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Articles 1321 through 1420 of 1494:
- Return To Shimla (Telegraph, Mani Shankar Aiyar, Jan 15, 2002)
Well, where do we go from here? Pervez Musharraf has read out a speech scripted in Washington, translated in Islamabad. It says all the things the Americans wanted to hear. Heard music is sweet.
- Can Musharraf Make It Stick (Hindu, B. MURALIDHAR REDDY, Jan 13, 2002)
Cracking down on the jehadis is a gigantic task for Pervez Musharraf.
- Can Musharraf Make It Stick (Hindu, B. MURALIDHAR REDDY, Jan 13, 2002)
Cracking down on the jehadis is a gigantic task for Pervez Musharraf.
- 'Heads I Win, Tails You Lose' (Pioneer, M L Kotru, Jan 11, 2002)
If terrorism be terrorism, how come terrorism against the US is to be accepted as more heinous than terrorism against India?
- Growing Ties (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jan 10, 2002)
Israel's Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Shimon Peres' visit to India-the third in the space of a year-underlines the warmth and understanding characterising India-Israel relations.
- Meeting The Challenge Of Terror? (Hindu, Balraj Puri, Dec 29, 2001)
India's greatest strength is its democracy. The attack on its symbol can best be answered by renewing our faith in, and resolve to strengthen, democracy.
- Meeting The Challenge Of Terror? (Hindu, Balraj Puri, Dec 29, 2001)
India's greatest strength is its democracy. The attack on its symbol can best be answered by renewing our faith in, and resolve to strengthen, democracy.
- Disadvantage: Military Offensive (Pioneer, Urmi A Goswami, Dec 28, 2001)
After the December 13 attack on Parliament, Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee told the nation that "the fight against terrorism has reached its last stage".
- Tasks Before Karzai Regime (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Dec 24, 2001)
This is the beginning of a new era in war-torn Afghanistan.
- Shadow Over The Valley (Hindu, Shujaat Bukhari , Dec 23, 2001)
WAR. THAT is what the Kashmiris fear could follow December 13. There are some who hope it will throw up a solution to their problems. But they are in a minority.
- Shadow Over The Valley (Hindu, Shujaat Bukhari , Dec 23, 2001)
WAR. THAT is what the Kashmiris fear could follow December 13. There are some who hope it will throw up a solution to their problems.
- Will The Afghans Agree To Agree This Time? (Indian Express, Husain Haqqani, Dec 09, 2001)
THE United Nations-sponsored agreement worked out by diplomats from various Afghan factions in Bonn has yet to face the test of implementation.
- Pakistan And Northern Alliance: New ‘Friends’, Older Adversaries (Indian Express, Khaled Ahmed, Dec 03, 2001)
The entry of the Northern Alliance into Kabul has unleashed fears in Pakistan.
- Pakistan And Northern Alliance: New ‘Friends’, Older Adversaries (Indian Express, Khaled Ahmed, Dec 03, 2001)
The entry of the Northern Alliance into Kabul has unleashed fears in Pakistan.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- Back To The Future In Kabul? (Indian Express, Husain Haqqani, Nov 18, 2001)
THE fall of Kabul to the Northern Alliance marks the beginning of the end of Taliban rule in Afghanistan.
- Poto, What It Does Not Say And What It Says (Tribune, Anupam Gupta, Nov 05, 2001)
PROMULGATED late evening on October 24, the Prevention of Terrorism Ordinance, 2001 — known popularly by its highly pronounceable acronym, POTO — is already bristling with controversy.
- Meeting India's Concerns (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Nov 05, 2001)
INDIA'S LONG, LONELY battle against fundamentalist terrorism on its soil may be about to be joined, even if indirectly and remotely, by the global coalition as the U.S expands its campaign to include terrorism in its multifarious forms.
- When Terror Takes The Hawala Route (Indian Express, Ritu Sarin & Sunil Jain, Oct 31, 2001)
Discovered by the US, rediscovered in India: after gangsters, exporters and expatriates, terrorists are lining up to raise funds through the “efficient, cost-effective and private” illegal parallel banking system.
- In Walled City, Open House On Hawala (Indian Express, Dalip Singh, Oct 31, 2001)
VERY, very long ago, it was the crucible for Urdu poet Mirza Ghalib’s imagination. Today, the bustling blind alley of Balliraman in old Delhi’s Walled City is a favoured hunting ground of hawaladars, as hawala operators are also known.
- Quest For The Moderate Taliban (Telegraph, MANVENDRA SINGH, Oct 30, 2001)
At first it was l’affaire Muttawakil, and now it is the name of Haqqani that is doing the rounds.
- Kashmir And Kabul - I: War And The Impact Of Militancy (Hindu, Mukund Padmanabhan, Oct 19, 2001)
SRINAGAR, OCT. 18. How will Kabul impact on Kashmir?
- Sitting On A Powder Keg (Hindu, Muralidhar Reddy, Oct 14, 2001)
AS THE U.S.-led military campaign in Afghanistan takes an ugly turn, with claims of growing civilian causalties, the military Government in Pakistan is faced with a sensitive situation.
- Intriguing Web Of Incongruities And Links (Tribune, David Devdas, Oct 14, 2001)
MY friend Aftab got married in Srinagar a fortnight ago. His “Pinky bhabhi” took over the kitchen a few days before the wedding She cooked for his entire joint family, leaving his mother and sisters free to prepare for the wedding feast.
- Can The King And His Men Do It? (Hindu, VAIJU NARAVANE, Oct 07, 2001)
MOHAMMED ZAHIR Shah, the former ruler of Afghanistan who turns 87 on October 15, lives in a secluded villa surrounded by gardens in the northern Roman suburb of Cassia.
- The Perpetrators (Hindu, Shujaat Bukhari , Oct 07, 2001)
The following is a profile of the main militant outfits active in Jammu and Kashmir:
- The Perpetrators (Hindu, Shujaat Bukhari , Oct 07, 2001)
The following is a profile of the main militant outfits active in Jammu and Kashmir:
- Martyrdom, The Prize For Taking One’s Life (Indian Express, Muzamil Jaleel, Oct 05, 2001)
It’s not just religious ‘zealots’ who are blowing themselves and their targets up; even the aetheist LTTE has chosen the suicide militancy route.
- Us Action Against Osama And Taliban (Tribune, Inder Malhotra, Oct 04, 2001)
THREE weeks after the infamous September 11 slaughter the future scenario is less clear than it seemed to be in the immediate aftermath of the ghastly terrorist outrage against the USA.
- When Death Is The Weapon, And Message (Indian Express, Muzamil Jaleel, Oct 04, 2001)
The world and the Valley are looking the most gruesome side of militancy in the face.
- ‘Foreign Policy Isn’t Sacred, It Changes To Suit National Interest’ (Indian Express, Neerja Chowdhury, Oct 03, 2001)
FORMER prime minister I.K. Gujral’s foreign policy initiatives, whether in government or out of it, has always been driven by the conviction that stability in South Asia should be the desired end of any move India makes.
- There’s A Time Bomb Close By (Telegraph, Ashok Kapur, Oct 01, 2001)
The world today reveals a major fault line. It involves on one side those who attack civilian targets — something the communists did not do vis-à-vis innocent citizens of countries who opposed their policies.
- ‘Kashmiri Women Don’t Need Morality Lessons’ (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Sep 07, 2001)
Mehbooba Mufti, the fire-brand leader of Kashmir’s opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), adopted the abaya after she joined politics.
- The Curtain Of Coercion (Indian Express, Syeda Saiyidain Hameed , Sep 04, 2001)
The injunction that Kashmiri women must veil themselves maligns both Islam and women.
- To Beat Them When They Are Down (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Sep 03, 2001)
Human rights violations occurred throughout India, with socially and economically disadvantaged sections of society continuing to be particularly vulnerable.
- Will Burqa Veil Kashmir? (Tribune, A.N. Dar, Sep 03, 2001)
WHATEVER pressure the Lashkar-e-Jabbar may put on the womenfolk of Kashmir, it cannot make them take to the burqa as a dress that will last long.
- There Is Life After Poonch! (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 27, 2001)
THE account of the death and disability written brazenly on Friday night by Pakistani militants in Poonch city cannot be routinely added to the current year’s black book of terror in Jammu and Kashmir.
- Pak Move Against Militants (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 24, 2001)
When the successive regimes in Pakistan encouraged the setting up of terrorist training camps for the proxy war in India's Jammu and Kashmir, they did not realise that they were patronising a two-edged weapon.
- Falling Graph (Pioneer, Anil Narendra, Aug 23, 2001)
The popularity graph of the NDA Government in general and its leader Atal Bihari Vajpayee in particular has been on the decline. However, in the past few months, this has sunk to an all-time low.
- Curb Naxal Menace (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Aug 22, 2001)
From a law and order problem, confined till recently to a few districts in Andhra Pradesh, Naxalite violence is fast assuming a serious internal security dimension.
- Musharraf’s Government And The Great Divide (The Financial Express, Kuldip Nayar, Aug 22, 2001)
I have vainly looked through the Pakistan press and the writings of its columnists for a word of condemnation against these killings of Hindus in Doda or Jammu and earlier at the Amarnath pilgrimage.
- Fostering Cult Of Hatred (Tribune, P. Raman , Aug 21, 2001)
AMIDST all our preoccupation with hard politics and a crumbling economy, we tend to overlook certain highly disturbing trends on the social front
- The Shifting Sands Of Lebanon (Hindu, KESAVA MENON, Aug 19, 2001)
Two leaders, a Maronite Christian and a Druze, have begun efforts to revive a composite Lebanese identity and review ties with Syria.
- A Culture Of Lawlessness (Tribune, David Devdas, Aug 19, 2001)
SUHAIL used to be a militant. In fact he was a commander of the Hizbullah outfit, which dominated the area around his house in Batmaloo in the early 1990s.
- Signals From Jerusalem (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 17, 2001)
THERE are ominous clouds over the West Asian horizon. The unending Palestinian Intifada and the Israeli retaliatory measures have brought the situation to a flashpoint.
- Hell Out Of Heaven (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Aug 17, 2001)
The unprecedented security, and violent incidents, that both preceded and followed the Independence Day celebrations, especially in Kashmir and Delhi, are a clear indication of Pakistan's renewed attempts to blackmail India through a proxy war.
- Dress Code Panic In Kashmir (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 14, 2001)
THE Kashmir valley is in the grip of a new kind of fear. This is the result of incidents of acid attacks on women for not being burqa clad.
- The Way Forward On Kashmir (Hindu, Malini Parthasarathy, Aug 13, 2001)
WE SEEM to have arrived at yet another defining moment in our collective effort to persuade the people of Kashmir that their interests are best served by remaining affiliated to the Indian Union rather than anything else.
- Trench War Of Angst In West Asia (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Aug 13, 2001)
THE ISRAELI LEADER, Mr. Ariel Sharon, has once again set a callous agenda in his trench warfare that is sustained by a strong undercurrent of emotional prejudices against the Palestinians.
- Kashmir’s Taliban (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Aug 13, 2001)
There appear to be no limits to the extent to which fanatical groups can go in pursuit of their creed of intolerance.
- Crack The Code (Hindustan Times, Ravi Visvesvaraya Prasad, Aug 10, 2001)
THE LASHKAR-e-Tayyeba militants responsible for the Red Fort attack were running a cybercafe and using electronic mail to receive instructions from abroad.
- A Necessary Move (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Aug 10, 2001)
The Centre's decision to declare Udhampur, Doda, Jammu and Kathua districts of Jammu & Kashmir (J&K) as disturbed areas and bring them under the Armed Forces (J&K) Special Powers Act, 1990, is hardly surprising.
- Mindless Massacres (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Aug 09, 2001)
Be persuasive across the table and firm on the ground.
- Post-Agra Message From Pakistan (Tribune, Inder Malhotra, Aug 09, 2001)
IT is high time to put an end to what Mr G.Parthasarathy, former High Commissioner to Pakistan, calls the “Musharraf mania”.
- A Horrendous Episode (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Aug 07, 2001)
THE GUNNING DOWN of 15 persons by unidentified militants on August 3 night in Jammu and Kashmir, coming as it did in less than a fortnight of an equally horrendous episode, is a cause for grave concern.
- Line Of Action (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Aug 06, 2001)
Neither excessive optimism nor sheer folly can be adequate excuse for the hope that the militants in the Kashmir valley will change their spots.
- Death Dance In Doda (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 06, 2001)
REPORTS from Jammu and Kashmir are deeply disturbing. Militants have stepped up their heartless attack as in Doda district on Friday night snuffing out the life of 17 persons.
- After The Knocks (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Aug 02, 2001)
Keep the political track alive in J&K.
- Peace In Our Time? (Pioneer, Shubha Singh, Jul 30, 2001)
Despite efforts made by the Central Government through its peace initiative, the situation in Jammu & Kashmir has shown few signs of settling down.
- Agra Failure Means Love Failed, We’ll Meet On Front (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jul 29, 2001)
Moderate Hizbul Commander Masood was killed by security forces on Wednesday.
- New Chapter Of Blood-Letting? (Hindu, Shujaat Bukhari , Jul 29, 2001)
It is not only the militant whose morale has gone up after the Agra summit.
- Agra And After (Hindu, Balraj Puri, Jul 25, 2001)
IF THE India-Pakistan summit did not fail, as the Foreign Ministers maintain, it did not succeed either.
- Now, The Third Decade In Kashmir (Hindu, Harish Khare , Jul 25, 2001)
NOW THAT the principled prejudices have been so firmly and so unequivocally re-stated at Agra, it is time for India to start preparing itself for the third decade of the Kashmir problem.
- The Challenge Of Militancy (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 24, 2001)
THE KILLINGS OF Amarnath pilgrims at Sheshnag and the massacre of innocent civilians in a Doda village, separated by less than 24 hours and together accounting for over 25 deaths.
- ‘They Owe Me Eight Years’ (Tribune, Nick Patron Walsh, Jul 18, 2001)
IT was the long hot nights in the dirty interrogation centre in Pappatot, on the border between Kashmir and Pakistan, that broke 18-year-old Chaudhary Aurangzeb.
- View Of The Little People (Hindustan Times, Prem Shankar Jha, Jul 17, 2001)
IT’S A moving story of the way old people in Uri have received New Delhi’s announcement that it intends to open the road between Srinagar and Muzaffarabad (or more precisely, Uri and Domel) which has been shut since 1947.
- Under The Shadow Of Suspicion (Hindustan Times, Madhavrao Scindia, Jul 13, 2001)
The world community and all right-thinking people in India and Pakistan have rightly welcomed the resumption of talks between the two hostile neighbours in South Asia.
- Kashmir: To The Summit Without Sherpas (Business Line, B. Raman , Jul 12, 2001)
PROACTIVE on Jammu & Kashmir (J&K), reactive on other issues.
- Deciding Kashmir's Future (Times of India, Zafar Meraj, Jul 05, 2001)
KASHMIR is not a bilateral issue, or a territory dispute between India and Pakistan and neither of the two has any moral or other right to discuss and take any decision with regard to its political future.
- Taj By No Moonlight (Hindustan Times, Brahma Chellaney , Jul 04, 2001)
July is the height of midsummer madness on the subcontinent.
- Crowding Out, Courtesy Aphc (Hindu, Sajad Gani Lone, Jul 03, 2001)
THE SIMULTANEOUS announcement of the withdrawal of the ceasefire and the invitation to General Musharraf from Mr. Vajpayee has established an unequivocal relationship between the Kashmir issue and Pakistan.
- A Passage To Tension-Free Relations (Pioneer, Gazanfar Bhatt, Jun 30, 2001)
Ever since Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee assumed office in 1998, he has been making continuous efforts to improve India's relations with its neighbours in the subcontinent.
- Musharraf’s Bid For Consensus (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 28, 2001)
WITH the Alliance for the Restoration of Democracy (ARD) boycotting Wednesday's meeting of political leaders convened by President Musharraf to secure their viewpoints vis-a-vis India before his visit to New Delhi,
- First, An Agenda (Hindustan Times, AG Noorani , Jun 28, 2001)
‘IF THERE is not at the summits of the nations the will to win the greatest prize... doom-laden responsibility will fall upon those who now possess the power to decide.
- Worsening Internal Security Situation (Tribune, G Parthasarathy, Jun 09, 2001)
NEW DELHI is preparing to roll out the red carpet for Gen Pervez Musharraf. The havelis of Daryaganj are being spruced up.
- 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?
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