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Articles 23121 through 23220 of 27135:
- India-Pakistan Visa Divide (Deccan Herald, Kuldip Nayar, Jun 17, 2005)
Despite the peace process chugging on, visa restrictions between the two countries remain stringent
- All Charged Up Over Paddy Cultivation (Deccan Herald, ANIL CHINTAMANI, Jun 16, 2005)
A farmer at heart and army man by association, Kolera Belliappa is a zestful 70-year-old. Spurning a relaxed retired life, this former chargeman in CIL (Chief Inspectorate of Electronics, a Defence establishment) keeps returning to his main passion -- agr
- Singing The General’S Tune (Deccan Herald, G Parthasarathy, Jun 16, 2005)
Hurriyat chief Mirwaiz Farooq’s statements in Pakistan indicate that Musharraf will continue to aid terrorism in J&K
- A Defining Moment (Tribune, G Parthasarathy, Jun 16, 2005)
Pleading for foreign investment in oil and gas exploration, Petroleum Minister Mani Shankar Aiyar told bemused senior executives of American and Canadian oil companies in Houston and Calgary earlier this year: “Take my oil please. We invite you to come...
- Casualties Of Baku Oil Stampede (Hindu, Michael Meacher, Jun 16, 2005)
Those behind human rights abuses and an allegedsafety cover-up around the Caspian pipeline mustbe held to account.
- Bjp Developments Will Not Affect Nda, Says Fernandes (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 16, 2005)
Describes controversy as party's internal matter, says alliance endorses Advani's statements on Jinnah
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Other statements
AIADMK not to join National Democratic
- Sheikh Rashid Was Given Hundreds Of Acres' (Hindu, B. MURALIDHAR REDDY, Jun 16, 2005)
Pakistan People's Party demands a full-fledged probe into training of militants
- Maoist Problem Was Main Focus Of Talks" (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 16, 2005)
I have returned with the goodwill of the Indian Government and the people: Girija Prasad Koirala
- A Visit And Its Balance-Sheet (Hindu, B. MURALIDHAR REDDY, Jun 16, 2005)
The Hurriyat faction is aware of the battle ahead of it from the separatists as well as the `pro-India' political forces as it gets down to the task of convincing the various constituencies about its new line of thinking.
- Another Test For West Bengal's Opposition (Hindu, Marcus Dam, Jun 16, 2005)
West Bengal's Opposition parties have another chance to challenge the Left Front before next year's Assembly election.
- Pia Concession To Judges (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 16, 2005)
Islamabad: The Defence Ministry has directed the Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) to exempt judges from the rules being applied at airports regarding issuance of boarding cards.
- Nishant Completes 100th Flight (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 16, 2005)
BANGALORE: The indigenous Unmanned Air Vehicle (UAV), Nishant, developed by the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO), has completed its 100th flight.
- Neighbourhood Ties (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Jun 16, 2005)
India cannot afford to be complacent about its relations with Sri Lanka
- Elbaradei Gets Third Term As U.S. Drops Objection (Hindu, Jonathan Steele, Jun 15, 2005)
European diplomats are impressed by the IAEA chief's record
- The Heights Of Contention (Tribune, B.G. Verghese, Jun 15, 2005)
The resumed India-Pakistan Siachen talks appear to have stalled on India’s insistence that its Actual Ground Position Line along the Saltoro Ridge that forms the western wall of the Galcier
- Memorial To Bluestar (Tribune, S. S. Dhanoa, Jun 15, 2005)
The Shiromani Akali Dal Badal, it seems, has made it into an art to go for a tight rope walking in public affairs in Punjab. SAD threw open its doors to Hindus only recently. Perhaps the move upset some Sikh hardliners.
- A Warm Welcome In A Cold Battlefield (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 15, 2005)
Manmohan Singh paid a long overdue tribute to the personnel of the Indian armed forces when he became the first Prime Minister to visit the Siachen Glacier. For 21 years,
- Rumsfeld Approved Use Of Coercive Methods: Time (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 14, 2005)
Secret logs obtained by magazine reveal interrogation methods
- China-Japan Ties — A Complex Web (Hindu, Nirupama Subramanian , Jun 14, 2005)
How long can China and Japan keep their growing economic relationship separate from their strategic interests?
- In A High Place (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 14, 2005)
Some actions acquire dimensions that go beyond the event. Especially when it is the prime minister undertaking that action.
- Strategic Triangle (Hindu, E.R.Gopinath, Jun 14, 2005)
Examines the triangular relationship of China, India and Pakistan through the prism of nuclear deterrence
- 15 Killed In Pulwama Car Blast (Hindu, Shujaat Bukhari , Jun 14, 2005)
2 schoolchildren and three CRPF jawans among the victims; 60 injured
- Peace Mountain (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 14, 2005)
Dr Manmohan Singh has chosen a good time to become the first Prime Minister to visit the forbidding terrain of the icy confrontation between India and Pakistan along the Saltoro Ridge west of the Siachen Glacier.
- Look Back Without Anger (Telegraph, N.J. Nanporia, Jun 14, 2005)
China and Japan have to be more pragmatic in reading their common history, both past and more recent, argues N.J. Nanporia
- Advani's Political Doosra Gets Called (Hindu, P. SAINATH, Jun 14, 2005)
L.K. Advani's troubles are not all about Jinnah. Nor are they over with his return as president of the Bharatiya Janata Party.
- Snow Warriors (Hindu, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Jun 14, 2005)
The PM’s visit should boost the troops’ morale
- Quest For Nuclear Security (Deccan Herald, U R RAO, Jun 14, 2005)
In the current scenario, the only way out would be for nations to adopt a “no first use treaty of nuclear weapons”
- U.S. Slaps Sanctions On Israel (Hindu, Conal Urquhart , Jun 14, 2005)
Sale of unmanned aerial vehicles to China irks America
- China-Japan Ties — A Complex Web (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 14, 2005)
How long can China and Japan keep their growing economic relationship separate from their strategic interests?
- China-Sri Lanka Ties And India (Deccan Herald, Bidanda M Chengappa, Jun 14, 2005)
India’s inadequate diplomatic efforts towards its neighbours attract extra-regional involvement in its neighbourhood
- Back On The Ram Rath (Telegraph, MAHESH RANGARAJAN, Jun 13, 2005)
The author is an independent researcher. He has recently co-edited the book, Battles Over Nature
- Chirac, Blair Clash Over Eu Rebate (Tribune, Stephen Castle , Jun 13, 2005)
The simmering dispute over Britain’s EU budget rebate burst into open confrontation Thursday, as France’s President, Jacques Chirac, and Tony Blair clashed directly over the fate of the UK’s annual €5bn (£3.4bn) cheque ahead of a crucial summit next week.
- Soldiers, World Over (Tribune, B.K. Karkra, Jun 13, 2005)
THEY are in the profession of killing all right, but this, in their case, is considered honourable. The soldiers kill to order just anybody who is declared to be the enemy of their state.
- Visa Curbs A Roadblock (Tribune, Kuldip Nayar, Jun 13, 2005)
Human rights activists met in Lahore the other day to take stock of people-to-people contact initiatives.
- Vaiko Against Provision Of Defence Aid To Sri Lanka (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 12, 2005)
Offer of RADAR system to provide air cover
- Of Indian Generals And The Men They Led (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 12, 2005)
How many of us know that even at 75 Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw memorises the exact length of a military nurse’s skirt or Gen K S Thimayya’s orderly Ram Singh felt that he should also be awarded
- Battling On Two Fronts (Hindu, Luv Puri , Jun 12, 2005)
The Gujjars managed to protect themselves by picking up guns. But what about their fight against poverty?
- Enjoying Life After Retirement (Tribune, R. C. Acharya, Jun 12, 2005)
They say death is a great leveller, and so is superannuation, which turns the mighty into humble.
- Going Beyond The Obvious (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 12, 2005)
VASANTHI SANKARANARAYANAN in conversation with Romila Thapar on the role of a historian in modern society
- Prison Days In Tihar (Deccan Herald, M J Vinod , Jun 12, 2005)
An account of the author’s incarceration in one of the ‘worst jails in the country’, where he underwent considerable trauma.
- The Road Ahead For The Eu (Business Line, Ranabir Ray Choudhury , Jun 11, 2005)
DOES THE European Union today find itself at the crossroads which may even affect the original dream of Jean Monnet and his band of enthusiasts who signed the Treaty of Rome on March 25, 1957, heralding a new Europe?
- Ties Could Serve As A Role Model: Natwar (Hindu, V.S. Sambandan, Jun 11, 2005)
India, Sri Lanka sign agreements on developmental projects and education
- Netaji Remains An Idol (Tribune, T.P. Sreenivasan, Jun 11, 2005)
Austria had a major role to play in Netaji’s life, not in the least because his wife, Emilie Schenkl, and their daughter, Anita, lived here.
- Indo-Lanka Defence Pact Soon: Natwar (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 11, 2005)
India has offered the Sri Lankan army an air defence system to strengthen the Lankan air force
- Indian Fighters For France (Tribune, Girja Shankar Kaura, Jun 11, 2005)
As part of Indo-French defence cooperation, six Indian fighter aircraft and a mid-air refueller have left for the Istres Air Base in France for the ‘Garuda II’ air exercise, which be held from June 15 to June 30.
- Consolidating Peace In Nagaland (Tribune, Lt Gen Raj Kadyan, Jun 11, 2005)
Mr Thuingaleng Muivah, general secretary of the National Socialist Council of Nagaland (Isak-Muivah), has reiterated that it is not possible for the Nagas to come within the framework of the Indian Constitution.
- Prize Catch (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 10, 2005)
A Full-Blown controversy has arisen over whether Jagtar Singh Hawara and his accomplices were arrested from Patiala or Narela in Delhi. But that is just not central to the issue.
- From Military Coups To People's Coups (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 10, 2005)
Latin America's political elites need to accept the new reality that power has passed from the drawing room to the street.
- France Casts Shadows Across The Bosphorous (Hindu, M.K. Bhadrakumar, Jun 10, 2005)
A sense of unease prevails that Turkey will have to settle for a vastly different European Union than it may have sought.
- The Love Strike (Tribune, Raj Chatterjee, Jun 10, 2005)
AFTER an interval of 40 years I have been re-reading Eric Linklater’s novel, “The Impregnable Women”,
- Winning Without A Fight (Telegraph, Abhijit Bhattacharyya , Jun 10, 2005)
More than the authenticity of Gohar Ayub Khan’s statement about the past transaction of an Indian army brigadier with Pakistan,
- Whither Musharraf’S Pakistan? (Tribune, M B NAQVI, Jun 10, 2005)
Confusion is getting confounded over what President Pervez Musharraf is actually aiming at.
- Manmohan's Visit Offers A Chance (Hindu, Siddharth Varadarajan, Jun 09, 2005)
The key is for India to recognise that a speedy solution to Siachen is in its national interest and in the interest of the Army and is essential for the process of normalisation.
- Advani Sets Jinnah Among The Parivar (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 09, 2005)
Opinion on Atal Bihari Vajpayee has always been divided. To some he embodied moderation in a party wedded to bigotry and right-wing extremism;
- Arms And The Man (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 09, 2005)
GLOBAL military spending has once again crossed the one-trillion dollar mark, for the first time since the Cold War ended.
- Disturbing Kasauli’S Peace (Tribune, Baljit Malik, Jun 09, 2005)
A variegated flora ribbons the Kasauli ridge. A ribbon that protects the ecology, environment and peace of this charmed expanse of green acres.
- Ninth Round On Siachen (Tribune, Lt-Gen Vijay Oberoi, Jun 09, 2005)
The ninth round of negotiations between the Defence Secretaries of India and Pakistan ended on May 27, 2005,
- Hooda’S Mantra (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 08, 2005)
FOR some time Haryana had been suffering from the flight of industrial units to Himachal Pradesh, Uttaranchal and elsewhere.
- Unfriendly Neighbourhood (Telegraph, Sanjib Baruah, Jun 08, 2005)
India’s unilateralism in dealing with illegal immigration shows a misunderstanding about its power and influence, says Sanjib Baruah
- Lca Needs Policy Directive (Tribune, Maj-Gen Ashok Mehta (retd), Jun 08, 2005)
Barring the ballistic missile programme, our experience with the indigenous production of military equipment has not been impressive.
- Is It An Advani Gambit? (Deccan Herald, Rasheeda Bhagat , Jun 08, 2005)
Though the UPA regime seems well entrenched in power at the moment, seasoned players such as the BJP leader, Mr L. K. Advani, know only too well the pitfalls of power and the fragility of coalition governments.
- The Ugly Face Beneath The Veil (Telegraph, Beena Sarwar, Jun 08, 2005)
What happened on the streets of Cairo on May 25 resonated around the world, particularly among those of us in Pakistan who saw a milder preview of the Cairo action 11 days earlier, on the streets of Lahore.
- Safer Coastline (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 08, 2005)
Coastal security plans need to be made more effective, for protection against threats
- Cbi Registers Fir In Denel Case (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 07, 2005)
Four charges of allegations of corruption and pay-offs mentioned
- Al-Libbi Was Behind Attack On Musharraf, Aziz (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 07, 2005)
Islamabad : Pakistan has handed to the United States senior Al-Qaeda suspect Abu Farraj al-Libbi who was wanted for two assassination attempts against Pakistan President Gen. Pervez Musharraf, officials said on Monday.
- In A High Place (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 07, 2005)
Some actions acquire dimensions that go beyond the event. Especially when it is the prime minister undertaking that action.
- Look Back Without Anger (Telegraph, N.J. Nanporia, Jun 07, 2005)
China and Japan have to be more pragmatic in reading their common history, both past and more recent, argues N.J. Nanporia
- Ins Mumbai On A Historic Voyage (Hindu, Ravi Sharma , Jun 06, 2005)
Celebrations off England coast to mark the 200th Anniversary of the Battle of Trafalgar
- It All Started In June 1967 (Deccan Herald, MICHAEL JANSEN, Jun 06, 2005)
Israel seems to be doomed to ‘live by the sword’. Its policy will, ineluctably, continue to radicalise West Asia, exacerbate Muslim anti-US sentiments.
- A New Cold War In East Asia? (Deccan Herald, Joshy M Paul, Jun 06, 2005)
Japan is concerned about China’s peaceful rise and seems to be taking an aggressive stance
- Thaksin For New Trade Links With India (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 06, 2005)
Thailand's Prime MinisterThaksin Shinawatrasees scope for his country to be India's strategic partner on issues of common concern. In written answers to questions submitted byP.S. Suryanarayana, Mr. Thaksin emphasised, in particular, the emerging economic
- Gohar’S Disclosures (Tribune, K. Subrahmanyam, Jun 06, 2005)
What would be the reaction of an average young Pakistani to the disclosures of Gohar Ayub Khan? In 1965,
- Promotion Blues (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 06, 2005)
Far too many promotions in the defence forces are being challenged in civilian courts these days.
- Return To Sartre (Tribune, Nirupama Dutt, Jun 06, 2005)
One of the most towering intellectuals of the 20th century was Jean Paul Sartre (1905-1980). One of the most controversial figures,
- Us Ponders Next Move On N Korea (Deccan Herald, Reuters, Jun 06, 2005)
The US is considering to take the issue to the United Nations because it did not see any effort from North Korea to cooperate, an official said.
- Sri Lanka's Post-Tsunami Peace Moves (Hindu, V. S. Sambandan, Jun 06, 2005)
Chandrika Kumaratunga faces a complex exercise in gathering domestic support for a joint mechanism with the LTTE for post-tsunami reconstruction.
- Annan’S Un Reform Plans Evoke Mixed Reaction (Deccan Herald, Reuters, Jun 05, 2005)
The timetable drawn by the UN for rich countries to hike aid to the poor was backed by Europeans but not by the Bush administration.
- Jinnah Was Secular: Advani (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 05, 2005)
Mr Advani said that Mr Jinnah had been described as an ‘ambassador of Hindu-Muslim unity’ by freedom fighter Sarojini Naidu
- Of Anglo-Indian Angst In Independent India (Deccan Herald, Sonya Dutta Choudhury, Jun 05, 2005)
Hugh and Colleen Gantzer’s new novel fleshes out the anglo Indian experience at a time when the community was going through great changes.
- Bokaro Steel Plant Chalks Out Mega Expansion Plan (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 05, 2005)
The first phase of expansion involves increasing production of steel to five million tonnes during 2006-07.
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