This story is from March 18, 2019

City organisations contribute Rs 5 lakh for Nizamabad MP Kavitha Kalvakuntla's election expenditure

City organisations contribute Rs 5 lakh for Nizamabad MP Kavitha Kalvakuntla's election expenditure
A physically challenged woman Rajitha made a contribution of Rs 5,000 for Kavitha’s election expenditure.
HYDERABAD: Various city organisations on Monday came together and contributed Rs 5.77 lakh for Nizamabad MP Kavitha Kalvakuntla’s election expenditure. This is on the lines of what had happened during the December 2018 elections when various caste groups and villages made contributions for TRS candidates to contest the polls.
Unanimous resolutions were also made by the groups to only vote for the TRS.

Telangana chief minister K Chandrasekhar Rao, who will address an election public meeting on Tuesday in Nizamabad, will declare the candidature of Kavitha once again for the LS seat. At the Karimnagar public meeting, he had announced the candidature of the sitting MP, B Vinod Kumar.
A physically challenged woman Rajitha made a contribution of Rs 5,000 for Kavitha’s election expenditure. Kavitha said she was moved by the gesture of Rajitha.
Addressing a press conference in Nizamabad, Kavitha described the results of the Lok Sabha elections as a foregone conclusion saying that the party would win all the 16 seats. “The war is one-sided in Telangana,” she said.
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About the Author
Ch Sushil Rao

Sushil Rao is Editor-Special Reports, at The Times of India, Hyderabad. He began his journalism career at the age of 20 in 1988. He is a gold medalist in journalism from the Department of Communication and Journalism, Arts College, Osmania University, Hyderabad from where he did his post-graduation from. He has been with The Times of India’s Hyderabad edition since its launch in 2000. He has also done an introductory course in film studies from the Film and Television Institute of India, Pune, and also from the Central University of Kerala equipping himself with the knowledge of filmmaking for film criticism. He has authored four books. In his career spanning 34 years, he has worked for five newspapers and has also done television reporting. He was also a web journalist during internet’s infancy in the mid 1990s in India. He covers defence, politics, diaspora, innovation, administration, the film industry, Hyderabad city and Telangana state, and human interest stories. He is also a podcaster, blogger, does video reporting and makes documentaries.

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