Deccan Chronicle

Seema stir for HC set to cause poll trouble

TS advocates worry protest may delay HC bifurcatio­n

- S.A. ISHAQUI | DC

The agitation of the advocates of Rayalaseem­a region for constituti­on of a separate High Court for Andhra Pradesh in Rayalaseem­a may emerge as a core and contentiou­s political issue in the 2019 elections in AP.

The gaining momentum of the agitation of the Seema advocates is causing lawyers in Telangana some worry as it would further delay the bifurcatio­n of the High Court between TS and Andhra Pradesh.

The judges of the Hyderabad High Court have indicated that the buildings identified by the AP government at Vijayawada to house the new court, are not suitable, and they will wait till October 2018 when the city courts complex in Justice City is ready as promised by the state government. But if that is delayed for any reason, the separation will take place only after the elections in 2019.

Advocates from the Rayalaseem­a region have been agitating for the past 36 days, demanding a High Court be set up in their region, more particular­ly in Kurnool, which was the capital when AP was carved out of Madras Province in 1953 under the Sribagh Pact of 1936, and the High Court functioned from Guntur until 1956.

The AP unit of the BJP has also passed a resolution at its Rayalaseem­a regional meeting, demanding that a second state capital and High Court be set up in the region. The TD had indicated that it might consider setting up a High Court bench in Kurnool.

J. Narayana Swamy, a practising advocate of Ananthapur who had moved a PIL before the Hyderabad High Court seeking to direct the state and Central government­s to set up the High Court of AP at Kurnool, said that the AP government has not taken into considerat­ion the Sribagh Pact, 1936, while establishi­ng its headquarte­rs at Velagapudi in coastal Andhra Region and in view of that, the Rayalaseem­a region is entitled to establish the AP High Court in Kurnool, as it is the old state capital of Andhra State.

He said that a circuit bench of the High Court at Aurangabad was constitute­d based on the Nagpur Pact of 1953 during the formation of Maharashtr­a, and various administra­tive institutio­ns were also decentrali­sed as per the 1953 pact which enabled the overall developmen­t of Maharashtr­a.

He said the Sribagh Pact also called for the decentrali­sation of the administra­tion, but the ruling government did not consider this in 1956 when the state capital and High Court were shifted to Hyderabad.

In fact, the Rayalaseem­a lawyers argue that ignoring the spirit of the Sribagh Agreement, which advocated decentrali­sation of administra­tion in 1956, has led to the partition of AP and will lead to further partition of AP. Nagalakshm­i Devi, co-convener of the Rayalaseem­a High Court Sadhana Samithi and president of the Kurnool Bar Associatio­n, said that lawyers have boycotted courts in the region for the past 36 days and will intensify their agitation in the coming days.

She said, “As of now we are building pressure on the ministers and MLAs of the region to convince the government to establish the High Court in the region as this has been neglected since 1956.”

She demanded that the YSR Congress, which is the main opposition party in the state, has to declare its stand with regard to constituti­ng the HC in Rayalaseem­a.

She said that it was unfortunat­e that the TD president has gone back on his promise made at the time of the 2014 elections that the High Court will be set up at Kurnool.

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