Andhra’s ₹109 Petrol Tragedy: Starring CBN the “Visionary” & Pawan the “Rebel-Turned-Sidekick”

SIBY JEYYA

If there were an award for political drama, andhra pradesh would sweep the Oscars this year. The blockbuster? Petrol at ₹109.04 per litre—the highest in India. The script? A dark comedy where citizens pay premium rates for ethanol-adulterated fuel while the ruling stars—CM chandrababu naidu and deputy cm Pawan Kalyan—deliver their worst performance yet.


The Centre, of course, plays the silent co-star, nodding along as the loot continues. Let’s look at the “roles” in this tragic drama:



1. CBN – The ‘Visionary’ director of Loot 🎬

  • chandrababu naidu loves calling himself a visionary, but the only vision the people see is ₹109 flashing on fuel boards.

  • He built his career on promises of development but is now scripting Andhra’s most expensive petrol saga.



2. Pawan Kalyan – The Rebel Who Forgot His Script 🎭

  • Once the loudest critic of price hikes, Pawan has now gone conveniently mute.

  • From firebrand speeches to a silent sidekick of CBN, he’s proving that in politics, “character arcs” can mean U-turns.



3. The Centre – The Invisible Villain 🕴️

  • The central government’s high excise duties are the skeleton holding up this loot.

  • When petrol is high in opposition states, delhi blames local leaders. But in Andhra? Silence louder than Pawan’s missing voice.



4. Ethanol Fuel – Paying Premium for Junk 🛢️

  • Citizens aren’t even buying pure petrol—they’re paying luxury rates for diluted fuel.

  • Engines suffer, wallets bleed, but the actors in power still clap for each other.



5. Alliance politics – A Script with No Hero 🤝

  • TDP, Janasena, BJP—the trio is united not in lowering prices, but in sharing credit for squeezing citizens.

  • For them, it’s “Mission Alliance.” For the public, it’s “Mission Survival at the petrol Pump.”



🔥 The Bottomline: Andhra Pradesh’s petrol tragedy is a film nobody wanted to watch, but everyone is forced to pay for—literally. CBN plays the proud director, Pawan the silent extra, and the Centre the data-faceless villain. Result? Highest taxes. Highest prices. Lowest shame. A political drama running 24x7, with the audience paying ₹109 per ticket—oops, per litre.

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