Kishan Reddy Reviews Anganwadi Centre in Hyderabad's Khairatabad
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Union Coal and Mines Minister and BJP Telangana state president G. Kishan Reddy visited the Anganwadi Centre at Gandhi Nagar in Khairatabad Division, Hyderabad, on Saturday, 27 June 2026, reviewing facilities and services provided to children and mothers under the central government's early childhood welfare framework.
Context
During the visit, Kishan Reddy interacted with Anganwadi Sevikas, support staff, and children at the centre. He described the experience as 'heartening', noting the enthusiasm of the children and the 'unwavering commitment' of the Anganwadi team. Senior BJP leader Shri Chintala R Reddy and other party karyakartas were also present at the occasion.
The minister appreciated the dedicated efforts of the centre's staff in ensuring quality nutrition, early childhood education, and holistic development — the three core mandates of the Anganwadi system under the Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS).
Policy Backdrop
Anganwadi Centres have been the backbone of India's community-level child welfare delivery since 1975, when ICDS was launched. They provide supplementary nutrition, immunisation support, health check-ups, referral services, pre-school non-formal education, and nutrition and health education to children under six and to pregnant and lactating mothers.
Kishan Reddy specifically highlighted POSHAN Abhiyaan — the National Nutrition Mission launched by the Government of India in 2018 — as a key initiative strengthening nutrition outcomes. The mission aims to reduce stunting, undernutrition, and anaemia among children and women through convergence of multiple government schemes and real-time monitoring via the POSHAN Tracker platform.
Stakeholders and Impact
The primary beneficiaries of Anganwadi services are children below the age of six, along with pregnant and lactating mothers. Anganwadi Sevikas and helper staff — largely women from local communities — form the frontline workforce delivering these services across urban and rural India.
In urban constituencies such as Khairatabad in Telangana's capital, Anganwadi centres serve densely populated neighbourhoods where access to formal early childhood education and nutrition support can be uneven. Field reviews by central ministers serve to assess on-ground implementation and draw attention to staffing, infrastructure, and supplementary nutrition budgets at the state level.
What's Next
Attention will now turn to whether the visit prompts any specific administrative follow-up on Anganwadi staffing or supplementary nutrition allocations in Telangana. Periodic releases from the POSHAN Tracker — the government's data platform monitoring district-level nutrition indicators — will offer a broader picture of how Telangana's centres are performing against national benchmarks.
With the BJP seeking to consolidate its presence in Telangana, such ground-level welfare outreach by a senior Union Minister also signals the party's intent to remain visible on social development issues in the state ahead of future electoral cycles.