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Articles 12621 through 12720 of 13380:
- Communalising Crafts (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Nov 27, 2001)
THE NDA government, accused of Talibanising education, has exposed itself to another serious charge.
- Importance Of Being Bhutto (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Nov 27, 2001)
MS Benazir Bhutto, Pakistan's former Prime Minister in self-imposed exile in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), knows how to remain in focus despite her dwindling popularity at home. She travels a lot, and wherever she goes she speaks what suits her audience
- Benazir Talks Of Tearing Down The ‘Berlin Wall’ (The Financial Express, Rohit Bansal, Nov 27, 2001)
• For far too long have there been Berlin Walls...
- Mr Chomsky And The Left World (The Financial Express, K. P. Sethunath, Nov 26, 2001)
If Noam Chomsky was not there, what would have been the fate of India’s professional dissenters?
- Strong Case For Enhancing India-Eu Relations (Hindu, K. K. Katyal , Nov 26, 2001)
The outcome of the second India-EU summit (in New Delhi last week) should take care of the criticism that the relationship between them lacks direction.
- A Missed Opportunity (Hindu, Harsh Sethi , Nov 26, 2001)
DESPITE THE heightened global talk about human rights, the inaugural South Asians for Human Rights (SAHR) convention held in New Delhi on November 11 and 12 went virtually unnoticed.
- India And Pak. In The New Scenario (Hindu, Muchkund Dubey , Nov 26, 2001)
THE LAUNCHING of the global campaign against terrorism by an international coalition led by the United States has already resulted in a reordering of the foreign policies of major powers.
- Spreading Wings (Indian Express, Ritu Sarin & Sunil Jain, Nov 26, 2001)
In the name of efficiency, streamlining, the MHA is set to get six more divisions.
- Laloo, And The Law (Indian Express, E. P. Unny, Nov 26, 2001)
E.P. UNNY meets a leader waiting for luck to catch up with him before courts do. Meanwhile, he tempts both...
- Watch Out For This Poto-Hole (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Nov 26, 2001)
By definition no law can ever be perfect or complete. Nor can it anticipate every situation.
- Education As Antidote To Terrorism (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Nov 26, 2001)
The war against terrorism will be a protracted affair. For educationists too, terrorism represents a challenge.
- Testing Times (Hindu, B. MURALIDHAR REDDY, Nov 25, 2001)
THE HISTORY of Pakistan- Afghanistan relations has been marked by several ups and downs.
- Much Ado About Nothing (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Nov 25, 2001)
The ill-informed and prejudiced wran-gling between the ruling National Con-ference and BJP, its ally at the Centre and adversary in the State.
- Hizbul's Gambit (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Nov 25, 2001)
The Government has acted prudently in not outrightly dismissing the offer of talks made by the Hizbul Mujahideen. If terrorists wish to talk peace, their offer must be welcomed with an open mind.
- History Rubbished To Rouble (The Kashmir Times, Anuradha Bhasin Jamwal, Nov 25, 2001)
If vandalising a historic monument and reducing it to rouble, and reducing the rouble to finer dust can increase the space in any part of Jammu city, then why end at the Bibi Chand Kour Samadhi.
- Probe Land Grabbing Cases (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Nov 25, 2001)
In a state where encroachment upon the government land has been colossus and some of the unearthed cases of such land grabbing have been hushed up the report that the investigation into the Budgam land scam is almost complete should come as a small relief
- Lessons From Doha (The Kashmir Times, SURENDRA MOHAN, Nov 25, 2001)
The Union Commerce Minister Murasoli Maran, on his return from Doha ministerial conference of the World Trade Organisation has underlined in particular two courses of action to be followed in the future.
- War Against Terror: The Public Opinion Conundrum (Tribune, Sreeram Chaulia, Nov 25, 2001)
There is a fundamental contradiction in the renewed love fest that the present war against terrorism has contrived between the United States and its old Cold War ally, Pakistan.
- Enough Of Prolonged Saga Of Blood-Letting (Tribune, David Devdas, Nov 25, 2001)
Abdul Majid Dar could easily pass for a dapper professor. A salt and pepper beard and a receding grey hairline frame his smiling face as he lopes into the room looking like a gentleman at a golf course.
- Mingling Of Hinduism And Islam (Tribune, Asghar Ali Engineer , Nov 25, 2001)
Dara Shikoh has made seminal contribution to the composite culture of India. He was appointed heir apparent by Shah Jahan and had he become emperor of India it would have certainly made much difference to religio-cultural scene in India.
- Why Bush Wouldn't Condemn Pakistan (Pioneer, M L Kotru, Nov 25, 2001)
If you were one of those who watched President Mush (Musharraf) trying to steal the show from President Bush when the two went centre-stage at their New York Press conference.
- Hizbul's Gambit (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Nov 24, 2001)
The Government has acted prudently in not outrightly dismissing the offer of talks made by the Hizbul Mujahideen. If terrorists wish to talk peace, their offer must be welcomed with an open mind.
- Why Bush Wouldn't Condemn Pakistan (Pioneer, M L Kotru, Nov 24, 2001)
If you were one of those who watched President Mush (Musharraf) trying to steal the show from President Bush when the two went centre-stage at their New York Press conference.
- Wanted In Pakistan, Someone To Bell The Cat (Indian Express, Husain Haqqani, Nov 24, 2001)
THE turn of events in Afghanistan over the past two weeks is being described as a strategic debacle for Pakistan.
- Do Our Sacrifices Count, Ask Dogras (Indian Express, Arun Sharma, Nov 23, 2001)
THEY acceded the single-largest composite state — having boundaries with China and Afghanistan — to India 55 years ago, but the Dogras have been fighting a battle for recognition of own language for 10 years.
- Not The Way To Put The House In Order (Pioneer, Ahtesham Qureshy, Nov 23, 2001)
The Union Cabinet has decided to do away with the requirement that a person should be residing in the State from where he wants to fight an election to the Rajya Sabha.
- India-Pakistan Talks: Yes, No, Maybe (Hindu, Kanti Bajpai, Nov 23, 2001)
WITH THE Northern Alliance's dramatic gains in the ground war in Afghanistan, India must turn its attention to relations with Pakistan.
- Pakistan: Reaping The Whirlwind? (Business Line, Rasheeda Bhagat , Nov 22, 2001)
PAKISTAN today is in the unenviable position of having two enemies, vis-`-vis the developments in Afghanistan.
- Gowda’s Plans Go Awry (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Nov 22, 2001)
In the last few weeks, former Prime Minister H. D. Deve Gowda has been desparately trying to come to political limelight but without much success.
- Retrograde Act (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Nov 22, 2001)
ALTHOUGH THE DECISION of the Supreme Court Bench to return without any comment the Resettlement (of J&K State Subjects Who Left State Before 1954 And Now Living in Pakistan).
- This Is No Misa (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Nov 22, 2001)
IN 1969, Henry Kissinger, newly appointed national security adviser, was talking off the record to the media. ‘‘Will you repeat your predecessors’ mistakes in Vietnam?’’
- Where Will The Taliban Go Now? (Pioneer, Ghazanfar Butt, Nov 22, 2001)
Much has happened during the last few days, which would significantly affect Afghanistan and the Indian sub-continent.
- Probe Land Grabbing Cases (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Nov 21, 2001)
In a state where encroachment upon the government land has been colossus and some of the unearthed cases of such land grabbing have been hushed up the report that the investigation into the Budgam land scam.
- Missed Melody (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Nov 21, 2001)
"Menon" - a deep, confident, decisive voice always answered, in response to telephone calls made to their Friend's Colony residence.
- Pakistan’s Yes, No, If, But … (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Nov 21, 2001)
HAD it not been the inevitable consequence of riding two horses pulling in opposite directions, the condition of Pakistan could have been described as pathetic.
- A Soldier: Why Should I Fight Terrorism? (Tribune, PN Khera, Nov 21, 2001)
INDIAN soldiers posted on the international border and the Line of Control have to fight an unseen enemy who has been infiltrated into the country to strike at strategic targets and innocent civilians or set up booby traps to blow up military convoys.
- The Bush-Putin Summit (The Kashmir Times, R. R. Subramanian, Nov 21, 2001)
The summit meeting between President Bush of the USA and President Putin of Russia at a ranch house in Gramford, Texas has floundered over the issue of ballistic missile defence (BMD).
- A Voyage And The Elusive Vision - Ii (Hindu, P. S. SURYANARAYANA, Nov 21, 2001)
IMAGE POLITICS is not the real answer to the difficulty that Official India encounters in acquiring a strategic vision and a roving focus to keep pace with the U.S.-led campaign against global terrorism.
- The Raging Controversy Over Poto (Tribune, Amar Chandel, Nov 21, 2001)
IT will be difficult to find an Indian who is not alarmed by the menace of terrorism. Everyone admits that it has already become all pervasive, mostly thanks to the pusillanimity of the government, and something drastic must be done to crush it at once.
- History Rubbished To Rouble (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Nov 21, 2001)
If vandalising a historic monument and reducing it to rouble, and reducing the rouble to finer dust can increase the space in any part of Jammu city, then why end at the Bibi Chand Kour Samadhi.
- Shrinking Space Of Hinduism (Hindu, Kancha Ilaiah, Nov 21, 2001)
THE DALITS embracing Buddhism in Delhi on November 4 became a national issue as it was made controversial.
- When Elephants Fight, The Grass Gets Trampled (Business Line, Sunanda K. Datta-Ray, Nov 21, 2001)
WHEN elephants fight, runs an old saying, it is the grass that is trampled.
- Much Ado About Nothing (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Nov 21, 2001)
The ill-informed and prejudiced wran-gling between the ruling National Con-ference and BJP, its ally at the Centre and adversary in the State.
- The Fight For Human Rights Has To Include The Excluded (The Financial Express, Kuldip Nayar, Nov 21, 2001)
Kabul fell one day after some 500 men and women from South Asia, at a meeting in New Delhi, adopted a statement on the sovereignty of Afghanistan.
- Distorting The Spirit Of Islamic Reconstruction (Indian Express, Syed Ali Mehdi, Nov 20, 2001)
Terrorism, particularly after Black September, poses the greatest threat to human civilisation.
- Poto: Pity It Is Confrontation, Not Consensus (Hindu, K. K. Katyal , Nov 20, 2001)
NEW DELHI, NOV. 19. It will be a pity that just when the country needs consensus on core issues of national interest, the ruling side and the opposition head towards a sharp confrontation.
- Resettlement Act: Was The Supreme Court Right? (The Kashmir Times, Karuna Thakur, Nov 20, 2001)
The Presidential reference in respect of J&K Resettlement Act (The Act provides for resettlement of all those permanent residents of erstwhile J&K in this part of J&K from areas known as Pakistan occupied Kashmir).
- Fresh Opportunity In Valley (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Nov 20, 2001)
With the ejection of the extremist Taliban regime from Kabul and the disclosure of how it was being controlled by foreign elements to the detriment of the Afghans.
- Minister For Siachen (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Nov 20, 2001)
Defence means more than notching up frequent flier points.
- A Vvip Village Called Bathindi (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Nov 20, 2001)
Mahatma Gandhi saw the vision of new India in the villages of the country.
- Hr Abuses In Poonch (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Nov 20, 2001)
That Kashmir has to be resolved politically through dialogue is already clear.
- Cold Facts, Bold Talks (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Nov 20, 2001)
The militants have again flexed their muscle. At Ramban on Jammu-Srinagar national highway, far away from either the I.B. or the LoC, while ten jawans and five civilians lay dead and around 30 others were left wounded.
- A Voyage And The Elusive Vision - I (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Nov 20, 2001)
DOES AMERICA need a foreign policy? The poser, popularised by Dr. Henry Kissinger, reflects the present status of the U.S. as the sole superpower.
- Poto: Pity It Is Confrontation, Not Consensus (Hindu, K. K. Katyal , Nov 20, 2001)
NEW DELHI, NOV. 19. It will be a pity that just when the country needs consensus on core issues of national interest, the ruling side and the opposition head towards a sharp confrontation.
- All That The Pakistani Can’t Leave Behind (Indian Express, Khaled Ahmed, Nov 20, 2001)
The attitude of the expatriate Pakistani tends to be more extreme than Pakistan’s domestic opinion.
- The Afghan Kaleidoscope (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Nov 20, 2001)
NOT FOR the first time nor, one suspects, the last, Afghanistan is playing a role in world history unmerited by its economic weight, unwarranted by its military power.
- Health Of The Nation (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Nov 19, 2001)
Right from our childhood we have been told that "health is wealth", and we should not need Nobel Laureate Amartya Sen and Jammu-born Mehboob-ul-Huq to regularly tell us that the best fields of investment for a nation’s development are health and education
- Including The Excluded (The Kashmir Times, Kuldip Nayar, Nov 19, 2001)
Kabul, fell one day after some 500 men and women from South Asia adopted at a meeting in New Delhi a statement on the sovereignty of Afghanistan. It was a premonition or wishful thinking on their part.
- Talk Talk, Little Action (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Nov 19, 2001)
All India Women’s Conference chairperson, who attended a seminar on women in Jammu has spoken about the need for educating women about their rights so that they can fight injustice.
- The Challenges In J&k (Hindu, Balraj Puri, Nov 19, 2001)
THE WORLD, they say, changed on September 11. How does the change affect the situation in Jammu and Kashmir?
- A Vvip Village Called Bathindi (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Nov 19, 2001)
Mahatma Gandhi saw the vision of new India in the villages of the country.
- Caught In The Quicksand (Hindu, Muralidhar Reddy, Nov 18, 2001)
``NEVER IN the field of human conflict have so many experts of the highest renown been so thoroughly wrong.
- Darling Of The West (Hindu, Sridhar Krishnaswami, Nov 18, 2001)
FROM being a nation shunned to a ``frontline'' ally and a coveted guest at the high table in Downing Street, and at Waldorf Astoria across the Atlantic...
- Timely Concern (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Nov 18, 2001)
THE concern voiced by Abu Abraham in his article “A legacy denied: All that Nehru stood for is now under attack” (Nov 11) is timely.
- Kashmir At The Crossroads (Hindu, Shujaat Bukhari , Nov 18, 2001)
THE fallout of the Taliban's debacle in Afghanistan is bound to have its impact over the next phase of the armed struggle in Jammu and Kashmir.
- Terrorism: Don’t Allow The Momentum To Die (Tribune, M.S.N. Menon, Nov 18, 2001)
Terrorism has a long antiquity. But it never took such a macabre proportion that it has assumed of late.
- Caught In The Quicksand (Hindu, B. MURALIDHAR REDDY, Nov 18, 2001)
``NEVER IN the field of human conflict have so many experts of the highest renown been so thoroughly wrong.
- Darling Of The West (Hindu, Sridhar Krishnaswami, Nov 18, 2001)
FROM being a nation shunned to a ``frontline'' ally and a coveted guest at the high table in Downing Street, and at Waldorf Astoria across the Atlantic...
- De-Legitimise Terror As State Policy (Pioneer, K P S Gill, Nov 18, 2001)
Most ruthless in the suppression of their own hapless people, and most cowardly in battle.
- The Afghan Endgame (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Nov 17, 2001)
INDIA won two points in its Afghan policy on Thursday. It is formally recognised by the UN as a key member to decide on the future set-up in Afghanistan.
- De-Legitimise Terror As State Policy (Pioneer, K P S Gill, Nov 17, 2001)
Most ruthless in the suppression of their own hapless people, and most cowardly in battle.
- India In Today’s Global Politics (Tribune, Hari Jaisingh, Nov 17, 2001)
WHERE does India stand after the three-nation tour of Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee? The countries he has just visited are the world's major centres of power.
- Specious Arguments (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Nov 17, 2001)
THE UNION CABINET'S proposal to replace the Foreign Contributions Regulation Act (FCRA) with a more stringent law.
- Fear And Learning In New York (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Nov 17, 2001)
Some quiet in J&K, few red faces in Pak: shouldn’t we get more out of Sept 11?
- ‘Us Wants India To Be Right In The Middle Of Talks On Afghanistan’ (Indian Express, Sonia Trikha, Nov 17, 2001)
US ambassador Robert Blackwill is currently with the US Pacific Command in Hawaii discussing proposals for military cooperation between the US and India with Admiral Dennis Blair.
- Us Must Keep An Eye On Pak (Indian Express, Rajeev Shukla, Nov 17, 2001)
HIGH time the US realised how it has been taken for a ride by Pakistan.
- The Demand For Autonomy (Hindu, Ajay K. Mehra, Nov 17, 2001)
THOUGH THE Indian state, even as it came into existence, became aware of the potential of pluralism and identities constituting society to articulate itself to demand a political system with an `adequate' power-sharing arrangement.
- The Inherent Contradiction (Hindu, K. Shankar Bajpai , Nov 17, 2001)
THE UNITED States' discussions with our Prime Minister and with Pakistan's leader, which must inevitably be seen together, confirm, at the summit level, the approach its other leaders have been already indicating: with India.
- Going After The Raiders Of The Dark (Pioneer, Anil Narendra, Nov 16, 2001)
Osama bin Laden has now threatened to use nuclear and biochemical weapons.
- Shut The Backdoor (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Nov 16, 2001)
Russian President Vladimir Putin's frank admission, before American journalists in a recent press conference in Moscow, that the Taliban in Afghanistan and international terrorism in general were products of Cold War rivalry, is refreshing.
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