Key Points

Telangana's Irrigation Minister N Uttam Kumar Reddy has dramatically called the Kaleshwaram project the biggest man-made disaster since India's independence. He presented a damning National Dam Safety Authority report revealing structural collapses in multiple barrages and massive financial losses. The minister accused former Chief Minister K. Chandrashekhar Rao of pursuing a politically motivated project without scientific principles. The state is now burdened with paying Rs 16,000 crore annually in loan repayments for what he describes as a complete engineering failure.

Key Points: Uttam Kumar Reddy Exposes Kaleshwaram Project Disaster

  • Massive Rs 16,000 crore annual loan burden for failed project
  • Three barrages structurally collapsed according to NDSA report
  • Project abandoned original scientific planning for propaganda
3 min read

Kaleshwaram is biggest man-made disaster since independence, says Telangana minister

Telangana Minister reveals massive financial and structural failures of Kaleshwaram project, blaming former CM K. Chandrashekhar Rao's mismanagement.

"The Kaleshwaram collapse is not a natural tragedy. It is a direct result of the BRS government's irresponsible decisions. - N Uttam Kumar Reddy"

Hyderabad, April 29

Telangana's Irrigation Minister N Uttam Kumar Reddy on Tuesday held the previous BRS government squarely responsible for the collapse of the Kaleshwaram project, calling it the biggest man-made disaster since Independence and the most expensive engineering failure caused by any state government in India.

He said Telangana is currently paying Rs 16,000 crore annually towards interest and instalments on high-cost loans borrowed during the BRS regime for this faulty project.

He was talking to the media while making a presentation on the final report of the National Dam Safety Authority (NDSA).

The Minister said the findings confirmed the structural collapse of all three barrages--Medigadda, Annaram, and Sundilla--and exposed the inefficiency, negligence, and deliberate mismanagement of the previous regime under former Chief Minister K. Chandrashekhar Rao.

Uttam Kumar Reddy said the Kaleshwaram project was not based on scientific principles but on a campaign of lies, propaganda, and false publicity. He reminded the public that the original plan was the Dr B.R. Ambedkar Pranahita-Chevella Project at Tummadihatti, for which even the then TRS government had sought national project status. However, KCR abandoned it and instead reengineered and redesigned everything to launch Kaleshwaram, falsely promising that both projects would be completed.

He alleged that instead of sustainable planning, the previous regime opted for hurried execution funded by high-interest loans, resulting in massive financial losses.

"All three barrages have structurally collapsed. I am giving this presentation to set the facts on record and show the people how their hard-earned money was misused," he said.

He pointed out that the barrages were originally designed to regulate just 2 TMC of river water. However, over 10 TMC was stored in each, driven purely by a publicity agenda, causing foundational damage and eventual collapse. The NDSA report confirmed that safety protocols were ignored, borehole investigations were inadequate, and maintenance records were absent, in violation of legal mandates.

"Signs of seepage and damage were noticed as early as 2019, but the BRS government ignored them. This criminal negligence caused financial losses of thousands of crores to Telangana," he said.

"The Kaleshwaram collapse is not a natural tragedy. It is a direct result of the BRS government's irresponsible decisions. It has dealt a serious blow to Telangana's finances and to the lives of farmers. Telangana is paying Rs 16,000 crore every year just in loan repayments for this failed project. This is public money lost due to a political stunt," Uttam Kumar Reddy.

The Minister said it was outrageous and shameful that KCR, instead of accepting responsibility, is now attacking the credibility of the NDSA and questioning its authority.

"This is a huge injustice to Telangana. It has deeply hurt the sentiments of our people and destroyed the credibility of our state in the eyes of the country. When we recently approached the Ministry of Jal Shakti seeking clearance for the Sitaramasagar project, the officials refused to consider it because our irrigation system had collapsed," he added.

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
This is heartbreaking 💔 Our farmers were promised so much, and now we're left with broken infrastructure and massive debt. How can any government be so reckless with public funds?
P
Priya M.
While I agree the previous government made mistakes, the current administration should focus on solutions rather than just blame games. We need accountability AND action to fix this mess.
S
Suresh T.
Rs 16,000 crore per year just in interest payments?! That's money that could have built schools, hospitals, and better roads. Criminal negligence indeed.
A
Ananya R.
The most shocking part is they ignored warning signs since 2019. This wasn't just incompetence - it was willful disregard for public safety and funds. Hope the guilty are held accountable.
V
Vikram J.
I work in civil engineering, and storing 5x the designed capacity is just asking for disaster. Basic safety protocols were ignored for political showmanship. Shameful!
K
Kavita S.
The article presents one side strongly, but I'd like to see the technical details from the NDSA report itself. Big claims need solid evidence, regardless of which party is involved.

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

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50