Third Antony ministry

The Eleventh Kerala Legislative Assembly Council of Ministers in A. K. Antony's third ministry, was a Kerala Council of Ministers (Kerala Cabinet), the executive wing of Kerala state government, led by Indian National Congress Party leader A. K. Antony from 17 May 2001 to 29 August 2004. This was the 18th Ministry in Kerala and it comprised 21 ministers.

Third A. K. Antony Ministry
18th Cabinet of Kerala
2001-04
Date formed17 May 2001
Date dissolved29 August 2004
People and organisations
Head of governmentA. K. Antony
History
PredecessorThird Nayanar ministry
SuccessorFirst Chandy ministry

[1][2]

MinisterMinistry
1A. K. AntonyChief Minister (Also in charge of Home Department)
2K. SankaranarayananMinister for Finance
3K. M. ManiMinister for Revenue
4M. K. MuneerMinister for Public Works
5P. K. KunhalikuttyMinister for Industries
6K. R. Gouri AmmaMinister of Agriculture, Soil Conservation, Soil Survey, Warehousing Corporation, Diary Development, Milk Co-operatives, Agricultural University, Animal Husbandry, Coir
7M. V. RaghavanMinister for Co-operation
8Kadavoor SivadasanMinister for Electricity
9Babu DivakaranMinister for Labour and Minister for Employment
10T. M. JacobMinister for Water Resources
11K. B. Ganesh KumarMinister for Transport
12C. F. ThomasMinister for Culture
13P SankaranMinister for Health
14M. A. KuttappanMinister for Forestry
15Nalakath SoopyMinister for Education
16G. KarthikeyanMinister for Devaswom
17K. V. ThomasMinister for Tourism
18M M HassanMinister for External Affairs
19K SudhakaranMinister for Forest
20Chekkalam AbdullaMinister for Local Self Government

Achievements

  • The Akshaya project was implemented in 2002 by providing E-literacy to the people those who haven't it and opening Akshaya centres in the remote rural areas of the state, thus ensuring Internet availability all over the state, aiming to make Kerala the first complete E-literate state of India.[3]

References

  1. "Council of Ministers - Kerala". Kerala Legislative Assembly. Retrieved 20 December 2009.
  2. "Ministries after State formation". Information & Public Relations Department of Kerala. Archived from the original on 8 July 2016. Retrieved 11 June 2014.
  3. "The first E-literate district of India". The Times of India. 18 August 2004. Retrieved 3 July 2020.


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