10 years of Telangana state: A brief look at how India’s youngest state was formed (2024)

June 2 is Telangana Formation Day and this year marks a decade since India’s youngest state was carved out of Andhra Pradesh. The ruling Congress government in Telangana celebrated the event while emphasising the party’s role in the state formation process.

Under the Congress-led UPA government, the Andhra Pradesh Reorganisation Act of 2014 was passed for a separate Telangana state, the demand for which had been raised for decades.

Capital city Hyderabad saw celebrations at the Parade Grounds on Sunday, where Chief Minister Revanth Reddy unveiled a new version of the state song ‘Jaya Jaya he Telangana’. Written by Telangana poet Ande Sri, composer M M Keeravani, who won the Oscar for his work in the film ‘RRR’, was behind the music.

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A video from former Congress President Sonia Gandhi was also played, where she paid homage to those who sacrificed their lives for the cause of statehood to Telangana. What is the story of the state’s formation? We explain the story in three parts.

PART I: Princely State of Hyderabad, post-independence Hyderabad State

Telangana has a complex history and pre-Independence, it was a part of the princely state of Hyderabad. Present-day Telangana comprised the state’s south and southeast Telugu-speaking regions. The city of Hyderabad lay at the heart of the larger region, but unlike the areas around it, it was dominated by the Urdu-speaking Muslim elite. Ruled by Nizam Osman Ali Khan, Hyderabad was among India’s largest and most prosperous princely states.

In 1945, a communist-supported rebellion broke out in Telangana against the prevailing jagirdari (land revenue) system. The Nizam’s response was brutal, unleashing a local militia known as the Razakars on the protesting peasants. Over the next few years, the Razakars committed numerous atrocities on Telangana’s population and grew increasingly dominant in political matters.

After Independence and the Partition in 1947, the Nizam of Hyderabad was unwilling to accede to India, like most other princely states had done, even after multiple rounds of discussion with Sardar Patel’s States Ministry. In the meantime, the Razakars under Kasim Razvi terrorised the population, lest any attempts to overthrow the Nizam be made.

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In order to usher in a modicum of stability in the state, India signed the Standstill Agreement with Hyderabad in November 1947, which stated that all administrative agreements that were in place between the Nizam and the British Crown would continue between the Nizam and India.

However, almost instantly, the Nizam violated the terms of the agreement. Not only did he let the Razakars run amok, he also restricted exports of precious metals to India, began negotiating with Pakistan, and stopped accepting the Indian rupee as legal tender. The Razakars even began carrying out “border raids” in neighbouring states.

As the state started falling into anarchy, India intervened militarily, launching “Operation Polo” in September 1948. Within a week, India had taken control of Hyderabad’s administration.

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On January 26, 1951, when India became a republic, Hyderabad was accorded the status of a Part-B state, with the Nizam as the Rajpramukh and an elected chief minister. As history would have it, this state lasted less than six years.

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PART II: Linguistic reorganisation and the creation of Andhra Pradesh

While there were talks of statehood for Telangana in the 1950s, the region got merged with Madras and later Andhra Pradesh.

The erstwhile Madras state was huge, covering areas which spoke all the major languages of South India. In 1952, Potti Sriramalu went on a fast-unto-death demanding a separate Telugu state. He died after 56 days, triggering unrest across the region and eventually leading to the formation of the Andhra State out of the north and northeastern regions of the Madras state in 1953.

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Moreover, Sriramalu’s death made the government seriously reconsider its position on linguistic states. The States Reorganisation Committee (SRC) came into existence in 1953 and submitted its report two years later. Notably, it recommended that Hyderabad be reorganised linguistically – the Marathi-dominant Marathwada would be integrated into the bilingual Bombay state and southwestern Kannada-dominant districts would be integrated into the Mysore state.

10 years of Telangana state: A brief look at how India’s youngest state was formed (2) Celebrations at Azad Maidan, Mumbai, after a Bill to carve out Telangana state out of Andhra Pradesh was passed by Lok Sabha in 2014. (Express photo by Ganesh Shirsekar)

What was contentious, however, was the status of the Telugu-dominant Telangana region. While Andhra wanted to merge with Telangana to create a united Vishalandhra, the SRC itself did not favour this, instead recommending Telangana be a separate state till at least 1961, when it would be allowed to voluntarily merge with Andhra, if it so wished.

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But the States Reorganisation Act passed in 1956 ignored this recommendation, merging Andhra State and Telangana into a single state called Andhra Pradesh, with Hyderabad as the capital. For some, like Bharat Rashtra Samithi (BRS) leader K Chandrasekar Rao who was the first CM of the state and active in the state movement, this was the point where a struggle for a separate Telangana state began.

PART III: The struggle for Telangana and the creation Telangana State

The sense of Telangana as a separate entity predated even Independence. Under the rule of the Nizam, the Telangana region had in-force Mulki Rules – domicile rules which ensured that only native residents were able to get government jobs in the region.

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Since Independence, protests regularly broke out in Telangana demanding the strict adherence to these rules, the first one being in 1952. However, it was in January 1969, after the creation of Andhra Pradesh, that the region witnessed its most widespread protests yet. While the government sprung to action, promising to “transfer all non-Telangana employees holding posts reserved for Telangana domiciles”, the issue refused to die down.

The protests gave birth to the Telangana Praja Samiti, which called for a separate Telangana state. Over the next few years, Mulki Rules were at the centre of protests as well as legal cases.

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Finally, in September of 1973, Indira Gandhi initiated the 32nd Amendment to the Constitution, which declared that Andhra Pradesh would be divided into 6 zones, with reservation for jobs being decided on the basis of zones. As a result, the original Mulki Rules Act was repealed, and the movement for Telangana lost some steam.

It would finally be revived by KCR in 2001. A member of the Telugu Desam Party (TDP), he resigned and established his own political party – the Telangana Rashtra Samithi (TRS) (now called the BRS) with the singular aim of creating a new state of Telangana with Hyderabad as its capital.

While his performances in polls were underwhelming, the sudden death of Andhra Pradesh’s Chief Minister Y S Rajsekhara Reddy of the Congress in 2009, presented an opportunity to KCR. Reddy was the tallest leader of Andhra Pradesh at the time and after his death, political turmoil ensued. On November 29, 2009, KCR began a fast-unto-death demanding statehood. The Congress, which was also under pressure nationally then, relented within 10 days – promising the creation of the state of Telangana.

After extensive discussion on the specifics of the state boundary and the choice of capital (for the new Andhra State), Telangana came into existence around four and a half years later, in 2014. Hyderabad was chosen as the joint capital of both Andhra and Telangana for a period of ten years, after which Andhra would have to shift its capital.

10 years of Telangana state: A brief look at how India’s youngest state was formed (2024)

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