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Articles 4521 through 4620 of 5550:
- Importance Of Building A Culture Of Innovation -- Transforming Into A Knowledge Society (Business Line, K. Venkatasubramanian, Jun 15, 2001)
THE Prime Minister, Mr Atal Bihari Vajpayee, has unveiled a five-point agenda for India's development as a knowledge society.
- Status, Not Acceptability (Hindu, Kuldip Nayar, Jun 15, 2001)
It does not come as a surprise to me that Mr. L. K. Advani has been made number two in the Union Cabinet.
- India & Maoist Menace In Nepal (Tribune, M.S.N. Menon, Jun 15, 2001)
THE mystique of the Nepal monarchy is gone — perhaps for ever. There is now nothing to unite the Nepalese people.
- Information Roadblock (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jun 15, 2001)
It is a classic case of the right hand not knowing - or, more likely, being cynically unconcerned - about what the left is up to.
- Out Of Sight, Out Of Mind (Hindustan Times, Rahul Karmakar, Jun 15, 2001)
IT IS often said that New Delhi, dominated by the Hindi belt, is ignorant of the intricacies of the India that lies south of the Vindhyas.
- Dumb Charade (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 15, 2001)
There is nothing better for the national morale than a show of solidarity vis-a-vis Pakistan.
- General Musharraf V. President Musharraf (Tribune, Hari Jaisingh, Jun 15, 2001)
HOW different will be General Pervez Musharraf in the new civilian robe of presidency? Does it make him more respectable and acceptable to the world community, especially to India?
- Play It Cool (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jun 15, 2001)
Two questions arise now that General Pervez Musharraf is Pakistan's president. To what extent he is in charge?
- From Lahore With Hope (The Kashmir Times, Kuldip Nayar, Jun 15, 2001)
Lahore looked different when I went there in the bus carrying Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee nearly two years ago.
- A Washington Itinerary (Telegraph, K.P. NAYAR , Jun 15, 2001)
When Brajesh Mishra, national security adviser and principal secretary to the prime minister, walked into the Central Intelligence Agency’s headquarters near Washington a few days ago for his scheduled.
- The Spark That Lit The Powder Keg (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 14, 2001)
Imphal has been curfew-bound for a week now...
- Run-Up To The Summit (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 14, 2001)
THE countdown has started for the Indo-Pakistan summit but the diplomatic temperature in the two capitals are dramatically different. It is a leisurely pace in New Delhi with only High Commissioner to Pakistan Vijay Nambiar stirring things up a bit.
- A Washington Itinerary (Telegraph, K.P. NAYAR , Jun 14, 2001)
When Brajesh Mishra, national security adviser and principal secretary to the prime minister, walked into the Central Intelligence Agency’s headquarters near Washington a few days ago for his scheduled.
- Practicing Untouchability (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jun 14, 2001)
OUR former defence minister, the ever irrepressible and maverick, George Fernandes can never be accused of shying away from taking a separate stand.
- From Lahore With Hope (The Kashmir Times, Kuldip Nayar, Jun 14, 2001)
Lahore looked different when I went there in the bus carrying Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee nearly two years ago.
- Defiling Mosques (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jun 14, 2001)
The All-Party Hurriyat Conference has done well to ask terrorists in Kashmir not to use mosques as sanctuaries, and to endorse General Pervez Musharraf's call to the fundamentalist Islamic terrorist groups to stop their anti-India propaganda.
- President Pervez (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jun 14, 2001)
General Pervez Musharraf's elevation to the office of the President of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan is the latest Act in the continuing drama of Pakistan's search for an internationally acceptable and stable political order.
- Dumb Charade (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 14, 2001)
There is nothing better for the national morale than a show of solidarity vis-a-vis Pakistan.
- President In His Labyrinth (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jun 14, 2001)
There can be no better example of the differences in the Pakistani and Indian styles of governance than General Pervez Musharraf’s decision to take over as President.
- Storm Before The Lull (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jun 14, 2001)
FEW PEOPLE believed that the stand-off between militants and security forces at a mosque in Shangus village in Kashmir’s Anantnag district could be resolved in a manner that would not rebound on the administration.
- Sadr-E-Pakistan (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jun 14, 2001)
The announcement on Wednesday about general Musharraf assuming the office of president will hardly come as a surprise to long-term observers of Pakistan's political scene.
- The Missile's Message (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 14, 2001)
TUESDAY'S SUCCESSFUL TESTING of a supersonic cruise missile in collaboration with Russia should be hailed as a leap forward in India's defence effort.
- Socio-Cultural Integration Imperative (The Kashmir Times, Dhurjati Mukherjee, Jun 13, 2001)
Religious intolerance has become manifest in recent times because of the tendency of certain sections of religious groups to violate the principles of civil society.
- A Shifting Hurriyat (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jun 13, 2001)
The Hurriyat’s decision to suspend their campaign in view of the upcoming meeting between Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee and General Pervez Musharraf should help ease tension in the Valley.
- A View From Pakistan: Resolving Kashmir Now (Hindu, Foqia Sadiq Khan, Jun 13, 2001)
The poor, illiterate, unhealthy, shelterless, unemployed, underfed of India and Pakistan want the Vajpayee-Musharraf summit to be truly successful.
- Doubts That Will Not Down (The Kashmir Times, Kuldip Nayar, Jun 13, 2001)
Dead men tell no tales. Nor do burning pyres.
- The Architect Returns (Hindustan Times, Surinder Kumar Singla, Jun 13, 2001)
Taking care of the child, ensuring his proper growth for the realisation of his full potential, is a phenomenon, often not seen in the current quicksand of Indian politics of alliances and coalitions.
- Musharraf Will Be On A Sticky Wicket: (Hindustan Times, Benazir Bhutto, Jun 13, 2001)
In a surprise move, Indian Premier Atal Bihari Vajpayee extended an invitation to Pakistani coup leader General Pervez Musharraf to visit New Delhi for talks this summer.
- The Rulers We Don't Deserve (Business Line, Rasheeda Bhagat , Jun 13, 2001)
``WHAT the hell are you lot so smug about, get back to work.''
- Defiling Mosques (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jun 13, 2001)
The All-Party Hurriyat Conference has done well to ask terrorists in Kashmir not to use mosques as sanctuaries, and to endorse General Pervez Musharraf's call to the fundamentalist Islamic terrorist groups to stop their anti-India propaganda.
- President Pervez (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jun 13, 2001)
General Pervez Musharraf's elevation to the office of the President of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan is the latest Act in the continuing drama of Pakistan's search for an internationally acceptable and stable political order.
- Road To Hope, Optimism And Warmth (Pioneer, Bobby Sharma, Jun 13, 2001)
In a bold decision, Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee has invited Pakistan's Chief Executive General Pervez Musharraf for talks.
- A Neat Operation (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 13, 2001)
THE siege of the Shangus mosque in Anantnag district ended on Monday. For once the terms for ending the siege were dictated by the security forces and not the militants who had turned the mosque into a mini fortress.
- Musharraf Becomes President (Business Line, Rasheeda Bhagat , Jun 13, 2001)
SO GEN Pervez Musharraf has done what was expected of him for quite some time. Like other army generals before him who wrested power through military coups, Gen Musharraf has anointed himself president of Pakistan.
- Small Step To Peace (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 12, 2001)
The tremendous attention that the forthcoming Atal Bihari Vajpayee-Pervez Musharraf summit meeting has attracted is reflective of the growing constituency for peace in India and Pakistan.
- Congress Just Mews Over Tehelka (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 12, 2001)
Having tried building a public wave of anger over Tehelka, did the Congress falter in the last stages?
- A Positive Sign (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 12, 2001)
THE ALL PARTY Hurriyat Conference has done well to suspend its ``organised political movement'' against what it calls ``state terrorism'' in Jammu and Kashmir in the context of the forthcoming India-Pakistan summit.
- Excise Holiday Sop In Kutch Irks North-Eastern States (The Financial Express, Santanu Saikia, Jun 12, 2001)
Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s announcement of a five-year excise holiday for industries in Kutch district of Gujarat may yield rich dividends for the earthquake-ravaged region.
- Small Step To Peace (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 12, 2001)
The tremendous attention that the forthcoming Atal Bihari Vajpayee-Pervez Musharraf summit meeting has attracted is reflective of the growing constituency for peace in India and Pakistan.
- Hazratbal To Shopian (Hindustan Times, Inder Malhotra, Jun 12, 2001)
One of the many consequences of the almost daily death dance in Jammu and Kashmir for over a decade has been that more and more people are getting inured to the unending horrors in the lost paradise.
- Mig Crashes Again, Pilot Killed Again (The Kashmir Times, B. K. Mathur , Jun 12, 2001)
This column was initially planned for a different subject, on what military rulers and Generals in Pakistan used to tell their sports teams and managers prior their departure for international competitions abroad, like the Olympiad and Asiad.
- The Seeds Of Separatism In The North-East (Tribune, Rakshat Puri, Jun 12, 2001)
THERE are two aspects of the demand for which the Isaac Swu-Thuingaleng Muivah faction of the National Socialist Council of Nagaland is engaged in insurgency.
- Murdering Dialouge (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jun 11, 2001)
No words of condemnation are too strong for last Friday's grenade attack in the Charar-e-Sharief complex in Jammu & Kashmir (J&K) which killed four women and injured around 60 persons who were among a large crowd that was about to offer prayers
- Circling Allies (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jun 11, 2001)
Between the Congress and the BJP, the former fared much better in the recent assembly elections.
- Day Of The Moderate (Hindustan Times, Amulya Ganguli, Jun 11, 2001)
For Prime Minister Vajpayee, whose three tenures have not been marked by conspicuous success in any field, a thaw in India’s relations with Pakistan may feature as an achievement which he expects will cement his place in history.
- Backseat For Economy? (Business Line, Ranabir Ray Choudhury , Jun 11, 2001)
SATURDAY'S morning papers carried a report which said that the Government had decided to call ``an urgent meeting of public sector banks and financial institutions next week to chalk out a full-fledged revival strategy''.
- Jaya's People (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jun 11, 2001)
The happiest lot of people in the aftermath of Tamil Nadu chief minister J Jayalalitha's whirlwind tour of the capital must surely be in the Bharatiya Janata Party.
- Sadr-E-Pakistan (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jun 11, 2001)
The announcement on Wednesday about general Musharraf assuming the office of president will hardly come as a surprise to long-term observers of Pakistan's political scene.
- Run-Up To The Summit (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 11, 2001)
THE countdown has started for the Indo-Pakistan summit but the diplomatic temperature in the two capitals are dramatically different. It is a leisurely pace in New Delhi with only High Commissioner to Pakistan Vijay Nambiar stirring things up a bit.
- High Road Or Low Comedy? (The Kashmir Times, Praful Bidwai, Jun 11, 2001)
Mr Atal Behari Vajpayee has ce tainly not enhanced his claim to consistency by executing yet another flip-flop on Pakistan and inviting Gen Pervez Musharraf, the very man New Delhi has been pursuing in every conceivable forum since October 1999.
- Welcome Signs (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jun 11, 2001)
What Gen. Musharraf told the fundamentalists and anti-Indian elements of his own country on the 5th and 7th was music to the ears of most of us.
- Little Relief For Vajpayee (Hindu, MANAS DASGUPTA, Jun 10, 2001)
DESPITE THE best efforts of the Gujarat Government to convince the Prime Minister, Mr. Atal Behari Vajpayee, that its rehabilitation and reconstruction package for the earthquake- affected people was the ``best and the fastest in the world'', he apparentl
- Your Home May No More Be Your Castle (Hindu, NEENA VYAS , Jun 10, 2001)
FOUR WEEKS ago, the Union Home Ministry routinely breathed fresh life into an old circular, perhaps without bothering to apply its mind (to use a legal cliche).
- Musharraf's 'Western' Audience (Pioneer, Shobori Ganguli, Jun 10, 2001)
Pakistan Chief Executive Gen Pervez Musharraf's rather surprising message to a gathering of Islamic clerics in Islamabad, deviating from a prepared text on the occasion of Prophet Mohammed's birthday, was perhaps intended less for India's ears and more fo
- General Concern Critical For Peace (Pioneer, Dhananjay Kumar, Jun 10, 2001)
The forthcoming talks between India's Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee and Pakistan's Chief Executive General Pervez Musharraf has evoked plenty of speculation.
- Three Women (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 10, 2001)
The story of contemporary Indian politics can be written up as an account of the relationship of three powerful women: Ms Sonia Gandhi, Ms J. Jayalalitha and Ms Mamata Banerjee.
- Three Women (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 09, 2001)
The story of contemporary Indian politics can be written up as an account of the relationship of three powerful women: Ms Sonia Gandhi, Ms J. Jayalalitha and Ms Mamata Banerjee.
- U.K. Election Result: Comfort In New Delhi (Hindu, K. K. Katyal , Jun 09, 2001)
There is no particular suspense about the direction of the Indo-U.K. relations - as Mr. Tony Blair begins his second term as the Prime Minister - contrary to the case four years ago when the Labour was first swept to power.
- Hopes And Fears On Kashmir (Hindu, Rajindar Sachar , Jun 09, 2001)
THE INVITATION to General Pervez Musharraf by the Government of India has naturally raised intense speculation as to the motivation and the results that might follow.
- Building On A Unique Relationship With Nepal (The Financial Express, Inder Malhotra, Jun 09, 2001)
There have been occasions in the past when I have had to upbraid South Block for not having a contingency plan for a sudden eventuality of profound significance.
- New Tunes From Islamabad (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jun 09, 2001)
THE RECENT observations of General Pervez Musharraf and of his opponents on the forthcoming Indo-Pakistani talks are typical of subcontinental politicians who specialise in saying one thing when in power and its exact opposite when out of it.
- Three Women (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 09, 2001)
The story of contemporary Indian politics can be written up as an account of the relationship of three powerful women.
- Decline And Fall Of The Bjp (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jun 08, 2001)
WHEN LAST month’s Assembly polls brought little cheer to the BJP, it sought to deflect political embarrassment by challenging all and sundry to show their mettle in Uttar Pradesh where assembly election is due in a few months.
- The General In His Labyrinth (The Financial Express, Sanjaya Baru, Jun 08, 2001)
It is not often that one faces the prospect of being stranded on a Pacific island with a woman - that too a Pakistani woman! But then, giving me company through the hassle of dealing with a grounded aircraft and a day spent in changing flights.
- Dabhol Lessons (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Jun 08, 2001)
DABHOL POWER COMPANY'S reported willingness to extend the period for conciliation must be welcomed as it gives rise to some hope for a negotiated settlement.
- Hurriyat: Confused Or Out Of Steam? (Pioneer, M L Kotru, Jun 08, 2001)
Was one surprised when the Valley-based All-parties Hurriyat Conference endorsed Gen Musharraf's well-reasoned rebuff to the jihadi fringe in Pakistan?
- A Washington Itinerary (Telegraph, K.P. NAYAR , Jun 08, 2001)
When Brajesh Mishra, national security adviser and principal secretary to the prime minister, walked into the Central Intelligence Agency’s headquarters near Washington a few days ago for his scheduled.
- Dumb Charade (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 08, 2001)
There is nothing better for the national morale than a show of solidarity vis-a-vis Pakistan.
- India Must Reassess Us Missile Defence (Pioneer, Cecil Victor, Jun 08, 2001)
Having made its initial response welcoming the US decision to implement its National Missile Defence (NMD) policy, the Government of India must take steps to understand its implications.
- Vajpayee’s Dialogue With Pakistan (Tribune, Hari Jaisingh, Jun 08, 2001)
WILL the forthcoming dialogue between Indian Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee and Pakistan’s Chief Executive Pervez Musharraf be different from such exercises in the past?
- Linking India, Pak Through Music (Tribune, Harihar Swarup , Jun 08, 2001)
MUSIC and poetry transcend the barriers of caste, creed and religion and cut across divide between people.
- Us Search For Strategic Primacy: Bush Missile Defence (Tribune, Bharat Wariavwalla, Jun 08, 2001)
STRATEGIC primacy is what the USA under George Bush Jr. aspires to. In his speech before the national Defence College on May 1 he sketched a hazy design of American primacy.
- Peace And Prosperity In The Pipeline? (Tribune, Rakshat Puri, Jun 08, 2001)
REPORTS indicate that among the important subjects for discussion between Pakistan's military ruler Pervez Musharraf and Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee when they meet in July will be the pipeline to be laid for bringing Iranian gas to India.
- Roll Over Non-Alignment (Hindustan Times, Bhaichand Patel, Jun 08, 2001)
WE SHOULD be paying more attention to some of the changes that are taking place at the United Nations.
- A Peace Overdrive (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 07, 2001)
GENERAL Pervez Musharraf has launched, or is about to launch, a psychological warfare against this country if his recent assertions are anything to go by.
- Wealth Is Health (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jun 07, 2001)
In its latest issue, The Economist, London, has published a survey of India's economy which is comprehensive, competent and highly perceptive.
- Three Women (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 07, 2001)
The story of contemporary Indian politics can be written up as an account of the relationship of three powerful women.
- The Rulers We Don't Deserve (Business Line, Rasheeda Bhagat , Jun 07, 2001)
``WHAT the hell are you lot so smug about, get back to work.''
- A Peace Overdrive (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 07, 2001)
GENERAL Pervez Musharraf has launched, or is about to launch, a psychological warfare against this country if his recent assertions are anything to go by.
- Musharraf Becomes President (Business Line, Rasheeda Bhagat , Jun 07, 2001)
SO GEN Pervez Musharraf has done what was expected of him for quite some time.
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