Business Standard

Unforgettable year for Telangana

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Press Trust of India Hyderabad
2014 was an emotional and a historic year for Telangana as the long-cherished dream of the land-locked region for a separate statehood finally became a reality after a long struggle.

On June 2, Telangana became the country's 29th state but not before its share of suspense and controversies as skeptics and die-hard supporters debated for months as to whether the division would be clinched at all given the sharp division among the political class over the bifurcation of the erstwhile Andhra Pradesh.

2014 was indeed a watershed year in the history of erstwhile Andhra Pradesh as it was bifurcated though the residuary state (post formation of Telangana) retains the old name.
 

The turbulence and tumult witnessed in Andhra Pradesh in 2013 continued in the early part of 2014 with the then Chief Minister N Kiran Kumar Reddy, who vehemently opposed his party's decision to divide the state, quitting his post and also Congress.

Capping months of tumult in and outside Parliament and an alleged TV blackout, the Lok Sabha approved the bill for formation of Telangana on February 18. The passage of the bill had unprecedented events like an MP using pepper spray on the floor of the House in an attempt to scuttle it.

As the countdown for the General Elections began, political developments occurred swiftly with Telangana Rashtra Samiti (TRS), which spearheaded the statehood agitation for over a decade, refusing to have an electoral alliance with Congress and TDP joining NDA.

Riding on a wave of support following formation of Telangana and election promises like loan waiver for farmers, TRS had a thumping victory at the hustings.

Congress would, probably, like to erase 2014 from its memory as it suffered a humiliating defeat in the elections though it "delivered" on the separate statehood demand. A divided house with a string of chief ministerial aspirants, Congress paid the price apparently due to lack of unity.

Adding insult to the injury, some Congress legislators left the party and joined TRS post formation of Telangana.

The TDP-BJP combine fared reasonably well in the elections though Congress emerged as the main Opposition party.

TRS leader K Chandrasekhar Rao, who assumed the office of Chief Minister on June 2, quickly got down to business as he sought to build a separate identity for the infant state and promote a brand image with Hyderabad as a magnet.

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First Published: Dec 16 2014 | 10:05 AM IST

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