New Delhi: The Centre's reasons for not granting special category status to Andhra Pradesh is "flawed, unreasonable, unjustified and untenable", said YSRCP Rajya Sabha Member V Vijayasai Reddy on Monday.
Speaking on the Motion of Thanks to the President's address, he also termed the reduction of borrowing limits of the state as "step-motherly treatment".
Reddy alleged the Centre was taking advantage of the Andhra Pradesh Reorganisation Act, 2014, which was "loosely drafted" by the previous Telugu Desam Party (TDP) government with "many anomalies and lacunae" in it.
Andhra Pradesh lost Hyderabad as its capital when it was bifurcated. But when the BJP bifurcated Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh, none of the residual states lost their capital cities, he said.
The YSRCP MP asserted that when Andhra Pradesh was bifurcated, the state was promised special category status by then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.
"The Centre (now) has given six reasons for not granting special category status, which are totally flawed and unreasonable, unjustified and untenable," Reddy said.
Reasons such as economic status of the state, no mention of 'special category status' in the Andhra Pradesh Reorganisation Act, 2014, and "politically not possible" cannot be the basis for denying the promised status to the state, he argued.
"We have absolutely no objection if the Central government is willing to grant special category status to Odisha and Bihar. But that can't be the reason for not granting special category status to the state of Andhra Pradesh," Reddy said.
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He argued in the House that when Uttarakhand was carved out of Uttar Pradesh, there was no mention of special category status in the Uttar Pradesh Reorganisation Act, 2000. But the BJP "has given it" to Uttarakhand, he said.
The YSRCP MP cited Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman's promise made during the Puducherry elections of granting special status to Puducherry.
He also cited the report of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Commerce, which he chairs, that has recommended special status for Andhra Pradesh, Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh.