Deccan Chronicle

People hope bypoll will usher in developmen­t

Locals foresee slew of projects, schemes ahead of byelection

- N. VAMSI SRINIVAS I DC GUDIMALKAP­URAM, MUNUGODE ASSEMBLY CONSTITUEN­CY, AUG. 2

Hectic activity that began on the Choutuppal­gudimalkap­uram road on Tuesday when lorries carrying metal and earthmover levelling the ground to lay a fresh layer over a damaged road vindicated the locals’ belief that the bypoll to Munugode Assembly constituen­cy would herald a new era of developmen­t.

With the sensationa­l Huzurabad bypoll fresh in mind, the electorate here was confident of the Munugode constituen­cy drawing attention of Chief Minister K. Chandrasek­har Rao who they felt would announce a slew of projects and welfare schemes ahead of the byelection. The government’s hurried moves, however, may prove counter-productive as the people were accepting it with a pinch of salt.

“Why did they neglect the repairs so far? Why are they rushing to do it now? It is just because of the talk of the bypoll,” complained Venkatesam, residing near the age-old broken fort gate of Samsthan Narayanapu­r, speaking hours before K. Rajgopal Reddy announced his resignatio­n from the Congress. Similar were the feelings echoed by a mobile shop attendant at Munugode. “Some projects have been pending since YSR regime and now we hope they will be implemente­d,” he said adding that the credit for fulfilling the long pending dream would indeed go to Rajgopal Reddy.

A group of women waiting to draw Aasara pension at the sub-post office in Puttapaka expressed serious concern over the increase in prices of essential commoditie­s. “KCR saaru is giving us pension of `2,000 every month. But its meagre given the high prices of oil and other commoditie­s,” lamented Mekala Parvathamm­a, a septuagena­rian. Another senior citizen, Yellaiah, sitting beside the group was agitated over the benefits of developmen­t being pocketed by a few corrupt and influentia­l leaders.

Venkatesha­m’s aging mother also complained against the local officials not extending pension to her even three years after death of his father and similar was the complaint of Jayamma, a cattle grazer residing on the outskirts of Chandur town.another farmer of the same village, however, gave full credit for turning agricultur­e into a profitmaki­ng activity to CM K. Chandrashe­kar Rao. “His

irrigation initiative­s and quality power supply changed our lives. Sometimes

nature may turn adversary but it is not his fault,” he pointed out.

 ?? — DC ?? Ahead of bypolls, earthmover­s level the ground to lay a new layer over a damaged road on the Choutuppal­gudimalkap­uram stretch in Munugode.
— DC Ahead of bypolls, earthmover­s level the ground to lay a new layer over a damaged road on the Choutuppal­gudimalkap­uram stretch in Munugode.

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