Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Telangana

Telangana has been backward for centuries. It never came under the British
but was ruled by the Nizam of Hyderabad. He did set up a few factories and
a textile mill in Warangal in collaboration with the French.  However,avenues

of employment were few and exploitation abounded, owing to the nature of 
feudalism in the region.The most crucial infrastructure element, an irrigation 
system, was never developed systematically in Telangana,although both the
Krishna and theGodavari flowed through it. By contrast, the coastal Andhra
region aggressively lobbied for and got a garland of canals that took river 
waters deep into the east and west Godavari districts. The Telangana region
became a stronghold of the Communist Party of India and it was here that 
armed struggle first cameup in India.In 1956, when Fazal Ali presented his
report on the linguistic reorganisation of states, Telangana (called Hyderabad 
state) first refused to integrate and then negotiated long and hard on the terms
on which it would become a part of Andhra Pradesh (AP). What Nehru called 
a “gentleman’s agreement” was drawn up, in which Telangana would be recog-
nised as “virtually” a separate state.
This didn't happen and the movement for a separate state continued to simmer.
M Channa Reddy cynically fanned the flames of a separate Telangana 
movement in the late 1960s and 1970s that led to bloody riots but ensured 
a permanent stranglehold of  the Congress over AP. When N T Rama 
Rao founded the Telugu Desam, the Congress found itself turfed out 
of coastal Andhra but retained its base in Telangana and Rayalaseema.The
Telangana Rashtra Samiti was formed by K Chandrasekhar Rao in the 
winter of 2001. Rao quit as deputy speaker of the Assembly and resigned
 from the TDP. In the 2001 local body elections in AP, the TRS took off so 
strongly that the TDP got just 10 of the 20 zilla parishads. On this, the 
Congress quickly struck a deal with the TRS for the Lok Sabha elections.
In the 2004 Lok Sabha and Assembly elections, which the TRS fought in 
alliance with the Congress, the party bagged 26 assembly and five Lok Sabha 
seats. When it found the Congress equivocating on the issue of Telangana,
 the TRS broke away from the alliance. However, the base of the TRS had 
shrunk. Now, the eye of the Congress is on that base, which it hopes to 
get with the announcement of a new state, believing it has elbowed out the TRS

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