The Hindu (Kozhikode)

A State without a capital yet

With leaders busy in vendetta politics, the people of Andhra still have no capital

- P. Sujatha Varma pothuri.varma@thehindu.co.in

Just days before the deadline of June 2, 2024, the day when Hyderabad will cease to be the joint capital of Telangana and Andhra Pradesh, the political class in residual Andhra Pradesh maintains a stoic silence on the issue of choosing a capital.

As per Section 5 of the Andhra Pradesh Reorganisa­tion Act, 2014, Hyderabad will be the common capital of Telangana and Andhra Pradesh for a period not exceeding 10 years with ežect from June 2, 2014, the o¦cial date of the bifurcatio­n of the combined State. The 10-year window period was given to the residual State of Andhra Pradesh to build its own capital. But Andhra Pradesh continues to be where it had started. The tragedy is that the presidents of the incumbent YSR Congress Party (YSRCP) and the Opposition Telugu Desam Party (TDP) have been pulling in different directions on the issue.

The rst ve years post bifurcatio­n were marked by hullabaloo over a “world class futuristic and smart capital” at Amaravati for Andhra Pradesh. This was generated by N. Chandrabab­u Naidu, who was Chief Minister then. To build a “people’s capital”, estimated at ₹51,000 crore in 2015, Mr. Naidu acquired 33,000 acres of land from farmers through land-pooling and promised to make them a partner in the capital developmen­t plan. He roped in Singapore-based rms and paid them thousands of crores to build the project. He also pooled ₹7,500 crore from the Housing and Urban Developmen­t Corporatio­n, a couple of hundred crores from the World Bank, and ₹1,500 crore from the Union government.

But in the 2019 elections, Y. S. Jagan Mohan Reddy’s YSRCP came to power. The new Chief Minister stalled all the projects and slashed the budget of the new capital to ₹500 crore. This resulted in the withdrawal of the World Bank and the Singapore rms from the project. Amaravati now looks like a ghost capital.

Meanwhile, Mr. Jagan Mohan Reddy’s plan to decentrali­se developmen­t by establishi­ng three capitals in the State has run into legal issues; the case is pending in the Supreme Court.

The people of the State blame both the Chief Ministers for being insensitiv­e to their emotions and problems in the last 10 years. They also accuse the Congress of letting them down by implementi­ng the bifurcatio­n process in the most unscientic manner. It brings to their mind grim memories of the bifurcatio­n Bill being passed without any discussion­s in Parliament, the mics in the Lok Sabha being switched ož, the live telecast of the proceeding­s being stopped, and members opposing the Bill being forced out of the House by the marshals. The people feel that developmen­t in the State has taken a back seat even as leaders indulge in vendetta politics.

Though Hyderabad was declared the joint capital of Andhra

Pradesh for 10 years, Mr. Naidu operated from there only for a year before moving to Vijayawada. Many people attribute his hurried shifting to his fear of an imminent arrest in the cash-for-vote scam that broke out in 2015. Some political experts feel that Hyderabad would have probably become Andhra Pradesh’s permanent capital, much like how Chandigarh is the capital of Punjab and Haryana, if Mr. Naidu had stayed in the city for 10 years.

In view of the looming deadline of June 2, Telangana Chief Minister A. Revanth Reddy has set the ball rolling for completing the distributi­on of assets and liabilitie­s between the two States, a contentiou­s issue which has been pending due to lack of consensus. After many rounds of bilateral meetings failed to address the issue, Andhra Pradesh moved the Supreme Court seeking a ‘fair’ division of assets and liabilitie­s between the two States. A total of 245 institutio­ns with a xed asset value of ₹1.42 lakh crore are at stake. Of them, 91 come under Schedule I◣ and 142 under Schedule ◣ of the Andhra Pradesh Reorganisa­tion Act. The division of another 12 institutio­ns, not mentioned in the Act, has also become contentiou­s.

The leaders of Andhra Pradesh are apprehensi­ve about the Congress government in Telangana doing a fair job of the distributi­on process. They feel that even if Mr. Revanth Reddy makes any attempt to sort out the tangle, the Opposition Bharat Rashtra Samithi is bound to target him by whipping up the Telangana welfare issue again.

On the capital, there is still no clarity. Whichever party comes to power this election must address the issue; they owe it to the people.

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