The Hindu (Hyderabad)

Upbeat Congress plans jalsas and street corner meetings in Old City

The six guarantees of the Congress party have already become talking points at homes and family gatherings, say minority leaders of the party

- R. Ravikanth Reddy

The Old City of Hyderabad, once the bastion of the Congress and later conceded to its earlier political ally AIMIM, can now hardly boast of any Statelevel or nationalle­vel leader apart from a strong vote base.

But the six guarantees of the Congress party seem to have infused the minority leadership, which wants to take them to every household in the Old City with the slogan that 85% of the residents there will benefit from it. Lakhs of poor people residing in the Old City, particular­ly the women community are being targeted by the minority leaders of the Congress party.

There is hardly any scheme that would not impact a large number of women of the minority community, not just in Hyderabad but across Telangana, says Hyderabad District Congress Committee (DCC) president Sameer Waliullah. “The schemes announced by Ms. Sonia Gandhi will touch 85% of minorities, who are mostly from financiall­y poor background,” he says. Mr. Sameer Waliullah argues that no scheme like the Mahalakshm­i scheme existed under any government. “Under the scheme, Congress promises ₹2,500 for women and the free travel for women in buses means they would be saving huge. The Congress party, he feels will improve its vote share hugely, and the response just a few days after the announceme­nt has been tremendous. Every household is discussing these schemes and they have the live example of Karnataka, where the Congress has implemente­d similar schemes, he argues.

Chairman of the TPCC Minorities department Shaikh Abdullah Sohail reveals that two schemes that have already become talking points at homes and family meetings are the gas cylinders for ₹500 only and the Gruha Jyothi guarantee that provides 200 units of free electricit­y. “These schemes have hit people like the 4% reservatio­ns provided by the Congress government for poor Muslims,” he says. “We will plan street corner meetings and ‘Jalsas’ to take this deep into people.”

Aamer Zaveed, a young Congress leader and a strong contender for the Jubilee Hills ticket alleges that the BRS government has literally killed the Fee Reimbursem­ent scheme and this has led to the closure of over 100 minority colleges of different streams. “This has driven away minority students to pursue higher education. But with the Congress announcing to revive the fee reimbursem­ent scheme and also ₹5 lakh assistance for higher education is a confidence builder for the minority youth and their parents,” he says.

Congress minority leaders feel this is the best opportunit­y for the party to get minority voters back in

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