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Articles 9821 through 9920 of 12412:
- G-8 Way To Go (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jul 07, 2005)
Give us better access to cleaner technologies. This is what we need to say at Gleneagles
- Pakistan Scared And Up In The Arms With India-Us-Uk Joint Air Force Exercises In Kashmir (India Daily, Balaji Reddy, Jul 07, 2005)
Indian Air Chief S.P. Tyagi said that India was going to hold joint air power exercises with US air forces in Kashmir in coming November and by the start of next year with the British air force.
- A Damage-Control Exercise (Hindu, Amit Baruah, Jul 07, 2005)
Defence Minister Pranab Mukherjee tries to address fears about the implications of the June 28 defence deal with the U.S.
- South Asia’S Water Wars (Deccan Herald, Swaran Singh, Jul 06, 2005)
The onus lies on India to convince its neighbours that they must take a holistic view of the Himalayan river-grid .
- What Left Won’T Say When It Opposes Us Ties (Indian Express, C. Raja Mohan, Jul 06, 2005)
Left parties hold rallies today, complaint that CMP is violated doesn’t match facts
- Russia's New Move (Hindu, VLADIMIR RADYUHIN, Jul 05, 2005)
Uzbek President Islam Karimov's recent visit to Moscow signals a revival of close strategic ties between Central Asia's most populous country and Russia.
- No Need To Back India’S Bid (Dawn, Dr Akhtar Hasan Khan, Jul 05, 2005)
AN article has appeared advocating that Pakistan should support India’s bid as a permanent member of the Security Council and that Pakistan should also play the role of a satellite to India in international affairs.
- Indian It Logs 26% Growth (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 05, 2005)
Indian IT services market has recorded strongest growth at 26.7 per cent in the fiscal ended March 31, 2005 in the Asia Pacific region, according to a research report by Gartner Inc
- Is World United Against Iran? (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Jul 05, 2005)
US President Bush has said that the world is united against Iran’s efforts to acquire nuclear weapon capability and hoped that EU3 (Germany, France and Britain) will issue a strong message against Tehran at the G-8 summit. In an interview, he reiterated..
- Steel: Will Fortunes Remain Cast In Iron? (Business Line, S. D. Naik, Jul 05, 2005)
While the steel industry is no doubt passing through good times right now, there is fear that with many players rushing in to create new capacities, there may be overcapacity by 2010.
- The Contentious World Of Agricultural Trade (Business Line, C. Narendra Reddy, Jul 05, 2005)
As efforts are on to kick-start the Doha Round of negotiations before the Hong Kong ministerial meet, agriculture has once again emerged as a stumbling block.
- Pm’S Surprise Visit To Utility Stores (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Jul 05, 2005)
PRIME Minister Shaukat Aziz paid a surprise visit to Utility Stores at Karachi Company in Islamabad on Sunday to personally check the availability of atta and sugar for sale at the reduced prices.
- Revamping The Railways (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Jul 05, 2005)
THE government’s five-year plan for the rehabilitation of Pakistan Railways, at a cost of Rs 60 billion,
- India Set To Take Big Leap In Central Asian Backyard (Hindu, Siddharth Varadarajan, Jul 05, 2005)
SCO will help revive the interflow of ideas and commerce that marked the Silk Route era"
- China, Russia, And The Shanghai Agenda (Hindu, Siddharth Varadarajan, Jul 04, 2005)
The Sino-Russian declaration on the `New World Order in the 21st Century' is an attack on the `alliance for freedom' concept being promoted by the U.S.
- G-4 Counters Campaign By Us-China-Pak At Un (Deccan Herald, L K Sharma , Jul 03, 2005)
The Group of Four nations seeking United Nations Security Council expansion continues to resist attempts to divide it and is determined to approach the UN General Assembly.
- M&m Unveils First Tractor In China (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 03, 2005)
Automobile major Mahindra & Mahindra (M&M) on Saturday launched its ambitious bid to become the world’s biggest tractor producer by kicking off its China operations, including rolling out the first M&M branded tractor in Nanchang, capital of south-central
- M&m Rolls Out Tractor From China Venture (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 03, 2005)
The first phase of exports would cover select markets in the U.S., European countries and India.
- India Can Be America's Best Friend (International Herald Tribune, Brahma Chellaney , Jul 01, 2005)
At a time when anti-Americanism has spread across the globe, a new poll shows that more people in India have a positive view of the United States than in any other nation surveyed. The poll, conducted by the Pew Global Attitudes Project, raises . . .
- Stand-Off In The Peaks Of Kashmir: The War On Top Of The World (Independent (UK), Jan McGirk , Jul 01, 2005)
Indian and Pakistani troops face each other over the icefields of Siachen, but the deadly cold is their biggest enemy. By Jan McGirk .
- An Emerging Alliance With India (US News & World Report, Michael Barone, Jul 01, 2005)
You didn't see it in the headlines this week, but it's likely to be more important in the long run than many things that received much more notice. The "it" in question is the New Framework for the U.S.-India Defense Relationship signed Monday . . .
- Macaques Need Healthy Forests (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 30, 2005)
The discovery of the Tibetan macaque, a large primate with a short stump-like tail,
- Are The Days Of Cheap Oil Over? (Deccan Herald, Alok Ray, Jun 30, 2005)
The oil producing countries are aware of the dangers of letting the oil price go through the roof
- The Monster Within Us All (Dawn, Will Hutton, Jun 30, 2005)
The one reliable prediction you can make about any group of human beings is that one or two will have a proclivity to cut corners, accept a bribe or be ready to pursue a dishonourable means to achieve their end.
- Non-Proliferation Today (Tribune, G Parthasarathy, Jun 30, 2005)
The Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) signed in 1968 had three essential facets. The treaty envisaged that only those powers that possessed nuclear weapons prior to its being signed could possess nuclear weapons.
- Navaratnas, Left And Disinvestment (Hindu, Americai V. Narayanan, Jun 30, 2005)
As a card-carrying Congressman, I feel the UPA should not only join the Communists against the disinvestment of navaratnas or profit-making PSUs, but also beat them at their own game."
- India: U.S. Ally Or Independent Power? (Japan Times, Brahma Chellaney , Jun 29, 2005)
The courtship between the world's most powerful and most populous democracies is in full swing,
- It’S An Unequal World (Telegraph, SANKAR SEN, Jun 29, 2005)
The United Nations may have got its way over Darfur, but the US continues to thumb its nose at the ICC, writes Sankar Sen
- A Tidal Wave Of Optimism (Japan Times, TOM PLATE, Jun 29, 2005)
Talk about an ocean of optimism! Here's a positive current for you if there ever was one: A close friend -- whom I dub The Very Successful Korean-American Businessman (VSKAB),
- 'India Won't Play Second Fiddle To Us' (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 29, 2005)
India has rejected the idea of a unipolar world, clearly ruling out playing sub-altern to the United States if it seeks to remain dominant in the 21st century in the face of a rising Asia.
- Complex Deal Marks Videocon’S Buyout (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 29, 2005)
This acquisition gives Videocon manufacturing facilities in Poland, Mexico and China, along with patent rights and latest technology.
- Videocon Buys Thomson Colour Tv Tube Business (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 29, 2005)
Thomson to invest euro 225 m in Videocon's oil and gas venture
- U.S. Forces Israel To Cancel Sale Of Planes To China (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 28, 2005)
Tel Aviv agrees to allow Washington review of its defence exports deals
- Pitching A Japan That Can (Japan Times, KEIZO NABESHIMA, Jun 28, 2005)
A clash of interests among major U.N. member states is clouding the prospects for reform of the Security Council.
- Any Big Ideas, Dr Singh? (Indian Express, C. Raja Mohan, Jun 28, 2005)
The world wants India to assume responsibilities of an emerging great power but our security establishment conditioned by the Third World syndrome is unwilling to rise to the occasion.
- Us Plans To Make Plutonium 238 (Deccan Herald, L K Sharma , Jun 28, 2005)
While constantly warning the world about hazardous material that can be used by terrorists, the US plans to resume the production of deadly plutonium 238.
- Economy In Pink, But Concerns Persist (Business Line, Manoranjan Sharma, Jun 28, 2005)
To make the most of the heightened business confidence, there is a compelling need for the economy to be made more competitive and open through appropriate macro economic policies and financial standards.
- Bis Platinum Jubilee Report: `Build On Financial Stability' (Business Line, G. Srinivasan , Jun 28, 2005)
Central banks the world over have to shed the business-as-usual approach and consolidate the gains made so far in their quest for maintaining international financial stability through the cooperative efforts of all stakeholders.
- Flood Fury (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 28, 2005)
LAST year, the formation of a huge lake in Tibet because of the blocking of a river kept India on tenterhooks for long.
- The Chinese Challenge (Deccan Herald, Paul Krugman, Jun 28, 2005)
The US should be relieved that at least for now the Chinese aren’t dumping their dollars; they’re using them to buy American companies.
- India, China May Enter Group-8 Club (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 28, 2005)
The two Asian giants have been invited to attend the forthcoming G-8 summit at the Scottish resort of Gleneagles.
- U.K. Promises To Take Fresh Look At Advisory On Kashmir (Hindu, Hasan Suroor, Jun 28, 2005)
Useful to have such talks, says Natwar Singh of dialogue with Jack Straw ahead of Prime Minister's trip to Britain
- Years Of Militancy Ahead, Says Rumsfeld (Hindu, Rory Carroll , Jun 28, 2005)
The U.S. Defence Secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, has warned that the militancy in Iraq could go on for another 12 years and admitted that the army has been in contact with some of its leaders in an attempt to quell the violence.
- `Privatise And Incentivise Transport Infrastructure' (Business Line, Raja Simhan T. E., Jun 27, 2005)
Norasia as a shipping line focused on the East-West trades before being acquired by the Compañía Sudamericana de Vapores (CSAV),
- Brief Case: Present Daze (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jun 27, 2005)
When in the chronicle of wasted sound bytes they sum up all the mindless observations made by people who should have known better, some truly outstanding ones will be discovered
- Cultural Stumbling Blocks To Excellence (Business Line, P. V. Indiresan , Jun 27, 2005)
India's culture — social and political — is the stumbling block to setting up a world-class research university.
- Divestment: The Chinese Example (Business Line, S. Venkitaramanan , Jun 27, 2005)
The latest episode in the UPA serial has shown the Left and its sympathisers protesting against the divestment of 10 per cent stake in one of India's industrial public sector units (PSUs) — BHEL. It is instructive to compare this with what China has been
- Facing Up To Demographic Changes (Business Line, C. Gopinath , Jun 27, 2005)
The problems arising from a `population explosion' with attendant fears of food shortages and slow growth is a serious issue afflicting the developing world. The developed world had managed to control their numbers.
- Media’S Role In The Hype And Hyperbole (Indian Express, Sucheta Dalal, Jun 27, 2005)
When BSE Sensex soared past the psychological benchmark of 7,000 points last week, it was to the cheering drumbeat of the media.
- Eco-Threat From Siachen (Tribune, Mohan Guruswamy, Jun 27, 2005)
The Prime Minister, Dr Manmohan Singh, for a moment came tantalisingly close to committing himself to a settlement of the Siachen confrontation when he expressed a desire to turn the area into a mountain of peace.
- Russia Ambivalent On U.N. Reform (Hindu, VLADIMIR RADYUHIN, Jun 27, 2005)
Even as Russia supports India's bid for a Security Council seat, Moscow's position on United Nations reform is ambivalent.
- Executive Defense Industry Round Table Lunch (Indian Embassy, Pranab Mukherjee , Jun 27, 2005)
I am indeed honoured to be here today to address this august gathering of leaders of the Indian and US defence industries. I must congratulate the US India Business Council for organizing this event.
- Carnegie Endowment For International Peace (Indian Embassy, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 27, 2005)
It is a great privilege for me to be here in Washington, before this distinguished gathering at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, to speak on ‘India’s strategic perspectives’.
- `Great Potential For India-Singapore Trade' (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 27, 2005)
Singapore's Prime MinisterLee Hsien Loongsees the prospective Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement between India and Singapore as "a very big psychological step" for New Delhi. In a wide-ranging interview toP.S. Suryanarayana, he also spoke on the
- A Serious Setback To The Eu (Dawn, Tariq Fatemi, Jun 27, 2005)
The EU’s current president is reported to have remarked after the latest EU summit this week, that “Europe is not in a state of crisis — it is in a state of profound crisis.”
- Perceptions That Defy Amity (Japan Times, KIROKU HANAI, Jun 27, 2005)
On a recent Korea Air flight from Narita to Inchon, South Korea, I was surprised when they showed images of air routes on the in-flight video system. The Tok-do islets in the Sea of Japan,
- Rumsfeld’S Concerns (Dawn, Fred Hiatt, Jun 27, 2005)
Earlier this month Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld questioned the priorities of editorial pages in some newspapers.
- Will South Korea's Economy Follow Japan's? (Japan Times, CHRISTOPHER LINGLE, Jun 27, 2005)
Despite numerous economic stimulus packages during his tenure in office, South Korean President Roh Moo Hyun must regret his promise to oversee annual economic growth of about 7 percent during his five-year term.
- Growing Discord In Europe (Dawn, Shadaba Islam, Jun 26, 2005)
The recent ill-fated European Union summit will probably be remembered as one of the worst in the bloc’s history.
- Reverberations Of The Midnight Knock (Deccan Herald, Inder Malhotra, Jun 26, 2005)
In my biography of Indira Gandhi (Hodder & Stoughton, 1989), I had described the Emergency she had clamped down in the mid-1970s as her worst blunder, indeed “cardinal sin”.
- Security: Nepal Seeks Financial Help (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 26, 2005)
Nepal's Government fighting the Maoist insurgency in the kingdom has asked donor countries, including India and the U.S., to extend support to finance its increasing expenditure for peace and security.
- New Deal Between Beijing, Hong Kong (Japan Times, FRANK CHING, Jun 26, 2005)
Almost two years ago, on July 1, 2003, well over half a million people marched through the streets of Hong Kong to protest against a national-security bill that they feared threatened their rights and freedoms.
- Bharat Forge Acquires Us Firm For $9.1 (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 26, 2005)
Bharat Forge Ltd (BFL), the flagship company of the US $1.25 billion Kalyani Group, has acquired US-based Federal Forge Inc through its wholly-owned subsidiary, Bharat Forge America Inc, in all cash deal worth US $9.1 million (about Rs 40 crore).
- Whither European Unity? (Hindu, Shelley Walia, Jun 26, 2005)
The recent referendum in France and the Netherlands is the biggest crisis to engulf the E.U. Final breaks have been put on the process of integration which now stands hindered.
- Comrades Conspiring To Create Chaos? (Deccan Herald, Tavleen Singh, Jun 25, 2005)
The comrades claim to speak for the ‘people’ but they have never led an agitation demanding that the people get that most fundamental of human needs: water
- Politics Of Budgeting (Dawn, Kaiser Bengali, Jun 25, 2005)
The budget is a political document. It determines how much money will be taken out of whose pockets and how much of that money will be put into whose pockets.
- Making Of National And Military Leaders (Dawn, Khushwant Singh, Jun 25, 2005)
There is only one leader; the rest are led by him. National leadership in times of peace requires one kind of skill; military leadership when a war breaks out requires quite a different kind.
- Emergency’S Reality Czech (Indian Express, Shekhar Gupta, Jun 25, 2005)
A second trip to Prague provokes a second thought on Emergency: why do we forget the strangling of our economic freedom?
- Eu: Clash Of Fundamentals (Business Line, Ranabir Ray Choudhury , Jun 25, 2005)
The European Union is dead. Long live the European Union." To enthusiasts of the Union of Europe, nothing could be more welcome at this point of time than this slogan,
- Hero Honda To Foray Into Scooter Market This Year (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 25, 2005)
Hero Honda Motors Ltd (HHML), world’s largest maker of motorcycles, on Friday, announced that it will foray into the scooter market during the current financial year.
- Eu Lessons For East Asian Regionalism (Japan Times, ERIC TEO CHU CHEOW, Jun 25, 2005)
Recent referendums in both France and Netherlands dealt a blow to European integration as voters overwhelming rejected the proposed EU Constitution 55-45 percent and 64-37 per- cent, respectively. Nine countries, including Germany, Spain and Italy, . . .
- If The Wind Comes From An Empty Cave, It's Not Without A Reason" (Business Line, D. Murali , Jun 25, 2005)
Three banks have received the RBI's (Reserve Bank of India) nod for crossing over the Great Wall, and now they are waiting in line for approval at the `Red' end. When Allahabad Bank,
- Us ‘disliked’ Everywhere, Except In India (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 25, 2005)
Nearly seven of ten US citizens felt their country was ‘generally disliked’, a finding which is ‘the most self-effacing assessment’ of global popularity.
- Door Wide Open For Resolving Korean Nuclear Issue (Japan Times, JAMES A. KELLY, Jun 24, 2005)
There is no country in Asia, indeed in the world, that behaves like the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK).
- A Slice Of India In A Corner Of China (Hindu, Nirupama Subramanian , Jun 24, 2005)
The ease with which foreign companies manage to set up shop has encouraged some 50 Indian names to venture into eastern China.
- Steel The Future (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jun 24, 2005)
Orissa Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik deserves to be congratulated for bringing the biggest FDI project ever in the country to one of the poorest states of India. The Korean steel company Posco Steel has signed a deal with the Government of Orissa to inves
- Steeling The Future (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Jun 24, 2005)
The Posco project will inspire others to follow suit
- N-Weapons In Emerging World Order — Symbols Of Power And Privilege (Business Line, G Parthasarathy, Jun 24, 2005)
The differences between the signatories of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and the absence of any consensus on nuclear disarmament have created a new situation in the global nuclear architecture for India.
- India's Drawbacks (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Jun 24, 2005)
There have been copious writings comparing India and China and discussing why one or the other is more or less attractive as an investment destination in the eyes of foreign observers.
- Expanding Security Council (Business Line, T.P. Sreenivasan, Jun 23, 2005)
THE US announcement of possible criteria for new permanent members and the simultaneous indication that it might support Japan and a developing country for permanent membership constitutes a master-stroke to get the initiative on expansion back to . . .
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