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Mahesh Babu to Campaign for Galla Jayadev

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The managing director of Amara Raja Batteries, Galla Jayadev on Sunday said that he would contest from the Guntur Parliamentary constituency, and talks are going on with the Telugu Desam party in this regard. “I will announce my decision after January 30,” he said.
Speaking to reporters on the premises of the newly launched extension unit of their industry near Chittoor, Mr Jayadev said that since childhood he was impressed by his grandfather late Rajagopal Naidu, veteran leader NG Ranga and his mother Galla Arunakumari and this prompted him to show interest in politics
Regarding the bifurcation issue, Mr Jayadev faulted the Congress party. “I don’t feel they (Congress) respected the people and the party leaders. Now they are initiating dialogue.” When asked whether his joining the Telugu Desam Party would bring political division in their family, he said the trend of members of the same family belonging to several parties is universal.
Replying to a question, Galla Jayadev said that he had consulted his relative and film actor Mahesh Babu about his foray into politics. “Mahesh Babu will not support any political party. But he will definitely canvass for me as an individual,” he said.
Interestingly, Mines Minister Galla Arunakumari, who was with her son, said that she would vote against the T-Bill in the Assembly. She rejected rumours of her hobnobbing with the TDP leaders following her presence with them in Guntur on Saturday. When asked whether she would contest as the Congress candidate in the coming elections, she said: “Let us see what happens then.”

Dr.Pattipati Ramaiah Naidu: Renowned Indian nuclear Physicist, Medical Scientist and Radiologist

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Pattipati Ramaiah Naidu(Dr. Ramaiah Naidu) (June 1904 - June 6, 1991) was a pioneering Indian nuclear Physicist, Medical Scientist and Radiologist who helped established the foundations of medical physics. He is better known for working under double Nobel Laureate, Marie Curie, for his post-doctoral thesis in Paris, France and pioneer in establishing up Radiology laboratory in India in 1938.

Early life
Naidu was born at Madanapalli, in the Chittoor district of Andhra Pradesh state in India in June 1904. In an early age he left home to join Aurobindo Ghosh's fledging ashram in Puducherry. From there he went to Santiniketan where he taught Mathematics. In 1923 he graduated with honours in B. Sc. from Banaras Hindu University.

Academia and research
Work with Marie Curie
After refusing a scholarship grant from England, he went to Paris to complete his M. Sc. Degree from University of Paris in 1929. He later wrote to Marie Curie, Polish physicist and chemist based in Paris, famous for her pioneering research on radioactivity expressing his desire to work with her, and was accepted into the Sorbonne where he completed his Doctor of Science in 1933. Here he worked with Marie Curie of Radium Institute, Paris for his Doctoral thesis under four years Curie-Carnegie Research Fellowship. The thesis covered ionization curve of alpha rays in pure gases including Krypton and Xenon and published his first research papers in French in the Journal of Physics and Radium, Paris in 1934. Upon Curie's death in 1934 Ramaiah Naidu was running her laboratory for a while.

Post doctorate
Later he moved to England to work under the English experimental physicist Prof. P. M. S. Patrick Blackett, in London University for his Ph. D. thesis which was awarded to him in 1936. In 1936, Tata Trust, Mumbai offered Ramaih Naidu the post of Chief Physicist at Tata Memorial Hospital, Bombay and sought his services to help establish India's first Radon production facility for treatment in Cancer Management. In 1936, Ramaiah Naidu spent another two years at the New York's Sloan Kettering Memorial Hospital, now known as Memorial Sloan–Kettering Cancer Center under G. Failla where he installed Radium Extraction unit for radon production.

Radon production facility in India
During 1936, Tata Sons, Mumbai was keen to set up a Cancer Research Institute under Sir Dorabji Tata Trust in India and sought Ramaiah Naidu services to help establish India's first Radon production facility for treatment in Cancer Management.

In 1938 Ramaiah Naidu joined Tata Memorial Hospital (now Tata Memorial Centre), as its Chief Physicist and brought along with him the Radium Extraction unit and 2 gms of Radium. He set up the countries first Radium Extraction unit well in time before the Start of Tata Memorial Hospital in 28 February 1941. In 1957, the Indian Cancer Research Centre (later called Cancer Research Institute), which was established in 1952 by the Government of India took over the Tata Memorial Hospital & Cancer Research Institute and in 1962 Tata Memorials Hospitals administrative control was transferred to the Department of Atomic Energy.
During World War II years the process of decommissioning and re-commissioning the radon plant before and after his bone marrow was damaged and developed artificial cancer due to his over exposure to radium. Essentially he was advised to move away from radiation related job. In 1948 Tata Trust sent Ramaiah Naidu and his family to Switzerland by for Treatment in 1948.

UNESCO years
Ramaiah Naidu along with his family recovered from the Radium overexposure and Bone Marrow damage. Thereafter, he joined UNESCO in Paris as Programme Specialist in the Department of Natural Science where he initiated and implemented several projects for improvement of science education. In 1955 on the request of Government of India Naidu transferred to India as science director for UNESCO, South East Asia. During 1957 – 59, he worked with the All India Council for Secondary Education as Field Adviser.

Personal life
Ramaiah Naidu met Ms. Marthe Mange of Swiss-French origin during the Second Round Table Conference in London. She was a journalist with Le Petit Democrat Populaire working in Paris and interested in Indology. She was the daughter of a wealthy businessman in Vosges region of France, who helped French Army during the World War I. The later day Italy dictator Benito Mussolini was one of Mange's former employees.

In 1940, the couple had a daughter, Leela Naidu who later acted in Indian Cinema, and was most famous for being listed as "The Worlds Most Beautiful Women" by Vogue and several magazines during the 1960s. She was married Tilak Raj Oberoi, son of Mohan Singh Oberoi, the founder of Oberoi Hotels and later to Dom Moraes the famous poet, writer and publisher based in Mumbai.

Ramaiah Naidu died on June 6, 1991, at the age of 87 years. The Association of Medical Physicists of India in 1992 created the Annual Dr. Ramaiah Naidu Memorial Oration Award in honour of Ramaiah's contribution and pioneering efforts in his works.

Anumolu RamaKrishna, Pullela Gopichand get Padma Bhushan; Anumolu Ramakrishna gets Padma Shri award

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Badminton player-turned coach Pullela Gopichand and Dr Anumolu Ramakrishna,  doyen Of Indian construction industry (posthumously)  were the two Kammas who were awarded Padma Bhushan in recognition of the distinguished services of high order extended by them.  They are among the 25 people awarded this year's Padma Bushan.

The awards will be conferred by the President at a ceremonial function  to be held at Rashtrapati Bhavan Bhawan usually around March or April. This year, the President has approved conferment of 127 Padma Awards – two Padma Vibhushan, 24 Padma Bhushan and 101 Padma Shree awards – one of the highest civilian awards for prominent personalities in the country.        

Dr Anumolu Ramakrishna, who got the Padma VIbhushan posthumously from Punadipadu village, near Vijayawada served as the President, Deputy Managing Director and Advisor of Larsen & Toubro Ltd. He also served as the Operational Head of ECC Construction Division of Larsen & Toubro Ltd. He provided leadership for the construction of scores of cement plants, steel plants, power projects, refineries, petrochemical complexes, bridges, harbours, airports and nuclear power plants in and outside India. 

Chief Coach of Indian badminton, Pullela Gopichand, is elated at having been bestowed the coveted Padma Bhushan in the year’s roll of honours.  “It indicates that the contributions are getting recognised. I am happy that badminton has been in the spotlight. It is even more heartening that this comes after the Pullela Gopichand Badminton Academy (PGBA) received the President’s Medal last year. I am also happy that this comes on the day when two the of the Academy’s leading lights, Saina Nehwal and P V Sindhu have made it to the finals of India Open. I hope more men players will be honoured with the Arjuna next time round,” he said.


Anumolu Sri Rama Rao has been selected for Padma Shri award for his social work. Being a medical doctor, he also received Dr BC Roy National Award in 1995.
Rama Rao (74) has treated more than 2,70,900 patients by conducting thousands of free medical camps. He also worked as the president of the Indian Medical Association, Vijayawada unit, during 2010-11.  His father Sheshagiri Rao worked as sarpanch for Punadipadu village near Viajaywada

Padma Awardee Kammas (Updated)

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Padma Vibhushan:
1. Gottipati Brahmayya
2. Dr.Gogineni Ranganayakulu (N.G.Ranga)
3. Dr.Kotha Sachidananda Murthy
4. Dr.Tummala Madhava Rao
5. Dr.Myneni Hari Prasada Rao
6. Akkineni Nageswara Rao

Padma Bhushan:
1. Dr.Moturi Satyanarayana
2. Dr.Akkineni Nageswara Rao
3. Kongara Jaggayya
4. Adusumalli Radhakrishna
5. Dr.Ramanujam Varadaraja Perumal (Tamilnadu)
6. Kantipudi Padmanabhayya (IAS)
7. Ghattamaneni Sivarama Krishna
8. Dr.Patibandla Chandra Sekhara Rao
9. Dr.Daggubati RamaNaidu
10. Dr.Atluri Satyanarayana (USA)
11. Dr.Anumolu RamaKrishna
12. Pullela Gopichand

Padma Shri:
1. Nandamuri Taraka Rama Rao
2. Dr.Moturi Satyanarayana
3. Akkineni Nageswara Rao
4. Challagulla Narasimham (IAS)
5. Dr.Gadde Rama Koteswara Rao
6. Kalluri Subba Rao
7. Dr.Vadlamudi Venkata Rao
8. Katta Venkataswamy Naidu (Tamilnadu)
9. Dr.Valluri Sita Rama Rao
10. Dr.Nuthakki Bhanu Prasad
11. Dr.Yalavarthy Nayudamma
12. Dr.Govindappa Venkataswamy (Tamilnadu)
13. Dr.Kadiyala Ramachandra Rao
14. Dr.Narla Tata Rao
15. Dr.Sruyadevara Ramachandra Rao (IAS)
16. Dr.Gopalaswamy Govindarajan (Tamilnadu)
17. Dr.Immaneni Sathyamurthy (Tamilnadu)
18. Dr.Kakarla Subba Rao
19. Dr.Idpuganti Venkata Subba Rao
20. Dr.Kota Hari Narayana
21. Dr.Gullapalli Nageswara Rao
22. Dr.Atluri Srimannarayana
23. Dr.Yarlagadda Lakshmi Prasad
24. Pullela Gopichand
25. Dr.G.Bhaktavatsalam (Tamilnadu)
26. Dr.Namperumal Perumalswamy (Tamilnadu)
27. Koneru Humpy
28. Manchu Mohan Babu
29. Kakarla Narayan Karthikeyan (Tamilnadu)
30. T.N.Manoharan (Tamilnadu)
31. Dr.Koneru Ramakrishna Rao
32. Dr.Gutta Muniratnam
33. Dr.Katragadda Paddayya (Archaeologist from Pune)
34. Sridevi (Actress)
35. Rajshree Pathy (Tamilnadu)
36. Anumolu RamaRao

J P Chalasani to join as group CEO of Punj Lloyd

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Chalsani is expected to join the Delhi-based company by the end of this month

The former chief executive officer of , Jayaram Prasad Chalsani, is all set to take over as the group chief executive officer of Punj Lloyd. Chalsani is expected to join the Delhi-based company by the end of this month, and would be re-locating to Gurgaon.

Chalsani, who quit Reliance Power in September 2013, will also be a director on the board of infrastructure company Punj Lloyd. He was not available for comments. The engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) major, is also present in the infrastructure development space, albeit in a small way. Punj Lloyd, which did not have a reigning chief executive, too was not available for comments.  

The 52-year-old was on a vacation in the United States for the last two months. Unlike, earlier expected, he did not go on become an enterpreneur. He had an eighteen-year-old stint with the Ambanis, where he worked for both the undivided Reliance Industries as well as at two companies of Anil Dhirubhai Ambani group ie, Reliance Energy (now Reliance Infrastructure) and Reliance Power. He became the chief executive officer of Reliance Power in 2008.

Hailing from Vijayawada in Andhra Pradesh, Chalasani is an engineering graduate from Regional Engineering College in Nagpur. He started his career in with National  Corporation ().

This would be the first time that Chalsani would work for a company which has diverse interests in infrastructure including equipment manufacturing as well. Added to that Punj Lloyd also has most of its projects in international locations, especially in the Middle East.

Preeti Kakani named Intel Finalists

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Preeti Kakanisenior at Jericho High School, is one of the 40 students from across the United States that were named finalists in the Intel Science Talent Search.

Kakani’s project is entitled Differential Gene Expression Prior to Eye Opening in Mouse Superior Colliculus, 

Kakani along with the other 39 finalists, will convene in Washington, D.C. from March 6-12 to compete for $630,000 provided by the Intel Foundation, including a grand prize of $100,000 that will be awarded to the first-place winner.

Satya Nadella likely to be next Microsoft CEO

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NEW DELHI: Senior Microsoft executive Satya Nadella would replace Steve Ballmer as Microsoft CEO, two media reports said today, citing sources familiar with the processes of selecting the new leader at the Redmond-based company.

Bloomberg reported that the Microsoft board was set to name Nadella, an Indian who was born in Hyderabad and who completed his engineering from Manipal University before heading to the US for higher studies, as the company's next CEO. The report also said that the board was discussing replacing Bill Gates as chairman.

The Bloomberg report came several hours after Kara Swisher, who has a fairly reliable record of breaking stories, wrote on technology website Re/code that Microsoft has apparently finalized Nadella as the next CEO of the company. Swisher wrote that a formal announcement was expected within a week.

While Bloomberg report indicated that Nadella was certain to be the next CEO, Re/code report hinted that he was among the three insiders shortlisted for the job and was the strongest candidate.

"And, at this moment, those who have watched the process think that insider Satya Nadella, who is currently leading its enterprise effort, is the likeliest internal candidate to prevail. That's due to a number of reasons, including his familiarity with the company, where he has spent much of his career, as well as a strong technical background and a varied work history at Microsoft," noted the report. "The two other insiders -- strategy head Tony Bates and Nokia leader and former Microsoft exec Stephen Elop -- seem further behind."

Currently, Nadella is the president of server & tools business at Microsoft. He landed his current assignment in 2011. Before that he was senior vice-president of R&D for the online services division and vice-president of the Microsoft business division. In total he has been with Microsoft for nearly 23 years and is considered a person who is familiar with the internal culture within the company, which has an incredibly complex corporate structure.

Nadella's appointment as CEO is likely to have mixed reactions. He is considered a person who is familiar with the Microsoft's enterprise-focussed products like MS Office, online services like Bing and cloud services like Azure. In the last few years, Microsoft has seen good adoption of products like Office 365, Azure and Windows Servers and many industry insiders believe that for the company, enterprise services and the products are the future. If that is the same consensus Microsoft board has reached, Nadella seems like an obvious and good choice as the next CEO of the company.

But at the same time Microsoft has found going a little difficult in the consumer space. Windows 8 has been considered a flop and the company is trying to fix the OS by dialling down on the Metro user interface. Also, Windows Phone has so far failed to take off even as Google's Android and Apple's iOS continue to woo consumers. In the smartphone and tablet market Microsoft has negligible share. In the personal computer market, the sale is slowing and that has hurt Microsoft and its hardware partners.

While Microsoft's financial performance remains strong, the company seems to have lost mind-share. Google and Apple are now considered more innovating and exciting technology firms compared Microsoft.

Patrick Moorhead, president at Moor Insights & Strategy and a veteran of computer industry, says that Nadella may face challenging time in fixing Microsoft's problems in consumer space.

"Satya Nadella has a lot of experience, but not as much as someone who typically runs a company of the size of Microsoft. He has spent most of his time in the enterprise space, so I think he would need a very strong lieutenant who gets the consumer market. Microsoft's biggest challenge is consumer and Satya doesn't have experience in this market," Moorhead told .

Nadella is said to have little experience with smartphone, personal computer and Xbox divisions at Microsoft. This is a concern that many will raise if Nadella turns out to be the CEO of Microsoft. On Friday when Bloomberg story appeared, Peter Bright, who is Microsoft editor at technology website ArsTechnica, tweeted, "The question is: who will be the champion for mass-market consumer/end-user products?"

As focus turns on him, Nadella has been more active in talking to media in the last few months. A few months earlier in Paris he was meeting startups. He told a French publication, "Meeting with startups is important because the tech cycle is such that the small guys make it big and the big guys die".

Before that he talked to Mary Jo Foley, a long-time Microsoft watcher, for Zdnet website. He told the website that Steve Ballmer taught him "there's nothing in this industry -- and definitely in this particular segment -- that's built to last... It's all about being able to reinvent yourself."

Given the fast-changing technology market and the advances Google and Apple have made in the last few years, leaving Microsoft behind, Nadella will definitely have to reinvent Microsoft if he is its next CEO and if the company does not decide to give up its business in the consumer market.

Aravind Eye Care to set up hospital in Nigeria

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From an 11-bed hospital in Madurai started by Dr Govindappa Venkataswamy (better known as ‘Dr V’), the late founder-Chairman of Aravind Eye Hospital, the eye-care institution is now setting up its first overseas venture, in Nigeria. 

In partnership with Nigeria’s Chanrai Group, the hospital is expected to be the largest eye-care facility in Africa, said S. Aravind, Director (Projects) with Aravind Eye Care System. 

Scheduled to go operational in 2015, the hospital expects to do about 10,000 surgeries annually.
The 37-year-old Aravind Hospital will bring in its eye-care expertise, while the funds will come from the local partner, Tulsi Chanrai Foundation (TCF), he added. 

TCF is run by a section of the Chanrai family, whose business interests range from textiles to agricultural products. 

The Chanrais also run eye-care programmes in India, besides being a trustee of Mumbai’s Jaslok Hospital. 

Responding to why the largely Tamil-Nadu-centric Aravind Group opted to set up shop in Nigeria, Aravind said the organisation has been doing projects on and off in Nigeria, in terms of training doctors, and hence the familiarity with the region. 

The organisation has trained most of the ophthalmologists practising there, he pointed out.
Africa needs a model that works within its ecosystem, and the new venture hopes to build local capacity, he said. 

India and Africa have similar population profiles, but India does 10 times more cataract operations, he observed. Nigeria has a population of about 170 million and a requirement of about 8 lakh eye-related surgeries. 

Chennai hospital

Aravind Eye Care is also setting up a Rs 140-crore hospital near Chennai. It has acquired the land and is awaiting building approval, said Aravind. 

With similar operational timelines as the Nigeria hospital, the Chennai hospital will, however, have a larger capacity of about 60,000 surgeries a year. 

The group has been conservative in its outlook because of its philosophy to go with its own funds. “We are going to grow, but it would be tempered,” he said, adding that it did not want to grow without a control on the services offered. 

The group also has four partnership projects — with the Rajiv Gandhi Chairtable Trust in Amethi, another in Lucknow, the Birlas in Kolkata and Sun Pharma promoter Shanghvi Trust in Amreli (Gujarat).

Kamma IPS Officers (Updated)

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Kamma IPS officers (Past and Present)

1. P.S.Ramamohana Rao
2. K.Ramamohana Rao
3. K.V.Appa Rao
4. P.D.Koteswara Rao
5. Chirumamilla Venkata Narasaiah
6. P.Gowtham Kumar
7. M.Lakshmi Narayana
8. K.Sadasiva Rao
9. Yendluri Anil Kumar
10. P.S.Prasad
11. C.R.Naidu
12. N.V.Surendra Babu
13. Jasti Venkata Ramudu
14. Boyapati Dinakar Prasad
15. Chadalawada Umesh Chandra
16. Maganti Kantha Rao
17. Goduguluri Srinivasa Rao
18. Ammineni. R. Srinivasa Rao
19. Kode Durga Prasad
20. M.Malakondaiah
21. Aluri Venkateswara rao
22. P. Appa Rao
23. Mandava VishnuVardhan Rao
24. Muvva Chandra Sekhar
25. M.Punna Rao
26. Athota Malakondaiah
27. Thummala Vikram
28. E.Damodar
29. Parvathaneni Sai Prasad
30. Chitturi Prasad
31. Kalluri Siva Rama Prasad
32. M.V.Rao

33. Kondaveeti Rajendra Kumar
34. Pullela Murali Mohana Rao
35. Koya Praveen
36. S.C.Thimmappa (Karnataka)
37. S.K.Venugopal (Karnataka)
38. V.Balachandran (Tamilnadu)
39. K.Radhakrishna (Tamilnadu)
40. T.Radha Krishna (Tamilnadu)
41. Dinakar (Tamilnadu)
42. B. Perumalsamy (Tamilnadu)
43. P.Bhaskar (Tamilnadu)
44. C.Dinakaran (Tamilnadu)
45. D.R.Karthikeyan (Tamilnadu)
46. V.A. Ravikumar (Tamilnadu)

47. Kamireddy Panduranga Prabhakara Rao (DGP - West Bengal)
48. Pendurthi Purnachandra Rao
49. Tatineni Yoganand
50. Bathini Srinivasulu 
51. Harshita Attaluri - SP (Kollam - Kerala)
52. Ancha Shankar Rao (OSD, Tourism and Civil Aviation Department - Sikkim )
53. Mandava HarshaVardhan (S/o Mandava VishnuVardhan Rao) IPS - IG Jarkhand)
54. Darpineni Amarkesh 

Nuthakki Ramaseshaiah, Ex.MP and former Health Minister Orissa State

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Nutakki Ramaseshaiah B.A., B.L.  (29 September 1897 – 1 June 1969) was an Indian lawyer, politician and Member of Parliament.

He was born to Shri Nutakki Uddande Ramaiah at Chiluvuru, Guntur district on 29 September 1897. He was educated at Presidency College and Madras Law College, Madras. He married Shrimati N. Punnamma on 14 May 1924. They had 2 sons and 2 daughters.


He has practiced Law in Vijayawada for some time. He has worked as assistant Diwan and later as Diwan in Jaipur Samsthanam. He is closely associated with Velagapudi Ramakrishna.


He was elected as President, Taluka Board, Bezwada, 1929-30

He was elected to 1st Lok Sabha from Parvathipuram (Lok Sabha constituency) in 1952 as an Independent candidate.


He was elected to the Jaipur Assembly constituency in Orissa as a member of Swatantra Party. He had held a position of Minister of Health in Government of Orissa.


He has contested to the 3rd Lok Sabha from Nowrangapur constituency in 1962 and lost.Vedula

Ashok Kondabolu: Rap Artist, Dancer, Content Creater; USA

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Ashok Kondabolu, also known by his stage name Dapwell, is an American rapper and dancer from Queens, New York. A graduate of Stuyvesant High School in New York City, Kondabolu is best known for being a member of and hype man for the New York-based rap group Das Racist. Kondabolu has also announced that he will eventually release his own solo material. He is the younger brother of comedian Hari Kondabolu, with whom he conducts the monthly "Untitled Kondabolu Brothers Project" as well as the "Untitled Kondabolu Brothers Podcast" every two weeks. Rolling Stone India described Ashok as "New York’s stock Joe Gould-like character injected with the creative adrenaline of gonzo journalist Hunter S Thompson and the uncouth coarseness of writer Charles Bukowski." With the break up of Das Racist in December 2012, Kondabolu stated that he would be focusing his attention on two television shows and his radio show Chillin' Island


Satyanarayana Chowdary Nadella Announced as Microsoft's New CEO

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After a five-month search, Microsoft has named Satya Nadella its new CEO. He's the third CEO in the company's history.

Satya Nadella was born in 1967 in Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh, India to Kamma parents B. N. Yugandhar (Father) and Prabavati Nadella (Mother). His father B. N. Yugandhar is an 1962 batch Indian Administrative Service officer (IAS) hails from the Bukkapuram village, Anantapur district, B. N. Yugandhar was a member of the Planning Commission during 2004-2009 under Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. He has also served as secretary to the prime minister, secretary, rural development, and as a director of the Lal Bahadur Shastri National Academy of Administration.

 BN Yugandhar

     Anupama                                                                                                         Family        

Satya Nadella's wife, Anupama V Nadella is a Brahmin, daughter of another retired IAS officer K.R. Venugopal, an architect of the Rs. 2 a kg rice scheme launched during the late NTR’s regime. She also attended Hyderabad Public School.

Satyanarayana Chowdary Nadella is the executive vice president in charge of Microsoft's cloud and enterprise group, a fast-growing and lucrative division of the company. He's been a Microsoft employee for over 20 years and has worked as a VP in the company's business and online services divisions.

It's not a big surprise Microsoft's board picked Nadella. Last week, several reports began trickling out that Microsoft had chosen him. The company's board reportedly made its final vote over the weekend, only taking a break to watch the Seattle Seahawks win the Super Bowl.

Microsoft began looking for a new CEO in August when Steve Ballmer announced he'd retire within a year or as soon as the board could find a replacement. Ballmer's decision to retire was a surprise, as he had previously said he didn't plan to do it until all his kids were in college, which wouldn't have been until 2017 at the earliest.

The board reportedly considered a few outside hires for the job, including Ford CEO Alan Mulally. It's likely that the board's decision to pick an internal candidate means it wants the company to continue its course. Right now, Microsoft is still struggling to catch up with the consumer shift to mobile computing devices like smartphones and tablets. Its newest operating system, Windows 8, is hybrid software designed to work on regular desktop or laptop computers plus touchscreen devices like tablets. But Windows 8 got a lukewarm reception, and Microsoft is now working on updates to make it easier to use on traditional computers. Meanwhile, Microsoft's other businesses like Office and Xbox are doing pretty well.

If Microsoft's board had landed on an outside hire, that would've been a sign that the company wanted to change its direction and possible focus on the growing parts of its business like enterprise software.

No wonder his Total Calculated Annual Compensation as on date is  $7,668,952 = Rs.47,94,62,879

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella offered Rs 112 cr pay package

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Satya Nadellawill get a base annual salary of USD 1.2 million as new CEO of Microsoft Corporation, but his overall package after taking into account bonus and stock awards may reach USD 18 million (Rs 112 crore) a year besides various other perks. 

As per his new employment agreement, the Indian-origin CEO of USD 78-billion software major will be paid his salary on "semi-monthly" basis at an annual rate of USD 1.2 million (Rs 7.5 crore).
46-year-old Nadella, who has been with Microsoft for 22 years, would also be eligible for a cash bonus, which can range from zero to 300 per cent, resulting into total payout of up to USD 3.6 million.
Besides, he would get stock awards to the tune of USD 13.2 million, taking the total package to USD 18 million.

Nadella's annual salary would be determined by the company's Executive Incentive Programme (EIP).
The top executive would be eligible for an annual EIP stock award worth USD 13.2 million starting 2015 fiscal year, according to Microsoft's offer letter to Nadella.

"For Microsoft's 2014 and 2015 fiscal years, your annual cash award target will be 300 per cent of your salary earned as CEO during the fiscal year.

"Your actual cash award can be from 0-300 per cent of the target and will be based on your performance as evaluated by the Board," the letter said, a copy of which has been submitted to the US market regulator SEC also.

Nadella, who became the third CEO of Microsoft after Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer, was paid an annual salary of USD 675,000 for the fiscal year 2013 as the President of the firm's server and tools business.

Going by reports, Nadella pocketed a cash bonus of USD 1.6 million last year.

Microsoft's fiscal year runs from July 1 to June 30.

Chandrababu Naidu emerges NDA’s standby PM candidate

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 HYDERABAD:In an unexpected development that is raising eyebrows, Telugu Desam Party (TDP) presidentNara Chandrababu Naidu is emerging as the NDA's consensus candidate as Prime Minister in the event of the BJP failing to get more than 200 parliamentary seats on its own, revealed top leaders privy to the development.

Leaders said along with a formal pre-poll alliance between BJP and TDP, the formal announcement on Naidu emerging as the dark horse will come after Parliament session ends. With more than 200 seats on its own Narendra Modi will be the clear PM favorite. "It would be difficult for us to see Modi at the helm in case we fail to cross the 200 mark. While we are hopeful of getting more than 200 seats, it is practical to have plan B and leaders like Chandrababu Naidu would be the natural choice, going by his acceptance," said a top BJP leader who commented that he would be expelled by his party if he is named.

Naidu is likely to contest the parliamentary polls either from Malkajgiri in Ranga Reddy district or Hindupur in Anantapur district.

"It is for sure that Chandrababu Naidu is going to play a pivotal role in government formation at the Centre. And we are not denying the fact that he is the prime ministerial candidate. As the dynamics of the pre-poll coalition are being worked out, Naidu rightfully tops the list of consensus candidates for the PM post," said senior TDP legislator A Revanth Reddy.

While he himself is among the aspirants to run for the Lok Sabha from Malkajgiri, Revanth Reddy said he would work for Naidu in the constituency if he prefers to contest from that constituency."As it is likely that Naidu would contest from Malkajgiri, I will be one of his campaign managers," added Revanth Reddy.BJP leaders said it was important that Naidu be on their side in the post-poll scenario while the party faces an uphill task to win over the coalition partners with Narendra Modi being the prime ministerial nominee.

Veteran BJP leader M Venkaiah Naidu told TOI that the coalition scenario would get clearer once there was clarity on Telangana, which he expects after the Parliament session ends. "We are waiting for the Telangana issue to be settled before going for the formalities of the coalition. Andhra Pradesh is one of the most important states for us because we have strong old partners here," said Venkaiah Naidu.BJP insiders said internal political dynamics in the party was also aimed at reining in Modi. They said Naidu's prime ministerial candidature was strongly being projected by the camps opposed to the Gujarat chief minister. They said leaders including L K Advani, Sushma Swaraj, and Arun Jaitley are in touch with Naidu.

As Naidu called on Advani and Sushma in Delhi on Tuesday, the BJP leaders said there was more to the meeting as it is being perceived as the TDP leader's bid to stop the Congress from going ahead with the bifurcation of AP for its political gains. .Sources said Naidu was in touch with the JD(U), which is vehemently opposing Modi as prime minister

Going by the positive response he was getting, the BJP leaders said Naidu would prove a good leader to rope in the coalition partners in the post-poll scenario.As united AP has 42 seats, the TDP is hopeful of emerging the single largest party in Seemandhra, which sends 25 MPs to the Lok Sabha. The party is pinning its hope on Chandrabau Naidu who is claiming to have turned the tide on the division issue by convincing the BJP not to support the Telangana Bill in its present form.

Garikapati RamaMohana Rao elected to Rajyasabha

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Garikapati Ram Mohan Rao Telegu Desam party General Secretary,  from Warangal elected to RajyaSabha from Andhra Pradesh. Garikapati Mohan Rao has been instrumental in the successful conduction of the Vastunna Meekosam campaign of Chandrababu Naidu. 

Vijay Nauidu, Member Fiji Electoral Commision

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The Fiji government recently announced a seven member commission, headed by former president of the Fiji Law Society Chen Bunn Young, to supervise the elections promised for September.

A member of Fiji's newly-formed Electoral Commission, Vijay Naidu, says he is looking forward to a democratically-elected Government.

Vijay Naidu was born in Fiji and educated there and in the United Kingdom. He is Professor and Director of the Development Studies program at the University of the South Pacific, and was Professor and Director of Development Studies at Victoria University of Wellington from 2003 to 2007. He has written on aid, migration, ethnicity, higher education, electoral politics, land tenure, the state, development and poverty, and taken an active role in the civil society movement in Fiji over many years. He has recently served a term as co-chair of Aotearoa New Zealand International Development Network (DEVNET).

Professor Naidu, of the University of the South Pacific, says one of the commission's first steps will be to establish its Terms of Reference.

"What we want to do is move as smoothly and as quickly towards a general election. Timing is of the essence here and we need to facilitate this process and I think the next stage is to get a supervisor of the elections in place and set up the electoral office and we move forward."

Vijay Naidu says all the people elected to the commission have integrity and are independent of the Government.

He says he feels optimistic that elections will go ahead as the Government has made a commitment to the international community.


Delhi High Court Chief Justice Appointed Supreme Court Judge

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Delhi High Court chief justice Nuthalapati Venkata Ramana has been appointed as Supreme Court judge and orders to that effect were issued by President Pranab Mukherjee on Saturday. He is likely to assume office as Supreme Court judge on Feb 13.
Justice NV Ramana, who was acting chief justice of the Andhra Pradesh High Court from March 10, 2013 to May 20, 2013 was elevated as the chief justice of Delhi High Court on September 2, 2013. Name of Justice NV Ramana was recommended by the  Supreme Court Collegium.
NV Ramana was born in an agricultural family on August 27, 1957 in Ponnavaram village in Krishna district. He enroled as an advocate on February 10, 1983. He practised in the High Courts of Andhra Pradesh, Central and Andhra Pradesh Administrative Tribunals and the Supreme Court of India in Civil, Criminal, Constitutional, Labour, Service and Election matters.
He has specialized in Constitutional, Criminal, Service and Inter-State River laws. He has also functioned as panel counsel for various government organisations. He has functioned as additional standing counsel for Central government and standing counsel for railways in the Central Administrative Tribunal at Hyderabad. He has also functioned as additional advocate general of Andhra Pradesh. He was appointed as a permanent judge of the Andhra Pradesh High Court on June 27, 2000.

Vijayawada as the New Capital of Separate Andhra Pradesh?

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అనుకున్నదంతా ఐపొయింది, ఆంధ్ర రాష్ట్రం రెండు ముక్కలైంది. ఇప్పుడు మనముందున్న పెద్ద సమస్య సీమాంధ్ర రాష్ట్రానికి కొత్త రాజధాని. మనం తలుచుకుంటే ఒక దశాబ్ద కాలంలోనే హైదరాబాద్ ను తలదన్నే రాజధానిని తయారు చేసుకోగలం. కొత్త రాజధాని ఏ ప్రాంతంలో ఏర్పడినా కాని అభివృద్ధి, పారిశ్రామీకరణ అన్ని జిల్లాలలో సమానంగా జరిగినప్పుడే భవిష్యత్తులో కొత్త రాష్ట్రంలో అన్ని ప్రాంతాల ప్రజల్లో ఏ విధమైన అసంతృప్తి తలెత్తకుండా ఉంటుంది. 

రాజధాని ఏర్పాటు చేయాలంటే స్థల రాజకీయాలు, కుల రాజకీయాలు, వెనకబడిన ప్రాంతాల ఉద్ధరింపు ఇవేమీ ముఖ్యం కాదని అన్ని జిల్లాల వారు, ప్రాంతాల వారు గుర్తుంచు కొవాలి. రాజధాని ఏర్పాటుకు మౌలిక వసతులు, వనరులు, రవాణా, నీరు, భౌగోళిక స్వరూపం, జనాభా అతి ముఖ్యమైనవి. 

కొత్తగా ఏర్పడే సీమాంధ్ర రాష్ట్రానికి రాజధానిగా వుండే అర్హతలు కలిగిన పట్టణాలలో విజయవాడ, విశాఖపట్నం, తిరుపతి, కర్నూలు, నెల్లూరు వున్నాయి. ఈ పట్టణాలలో జనాభా పరంగా విశాఖపట్నం, గ్రేటర్ విజయవాడ పదిహేను లక్షలు పైగా జనాభా కలిగి ఉన్నాయి, మిగిలిన మూడు పట్టణాల జనాభా ఐదు, ఆరు లక్షల లోపు గానే ఉంటుంది. 

భౌగోళికంగా చూస్తే విజయవాడ, రాష్టంలో అన్ని ప్రాంతాలకు, తెలంగాణాకు కు కూడా అనుకూలంగా ఉండే పట్టణం. ఇక్కడ నుండి రాష్ట్రంలో అన్ని ముఖ్య పట్టణాలు  నాలుగు వందల కిలోమీటర్ల లోపు దూరంలోనే ఉన్నాయి. విజయవాడ పట్టణం రాష్ట్రంలో అన్ని జిల్లా కేంద్రాలకు, ముఖ్య పట్టణాలకు బస్సు, మరియు రవాణా సౌకర్యం కలిగి ఉంది.  ఈ పట్టణం నుండి రాష్ట్రం లోని ముఖ్య పట్టణాలు, మరియి దక్షిణ భారత దేశంలో ముఖ్య పట్టణాలు కలిపే రోడ్డు మార్గం కలిగి ఉంది. భారత దేశంలో అన్ని ప్రధాన పట్టణాలను కలిపే అతి పెద్ద రైల్వే కూడలి పట్టణంగా విజయవాడ నగరం యెంతో ప్రసిద్ధి చెందింది.  

విజయవాడలో విమానాశ్రయం ఉండటం కూడా ఎంతో అనుకూలాంశం. ఇప్పటికే విజయవాడ విమానాశ్రయానికి నాలుగు వందల నలభై ఎకరాల స్థలం కలిగి ఉంది, మరియు ఇంకో నాలుగు వందల ముప్పది రెండు ఎకరాల స్థల సేకరణకు రంగం సిద్ధమైంది. ఈ విమానాశ్రయం జాతీయ రహదారిని ఆనుకుని, విజయవాడ నగరానికి అతి సమీపంలో ఉంది. త్వరలోనే మచిలీపట్టణంలొ అతి పెద్ద నౌకాశ్రయం రాబోతుంది. 

ప్రభుత్వ కార్యాలయాలు, అసెంబ్లీ, సచివాలయం మొదలైన ముఖ్యమైన కార్యాలయాలు ఏర్పాటు చేసుకోవాలంటే పెద్ద మొత్తంలో ప్రభుత్వ స్థలాలు ఉన్న నగరం ఐతే రాజధానికి అనుకూలం గా ఉంటుందనే వాదన ఒకటి ఉంది. ఒకప్పుడు ప్రభుత్వ కార్యాలయాలకు పెద్ద మొత్తంలో స్థలం అవసరం అయ్యేది కానీ,  ప్రస్తుతం తక్కువ స్థలంలోనే బహుళ అంతస్తుల భవనాలు అన్ని సౌకర్యాలతో నిర్మించే అవకాశం వుంది, అందువలన ప్రభుత్వ మిగులు భూమి లభ్యత అనేది ముఖ్యమైన విషయం కానే కాదు, ఈ విధంగా చూసినా కూడా విజయవాడ పట్టణాన్ని ఆనుకొని మంగళగిరి, మరియు గన్నవరం ప్రాంతాలలో వందల ఎకరాల ప్రభుత్వ మిగులు భూములు ఉన్నాయి. 

విజయవాడ నగరంలో పుష్కలమైన నీటి లభ్యత ఉంది. ఈ నగరం నుండి కృష్ణా నది ప్రవహిస్తుంది, అదే విధంగా ఈ ప్రాంతంలో భూగర్భ జలాలు కూడా యెంతో ఎక్కువగా లభిస్తాయి. ఇన్ని అనుకూలతలు కలిగిన పట్టణం ఆంధ్ర రాష్ట్రంలో మరొకటి లెదు. ఇప్పటికే విజయవాడ నగరాన్ని వాణిజ్య, రాజకీయ, కళా రంగాలకు రాజధానిగా అభివర్ణిస్తారు.

కోస్తా జిల్లాల్లో ఆర్ధికంగా బలపడిన వారు వాణిజ్యవేత్తలు, పారిశ్రామికవేత్తలుగా ఎన్నో విజయాలు సాధించారు, హైదరాబాద్, బెంగుళూరు నగరాల్లో మరియు విదేశాలలో ఎన్నో పరిశ్రమలు స్థాపించారు, ఎందరికో ఉపాధి అవకాశాలు కల్పించారు, యెంతో సంపద సృష్టించారు. విజయవాడ రాజధానిగా ఏర్పడే పక్షంలో ఆ ప్రాంతంలో వీరు అనేక పరిశ్రమలు స్థాపించే అవకాశం ఉంది తద్వారా ఈ ప్రాంతం ఆర్ధికంగా, పారిశ్రామికంగా యెంతో అభివృద్ధి చెంది హైదరాబాద్ ను సవాలు చేసే అవకాశం వుంది. 

ఉమ్మడి మదరాసు రాష్ట్రం విడిపోయి ప్రత్యెక ఆంధ్ర రాష్ట్రము ఏర్పడినప్పుడు రాష్ట్ర రాజధానిగా కాంగ్రెస్ పెద్దలు రాష్ట్రానికి నడిబొడ్డు పట్టణం విజయవాడ ని పరిగణలోకి తీసుకున్నారు, కాని అప్పటికే ఇక్కడ కమ్యూనిస్ట్ పార్టీలు బలంగా ఉండటం, ఈ జిల్లాలో కమ్మ వారి ప్రాబల్యం అధికంగా వుండటం వంటి కారణాల వలన, రాష్ట్ర రాజకీయాల్లో మరియు కాంగ్రెస్ పార్టీలో  బలమైన రెడ్డి వర్గం విజయవాడ రాజధానిగా    ఏర్పాటు చేయాలనే అంశానికి ఆదిలోనే తెర దించి తాత్కాలిక రాజధానిగా కర్నూలు పట్టణాన్ని ఎంపిక చేశారు. కాని ఆ తరువాత మౌలిక వనరులు, వసతులు, భౌగోళిక స్వరూపాన్ని దృష్టిలోకి ఉంచుకొని శాశ్వత రాజధానిగా హైదరాబాదు ను ఏర్పాటు చేశారు.

పై విషయాలను పరిగణలోకి తీసుకున్నపుడు త్వరలో ఏర్పడబోయే ప్రత్యెక రాష్ట్రానికి విజయవాడ రాజధానిగా ఏర్పాటు చేయాలనే విషయంలో మరే విధమైన సందేహాలకు తావుండకూడదు. కాంగ్రెస్ పార్టీలో ప్రస్తుతం రెడ్డి కులం వారి లాబీ పనిచేసే అవకాశం లెదు.. కమ్మ, కాపు మరియు ఇతర వర్గాలవారికి అనుకూలమైన  విజయవాడ నగరానికే కాంగ్రెస్ పార్టీలో మెజారిటి వర్గాలు, అధిష్టానం అంగీకరించే అవకాశం ఉంది. 



Kamma IRS ( Indian Revenue Officers ) updated list

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Kamma IRS (Indian Revenue Service) officers (Past and Present) 

1. P.A.Chowdary
2. Muthuluri Narasimhappa
3. Kata Chandrahas
4. Kotha Hari Prasad
5. Kosaraju Veeraiah Chowdary
6. Koripalli Nageswara Rao
7. Venigalla NagaPrasad
8. Jasti Krishna Kishore
9. Bathina Ramesh
10. Vemulapalli Ramu
11. Bodduluri Hareram
12. Sunkara V.S.S.Prasad
13. Yalavarthi Rajendra
14. Kondaveeti Purnachandra Rao
15. Chirumamilla Venkanna Chowdary
16. K.S.Rajendra Kumar
17. M.Subbaiah Chowdary
18. Katragadda Haritha
19. Vadlamudi Raghavendra Rao
20. Athota Satyanarayana
21. Edara Ravi Kiran

22. Kalyanam Rajesh Rama Rao
23. Dinesh Paruchuri
24. Vinaya Kumar Kantheti
25. Vikram Chand Meka
26. Venkata Siva Prasad Chirala
27. Siripurapu Padmaja
28. Cherukuri Srinivasa Rao
29. V.Appa Rao
30. Nuvvula Lakshmi Prasad
31. Uppalapati Anjaneyulu
32. Kotapati Vamsi Krishna
33. Ravi Anuradha
34. Valluri Srinivas
35. Vasantha Vijaya Babu
36. Kancherla HariPrasada Rao
37. Kantipudi Krishna Rao
38. Panda Gangadhar
39. Anumala Mallikarjuna Rao
40. Tummala Reddi Sekhar Naidu
41. Sompalle Gurukumar
42. Nuthalapati Sowmya
43. N.Ramkumar (Tamilnadu)
44. D.P. Naidu (Tamilnadu)
45. Seerani V Vidaysagar (Tamilnadu)
46. M.Prabhakaran (Tamilnadu)
47. Venkataswamy (Tamilnadu)

48. D.Kumutha (Tamilnadu)
49. Sivanna Reddy (Karnataka)

50. Goli Srinivasa Rao
51. Kotapati Vasmsi Krishna
52. Attaluri Alankrutha

Dominant caste and territory in South India (Kammas) By Dalel Benbabaali

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The case of the Kammas of Andhra Pradesh

Dalel Benbabaali In the existing literature on caste, the concept of territory, which can be defined as social, economic and political appropriation of space, is very often absent. My argument is that one cannot understand caste dominance without taking into account territorial control. This argument is all the more relevant in the case of Andhra Pradesh, where the demand for a separate Telangana State is partly related to questions of caste domination. Traditionally, the Kammas are dominant in Coastal Andhra, whereas the Reddis are dominant in the interior regions of Telangana and Rayalaseema. These two castes have been controlling the politics of Andhra Pradesh since the formation of the State in 1956, and even before, since they were at the forefront of the movement for a linguistic Telugu State. Both these castes are originally farming communities - in varna terms, Shudras -, which means that their ritual status is relatively low. However, they claim that they are Kshatriyas (the traditional warrior varna), because some of their ancestors were local kings or army commanders under the Vijayanagar empire. They are not commonly perceived as Shudras  because of their upward social mobility in the last century, which explains that today they are not entitled to « backward caste » or OBC reservations, unlike other agrarian castes of North India like the Kurmis. Both Kammas and Reddis are landowning communities. 

The main difference is that Kamma  property is concentrated in the agriculturally rich Krishna and Godavari deltas, where land is fertile and irrigated, whereas Reddis own land in the arid Deccan plateau, where irrigation is rare. In terms of assets, Kammas are therefore more prosperous, but in terms of political  power, Reddis have been dominating the State through their control of the Congress Party since Independence. It’s only in the 1980s, with the creation of a regional party called the Telugu Desam Party (the TDP), that the ex-movie star N.T. Rama Rao (NTR) became the first Kamma Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh, followed by his son-in-law Chandrababu Naidu. Kammas have a very high propensity to migrate, wherever they see investment opportunities, whether in new irrigation projects, or business and real estate in the cities, especially in Hyderabad. They also migrated to other South Indian States like Karnataka and Tamil Nadu, and abroad, mostly to the United States. Since we are in Princeton, I should mention that New Jersey has the highest concentration of Kammas in America, along with California. In the US, they are mostly entrepreneurs or work in the IT industry, and they are dominant among the Telugu diaspora. They control the Telugu Association of North America (TANA). The Reddis resented this domination and created their own organization, called American Telugu Association (ATA). This shows that the rivalry between these two dominant castes of Andhra Pradesh exists even in the US.

What I’d like to talk about today is the link between migration and upward social mobility,  but also the power mechanisms that prevent the mobility of the castes dominated by Kammas in the territories they control. The aim of my research was to re-define the concept of dominant caste, which was first studied in 1950s by M.N. Srinivas at the village level, to make it relevant in contemporary India by taking into account the rapid urbanization and increased social and spatial mobility of the elites. According to Srinivas, “ For a caste to be dominant, it should own a sizable amount of the arable land locally available, have strength of numbers and occupy a high place in the local hierarchy.

Kammas form only 5% of the population of Andhra Pradesh, but more than 20% in the Krishna delta where they own 80% of the agricultural land. Despite their relatively small numbers at the State level, they occupy key positions in the politics and economy of Andhra Pradesh, and to a lesser extent of Tamil Nadu and Karnataka. Taking territory into account is essential to understand the change in the scale and nature of caste dominance and to study its regional variations. When the Telugu Desam Party won the elections in Andhra Pradesh, the Kamma control over State power helped them consolidate their influence. They also dominate the Telugu media and cinema, which gives them sociocultural preeminence. These new attributes of dominance, which are ideological and not only material, have a hegemonic character. However, this hegemony is challenged by the growing resistance of Dalits to caste and class oppression. 

Kamma cultural domination has also been contested by the supporters of a separate Telangana State. Now that the bifurcation of Andhra Pradesh has been announced, Kammas’ interests are likely to be harmed, at least inTelangana. Before trying to examine whether the creation of Telangana will lead to a decline of Kamma dominance, I’d to go back to the history of this community to trace both their spatial and social trajectories.

Kammas’ early history is associated with buddhism, which was very influential in the Krishna valley in the 3rd century. According to epigraphical records, the Krishna delta area at that time was known as Kammanadu, and the main farming community living there was called Kamma. But it is only after the 10th century that the name Kamma started referring to a specific Hindu agrarian caste. Most Kammas were small farmers, but some of them worked as soldiers for the Kakatiya kings of Warangal. The Kamma historian K.B. Chowdary tries to  prove the martial origin of his caste based on matrimonial alliances between Kammas and members of the Kakatiya dynasty. It is based on his book that Kammas continue to claim Kshatriya status, although traditionally their main occupation is agriculture. During the Vijayanagar empire, more and more Kamma farmers were employed as soldiers, and even as army commanders, to participate in the conquest of the Tamil country. At that time, war was the main migration factor, and this explains the presence today of a large Kamma community in Tamil Nadu, which is the consequence of military migrations from the 15th century onwards. In times of peace, the Kamma settlers engaged in agricultural activities on the conquered territories of South India. Since they needed manpower to clear the forest lands, and service castes to take care of so-called “polluting” tasks, they brought with them Telugu speaking untouchable communities, known today in Tamil Nadu as Sakkiliars.

Along with this process of military conquest in the South, Kammas also acquired land in the interior regions of the Deccan Plateau. Agricultural colonisation was another major factor of migration for the dominant castes, and it led to the dispossession of tribals and smalls farmers from their lands. The Telangana region at that time was under the control of Muslim rulers who collected taxes through members of the dominant castes that were given the title of chowdharis. Muslim princes thus played a role in reinforcing caste hierarchy because they saw it as a guarantee of social order among their Hindu subjects. Kamma chowdaris used their title to consolidate their holdings in Telangana, while a few becamezamindars or big landlords in Coastal Andhra. The Nizams of Hyderabad even called Kamma farmers from Andhra to develop agriculture in Telangana, generously granting them titles to land, since they were considered expert rice cultivators due to their experience of irrigation in the deltas. In the mid-19th century, the Britishers had built two big dams in Coastal Andhra on the Krishna and Godavari rivers. Kamma farmers benefitted tremendously from the agrarian development that followed the introduction of canal irrigation in British-ruled Andhra. Even the middle peasantry that was paying taxes directly under the ryotwari system became richer thanks to irrigation and the introduction of cash crops like sugarcane, tobacco and cotton. In a context of generalised commodification of land, the value of their properties increased so much that by selling one acre of land in the Krishna delta, they could buy 10 acres in the dry areas of Telangana. The main crop grown in the fertile deltaic lands was paddy or rice, which soon became a commercial crop thanks to the surpluses produced. 

The commercialisation of agriculture in Coastal Andhra led to the development of transportation infrastructures, urban growth and industrialisation. The small town of Vijayawada became a thriving commercial market and an important railway junction. Kamma farmers diversified their activities by migrating to urban areas while keeping land in their villages. They used their agricultural surplus to invest in bus companies or in food processing industries like rice mills and sugar factories. They also started commercialising their own agricultural production and became moneylenders, thus bypassing the traditional merchant castes and business communities. This process of capital accumulation by the rich Kamma farmers led to an increased  polarisation of the agrarian social structure, with the emergence of a class of Kulaks within the Andhra peasantry. In spite of this class differenciation, the Kammas made conscious efforts to remain united by using caste as a social capital. They created their first caste association in the beginning of the 20th century and used the funds to provide scholarships to children from poor Kamma families and to build Kamma hostels in the cities. Education was seen as a key to social mobility and even small farmers were eager to send their children to study in English-medium schools outside the villages. That’s what M.N. Srinivas calls “westernization”, as opposed to “sanskritization”, which is another way of improving one’s status by adopting the Brahminical rituals. There was a brief attempt at sanskritization by Kammas when some caste members became priests to celebrate weddings within the community, but the rationalist anti-Brahmin movement also had a strong influence on Kammas.

Some joined the non-Brahmin Justice Party which was supported by the middle castes asking for reservations in the Madras Presidency. The Britishers accepted those demands in order to  break the hegemony of Brahmins in the administration, because they suspected them of being nationalist. In the 1930s, with the economic depression, and rise in taxes which was harming farmers’ interests, many Kammas shifted from their pro-British position to a nationalist one. The Andhra Communist Party was supported mostly by the Kamma peasantry, who saw in this new party a vehicle for political power, since the Congress Party in Andhra was controlled by the Reddis. Some Kammas took part in the Telangana rebellion against feudal landlords in the 1940s. One year after India got Independence, Nehru sent the army to forcibly annex the princely State of Hyderabad to the Indian Union. This led to a massacre, affecting mostly Muslim villagers. Telangana was later merged with the Andhra province, and Hyderabad became the capital of Andhra Pradesh, the first Indian State to be formed on a linguistic basis. The demand for a Telugu State, separated from the Tamil province, was an old demand by the Telugu-speaking dominant castes.

Kammas’ support of the Communist Party can also be explained by the fact that the Andhra communists were in favor of Telugu regionalism, against the domination of Tamils in the multilingual Madras State. But the formation of linguistic States mostly served the interests of dominant castes, as the Dalit leader Ambedkar noted: “ In our country, linguism is only another name for communalism. Take Andhra. There are two major communities spread over the linguistic area. They are either the Reddis or the  Kammas. They hold all the land, all the offices, all the business. The untouchables live in  subordinate dependence on them. In a linguistic state, what would remain for the smaller communities to look to?”

After the formation of Andhra Pradesh, the Andhra Communist Party lost one of its main electoral argument and started declining. The Congress won the State elections and remained in power for almost three decades, mostly in the hands of the Reddis, even though some Kamma Congressmen were also present in the State Legislative Assembly, where the dominant castes continue to be overrepresented till today. These territorial recompositions encouraged the migration of Kammas from Andhra to Telangana, especially to Hyderabad. Kamma settlers were educationally more advanced and wealthier than Telangana people who had lived under the Nizam rule, so migration from Andhra was perceived as a threat by the locals. In fact, the States Reorganization Commission was not in favor of the formation of Andhra Pradesh because of the lack of homogeneity between Telangana and Andhra due to their distinct history and geography. 

Coastal Andhra is naturally endowed with rich plains of fertile and irrigated lands, whereas agriculture in the arid Deccan plateau is not as developed. Under the Nizams, Telangana was characterized by feudal relations in agriculture and a very restricted access to modern education. Even the landlords of Telangana were lagging behind the capitalist Kamma farmers who benefitted from the British rule. This uneven development continued after Independence, since most of the new irrigation  projects took place in Coastal Andhra, where the Green Revolution was introduced in the 1960s. Kammas were the main beneficiaries of the Green revolution, since they had enough capital to invest in the new techniques of production and they were generally entrepreneurial. Their wealth tremendously increased. They resented the Land Ceiling Act which they  perceived as a direct attack against their economic power by the Brahmin Chief Minister  Narasimha Rao. However, the land reforms didn't radically change the agrarian structure. The  big landlords may have lost some of their property, but the middle peasantry was not really affected because they could manage to divide their lands among family members. The landless farmers, who mostly belonged to the Dalit castes, didn’t benefit from the reforms. The Green Revolution accelerated the process of economic diversification in the rural areas of Coastal Andhra. 

The rich Kamma farmers were no longer dependent on agriculture. They invested in agro-industries, transportation business, and they were able to send their children to Hyderabad for higher education. They became more and more urban-oriented, in search of new avenues of employment. When they migrated to rural areas, it was mostly to new irrigation projects, because they knew they could buy cheap lands in Telangana or in the neighbouring State of Karnataka, and then improve their plots once irrigation was available and thus benefit from land appreciation. Even in cities like Hyderabad, when they bought land, it was often speculative as they were very active in the real estate business. This flow of capital from Andhra to Telangana was not perceived by the locals as a positive sign of economic development for their region, but as exploitation of their poorer conditions. Kamma settlers in Telangana claim that they « turned the desert green », which is a typical colonist narrative. In fact, they were looking for cheaper land and cheaper manpower. When land was not available for sale, Kammas used to practice « reverse tenancy », by taking land on lease from poor farmers and lending them money. When the local farmers became too indebted to their rich Kamma tenants, they ultimately had to yield their lands. In Hyderabad,  people coming from Andhra had an advantage to access higher education and employment  because they had benefitted from English schooling in their region, which was long controlled  by the Britishers. This harsh competition from Andhra migrants led to the first Telangana separatist movement in 1969. 

It is only in the 1980s that the number of Kamma settlers in Hyderabad increased significantly. According to some Kamma informants, they felt encouraged to migrate to the capital-city after the Telugu Desam Party came to power in 1983. For the first time a Kamma Chief Minister, N.T. Rama Rao (NTR), was leading the State, and many of his caste fellows felt that this would open new opportunities to them in the capital-city. The victory of the Telugu Desam Party, just a few months after its creation, can be explained by the interference of the central government from Delhi in choosing the Congress Chief Ministers of Andhra Pradesh. NTR won the elections after a campaign on the regionalist theme of « telugu pride », which was supported by the media, especially by the Telugu newspaper Eanadu, owned by the Kamma billionaire Ramoji Rao, who also owns ETV. The control of the regional media  by Kamma businessmen helped NTR to capture State power. His charisma as an ex-movie star and his populist promises like welfare schemes and food subsidies are also important factors behind his victory. On top of his personal fortune, he benefitted from the financial support of big Kamma industrialists who wanted a Chief Minister from their caste to serve their interests. Before NTR ’s election as the head of the State, there was a discrepancy between Kammas’ economic wealth and their lack of decisive political power, since they were sidelined by the Reddis dominating the Congress.

NTR’s trajectory from an agricultural family to cinema and then politics is typical of Kammas  pattern of upward social mobility. The Telugu film industry, which is the second in India after Bollywood, in terms of number of movies released every year, is dominated by Kamma directors, producers and actors, with some exceptions like Chiranjivi, the Kapu superstar-turned-politician. Corporate health and education are also major sectors in which Kammas have invested their money. The first generation of Kamma doctors, who migrated to the United States in the 1960s, accumulated capital abroad and came back to Hyderabad in the 1980s, encouraged by NTR, to invest in private hospitals. Apart from medicine, engineering is one of the most common career option among the young Kamma generation, but since they are not entitled to reservations, they generally study in private colleges, generally owned by Kamma businessmen. The cost of these educational institutions is so high that other communities can hardly afford to study there. 

This corporatisation of health and education in Andhra Pradesh was started by Kammas in the 1980s, even before the liberalisation process that took place at the national level after 1991. From 1995 to 2004, under the regime of the Chandrababu Naidu, NTR’s son-in-law, economic reforms and the disengagement of the State accelerated this phenomenon. TDP Chief Minister Naidu became the darling of the corporate media and of the World Bank which granted him a loan for the development of his. It was the first time that an international institution like the World Bank gave a loan to a subnational entity. Naidu made Hyderabad a showcase for his neoliberal policies. He focused on urban infrastructure and global growth sectors like Information Technology. He decided to develop HITEC City in the western  periphery of Hyderabad, near the residential areas of Jubilee Hills and Kukatpally, were most of the Kamma settlers live. This led to a tremendous appreciation of their properties. Kamma  businessmen who benefitted from political patronage and privileged access to information for real estate speculation could make a lot of profit by investing in those areas. Chandrababu  Naidu was accused of corruption, nepotism and casteism since his development choices clearly benefitted to his own Kamma community. In 1999, a post-electoral survey showed that 87% of Kamma voters re-elected him for a second mandate.

It is under Naidu’s regime of almost one decade that the Kamma caste really became hegemonic in Andhra Pradesh. I borrow here Gramsci’s concept of hegemony, which refers to a kind of domination that is not only material, but also ideological. By migrating to urban areas, Kammas started enjoying new attributes of dominance, not based on landownership alone, but on control over the media, culture and politics. After seizing State power, they were able to impose on the rest of society the neoliberal ideology which served their capitalist interests best. This led to a lopsided type of development which increased social and spatial inequalities, by affecting poor farmers and rural areas most. Between 1997 and 2004, more than 3000 farmers committed suicide in Andhra Pradesh, especially in the less developed regions of Telangana and Rayalaseema. 

The liberalisation of agriculture led to an increase in  production costs, so even in Coastal Andhra, agriculture is not very profitable anymore. However, Kammas generally don’t sell their lands when they migrate to the cities. For them land is an important symbol of prestige and power, therefore they prefer to give it on lease to tenants because they know that the value of land is not going to decrease, and agricultural incomes are not taxed anyway. The land around Vijayawada in the Krishna delta has appreciated tremendously since the formation of the Telangana State because of the speculation on the future status of Vijayawada as a possible capital-city for Andhra. Even Kammas living abroad are sending remittances back to India for their families to buy more land in the Krishna delta, as a purely speculative investment. Land is also used as dowry. Kammas are known in Andhra Pradesh for having the most conspicuous weddings and for giving the highest dowries to their daughters, especially in the form of land and gold. Though Kammas have retained their economic power, they have lost some of their political influence after the Congress party came back to power in the 2004 State elections. The formation of Telangana might harm their economic interests in Hyderabad, but if Vijayawada  becomes the new capital of Andhra, they might very well repatriate their investments and make them thrive there as well. 

Kammas may also capture State power in the new Andhra State. The decline of Kamma dominance therefore is not so much economic or even political,  but mostly social and cultural, because of the increasing resistance to their cultural hegemony in Telangana, and the social contestation of their caste domination by the Dalits, whom they have used as agricultural labour and oppressed for centuries. The Dalit movement in Andhra Pradesh started organizing after a massacre perpetrated by Kamma landlords in 1985 in a village called Karamchedu, one of the richest and most developed village of coastal Andhra. This goes against the argument that caste atrocities happen only in backward regions. The two main Dalit communities of Karamchedu, the Malas and Madigas, benefitted quite early from the Christian missionaries’ activities, and then from the reservation policy. They started sending their children to school, getting employment outside agriculture, and becoming politically aware. This is precisely what the dominant caste had a problem with. Dalit assertion meant that Kammas could no longer control their votes and transform their economic dependence into political loyalty.

After the creation of the Telugu Desam Party, the Dalits of Karamchedu continued to vote for the Congress, against their Kamma employers who supported the TDP. This Dalit resistance was perceived by the Kammas as a dangerous sign of rebellion and contestation of their traditional dominance, so they decided to attack them to “teach them a lesson” (which is the expression they use). The  pretext for retaliation was an incident that opposed a Kamma boy to a Madiga woman who scolded him for washing his buffalo in the pond used by Dalits for drinking water. This was seen by the Kamma landlords as a sufficient provocation to plan a punitive expedition to the Madiga hamlet, burn down their huts, rape three women, beat up men with axes, leaving many terribly injured and six murdered.

As a response to this event of extraordinary violence, a strong mobilisation led to the creation of the Dalit Mahasabha that soon spread across the entire State. This organization fought for the culprits to be punished, but NTR, who was then the Chief Minister, had Kamma relatives in Karamchedu, one of them directly involved in the massacre, and whose name was not even included in the list of the 92 accused. 23 years after the killings, only one accused was condemned to life emprisonment, and 30 others to 3 years in jail. The victims consider that this judgement didn’t bring them justice. NTR’s relative, who premeditated the massacre and escaped from the court, was later killed by Naxalites. The Peoples’ War Group was the main naxalite organization in Andhra Pradesh at that time. They were very active in Telangana, where the struggle took shape along class lines rather than caste. The Maoists consider Kammas and Reddis as “class enemies” more than “dominant castes”.

There is a very strong correlation between caste and class and it is often difficult to disentangle both. The big landlords and the ruling class of Andhra Pradesh mostly belong to the dominant castes and they used State power to crush the Naxalite movement which was threatening their interests. Let me quote here the human rights activist Balagopal: “After the Telugu Desam party came to power, the ruthlessness of the repression on Maoists has increased manifold, and its class content is clearly revealed in the exchanges in the State Legislative Assembly, which is  populated by the cream of the absentee landlords, contractors, financiers, businessmen and brokers. Suppression of the rural poor is an important requirement for the strengthening of the hegemony of this class. It is not just that payment of higher wages would affect its accumulation, or that the demand for land redistribution would affect its property; it is a political requirement, too.”

Both under NTR and Chandrababu Naidu’s regimes, the paramilitary forces killed hundreds of Naxalite guerillas as well as un-armed tribal sympathisers in fake encounters. This is why the Maoists have moved from Andhra Pradesh to the neighbouring State of Chhattisgarh. It clearly appears that caste dominance has to do with territorial control, and that access to State power is essential to promote specific caste and class interests. This is why the Kammas of Tamil Nadu and Karnataka are not as hegemonic as the Kammas of Andhra Pradesh,  because outside their State of origin, they are considered a Telugu linguistic minority and they don’t have so much political power. However, they are locally dominant in some pockets of north Karnataka, where they have become very rich after migrating to buy lands in the new irrigated belt of the Tungabhadra river. They are also dominant in cities of Tamil Nadu like Coimbatore, where they own most of the textile factories and other industries. I have conducted fieldwork in all these places, to compare the nature and level of Kamma dominance depending on the territory they live in and how much control they have over it. My methodology was mostly qualitative, based on interviews and ethnographic studies, but I have also used a questionnaire to do a survey among a sample of 200 Kamma households, one hundred in a village of the Krishna delta, called Godavarru, and another hundred in a suburb of Hyderabad, known as Kukatpally, so that I could make a quantitative analysis and compare the socio-economic profile of Kammas both in rural and urban areas.

The questionnaire was about their migration patterns, educational levels, family structures,  professional mobility, economic position, social and political participation. Migration was found to be an important aspect of Kammas social mobility. Even in rural areas, 20% of Kamma households had a family member abroad sending remittances that improved their economic status. The educational level of Kammas in Hyderabad was obviously higher than in the surveyed village, but in rural areas too, Kammas invest a lot in their children education so that they can move out of agriculture to enter urban professions. Most live in nuclear families and have no more than two children to avoid the division of property. Endogamy is strictly respected with a very few exceptions. Subcaste doesn’t matter anymore:

Kammas belonging to different subcastes don’t mind intermarriage. Though the socio-economic status of Kammas in Hyderabad is far higher in terms of incomes and assets, the Kamma rural elites enjoy a stronger dominance over the backward and dalit castes. Kamma dominance in urban areas is of a different nature. To understand what caste dominance means in the cities, I did a comparative study of two regional towns, Vijayawada in Andhra Pradesh and Coimbatore in Tamil Nadu. In Vijayawada, Kammas form a class of  bourgeois neo-rich who acquired their wealth in a short time by doing all kinds of businesses, including illegal activities. In Coimbatore, Kammas have built their wealth in the textile industry over a long period of time, since they first migrated there as cotton farmers. Some  belong to old aristocratic families who settled in Tamil Nadu a few centuries ago as army commanders or big landlords. Their culture is totally different from Andhra Kammas and they rarely intermarry. They speak a Telugu which is mixed with Tamil words, and they are much more cultured and well-read. That doesn’t make them any less exploitative of their manpower in the textile factories, where they generally employ lower caste girls who migrate to the mills, sign a 3 year contract, at the end of which they get married with the little savings they could gather for their dowry. The short contracts are favored by the Kamma bosses to avoid the unionisation of their workers who keep changing and have no time to organize. That’show they have put an end to the strikes that were common in Coimbatore textile industry. 

This extremely wealthy capitalist class tries to improve its image through philanthropy. They fund hospitals and educational institutions through their trusts, whereas in Vijaywada, both health and education are a business only aimed at making profits, owned by very aggressive Kamma entrepreneurs. In Coimbatore, Kamma dominance is less political than in Vijayawada, where business, caste and politics are very much intertwined. A violent rivalry opposes Kapu and Kamma politicians in Vijayawada, which led to political murders and riots  between the two communities. Apart from these two cities, I also conducted fieldwork in rural areas of Telangana and Karnataka where Kammas have migrated in search of « greener pastures ». In Telangana, they were attracted by the Sriram Sagar project in Nizamabad district, and in Karnataka, they went for the Tungabhadra project in Raichur and Bellary districts. Kamma farmers claim that they  brought development to those areas by « teaching » rice cultivation to the locals, but their arrival was perceived as a form of internal colonisation, especially in Telangana, where the  best lands were acquired by the settlers.

Recently, there was a controversy over a Telugu novel by a Kamma writer, Chandralata, whom I interviewed in Hyderabad and who told me that her book was partly autobiographical since she tells the story of her father who migrated from Coastal Andhra to Telangana in the 1960s to buy land in black cotton soil areas. That explains the title of her novel, Regadi vittulu, in Telugu, which means « Seeds of black soil ». Kammas claim to be experts in the cultivation of this type of soil that can give good yields if water is available. This book was awarded the « best Telugu novel » prize by the Telugu Association of North America (TANA). This prize was contested in Telangana. TANA was accused of caste favoritism since the association is dominated by Kammas living in the US, and the novel was criticized for  portraying Telangana people as unable to develop their own lands, and for presenting Telangana culture in a negative light, as backward. This controversy over the book shows that the regionalist sentiment which led to the creation of a separate Telangana is not only about economic domination by Andhras, but also about cultural domination. For example, many  people resent the fact that the Telugu film industry, which is controlled by Kammas, makes fun of the Telangana dialects, which are generally spoken in the movies by the villain, under-class or criminals characters. 

To conclude, caste dominance can take many different forms: its nature and degree vary according to the territory observed, whether it is a rural or urban area, whether it is a small town or a big city, whether the dominant caste is originally from the place or migrated there. If the concept of dominant caste is still relevant in today’s India, one has to take into account new attributes of dominance which are not related only to landownership, but also to culture and ideology via the control of the media, the entertainment industry and State power. This is why I found the concept of hegemony very useful for my study of the Kamma caste, but it is important to bear in mind that «No hegemony can be so pervasive as to eliminate all ground  for contestation or resistance»
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