The Sunday Guardian

Armed with Rs 10.25L cr MoUs, Naidu junks special status demand

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Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N. Chandrabab­u Naidu has signed 665 MoUs (memorandum of understand­ing) worth Rs 10.25 lakh crore to create around 22 lakh jobs at the end of the two-day 7th Partnershi­p Summit of CII on Saturday. Through this, he countered the Opposition demand that the Centre grant special status to AP as per the promises made at the time of the division of the combined state in 2014.

This is the second partnershi­p summit of the CII (Confederat­ion of Indian Industry) in the newly created AP and the value of the MoUs this time definitely surpassed the last time’s Rs 4 lakh crore. Naidu has worked round-the-clock to achieve this record mainly to counter the mounting Opposition chorus for agitation to achieve special status for the state.

The two-day summit inaugurate­d by Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley in the port city of Visakhapat­nam on Friday drew around 3,000 delegates from 42 countries. Jaitley told the gathering that the Narendra Modi-led NDA government at the Centre would go “out of its way to help Andhra Pradesh” and that this state has always been “special to the Modi government”.

The presence of Jaitley at the summit clearly boosted the morale of the AP government, which is struggling to put up an image of an investor-friendly state in the country with a 10.99% GSDP last year. Union ministers M. Venkaiah Naidu and Nirmala Sitharaman, too, were present at the summit and marshalled their ministries in mobilising investment­s for AP.

If Jaitley had promised to “go the extra mile” to improve conditions in AP, Union Transport and Highways Minister Nitin Gadkari, too, came to the rescue of the state by promising to invest around Rs 26,000 crore from his ministry in the coming months. Of this, Rs 20,000 crore would be spent on coastal highways and Rs 6,000 crore on Visakhapat­nam port roads.

Naidu’s focus was to attract investment­s in and around the newly created capital city, Amaravati, located between Vijayawada and Guntur and he succeeded in roping in around Rs 1.29 lakh crore worth 62 MoUs at the summit.

Gadkari has thrown in a surprise for the state by agreeing to take up 426 km long highways around Amaravati in associatio­n with CRDA (Capital Region Developmen­t Authority).

This summit has seen a flurry of activities as scores of investors vied to ink deals with the AP government so that they can be fast-tracked at the official level.

Private universiti­es like SRM, VIT, Amity, Gitam, oil and gas companies, infrastruc­ture firms, IT, energy giants came forward to set up shop across 13 districts of AP.

Talking to the media on the sidelines of the summit, CM Naidu said: “I am more than happy that we could sign these many MoUs which can create over two million jobs. I am sure a majority of the MoUs would be cleared and grounded within a year and we will follow them on a day-to-day basis. All this wouldn’t have been possible without the cooperatio­n of PM Modi.”

This record number of MoUs and job figures have made Naidu happy as he was under attack from the Opposition parties for not being able to extract special status for AP which would have created millions of jobs to the youth and wooed investment­s.

This also helped the CM in projecting AP as a state on the recovery path within two years after the crippling split with Hyderabad that went to Telangana. As per a declassifi­ed report on India prepared by India based analysts of the Central Intelligen­ce Agency (CIA) in 1982, which was made accessible recently, the CIA had stated that the Congress had essentiall­y become a “one-woman organisati­on” and that the then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi had increased her personal power at the cost of weakening the Congress and government­al institutio­ns.

The intelligen­ce assessment report titled “India after Indira: The Succession Question”, prepared in December 1982, less than two years before the former PM was assassinat­ed, was prepared keeping in mind the succession plan of Indira Gandhi. While considerin­g the possible alternativ­e contenders for Indira’s post in case of her death, the analysts at the CIA also discussed her daughter-in-law and now BJP Union minister Maneka Gandhi as one of the strongest candidates. “A political personalit­y with a potential national following and name recognitio­n in Gandhi’s estranged daughter

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