For the first time after the Tamil Nadu Governor re-allocated the portfolios of ailing Chief Minister Jayalalithaa, state Finance Minister O Panneerselvam on Wednesday presided over a meeting of the state cabinet to discuss, among other matters, the vexed Cauvery issue.
Although the government did not release details of the agenda of the meeting, the Cabinet is understood to have deliberated on the ongoing Cauvery water sharing dispute with Karnataka, besides other subjects.
The meeting also comes ahead of the scheduled onset of north-east monsoon later this month. The rains in December last year had wreaked havoc, flooding Chennai and nearby districts.
Last week, Tamil Nadu Governor Ch Vidyasagar Rao had allotted the portfolios including Home held by Jayalalithaa to Panneerselvam, till the time she returned to resume official duties.
The government released photographs of the cabinet meeting, where Panneerselvam was seen seated with a picture of Jayalalithaa placed on his desk.
The nearly hour-long meeting was held in the backdrop of the ongoing Cauvery water sharing row with Karnataka and demands by Opposition parties for an all-party meeting on the issue.
Farmers’ bodies and political parties had staged a two-day state-wide rail blockade ending Tuesday, urging the Centre to constitute the Cauvery Management Board.
The Raj Bhavan had last week in a release, said Paneerselvam, who holds the administrative reforms portfolio, in addition to finance, “will also preside over cabinet meetings.”
The last Cabinet meeting held by Jayalalithaa was in July this year to discuss the state budget.
Jayalalithaa, 68, was admitted to the Apollo hospital on September 22 after she complained of fever and dehydration.
A specialist from London besides a three-member team of doctors from AIIMS, Delhi, had also examined Jayalalithaa, who is being treated for infection with respiratory support.
Image: Senior minister O Panneerselvam chairing the meeting of Tamil Nadu cabinet at the secretariat on Wednesday morning. Photograph: AIADMK/Facebook