The
Telangana agitation started in the first week of January 1969 in
Khammam when students demanded the implementation of the Telangana
safeguards enumerated in the Gentlemen's Agreement. It soon spread
to different parts of Telangana. The students got divided into two
groups: one demanding the implementation of safeguards and the other
demanding a separate Telangana state.
Non-Gazetted
Officers threatened direct action on January 11, 1969, if their
demands were not met. At the outbreak of the agitation, the Chief
Minister of Andhra Pradesh called for an All-Party Meeting and
announced that there was a perfect unanimity among the leaders to
'achieve full integration of Andhra Pradesh
State.
Two issues were discussed
and agreed upon:
1) The appointment of a
senior civil service officer to decide the question of Telangana
surpluses
2) Relieving of all
domicile persons from Telangana posts and providing jobs for them in
the Andhra region.
Following the All-Party
Accord of January 1969, the State Government issued orders for the
transfer of non-domicile public employees from Telangana. The
Government order on these transfers was the Public Employment Act of
1957. The rules were challenged by Andhra employees in the Andhra
Pradesh High Court. The High Court struck down the Public Employment
Act and the Rules. The Government appealed to the division bench of
the High Court.
A few other Andhra
employees led by A.V.S. Narasimha Rao filed a separate writ petition
in the Supreme Court on February 4, 1969, challenging the validity
of the Government Order and also the Public Employment Act of 1957
and the Rules. The Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court gave its
judgement on March 28 quashing the Government Order.
As a follow-up measure of
the All-Party accord, the Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh arranged
for the accounting of Telangana surplus funds. Kumar Lalith, Deputy
Comptroller and Auditor General, assessed the surplus funds as
Rs.34.10 crores.
The Telangana agitation
continued in the meantime. In the beginning it was leaderless. Madan
Mohan, a lawyer, formed a forum known as the Telangana Praja Samithi
(TPS) in February 1969. Chenna Reddy was sympathetic to these
leaders. Violence increased. Firing was often employed to disperse
violent crowds. The TPS organized conventions in many towns across
Telangana and soon got strengthened. Chenna Reddy came out openly in
support of a separate Telangana and K.V. Ranga Reddy gave his
blessings to the movement. Law and order continued to
deteriorate.
The Prime Minister Indira
Gandhi discussed the problem with leaders of the Opposition in
Parliament on April 9,1969. Except for the Swatantra Party all
others did not support a separate state. The Prime Minister Indira
Gandhi rejected the demand for the ouster of Kasu Brahmananda Reddy
from the leadership of the Andhra Pradesh Congress.
The Prime Minister
announced an Eight-Point Formula on April 11,1969 to ensure the
development of Telangana. In consonance with this formula, the
Centre appointed two committees:
1.
Committee of Jurists under
former Justice K.N. Wanchoo to suggest measures to provide
constitutional safeguards for the Telangana people in the matter of
public employment
2.
Committee under Justice
Bhargava to assess the revenue surpluses of Telangana.
In spite of these measures
the agitation mounted and grew in intensity. Bandhs, hartals and
processions were very frequent. Demand for a separate state became
the central theme of the agitation.
The Prime Minister visited
Hyderabad on June 4, 1969. She met leaders of different groups and
political parties. Subsequently, then Union Home Minister, Y. B.
Chavan, also visited Hyderabad to have discussions. Consensus
reached on two things:
(1) The dismissal of
Brahmananda Reddy's ministry.
(2) Proclamation of
Presidential rule in Andhra Pradesh.
Realizing that the
agitation was very strongly motivated, particularly about the
dismissal of his government, Brahmananda Reddy tendered his
resignation on June 27. The Congress leadership sent Congress
President Nijalingappa and a senior member Kamaraj Nadar, to seek
the verdict of the State Legislature Party. The Congress Legislature
Party affirmed its support to Kasu Brahmananda Reddy and suggested
that he should continue until normalcy was restored and a peaceful
changeover should be opted, giving the leadership to someone from
Telangana.
The Telangana leaders felt
that agitation politics alone would not be sufficient to dethrone
Brahmananda Reddy. This realization made the TPS enter into the
electoral politics. It won a by-election in June 1970, defeating the
Congress (R). By this time, the Congress had already split at the
national level and the TPS supported the leadership of Indira
Gandhi. Brahmananda Reddy also supported her.
In the December of 1970,
Indira Gandhi dissolved the Lok Sabha and announced a mid-term poll.
The TPS eventually contested all the 14 seats to Parliament from
Telangana and won 10 out of them. In spite of her overwhelming
majority in the Lok Sabha, Indira Gandhi did not give any leverage
to the TPS which opted for a compromise in September 1971 and merged
with the Congress (R). The deal involved:
1. Continuation of Mulki
Rules;
2. Separate budget and
accounts for Telangana
3. Separate Pradesh
Congress Committee for Telangana
4.Resignation of
Brahmananda Reddy in favor of a Chief Minister from
Telangana.
The Telangana agitation
did not achieve its important goal of a separate state, but secured
assurance of safeguards for the region. Its achievement was quite
significant. It wrested for the first time the Chief Ministership
from the politically dominant Andhras. However, the new Chief
Minister, P.V. Narasimha Rao (former Education Minister in the State
Cabinet) was an integrationist and politically a light weight in the
Reddy dominated Telangana politics. Ten portfolios in his ministry
went to Telangana, three of them belonging to the erstwhile
TPS.
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