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Articles 5121 through 5220 of 5550:
- Information Roadblock (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Apr 10, 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.
- Messages In The Media (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Apr 10, 2001)
General Pervez Musharraf quite obviously views himself as a forceful communicator of Pakistan’s national interest.
- Dumb Charade (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Apr 10, 2001)
There is nothing better for the national morale than a show of solidarity vis-a-vis Pakistan.
- A Washington Itinerary (Telegraph, K.P. NAYAR , Apr 10, 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.
- From U.S. To Iran: An Indian Rope Trick? (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Apr 09, 2001)
From the United States to Iran! If the acme of diplomatic skill is about managing irreconcilable contradictions and profitably engaging two nations that are daggers drawn, India will be demonstrating some of that capability this week.
- Dialogue On Jammu & Kashmir (Hindu, K.K. Katyal, Apr 09, 2001)
IT IS hard not to be repetitive on Jammu and Kashmir. That is because there is no marked advance in the efforts, initiated from time to time, to resolve this issue.
- Kashmir Talks With A Difference (Tribune, Pran Chopra , Apr 09, 2001)
HALF-way through the three-month “ceasefire” announced by Prime Minister Vajpayee at the end of February, the Government of India has offered a basis on which both sides can hold fire for much longer while talks proceed for something more lasting.
- Govt. realigning J&K policy (Hindu, Atul Aneja , Apr 08, 2001)
NEW DELHI, APRIL 7. Unwilling to lose the Kashmir initiative, the Government is making a fresh effort to begin a peace process in the troubled State.
- The gamble that didn't come off (Hindu, Sudhanshu Ranade , Apr 08, 2001)
A HUGE museum is reported to have come up at Kurukshetra; the site of the Mahabharat war. But, clinging as tightly as we do to our illusions, we are likely to find only stories there, not history. Stepping out from the museum into the blinding light of da
- A Tale Of Two Scandals (Hindustan Times, Vir Sanghvi, Apr 07, 2001)
POLITICIANS OPERATE on the assumption that the public has a short memory.
- A new ``dialogue counter'' (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Apr 07, 2001)
THE ONE POSITIVE aspect of the Government of India's open and broadspectrum `invitation' for talks to peace-desiring sections of Jammu and Kashmir is that it is the Atal Behari Vajpayee administration's first attempt to inject crucial political content in
- BJP, Cong. welcome talks package (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Apr 06, 2001)
NEW DELHI, APRIL 5. The Bharatiya Janata Party and the Congress today welcomed the decision of the Centre to initiate talks in Jammu and Kashmir even as reports from Srinagar indicated that the Hurriyat had rejected the dialogue offer insisting on its old
- When Elections Approach, Who Leads The Leaders? (The Economic Times, Narendar Pani, Apr 06, 2001)
THE CHANGING equations between the BJP and its allies in the run up to the assembly elections are hardly a surprise.
- India rejects tripartite talks idea (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Apr 06, 2001)
NEW DELHI, APRIL 5. As part of its initiative to revive the Kashmir peace process, the Government today noted the ``frequently repeated requests from Pakistan that they are eager for a dialogue with India on Jammu and Kashmir''. Reaffirming ``its faith in
- Indian offer holds no hope: Pak. (Hindu, B. MURALIDHAR REDDY, Apr 06, 2001)
ISLAMABAD, APRIL 5. Pakistan today called the latest policy statement made by New Delhi on Kashmir as an effort to separate the All- Parties Hurriyat Conference (APHC) from Pakistan and said it did not hold out a promise.
- JPC - lifeline for a stalemated Lok Sabha? (Hindu, S. Swaminathan, Apr 06, 2001)
The Tehelka.com revelations, apart from causing grievous injury to the Vajpayee Government's moral credibility, have also brought the 13th Lok Sabha to a log-jam. However hard the Government tried to defuse the orchestrated demand of the Opposition for it
- One Loopy Logic (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Apr 06, 2001)
SINCE HE assumed office in 1998, Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee has strived hard to resolve critical issues concerning telecom.
- N.K. Singh To Be Eased Out? (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Apr 06, 2001)
NEW DELHI, APRIL 5. The Prime Minister, Mr. A.B. Vajpayee, is reported to be getting ready to meet the criticism of extraordinary powers wielded by his aides in the PMO by sacrificing the Officer on Special Duty (OSD), Mr. N.K. Singh.
- The rot in the core (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Apr 04, 2001)
THE PUBLIC PERCEPTION of pervasive corruption in the system of tax administration has now only been reinforced. The sensational allegations made against the former Chairman of the Central Board of Excise and Customs (CBEC), Mr. B.P. Verma, on Monday at th
- Weaknesses in the BJP and NDA (Tribune, S. Nihal Singh, Apr 04, 2001)
AS the two main political formations digest the consequences of the tehelka.com tapes, the Bharatiya Janata Party has finally got the message while the Congress is still unsure of its next move. The BJP has begun its Herculean task of repairing its compro
- The post-Tehelka scenario (Hindu, K. K. Katyal , Apr 04, 2001)
THE POLITICAL turmoil, caused by the Tehelka expose, threw up many a question but only a few answers are available as of now, after a gap of three weeks. The Government and the National Democratic Alliance were badly shaken in the immediate aftermath of t
- George's 1001 nights (Indian Express, Mani Shankar Aiyar, Apr 03, 2001)
One thousand and one nights ago -- or thereabouts -- the prime minister took the extraordinary step of naming as the nation's defence minister a man who had spent time in jail on a charge of naked terrorism. True, this was the same prime minister whose fi
- Case Of Too Little, Too Late? (Hindu, K. K. Katyal , Apr 03, 2001)
The Government's decision to draft Mr. K. C. Pant, Deputy Chairman, Planning Commission, for talks with various sections of the Kashmiri people is commendable and is to be welcomed though it is a case of too little, too late.
- India likes Europe, but loves the U.S.! (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Apr 03, 2001)
NEW DELHI, APRIL 2. Is Indian diplomacy too preoccupied with the United States to pay serious attention to other key players in the world such as Europe? This is a complaint one often hears from European diplomats based in New Delhi.
- J&K TALKS (Daily Excelsior, Correspondent or Reporter, Apr 03, 2001)
Talk of the talks on Jammu and Kashmir has, once again, begun. Significance, not much, though, is being attached to the talk of the talks, primarily because the Home Minister, LK Advani, has made public the Centre’s "decision" to hold talks with Kashmiri
- Corruption as ‘political fodder’! (Tribune, M. G. Devasahayam , Apr 03, 2001)
IN the wake of the tehelka.com expose the Congress has launched a crusade, nay an “all-out war”, against corruption and has condescended to lead a coalition to unseat the much-maligned BJP-led government at the Centre. Congress president Sonia Gandhi, but
- A Blurry Political Vision (Hindu, Malini Parthasarathy, Apr 02, 2001)
ON ALL accounts, these are dismal times for the ruling BJP-led NDA coalition. Television screens in middle class homes across the country carry endless replays of incriminating footage of an audacious sting operation which caught redhanded leading politic
- Why The Bjp Lords Over The Rss (Indian Express, Neerja Chowdhury, Apr 02, 2001)
Last week the Prime Minister gave awards to eight journalists at a function organised by the RSS weekly Panchjanya. Atal Bihari Vajpayee walked on to the stage at Vigyan Bhavan where other important leaders waited for him, including RSS chief K.S. Sudersh
- Politics Of Perdition - Ii (Hindu, P. Radhakrishnan, Apr 02, 2001)
ALTHOUGH BOTH the PT and the DPI have much in common as Dalits and victims of caste oppression, as it often happens with the interplay of caste and politics, the leaders of both are staunch rivals, with Dr. Krishnasamy strongly conscious of the PT's caste
- Jarring Notes In The Hindutva Symphony (Hindu, NEENA VYAS , Apr 01, 2001)
THE BHARATIYA Janata Party may sometimes seem to be out of sync with the rest of the Sangh Parivar orchestra, but always the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, like the maestro conductor, keeps control with its baton, ensuring that the different players in its
- Pm Visiting Iran To Consolidate Ties (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Mar 30, 2001)
NEW DELHI, MARCH 29. In a bid to consolidate bilateral relations with one of India's most important neighbours, the Prime Minister, Mr. Atal Behari Vajpayee, is travelling to Iran early next month. The Government today formally announced that Mr. Vajpayee
- Carry Forward J&k Peace Process, Says Former Pak. Minister (Hindu, B. MURALIDHAR REDDY, Mar 29, 2001)
LAHORE, MARCH 28. Dr. Mubashir Hasan, former Finance Minister of Pakistan and veteran peace activist, is of the view that the Kashmir peace process should be carried forward and developments in India on account of the Tehelka expose should not be allowed
- Abolish The Pmo (Hindu, Ajay K. Mehra, Mar 28, 2001)
THE REFERENCE in the Tehelka tapes to disproportionate influence wielded by certain officials in the Prime Minister's Office (PMO) has put this office with a history of dubious controversies in the eye of a storm all over again. Ironically, this time it i
- Brajesh Takes After Haksar (Hindu, Inder Malhotra, Mar 28, 2001)
With Parliament initially paralysed and subsequently in recess, the war of words over the explosive Tehelka expose has shifted to the streets. This is no surprise. But there is an unexpected and significant twist to the tale. Attention has suddenly shifte
- Bjp Rakes Up Foreign Origin Issue (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 28, 2001)
NEW DELHI, MARCH 27. The Bharatiya Janata Party today attacked the Congress, saying that ``during the freedom struggle it was the whites who used to call Indians traitors (gaddaar)'', but in independent India ``whites have no right to call an Indian gadda
- In A Combative Mode (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Mar 27, 2001)
WITH THE REGIONAL constituents of the ruling NDA demonstratively pledging their support to the Atal Behari Vajpayee Government in the aftermath of the Tehelka expose, the Bharatiya Janata Party has moved into a combative mode, driven as it was by the elec
- Pm On A Wheelchair? (The Economic Times, Arindam Sen, Mar 27, 2001)
THERE seems to be a conspiracy to undo Dr Chittaranjan Ranawat’s operation on the prime minister’s knees. The good doctor apparently worked a miracle and made Mr Vajpayee stand on his legs.
- Vajpayee Breathes Easy (Hindu, Harish Khare , Mar 27, 2001)
NEW DELHI, MARCH 26. The Prime Minister, Mr. Atal Behari Vajpayee, is reported to be in a buoyant mood, especially after the successful rally staged by the NDA yesterday as well as by the show of solidarity at the BJP's national executive over the weekend
- Bribes And Bullets All The Way (Indian Express, Nandini Sundar, Mar 27, 2001)
While the fallout of the Tehelka tapes has pushed aside questions regarding the pro-rich thrust of the budget and the government's disinvestment policies, these are unlikely to disappear altogether. For what the Tehelka tapes highlight is the fact that un
- Mamata Too Under Tehelka Shadow: Basu (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 26, 2001)
KOLKATA, MARCH 25. The former Chief Minister of West Bengal, Mr. Jyoti Basu, today set the mood for the ruling Left Front's campaign in the coming Assembly election indicating that they would make good use of the Tehelka disclosures which suggested that T
- Govt. Must Go, Says Cong. (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 26, 2001)
NEW DELHI, MARCH 25. Seeking the resignation of the ``corrupt'' Bharatiya Janata Party-led Central Government and the arrest of those involved in the defence deal scam, the Delhi Pradesh Congress Committee (DPCC) organised a rally to observe ``Dhikkar Div
- Tehelka Has Exposed Shortcomings: Vajpayee (Hindu, NEENA VYAS , Mar 26, 2001)
NEW DELHI, MARCH 25. The Prime Minister, Mr. Atal Behari Vajpayee, today blamed the ``system'' for the ``shortcomings'' exposed by the Tehelka tapes.
- 'Cong. Wants War, We Are Ready' (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 26, 2001)
NEW DELHI, MARCH 25. The Prime Minister, Mr. Atal Behari Vajpayee, today said his multi-party National Democratic Alliance (NDA) was prepared to counter the Congress' charges of calumny emanating from the Tehelka tapes on the streets. ``They have declared
- The Congress(i) Leaves The Door Half Open (Hindu, Javed M. Ansari , Mar 25, 2001)
The Congress(I) would still like to form the Government on its own but is prepared for a situation in which it cannot. It has positioned itself accordingly. JAVED M. ANSARI on the Bangalore plenary of the AICC(I).
- The Debate Rages On ... (Hindu, Hasan Suroor, Mar 25, 2001)
A NEW biography of Indira Gandhi is likely to re-ignite the debate on whether she was a democrat or an authoritarian and whether the present ruling elite in India is a product of the process of "political debasement" that her critics believe began under h
- Bjp Absolves Govt., Attacks Cong. (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 25, 2001)
NEW DELHI, MARCH 24. The political resolution adopted by the Bharatiya Janata Party's national executive committee today almost entirely focussed on the aftermath of the Tehelka episode, and as expected, took the line that it was part of a larger conspira
- Canada's Gesture To India (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Mar 24, 2001)
CANADA'S CORRECTIVE DIPLOMACY of lifting the India-specific `sanctions', which were imposed after New Delhi conducted nuclear arms tests in 1998, must surely help tone up the bilateral ties. The reasons cited by Ottawa certainly do not indicate any sembla
- Govt. Will Not Resign: Advani (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 24, 2001)
NEW DELHI, MARCH 23. The Government will ``fulfill the people's mandate and shoulder the responsibility given to it till it commands a majority in the Lok Sabha,'' the Union Home Minister, Mr. L.K. Advani, told his party MPs at an emergency meeting of the
- 'Sonia owes an explanation' (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 23, 2001)
NEW DELHI, MARCH 22. The Bharatiya Janata Party today said the Congress president, Ms. Sonia Gandhi, ``owes an explanation to the nation'' for retaining the services of her Private Secretary, Mr. Vincent George, booked by the CBI on charges of corruption.
- Mandi House mouthpiece (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Mar 23, 2001)
If Sushma Swaraj can call Doordarshan autonomous, then surely she is the Minister of Misinformation. In structure and performance, and the degree of control exercised by the government, DD and AIR are still official mouthpieces par excellence. The way the
- Scenting blood, BJP hawks ready to swoop in (Indian Express, SANKARSHAN THAKUR, Mar 23, 2001)
NEW DELHI, March 22: Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee doesn't get a break from the Tehelka crisis when Parliament goes into the recess tomorrow. Hardliners in his party are readying to open round two of the tussle over ``cleansing'' the Prime Minister'
- Investment Climate Not Conducive, Says Japanese Envoy (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 23, 2001)
CHENNAI, MARCH 22. The attitude of ``killing the goose that lays the golden eggs'' adopted by tax authorities in India and governance issues in States like labour unrest and extortion by criminal elements are posing a threat to sustenance of revived Japan
- Politics of perdition - II (Hindu, P. Radhakrishnan, Mar 22, 2001)
ALTHOUGH BOTH the PT and the DPI have much in common as Dalits and victims of caste oppression, as it often happens with the interplay of caste and politics, the leaders of both are staunch rivals, with Dr. Krishnasamy strongly conscious of the PT's caste
- Bjp, Allies Pick Holes In 'Expose' (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 22, 2001)
NEW DELHI, MARCH 21. The BJP and its alliance partners today unveiled a strategy calculated to rubbish the tehelka expose about the role of middlemen in defence deals. Rather than acknowledge the ethical dimension, the Samata and the BJP spokesmen sought
- Defend The Budget (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Mar 22, 2001)
As the defence deals bribery scandal runs with undiminished momentum into yet another week, there must be rising concern about the impact on the economy. The scandal will effect the economy in two major ways: by raising doubts about the stability of the g
- A Slowdown In Foreign Relations? (Hindu, K. K. Katyal , Mar 22, 2001)
NEW DELHI, MARCH 21. To say that the current political crisis will impinge on the conduct of external relations is to stress the obvious. However, the impact may vary from case to case, from country to country - for instance, it may not mean the same thin
- Indo-U.S. Ties At Its Best: Mansingh (Hindu, Sridhar Krishnaswami, Mar 22, 2001)
WASHINGTON, MARCH 21. The new Indian Ambassador to the United States, Mr. Lalit Mansingh, is confident that bilateral relations will climb to newer heights and there will be continuity and expansion in what has been achieved thus far. ``My job is to ensur
- House Of Scandal (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Mar 22, 2001)
A natural expectation in the aftermath of the shocking Armsgate scandal was that the opposition would put the government on the mat in the course of debates in the Lok Sabha. But then that was too much to expect of the Indian opposition, which regardless
- The continuing travails of the NDA (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 21, 2001)
THE DECISION TO institute a judicial inquiry and the exit of Mr. George Fernandes from the Union Council of Ministers - secured under tremendous pressure from within the ruling coalition - may have helped the Atal Behari Vajpayee Government in controlling
- All The Prime Minister's Men (Indian Express, Neerja Chowdhury, Mar 21, 2001)
Prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee has, for the time being, managed to ride the storm that was unleashed by the Tehelka tapes. Although Mamata Banerjee has quit, the other NDA allies have rallied around him. The Congress and the new People's Front cannot
- Bjp's Agni Pariksha (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Mar 21, 2001)
The recent revelations in the Tehelka tapes have all but destroyed the BJP's USP - its squeaky clean reputation. As the BJP gets to work to clean up its act, Narendra Mody, general secretary in charge of the party organisation - who is likely to play a mo
- Ls Passes Vote-On-Account (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 21, 2001)
NEW DELHI, MARCH 20. Amid slogan shouting and general commotion, the Lok Sabha today passed the vote-on-account through voice vote enabling the Government draw from the Consolidated Fund of India for the next two months. The House also approved the propos
- 'We can't be pushed around' (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 21, 2001)
NEW DELHI, MARCH 20. The Prime Minister, Mr. Atal Behari Vajpayee, pronounced himself a ``deshbhakt'' (patriot) who ``did not need a certificate from anyone''. Simultaneously, he made it clear that he will not allow the Opposition to be successful in its
- Ceasefire Received Well In U.S. (Hindu, Shujaat Bukhari , Mar 21, 2001)
WASHINGTON, MARCH 20. Notwithstanding the unabated violence in Kashmir claiming more and more civilian lives, the unilateral ceasefire announced by the Prime Minister, Mr. Atal Behari Vajpayee, is seen as a move in the right direction in the U.S. Though t
- George And Friends (Indian Express, Mushirul Hasan, Mar 21, 2001)
The NDA government kindled hopes of a better future in certain circles. A weary nation, having experienced the rise and fall of the not so united fronts, turned to Atal Bihari Vajpayee for political stability. He was the new icon -- idolised by not just h
- Congress Does A Volte Face On Reforms (Hindu, S. Swaminathan, Mar 21, 2001)
The recent Congress jamboree in Bangalore might have passed off without the customary pomp and ostentation but its dismal import for the nation would be difficult to underestimate. For a great political organisation that nurtured parliamentary democracy i
- Paralysed Govt shows some signs of movement (Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 21, 2001)
NEW DELHI, MARCH 20: The government today went on the offensive threatening to file a defamation case against Tehelka with pressure easing on it as the Opposition allowed the passage of the crucial vote-on-account for the general and Railway budgets in th
- Offence as Defence (Times of India, VIDYA SUBRAHMANIAM, Mar 20, 2001)
PLACE: The PM's official residence. In one room, BJP office-bearers are meeting guests. One among them, a gent in powdered wig and black goggles, stealthily hands over a brown paper packet. The crisp notes go into the party coffers and he's told that his
- Swayam ka Sewak (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Mar 20, 2001)
Bangaru Laxman, tehelka.com's first victim, may have had a long innings in the BJP but he was a fairly obscure figure in the party. That is, till the prime minister picked him to become the party's first Dalit president. That too at a time when he was jus
- A Realistic Line (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Mar 20, 2001)
THE NEW LINE adopted by the Congress(I) at the Bangalore plenary in favour of forging a nationwide coalition against the BJP-led NDA is, indeed, a reflection of a realisation among its leaders of the ground realities. With the party being reduced to a pal
- Govt. To Go In For Vote-On-Account (Hindu, NEENA VYAS , Mar 20, 2001)
NEW DELHI, MARCH 19. With the Government reconciled to the fact that the rest of the first phase of the budget session of Parliament is lost, it has decided to get the crucial vote-on- account approved by the Lok Sabha tomorrow and the Rajya Sabha on Wedn
- Fast Backward (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Mar 20, 2001)
If only shrillness could substitute for political vitality, or strategy. Sonia Gandhi's high-decibel declamation at the AICC session in Bangalore only underlines the tragedy of the farce being played out on political centrestage ever since the Tehelka tap
- I Didn't Dabble In Defence Deals: Brajesh Mishra (Hindu, Harish Khare , Mar 20, 2001)
NEW DELHI, MARCH 19. Mr. Brajesh Mishra, beleaguered Principal Secretary to a beleaguered Prime Minister, today assertively refuted the insinuation in the Tehelka tapes that he had dabbled in defence deals. He also declared that there was no need for him
- Sudarshan chakra (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Mar 20, 2001)
Members of the sangh parivar and particularly the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh are proving to be far more serious adversaries of the Vajpayee government than the Congress party or the rest of the Opposition. The thunder from Bangalore does not cause half a
- PM ready for trial of strength (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 19, 2001)
NEW DELHI, MARCH 18. Going on the offensive, the Prime Minister, Mr. A.B. Vajpayee, today rejected the Opposition demand for his resignation and dared them for a trial of strength in Parliament as the Congress president, Ms. Sonia Gandhi declared a war to
- Vajpayee turns to Jaswant for Defence (Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 19, 2001)
NEW DELHI, MARCH 18: Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee today entrusted the key Defence portfolio to Minister for External Affairs Jaswant Singh, his confidant, on a day when the Government was grappling with more discordant noises from within the Sangh
- RSS joins attack, says Vajpayee's men are incompetent (Indian Express, SHARAD GUPTA, Mar 19, 2001)
SEVADHAM (MANDOLI), MARCH 18: In a direct attack on the Prime Minister's Office (PMO), the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), the ideological parent of the ruling BJP, today accused Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee of not heeding to its demand that ``e
- Double negative (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Mar 19, 2001)
EVEN in a polity where results of national elections have, since the Emergency, largely been defined as an anti-establishment vote of one kind or the other, the latest coming together of the self-perceived anti-communal and anti-authoritarian forces seems
- Fate of 35 Bills under cloud as Oppn sticks to its guns (The Economic Times, G Ganapathy Subramaniam & Jayanthi Iyengar, Mar 19, 2001)
THE CRISIS may be political, but the economy will bear the brunt. With the Opposition adamant on stalling proceedings in Parliament, the fate of more than 35 legislative bills has come under cloud.
- Culture as Diplomacy (Times of India, M D NALAPAT, Mar 19, 2001)
IN most countries, foreign policy subserves domestic interests. Whenever the flood of Chinese imports into the US crosses levels that the media in that country cannot ignore, human rights are used to divert attention away from the balance of trade. Althou
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