IANS/Hyderabad

 

 

A man walks past Telangana Joint Action Committee (TJAC) activists blocking traffic over a road in Hyderabad yesterday

Road traffic was affected in several parts of Telangana in Andhra Pradesh yesterday as protesters took to the streets, demanding separate statehood to the region.

Activists of the Telangana Rashtra Samiti (TRS), the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and other constituents of the Telangana Joint Action Committee (JAC) squatted on the roads.

Leaders and hundreds of activists in Hyderabad and nine other districts of Telangana were detained as the protests led to huge traffic jams.

JAC convener M Kodandaram, BJP leader Bandaru Dattatreya, TRS leaders and a large number of activists were taken into custody at L B Nagar crossroads on the outskirts of Hyderabad when they blocked the traffic on the Hyderabad-Vijayawada highway.

Carrying flags of their parties and raising slogans of ‘Jai Telangana’, the protesters squatted on the roads. Some women activists sang folk songs of Telangana to the beat of drum.

“The government is using the police to deny us the democratic right of staging a protest. This is unjust,” Kodandaram told reporters as he was physically lifted by the police and put into a van.

TRS leader N Narasimha Reddy and scores of party activists were held when they blocked the traffic at RTC crossroads in the heart of Hyderabad.

In Medak district, TRS legislator Harish Rao led the protests near Siddipet town. Hundreds of trucks, buses and other vehicles were caught in a huge traffic jam on the Hyderabad-Mumbai highway as people squatted on the road and were seen cooking and playing games.

Students, lawyers and employees of public sector undertakings also joined the protests for separate Telangana in Karimnagar, Warangal, Adilabad, Nizamabad, Ranga Reddy, Nalgonda, Mahabubnagar and other districts.

With the massive protests after nearly a week-long lull, the pro-Telangana parties have intensified their campaign demanding a bill for the formation of separate Telangana state to be introduced in the budget session of parliament.

The region had been witnessing sporadic protests since January 6 when the Srikrishna Committee’s report was made public. The report suggested six options that included formation of a Telangana state but strongly favoured a united Andhra Pradesh.

The pro-Telangana parties as well as leaders among the ruling Congress and the main opposition Telugu Desam Party (TDP) are demanding that the government accept only the fifth suggestion of the Srikrishna panel and grant separate statehood to Telangana.