Telangana note will take time: Kiran Kumar Reddy
Hyderabad: It will take some more time for the note on Telangana prepared by the Union home ministry to be put before the Union Cabinet for its consideration, according to Chief Minister N. Kiran Kumar Reddy who was involved in a similar exercise when the state government proposed an amendment to the controversial 14 (F) clause to the Presidential Order two years ago.
Ministers and legislators made anxious by the statement of home minister Sushilkumar Shinde that the Cabinet note was ready, met the Chief Minister and were assured that the whole process will take much more time.
The Chief Minister told them that the draft Cabinet note is prepared first and submitted to the home minister, who will send it to at least 11 ministries, including the law ministry, for their comments within 10 days. Once the comments are received, the home mi-nistry will prepare a note and send this to the Cabinet secretary.
After getting approval from him, the same note will be submitted to the Prime Minister’s Office for the Prime Minister’s approval.
Only after that will the note be put before the Union Cabinet for its consideration. All this will take at least a month.
The Chief Minister shared his experience of getting the Union Cabinet to approve the amendment to Clause 14 (F) related to public employment under the Presidential Order in 1975. He said that even after he appointed a Special Officer in Delhi exclusively to chase the file’s movement among various ministries, he had to personally call up the concerned ministers almost every day to hasten the process.
Kiran Kumar Reddy said he was sure the law ministry would raise the issue of the AP Assembly resolution on Telangana to avoid legal complications and the convention the Union government followed in respect of carving out three states in 2002.
No going back on Telangana: Central brass
More than once the Central Congress leadership has conveyed to the agitating Union ministers and MPs of the Seemandhra region that it will not go back on its decision to carve out Telangana and it is up to them to suggest any alternatives other than seeking a united state.
AICC general-secretary Digvijay Singh, Union minister Manish Tewari, and AICC spokesperson P.C. Chacko made this clear yet again in the past two days.
“The CWC decision will be implemented. You better shed your demand for the united state. It is not going to happen. It is better for you to bargain for the status of Hyderabad city,”?Mr Digvijay Singh told Seemandhra Union ministers and MPs during his meeting with them on Thursday night.
When some of the MPs told him that in such case they have no option but to resign their posts and memberships, Singh reportedly obser-ved, “You can do anything, but the decision (on Telangana) will not be taken back.”
On Friday, briefing the media, Union information and broadcasting minister Tewari said, “The Centre will not go back on the Telangana statehood issue.”
He, however, added that the note on Telangana prepared by the home ministry did not come up for the Cabinet’s consideration on Friday. “After we get the political nod on the issue, the note will be considered by the Cabinet in due course,” Tewari said.
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