KCR's Comeback: Why His Mass Movement Over Irrigation Projects Could Shake Telangana

Former Chief Minister KCR is stepping back into active politics with a major announcement. He plans to lead a mass movement across several districts, focusing on delays to a crucial irrigation project. KCR is pointing fingers at both the state Congress government and the central BJP-led NDA, accusing them of failing Telangana's interests. He also launched a broadside against current Chief Minister Revanth Reddy, criticizing his governance and personal attacks.

Key Points: KCR Announces Mass Movement Over Palamuru-Ranga Reddy Project Delays

  • KCR vows to lead a village-level movement in three districts over irrigation project delays
  • Accuses BJP-led Centre and Andhra CM Naidu of deliberately stalling the Palamuru-Ranga Reddy project
  • Criticizes the Congress state government for inaction and silence on the returned project report
  • Claims law and order has deteriorated and land prices have crashed since BRS lost power
3 min read

KCR announces mass movement over irrigation projects

Former Telangana CM KCR vows to launch a massive movement, accusing Congress and BJP of stalling key irrigation projects and endangering state interests.

"We have given sufficient time. Now I have decided to personally step in. There will be no niceties. We will fight to protect the interests of Telangana. - K. Chandrasekhar Rao (KCR)"

Hyderabad, Dec 21

After a long hiatus, former Telangana Chief Minister K. Chandrasekhar Rao will be hitting the road to lead a movement for the protection of the state’s interests and to what he called exposing Central and state governments over irrigation projects.

The Bharat Rashtra Samithi (BRS) chief announced that a massive mass movement would be launched over the delay in undertaking Palamuru-Ranga Reddy Lift Irrigation project across the Krishna River.

He made the announcement at a press conference on Sunday after presiding over a joint meeting of the party’s executive and BRS Legislature and BRS Parliamentary Party at Telangana Bhavan.

KCR, as the former Chief Minister is popularly known, vowed to expose the Congress government in the state and the BJP-led NDA government at the Centre.

“We have given sufficient time. Now I have decided to personally step in. There will be no niceties. We will fight to protect the interests of Telangana,” declared KCR, who had been largely inactive since losing power to the Congress party two years ago.

The BRS chief announced that the party would conduct a huge movement, touching every village in Palamuru (Mahabubnagar), Ranga Reddy and Nalgonda districts. He will also address a major public meeting.

He alleged that due to the Congress government’s inefficiency, the state’s interests in Krishna and Godavari river waters are endangered.

KCR questioned the Congress government’s inaction in taking up work on Palamuru-Ranga Reddy project during the last two years. He claimed that soon after BRS lost power, the BJP-led Centre sent back the Detailed Project Report (DPR).

He accused Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N. Chandrababu Naidu of forcing the NDA government at the Centre to stall the project.

“BJP-led NDA at the Centre has been opposing Telangana’s development from day one. After Chandrababu Naidu joined the NDA, blocking Telangana projects has become their agenda,” he said.

“Out of nine Permissions, we got six permissions, including environment clearance, but once Chandrababu Naidu came to power (in Andhra Pradesh) and joined the NDA, he made the Centre send back the DPR,” KCR said and questioned the Congress government’s silence over this.

“Is there even a government in the state, or is the real estate dealing their only priority?” he asked.

KCR claimed that there was all-round progress under the BRS rule. He said under the BRS rule, land values rose, and farmers lived with dignity. “Today, prices have crashed. There are no buyers even for one acre,” he said.

The former CM said under the BRS rule, Telangana was known for peace and law and order.

“Today, murders are happening in broad daylight. According to NCRB, the crime rate has gone up by 20 per cent,” he said.

KCR alleged that Congress came to power by cheating people with false promises and by spreading lies and canards.

The BRS chief came down heavily on Chief Minister Revanth Reddy for his personal attacks on him.

“He constantly spews venom and every day wishes death for KCR. Can a person have so much of a grudge? Politics should not stoop this low,” he said.

KCR also ridiculed Revanth Reddy for creating a hype over ‘Future City’. “Who needs this Future City. Hyderabad was not built overnight. It has 400-year history,” he said.

He remarked that Revanth Reddy’s guru is Chandrababu Naidu. “Fake MoUs won’t bring investments. If they did, Rs 20 lakh crore would have flowed into Andhra Pradesh,” said KCR, referring to the MoUs signed by Chandrababu Naidu during his previous term as the Chief Minister.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priyanka N
Interesting timing. After being silent for two years, now he remembers the people's issues? Feels more like political revival than genuine concern. The Congress government should respond with facts about what they've done on the project, not just counter-rhetoric.
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Rohit P
He is right about Chandrababu Naidu's influence. The moment TDP joined NDA, projects from Telangana started facing hurdles. This is a classic case of state politics affecting development. The farmers are the ones suffering. Hope this movement brings some pressure.
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Anjali F
While the irrigation issue is important, the personal attacks need to stop from all sides. "Wishing death" is unacceptable in our democracy. Can our leaders please debate policies instead of personalities? We deserve better discourse.
K
Karthik V
The point about the DPR being sent back is serious. If the Centre is blocking a project that already has environmental clearance, it's a violation of federal rights. This isn't just a Telangana issue, it affects how the Centre treats all opposition-ruled states.
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Michael C
Watching from outside, the river water disputes in South India seem endlessly complex. But the core issue is simple: people need water for farming and living. Political blame games don't dig canals. Hope the movement leads to actual solutions, not just more headlines.
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