Amit Shah to Chair Central Zonal Council Meeting in Chhattisgarh on May 19

Union Home Minister Amit Shah will chair the 26th Central Zonal Council meeting in Chhattisgarh on May 19. The meeting will discuss over a dozen issues including inter-state coordination, crimes against women, and rural banking. Chief Ministers and senior officials from member states will attend. The council aims to enhance cooperative federalism and national development.

Key Points: Amit Shah Chairs 26th Central Zonal Council Meet on May 19

  • Amit Shah to chair 26th Central Zonal Council meeting on May 19 in Chhattisgarh
  • Focus on inter-state coordination and cooperation
  • Issues include crimes against women, rural banking, emergency response
  • Council includes Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh
3 min read

Amit Shah to chair 26th Central Zonal Council meeting in Chhattisgarh on May 19

Union Home Minister Amit Shah will chair the 26th Central Zonal Council meeting in Chhattisgarh on May 19, focusing on inter-state coordination and cooperation.

"Strong states make a strong nation – Prime Minister Narendra Modi"

New Delhi, May 13

Union Home Minister Amit Shah is set to chair the 26th meeting of the Central Zonal Council on May 19 in Chhattisgarh, where several issues of regional and national importance are expected to be discussed, including strengthening inter-state coordination and improving cooperation in sectors such as nutrition, education, healthcare, electricity, urban development and cooperatives.

The Central Zonal Council comprises the states of Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Uttarakhand and Uttar Pradesh. According to officials, the meeting is expected to deliberate on more than a dozen important issues aimed at enhancing interstate cooperation and administrative coordination among member states.

Among the key issues likely to be discussed are faster investigation and disposal of crimes against women and children, strengthening rural banking connectivity, implementation of emergency response systems and improving delivery mechanisms in public welfare sectors.

The meeting will be attended by the Chief Ministers of the member states, along with two senior ministers from each state government. Chief Secretaries and senior officials from the participating states, as well as senior officers from the Central government, are also expected to take part in the deliberations.

This meeting is being organised by the Inter-State Council Secretariat under the Ministry of Home Affairs, in collaboration with the Chhattisgarh government.

The 25th meeting of the Central Zonal Council was held on June 24, 2025, in Uttar Pradesh's Varanasi.

Under Sections 15 to 22 of the States Reorganisation Act, 1956, five Zonal Councils were established. The Union Home Minister is the chairperson of these five Zonal Councils, and the Chief Ministers, Lieutenant Governors, and Administrators of the member states and Union Territories are their members.

Among the member states, the Chief Minister of one state acts as the vice-chairperson of the council on a rotational basis for a period of one year. In addition, each Governor nominates two ministers from the respective state government as members of the council.

Each Zonal Council has also formed a permanent committee at the level of Chief Secretaries. Issues proposed by the states are initially presented to the permanent committee of the concerned Zonal Council for discussion.

After consideration by the permanent committee, the remaining issues are then presented to the Zonal Council meeting for further deliberation.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi has emphasised the need to leverage cooperative and competitive federalism for the all-round development of the country.

With the belief that strong states make a strong nation, the Zonal Councils provide a structured mechanism for dialogue and discussion on issues affecting two or more states or the Centre and states, and through this, serve as an important platform to enhance cooperation.

The role of the Zonal Councils is advisory; however, over the past few years, these councils have proven to be an important factor in promoting healthy bonds of mutual understanding and cooperation in various fields. With the cooperation of all state governments, central ministries, and departments, a total of 64 meetings of the various Zonal Councils and their permanent committees have been held in the last eleven years.

The Zonal Councils also discuss broad issues of national importance, including the speedy investigation of cases of sexual offenses against women and children and the implementation of Fast Track Special Courts (FTSC) for their swift disposal; providing brick-and-mortar banking facilities within the designated area of every village; implementation of the Emergency Response Support System (ERSS-112); and various regional-level common interest issues such as strengthening nutrition, education, health, electricity, urban planning, and the cooperative system.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
It's good that faster investigation of crimes against women is on agenda. But we need action, not just meetings. My district still doesn't have proper women help desks in police stations. Zonal councils can push states but ground reality is different.
V
Vikram M
As a Chhattisgarh resident, I'm happy the meeting is in Raipur. We have unique issues like naxal-affected areas needing better coordination with MP for security operations. Hope they discuss rural road connectivity too - many villages still cut off during rains.
J
James A
Interesting to see how India's federal structure works through these councils. I'm an expat working in Delhi and always amazed at how states cooperate on issues like electricity distribution and disaster management. This meeting could set important precedents.
R
Rohit P
Central Zonal Council is good but why only UP, MP, Uttarakhand and Chhattisgarh? What about Bihar and Jharkhand - they share borders with UP and MP and have similar issues. But I guess that's the Eastern Zone. At least they're discussing ERSS-112 implementation which is urgent for women's safety.
K
Kavya N
Brick-and-mortar banking in every village is long overdue! As someone from a Uttarakhand hill village, we still travel 30km for basic banking. Couple this with better electricity coordination between states and we might actually see development. But these meetings often end with just photo ops. 🤷‍♀️

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