Nandamuri Harikrishna, son of NT Rama Rao who is brother-in-law of Andhra Pradesh CM N Chandrababu Naidu, died Wednesday morning after he met with a road accident on his way from Nellore to Hyderabad in Telangana.
Police believe that deceased Harikrishna was driving the car when the mishap occurred on Wednesday
Key Highlights
Former Andhra Pradesh CM NT Rama Rao's son Nandamuri Harikrishna died in a road mishap near Nalgonda in Telangana
According to Nalgonda SP, Harikrishna was declared dead at the Kamineni hospital in Narkeptally
Police said he was returning from Nellore to Hyderabad in a car, when it turned turtle
HYDERABAD: Andhra Pradesh chief minister N Chandrababu Naidu's brother-in-law and NT Rama Rao's son Nandamuri Harikrishna died in a road mishap near Nalgonda in Telangana on Wednesday morning. Nandamuri Harikrishna's death: Click to get all LIVE updates According to Nalgonda superintendent of police AV Ranganath, the film actor-politician N Harikrishna was declared dead at the Kamineni hospital in Narkeptally after he was taken there in a critical condition. He also added that Harikrishna was not wearing a seat belt due to which he was thrown out of the car after due to the impact.
Police believe that deceased Harikrishna was driving the car when the mishap occurred on Wednesday
Police believe that deceased Harikrishna was driving the car when the mishap occurred
Nandamuri Harikrishna with his sons Kalyanram and Jr NTR Junior NTR too was injured in a road mishap in 2009. Incidentally, Nandamuri Harikrishna's other son Nandamuri Janakiram died in a road mishap in 2014. Read the story in Telugu Samayam
Sudhakar Reddy Udumula is the Editor (Investigation) at the Times of India, Hyderabad. Following the trail of migration and drought across the rustic landscape of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, Sudhakar reported extensively on government apathy, divisive politics, systemic gender discrimination, agrarian crisis and the will to survive great odds. His curiosity for peeking behind the curtain triumphed over the criminal agenda of many scamsters in the highest political and corporate circles, making way for breaking stories such as Panama Papers Scam, Telgi Stamp Paper Scam, and many others. His versatility in reporting extended to red corridors of left-wing extremism where the lives of security forces and the locals in Maoist-affected areas were key points of investigation. His knack for detail provided crucial evidence of involvement from overseas in terrorist bombings in Hyderabad.