Category Archives: Leaders

Cook inaugurates Apple Maps development office in Hyderabad

Apple’s CEO Tim Cook (L) with Telangana CM K Chandra Sekhar Rao after inauguration of Apple's development office in Hyderabad on Thursday. / PTI
Apple’s CEO Tim Cook (L) with Telangana CM K Chandra Sekhar Rao after inauguration of Apple’s development office in Hyderabad on Thursday. / PTI

Says this investment will accelerate Maps development and create up to 4,000 jobs.

Apple Inc on Thursday announced the opening of a new office here that will focus on development of Maps for its products including iPhone, iPad, Mac and Apple Watch.

The Californian tech giant said in a statement that this investment will accelerate Maps development and create up to 4,000 jobs.

Mum on quantum of investment

The company, however, did not disclose the quantum of investment that it intends to invest on the facility.

“We are thrilled to open this new office in Hyderabad which will focus on Maps development,” Apple CEO Tim Cook said.

“The talent here in the local area is incredible and we are looking forward to expanding our relationships and introducing more universities and partners to our platforms as we scale our operations,” he said.

Updating, adding new features

Apple has been continually updating and adding new features to Maps including 3D views, the Flyover feature and tools to help customers find convenient places to shop, eat and explore nearby areas, the statement said.

With iOS 9 Apple added Transit, offering a combination of trains, subways, buses and walking, which is already available for more than 300 cities around the world.

The new facility, located on the Waverock campus, will provide a world-class, LEED-certified home for the expanding Maps team, it added.

Honoured, says KCR

Telangana Chief Minister K. Chandrashekar Rao has said the State is honoured that Apple chose Hyderabad as a home for its Maps development office.

“This will create thousands of jobs here and is a testament to our proactive approach, quality infrastructure and the excellent talent base we have in the region,” he said.

RMSI is a global IT services company providing GIS, modelling and analytics and software services.

‘One of the most innovative firms’

CEO of RMSI Anup Jindal said, “Apple is one of the most innovative companies in the world. We are very proud they chose us to partner with for this important project.”

“We are experts in geospatial data and we will be hiring thousands of people from the local area to support this effort,” Mr. Jindal said.

Apple supports over 6,40,000 iOS app developer jobs and other positions related to the iOS ecosystem across India, the statement said.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> National / PTI / Hyderabad – May 19th, 2016

First Telugu to head All-India Carrom Federation

Proud moment:S. Madan Raj, the newly-elected treasurer of All-India Carrom Federation, seen with the federation’s new president Dr. Neeraj Sampathy, in Hyderabad on Sunday.– PHOTO: V.V. SUBRAHMANYAM
Proud moment:S. Madan Raj, the newly-elected treasurer of All-India Carrom Federation, seen with the federation’s new president Dr. Neeraj Sampathy, in Hyderabad on Sunday.– PHOTO: V.V. SUBRAHMANYAM

In a rare show of unity in sporting circles, Andhra Carrom Association and Hyderabad Carrom Association join hands to ensure unanimous election for all posts

He was not born when the All-India Carrom Federation was formed back in 1956. But, 47-year-old Dr. Neeraj Sampathy has achieved the rare distinction of becoming the first-ever Telugu speaking official to head the national sports body, on Sunday.

Nothing could have been more symbolic than one of the founder-members of the AICF, 75-year-old omnipresent B.K. Haranath, ensuring that there are no more hiccups in handing over the baton to Dr. Sampathy, who himself is a passionate carom player besides being an enterprising president of Andhra Carrom Association.

Ironically, despite his vast experience and major contribution to promoting the sport, Mr. Haranath has never headed the AICF. In the new setup too, he was given the post of director (media), as he is known to be adept in handling the media.

And, in a rare show of unity in sporting circles, both Andhra Carrom Association and the Hyderabad Carrom Association joined hands as part of the process to ensure the unanimous election for all the posts at the AGM here. Consequently, S. Madan Raj, secretary of Hyderabad Carrom Association, will be the treasurer.

The new AICF chief says that every effort would be made to see that carrom, which is in Group C in terms of sports discipline priority list – both at the State and the Central-level, gains a place in Group A.

“The only way out is to popularise the sport hosting more events – national and international – to produce more champions,” Dr. Sampathy remarked. “With the School Games Federation of India already including carrom in its curriculum, we will try our best to see that it is introduced at the university level too,” he said.

We will try our best to introduce carom at the university level. Dr. Neeraj Sampathypresident, AICF

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Hyderabad / by V.V.Subrahmanyam / Hyderabad – May 16th, 2016

Veteran leader Chennamaneni Rajeswara Rao passes away

Rajeswara Rao served the Communist Party of India for four decades since his student days / The Hindu
Rajeswara Rao served the Communist Party of India for four decades since his student days / The Hindu

Veteran Communist leader and five-time-MLA Chennamaneni Rajeswara Rao died on Monday at a hospital in Hyderabad, following illness. He was 93 and is survived by three daughters and a son Ch. Ramesh, who is the TRS MLA from Vemulawada constituency in Karimnagar district. Rajeswara Rao’s brother Ch. Vidyasagar Rao is the Governor of Maharashtra.

Mr. Rao served the Communist Party of India for four decades since his student days and was elected as its MLA four times from Sircilla, now renamed as Vemulawada. He participated in the Telangana armed struggle against the tyranny of Nizam’s rule and went underground for sometime.

He was the president of the Telangana Freedom Fighters Association and the president of the farmers’ wing of CPI. He quit the CPI as the chairman of its legislature party in 1999 and joined the Telugu Desam, the party which he described as the closest to his heart. He, however, lost the Assembly election on a TDP ticket in 1999 and went on to represent the party in the Assembly in the next term. He distanced himself from active politics after 2009 when his son Ramesh, a professor in agricultural economics at a German university, was elected.

The funeral will take place on Tuesday.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> National> Telangana / by N. Rahul – Hyderabad – May 09th, 2016

A tale of two cities

Narendra Luther. Photo: K. Ramesh Babu
Narendra Luther. Photo: K. Ramesh Babu

Hyderabad, TELANGANA :

Narendra Luther talks about weaving in amusing legends and fact-filled anecdotes in his new book ‘Legendotes of Hyderabad’

‘Don’t google the meaning of ‘legendotes’ for there is no such word,’ historian Narendra Luther says in the introduction to his new book ‘Legendotes of Hyderabad’ (Niyogi Books; Rs. 995). A combination of legend and anecdotes, ‘legendotes’ is also an encapsulation of nuggets of history, backed by research, presented in the style of a coffee table book illustrated with photographs of people and buildings that provide a window to the past. “To my surprise, the publishers were eager to have more photographs,” he says with a smile, speaking to us ahead of the launch of his book on Thursday in the presence of historian Aloka Parasher Sen.

“During the course of my research on Hyderabad over the years, I came across both legends and anecdotes. Legends are generally considered gossips of history, but some of those are also stuff that makes up history. Former historians, I believe, walked on the highway of history whereas I feel many pieces of history lie scattered in the lanes and by lanes of the city. I collected a few of these and applied tests of historicity and veracity before documenting them,” explains Luther. Narendra Luther focuses both on stories that are now popular knowledge and lesser-known facts that give readers fresh insights into the history of Hyderabad and Secunderabad. “These are not mere ‘he said, she said’ facts put together,” he emphasises.

Luther also prefers to gather information from people than just documents from the archives: “I believe in interviewing people to know about history than merely going through archives; they have given me a wealth of information,” he says, referring to how he got the late Zahid Ali Kamil to share the story of Kazim Razvi, who led the Razakars movement. The author draws our attention to rocks of Hyderabad that are 2500 million years old and as he points out, ‘older than the Himalayas’ and traces the origin of Hyderabad, including the much-debated tale of romance that gave birth to Bhagnagar. “The historicity of Bhagmati has been established beyond doubt,” says Luther, and states his earlier research while penning a biography of Mohd. Quli Qutb Shah that led him to a document mentioning an old seal of ‘qazi of Bhagnagar’. “And in the court of Jehangir, there was a reference to the city of Bhagnagar in the South, established by Quli Qutb Shah in memory of his beloved,” he adds.

The book contains quirky stories of a dog made to sit on a throne by Sultan Tana Shah in recognition of it raising an alarm spotting an intruder, Aurangzeb’s visit to Bhagnagar and Stalin’s orders on the red revolt. There’s also a perceivable effort to make history relevant to the times we live in, in the chapters that detail how the King Kothi got its name, the story of Lal Bazaar in the then Lashkar that later came to be called Secunderabad. “I’ve given historical citations even for amusing stories,” smiles Luther, citing the story of seven kulchas and how the kulcha was represented on the Nizam’s flag. “This was contradicted by the man himself, the first Nizam, who said the ‘circle’ was a moon that denoted his name Kamaruddin (‘Kamar’ in Persian means moon). But later when the sixth Nizam was approving the design of the flag in 1899, issued a written mentioning the big white circle as a kulcha.” Like his previous works, this book too is an ode to Hyderabad.

Hyderabad connection to ‘Jai Hind!’

Did you know that it was a Hyderabadi who coined the slogan Jai Hind? Zain-ul Abideen Hasan was pursuing engineering in Germany at the time when Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose visited Germany and urged Indian students to join his movement to liberate India. Abid Hasan gave up his studies and became Netaji’s secretary and interpreter. ‘Legendotes of Hyderabad’ discloses why Abid came to be called ‘Safrani’ in later years and how he coined the term ‘Jai Hind’ as the greeting for his army and for independent India.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Features> MetroPlus / by Sangeetha Devi Dundoo / Hyderabad – January 30th, 2014

Bhagavatar Harishankara Sastry passes away

Noted Harikatha Bhagavatar, Velidhe Harishankara Sastry passed away at his residence at Rangasipet in Warangal early on Thursday. He was 86.

He authored many mythological and social Harikathas and rendered them on Deccan Radio in the 1930 and 1940s.

He toured extensively and was honoured with gold anklets and titles.

Mr Sastry was honoured with Ugadhi Puraskaram by late Chief Minister N T Rama Rao in recognition of his services and scholarship.

Journalists V L Narasimha Rao and Dasari Krishna Reddy, senior advocate V Harihar Rao, Lok Satta leader Parcha Kodandarama Raoand condoled his death.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> National> Telangana / by Special Correspondent / Warangal – April 22nd, 2016

Collector urged to develop a cell at Quilla jail into national monument

Indur Bharathi general secretary Meka Ramaswami submitting a memorandum to Collector Yogitha Rana, in Nizamabad on Saturday.— Photo: K.V. RAMANA
Indur Bharathi general secretary Meka Ramaswami submitting a memorandum to Collector Yogitha Rana, in Nizamabad on Saturday.— Photo: K.V. RAMANA

Dasarathi Krishnamachary and Vattikota Alwar Swami, fighters of Telangana Liberation Movement, were kept in custody here

Meka Ramaswami, general secretary of Indur Bharathi, a literary and cultural organisation, appealed to District Collector Yogitha Rana to develop the cell in which the fighters of Telangana Liberation Movement – Dasarathi Krishnamachary and Vattikota Alwar Swami – were kept in custody during their incarceration at Quilla jail by the Nizam Nawab Mir Osman Ali Khan.

In a memorandum submitted to the Collector here on Saturday, he urged the administration to install life-size portraits of the two stalwarts who laid down their lives for people. The cell should be spruced up and developed into a national monument, he said.

Mr. Ramaswami also requested Ms. Rana to use her good offices to set up a permanent library on municipal or government land to enable people to read the duo’s literature and also to conduct research on them.

He thanked the Collector for her positive response to the twin demands.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> National> Telangana / by Special Correspondent / Nizamambad – April 17th, 2016

Vice-Chancellor of EFLU elected ICCR vice-president

Sunaina Singh, Vice-Chancellor, English and Foreign Languages University (EFLU), Hyderabad has been unanimously elected as Vice President of the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR), New Delhi for a period of three years.

The ICCR Constitution provides for three Vice Presidents out of whom two are elected by the General Assembly. Prabhat Shukla, former Ambassador is the other dignitary who was elected as Vice President while Dr. Jai Shankar, Foreign Secretary to the Government of India is ex-officio third vice-president of the Council.

ICCR president Prof. Lokesh Chandra conducted the General assembly and the Governing Board meetings recently, a press release said.

Prof. Sunaina Singh’s election adds another feather to her career as an academic and as one of the few woman Vice Chancellors of a Central University in India today. She is the first and only Indian woman to have headed the Shastri Indo-Canadian Institute, a bi-national organization and has rich experience of academic administration at both the national as well as at the international levels.

The Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR) is a body functioning under the aegis of the Ministry of External Affairs of the Government of India and its mandate includes participation in the formulation and implementation of policies and programmes relating to India’s External Cultural relations and to foster and strengthen cultural relations and mutual understanding between India and other countries.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Cities> Hyderabad / by Special Correspondent / Hyderabad – March 31st, 2016

120th jayanti of Parcha Ranga Rao to be held on March 27

The 120th jayanthi of eminent advocate Parcha Ranga Rao would be held on March 27 at Vagdevi College in Hanamkonda.

Parcha Ranga Rao Memorial Charitable Trust secretary Parcha Kodandarama Rao said they would be felicitating T. Rangaswamy for his services in the field of literature and also B Ramaleela, founder of Mallikamba Manovikasa Kendra.

District Session Judge C. Vijayasaradhi Acharyulu would be the chief guest and Lawcet convenor Prof. M.V. Ranga Rao and Warangal Bar Association president Vaddiraju Venkateswar Rao would be guests of honour. Trust president Parcha Mohan Rao would preside over the function.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> National> Telangana / by Special Correspondent / Warangal – March 26th, 2016

State, Maharashtra sign historic accord

Telangana Chief Minister K. Chandrasekhar Rao (right) and his Maharashtra counterpart Devendra Fadnavis exchanging the agreement on the Godavari projects in Mumbai on Tuesday.– Photo: PTI
Telangana Chief Minister K. Chandrasekhar Rao (right) and his Maharashtra counterpart Devendra Fadnavis exchanging the agreement on the Godavari projects in Mumbai on Tuesday.– Photo: PTI

Chief Ministers of both States ink pact on inter-State board on Godavari projects like Lendi, Lower Penganga, Pranahita which include barrages at Chanakha-Korata, Rajapet, Penpahad and the newly-proposed Medigadda.

Chief Ministers of Telangana and Maharashtra K. Chandrasekhar Rao and Devendra Fadnavis, respectively, unveiled a new chapter in the inter-State relations in the country by signing a memorandum of understanding (MoU) in Mumbai on Tuesday for establishing an inter-State water board on Godavari projects.

The agreement is expected to end decades of discord between the two States on utilisation of water of the Godavari and its tributaries and pave the pay for the two States to take up and complete irrigation projects which have been mired in disputes all these years, particularly pending projects such as Lendi, Lower Penganga, Pranahita which include barrages at Chanakha-Korata, Rajapet, Penpahad and the newly-proposed Medigadda.

MilestoneTELAN12mar2016

The proposed inter-State board to be headed by the two Chief Minister alternatively every year would help work out mutually-agreeable specifications on the construction of Medigadda barrage as part of the Kaleshwaram project and a component of the redesigned Pranahita-Chevella project.

The barrage would allow irrigation of 16.4 lakh acres in Telangana and over 50,000 acres in some tribal areas of Maharashtra with the help of four small lift irrigation schemes.

A meeting of the new board likely to be held in a fortnight’s time would decide the height, full reservoir level (FRL), of the Tummidihatti and Medigadda barrages. The FRL of barrage near Tummidihatti is likely to be 148 meters while that of Medigadda could be anywhere between 100 and 103 meters.

Speaking after inking the bilateral document, Mr. Fadnavis said they had agreed for the pact with Telangana after the neighbouring State had explained and convinced it about various possibilities on taking up the two barrages on which Maharashtra had serious objections. “It’s a historic agreement by all means when several States are at loggerheads on issues related to river waters,” Mr. Chandrasekhar Rao said.

“We are ready to take up construction of Medigadda barrage, if given a go-ahead by Maharashtra, immediately even as talks could continue on deciding the height of the barrage at mutually agreeable level. However, my request to Maharashtra is to keep in mind that higher the storage capacity of the barrage larger the benefits to farmers of both the States, without causing much submergence”, Mr. Chandrasekhar Rao said.

KCR extends invite to Fadnavis

He invited Mr. Fadnavis, Water Resources Minister of Maharashtra G.D. Mahajan to Hyderabad for the next meeting of the inter-State board to discuss and decide upon the levels of Medigadda and Tummidihatti barrages.

The Maharashtra Chief Minister recollected that efforts were on between Maharashtra and the then combined Andhra Pradesh States for an agreement on Godavari waters since October 1975.

“When neighbouring countries could have good relations, why can’t two States have such ties,” the Maharashtra Chief Minister asked stating that the agreement would benefit the people of both Maharashtra and Telangana.

It’s a historic agreement by all means when several States are at loggerheads on issues related to river waters.

K. Chandrasekhar Rao, Chief Minister of Telangana.

When neighbouring countries can have good relations, why can’t two States have such ties?

Devendra Fadnavis, Chief Minister of Maharashtra.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> National> Telangana / by B. Chandrasekhar / March 09th, 2016

Congress legislator Venkat Reddy passes away

Ramreddy Venkat Reddy.
Ramreddy Venkat Reddy.

Former Congress Minister and five-time MLA Ramreddy Venkat Reddy (72) passed away after prolonged illness in a city hospital on Friday evening.

The end came at 3.20 pm at a corporate hospital. Venkat Reddy, who represented Palair Assembly constituency in Khammam district, had been ailing for the last few months. He had been admitted into the hospital for treatment as his condition deteriorated recently. He was serving as Public Accounts Committee chairman of the Telangana Assembly. The Congress leader born on May 22, 1944 leaves behind wife Sucharita and four daughters.

His mortal remains were shifted to his residence in MLAs Colony. The last rites would be performed at Pathilingala village of Kamepalli mandal on Saturday afternoon. His funeral will take place with police honours following the instructions of Chief Minister K. Chandrasekhar Rao, a release from CMO said.

A steady stream of visitors made a beeline to his residence to pay their last respects as soon as word spread about his demise. Telangana Pradesh Congress Committee President N. Uttam Kumar Reddy, working president Mallu Bhatti Vikramarka, and Congress Legislature Party leader K. Jana Reddy condoled the death.

He made his debut in the Assembly in 1996 byelection from Shujatnagar and repeated the feat in 1999 and 2009. Elected for the fifth time from Palair, Venkat Reddy was made chairman of Public Accounts Committee of Telangana Assembly. On four occasions, he had represented Shujatnagar constituency in Khammam district. After the constituency was demerged, he shifted to Palair and won with a comfortable majority in the 2014 elections.

A soft-spoken low-profile leader, Venkat Reddy served as Horticulture Minister in the Y. S. Rajasekhar Reddy, K. Rosaiah and Kiran Kumar Reddy Governments. Venkat Reddy’s brother R.Damodar Reddy is a former Minister.

In a statement issued here on Saturday, TPCC chief Uttam Kumar Reddy said the Congress party had lost a disciplined soldier. Telangana TDP president L. Ramana, working president A. Revanth Reddy and Ravula Chandrasekhar Reddy condoled the Congress leader’s death.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Hyderabad / by Special Correspondent / Hyderabad – March 05th, 2016