CM Revanth Reddy releases Rythu Bharosa funds at Khammam Sabha
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Chief Minister's Office of Telangana announced on 10 July 2026 that Chief Minister A. Revanth Reddy participated in the Rythu Ashirvada Sabha at Jagannadhapuram, Chintakani Mandal, Khammam District, where he released Rythu Bharosa funds directly to farmers and issued e-Pattadar Passbooks at a public meeting.
Context
The Rythu Ashirvada Sabha is a district-level public event designed to disburse farmer welfare benefits and maintain direct contact between the state government and rural communities. At Jagannadhapuram in Khammam District — one of Telangana's agriculturally significant regions known for paddy, cotton, and chilli cultivation — CM Revanth Reddy personally presided over the release of funds and the issuance of digital land title documents to beneficiary farmers.
The event combined financial disbursement with a public address, a format the Congress government has used to publicise scheme rollout across rural constituencies since coming to power in December 2023.
Policy Backdrop
Rythu Bharosa is the Congress government's flagship direct benefit transfer programme for farmers, framed as a fulfilment of a key poll promise made ahead of the 2023 Telangana Assembly elections. The scheme continues the core mechanism of per-acre cash transfers to farming households, building on the architecture established by the previous BRS government's Rythu Bandhu programme launched in 2018, while rebranding and redesigning eligibility and delivery.
e-Pattadar Passbooks are digital land title documents that allow farmers to access credit, subsidies, and government benefits without relying on physical paper records. Their issuance at district events is intended to accelerate financial inclusion among rural landowners who previously faced barriers due to missing or disputed land documentation.
Stakeholders and Impact
The primary beneficiaries are landowning farmers and rural households in Khammam District and, by extension, across Telangana as the government conducts similar sabhas in other districts. For small and marginal farmers, direct cash transfers under Rythu Bharosa provide income support against volatile input costs, while e-Pattadar Passbooks open access to institutional credit from banks and cooperative lenders.
District-level distribution events also serve a political function: they give the ruling party visible proximity to voters in rural constituencies ahead of future electoral cycles, a pattern consistent with how Telangana governments have historically managed agricultural welfare programmes.
What's Next
Observers will watch whether the government completes full-year fund releases under Rythu Bharosa across all eligible districts and whether per-acre disbursement amounts are revised in the next state budget. Integration with the central government's PM-KISAN scheme remains a point of interest, as coordinated transfers could reduce duplication and expand the net benefit to farmers. Further Rythu Ashirvada Sabhas in other districts are expected as the government continues its rollout calendar.