Maharashtra-Karnataka border row: Situation worrisome, says Sharad Pawar
NCP leader says Bommai is making conscious attempts to take the situation in a different direction, and that time has come for Maharashtra to take a stand
Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) chief Sharad Pawar on Tuesday termed the situation in the border areas of Maharashtra and Karnataka as “worrisome”, and said the time has come to take a stand after seeing what is happening there.
Maharashtra ministers Chandrakant Patil and Shambhuraj Desai, appointed for coordinating the states border dispute with Karnataka, were earlier scheduled to meet activists of the Maharashtra Ekikaran Samiti at Belagavi in the southern state on Tuesday and hold talks with them on the decades-old border issue.
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Karnataka Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai on Monday said he will ask his Maharashtra counterpart Eknath Shinde not to send his cabinet colleagues to Belagavi as their visit may disrupt the law and order situation in the border district. Asserting the border dispute with Maharashtra is settled, Bommai said he has already instructed the officials concerned regarding the measures to be taken in case the ministers go ahead with the visit, and that the government will not hesitate to take any legal action.
Talking to reporters on Tuesday, Pawar claimed that since the last few weeks, conscious attempts were being made by the Karnataka CM to take the situation in a different direction.
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“Time has come to take a stand after seeing what is happening in border areas. The situation there is worrisome,” said Pawar, whose party was part of the previous Uddhav Thackeray-led Maha Vikas Aghadi government in Maharashtra.
Talks with volunteers
Last week, Chandrakant Patil said there was a demand from the Madhyavarti Maharashtra Ekikaran Samiti, an organisation fighting for the merger of Belagavi and some other border areas with Maharashtra, to hold discussions with the volunteers on the Maharashtra-Karnataka border issue.
Maharashtra, since its inception in 1960, has been entangled in a dispute with Karnataka over the status of Belagavi district and 80 other Marathi speaking villages, which are in the control of the southern state. The dispute is pending before the Supreme Court.
With agency inputs