Protests in India over new state creation
Protests erupted Wednesday in southeast India a day after
the national ruling coalition approved the creation of a new state, leading to
hundreds of arrests, police and reports said.
Protests were staged in the coastal and southern regions of
Andhra Pradesh state against the creation of Telangana state, while a strike
shut some schools and businesses, police and witnesses said.
Demonstrators pelted police with stones, injuring some
officers, and damaged buses, at rallies in the district of Anantapur, area
inspector Gorantla Madhav told AFP.
A local office of the Congress party in Anantapur was also
partly damaged when protesters attacked it, Madhav said.
The street protests, which blocked traffic on main roads in
the coastal and southern Rayalaseema regions, were largely peaceful, although
police said over 500 people were arrested.
"Above 500 people have been arrested in Chittoor,
Kadapa and Anantapur districts," police inspector general R.K. Reddy said.
India's Congress party approved a resolution on Tuesday for
the state of Telangana to be carved out of Andhra Pradesh state, despite fears
the decision could spark violence in the region which includes the IT hub
Hyderabad.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Congress leaders bowed to
longstanding demands for Telangana, noting campaigns for a separate state date
back to 1956.
The move must still be approved by parliament but the
state's creation has the backing of the main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party
(BJP) which had earlier accused the government of "dilly-dallying" on
the issue.
The new state, India's 29th, would be created out of an
impoverished, drought-prone mainly tribal belt that supporters say has been
neglected by successive Andhra Pradesh governments.
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