Telangana - Demand for a new state in India

Telangana would be formed, it is just a question how soon…

**What is Telangana? **

Today, Telangana is a region comprising 10 of Andhra Pradesh’s 23 districts. Originally, it was a part of the erstwhile Nizam’s princely state of Hyderabad. The region accounts for 119 seats of 294 in the assembly.

**When did Telangana merge with Andhra? **

In 1948, India put an end to the rule of the Nizams and a Hyderabad state was formed. In 1956, the Telangana part of Hyderabad was merged with then Andhra state (carved out of Madras Presidency in October, 1953). The remaining parts of the Nizam’s empire merged with Karnataka and Maharashtra. Andhra Pradesh became the first linguistically carved state in the country after Gandhian revolutionary Potti Sreeramulu, on a hunger strike over the issue, died on December 16, 1952.

**When did the movement for a separate Telangana kick off? **

The first Telangana movement intensified in 1969. There was a distinct difference between Andhra and Telangana regions. Since Andhra was part of a colonial Madras Presidency, education levels and development of this region were better than in feudal Telangana. People from Telangana were against merger with Andhra state as they feared they would lose jobs to them.

Cultural differences, too, remain. Under Nizam’s, and before that, under the Qutb Shahi rule, the culture and langauge in Telangana bore influences of North India. Emphasis on festivals are also different.

**What happened in the 1969 agitation? **

Primarily a student-driven protest, it turned historical for the number of people who took part in it. Over 350 students were killed in police firing and lathi charge. Osmania University was the movement’s hotbed. Congress leader Marri Channa Reddy, who raised the ‘Jai Telangana’ slogan, diluted the movement by merging his Telangana Praja Samithi Party with Congress — Indira Gandhi made him the chief minister after this. That’s how the movement collapsed: a result of Indira Gandhi’s masterstroke. P V Narasimha Rao, too, was made CM in 1971 because he was from Telangana region.

**What’s K Chandrasekhar Rao’s role? **

In the 90s, KCR, then a member of the Telugu Desam Party, was hopeful of a ministerial post in the state government but was made deputy speaker after the 1999 elections. He quit TDP in 2001 to champion the cause of a separate Telangana state and founded Telangana Rashtra Samithi.

All this while, with faster development in the rest of Andhra, a strong feeling was gaining ground in Telangana that it was being exploited and that the region’s surplus was being transferred to finance development in the rest of the state. In 2004 election, Y S Rajasekhara Reddy joined hands with KCR, promising a separate Telangana. But YSR got cold feet and backtracked, triggering resignations of TRS MLAs. KCR quit his Union ministry post.

**What’s the stand of other political parties on Telangana? **

One state, but these two regions are worlds apart - India - The Times of India

Congress continues to flip-flop, while TDP, which was against separate Telangana until 2009 election, is now supporting it. BJP, CPI and PRP support Telangana. CPM’s stand still unclear, but by and large, it is opposed to Telangana.

**What’s the Hyderabad angle? **

Hyderabad, which is within the Telangana region, is a bone of contention between votaries of Telangana and those against it. The issue of AP capital remains a stumbling block in the creation of Telangana.

Re: Telangana - Demand for a new state in India

See this I personally dislike. Not everybody bloody community can have their own state.

The Indian government is to allow a new state to be carved out of part of the southern state of Andhra Pradesh.

Home Minister P Chidambaram said the process of forming Telangana state would begin soon. Campaigners say the region has long been neglected. Supporters of the state are celebrating after days of violent protests. One of their leaders ended a hunger strike. But many in India fear acceding to the protesters’ wishes could fuel demands for other new states across India.

Dozens of Andhra Pradesh assembly members and at least one Indian MP with a seat in the state have announced they are resigning in protest at the move. Analysts say the flurry of resignations, mostly from the governing Congress party, could lead to a political crisis in Andhra Pradesh.

Correspondents say Telangana state is likely to include one of India’s major software hubs, Hyderabad.
The city, currently the Andhra Pradesh capital, is home to leading world companies in India like Microsoft and Google.

The government announcement came at midnight on Wednesday. “The process of forming the state of Telangana will be initiated. An appropriate resolution will be moved in the state assembly,” Mr Chidambaram said after talks with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Congress party leader Sonia Gandhi.

On hearing the news, crowds in Hyderabad and nine other districts of Telangana erupted in celebration, reports the BBC’s Omer Farooq in the state capital. Mr Chidambaram said the government had asked for court cases against leaders, students and others “associated with the present agitation” to be dropped.
He also appealed to protesters to call off their demonstrations. His announcement was greeted with jubilation among protesters, who let off fire crackers, beat drums, danced and sang songs.

Some of the celebrations took place outside the Hyderabad hospital where one of the campaign leaders, K Chandrasekara Rao of the Telangana Rashtra Samiti (TRS) party, had been admitted during his fast.
Mr Rao said: “I am happy that this is the victory of 35 million people who live in the Telangana region.”
Protest rallies seeking a separate state planned for Thursday were called off.

Thousands of police had been deployed for the rallies, but after Mr Chidambaram’s announcement security was relaxed, our correspondent says. Long campaign Telangana region is spread over 10 northern districts of Andhra Pradesh.

The demand for separate state status for the underdeveloped and drought-prone area dates back 50 years. More than 400 people died in violence over the demand for a Telangana state in 1969.
Campaigners say Telangana’s economic development has been neglected in favour of the richer and more powerful Andhra region - and that a new state is the only solution.

The last three new states in India were formed in 2000: Chhattisgarh was created out of eastern Madhya Pradesh; Uttarakhand was created out of the hilly areas of northern Uttar Pradesh, and Jharkhand was carved from Bihar’s southern districts. India currently has 28 states.

BBC

India soon getting its 29th state. We might see even more in coming years.

Will all this lead to the Balkanisation of India?

Nepali speaking Indians in West Bengal want Gorkhaland, Kutchis is Gujarat
want Saurashtra, Maharashtrians want two Marathi speaking states (well three if you include Goa) Vidarbha.

There is a demand for North Karnataka, Coorg, Harit Pradesh, Bundelkhand.

This is not the case in Vidarbha (Marathi speaking state)

In Vidarbha there is a "natural" capital in Nagpur where the winter session of the Maharashtra Assembly takes place -- unlike the case with Hyderabad which has been the beacon for all regions in Andhra Pradesh. The economic viability argument does hold some water but sometimes an emotional upsurge fuelled by a sense of discrimination, real or imagined, renders rational considerations irrelevant.

The Vidarbha demand faces the opposition of Shiv Sena which stands for a united Maharashtra and Congress is also opposed to it. State Congress leaders from western Maharashtra, a politically dominant section, are strongly opposed to the idea. Unlike the case in Andhra Pradesh where TDP, TRS, CPI and now Congress support statehood for Telangana, opinion is sharply divided in Maharashtra.

But if the demand gathers momentum, it will be difficult for Congress to argue that what was right in Telangana is wrong in Vidarbha. Shiv Sena has a decent support base in the region and it may find itself faced with a hard choice if the sentiment grows. The 11 Lok Sabha seats in the area are nothing to sneeze at and Congress leaders who represent some of them will be wary of going against the grain.

Will all this lead to the Balkanisation of India?

Nepali speaking Indians in West Bengal want Gorkhaland, Kutchis is Gujarat
want Saurashtra, Maharashtrians want two Marathi speaking states (well three if you include Goa) Vidarbha.

There is a demand for North Karnataka, Coorg, Harit Pradesh, Bundelkhand.

Its been topic of the day in my office where most of the folks are from AP, india. People are actually very worried about whats going on what'll happen next

The bone of Contention is Hyderabad. Lot of Businesses are in Hyderabad, Bio tech and IT with log of multinational companies. Hyderabad is technically in Telangana but is home to many Andhra folks.

If Hyderabad becomes capital of Telangana, what would be the capital of Andhra Pradesh?