CM Revanth Reddy condoles death of ex-MLA Kommidi Narsimha Reddy
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Chief Minister's Office of Telangana announced on Tuesday, 7 July 2026, that Chief Minister A. Revanth Reddy has expressed deep condolences over the passing of Kommidi Narsimha Reddy, former two-time Member of the Legislative Assembly from Bhuvanagiri, describing him as a man of integrity who stood by the people throughout his life.
Context
The Chief Minister's Office shared the tribute on X, recalling that Kommidi Narsimha Reddy was an active participant in the 1969 first-phase Telangana agitation — the early chapter of the decades-long movement that eventually led to the formation of a separate Telangana state in 2014. Revanth Reddy praised him as someone who 'lived with honesty and integrity until his last breath' (తుదిశ్వాస వరకు నీతినిజాయితీతో జీవించారు). The statement did not specify the exact date or circumstances of his death.
Narsimha Reddy won the Bhuvanagiri assembly seat twice, in 1978 and 1983, representing the constituency at a time when Telangana's political identity was being actively contested within the then-unified Andhra Pradesh.
Policy Backdrop
The Chief Minister specifically highlighted Narsimha Reddy's role in campaigns for Godavari river water rights and the Musi river conservation movement — both issues that remain live in Telangana's political and environmental discourse. His work on water rights echoes the original 1969 agitation's core grievances, which centred on equitable distribution of resources, jobs, and development between regions of the then-combined state.
Perhaps most strikingly, the tribute recalled that Narsimha Reddy donated 300 acres of his own land to the Bhoodan movement — the landmark land-redistribution initiative launched by Vinoba Bhave in the 1950s to transfer agricultural land to landless farmers. This act of voluntary donation was cited by the Chief Minister as evidence of his 'great humanitarian' character.
Stakeholders and Impact
The death of a figure who bridges the 1969 Telangana agitation and the era of elected representation carries symbolic weight for activists, historians, and residents of Bhuvanagiri who remember his tenure. The Chief Minister's tribute underscores the Congress-led state government's effort to position itself as the custodian of Telangana's long statehood struggle and its associated social reform legacy.
Revanth Reddy described Narsimha Reddy as 'an ideal for the present generation' (నేటి తరానికి ఆదర్శప్రాయుడు), a framing that connects personal austerity and public service to contemporary political values. The Chief Minister also conveyed his 'profound sympathies' to the Kommidi Narsimha Reddy family and prayed for peace for the departed soul.
What's Next
Responses from opposition parties and civil society groups active in the Telangana statehood movement are likely to follow. Given that Narsimha Reddy was associated with both Godavari and Musi river causes, his passing may prompt renewed references to these ongoing water-management debates in state legislative proceedings. The tribute also reinforces the broader pattern of the Telangana government formally honouring former legislators who participated in the statehood struggle — a practice that helps anchor present-day governance to the state's founding narrative.