This Article is From May 24, 2014

Seemandhra Employees Cannot Work in Telangana, Says K Chandrasekhar Rao

Hyderabad: Telangana Rashtra Samithi (TRS) leader K Chandrasekhar Rao has once again stirred the hornet's nest. Trying to reassure people that government jobs in Telangana will stay with the people of the region, Mr Rao said people from Seemandhra who opt to work in Telangana, will face consequences. (Also Read: KCR urges Telangana voters to 'throw out Andhra parties')

"Telangana employees should work for Telangana and Seemandhra employees for Seemandhra. I have been saying that from the beginning. But those presumably with more wisdom disagreed," Mr Rao said. (Also Read: TRS chief cheated Congress, says Sonia Gandhi)

"How can a Telangana government, with a Telangana chief minister and a Telangana chief secretary have people from Seemandhra working for them? Does it make any sense at all? If they still insist and force some 50 Seemandhra employees on us, we won't let them inside the gates of the Secretariat. Or we will transfer them to some god forsaken place," Mr Rao thundered to cheers from the audience. (TDP, TRS Win Seemandhra, Telangana Assembly Polls)

On June 2, Andhra Pradesh will be formally bifurcated to create India's 29th state of Telangana. With the division drawing close, such statements are being seen as divisive and creating fear.

Sharat Chandra, a section officer from Seemandhra, whose wife works as a deputy director with the government says, "After 15 years here, my wife and I both decided to go to Seemandhra because of controversial and hostile atmosphere here. What should families where children have grown up here and have nativity here do, if the parents are technically natives of Seemandhra? Families will be split just the way the state has been."

Chinni Krishna, a government employee from Seemandhra says KCR is only adding to the emotional divide between employees of the two regions.

"No Seemandhra employee is willing to work in this place. 90 per cent would any way opt to go back. But even the 10 per cent who wanted to be here for some specific reason, would now rethink, considering they are not going to be made to feel welcome," Mr Krishna said.

An official committee set up for the division has sought information on nativity but an option to make a choice is meant to be given to employees.

Post bifurcation, political leaders are expected to behave like statesmen, providing the healing touch. But statements like these only add salt to sounds, to ensure no healing happens soon.
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