
Opposition parties call for a united struggle to protect riparian rights of Andhra Pradesh
The Hindu
Opposition parties, farmer unions call for united struggle to protect AP's riparian rights.
Leaders of opposition parties and farmer unions on Wednesday called for a united struggle cutting across party lines to protect the riparian rights of Andhra Pradesh at a time when the Centre issued a gazette notification for redistribution of the Krishna waters with a view to allegedly gain political mileage in poll-bound Telangana.
Chairing a roundtable conference to unite the farmers cutting across party lines for a protracted struggle to assert the rightful share of Andhra Pradesh of 512 tmc ft decided by the Brijesh Kumar tribunal and that of Telangana of 299 tmc ft, Communist Party of India(CPI) State Secretariat memmber G. Eshwaraiah said drought would be a recurrent feature if the present allocation of the Krishna waters was altered to the detriment of the lower riparian State.
Not a single acre of land could be cultivated this year under the Nagarjunasagar Right Bank Canal ayacut in the State, including Prakasam district, which was in the tail-end due to construction of new projects in the upper riparian States of Telangana and Karnataka, said TDP farmers’ wing leader K.Srinivasa Rao.
It was unfortunate that the Centre had issued the gazette notification when Chief Minister Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy was in New Delhi, said CPI(ML) New Democracy State vice-president Ch. Venkateswarlu.
Inflows into the reservoirs across the State had dwindled in the wake of the BJP-led Government at the Centre granting national project status to the controversial Upper Bhadra project in Karnataka and earmarking ₹5,300 crore for the project in the Union Budget at the time of the Assembly elections in that State, Samyukta Kisan Morcha Prakasam district convenor Ch. Ranga Rao said.
Farmers in the drought-prone district suffered due to prolonged delay in completion of the Veligonda project designed based on floodwaters obtained in the Krishna river, said Jana Chaitanya Vedika president V. Lakshman Reddy.

Currently, only the services in the 32 series stop at the section of the road adjacent to the Broadway terminus, temporarily closed on account of reconstruction work. Small traders association tells R. Ragu that ensuring the services now accommodated at the temporary terminus at Island Grounds stop at NSC Bose road would benefit visitors to the markets in Parrys

The silent reading movement in the Mylapore-Mandaveli-RA Puram area showed up first at Nageswara Rao Park around two years ago, with modest ambitions, when Balaji launched it along with other reading enthusiasts from the region. This initiative has now moved parks, and seems to set to get entrenched in one. Due to renovation work at Nageswara Park, the reading session became irregular. With the Nageswara Rao park work gaining more surface area, it had to be shifted elsewhere. And it seems set to continue with a newly discovered green patch in RK Nagar in the Sundays to follow.











