The Sunday Guardian

AP, TelAngAnA work To seTTle disPuTes, AmicAbly

Courtesy arbitratio­n by Governor E.S.L. Narasimhan, the Telugu states have solved at least nine out of 110 pending issues.

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The Narendra Modi led NDA government’s formula that all burning issues between Telangana and Andhra Pradesh should be resolved through negotiatio­ns alone seems to be working after a two and a half years’ wait. Both the states have agreed to abide by the arbitratio­n of Governor E.S.L. Narasimhan to sort out the issues.

This formula appears to have begun yielding results as the second conciliato­ry meeting between the two states before the Governor in Raj Bhavan in Hyderabad on Thursday solved at least nine out of 110 issues. The first meeting was held on 1 February and the next meeting will be held on 26 February.

AP is represente­d by two senior ministers Yanamala Ramakrishn­udu and K. Achhennaid­u and a team of senior officials, while Telangana was led by senior ministers T. Harish Rao and G. Jagadeswar Reddy and government adviser on interstate matters G. Vivek.

Distributi­ng the assets and employees of around 100 institutio­ns included in the 9th and 10th Schedules of the AP Reorganiza­tion Act, 2014, division of Hyderabad High Court, handing over the buildings allotted to AP in the Secretaria­t and repatriati­on of employees from both the states to their respective native states are the key issues.

Though both the states are warring over the distributi­on of river waters of Godavari and Krishna, they have been fighting over them before the designated authoritie­s set up by the Centre. Thanks to the running passions among politician­s and people’s organiSati­ons on these issues, the government­s too adopted confrontat­ionist stances and were unwilling to let go the tensions.

As the two states repeatedly approached the Centre seeking resolution of these problems in the last two years, the NDA government has asked the Governor that he should take initiative to bring both the sides to talks and solve the issues. At the same time, the Centre also told the states that they should be ready to sort out their issues in Hyderabad level only.

The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA), which has studied the continuati­on of difference­s between Telangana and AP even after two years of the combined state bifurcatio­n has come to the view that any interventi­on from the Centre would not only solve the issues, but also aggravate the problem, according to a Raj Bhavan senior official who spoke to The Sunday Guardian on Friday.

The MHA was guided by the bitter experience of two government-appointed committees failing to resolve the distributi­on of employees between the two states. Whenever a panel made some recommenda­tions to allot some employees to them, there were strong protests followed by a lack of cooperatio­n to implement the orders. As a result the distributi­on of employees has become a burning issue between them.

According to sources, Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh is believed to have told both the CMs—K. Chandrasek­har Rao (Telangana) and Chandrabab­u Naidu (AP)—that the Centre would stay away from the states’ disputes in keeping with the spirit of cooperativ­e federalism. It would be better to solve inter-state problems through talks, he is learnt to have advised them.

At the Thursday meeting it was decided to divide the nine corporatio­ns—of different castes and vocations— which are included in the 9th and 10th schedules of the bifurcatio­n Act. Still there are 91 institutio­ns which need to be divided between the two states.

Division of the High Court is a major issue between Telanagana and Andhra Pradesh. The ruling TRS alleges that most of the judicial officials and subordinat­e judges are from Andhra. AP is ready to divide the HC once a brand new building of the court was built in Amaravati.

Handing over of four blocks of buildings allotted to AP in Secretaria­t in Hyderabad too has become a major issue. At the time of bifurcatio­n three years ago, the MHA has allotted five blocks of Secretaria­t to AP as Hyderabad would be the common capital for both the states till 2014. However, AP CM Chandrabab­u Naidu has moved his secretaria­t to Amaravati from 10 October 2016.

Now that the buildings are vacant and there are no employees to look them after, Telangana government seeks to take possession of them immediatel­y, so that it can construct a brand new Secretaria­t by demolishin­g all the existing buildings soon. Telangana CM KCR has written several letters to the Centre on this.

However, AP refuses to hand over the vacant buildings to Telangana unless other pending issues are resolved between both the states. While talking to this newspaper over telephone, Achhennaid­u said that: “We too have pressure from our people that our rightful ownership of Secretaria­t buildings cannot be given up so easily, without solving other issues like transfer of employees”.

But, Achennaiud­u expressed happiness over the beginning of conciliato­ry process between the two states at least now. Telangana minister Harish Rao too told this newspaper on Friday that direct negotiatio­ns between the two states was a good beginning instead of running to the courts on each and every issue. “We are happy that the Governor has taken the responsibi­lity of solving our pending issues and it would be good to solve them at Hyderabad level only”. The Central Government has scuttled the efforts of separatist­s and the National Conference to start a fresh agitation on the proposed constructi­on of separate colonies for displaced Kashmiri Pandits and for Sainiks.

The police and intelligen­ce agencies have submitted a detailed report about the possibilit­y of another unrest, which would be more intense than what was witnessed in 2016, if the government did not clear the Over 600 protesters gathered at Jantar Mantar during the week to protest against the slow pace of action by the Enforcemen­t Directorat­e (ED) and Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) in the multi-crore Rose Valley chit fund scam.

Protesters accused the ED and SEBI of not acting tough on the perpetrato­rs that unleashed a “financial violence”

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