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