Ops slammed the government’s decision to celebrate TN Day on July 18; call it the peak of political vendetta – News2IN
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Ops slammed the government’s decision to celebrate TN Day on July 18; call it the peak of political vendetta

Ops slammed the government's decision to celebrate TN Day on July 18; call it the peak of political vendetta
Written by news2in

Chennai: AIADMK opposition on Sunday confirmed the announcement of Minister M K Stalin about changing Tamil Nadu’s day from November 1 to July 18, said it was slapped ‘Vendetta Politik’ and naved it as a ‘unsuitable movement’.
Reversing the previous AIADMK government’s decision, Stalin on Saturday said the country’s formation day would later be celebrated on July 18, in line with recherthristen from its name to date and not in November.
The government’s order will be immediately issued for this purpose, he said.
Following the country’s linguistic reorganization, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Kerala emerged from the country of Madras on November 1, 1956.
AIDMK Coordinator O Panneerselvam said the birthday of the child fell on the day was born and not when named, referring to the powerful DMK decision to change the day The formation of the country in the line with it gets the current name, namely Tamil Nadu.
Incidentally, despite the delay of CN Annadurai’s Minister of CN drive the assembly resolution on July 18, 1967 to change the name Tamil Nadu from the Madras country, it came true two years later, after the proposal passed the parliament and the central government who issued a notification on changes in names in 1968, said it would Valid starting January 14, 1969.
“Going by the reasoning of the minister’s chairman, only 14-01-1969 must be celebrated as Tamil Nadu’s Day.
The birthday of a child must be celebrated on that day was born ….,” said the former cm in a party statement .
Panneerselvam further said a child’s birthday, even if his name officially changed 10 years after being born, celebrated on his birthday and not what happened to a name change.
A building was also assumed to have been set on the day inaugurated and not when cleaned at the proposal level, he added.
“Likewise, a child’s birthday called the Madras country born on November 1, 1956 with the current landscape, which was decided to be renamed as Tamil Nadu in 1967 and one that occurred in 1969, still Novmber 1, 1956.” “So the announcement to celebrate Tamil Nadu on July 18 will not match any way.
That means saying the country was born 11 years later and was an attempt to rewrite history ….
was the peak of political vendetta ….,” he added .
Panneerselvam quoted other countries carved from Madras State celebrating the days of shoots on November 1 and urged Stalin to withdraw its government’s decision to observe Tamil Nadu’s day on July 18.

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