Press
Briefing Thursday, 10th December 2009
Abhishek Singhvi addressed the media today.
Shri Abhishek Singhvi said that the Congress party
welcomed the initiation of the process in respect of the
formation of the state of Telengana because it was based
upon an emerging consensus and that is why the first
logical step had to be the expression of that consensus
in the form of a resolution of the State Assembly. He
said that this was the logical first step which alone
could take things forward and everything else would
follow. He said that the Congress party was and has been
very concerned about the health and well-being of Mr. K.
Chandra Shekhar Rao.
To a question, Shri Abhishek Singhvi said that the
Congress party’s stand was the most consistent of any
party in the country or in the State of Andhra Pradesh
on the Telengana issue. The TDP made it a flank of its
founding that it was opposed to the creation of
Telengana and opposed it very strongly and then did a
complete flip- flop in the recent past. He added that
the BJP did not even shed a crocodile’s tear on this
issue from 1998 to 2004. He further said that the CPI
and the CPM opposed it and subsequently in ‘Mahakutumb’
some of them diluted their stand. The Congress party on
the other hand in writing said that it was not at all
opposed to the idea of creation of Telanagana and would
promote it provided there was a consensus. He explained
the Congress’ logical stand on the issue saying that a
State of Telengana actual, real or potential could not
come about without two levels of consensus i.e.
consensus in the State Assembly for passing the
resolution and more importantly passing the
Constitutional Amendment in Parliament by 2/3rd
majority. That consensus had emerged as recently as last
week he said.
To a question, Shri Abhishek Singhvi said that one was
jumping too many bridges before even coming close to
them and the question of status of Hyderabad,
demarcation, Constitutional Amendment were secondary
questions and one had to first get through the primary
stage of a resolution in the state assembly. There was
no question of getting into nitty-gritties right now he
said. He further said that these things do not happen
instantly and in the natural progression of time things
would settle down.
To a question, Shri Abhishek Singhvi said that the
Congress party’s decision taken on Telangana had cannot
be equated to decisions in respect of other states and
regions in India like Harit Pradesh, etc as these were
matters which were conceptually, factually and
contextually different and hence could not be linked
remotely to the Congress’ stand on Telangana.
Tom Vadakkan
Secretary, AICC