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Karnataka News Updated May 20, 2026

Parameshwara Defends Karnataka Govt Ceremony, Clarifies Tumakuru District Proposal

Karnataka Home Minister G Parameshwara defended the government's three-year achievement ceremony, calling opposition criticism "positive." He clarified that Tumakuru's name and boundaries will not change, despite a concept to link it to Bengaluru for investment. Parameshwara also defended the five guarantees as pro-poor and dismissed rumors of government changes. He noted that the ceremony aimed to communicate the government's achievements to the people of Karnataka.

G Parameshwara responds to criticism of "Pragathiyatta Karnataka" convention, clarifies district proposal

Tumakuru, May 20

Karnataka Home Minister G Parameshwara on Wednesday addressed criticism from Opposition leaders over the government's three-year achievement ceremony, calling it "positive criticism" and defending the event's intent.

Speaking in Tumakuru about the achievement ceremony, Parameshwara said the state government organised the ceremony to mark the completion of three years in office.

"Chief Ministers, Deputy Chief Ministers, all ministers and MLAs participated. We needed to send a message to the people of Karnataka that we have governed on your behalf for three years. We have implemented all the programmes we promised in our manifesto. We did what we said we would, and we will continue to do so," Parameshwara said.

Responding to remarks made by the opposition, he added, "Naturally, those in the opposition criticise the programmes of the ruling party. We take it as positive criticism. They ask how many programmes will be held in the next two years. One thing must be noted: no one forced people to attend. Claims that 1,52,000 people were coerced are incorrect. This was not an anti-people programme."

He explained that while government projects typically involve taluk-level meetings, the state-level event was held to communicate achievements to all of Karnataka. "There was no malicious intent. When a party is in power, opposition criticism is natural. Even amid debate, our duty is to provide good governance," Parameshwara said.

On five guarantees, he said, "We are for the people, for the poor. To whom have we given the five guarantees? To the people. Our intention is to help the poor. Even the privileged are benefiting, and they say they are fine. Our aim is to reach the entire community. Haven't crores of people now experienced the five guarantees? People understand that. How will critics understand it?"

Clarifying reports about Tumakuru being linked to the Bengaluru North district, Parameshwara said, "Tumakuru is just a concept. Did I say the name of Tumakuru will be changed? The name of Tumakuru will not change. Our area will not change either. It will remain as it is."

He added that the idea is to position Tumakuru as part of Bengaluru's growth corridor to attract investment.

"When Bengaluru becomes a part of it, someone in America will think they should invest here. Apart from that, we will not change anything. Not even a single boundary of Tumakuru has been moved," he said.

Citing Delhi-NCR as an example, he said, "They created NCR around Delhi and made three parts of Delhi. That is not new. Did they change Delhi? Did they change Noida? There is no need to misunderstand. Tumakuru will remain as it is, Tumakuru taluk will remain as it is."

"If Tumakuru district headquarters is conceptualised as part of Bengaluru, we will get more investment. Tumakuru will also be elevated. There is no other purpose or ill intent in this," he said.

Addressing rumours of changes in government after three years, Parameshwara said, "They are changing officers in the government. They are changing IAS, IPS officers. What else is the change? The change of positions is a matter left to the high command and the CM."

On a recent meeting at KJ George's house, he said, "They joined for lunch. Like-minded ministers eat lunch together. There is no need to say that means something has changed."

Asked about Minister KN Rajanna's statement that there would be a discussion in Keralam, Parameshwara replied, "You have to ask him that. I don't know."

— ANI

Reader Comments

Priya S

Honestly, this "Pragathiyatta Karnataka" thing feels like a big PR exercise. 1,52,000 people attendance claim is hard to believe - I saw photos and many chairs were empty. But I appreciate they're trying to communicate. The Tumakuru-Bengaluru North district idea is actually smart for development - see what NCR did for Delhi's growth. Just be transparent about the costs of these events. 💭

Vikram M

Tumakuru as part of Bengaluru growth corridor? Sounds like a plan to help real estate developers more. We've seen this before in India - "growth corridor" means land prices go up and common man gets pushed out. Parameshwara says no boundary change, but wait and watch. Delhi-NCR example is worrying - people there still face water and infrastructure issues. Need more clarity.

Siddharth J

"Positive criticism" - that's a very diplomatic way to handle opposition! I like that Parameshwara didn't get defensive. The five guarantees are genuine populist measures but they've put pressure on state finances. Hope they balance development with welfare. And that comment about lunch at KJ George's house being tiffin matters - politicians and their inner party drama! 😄

Kavya N

As someone from Tumakuru, I'm a bit worried about this "concept" of linking us to Bengaluru. Our district has its own identity and culture. Yes, development is needed - we need better roads, hospitals, and jobs. But don't reduce us to just being an extension of Bengaluru. We are Tumakuru, not Bengaluru North. Hope the government respects local sentiments while talking about investment. 😕

R < We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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