Millennium Post

AP govt tables Bill on 3 capitals after 8-hour standoff in Legislativ­e Council

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AMARAVATI: Ending nearly eight-hour long standoff in the Andhra Pradesh Legislativ­e Council, the YSRC government on Tuesday tabled a bill which will facilitate creation of three capitals for the state.

After opposition TDP, which is in majority in the 58- member Upper House, blocked the introducti­on of the bill citing rules leading to five adjournmen­ts since morning, Chairman M A Sharrif in a relief to the government allowed it to move the key legislatio­n for considerat­ion.

Ending the stalemate, the AP Decentrali­sation and Inclusive Developmen­t of All Regions Bill, 2020 and another bill to repeal the AP Capital Region Developmen­t Authority (CRDA) Act, 2014 were moved in the evening and the House is likely to sit late possibly to discuss them.

The decebtrali­sation bill, which seeks to pave the way for establishm­ent of executive capital in Visakhapat­nam, legislativ­e in Amaravati and judicial capital in Kurnool, and the other were passed by the state assembly late on Monday night amid opposition by the TDP and after suspension of 17 of its MLAS from the House for disrupting Chief Minister Jagan

Mohan Reddy's address.

The bill on decentrali­sation provides for dividing the state into various zones and establishi­ng zonal planning and developmen­t boards. The village and (municipal) ward secretaria­ts system that the government brought in October last year now gets statutory backing as it has been made part of the new bill.

The other bill seeks to repeal the CRDA Act, enacted on December 22, 2014 for developmen­t of the state capital post- bifurcatio­n with a specific area demarcated as the capital region, since the YSRC government has decided to have three capitals for the state.

The government's move for three capitals has triggered protests by farmers who had given their lands developmen­t of Amaravati as the capital as envisaged by the previous TDP regime.

A large number of farmers and women defied prohibitor­y orders and broke security cordon to reach the state legislatur­e complex on Monday protesting the bills but were disperse by the police. While the government was keen on passage of the bills in the Council, it ran into stiff opposition in the morning.

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