TDP Alliance Won Andhra Pradesh by Preventing Division of Anti-Incumbency Votes

The arrest of TDP president N. Chandrababu Naidu in an alleged scam was among the biggest blunders of the YSR Congress government.

Hyderabad: In the recently-concluded Andhra Pradesh Assembly elections, the anti-incumbency votes against the government of Chief Minister Y.S. Jaganmohan Reddy didn’t get divided and went almost in its entirety to the Telugu Desam Party (TDP) and its two allies, the BJP and the Jana Sena, which led to the humiliating defeat of the YSR Congress.

The sheer extent of the YSR Congress’s defeat cannot be just gauged by the drop in its vote share, which dropped by only 10 per cent, roughly the same percentage by which the vote share of the TDP-led alliance increased, as compared to the 2019 elections.

Illustration: Pariplab Chakraborty

But despite its vote share dipping by just 10 per cent, the YSR Congress could win only 11 out of the total 175 Assembly constituencies, with the TDP alliance bagging 164 seats.

Political analysts explained that the 10 per cent shortfall for YSR Congress could have been overcome by split in anti-incumbency vote if a third player was in the contest.

The Congress posed no challenge of splitting the vote of YSR Congress even though it was an alternative to both groupings. As a result, the anti-incumbency votes against the government didn’t split up and went to the TDP-led alliance.

An example of the splitting up of the anti-incumbency votes can be seen in the case of the Telangana Assembly elections six months ago, wherein the Congress could not win more seats because of the presence of the BJP, which led to the anti-government votes being split up between the two parties.

In the Telangana elections, the Bharat Rashtra Samiti (BRS), which was in power at the time, had 37.6 per cent vote share and won 39 seats while the Congress won 64 seats from a poll percentage of 39.7. As a third player, the BJP chipped in with 14 per cent vote share and won eight seats.

As a result, the anti-government vote was split and the Congress could not win more seats. But a similar phenomenon didn’t occur in Andhra Pradesh for the TDP and its partners Jana Sena and BJP because the electoral contest was bipolar and not triangular.

Experts say that anything short of 50 per cent vote in a two-way contest is defeatist because both sides will have loyal voter base to a certain extent. Victory or defeat will be determined only by swing voters.

Arresting Naidu was a move that backfired for YSR Congress

Indications of a tough time for the YSR Congress in elections were available last year when the candidates backed by the party lost elections to Legislative Council in three graduates constituencies. A candidate of TDP also won the Council election from local authorities constituency.

The arrest of TDP president N. Chandrababu Naidu in an alleged scam in a skill development programme run by the government when he was the Chief Minister from 2014 to 2019 was perhaps the biggest blunder of YSR Congress government.

Naidu was jailed in the case for 52 days with hardly eight months to go for elections. There was a groundswell of support in sympathy for Naidu and anger against Chief Minister Reddy as Naidu’s wife Bhuvaneswari joined the protests against the YSR Congress across the state.

It was at this juncture that actor turned politician Pawan Kalyan entered in a series of consultations with Naidu to forge an alliance with the TDP. After visiting Naidu at jail, Kalyan announced that an alliance was sealed between the TDP and Jana Sena.

Thereafter, it was the continuous persuasion by Kalyan with top leaders of BJP, including Prime Minister Narendra Modi and party president J.P. Nadda, which ensured that the saffron party joined ranks to put up a joint fight against YSR Congress.

The three parties buried their differences and entered into a seat sharing arrangement with just days left for issue of election notification. Kalyan compromised and agreed to give to BJP three Assembly seats out of the quota for Jana Sena to break a deadlock in talks.

Finally, the TDP was allotted 144 Assembly and 17 Parliamentary seats, Jana Sena 21 and 2 and BJP 10 and 6. It was argued that the BJP was offered more seats than its strength. In fact, the party did not have a single MLA or MP last time. The partners went ahead with several changes in seat allotment with larger interest of alliance in view.

The alliance worked so well that TDP won 135 Assembly and 16 Parliamentary seats, Jana Sena had a 100 per cent strike rate, winning all  21 Assembly and 2 Parliamentary seats while the BJP won eight and three seats respectively.

The YSR Congress was reduced to 11 Assembly seats against 151 it won last time and 4 Parliamentary seats.

The YSR Congress was seen as a natural ally of the BJP till the last minute because of its support to BJP led National Democratic Alliance in passage of Bills and other decisions of the government in Parliament.

Even the Prime Minister avoided any attack on CM Jagan in his first public meeting as part of election campaign in Andhra Pradesh. Later, of course, all the three parties campaigned in tandem and even addressed rallies at constituencies where they supported their alliance partners and didn’t have candidates of their own.

Pawan Kalyan’s success in stitching up alliance against Jagan

However, it was the zeal of movie star Kalyan to include the BJP in the fight against what the alliance claimed autocratic, corrupt and vengeful government of Jagan that swung the results of elections.

The YSR Congress won 151 seats against 23 of TDP in a four-cornered contest last time. But the government was found wanting in development and creating jobs. It depended on welfare schemes to the tune of Rs 2.75 lakh crore in a bid to retain power. However, the introduction of volunteer system to take the benefits to the doorsteps of public, diluted the role of elected representatives. The interface of MPs and MLAs with public was badly missing.

The opposition exploited the Andhra Pradesh Land Titling Act to launch a campaign against the government saying the legislation aimed to grab the lands of poor. Also, other issues such as the absence of clarity on the capital for the state and suspension of work on Polavaram irrigation project citing faulty design helped the opposition to train guns on the government.

It was at this time that Naidu was sent to jail which served the public grim reminder about similar arrest from the past including those of of senior TDP leaders Atchannaidu, Kollu Ravinder, Devineni Umamaheswara Rao, J.C. Prabhakar Reddy, Dhulipala Narendra Kumar and Chintamaneni Prabhakar. Several TDP activists were also attacked, some of them fatally, in targeted violence by YSR Congress.

The insult to Naidu in Assembly by YSR Congress members Ambati Rambabu and Kodali Nani was also fresh in the minds of public. The YSR Congress members made a remark against Naidu’s wife, upon which he walked out of the House swearing never again to return until he became Chief Minister.

Jagan and the rest of the House laughed away at the time as Naidu left in a fit of rage, only to now keep his promise.

Political analyst Telakapalli Ravi praised Pawan Kalyan’s role in the victory of the TDP-led alliance by consolidating the vote of Kapu community which had a strong presence in coastal districts. In fact, Kalyan had split the vote of TDP last time in 30 to 35 constituencies with Jana Sena contesting independently.

Another leader who did not want to be named, said the continuation of Naidu in NDA would remain clouded with doubts because he walked away from alliance with the BJP in 2018 over the refusal of Centre to grant special category status to Andhra Pradesh.

The TDP, Jana Sena and BJP broke away from each other and contested independently next year. The BJP did not win a single seat then while the Jana Sena was restricted to one seat.

 

Read all of The Wire’s reporting on and analysis of the 2024 election results here.

Behind TDP’s Spectacular Comeback, YSR Congress’s Complete Neglect of Development in AP

With TDP-Jana Sena-BJP alliance winning 164 out of 175 seats in the Andhra Pradesh assembly, YSR Congress is not in a position to even secure opposition status.

Hyderabad: The Telugu Desam Party-led National Democratic Alliance in Andhra Pradesh has registered a landslide victory, winning 164 out of 175 seats in the Andhra Pradesh legislative assembly. While TDP romped home with 135 seats, its alliance partners Jana Sena and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) secured 21 and eight seats respectively.

The tally of the ruling YSR Congress, headed by chief minister Jagan Mohan Reddy, came from 151 seats it had bagged in the 2019 elections to a mere 11 seats. The magnitude of the TDP-Jana Sena-BJP alliance meant Reddy would not be even in the position to get opposition status in the assembly.

All the parties in the fray reflected the same performance in Lok Sabha elections as well. While TDP secured 16 seats, its alliance partners Jana Sena and BJP secured two and three seats respectively. The YSR Congress bagged four seats.

Expressing shock at the results, an emotionally charged Jagan wondered at his maiden media conference in the last five years where the affection shown by beneficiaries of welfare programmes initiated by his government vanished.

He said he did not imagine this kind of result. He said he lost the election despite doing a lot for people.
Jagan also said god alone knew what went wrong and expressed his helplessness at the juncture. “I will rise up from here and take to struggles which is nothing new to me. I am ready for any challenge.”

Jana Sena chief Pawan Kalyan in his address to party supporters said he was at a loss for words. The results reflected the people’s ambition for change. This was not the time for taking revenge on political rivals, he added.

Telugu Desam Party president N. Chandrababu Naidu participated in a cake-cutting celebration at the Jana Sena office. He left for Delhi to take part in the NDA meeting on Wednesday called by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and other BJP bigwigs. His presence at the NDA meeting, more or less, end speculation about his speculation in the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA). But, the exit of Naidu from NDA during his previous term is a grim reminder of his blow-hot, blow-cold relationship with the BJP in the past. He decided to leave NDA protesting against the failure of the Centre to concede special category status to residuary Andhra Pradesh in the wake of the bifurcation of the erstwhile State.

The TDP and Jana Sena raced to lead in no time as soon as counting of votes began on Tuesday morning even as the ruling YSR Congress struggled to take off. As the trend continued, 23 out of 25 ministers in chief minister Jaganmohan Reddy’s Cabinet and Speaker Tammineni Sitaram trailed behind their TDP rivals.

It was obvious after a while that Jagan was set to exit and pave the way for Naidu to take the former’s seat in power again. Naidu was by then well on his way to winning his seventh Assembly election and with it becoming chief minister for the fourth time. Jagan conceded defeat later and sent his resignation letter to governor S. Abdul Nazeer.

A look at the reasons for the debacle of the YSR Congress shows that the welfare schemes of the party on which it banked heavily did not work with voters. The tall claims of the government that a sum of over Rs 2.75 lakh crore was spent on the welfare of the poor by direct benefit transfer (DBT) did not convince the public. Also, the ‘volunteer system’, initiated by the Jagan Reddy government, to take welfare to the doorsteps of people without having to go around government offices was ignored by people. The system had become hugely controversial as it was perceived as a parallel mechanism to village secretariats.

On the flip side, the YSR Congress is to blame itself for the defeat due to the lack of investments and development in the state. The three-capital model proposed by the government at Amaravati, Kurnool and Visakhapatnam representing the three regions of the state did not go down well with people. Finally, the state ended up without a clear capital. It was too late by the time he announced that he would run the government from Visakhapatnam in his second term.

The failure of the government to complete the Polavaram project citing faults in design and its firm resolve to implement the Andhra Pradesh Land Titling Act amidst serious concerns of the public on security for their lands were cited as reasons for YSR Congress’ defeat.

Naidu tore up land revenue records at public rallies, symbolically rejecting the government’s authority over private lands. All the Opposition parties highlighted that the Act would become another Dharani portal of the Telangana government lacking transparency and protection of land rights.

The TDP also promised ‘Super Six’ guarantees of Rs 4,000 pension per month, Rs 15,000 assistance to every school-going child, three free cooking gas cylinders for every household per annum, unemployment allowance of Rs 3,000 per month, free bus ride to women and Rs 1,500 per month to all women from 18 to 59 years. They seemed to steal a march over YSR Congress promises.

Jagan in the YSR Congress manifesto promised to continue all the welfare schemes of the past five years. He hiked social security pensions marginally from Rs 3,000 to 3,500 per month and assistance to school-going children from Rs15,000 to 17,000.

The arrest of Naidu and his imprisonment in Rajahmundry Central Jail for nearly 50 days in an alleged scam of skill development programme during his chief ministership from 2014 to 2019 earned him a lot of public sympathy, particularly women who took to road in Guntur.

A political analyst Pentapati Pulla Rao told The Wire that what worked in the victory of TDP and its allies was their unity. The public made it clear that freebies were not enough. Naidu promoted unity among allies by compromising on seats sought to be contested by TDP. The TDP gave 21 Assembly seats to the Jana Sena and 10 to BJP.

The TDP also conceded six parliament seats to BJP and two to Jana Sena. Pulla Rao highlighted that it was the severe oppression of Opposition parties by Prime Minister Modi which promoted their unity at the national level.

Another analyst Telakapalli Ravi said the fact that Jagan replaced 70 incumbent MLAs was a clear indication about the prospects of his party’s defeat. “Otherwise, why will any party change so many MLAs? It was a desperate attempt to save a sinking boat.”

Ravi also said TDP was expected to fight because of serious anti-government feelings among the masses. Also, the vengeance politics of Jagan to book Naidu in a criminal case and send him to jail and targeted violence by YSR Congress against TDP leaders and cadre spelt danger to the party. Jagan distanced himself from government employees by not looking into many of their demands.

Naidu, however, breathed life into the BJP by forging an alliance. It drastically changed the scenario at the national level. If he and BRS president K. Chandrasekhar had gone with the INDIA bloc, it would have made a vast difference to the results.

Pawan Kalyan was a game changer by consolidating the Kapu vote bank, Ravi added. YSR Congress replaced 70 out of its 153 incumbent MLAs with the experience of Bharat Rashtra Samiti in Telangana  Assembly elections. It was believed that the BRS lost polls because of its reluctance to change its MLAs after they had become unpopular.

On the other hand, the TDP retained all its 23 MLAs. The TDP also fielded runners-up on its behalf in 50 seats contested by the party in the last Assembly elections.

The TDP swept polls in Guntur, Krishna, Srikakulam, Vizianagaram, Kurnool and Nellore districts. Together with its ally Jana Sena, the party also made a clean sweep in East and West Godavari districts where the Kapu community held considerable sway. Pawan Kalyan who heads Jana Sena represents the community. The TDP also enjoyed the blessings of the Kamma community represented by Naidu.

YS Sharmila Elevated to Be Congress Chief in Andhra, to Take On Her Brother Jagan’s Party

The development is along the expected lines since Sharmila merged her YSR Telangana Party with the Congress. The grand old party hopes that Sharmila could revive its fortunes, where the party even forfeited its deposits virtually in every election held since 2014.

Hyderabad: Y.S. Sharmila, the daughter of former Andhra Pradesh chief minister Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy who recently joined the Congress, has been appointed as the president of Andhra Pradesh Congress Committee on Tuesday, January 16.

Her predecessor Gidugu Rudraraju had stepped down from the post a day before to pave the way for her elevation.

The development was on expected lines after Sharmila had made known her plans to disband her YSR Telangana party in the neighbouring state of Telangana and join ranks with the Congress primarily to take on her brother and Andhra Pradesh chief minister Y.S. Jaganmohan Reddy.

It is well known that the siblings have been on a war path over the past few years, as Sharmila nursed her political ambitions but her brother would not let another power centre grow within the family. She had reason to stake claim to play active politics as she had vigorously campaigned for the YSR Congress party of Jagan in Andhra Pradesh in his absence due to imprisonment in a disproportionate assets case against him booked by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI).

Handing over the reins of the party to Sharmila ahead of parliament and elections to the state Assembly, the Congress has shown its desperate attempt to gain some foothold in residual Andhra Pradesh post-bifurcation of the erstwhile state. The party has become non-existent in Andhra Pradesh after Telangana was carved out in 2014.

At least in Telangana, the Congress could claim people’s mandate on the ground that it created the state which was a historical demand. The party, however, earned a negative image in AP as people felt they were divided much to their disadvantage. The Congress lost every election in the last 10 years with abysmally poor performance in AP.

Also read: Y.S. Sharmila’s Entry Into Congress Would Chill Jagan Reddy as it Renews Fight for YSR’s Legacy

Due to her strained relations with Jagan, the Congress found in Sharmila the right choice to serve its interests in a bid to revive the party in the state with a known political figure and also provide her a platform to take on her brother. Thus, the interests of Sharmila and Congress converged.

How successfully she will steer the party, analysts feel, will depend on how vigorously she will campaign. But, the first inhibition to that should come from her own blood relationship with her brother because she might not attack him like any other political rival.

Also, she is not expected to create any impact if she does not contest upcoming elections. She must also win back at least a section of the former ministers, MPs, and MLAs who deserted the party to put a semblance of fight in elections. It is a long and arduous task but at least a journey of the party to make a comeback could begin though there is no political space for Congress with the ruling YSR Congress juggernaut on one side and Telugu Desam Party (TDP) on the other side of the political spectrum making a strong bid to return to power.

The Congress, if it manages to make a mark under Sharmila’s leadership, could at best split anti-incumbency vote between TDP, BJP, and actor-turned-politician Pawan Kalyan’s Janasena. Her appointment is not without a wild reaction from supporters of YSR Congress which claims it could be counterproductive to Congress.

Chairman of AP Media Academy, Kommineni Srinivas Rao, said Sharmila was a failure as a politician because she had rescinded her goal of dethroning the K. Chandrasekhar Rao government in Telangana. After making a tall promise that she would not exit Telangana and abusing Telangana Congress committee president A. Revanth Reddy, she conveniently not only joined the party but shifted to AP. She even picked up soil from the ground and spilled it over her head at a public meeting in Alair of Telangana to demonstrate her strong links with the state.

A political analyst from Andhra Pradesh Pentapati Pulla Rao said Congress could not hope worse to happen by her appointment as the party was out in the state and forfeited deposit in all previous elections.

However, her elevation showed the intention of Congress to induct fresh blood into the leadership by sidelining old warhorses. It was also proved in the selection of Revanth Reddy as chief minister following the victory of the party in Telangana.

Andhra Pradesh Is a Political Pesarattu in the Making

Amidst all the political churn, the BJP, too, has remained unsuccessful in making inroads in the state.

The significance of Andhra Pradesh in the complex matrix of India’s parliamentary democracy can’t be understated.

The state played a decisive role in ousting the incumbent Atal Bihari Vajpayee-led BJP government in 2004. The Congress, then led by its stalwart leader Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy, won 29 out of the 42 Lok Sabha constituencies of the state, and helped the United Progressive Alliance edge past the BJP that was riding high on its raucous “India Shining” campaign.

In 2009, Reddy steered his party to another remarkable victory by increasing the tally to 34, again piloting the Congress’s return to power at the Centre.

Twenty years later, much of the state’s dynamics has changed. For one, Andhra Pradesh now has only 25 seats. The remaining 17 have gone to Telangana that was formed in 2014. The bifurcation of the state sounded the death knell of Congress hopes in Andhra Pradesh, even as it clawed back into power in Telangana in 2023 after almost a decade of struggle. Almost the entire Congress unit shifted to the YSR Congress formed by Rajasekhara Reddy’s son Jagan Mohan Reddy, who registered one of the biggest victories in the 2019 assembly elections against its principal rival Telugu Desam Party led by N. Chandrababu Naidu.

Amidst all the political churn, the BJP, too, has remained unsuccessful in making inroads in the state. It has attempted to poach influential leaders from both the TDP and YSR Congress, pressed both the regional parties to toe its political line in the Parliament by keeping federal funds tightly under its control, and kept the Sword of Damocles hanging over both Jagan and Naidu’s heads through central investigation agencies. The carrot and stick approach adopted by the Narendra Modi-led BJP towards both the YSR Congress and TDP, however, has alienated the saffron party further in the state.

Both regional parties have taken a special dislike towards the BJP for its alleged blackmailing tactics and are willing to work with the Centre only for convenience instead of any true ideological reasons. The tricky, multi-layered politics that is currently unfolding in Andhra Pradesh, set to witness another round of simultaneous assembly and Lok Sabha polls in 2024, is a case in point.

The TDP scion Nara Lokesh in a recent interview to The Wire said that it has adopted an “equidistant policy” towards both the Congress and the BJP. Given that the TDP has historically been an anti-Congress platform and has been a part of the BJP-led NDA earlier, the new posturing is significant. Lokesh denied all reports that spoke about a possible TDP-BJP alliance in the near future. The party’s campaign is focussed on Jagan’s alleged “autocratic” regime that, according to Lokesh, has resulted in an all-round disenfranchisement of democratic institutions in the state – from Panchayats to Vidhan Sabha. “Over-centralisation” of governance during Jagan’s rule, Lokesh said, has led to corrupt and crony practices in the state. The party has also attacked Jagan for supporting many of the Centre’s controversial bills in the Parliament.

TDP’s line of canvassing bears stark resemblance to the larger opposition’s campaign against the Modi government. Most TDP leaders will privately tell you that the Jagan government is no different from the Modi government in the way it functions. Yet, TDP has not taken an open stance against the Centre, something that it did when N. Chandrababu Naidu walked out of the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) in 2018. It has allied with the Pawan Kalyan-led Jana Sena, which is a part of the NDA in Telangana. Lokesh said that Jana Sena is a BJP ally only in Telangana but not in Andhra Pradesh, as he asserted his party’s “equidistant” policy from both the Congress and the BJP.

Observers in the state believe that any hope of an alliance between the TDP and the BJP were dashed by Jagan when his government arrested Naidu in a corruption case, making it difficult for the saffron party to officially ally with the TDP. Given the BJP’s anti-corruption rhetoric, Jagan practically checkmated both its principal rival TDP and the BJP, while sending a strong message to the Centre to let both the regional parties fight it out on their own in the upcoming elections.

Jagan, however, is beset with his own problems. In 2019, he consolidated a majority of minority and Dalit votes in his favour. He has pursued a strong secular political line in the last five years, while also delivering a slew of welfare measures to the poor. However, his support to the Union government’s controversial bills in Parliament may have also driven away a substantial section of his supporters, especially those who have been traditional Congress workers, from his party.

Ahead of the 2024 elections, he is struggling to keep his house in order. His sister YS Sharmila, who was sidelined in the party, recently joined the Congress and is touted to play a prominent role in Andhra politics in the days to come. Her last-minute decision to withdraw from the recent electoral race played an important role in Congress’s victory in Telangana assembly elections. At the same time, many of his MLAs are facing strong anti-incumbency on the ground, forcing Jagan to announce many new faces as his party’s candidates. Moreover, his welfarist measures for the poor have alienated a large chunk of middle class voters.

How much his own popularity among the poor counts in the upcoming assembly elections in the face of such hurdles remains to be seen, as a class divide among the voters is increasingly becoming more and more palpable. Naidu, on the other hand, has shown his ability to resuscitate after a string of failures.

The Telugu parties remain malleable enough to move towards both UPA and NDA. Ahead of the 2024 Lok Sabha polls, the BJP, which tried hard to gain a foothold in Andhra Pradesh, seems to have resigned to the fact that it has no hope of any electoral gain in the coastal state. It will mostly rely on its alleged pressure tactics to sway one of the regional parties in the case of a complicated post-poll scenario. Regional concerns and state’s autonomy will dictate political decisions made by both the TDP and YSR Congress.

In contrast, the Congress has laid the foundation stone for its revival in Andhra Pradesh by inducting Y.S. Sharmila. However, its way forward currently seems to be a long-winding and laborious one.

This piece was first published on The India Cable – a premium newsletter from The Wire & Galileo Ideas – and has been updated and republished here. To subscribe to The India Cable, click here.

AP: Political Parties Want Voter Privacy Protected – As Long as They Are Not in Power

No matter how much privacy Indians demand, the current technical and governance setup does not allow any political party to change what is already built.

It was the YSR Congress (YSRC) Party that first demanded the protection of voters’ privacy in Andhra Pradesh during the 2019 elections. The demand was made in the backdrop of Telugu Desam Party (TDP) members getting caught with the Seva Mitra app, containing colour photos and 360-degree profiles of voters.

The political tides have changed. Now, the Jana Sena Party is demanding “My Data, My Right”, protesting against the Jagan Mohan Reddy government’s village volunteers collecting personal data. The TDP, too, has joined in, demanding an end to 360-degree profiling. Then what is the problem with the voters’ privacy?

It was the TDP government from 2014 to 2019 that pioneered 360-degree profiling in Andhra Pradesh.

Retired bureaucrat J. Satyanarayana, who was the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) chairman and IT advisor to the Andhra Pradesh government, championed the cause of real-time governance and 360-degree profiling in the state.

But Andhra Pradesh was the second state to do the profiling.

Telangana had already started implementing it before Andhra Pradesh did with its Samagra Kutumba Survey and Integrated People Information Hub. Both Telangana and Andhra Pradesh were the ground zero of these new experiments of pushing Aadhaar-based 360-degree profiling.

Imported model

This model of governance and push for Aadhaar is not native to India. It was primarily experimented in Estonia in Europe and later suggested to our bureaucrats to be adopted. The early experiment of the AP Smart Card project in 2006 under Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy was the precursor to the Aadhaar project, even before Nandan Nilekani adopted it to be enforced across the country.

United Andhra Pradesh was the laboratory to experiment with the implementation of new governance models and technologies because of globalisation and its IT sector’s place in global trade. The bureaucracy was open to experimenting with anything new in the population to be ahead in global supply chains.

There are many problems with Aadhaar-based 360-degree profiling and there has been large-scale opposition to it, resulting in the Supreme Court of India recognising the fundamental right to privacy.

The Aadhaar project itself was heavily restricted by the court, saying it should be used only for welfare. Yet, the government passed new laws and rules to push it, disregarding the Supreme Court judgments.

The nature of the Aadhaar project and 360-degree profiling allows the government to track citizens from birth to death. This was necessary for the government in a post-26/11 India, where the government wanted to know everyone in the country.

However, the threat to civil liberties was always on since this information can be misused, affecting electoral democracy.

illustration: The Wire

The big player

The Aadhaar-Voter ID linking experiments in Telangana and Andhra Pradesh resulted in denying lakhs of voters the right to franchise in the 2018 assembly elections in Telangana. It also resulted in Aadhaar profiles being used for electioneering at large.

Yet, these issues were ignored – and continue to be ignored and unacknowledged – because the Indian IT sector pushes towards a data economy. Everything from Aadhaar, UPI, Digital Locker, and CoWIN are being exported to other countries just the way they have been imported into India from Estonia.

Welfare was always used as an excuse to push technologies that the Indian IT sector could use to create a domestic IT economy. Even today, the biggest opposition to the Privacy and Data Protection Bill is from the Indian IT sector, not politicians.

At every level of the Aadhaar litigation, it was not only the government but the Indian IT sector also opposed a pushback.

A strict Data Protection Bill will address issues of government data collection and how data is affecting elections and electoral politics. But these have been ignored by allowing the government to have exceptions to collect as much data as it wants to implement the rule of the law.

The present draft of the Digital Personal Data Protection Bill, 2022, is not good enough to protect the citizens’ rights and it is just a rubber stamp on all government projects. A Data Protection Bill respecting the Supreme Court’s verdict on Aadhaar and the fundamental right to privacy would not allow 360-degree profiling. The draft Bill envisages it.

The political opposition seen in Andhra Pradesh is necessary to make people understand the dangers of information and with successive pushbacks, the people may realise the larger problem irrespective of whose politics prevail. But notwithstanding the opposition to these systems, as long as they are not opposed nationally, they will remain the same way.

Wanted: Global demand

The TDP’s plan to draw the attention of home minister Amit Shah to the issue of 360-degree profiling in Andhra Pradesh is useless when the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) itself wants 360-degree profiling databases like NATGRID, CCTNS, and ICJS for surveilling the citizens.

Indians already have a fundamental right to privacy, but who will implement it when the governments at both the Centre and state support Aadhaar? No court can implement its order or get these systems changed unless there is a change in the technical architecture of the Aadhaar system.

For the moment, this will happen only if there is a global demand from countries that want to buy Aadhaar, to change its code and architecture to respect individual privacy. No matter how much Indians demand privacy, the current technical and governance setup does not allow any political party to change what is already built.

The MHA is introducing a Bill for amending the Registration of Births and Deaths Act, 1969, in the ongoing Parliament session. The Bill seeks to link all major government databases at the Centre and state to build the National Population Register using Aadhaar as a unique ID. The Bill puts into law the idea of 360-degree profiling and allows the MHA to track citizens from birth to death, something that has been widely experimented with and accepted in Andhra Pradesh.

No amount of opposition will change the 360-degree profiling even though everyone knows it is bad. Every political party in power will continue to push it and oppose it when in Opposition. This is how the Indian state functions: Aadhaar is now part of statecraft.

This article is published under Creative Commons Attribution–No Derivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-ND 4.0). Read the original here.

Special | Sifting Fact From Fiction in the High-Profile CBI Investigation That Charges an Andhra Pradesh MP With Murder

Under its third investigating officer in as many years, the bureau presents a dramatically different version of events with the same evidence, a political thesis, and technical data whose utility and veracity needs examination.

For those who came in late…

Y.S. Vivekananda Reddy, the brother of two-time chief minister of united Andhra Pradesh, the late Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy (YSR), was murdered four years ago in his house in Pulivendula on the intervening night of March 14 and 15, 2019.

At the time, the Telugu Desam Party (TDP) was in power, Viveka’s nephew and YSR’s son, Jagan Mohan Reddy (Jagan), was in the opposition and elections were just a month away. Jagan immediately blamed the TDP for his uncle’s murder. Naidu responded by accusing the family. (Political rivalry has a history of turning violent in Rayalaseema.) Jagan and family approached the court pleading for a CBI investigation, but Naidu had banished the CBI from Andhra Pradesh so the court sat on the plea

A year later, with TDP and BJP leaders crying foul, the court changed its mind and transferred the case to the CBI on March 11, 2020. The agency took 120 days to file its FIR and another 474 days to file the first chargesheet in October 2021, in which it named four accused for the actual murder or actus reus – (A1) Yerra Gangi Reddy, (A2) Sunil Yadav, (A3) Gajjala Uma Sankar and (A4) Dastagiri. But the CBI told the court it wanted to pursue the ‘larger conspiracy’ behind the murder.  

In its final chargesheet made public on July 20, 2023, four more accused have been officially added on charges ranging from murder, criminal intimidation, conspiracy and destroying evidence – Kadapa MP, chief minister Jagan’s cousin and the victim’s nephew Y.S. Avinash Reddy himself, his father Y.S. Bhaskar Reddy, their aide D. Siva Sankar and another party activist called Gajjala Uday. They are accused A8, A7, A5 and A6 respectively.

This is the first in a series exploring the CBI’s investigation into the high-profile murder case.

Kadapa/Hyderabad: It’s not clear if the high-profile investigation into the murder of Andhra Pradesh chief minister Jagan Mohan Reddy’s uncle Y.S. Vivekananda Reddy has ended, or if more revelations will follow. But 1,558 days after the murder and 1,226 days after the Andhra Pradesh high court transferred the case to it, the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI)’s second supplementary ‘Final Report’ was made public on July 20. 

In its latest report, the CBI has presented what it calls the “Motive behind the conspiracy”, a section elaborated in 14 numbered paragraphs across eight pages. It is a history essay about a political family. It starts with the following statement: “That Late Y.S. Vivekananda Reddy S/o Sh. Y. S. RajaSekhara Reddy (sic), aged about 68 years, was pursuing an active political carrier (sic)” [emphasis mine], lingers on the YSR Congress party and family dynamics and ends with the claim that Vivekananda Reddy was killed because he wanted YSRC leader Jagan Mohan Reddy to give the Kadapa parliamentary ticket to Jagan’s sister Y.S. Sharmila instead of Avinash.

In a complex and fluid case such as this, it’s best to look at the CBI case as it is presented. 

The political ‘carrier’

For some inscrutable reason, the CBI chargesheet begins with Jagan’s grandfather Raja Reddy, with a 2,000-word description of various elections, with a spin uniquely its own. Since its conspiracy case is built around a political thesis, it needs to be examined in detail. 

Claim 1 (Para 16.23):

“It is revealed that despite defeat in the MLC election 2017, Y.S. Vivekananda Reddy was very active for the Lok Sabha Elections 2019… he wanted that MP ticket from Kadapa Lok Sabha constituency should either be given to himself or Smt. Y. S. Sharmila (sister of Shri Y. S. Jagan Mohan Reddy) or Smt. Y.S. Vijayamma (mother of Shri Y. S. Jagan Mohan Reddy) instead of Y. S. Avinash Reddy (A-8), incumbent Lok Sabha MP…. Moreover, Y.S. Vivekananda Reddy believed that Y.S. Avinash Reddy (A-8) was a weak candidate for MP Kadapa and therefore he wanted that Y. S. Avinash Reddy (A-8) should be given MLA ticket from Jammalamadugu.”

Regarding the claim of ‘active’ politician

Vivekananda Reddy had won his last election in 2004, 15 years before his murder. He was a YS family elder and Kadapa district manager for the party, but he was more than a decade past his “active politician” days. 

Vivekananda Reddy’s daughter, Narreddy Suneetha, told the CBI at least twice, that her father had retired from active politics:

“…after his election against Mrs. YS Vijayamma (w/o late YS Raja Shekhar Reddy) in the year 2011, he had retired from active politics…”

Then again:

“I state that lots of people may have talked me (sic) about his potential candidature but I always stated that my father had retired.”

The CBI forgot to list the date, but Viveka last held public office eight years before his death, in April 2011, when he resigned as agriculture minister from the Congress cabinet of chief minister Kiran Reddy to fight against Vijayamma, his sister-in-law and Jagan’s mother in the 2011 Pulivendula assembly by-election. After his humiliating defeat to her, the Congress gave him the cold shoulder and did not renominate him to the legislative council. The fact that he had assaulted an MLA in the assembly may also have had something to do with it. 

Regarding claims about Kadapa Lok Sabha ticket and Avinash being a ‘weak’ candidate

That year, election dates were announced on March 10, 2019, and the final list of candidates on March 17, 2019. It was delayed by two days because of Viveka’s death. 

But long before elections were announced, Avinash was not just the incumbent MP; he was the chosen candidate for the Kadapa Lok Sabha constituency. The claim that he was a weak candidate flies in the face of his electoral record.

The numbers speak for themselves. Avinash Reddy first won the 2014 Kadapa parliamentary election with a margin of 1,90,323 votes, resigned from parliament in 2016 in support of the demand for the special status category to Andhra Pradesh and would go on to win in 2019 again, with a larger margin of 3,80,976 votes. He had humiliated no less than the veteran politician C. Adi Narayan Reddy, party-hopper and factionalist, then fighting on a TDP ticket. Adi Narayan was originally a Congressman who had sided with Jagan, then shifted to the TDP and is now with the BJP. 

The YSR Congress (YSRC) needed Avinash more than he needed them. 

Equally importantly, several people including Narreddy Rajasekhar (Viveka’s son-in-law) have told the CBI that not only had Avinash been chosen as the candidate but also that Viveka was actually campaigning for Avinash the day before his murder. He added:

“I state that although officially Sh. Avinash Reddy was not declared as MP candidate but he was unofficially accepted as MP Candidate”

“Yerra Gangi informed me that they were at Jammalamadugu town the previous night for canvassing for Sh. Avinash Reddy YSRCP, MP candidate (also a sitting MP)”

Vivekananda Reddy’s sister Y.S. Vimala is also emphatic that Avinash was always the candidate for the Kadapa MP seat. She told The Wire, “I have no idea why this is being brought up like this. There was never any question that Avinash would be the candidate. Viveka was campaigning for him before he died. I’m really distressed that they’re framing an innocent boy.” 

Regarding CBI’s claim about tickets for Sharmila or Vijayamma

Two years after Vivekananda Reddy’s death, Sharmila split away from her brother Jagan to form her own party in Telangana, the YSR Telangana Party (YSRTP). Vijayamma, Jagan’s mother, joined her in Hyderabad. 

There is a split in the family – but it’s between the brother and sister. There is no way now to know if Vivekananda Reddy spoke to Sharmila about the Kadapa seat, and Jagan has always been tightlipped about family fights. But rumour has it that Sharmila wanted a Rajya Sabha seat and was denied it. 

Y.S. Sharmila Reddy launches the YSR Telangana Party in Hyderabad, July 8, 2021. Sharmila’s mother Y.S. Vijayamma is also seen. Photo: PTI

Either way, there is no information in the public domain about Vivekananda Reddy playing a role in what happened between Jagan and his sister.

Second, even if Viveka had a difference of opinion with Jagan on the Kadapa ticket, this would have been of no consequence since anyone who follows Andhra politics knows Vivekananda Reddy had little political influence left with Jagan after 2011. It’s also common knowledge why that happened. 

The 2011 split

After the death in 2009 of Jagan’s father, Viveka’s brother and unified Andhra Pradesh’s two-time chief minister Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy, there was a power struggle in the state. In a move that surprised everyone, Congress president Sonia Gandhi refused to nominate Jagan to YSR’s vacant Pulivendula assembly seat. 

Her decision would herald the precipitous decline of the Congress in the state. In 2010, when Sonia Gandhi refused permission for Jagan’s ‘Odarpu Yatra (Consolation Journey) for those who had reportedly died by suicide following YSR’s death, Jagan went anyway. A year later, he left to form his own party, the YSRC. At that crucial moment, Viveka chose to side with the Congress.

In return, the then Congress CM Kiran Kumar Reddy made Viveka an MLC and agriculture minister. Jagan quit the Lok Sabha and by-elections were called for both his Kadapa parliamentary seat and his late father’s Pulivendula assembly seat.

Viveka’s son-in-law Narreddy Rajasekhar Reddy had political aspirations. He had returned from the US in 2008, when YSR was chief minister, and was eager to contest one of the two vacant seats. The entire Narreddy family went to Delhi to meet Sonia Gandhi but Rajasekhar was denied the opportunity.

In 2011, riding high on the belief that he, and not Jagan, was carrying forward YSR’s legacy, Viveka quit the state cabinet and fought the Pulivendula election on a Congress ticket. Daughter Suneetha, Rajasekhar and brother-in-law Narreddy Siva Prakash campaigned hard for Viveka. He lost miserably. When the Congress gave him the cold shoulder in the next round of MLC nominations, he was out in the cold for a while, had Jagan’s aide D. Siva Sankar’s Reddy’s house raided in 2012 to no avail, and eventually went back to the family. 

Still, Jagan had a soft spot for the man who had stood by his father. He was made Kadapa district in-charge with the rest of the family reporting to him. But Vivekananda Reddy would never again be the central pillar of the party that he had been in Rajasekhar Reddy’s time.

So, when Narreddy Suneetha told the CBI that her father “was looking to leave politics for about two and half decades so that YS Jagan Mohan Reddy can take over”, it was less than the complete story.

At the time of his death in 2019, Vivekananda Reddy had won his last popular vote 15 years ago, in 2004. He had made a bid for claiming YSR’s legacy in 2011 and lost. His daughter admits he had retired. His son-in-law admits Avinash was the chosen candidate for Kadapa. Vivekananda Reddy’s own sister Vimala says there was never any doubt. The numbers say Avinash wasn’t an also-ran.

Who is the CBI batting for here, when the victim’s own family and party say he had retired from active politics and was campaigning for the accused?

The 2017 MLC elections

Para 16.21 It isn’t quite clear what the criminal charge is here, but the political charge is that D. Siva Sankar (A5) wanted to contest the 2017 MLC elections. He was ‘close’ to Y.S. Bhaskar and Y.S. Avinash (A7 and A8). When Jagan gave the MLC ticket to Viveka in 2017, accused A5, A7 and A8, of not only ensured his loss but also “got annoyed and developed a grudge against Shri Y.S. Vivekananda Reddy.”

The chargesheet says that when Viveka found out that they had ‘sabotaged’ his election, “he scolded D. Siva Shankar Reddy (A-5), Y. S. Bhaskar Reddy (A-7) Y. S. Avinash Reddy (A-8)… Y. S. Vivekananda Reddy also scolded T. Gangi Reddy (A-1).”

It is possible to imagine Vivekananda Reddy getting upset at losing the 2017 MLC elections. In the Rayalaseema region, power makes everything possible. However, in statements that the CBI presented to the court, there is not even one statement from the 800 voters spread across 10 assembly constituencies who were allegedly bribed. Neither did the CBI speak to the man who won the seat, defeating Viveka – the TDP’s Marreddy Ravindranath Reddy, also known colourfully as B.Tech Ravi. 

It’s not clear what the evidence for the political charge is.

And it’s certainly not clear how it connects to a motive for murder – seasoned politicians ranging from the 30s to the 70s killed someone because they got scolded? At the onset of a general election in 2019, they went berserk over an MLC election that was already two years old?  

Then there is the dissonance about the claims: one that D. Siva Sankar Reddy, Bhaskar and Avinash easily sabotaged the victim’s chances in an MLC election, yet found him a formidable enough opponent to have him killed two years later. Meanwhile, Avinash won the 2014 and 2019 elections with margins of 1.9 and 3.8 lakh votes – which apparently is an irrelevant fact for the investigators. 

The cousins

To round off the political “carrier”, the CBI wants the court to read all of the above with the family tree it provides in Para 16.12 at the beginning of the chapter, called “Motive Behind the Conspiracy,” and Para 16.15 which says:

It is revealed that Shri Y. S. Bhaskar Reddy (A-7) and his family had always been ambitious that their family should also be active in politics on account of the fact that though Shri Y. S. Rajasekhara Reddy had always kept them in confidence but never let them actively participate in politics. Due to such circumstances, Shri Y. S. Bhaskar Reddy (A-7) and his family members could not fulfil their ambition of becoming MLC, MLA or MP etc. Whereas, descendants of YS family, Shri Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy and Y. S. Vivekananda Reddy were dominating in the politics. Further, Shri Y. S. Rajasekhara Reddy promoted his son Shri Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy, who became MP (Lok Sabha) in May, 2009 from Congress Party.

Briefly, the family tree is as follows: Y.S. Venkat Reddy, had two wives – Laxmi and Manga or Mangi, respectively. Y.S. Bhaskar Reddy (therefore, son Avinash) is the descendant of Laxmi. YSR (therefore, Jagan) and Y.S. Vivekananda Reddy (and Narreddy Suneetha) are descendants of Manga. 

So, Bhaskar and Viveka had the same grandfather but different grandmothers. That would make Avinash and Jagan step-great-grandsons. Cousins is simpler. The implication is that as ‘step-descendants’, there is a rivalry. 

Unlike in the north, in south India, cousins marrying each other is fairly common, and women marrying uncles too is not unknown. For instance, Narreddy Suneetha is married to her mother’s younger brother. So Viveka’s brother-in-law is his son-in-law as well.

In 1996, Jagan married into Bhaskar’s family – he married Bhaskar’s sister’s daughter. So the ‘step-descendants’ were now also connected by marriage. 

Also, after YSR’s death in 2009, while Viveka and his son-in-law jockeyed for power, it was Jagan’s wife and Bhaskar’s side of the family that quietly backed him for ten years, through multiple CBI cases, jail time and setbacks. 

Andhra Pradesh chief minister Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy with his mother Y.S. Vijayalakshmi during a function in Amravati, Friday, July 8, 2022. They are holding a bust of YSR. Photo: PTI

The other cousins

At the time of his death, Vivekananda Reddy was a 67-year-old retired politician, living alone in Pulivendula with a bevy of staff, some permanent, some itinerant. 

Despite his heart surgery six months earlier, his wife lived with the daughter in Hyderabad, visiting him once a month or two. His daughter saw him a couple of times a year. Only his son-in-law Narreddy Rajasekhar, with whom he ran a bunch of companies including Delta Steels at Pulivendula, came often. According to Suneetha:

“I further state that myself Dr. Suneetha Narreddy was not very comfortable with my father since 2011 when the news of my father having affair with Shaikh Shamim emerged. I used to visit my father’s house in Pulivendula only for short periods (one to three days).”

Also:

“I visited my father’s place at Pulivendula on Christmas in the year 2018. My husband used to visit Pulivendula often.”

In 2006, Viveka met Shameem, a young biotech post-graduate looking for a job at Hyderabad’s Dr Reddy’s Laboratories. He helped her get the job which she didn’t take. They met again in 2009 at a fast against the bifurcation of the state, fell ill due to fasting and were admitted to the same hospital. A year later, they got married in secret. At the time of his death, he had a four-year-old son with her called Shahenshah.

Y.S. Vivekananda Reddy with his second wife Shameem and son Shahenshah. Photo: By arrangement

Shameem told the CBI that when the first wife’s family found out about their marriage, threats were issued, and men sent by Viveka’s brother-in-law Narreddy Siva Prakash Reddy (NSPR) landed up at her house. Viveka initially promised to give her up, then changed his mind. There was allegedly some physical altercation between him and one of the brothers-in-law and then the situation reached a stalemate

The family had been estranged since 2011, when they found out that Vivekananda Reddy had changed his name to Akbar Shaikh and married a Muslim woman. He had also introduced Shameem as his wife to various members of the extended family – including his first wife Sowbhagya’s brother-in-law (her sister’s husband). 

Shameem herself is transparent about what Vivekananda Reddy did or did not do for her. She says he took care of her rent, monthly expenses, the marriage of her two sisters, added an extra floor to her house in Balapanuru and bought 8 cents of land in her father’s name. But her chief complaint was that Vivekananda Reddy did not visit his son often enough and cared too much about money. After his heart surgery in 2018, his chief worry also seems to have been what he would leave behind for his son and second wife after his death.

According to Shameem, he had promised to get their son admitted to Delhi Public School, Hyderabad, buy her a house, make a fixed deposit and buy some agricultural land in the son’s name to ensure his education.

Then, according to her, shortly before his death, Viveka’s name was removed from the list of cheque-issuing authorities from all companies in which he was a director. And he began to panic. 

Viveka’s panic

Caretaker Panditi Rajasekhar (mentioned as Pendinti in the chargesheet), who lived with Viveka 24 hours, saw up close his panic about finances towards the last weeks of his life, which landed him in the company of men like Dastagiri and Sunil Yadav, named by the CBI as his actual killers. 

“Vivekananda Sir started getting frustrated about money and started consuming excessive alcohol. One day I saw Yerra Gangi Reddy counselled Sir that money will not come by getting desperate and shouting. The boys will bring money shortly Vivekananda Sir used to scold abuse bad words to Yerra Gangi Reddy but still Yerra Gangi Reddy kept coming to meet Vivekananda Sir

Vivekananda Sir’s behaviour became abnormal. He used to smoke and drink excessively. He used to sit down on stairs….

But slowly, Vivekananda Reddy Sir’s condition started getting deteriorated… I got very scared seeing Vivekananda Sir’s condition. One day I called from my mobile phone no. 98XXXXXX29 to N. Raja Shekhar Reddy Sir on his mobile phone no. 99XXXXXX24 and informed him that some panchayat is taking place and Vivekananda Sir is waiting for huge money desperately. He is consuming excessive alcohol and cigerates [sic] and also lies down on stairs. Sometimes, I carried Vivekananda Sir inside his house.”

Panditi Raja wasn’t the only one who was aware that Viveka owed money to several persons in Pulivendula. CBI testimonies alone show that between eight creditors he had debts amounting to Rs 5 crore, Rs 4.05 crore of which was a capital plus interest on a business loan taken for Narreddy Rajasekhar’s failing factory. 

Y.S. Vivekananda Reddy. Photo: PTI

Property matters

Yet, Narreddy Suneetha told the CBI that her father’s properties were worth about Rs 50 crore. When asked why Viveka’s cheque signing power was terminated she said:

“I state that we were trying to get credit card. But due to bad credit history of my father, our companies were not able to take credits. So we made certain changes to the bank accounts, we took his name out of the cheque signing authorities etc. I recollect and state that some changes in accounts were made to obtain credit. It is also that I am director in the companies owned by my father and my husband.”

The fact is that she replaced her father as director in all these companies after his death. And while Vivekananda Reddy barely had money for his daily expenditure while alive, within months of his death, most of the outstanding loans were paid up by Nareddy Siva Prakash and Narreddy Rajasekhar’s company is back to doing well, according to Suneetha (Statement 3, page 3, para 5). 

And, in January this year, about 93 acres of land were transferred in the names of Suneetha and Sowbhagya. 

Suneetha told the CBI that Shameem never approached the family for a payout. 

Meanwhile, caste and religious lines are being drawn around the case. 

At one level, the YS family has been facing the combined attack of the TDP and the BJP for being “Christian Reddys”. Conspiracy theories abound on money coming from outside, “state-sponsored conversion” to Christianity, and the appointment of Y.V. Subbareddy as chairman of the Tirumala Tirupathi Devasthanams had its own ripple effect. On the other hand, the Narreddys, being US citizens, neatly side-step that problem. 

By now it is clear that the picture is not quite how the CBI and the ‘Final Report’ claims. The places where the CBI looks for family rivalry and thwarted ambition as a motive for murder do not seem to hold up. On the other hand, there are other scenarios of schisms in the family that may need to be explored, not to mention the fact that the entire family angle could be a diversion because the CBI has not explored the possibility of outside involvement at all. 

The CBI’s entire case is built on the testimony of two men – former driver Dastagiri, who was an accused before he turned approver, and alleged watchman Ranganna. But are they telling the truth? 

This will be explored in Part II.

Sarita Rani reports on the intersection of crime, politics, and law and has been a reporter for 20 years.

Andhra: Y.S. Jagan to Shift Chief Minister’s Office to Visakhapatnam in September

The decision is in line with the YSR Congress government’s plan to make the port city as the executive capital. The state will have three capitals henceforth – Kurnool to be the judicial capital, and Amaravati to be the legislative capital.

New Delhi: Andhra Pradesh chief minister, Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy, has said that he would start operating from Visakhapatnam in September this year.

The chief minister’s office is now currently located in Tadepalle in Guntur district, which is part of Amaravati. Amaravati was named the sole capital city of truncated Andhra Pradesh by the previous Telugu Desam Party (TDP) government. However, Reddy’s government has announced that the state will have three capitals: the executive capital in Visakhapatnam, the legislative capital in Amaravati, and the judicial capital in Kurnool.

This is for the first time Reddy has publicly announced the timeline for shifting his office to Visakhapatnam. “As part of decentralisating the administration, your son (Jagan) will set up his family (kapuram) also in Visakhapatnam in September,” South First quoted Jagan as saying at a public meeting held in Srikakulam district on Wednesday, April 19.

The chief minister’s office also put out a tweet indicating the same.

Earlier this year, in January, he had indicated that he would start operating from Visakapatnam “soon” whilst speaking at the International Diplomats Alliance Meet in New Delhi. “Here I am to invite you to Visakhapatnam, which is going to be our capital in the days to come. I would be shifting over to Visakhapatnam in the months to come as well,” he had said.

Reddy made the latest announcement during a public meeting at Naupada village in the Srikakulam district’s Sonthabommali Mandal. The chief minister chose to make such an announcement in Srikakulam because the district is closer to Visakhapatnam than the previous sole capital of Amaravati. Both Visakhapatnam and Srikakulam are part of the North Andhra region, which is considered more backward than the rest of the state. However, the port city of Visakhapatnam is the largest city in Andhra Pradesh.

The decision of the Reddy government to have three capitals has come under fierce criticism from opposition parties as well as from the people of Central Andhra Pradesh, where Amaravati is located. The plan has been challenged in the courts by several individuals and organisations in the state. Currently, the three-capital plan is under Supreme Court’s consideration.

Visakhapatnam Will Be Andhra Pradesh Capital, Says Jagan Mohan Reddy

The announcement may run into legal hurdles, as the Andhra Pradesh high court had ordered the government to develop Amaravati as the state capital.

New Delhi: Andhra Pradesh chief minister Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy on Tuesday announced that Visakhapatnam will be his state’s new capital, continuing the controversy over his plans to alter his predecessor N. Chandrababu Naidu’s decision to establish Amaravati as the capital.

Addressing the preparatory meeting for the Global Investors Summit, which will be held in Visakhapatnam in March, Jagan said that his office will also be shifting to the coastal city in the months to come.

“Here I am to invite you to Visakhapatnam which will be our capital in the days to come. I will also be shifting to Visakhapatnam in the months to come,” he said at the International Diplomatic Alliance meet in Delhi.

The move may run into legal hurdles, as the Andhra Pradesh high court had ordered the YSR Congress party government to develop Amaravati as the state capital in March last year, as envisioned by the previous Telugu Desam Party government. The court rejected Jagan’s plan to have three capitals – Visakhapatnam (executive capital), Amaravati (legislative capital) and Kurnool (judicial capital). The government has challenged the decision before the Supreme Court.

The decision to “decentralise” Amaravati, located between Vijayawada and Guntur, as the capital was challenged in the high court by farmers who had parted with their lands for the city’s development.

Even before the judgment, the Jagan government in November 2021 repealed the laws that were passed to develop three capitals in Andhra Pradesh for the purpose of “decentralised development”. However, it had said that it plans to bring in a more “comprehensive legislation” to go ahead with the plan.

According to The News Minute, TDP spokesperson Pattabhi Ram said Jagan’s announcement goes against the high court’s judgment. “The case is sub judice before Supreme Court. It is due for hearing. In such a context, how can the chief minister of Andhra Pradesh make a statement on an issue which is sub judice?” he said.

Over 1,600 Farmers Died by Suicide in Andhra Pradesh Since YSRCP Came to Power: CPI

The party claimed that farmers in all the 26 districts had lost crops due to excess rains and fake seeds. However, instead of addressing farmers’ issues, the government is conducting a door-to door programme, with no outcome.

New Delhi: The Communist Party of India (CPI) on Monday, December 19, claimed that 1,673 farmers had died by suicide since the YSR Congress Party government came to power in May 2019, the Hindu reported.

The party also claimed that farmers in all the 26 districts in the state had lost a sizeable amount of crop due to excess rains and fake seeds, the newspaper reported.

As part of a state-wide agitation plan, the party launched the ‘Chalo Collectorate’ programme in Anantapur, in which leaders carried damaged cotton, groundnut, sugarcane, pomegranate, paddy, and turmeric plants to the collector’s office.

They demanded that the state government help the farmers who had lost their crops because of fake seeds, untimely rains and lack of a decent minimum support price, the newspaper reported.

During the agitation, CPI state secretary K. Ramakrishna, party leaders D. Jagadeesh and C. Jaffer, and others were arrested when they tried to barge into the district collector’s office.

The party leaders and workers staged a dharna in front of the collectorate’s main gate. However, the police dispersed them and took the arrested leaders to the police station.

The arrested leaders were released on personal bonds later in the day, the report said.

Ramakrishna told the daily that the party will hold similar protests at Kurnool on Tuesday, December 20, and at Nandyal on Wednesday, December 21.

He added that instead of going to the affected farmers’ houses to understand their problems, the government was holding ‘Gadapa Gadapaku Mana Prabhutvam’ as a ritual with no outcome. (The Gadapa Gadapaku Mana Prabhutvam is a door-to-door mass contact programme to inform the public that it is the ruling party that is providing benefits.)

Also read: Andhra Pradesh: Trying to ‘Prove’ Farmer Suicides, Families Left in Lurch

According to the latest NCRB report, at least 1,065 people working in the farm sector ended their lives in Andhra Pradesh in 2021 compared to 889 in 2020 – an increase of 19%.

Andhra Pradesh stood at third place in farmer suicides in 2021, after Karnataka (2169) and Maharashtra (4,064). The data, however, didn’t mention why the people in the farm sector took their own lives.

Interestingly, chief minister Jagan Mohan Reddy had on June 14 said the state had no dues in regard to farmer suicides. However, a field study found that many farmers who own land and have the relevant papers didn’t receive any compensation, The Wire had reported. Some of them had also leased land.

Separately, according to the 77th round survey of the National Sample Survey Office, 2019, the farmers of Andhra Pradesh have the highest average debt – of Rs 2.45 lakh – among 28 states.

A thriving fake seeds racket has also become a serious problem in the state.

Several news outlets have reported cases of fake seeds being sold to farmers, in both Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, due to lack of monitoring by the state governments.

EC Asks YSR Congress To Publicly Deny Reports That Jagan Was Made Its ‘Lifetime’ President

“The Commission categorically rejects any attempt or even a hint of any organisational post being of permanent nature, being inherently anti-democracy,” it said in a letter to the party.

New Delhi: Against the backdrop of media reports that Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy has been appointed the permanent president of the YSR Congress Party, the Election Commission (EC) on Wednesday directed the party to make a “clear and categorical public announcement” contradicting the reports as the matter has the potential to create “confusion” in other political organisations.

The EC order came after the YSR Congress Party initially informed the poll panel about the “unanimous” election of Jagan Mohan Reddy as president of the party on July 8 and 9 this year, but did not categorically admit or deny the specific allegation forwarded by the EC regarding him being made permanent president for life.

The EC had sought a reply from the parry following media reports.

The YSR Congress Party later confirmed to the EC that the issue was reported in the media and that the party has launched an internal enquiry in this regard. It had also told EC that “necessary action” on the same will be taken by the party on finding the facts.

But the commission has now directed the party to make a “clear and categorical announcement publicly”, contradicting media reports on the appointment of Jagan as the permanent president. This will put the possibility of such confusion at rest, the EC said.

“The Commission categorically rejects any attempt or even a hint of any organisational post being of permanent nature, being inherently anti-democracy. Any action which denies the periodicity of elections is in complete violation of the extant instructions of the Commission,” the order said.

The EC said if not categorically contradicted, “it has the potential to create confusion in other political formations of such a move being condoned by the Election Commission of India and in turn can assume contagious proportions.”

(With PTI inputs)