Dilsukhnagar

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Dilsukhnagar
Neighbourhood
The Busy Main Road of Dilshukhnagar
The Busy Main Road of Dilshukhnagar
Dilsukhnagar is located in Telangana
Dilsukhnagar
Dilsukhnagar
Location in Telangana, India
Coordinates: 17°22′08″N 78°31′29″E / 17.368784°N 78.524652°E / 17.368784; 78.524652Coordinates: 17°22′08″N 78°31′29″E / 17.368784°N 78.524652°E / 17.368784; 78.524652
Country India
StateTelangana
DistrictRangareddy
CityHyderabad
Government
 • BodyGHMC
Languages
 • OfficialTelugu
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
PIN
500,060
Vehicle registrationTS 08
Lok Sabha constituencyHyderabad
Vidhan Sabha constituencyL.B. Nagar
Planning agencyGHMC

Dilsukhnagar is one of the largest commercial and residential centers in Hyderabad.[1] It was once part of the Municipal Corporation of Hyderabad, but later merged with the Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation.

History[]

The name "Dilsukhnagar" is derived from Dilsukh Ramprasad, an agricultural land owner who lived around Malakpet. It is said that he subdivided his land into plots and built a colony which he named Dilsukhnagar.

Dilsukhnagar was once a purely residential suburb; however, in the last decade strong economic growth has transformed it into a major commercial hub.

Administration[]

Dilsukhnagar was merged into the Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation in 2007 after an order passed by the Government of Telangana. It is now a part of the Telangana State Assembly.[citation needed]

Transport[]

The suburb houses a Telangana State Road Transport Corporation bus depot.[2]

Multi-Modal Transport System station in Malakpet serves Dilsukhnagar.[3] It is well connected by Hyderabad Metro

Incidents[]

The locality has been subject to terrorist attacks twice in its history. Both cases involved attacks using a time bomb. The first incident happened in 2002, allegedly planted by SIMI, investigation of which is underway.[4] The second incident involving twin blasts occurred in 2013, killing 13 people while injuring 83 others.[5] Death toll enhanced to 17 in the ensuing days.[6] Members of Indian Mujahideen, a terrorist group, were eventually convicted for their role in the blasts.[7]

References[]

  1. ^ Dilsukhnagar: A congested commercial centre
  2. ^ "TSRTC Bus Depots".
  3. ^ "SCR - MMTS Brochure" (PDF).
  4. ^ "2002 temple blast accused brought to city".
  5. ^ "The Hindu Archive: 13 killed, 83 injured as twin blasts rock Hyderabad".
  6. ^ "Dilsukhnagar bomb blast toll rises to 17".
  7. ^ "Five IM men convicted for Hyderabad blasts".
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