"When was the First battle of Panipat fought?", asked Professor Sreeram in our Marketing
class, during my second year of MBA. Not a marketing question definitely, but
Sreeram sir, a learned man he is, had a knack of asking such questions (my perception 😊).
"17th
century", "16th century" and some other replies from our
classmates didn’t make sir happy.
"1526",
came out a reply amongst the chorus of other responses.
"Who said that
?", asked the professor.
I, generally a
backbencher, since the days height-wise seats allocation wasn’t the norm
anymore, slowly raised my hand.
"That is
correct. What's your name?"
"Prakhar".
Brimming with confidence, gazing at my colleagues Shubham, Mrigendra and
Ritesh, I proudly exclaimed.
"That is
correct. And when was the second battle of Panipat fought?"
All the confidence
shattered just like a mirror struck with stone. The cool expression on my face
vanished rapidly. "I don’t know sir".
"30 years
later. 1556. But glad you remember something at least".
The morale boosting
words again put a smile on my face. I remembered something at least. Though I
was not great at history, I wasn’t bad either. I gained a penchant for the
subject in class 8 but history's twin Civics didn’t really get into my head.
Starting from Parliament, Lok Sabha, Rajya Sabha till the very grassroots level
Gram Panchayats didn't fascinate me at all. But studying for MBA interviews, I
had no choice but to revisit all the Civics lessons again.
So when my erstwhile
teammate Akshay asked me to write a blog on States and Union territory, I
readily took it up. Though the difference is quite known, I did contemplate on
a few other things that may catch your attention.
How did States and Union Territory come into existence?
Before we gained
independence, India was divided into 'provincial' and 'princely' states.
Provincial states were administered directly by the Empire while the Princely
states by local Indian rulers, who had allied with the British. At the time of
independence, the country had 11 Provinces and 250+ Princely states. Once
independent, these states got re-organized under the 'States Reorganization
Act' and over the time new states got merged, carved out to form what we have
today; 29 states.
In all this
hullaballoo, some regions found themselves isolated. They were too small to be
a state and could not be merged into one of the neighboring states due to a
host of reasons like: to preserve their native culture, maintain their military
strength or just to keep them secluded because of innate instability and/or
unbalanced economy in the area. These were coined as 'Union Territories', and
they were to function as the Union government's protégé.
![]() |
States after the Reorganization Act |
However, Delhi and
Puducherry were given the status of a Quasi state or Partial statehood, by an
amendment in the Constitution. These have their own elected Chief Minister and
thereby a Legislative Assembly.
The difference
between a State and a Union Territory (India), is summarized in the below
table.
State
|
Union Territory
|
|
Government
|
Have their Own
elected government
|
Ruled by Central
government
|
Administrative Head
|
Chief minister,
elected by the people
|
Lieutenant
Governor, appointed by President
|
Constitutional Head
|
Governor
|
President
|
Governed Area
|
Large area
|
Small area
|
Total Number
|
29
|
7
|
Recently, we have
seen a spate in the demand for a full statehood demand for Delhi, due to a
continous stiff between the CM and the LG. As per the partial statehood
regulations/provisions, the Delhi government doesn’t have control over: 1)
Delhi Development Authority 2) Delhi Police and 3) Municipal Corporation of
Delhi. We have also seen several accusations levied from both the sides. Well
Supreme court's July 4 verdict asked the L-G to be a facilitator rather than an
impediment to the services towards the people. Whatever be the case, we
believe that it is the collective responsibility of government and the people to make a place good and worthy of living.
Nerd Notes:
- Some of the princely states like Kashmir, Mysore and Hyderabad were as large as England
- Andaman and Nicobar islands was the first union territory of India
- Union Territories have no representation in the Rajya Sabha, except for Delhi and Puducherry
Thanks for reading. Keep smiling !
- Prakhar
Good overview,but a brief story of formation of each UT would've been further appreciated.
ReplyDeleteThanks for reply. We will try to incorporate that in our next blog. Thanks again for the feedback
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