HomeNewsIndiaAfter Vizag, Nara Lokesh invites Bengaluru firms to Anantapur; Priyank Kharge hits back, calls it ‘desperate scavenging’

After Vizag, Nara Lokesh invites Bengaluru firms to Anantapur; Priyank Kharge hits back, calls it ‘desperate scavenging’

Quoting Moneycontrol’s report on startups and firms moving from Outer Ring Road to north Bengaluru and Whitefield due to infrastructure woes, Andhra IT Minister Nara Lokesh pitched Anantapur as a hub. Karnataka IT-BT Minister Priyank Kharge hit back, calling it “desperate scavenging.”

October 02, 2025 / 14:31 IST
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Karnataka IT-BT Minister Priyank Kharge (L) and Andhra Pradesh IT Minister Nara Lokesh
Karnataka IT-BT Minister Priyank Kharge (L) and Andhra Pradesh IT Minister Nara Lokesh

A war of words broke out on October 2 between Andhra Pradesh IT Minister Nara Lokesh and Karnataka IT-BT Minister Priyank Kharge after the former invited Bengaluru firms to shift operations to Anantapur

Quoting Moneycontrol’s report, 'Crumbling Outer Ring Road pushes more startups, firms towards North Bengaluru, Whitefield,' Lokesh wrote on X: “North sounds good. Slightly more north is Anantapur… where we are building a world-class aerospace and defence ecosystem! 😁”

Responding to the pitch, Kharge hit back: “It is natural for weaker ecosystems to feed off stronger ones. Nothing wrong with that, but when it turns into desperate scavenging, it shows more weakness than strength.” he wrote on X.

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Kharge underscored Bengaluru’s strong fundamentals, noting that the city’s GDP is projected to grow at 8.5 percent until 2035, making it the world’s fastest-growing city. He added that Bengaluru’s property market is expected to rise by 5 percent in 2025, while the Savills Growth Hubs Index places the city ahead of global counterparts in urbanisation, economic growth and innovation by 2033. Bengaluru’s urban agglomeration is estimated to reach 14.4 million in 2025, growing at an annual rate of 2.76 percent, making it one of India’s top migrant-absorbing cities.

Kharge’s sharp retort on opportunistic moves