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Saturday 25 February 2012

Exposed — The Carnegie Connection …

Courtesy Gaddam Post

 

THE SCANDALOUS TITANIC SANK, BUT CHANDRA BABU NAIDU WON A CONSOLATION PRIZE FOR HIS SON: The Nara Lokesh Carnegie Mellon Admission Trail

HOW NARA CHANDRA BABU NAIDU GOT HIS SON ADMITTED TO CARNEGIE MELLON UNIVERSITY

Few days back Nara Chandra Babu Naidu released the so called letters from Robbe Kosak, Vice President, Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) and Garth Saloner, Dean, Stanford University and voila! Nara Lokesh the intelligent son of the most intellectual chief minister ever of any state in India is vindicated of all the accusations surrounding his admission into CMU. The histrionics of Naidu put up for the media only shows his sheer underestimation of the intelligence of the people. Will anyone with an iota of commonsense believe that a representative from a university will come forward and agree that they accepted money or received favors of some sort from an individual/ institution/state? Chandra Babu Naidu trying to vindicate his son with ‘the joke’ of the letters only exposes his vulnerability. It is no rocket science that Nara Lokesh was admitted to CMU just because he is the son of Chandra Babu Naidu, who was the flag bearer of the CMU’s shattered dream to control the web infrastructure in India. The connected dots that follow not only establish the true colors of Chandra Babu Naidu but also expose his dangerous side where he was caught red handed as a selfish politician jeopardizing the country’s safety and security.

Continue to read the entire article by clicking here

The Master Manipulator

CHANDRABABU NAIDU’S IMPRINT ON THE GOVERNANCE OF THE STATE – Part I
By Benami Buster
After he smuggled himself to power, in the most abhorrent ways seldom paralleled in Indian polity, by dethroning the leader of the masses, Sri NTR, by ways of political deceit and betrayal, which Chandrababu had come to personify over the years, he set upon the task of governance of the State.

Image Courtesy: http://sriks6711.wordpress.com/
As recent history would tell us, we would have leaders, who in the rumble and tumble of real-politik, take sides, switch sides, take partisan stance, but when given the task of governance, adopt a liberal, democratic, all-inclusive approach to governance. We will not be cruel to Chandrababu Naidu by comparing him to legendary political leaders of yore, the Country had seen, but, naidu, does not even satisfy the minimal attributes of a leader, in contemporary times, who is acceptable to all sections of society, by his own frailties, and also on account of the issues he dealt with, in the manner he dealt with.
Any leader in governance would like to, at least be seen as making an effort, to usher in a transparent, honest, and a fair process of governance. Naidu is the only leader in contemporary politics who made manipulation, jugglery, spin-doctoring, media propaganda as effective instruments of governance. Let us take instance by instance :
a) Late NTR had imposed “prohibition” (no place for sale, consumption and trade in liquor) in the State of A.P. In fact the campaign for “prohibition” in the State was people-driven during the reign of K. Vijayabhaskara Reddy’s tenure as Chief Minister between 1992-1994, which was latched on to by Ramoji Rao’s eenadu.
After Naidu captured power, within a few months, he could understand the absence of revenue generation on account of prohibition and in a series of smart moves, EENADU started campaigning as to how “prohibition” is not in the interests of the State at all, as to how revenues started dwindling. One of the most popular decisions of any Government, – “prohibition” – imposed by NTR was lifted by Naidu. There were rumors and stories galore as to why and how the said decision was taken as a measure to garner pelf and assets for himself, and as is the trend, there was no investigation, no enquiry and a self-certification for himself was granted by the ever obliging EENADU.
b) He later on identified the areas which spelt doom for NTR during NTRs earlier reign between 1983 to 1989. He realized that the institutions of check and balance, had come very hard on NTR causing him untold embarrassment. Therefore, he went about the task of either subjugating them, and if not possible, subverted the parallel institutions of governance, such as Legislature, Judiciary etc. He would put his moles in every institution, and as James Manor#, the Englishman had recorded, even into the institution of Judiciary, to make things easy for him. The two moles he had inducted into the State higher judiciary, as noted by James Manor, came up for discussion during the course of recent hearing in the case of Smt. Y.S. Vijaya in the High Court against the misdeeds of Chandrababu Naidu during his reign as Chief Minister of the State.
Even during his latest lecture on THE BEST AND THE WORST OF INDIAN STATE he said that
Another worst feature of the Indian state is one-man dominance where certain chief ministers radically dominate their political sphere with the help of industrialists, “where one-person government is so strong that MLAs cannot represent and respond to their constituencies.” This is a negative trend. Examples he cited were Chandrababu Naidu, Naveen Patnaik, Narendra Modi, Karunanidi and Jayalalita“.*
The judiciary has never been the same ever since Chandrababu Naidu smuggled himself to power and as any stakeholder in the judicial institution of governance would lament, the master craftsmen brought on all his skills by employing lawyers, who are “NOT BEFORE” certain Hon’ble Judges, with an aim to marshall his case to a designated destination. And as he celebrated the dismissal of the W.P. filed by Smt. Y.S. Vijaya, by distributing sweets in the precincts, of the Legislative Assembly, he would be very proud of the actions he had taken, in regard to subverting every institution since 1995, which had kept him smiling. He still, unbelievably, seems to believe, that he is destined to have the last laugh.
Many men-made rulers, have come and gone, humbled by the aphorism that the “law has an uncanny way of catching up”. One may be on the run….. run……. Run……and then will find nowhere to go. It is a case of “when” and not “whether” with the law while Chandrababu naidu would be saying “whither with the law”.
To Conti…..
*http://www.jamiajournal.com/2012/01/17/prof-james-manor-from-the-uk-speaks-at-jamia-on-the-best-and-the-worst-of-indian-state/
# Prof James Manor Profile

odharpu yatra 26/2/2012

odharpu yatra 25/02/2012 images







Y.S.R CONGRESS PARTY IT STATE COMMITTEE MEMBERS

Y.S.R CONGRESS PARTY IT STATE COMMITTEE MEMBERS
(Approved by YSRCP President, MP Sri Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy)


1 Sri. Harsha Vardhan Reddy Guntur

2 Sri Surendra Abbavaram Chittor

3 Sri Madhusudhan Rao. Sampathi Visakhapatnam

4 Sri Mummadireddy Sujit Kumar YSR Kadapa

5 Sri Gurram Pati Devendar YSR Kadapa

6 Sri Sudharshan Talla Guntur

7 Sri K. Rajesh Reddy Prakasam

8 Sri V. Satish Warngal

9 Sri Kethu Malyadri Prakasam

10 Sri L.M Sandeep Reddy Chittor

11 Sri Jaya Deep Baluvuri Khammam

12 Smt Tanuja Reddy Alluri Nellore

13 Smt N. Sailaja priya Darshani Hyderabad

14 Marsha Mridhull Wellington Khammam

15 Sri Katukuri Suresh Warangal

16 Sri Supesh Samuel Kurnool

17 Sri Ravindra Reddy Kondapalli Krishna

18 Sri Arun Kumar Garala Hyderabad

19 Sri Rama Bhaskar East Godavari

20 Sri Y.Vijaya Bhaskar Reddy YSR Kadapa

21 Sri Syed Taher YSR Kadapa

22 Sri Lakhinana Kishore Srikakulam

23 Sri Palleti Aditya Reddy YSR Kadapa

24 Sri Permula Prakash Rao Rangareddy

25 Sri Suresh Goud Anantapur

26 Sri G Nagaraj YSR Kadapa

27 Sri Gowri Shankar pati West Godavari

28 Sri Subba Rao Hyderabad

29 Sri Srinivasulu Reddy Prakasam

YS Jagan unveiled YSR's Statue at Lingamguntla

Friday 24 February 2012

YSR Statue By Children's at Shalem Nagar

Kiran Kumar Reddy is binami for Chandrababu

 సీఎం కిరణ్, చంద్రబాబు ఏజెంట్: బాజిరెడ్డి గోవర్దన్

హైదరాబాద్, న్యూస్‌లైన్:ఎమ్మార్ కేసులో జైలుకెళ్లాల్సిన టీడీపీ అధినేత చంద్రబాబును సీఎం కిరణ్‌కుమార్‌రెడ్డి ఎందుకు కాపాడారో బహిరంగపర్చాలని వైఎస్సార్ కాంగ్రెస్ పార్టీ అధికార ప్రతినిధి బాజిరెడ్డి గోవర్దన్ డిమాండ్ చేశారు. కిరణ్-చంద్రబాబుల వ్యవహారం ‘లోపల కుస్తీ... బయట దోస్తి’ అన్న చందంలా ఉందని విమర్శించారు. చంద్రబాబుకు ఏజెంట్‌లా సీఎం పనిచేస్తున్నారని మండిపడ్డారు. పార్టీ కేంద్ర కార్యాలయంలో శుక్రవారం ఆయన విలేకరుల సమావేశంలో మాట్లాడారు. 

శాసనసభలో ఇద్దరూ ఒకరి ప్రయోజనాలు మరొకరు కాపాడుకుంటూ అధికారపక్ష పాత్రలో కిరణ్, ప్రతిపక్షపాత్రలో చంద్రబాబు రక్తి కట్టించారని దుయ్యబట్టారు. వైఎస్సార్ కాంగ్రెస్ పార్టీ అధ్యక్షుడు వై.ఎస్.జగన్‌మోహన్‌రెడ్డిని ఎదుర్కొనేందుకు వీరిద్దరూ చేస్తున్న అరాచకాలు, కుట్రలు, కుతంత్రాలను ప్రజలు గమనిస్తున్నారని చెప్పారు. 

‘‘ఎమ్మార్‌లో విల్లాలు కొనుగోలు చేసిన వారందరినీ విచారించిన సీబీఐ జేడీ లక్ష్మినారాయణ... చంద్రబాబు కోడలు బ్రహ్మణిని ఎందుకు విచారించలేదు? కాంగ్రెస్‌తో ఉన్నఫిక్సింగ్ కారణంగానే వారి వద్దకు వెళ్లలేదా? ఈ కేసులో జైలుకెళ్లాల్సిన చంద్రబాబును కూడా అందులో భాగంగానే సీఎం కిరణ్ ఆదుకున్నట్లా?’’ అని నిలదీశారు. వైఎస్ మరణం తర్వాత శంకర్రావు పిటిషన్ మొదలు, ఎమ్మెల్సీ ఎన్నికలు, బాన్సువాడ ఉప ఎన్నిక, మానవహక్కుల కమిషన్ చైర్మన్, శాసనసభలో అవిశ్వాస తీర్మానం... ఆఖరికి సమాచార కమిషనర్ల దాకా ఇలా అన్నింట్లో కాంగ్రెస్‌తో చంద్రబాబు చేసుకున్న మ్యాచ్‌ఫిక్సింగ్‌ను ఆయన వివరించారు. 

వైఎస్సార్ కాంగ్రెస్ ఇన్నాళ్లుగా చెబుతున్న వాటినే తాజాగ పీసీసీ చీఫ్ బొత్ససత్యనారాయణ, మంత్రి డీఎల్ రవీంద్రారెడ్డి చెబుతున్నారని తెలిపారు. రాష్ట్రంలో అనేక సమస్యలతో ప్రజలు సతమతమవుతున్న అవేవి పట్టని ప్రతిపక్షనేత చంద్రబాబు దివంగత వైఎస్‌ఆర్ ఏ విధంగా అప్రతిష్ట పాలుచేయాలనే ఆలోచనతో ఉన్నారని దుయ్యబట్టారు. సంక్షేమ పథకాలు ఏ ఒక్కటీ సక్రమంగా అమలు కాకపోయినా చంద్రబాబు కిమ్మనడం లేదంటే వీరిద్దరి మధ్య సహకార బంధం ఎంత బలంగా ఉందో అర్థమవుతుందన్నారు. 

లోకేష్ ‘చదివింపు’లు బయటపెట్టాలి

చంద్రబాబు తన కుమారుడు లోకేష్‌కు విదేశాల్లో చదువుకు ఖర్చు చేసిన మొత్తానికి సంబంధించి ఐటీ రిటర్న్, బ్యాంక్ లావాదేవీలను ప్రజల ముందుంచాలని గోవర్దన్ డిమాండ్ చేశారు. అతని యూనివర్సిటీ ప్రవేశానికి కారణమైన జీ మ్యాట్ కోర్‌ను విడుదల చేయాలన్నారు. లోకేష్ చదువుకు సత్యం రామలింగరాజు రూ.60 కోట్లు చెల్లించారని దివంగత వైఎస్ అసెంబ్లీలో బయటపెడితే దొంగలు పడ్డ ఆరునెలలకు కుక్కలు మొరిగిన చందంగా ఇన్నాళ్ల తర్వాత చంద్రబాబు స్పందించడంలో మర్మమేమిటని నిలదీశారు. 

లోకేష్ చదువులకు తానే డబ్బు కట్టినట్లయితే ఇన్నాళ్లు ఎందుకు మౌనంగా ఉన్నారని ప్రశ్నించారు. వ్యవస్థలను మ్యానేజ్ చేస్తూ తప్పుడు మాటలు, అసత్యాలతో కాలం వెళ్లదీసే చంద్రబాబు... తాను గొప్ప సత్యహరిశ్చంద్రుడనని చెప్పుకోవడం సిగ్గుచేటని ధ్వజమెత్తారు. చంద్రబాబు అవకాశవాదాన్ని గమనించినందునే తెలుగు ప్రజలు రెండుసార్లు ఛీ కొట్టారని గోవర్దన్ వివరించారు.
అయినా ఈ విషయమై ఆరోపణలు చేసిన ఆరు నెలలకు ఇప్పుడు స్పందిస్తారా? అని ప్రశ్నించారు. ఖర్చు పెడితే లోకేష్ చదువుకు అయిన 60 కోట్ల రూపాయలకు లెక్కలు చెప్పాలని నిలదీశారు. 

సమయం సందర్భంలేకుండా మహానేత డాక్టర్ వైఎస్ గురించి మాట్లాడుతున్నారని బాజిరెడ్డి అన్నారు.

Sonia gandhi IT returns citing privacy

ఆదాయపు పన్ను వివరాలు అందించబోనని సోనియాగాంధీ ఆర్టీఐకి స్పష్టం చేశారు. భద్రత కారణాల దృష్ట్యా ఆదాయ పన్ను వివరాలు ఇవ్వలేనని చెప్పారు. గత పదేళ్లుగా సోనియాకు సంబంధించిన ఐటీ రిటర్న్స్ వివరాలు తెలపాలంటూ చెన్నైకి చెందిన ఆర్టీఐ కార్యకర్త దరఖాస్తు చేశారు. ప్రజా జీవనంలో ఉన్న వ్యక్తులు మూడో పార్టీకి వివరాలు ఇవ్వడం ఆదాయపన్ను చట్టం సెక్షన్ 138 ప్రకారం కుదరదని సోనియా ఆర్టీఐకి తెలిపారు.

Sunday 19 February 2012

Image building and reality: role of media


WHILE SEEKING to lay bare reality beneath the image of N. Chandrababu Naidu, emerging from a generous media, P. Sainath (The Hindu, July 5) has cited examples from the foreign media and also charged that "In Indian media, awe and wonder was over the top" and that despite evidence of poor performance of the State, "Naidu worship in the media only grew, with not an iota of scepticism."
Close observers of the Andhra Pradesh scene would consider this somewhat unfair. The Indian media was no doubt liberal in devoting space to Naidu, but it cannot be accused of uncritical worship as even casual search would reveal several instances in which the media carried adverse reports as also critical reviews by objective scholars.
To cite a few, C. P. Chandrasekhar and Jayathi Ghosh ("Economic Performances of the States in the 1990s," The Hindu Business Line, May 15, 2001) presented data of relative growth of States citing Andhra Pradesh as a case of misleading applause. Earlier, veteran economist P. R. Brahmananda ("Analysis of reforms and growth in the States," The Hindu Business Line, June 17, June 24 and July 1, 2000) put Andhra Pradesh at the ninth place among 16 major States and at the bottom of the list of `middle performers.'
The Hindu (August 19, 1999) had carried my article, "Poll panel and A.P. schemes" which pointed out the budgetary position of Andhra Pradesh and the impropriety involved in some populist schemes. In December 2000, The Hindu gave me space to point out the prevarications indulged in by the World Bank President, James Wolfensohn and Chandrababu Naidu himself during a highly publicised visit to Andhra Pradesh in November that year. The Hindu also reported some critical observations made by me in the discussions on Annual Fiscal Framework arranged by the government of Andhra Pradesh and presided over by the Chief Minister.
The Hyderabad edition of The New Indian Express prominently featured in the opinion column not only my frequent criticism of the fiscal and budgetary policies but also several contributions by K. G. Kannabiran on the civil liberties situation. Pointing out the gap between "Promise and performance" I had said that "Continuous deficits year after year have pushed the A.P. Government on an unsustainable path of high cost borrowing with outstanding debt touching Rs. 37,713 crores in 2000-2001. Interest payment in 2000-2001 was as much as 32.3 per cent of State's own revenues. This is the grim reality; which few, if any, of the political leaders, including Chief Minister N. Chandrababu Naidu, appear to be conscious while making promises in public and later pulling up government servants for not `performing.' Regrettably, the State's development expenditure as a percentage of total expenditure has come down from 72 in 1991-92 to 66 in 1999-2000, with the fall being sharper since 1994-95 when the percentage was 71.16. While the State government has acquired a high profile with its promises, its officials need to ponder on many techno-economies aspects of the schemes and their financial viability. Examples such as the incomplete flyover in front of the Secretariat are not complimentary to the present engineers and administrators in the State." (The New Indian Express, June 25, 2001)
More recently, the criticism of Chandrababu Naidu's claims by U.K. based consultants of the Department for International Development (DFID), in a review had received space in the Hyderabad editions of newspapers.
The Indian media appears to have been carried away by the style and the show of Chandrababu Naidu as they were markedly different from those of the dhoti clad politicians and seemed somewhat novel. But all this was not uncritical `Naidu worship.' The media has also lionised S. M. Krishna and Digvijay Singh, who had also, like Chandrababu Naidu, received a drubbing at the polls. Media went for novelty and must have, in the bargain, learnt a lesson.
V.K. SRINIVASAN 
 http://www.hindu.com/op/2004/07/13/stories/2004071300471500.htm

Chandrababu: Image and reality

WELL, IT might be easier now to persuade the media that Andhra Pradesh is slightly bigger than Hyderabad. Two months after the polls, the media barely mention Chandrababu Naidu. The most written about Indian politician has vanished from their vision. Post-poll analyses have debated whether the national mandate was against Hindutva or for the reforms. They've been mostly silent on Mr. Naidu. This is more out of embarrassment than introspection. After all, he was the poster boy of the neo-liberal economic reforms.
Still, a look at the myth of Mr. Naidu is key to grasping a lot of things. Including the gigantic crisis crippling Andhra Pradesh today. On most indicators, he ran the worst performing state in the south of India for nearly 10 years. Yet the more damage he did, the more his media standing grew. The gap between his image and his record is stunning.
No other figure in Indian politics got the kind of press that Mr. Naidu did. The `miracle man.' The `GeneratioNext CM,' and, of course, `The CEO of Andhra Pradesh.' A larger than life image held up by huge spending on self-publicity helped this along. Ad-gurus from Mumbai flew in to foster it. Our media lapped it up. And starry-eyed journalists from The New York Times, The Financial Times and heaps of other places, weighed in with their bit. 

Take 2002 for instance. Top international journals were scripting the Naidu-namah. Hyderabad was full of their hacks. One of them all but asked the Third World to pray for leaders like Mr. Naidu. That his regime had just chalked up growth of - 17. 06 per cent in agriculture seemed hardly to matter. The image was the thing. When the media dealt with Mr. Naidu, facts were irrelevant. As the founder of Private Eye once said: "Never let the truth stand in the way of a good story." That was the editor of a satirical journal speaking half in jest. Our own editors applied that dictum with real zest and no trace of humour.
Had another Chief Minister taken on an Alyque Padamsee to give him an image makeover, we would never have heard the end of it. The media saw nothing wrong in Mr. Naidu doing this. Wasn't he, after all, the ultimate brand?
It's telling that what passed for critical press scrutiny first appeared after the exit polls suggested he was headed for defeat. Even then, there were those asserting the coast would stand by him in the second round of voting. How could it be otherwise? Hadn't he done such great work?
Mr. Naidu began with much goodwill. (Earned by the public's acceptance of him as N.T. Rama Rao's true successor.) His energy, his attitude towards technology (if not his grasp of it) seemed refreshing at the time. All of this went down well. As did his impatience with bureaucracy. But in the next few years, it became clear that the policies driven by that enthusiasm were disastrous for millions of poor people in his state. However, the more he disconnected from the poor, the more the corporate world loved him. He was now the champion of `the reforms.' The darling of international donors.
Endorsements from the World Bank, Bill Gates, Bill Clinton and assorted other billionaires further puffed his image - that of a selfless CEO slaving through sleepless nights to lead his dumb masses to enlightenment. All the evidence to the contrary seemed not to shake this. A few thousand farmers taking their own lives did fray the image for some. But mostly, as is now painfully clear, the media failed the challenge of that issue. Again, a couple of such stories did make the front pages outside the state - after the exit polls.
Even the stories that did appear were shallow. Most reduced the suicides to solely an outcome of drought. A lazy way of dodging the many factors behind them. On the whole, a sloppy sycophancy affected media across the board. 
 AP farmers' suicides

 •  When farmers die
 •  Sinking borewells, rising debt
 •  Death of a carpenter
 •  Anatomy of a health disaster
 •  Micro-credit, maxi risk
 •  Percentage raj
 •  Naidu: image and reality
 •  Dreaming of water, drowning in..
 •  Seeds of suicide - I
 •  Seeds of suicide - II
 •  Jobs drought before crisis
 •  How the better half dies
 •  How the better half dies - II
 •  The after-death industry
 •  The policy has no clothes
 •  Farmers lose crores in insurance
 •  Renew lapsed insurance policies


Keith Bradsher, for instance, is an award-winning investigative journalist. You'd think he would show some scepticism. But no. There was no place for that in the Naidu-namah. You came to this shrine to worship. Take this howler from Mr. Bradsher on Mr. Naidu in The New York Times (Dec. 27, 2002): "The party's hold on power seems secure in Andhra Pradesh, partly because Mr. Naidu and his allies speak Telugu, a language spoken only in this state and by a few people in two adjacent states."
Really? What language do Mr. Naidu's rivals speak? Esperanto? (Never mind that the party's hold on power being secure seems, 18 months later, like famous last words.) The year that report ran was one that saw a rush of farmers' suicides in the state. Mr. Bradsher's piece approves of Mr. Naidu's having "come close to balancing the state budget." It does not say a word about his gigantic borrowings. From the World Bank and other sources, and the effect that it is likely to have on many budgets to come. Mr. Bradsher also wrote that Andhra Pradesh was on its way to being "an international model for certain public policies."
A hard-headed publication like The Financial Times fell in line. (May 2, 2003.) It had no qualms about suggesting: "In a country where lower caste women are locked out of decision-making, the government of Andhra Pradesh is sponsoring a social revolution." This was happening in "thousands of villages" in the state. This, of Andhra Pradesh, where the panchayats were shut out and destroyed by Mr. Naidu's schemes. The FT correspondent even found a village where women "who had for generations stayed indoors without voice or influence, now dominate the village square."
The Wall Street Journal saw him as "a model for fellow state leaders." Time magazine declared him `South Asian of The Year' as early as 1999. Newsweek responded by crediting Mr. Naidu with a Ph.D. he does not have.
In the Indian media, the breathless awe and wonder was over the top. Yelling "IT' and "software" often enough became a substitute for actual performance in those vital fields. Andhra Pradesh did not lead the nation. But media audiences thought it did. The state was not even in the top three. And was slipping in the ranks.
This is also a state whose literacy levels are the worst in the south and lag behind the national average. A glance at the (Tata) Statistical Outline of India would show this: Even Cyberabad's literacy is behind that of Patna, Ranchi, Bhopal, Indore, Jabalpur and Jaipur. And that's the rating of Mr. Naidu's showpiece.
It's a state where millions of children are outside school. A state that has the largest number of child labourers in the country. And one where close to 90 per cent of rural workers are either illiterate or educated only up to the primary level.
Employment growth saw a drastic decline in the Naidu era. In rural Andhra Pradesh, it was 2.40 per cent per annum in the decade before him. It fell to 0.29 per cent during 1994-2000. This was a worse decline than that seen in the rest of India. The rate of growth of real wages in rural areas fell sharply in the 1990s.
What the media fondly called "one of the fastest-growing states" was really stumbling. The growth of GDP was just around 5 per cent for 1994-2001. Lowest among the southern states. Lower than the national average. Lower than what the same state had posted during 1981-91. Economists C. Mahendra Dev and C. Ravi show that "in the 1980s, A.P. was one of the top performing states in terms of Gross State Domestic Product (GSDP) growth. Only three states, Rajasthan, Haryana and Maharashtra, showed higher growth than A.P. in the 1980s." However, this rank sank from number four to eight in the next decade. "Seven states showed higher growth than A.P. in the 1990s." The state was overtaken by Gujarat, Karnataka, Tamilnadu and West Bengal.
This was the one state in the south that showed no improvement in its Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) between the first and second National Family Health Surveys. (Those came out in the early and late 1990s.) Indeed, its IMR of 65 is slightly worse than Bihar (62) on this count.
Small farmers did badly everywhere in the country in the 1990s. But it was in Andhra Pradesh that they committed suicide in thousands. The years of hostile policy still take a toll. (The suicides continue in the weeks after Mr. Naidu's exit. And there is a Kafkaesque touch to his standing up in the state Assembly demanding a decent deal for the farmers.)
Through it all, Naidu-worship in the media only grew. With not an iota of scepticism. The media bios of Naidu called him the son of a "poor agriculturist." Or of a "small farmer." Or of a "modest farmer." How the modest farmer and his spouse came to be worth Rs. 21 crores after nine years in power is a mystery no one wants to solve. That's the figure you'll find in his poll-time declaration of assets. But no questions. The king could do no wrong. (Courtesy: The Hindu)
 
 source:http://www.indiatogether.org/2004/jul/psa-cbabu.htm
July 2004: WELL, IT might be easier now to persuade the media that Andhra Pradesh is slightly bigger than Hyderabad. Two months after the polls, the media barely mention Chandrababu Naidu. The most written about Indian politician has vanished from their vision. Post-poll analyses have debated whether the national mandate was against Hindutva or for the reforms. They've been mostly silent on Mr. Naidu. This is more out of embarrassment than introspection. After all, he was the poster boy of the neo-liberal economic reforms.
Still, a look at the myth of Mr. Naidu is key to grasping a lot of things. Including the gigantic crisis crippling Andhra Pradesh today. On most indicators, he ran the worst performing state in the south of India for nearly 10 years. Yet the more damage he did, the more his media standing grew. The gap between his image and his record is stunning.
No other figure in Indian politics got the kind of press that Mr. Naidu did. The `miracle man.' The `GeneratioNext CM,' and, of course, `The CEO of Andhra Pradesh.' A larger than life image held up by huge spending on self-publicity helped this along. Ad-gurus from Mumbai flew in to foster it. Our media lapped it up. And starry-eyed journalists from The New York Times, The Financial Times and heaps of other places, weighed in with their bit.
AP farmers' suicides
 •  When farmers die
 •  Sinking borewells, rising debt
 •  Death of a carpenter
 •  Anatomy of a health disaster
 •  Micro-credit, maxi risk
 •  Percentage raj
 •  Naidu: image and reality
 •  Dreaming of water, drowning in..
 •  Seeds of suicide - I
 •  Seeds of suicide - II
 •  Jobs drought before crisis
 •  How the better half dies
 •  How the better half dies - II
 •  The after-death industry
 •  The policy has no clothes
 •  Farmers lose crores in insurance
 •  Renew lapsed insurance policies
Take 2002 for instance. Top international journals were scripting the Naidu-namah. Hyderabad was full of their hacks. One of them all but asked the Third World to pray for leaders like Mr. Naidu. That his regime had just chalked up growth of - 17. 06 per cent in agriculture seemed hardly to matter. The image was the thing. When the media dealt with Mr. Naidu, facts were irrelevant. As the founder of Private Eye once said: "Never let the truth stand in the way of a good story." That was the editor of a satirical journal speaking half in jest. Our own editors applied that dictum with real zest and no trace of humour.
Had another Chief Minister taken on an Alyque Padamsee to give him an image makeover, we would never have heard the end of it. The media saw nothing wrong in Mr. Naidu doing this. Wasn't he, after all, the ultimate brand?
It's telling that what passed for critical press scrutiny first appeared after the exit polls suggested he was headed for defeat. Even then, there were those asserting the coast would stand by him in the second round of voting. How could it be otherwise? Hadn't he done such great work?
Mr. Naidu began with much goodwill. (Earned by the public's acceptance of him as N.T. Rama Rao's true successor.) His energy, his attitude towards technology (if not his grasp of it) seemed refreshing at the time. All of this went down well. As did his impatience with bureaucracy. But in the next few years, it became clear that the policies driven by that enthusiasm were disastrous for millions of poor people in his state. However, the more he disconnected from the poor, the more the corporate world loved him. He was now the champion of `the reforms.' The darling of international donors.
Endorsements from the World Bank, Bill Gates, Bill Clinton and assorted other billionaires further puffed his image - that of a selfless CEO slaving through sleepless nights to lead his dumb masses to enlightenment. All the evidence to the contrary seemed not to shake this. A few thousand farmers taking their own lives did fray the image for some. But mostly, as is now painfully clear, the media failed the challenge of that issue. Again, a couple of such stories did make the front pages outside the state - after the exit polls.
Even the stories that did appear were shallow. Most reduced the suicides to solely an outcome of drought. A lazy way of dodging the many factors behind them. On the whole, a sloppy sycophancy affected media across the board.
Keith Bradsher, for instance, is an award-winning investigative journalist. You'd think he would show some scepticism. But no. There was no place for that in the Naidu-namah. You came to this shrine to worship. Take this howler from Mr. Bradsher on Mr. Naidu in The New York Times (Dec. 27, 2002): "The party's hold on power seems secure in Andhra Pradesh, partly because Mr. Naidu and his allies speak Telugu, a language spoken only in this state and by a few people in two adjacent states."
Really? What language do Mr. Naidu's rivals speak? Esperanto? (Never mind that the party's hold on power being secure seems, 18 months later, like famous last words.) The year that report ran was one that saw a rush of farmers' suicides in the state. Mr. Bradsher's piece approves of Mr. Naidu's having "come close to balancing the state budget." It does not say a word about his gigantic borrowings. From the World Bank and other sources, and the effect that it is likely to have on many budgets to come. Mr. Bradsher also wrote that Andhra Pradesh was on its way to being "an international model for certain public policies."
A hard-headed publication like The Financial Times fell in line. (May 2, 2003.) It had no qualms about suggesting: "In a country where lower caste women are locked out of decision-making, the government of Andhra Pradesh is sponsoring a social revolution." This was happening in "thousands of villages" in the state. This, of Andhra Pradesh, where the panchayats were shut out and destroyed by Mr. Naidu's schemes. The FT correspondent even found a village where women "who had for generations stayed indoors without voice or influence, now dominate the village square."
The Wall Street Journal saw him as "a model for fellow state leaders." Time magazine declared him `South Asian of The Year' as early as 1999. Newsweek responded by crediting Mr. Naidu with a Ph.D. he does not have.
In the Indian media, the breathless awe and wonder was over the top. Yelling "IT' and "software" often enough became a substitute for actual performance in those vital fields. Andhra Pradesh did not lead the nation. But media audiences thought it did. The state was not even in the top three. And was slipping in the ranks.
This is also a state whose literacy levels are the worst in the south and lag behind the national average. A glance at the (Tata) Statistical Outline of India would show this: Even Cyberabad's literacy is behind that of Patna, Ranchi, Bhopal, Indore, Jabalpur and Jaipur. And that's the rating of Mr. Naidu's showpiece.
It's a state where millions of children are outside school. A state that has the largest number of child labourers in the country. And one where close to 90 per cent of rural workers are either illiterate or educated only up to the primary level.
Employment growth saw a drastic decline in the Naidu era. In rural Andhra Pradesh, it was 2.40 per cent per annum in the decade before him. It fell to 0.29 per cent during 1994-2000. This was a worse decline than that seen in the rest of India. The rate of growth of real wages in rural areas fell sharply in the 1990s.
What the media fondly called "one of the fastest-growing states" was really stumbling. The growth of GDP was just around 5 per cent for 1994-2001. Lowest among the southern states. Lower than the national average. Lower than what the same state had posted during 1981-91. Economists C. Mahendra Dev and C. Ravi show that "in the 1980s, A.P. was one of the top performing states in terms of Gross State Domestic Product (GSDP) growth. Only three states, Rajasthan, Haryana and Maharashtra, showed higher growth than A.P. in the 1980s." However, this rank sank from number four to eight in the next decade. "Seven states showed higher growth than A.P. in the 1990s." The state was overtaken by Gujarat, Karnataka, Tamilnadu and West Bengal.
This was the one state in the south that showed no improvement in its Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) between the first and second National Family Health Surveys. (Those came out in the early and late 1990s.) Indeed, its IMR of 65 is slightly worse than Bihar (62) on this count.
Small farmers did badly everywhere in the country in the 1990s. But it was in Andhra Pradesh that they committed suicide in thousands. The years of hostile policy still take a toll. (The suicides continue in the weeks after Mr. Naidu's exit. And there is a Kafkaesque touch to his standing up in the state Assembly demanding a decent deal for the farmers.)
Through it all, Naidu-worship in the media only grew. With not an iota of scepticism. The media bios of Naidu called him the son of a "poor agriculturist." Or of a "small farmer." Or of a "modest farmer." How the modest farmer and his spouse came to be worth Rs. 21 crores after nine years in power is a mystery no one wants to solve. That's the figure you'll find in his poll-time declaration of assets. But no questions. The king could do no wrong. (Courtesy: The Hindu)
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