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Articles 21 through 120 of 500:
- Two Held For Selling Brown Sugar (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 04, 2007)
The police here arrested two persons when they were trying to sell 1 kg brown sugar in the Thandi Kassi area near here, last night.
- Dismembering Iraq? (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Oct 04, 2007)
EVEN though the autonomous Kurdistan government has welcomed the American Senate’s non-binding resolution calling for a decentralised, federal Iraq, the Arab majority has rejected what indeed is a dangerous move.
- 700 Bangladesh Fishermen Take Shelter In India (Hindustan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 26, 2007)
Over 700 Bangladeshi fishermen aboard 50 trawlers, who were feared missing, have taken shelter in different coastal areas in West Bengal.
- J-K Cops Sound Alert Over Let’S Up Plans (Indian Express, Arun Sharma, Sep 24, 2007)
-K police have alerted their Uttar Pradesh counterparts about a Lashkar plan to recruit cadre for stepping up violence in the Valley.
- The Stressed Army Jawan (Tribune, A N Sudarsan Rao , Sep 18, 2007)
Recently the Standing Committee of Parliament on Defence expressed grave concern over the rising number of army jawans killing themselves or their colleagues and superiors.
- Pakistan, India To Exchange Border Crossers In 36 Hours (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 11, 2007)
Pakistan and India will return people who have crossed the border inadvertently from either side within 36 hours.
- Security Talks With Us, Australia: Japan Wants India Taken Aboard (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 08, 2007)
Japan wants India to join its security talks with Australia and the United States, a Japanese government official said, and insisted the dialogue was not meant to isolate China.
- Japan Wants India To Join Talks With Us, Australia (The Economic Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 07, 2007)
Japan wants India to join its security talks with Australia and the United States, a Japanese government official said, and insisted the dialogue was not meant to isolate China.
- Bangladesh Suspects Got ‘Character Certificates’ From Bengal Politicians (Indian Express, Subrata Nag Choudhury, Sep 04, 2007)
Security agencies investigating the arrest of 11 suspected militants this year at the Haridaspur border checkpost in Bongaon — about 100 km from here — have come up with shocking evidence of political patronage to such elements.
- Jammu And Kashmir Government Urged To Set Up Judicial Commission (Hindu, Shujaat Bukhari , Aug 31, 2007)
Desperate to know the whereabouts of their dear ones who have been allegedly missing in custody for the last 17 years, members of the Association of Parents of Disappeared Persons (APDP) on Thursday urged the government to set up a judicial . . . . .
- The Other Hyderabad Attack: 2 Bombs, 3 Probes, Both Hands Tied (Indian Express, JOHNSON T A, Aug 29, 2007)
At the Mediciti Hospital here today, five injured students from a Maharashtra engineering college who were at Lumbini Park on Saturday night and who survived the serial blasts that left 44 dead, were shown dossiers by the police in the hope that . . . .
- Lashkar, Jaish Behind Blasts: Home Secy (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 28, 2007)
As investigation into the twin blasts in Hyderabad is on, the Centre said today that security agencies were suspecting the involvement of Pakistan-based outfits like Lashkar-e-Taiba or Jaish-e-Mohammad behind the strike that killed 40 persons.
- Vigil Stepped Up On West Bengal Border (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 28, 2007)
Vigil along West Bengal’s border with Bangladesh has been intensified in the wake of Saturday’s blasts in Hyderabad, which according to the Andhra Pradesh government, might have had Bangladesh as well as Pakistan connections.
- Lashkar, Jaish In Realm Of Suspicion: Govt (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 28, 2007)
Though probe is in preliminary stages, security agencies and state police are suspecting the role of Laskhar-e-Taiba or Jaish-e-Mohammad.
- 1,363 Hiv Cases Detected In Indian Paramilitary Forces (Daily Times, Iftikhar Gilani, Aug 22, 2007)
The Indian government has said that it has detected 1,363 cases of HIV/AIDS in the paramilitary forces.
- India Sees Decline In Ihk Violence (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 22, 2007)
The Indian Home Ministry has said there has been a continuous decline in the violence in Jammu and Kashmir over the past three years.
- Ulfa Rejects Appeal For Talks (Tribune, Bijay Sankar Bora, Aug 20, 2007)
In response to Assam Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi’s renewed appeal to ULFA for direct talks with the Government of India, the insurgent group has ruled out talks unless its demand for “restoration of sovereignty of Assam” does not form the core . . . . .
- Inside Islam (Frontier Post, R.K. Raghavan, Aug 18, 2007)
“The Islamist”, a new book with the subtitle, “Why I joined radical Islam in Britain, what I saw inside and why I left” has evoked mixed reactions in the U.K.
- Central Team Visits Assam (Hindu, Sushanta Talukdar, Aug 14, 2007)
A high-level team of the Ministry of Home Affairs arrived here on a day’s visit to take stock of the situation in the wake of the killing of Hindi-speaking people in central Assam’s Karbi Anglong district on Monday.
- Unsc Votes For Expanded Iraq Role (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 11, 2007)
The United States and Britain, who have the largest military forces in Iraq and cosponsored the resolution, believe the UN should play a greater part there because the world body is viewed by many as a more neutral party that can facilitate talks. . .
- Cbi Team Cools Heels In Germany Waiting To Fly Home Fugitive Who Has Swallowed A Knife (Indian Express, Ritu Sarin, Aug 10, 2007)
The CBI could have again missed a chance to bring to India Amarendra Nath Ghosh, an economic offender whose extradition was cleared by German authorities in 2003.
- Talk Of Us Strikes 'Counterproductive': Mush (New Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 08, 2007)
President Gen Pervez Musharraf said on Tuesday that talk of US military strikes against al-Qaeda in Pakistan only hurts the fight against terrorism, as his troops killed 10 people in a strike on militant hide-outs in their strongest response. . .
- Bird Flu: Tripura, Mizoram Tighten Vigil (Hindu, GARGI PARSAI, Aug 06, 2007)
Even as the Tripura and Mizoram Governments tightened vigil along their borders after “unusual mortality” in poultry population last week, the Union Department of Animal Husbandry said over 3.40 lakh poultry birds were culled in Manipur.
- Bangladesh Agrees To Help India Tackle Ulfa, Huji Menace (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 04, 2007)
With the home secretaries of India and Bangladesh concluding their talks here on Friday, New Delhi's major concerns — terror outfit HuJI's expanding network and deportation of Ulfa militants Paresh Baruah and Anup Chetia — again got lost in the . . .
- Bangla Vows To Nab Paresh Baruah (Telegraph, Nishit Dholabhai, Aug 04, 2007)
Bangladesh today admitted for the first time that Ulfa commander-in-chief Paresh Barua was on its territory and even promised to track down the man who is “heard” but never seen.
- Indo-Bangla Pact On Security Today (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 03, 2007)
Home Secretaries of India and Bangladesh on Thursday held talks on security, border management and co-operation in police matters.
- Strange Partners (Pioneer, Khwaja Ekram, Jul 21, 2007)
This week Saturday Special takes a close look at the deepening crisis in Pakistan which has been exacerbated by the Lal Masjid incident. Uppermost in the minds of everybody in the Indian policy-making community is the question:
- Sidhu Takes Up Border Farmers' Plight (Singapore Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 19, 2007)
"If the prime minister’s announcement fell on deaf ears then who would listen to us?" bemoan farmers who own cultivable land beyond the border fence.
- Mecca Blast: Terror Courier Nabbed (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 17, 2007)
An alleged courier of terror operatives in the city was arrested by police at Secunderabad on Sunday.
- Sameer ‘Confesses’ To Plotting Mosque Blast (Hindustan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 09, 2007)
Sheikh Sameer, the prime accused in Hyderabad’s Mecca mosque blast case, has reportedly confessed that he masterminded the attack in connivance with Pakistan-based terrorists.
- Yatra Suspended Due To Bad Weather (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 30, 2007)
The annual march to the holy cave shrine of Amarnath in Jammu and Kashmir, which was scheduled to begin tomorrow, has been suspended due to bad weather, officials said.
- Us Senate Derails Immigration Bill (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 30, 2007)
In a setback to 12 million illegal immigrants, including Indians, the US senate has derailed a landmark immigration Bill that would have paved the way for regularisation of their status.
- Calm In Kashmir Is Not For Real, Says Bsf Top Man (Indian Express, RIYAZ WANI, Jun 29, 2007)
The security establishment in Kashmir has said the relative calm witnessed in the state over the past six months is not for real but a calibrated move by the militants to regroup and intensify their assaults in the days to come.
- A Mela That Binds Border Villages (Hindu, Luv Puri , Jun 29, 2007)
BSF men hand over mud and water to Pakistani contingent
- Immigration Bill Stalled Again In Senate (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 29, 2007)
The U.S. Senate failed again on Thursday in a vote to limit debate on an immigration bill that could provide a path to legal status for millions of illegal immigrants in the country.
- ‘Chadar’ Brought To Chamliyal (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 29, 2007)
Civilians climbed Border Security Force (BSF) embankments of this border outpost (BoP) as they joined security forces personnel to watch closely across the border, not for an enemy but to have a glimpse of those, who had sent green 'chadar' for a . ..
- Us Senate Votes To Revive Immigration Bill (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 28, 2007)
The Senate voted 64-35 yesterday to resume debate on the bill, which ties tough border security and workplace enforcement measures to a plan to legalise an estimated 12 million illegal immigrants.
- U.S. Senate To Revive Immigration Bill (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 28, 2007)
Raising the hopes of millions of illegal immigrants, including Indians, the U.S. Senate has revived a stalled immigration bill that could pave the way for legalisation of their status.
- Siachen Hero Falls To Militants’ Bullets (Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 26, 2007)
A twice-decorated hero, who first proved his worth during a famous assault to capture the highest enemy post on the Siachen glacier, breathed his last after a fierce firefight with militants in the Kupwara sector of Jammu and Kashmir on Sunday.
- Need Secure Line Before We Can Free Space For Mobiles, Army Tells Govt (Indian Express, Pranab Dhal Samanta, Jun 25, 2007)
The Army has dug its heels on releasing space from the frequency spectrum for mobile service providers, making it clear to the Prime Minister’s Office and the Defence Ministry that it will do so only after it is handed over a dedicated secure . . . .
- Health Meet For Paramilitary Forces To Combat Hiv-Aids (Indian Express, TILAK RAI, Jun 23, 2007)
To educate jawans posted in the Northeastern region on HIV/AIDS, a regular health programme would be organised by paramilitary forces in the different outposts.
- Let Man Slips Out, Arrested (Hindustan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 18, 2007)
An alleged operative of terrorist outfit Lashkar-e-Tayeeba on Sunday escaped from police custody but was caught after a two-hour long chase in Secunderabad, the police said.
- Bsf Rings Border Alert (Telegraph, MUZAFFAR RAINA, Jun 13, 2007)
The BSF has warned that Pakistan is fortifying the border near Jammu even as Delhi and Islamabad talk of confidence building measures in a climate of ceasefire.
- Terror Junction (Frontline, PRAVEEN SWAMI, Jun 11, 2007)
Communal violence, organised crime and the global jehad intersect in the Andhra Pradesh capital.
- Bush Bill: Is The Fall Good Or Bad For Indians? (The Economic Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 11, 2007)
It was hailed as a "grand bargain", a please all panacea, before it came unstuck at the first hurdle. But what hit President George W Bush's wonder immigration bill wasn't the amnesty bugaboo, but a new animal called 'cloture'.
- Stuck On Immigration (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Jun 11, 2007)
The shameful — and we hope temporary — shelving of an immigration reform bill by the Senate contradicts the aphorism that success has a thousand fathers but failure is an orphan.
- Dangerous Journeys (Frontline, PRAVEEN SWAMI, Jun 08, 2007)
Every year thousands of Bangladeshi migrants risk their lives and cross the border fence in J&K, hoping to make a new life in Pakistan.
- Constant Traffic (Frontline, SUHRID SANKAR CHATTOPADHYAY, Jun 08, 2007)
E.M. FORSTER, in Howards End, makes an interesting observation that there is no point in praising civilisation if it does not allow a person to die peacefully in the house where he was born.
- Invisible Immigrant (Frontline, Sushanta Talukdar, Jun 08, 2007)
People who entered India from Bangladesh after 1971 are liable to be deported, but there are no reliable data on them.
- 2 Holed-Up Ultras Killed (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 08, 2007)
Two Hizbul Mujahideen militants were killed in an encounter with security forces in Pulwama district last night.
- Peace Back In Rajasthan (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 06, 2007)
Normality returned to Rajasthan after a weeklong strife over the Gujjars' demand for inclusion in the ST list, thanks to Monday's agreement between the Government and the struggle committee.
- Delhi Bears The Brunt Of A Fiery Bandh (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 05, 2007)
Capital's borders blocked, vehicles burnt, traffic disrupted, supplies stopped
- Gujjar Agitation: Rail Services Affected (Hindu, Sandeep Joshi, Jun 05, 2007)
37 people arrested in the Capital; over dozen security forces personnel injured in clashes
DTC buses and private vehicles torched
Supply of essential commodities affected
- Creeping Instability Around India (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Jun 04, 2007)
India’s regional security environment is characterised today by instability owing to the rise of Islamist fundamentalism, nexus between narcotics trafficking and terrorism, proliferation of small arms, uncertainty inherent in the rule of despotic . . . .
- 'Surge In Attacks In Kashmir Show Militants' Frustration' (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 04, 2007)
The recent surge in militant attacks in Jammu and Kashmir demonstrate that the militant leadership feels sidelined and wants to take centrestage in any settlement of the Kashmir issue, political observers in the state say.
- Home Ministry Reviews Situation (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 01, 2007)
In the wake of continued Gujjar violence in the State
- Over 2,600 Paramilitary Forces Sent To Gujarat (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 01, 2007)
In the wake of continued Gujjar violence in the State
- Gurjjar Unrest Spreads, Centre Rushes In More Forces (Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 01, 2007)
The Centre kept a close watch on the situation in Rajasthan today as violence continued unabated and the Gurjjar agitation found an echo in neighbouring states.
- Paramilitary Forces For Rajasthan (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, May 30, 2007)
The Union Government on Tuesday sent 24 companies of paramilitary forces to Rajasthan, where violence claimed several lives.
- Nepal Maoists Turn Back Indian Vehicles (Pioneer, Correspondent or Reporter, May 29, 2007)
Nepal Maoists forced Indian vehicles to return back to India, accusing its neighbour of encroaching upon Nepalese territory, a news report has said.
- Dera Apologises To Guru Gobind Singh (Pioneer, Correspondent or Reporter, May 28, 2007)
Dera Sacha Sauda chief Gurmit Ram Rahim Singh tendered an apology to Guru Gobind Singh on Sunday night. He said he had absolutely no intention to either imitate or replicate the Sikh Guru.
- Police Fears Flashpoint At Ritual For Slain Sikh (Asian Age, Correspondent or Reporter, May 26, 2007)
The failure of mediation efforts by a multi-religious group led by Swami Agnivesh, while reviving simmering tensions between Sikhs and the Dera Sacha Sauda, has top police officials in a panic with the Akal Takht’s deadline on the closure of the .. .
- The Storm Over Immigration (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, May 26, 2007)
THE virulence and breadth of opposition to the American Senate’s immigration bill has kicked up a dust storm of dogma that has obscured the real stakes and potential of the legislation.
- 3rd Man Held In J’Khand (Asian Age, Correspondent or Reporter, May 23, 2007)
Sleuths of the West Bengal Criminal Investigation Department picked up a suspect in the Mecca Masjid blast case from Jamshedpur in Jharkhand, the third person picked up for questioning in the case.
- India Falls In Love With All Fine Wines Of The Vine (Singapore Times, Amrit Dhillon, May 22, 2007)
Sitting in the army mess one day, Harmeet Singh, a soldier in India's Border Security Force, cringed when his brigadier asked for a glass of wine with his meal.
- Calm Returns To Salabatpura (Tribune, Chander Parkash, May 19, 2007)
A day after thousands of Sikhs surrounded the Salabatpura branch of Dera Sacha Sauda threatening to attack the same, the situation was brought under control after paramilitary forces where deployed in the village.
- Centre Says It Will Give All Help (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, May 18, 2007)
The Centre today appealed for calm as the volatile situation continued to prevail amidst reports of intermittent clashes between various Akali groups and followers of Dera Sacha Sauda in many parts of Punjab and Haryana.
- Central Forces Rushed To Punjab, Haryana (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, May 18, 2007)
Faith divided Punjab in a way not seen in the last two decades as the battle between Dera Sacha Sauda, a sect with a large following in Punjab and Haryana, and various Sikh groups claimed its first life on Thursday.
- No Construction On Indo-Pak Border Till Kashmir Resolution: Pakistan (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, May 18, 2007)
Pakistan will not allow any construction by India on the borders till the settlement of the Kashmir issue, Pakistan Rangers Punjab Deputy Director General Brig M Qaisar Khan Tareen said on Thursday in a meeting between Pakistan Rangers and the . . .
- Clashes Across Punjab, Centre Rushes Forces (Asian Age, Correspondent or Reporter, May 18, 2007)
Radical Sikh factions, reportedly led by Khalistani elements, have launched attacks on at least five establishments of the Dera Sacha Sauda in an expression of violent indignation at what they view as "a much too soft" stance adopted against . . . .
- Thousands Join Anti-Pak Protest In Kabul (Pioneer, Correspondent or Reporter, May 17, 2007)
Thousands of people participated in a rally outside the Pakistani embassy in Kabul on Wednesday, holding Pakistan responsible for the worst clashes between both countries in several decades, in which six Afghan border security agents and seven . . . .
- Pak-India Border Talks (Frontier Post, Correspondent or Reporter, May 17, 2007)
Pakistan and India will discuss border security affairs here at Wahga on today at 8.30 am. An eight members Indian delegation headed by A.K Jain Deputy Inspector General of Indian Border Security Force (BSF) will represent Indian side while . . . .
- India:terrorists Using Bangladesh Region (Washington Times, Correspondent or Reporter, May 17, 2007)
The Indian government said Wednesday terrorists have used Bangladesh territory to launch operations against India.
- We Vote, So We Are (Asian Age, J.S. Rajput, May 11, 2007)
Elections in Uttar Pradesh provide an extensive canvas to political pundits to study the functional aspects of Indian democracy. It has been a tough exercise for the politicians in their search for power in the state.
- Govt: Only 15-20 Lakh Bangladeshi Migrants In India (Pioneer, Rajeev Ranjan Roy, May 10, 2007)
In a span of 10 years, the number of illegal Bangladeshis has reduced from about 10 million in 1997 to 15-20 lakh in May 2007. Such a drastic decline in Bangladeshi migrants, as External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee put their figure up to . . .
- Indian Paramilitary Forces Fail To Use (Daily Times, Iftikhar Gilani, May 09, 2007)
India’s plans to modernise its seven central paramilitary forces (CPMFs) have gone awry.
- Old Foes Us & Iran Break Ice In Egypt (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, May 05, 2007)
The international conference in Egypt gave an oppurtunity for Iran and US to meet at an expert level.
- 4 Nations Waive Iraq Debts (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, May 04, 2007)
Egypt and three East European countries agreed to waive debts owed by Iraq as part of an International Compact to support Iraqi institutions in exchange for political and economic reforms by the Baghdad government.
- Border Fence Draws Barbs From Trapped Indian Farmers (Daily Times, BAPPA MAJUMDAR, May 01, 2007)
Stranded villagers live inside a corridor the width of an airport runway, sandwiched between the Bangladeshi border and the new fence
- Common Maximum Programme (Indian Express, Shekhar Gupta, Apr 30, 2007)
You can see its emerging contours in UP rallies: Leaders moving away from cliche, voters moving to the centre — politics of aspiration slowly edging out politics of grievance
- Mosque Damage Sparks Protest In J&k (Times of India, Saleem Pandit, Apr 28, 2007)
The security forces in J&K are in the line of fire yet again. Jawans of Border Security Force (BSF) and Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) have been accused of causing damage to a nearly two-century-old mosque inside the famous Hari Parbat . . . .
- Common Maximum Programme (Indian Express, Shekhar Gupta, Apr 28, 2007)
You can see its emerging contours in UP rallies: Leaders moving away from cliche, voters moving to the centre — politics of aspiration slowly edging out politics of grievance
- Order Without Force (Frontline, Purnima S. Tripathi, Apr 25, 2007)
The Centre seeks modification of the apex court order on police reforms, while several States have refused to comply with the directives.
- Indian Border Guards To Watch Chickens From Bd (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Apr 18, 2007)
India has told its border guards to prevent people illegally bringing in poultry from Bangladesh as part of a heightened vigil against bird flu, a top official said on Tuesday.
- 46% Turnout In 2nd Phase (Tribune, Shahira Naim, Apr 14, 2007)
Polling for the 58 assembly constituencies in 10 districts of western Uttar Pradesh passed off peacefully with no violence being reported from anywhere.
- The Peace Process Within Kashmir (Indian Express, Balraj Puri, Apr 13, 2007)
The crisis in the PDP-Congress government was finally resolved after the intervention of the prime minister and senior Congress leaders.
- Ex-Jawan With Hiv Recalled After Recovery (Statesman, Correspondent or Reporter, Apr 12, 2007)
Nearly one-and-a-half years after boarding out from the force because of his HIV status, a BSF jawan was requested to join the force again by the BSF chief as he showed a miraculous recovery.
- Indian Troops Kill Six At Loc (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Apr 09, 2007)
Six unarmed people were killed by troops in Indian-occupied Kashmir Sunday as they attempted to cross a ceasefire border into the Azad Kashmir, a military spokesman said.
- 2 Militant Hideouts Busted, Grenades Seized (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Apr 09, 2007)
The police smashed two militant hideouts and recovered explosives, including improvised explosive devices and grenades in Kupwara and Doda districts of Jammu and Kashmir, a police spokesman said today.
- Centre Steps In To Cover `Strategic` Chicken Neck (Business Standard, Correspondent or Reporter, Apr 06, 2007)
The central government is moving to upgrade security in the strategic Siliguri corridor, which connects the Indian heartland with the border states of the North-East.
- Cross The Gulf Cautiously (Pioneer, G Parthasarathy, Apr 06, 2007)
Iran's former President Hojatoleslam Mohammad Khatami was in Delhi last week.
- Cross The Gulf Cautiously (Pioneer, G Parthasarathy, Apr 05, 2007)
Iran's former President Hojatoleslam Mohammad Khatami was in Delhi last week.
- Dealing With Dhaka (Pioneer, Hiranmay Karlekar, Apr 05, 2007)
There must be an element of quid pro quo and not a flurry of concessions by India to Bangladesh
- 3 Let Men Held At Indo-Bangla Border (Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Apr 04, 2007)
The BSF yesterday confirmed that three of the four foreign nationals apprehended on Sunday at the Indo-Bangla border in Petrapol, North 24- Parganas, belonged to the Lashkar-e-Toiba. The incident brings to fore how West Bengal has become a corridor . . .
- No Free Lunch For Pakistan (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Apr 04, 2007)
In June 2003, US President George W Bush hosted Gen Pervez Musharraf at Camp David, Maryland, where he vowed to work with Congress on establishing a five-year, $3 billion aid package for Pakistan. Annual installments of $600 million each . . .
- Problem Of Policing (Frontline, Bhaskar Ghose, Apr 03, 2007)
The tragedy at Nandigram should be looked at in the context of the `unionisation' of the police in West Bengal.
- Centre Rejects Plea For Cbi Probe Into Copters Purchase (Pioneer, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 31, 2007)
The Ministry of Defence has rejected demands for investigation into the purchase of 16 MI-17 helicopters by the NDA Government, after a petition filed in the Supreme Court alleged that commissions were paid a Russian company.
- Strategic Softness (Frontline, P.S. Suryanarayana, Mar 31, 2007)
Japan and Australia have signed a security pact that steers clear of China's sensitivities.
- A Former Pm’S Flawed Analysis (Dawn, Mahir Ali, Mar 28, 2007)
It is neither odd nor particularly alarming that there are competing narratives about the war in Iraq four years after the invasion that engendered it. Not surprisingly, the division between opponents and supporters of the US-led occupation has . . .
- Changing Equations (Deccan Herald, B G Verghese, Mar 23, 2007)
Due to the reforms of the caretaker government, it would be difficult for the future governments to err.
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