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Articles 8721 through 8820 of 31829:
- Blasts Will Not Derail Peace Process: India: No-One Can Make Us Kneel: Singh (Dawn, Jawed Naqvi, Jul 13, 2006)
A day after serial blasts killed close to 200 commuters in Mumbai’s local trains, India vowed on Wednesday to continue the peace process with Pakistan even as Prime Minister Manmohan Singh warned that no one could make his country kneel.
- World Stands With India Against Terror (Pioneer, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
Condemning the blasts in Mumbai and Srinagar as "monstrous" and "despicable", US President Geroge W Bush and other world leaders have said such acts increase the urgency of coordinated action by all countries to defeat terrorism in all its forms . . .
- Infosys Diffuses Bomb Worries (Pioneer, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
Infosys Technologies Ltd, India's number-two software services exporter, beat forecasts with a 50 percent jump in quarterly profit and raised its full-year estimates, sending its shares up more than 7 percent.
- Pak Seeks Nuke Deal, Again (Statesman, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
Claiming that Pakistan’s nuclear weapons programme was “driven by the threat perception of India,” foreign minister Mr Khurshid Mahmud Kasuri has said Islamabad would “say yes” to a bilateral fissile material moratorium.
- Us Offers Help In Tracking Terror Agents (Indian Express, LALIT K JHA, Jul 13, 2006)
As India started the hunt for the terrorists responsible for the series of bomb blasts in Mumbai and Kashmir on Tuesday, the US said it was with India in its war against terror.
- Mumbai Blasts: Concern Over Peace Process (Hindu, Hasan Suroor, Jul 13, 2006)
Blasts front-page news in British papers
Attacks likely to play into the hands of those opposed to the peace process
- Mumbai Terrorism Must Be Seen In Context (Daily Times, Editorial, Daily Times, Jul 13, 2006)
The seven bomb blasts in Mumbai are bad news for many reasons.
- Unfortunate Mumbai Killings (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Jul 13, 2006)
Bombs ripped through seven packed commuter trains and stations during rush hour in Mumbai on Tuesday evening, killing at least 163 passengers and injuring about 600.
- How It Matters In, And For, India (The Financial Express, NIRVIKAR SINGH, Jul 13, 2006)
Analysing the impact of IT use in Indian firms will provide insights on how to raise productivity
- India Inc Is On A Global Shopping Spree (The Financial Express, AJAY KHANNA, Jul 13, 2006)
The country has the potential to emerge as the leader in outward FDI amongst other Bric economies
- Never Say Die (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 13, 2006)
The serial blasts in trains on Tuesday put Mumbai under the same kind of stress and strain which was its fate earlier in 1993.
- A Green Utopia (Hindustan Times, Editorial, HindustanTimes, Jul 13, 2006)
What does it take to get a spring in your step, a sparkle in your eye and a song on your lip? Ask the Ni-Vanuatu, residents of . . .
- My Lady Nicotine (Tribune, Raj Chatterjee, Jul 13, 2006)
Beautiful women, flowers, snow-capped mountains, placid lakes, moonlit nights and the songs of birds are not the only objects that have provided inspiration to poets to compose their odes.
- For Durable Ties With Us (Tribune, G. Parthasarathy, Jul 13, 2006)
Understanding the perceptions of those who influence US foreign policy provides an insight into the factors that shape the directions that global developments will take. It was, therefore, interesting to meet key strategic thinkers in the U.S last . . .
- Amarinder Rules Out Revival Of Terrorism (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh today ruled out any possibility of revival of terrorism in the state.
- Bush Condemns Mumbai Blasts (Tribune, Ashish Kumar Sen, Jul 13, 2006)
President George W. Bush expressed outrage over the bomb blasts that killed over 183 persons in Mumbai on Tuesday and said the United States stood with India in the war on terror.
- ‘China Gears Up For Rival Resolution’ (Statesman, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
China is preparing a rival resolution on North Korea’s missile tests that would drop language in the USA and Japanese-backed measure which could lead to possible future military action against Pyongyang, UN diplomats said today.
- Never Say Die (Times of India, C P SURENDRAN, Jul 13, 2006)
When the serial bombs went off for the first time in the Big City on March 12, 1993, I was on the third floor of the Times of India building, Fort, pushing copy, and the ground under my feet shook.
- Q&a: 'Iitians Are India's New Brand' (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jul 13, 2006)
The IIT fraternity in North America held its annual North American Regional Conference in Toronto recently. Rabiz Foda, a graduate of IIT Bombay and chairman of the conference, spoke with Gurmukh Singh about the outcome of the two-day event:
- Massive Hunt On As Death Toll Rises To 200 (The Daily Star, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
Indian police said yesterday the bombs which ripped through trains in Mumbai on Tuesday bore the hallmark of Islamic militants.
- Communal Riots Would Be Precisely What The Terrorists Want (Rediff on the Net, editoral, rediff on the net, Jul 13, 2006)
Having just returned from a 'Peace Delegation' visit from Karachi, one had a sense of foreboding about coming events. Exploding population, rampant religious fundamentalism, spiralling prices, unemployment, a money order economy, violence in . . .
- How Much Will India Endure? (Washington Post, Editorial, Washington Post, Jul 13, 2006)
Yesterday's awful rush-hour bombings of trains in Bombay raise an important and ominous question: How far can India be pushed?
- Moral Vacuum (Arab News, editoral, arab news, Jul 13, 2006)
terrorists have once again chosen to massacre innocent commuters. But why? What possible good could ever be achieved by slaughtering ordinary decent people as they go about their daily business? The hearts of the world have gone out to the citizens . . .
- Editorial: Moral Vacuum (Arab News, editorial, Arab news, Jul 13, 2006)
FIRST Madrid, then London, now Bombay — terrorists have once again chosen to massacre innocent commuters. But why? What possible good could ever be achieved by slaughtering ordinary decent people as they go about their daily business?
- Editorial: World Stands With People Of Mumbai (Toronto Star, Editorial, Toronto Star, Jul 13, 2006)
A day after seven bombs ripped through Mumbai's commuter rail system, leaving at least 200 dead and more than 700 injured, the trains were running again yesterday in India's commercial capital.
- World Stands With People Of Mumbai (Toronto Star, editoral, toronto star, Jul 13, 2006)
A day after seven bombs ripped through Mumbai's commuter rail system, leaving at least 200 dead and more than 700 injured, the trains were running again yesterday in India's commercial capital.
- Our Key Interests Are Sacred, Asserts India (Economist, D Ravi Kanth, Jul 13, 2006)
Union Commerce Minister Kamal Nath told World Trade Organization (WTO) Director General Pascal Lamy during a confessional meeting on Wednesday that New Delhi is not willing to accept any dilution of flexibilities for developing countries in regard . . .
- Some Leeway For The Small Shoplifter (New York Times, MICHAEL BARBARO, Jul 13, 2006)
refuses to carry smutty magazines. It will not sell compact discs with obscene lyrics. And when it catches customers shoplifting — even a pair of socks or a pack of cigarettes — it prosecutes them.
- Petition Initiative Is Wrong For Colorado (Denver Post, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
Colorado voters crushed anti-tax activist Douglas Bruce's so-called "Petition Rights Amendment" by a 78 percent to 22 percent margin in 1994 and 69 percent to 31 percent in 1996.
- Mayor Sees The Forest For The Trees (Denver Post, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
Imagine for a moment that somebody in the Bush administration had thought of this four years ago.
On Tuesday, the Pentagon announced it would apply the protections of the Geneva Conventions to the 500-some detainees held at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, . . .
- "Act Of War"in Mideast (Denver Post, Dion Nissenbaum, Jul 13, 2006)
A new crisis between Israel and Islamic militants threatened to escalate into a broader and deadlier regional conflict Wednesday after Hezbollah captured two Israeli soldiers in a coordinated assault along the Israel-Lebanon border.
- South Africa's Optimism (Denver Post, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
America could use a Nelson Mandela. The former South African president, 88 next month, is universally revered in his country.
- Voting Machines Under Fire (Denver Post, George Merritt , Jul 13, 2006)
A voter-rights group announced Wednesday that they would ask a judge to block electronic voting machines from the November election.
- Four Years Late To Geneva (Denver Post, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
Imagine for a moment that somebody in the Bush administration had thought of this four years ago.
- Bangla Immigrants: The Threat Within (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
While investigators probing leads into the Mumbai train blasts are scouring for evidence linking the terror strike to groups like Lashkar-e-Taiba, there is rising concern over a large of pool of illegals from Bangladesh in the city providing . . .
- Pakistan Tightens Security After Indian Blasts (Reuters, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
Pakistan has beefed up security in its main cities after a series of bomb attacks in neighbouring India, government officials said on Wednesday.
- No Breakthrough In Chinese Diplomacy On North Korea - U.S. (Reuters, Chris Buckley, Jul 13, 2006)
U.S. envoy Christopher Hill said on Thursday there had been no breakthrough in Chinese diplomacy to defuse the North Korean missile crisis as China condemned Japan for "pouring oil on fire" over the issue.
- A Summit For Global Security And Stability (Hindu, JACQUES CHIRAC, Jul 13, 2006)
We must seize the opportunities of globalisation in this extraordinary period of growth while correcting its unacceptable social and ecological excesses.
- 'Indo-Us Nuke Deal Can Get Through Cong By Month-End' (Press Trust of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
The United States Ambassador to India David Mulford expressed confidence that the Indo-US civilian nuclear deal that cleared the House and Senate Committees last month can be through Congress by the end of month or before law makers break away for . . .
- Iran Reply Disappoints Usa, Eu (Statesman, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
Foreign ministers from the six powers pushing Iran to accept a package of incentives to suspend its nuclear programme met behind closed doors in Paris today, the latest deadline in the standoff, and one that Teheran looked set to ignore.
- Private Ports (Statesman, Editorial, Statesman, Jul 13, 2006)
There is a trend all over the world to decentralise direct government control and to place the ports on a more commercial footing.
- 200 Dead: Investigators Find 'Leads' In Mumbai Blasts (Press Trust of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
Mumbai was resiliently back on its feet today even as the full extent of the havoc caused by yesterday's terror attack unfolded to reveal a death toll of 200 while the police claimed to have found "some leads" in their investigations.
- Infosys Q1 Profit Soars, Raises Forecasts (Reuters, Sumeet Chatterjee , Jul 13, 2006)
Infosys Technologies Ltd., India's number-two software services exporter, beat forecasts with a 50 percent jump in quarterly profit and raised its full-year estimates, sending its shares up more than 7 percent.
- Let Logic Reign In Tricky Situation (Daily Excelsior, Editorial, Dailyexcelsior, Jul 13, 2006)
Hardly a day passes without a loud voice being heard for and against demilitarisation in the State especially the Valley.
- Ice-Cool Under Terror Attack (TIME, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
Unlike the hysterical reaction of America and Spain, India's restraint under pressure is exemplary
- Relief For India’S Remand Prisoners (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Jul 12, 2006)
Amendment to the prison law promises to decongest Indian jails, where thousands languish without trial.
- Riding Piggyback To Disaster (Pioneer, Maneka Gandhi, Jul 12, 2006)
Many years ago, my husband and I had gone for dinner to a close friend. There was another guest, a young girl of 18.
- Don’T Underestimate Woes Of Oustees (Indian Express, HIMANSHU UPADHYAYA, Jul 12, 2006)
The Supreme Court has legitimised the continuing violation in the Narmada valley yet again.
- 160 Dead In Mumbai Blasts (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 12, 2006)
460 injured in explosions within 10 minutes on five trains and two stations
* Indian prime minister appeals for calm, vows to defeat terrorists
- India Rebukes Pakistan On Safta (Hindu, Nirupama Subramanian , Jul 12, 2006)
Makes veiled criticism of Islamabad
No economic progress without peace and security, says Bansal Pakistan trading under positive list goes against the very essence of SAFTA
- Rice's Pat For Indian-Americans (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 12, 2006)
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice paid rich tributes to the Indian-American community which, she said, has contributed to the "intellectual capital of American universities," and "by dint of its hard work, not only added to the wealth of our . . .
- World Condemns Blasts (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 12, 2006)
``Terrorism is a bane of our times and it must be condemned"
There can never be any justification for terrorism: U.K.
The terrorists guilty of this crime must be severely punished: Russia
- At Par With Peers (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, Jul 12, 2006)
It is good news when Indian banks score above Asian peers in securing high returns, including those in Japan, Singapore and Australia.
- The Realpolitik Of India’S ‘New Deal’ (The Financial Express, Sauvik Chakraverti, Jul 12, 2006)
The curse of ‘politics’ combined with ‘socialism’ and ‘democracy’ has made the state a clientelistic affair
- Us Opposes India Joining Npt As N-Weapon State (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 12, 2006)
“Let me be clear: We do not support India joining the Non Proliferation Treaty as a nuclear weapon state. Rather, the goal of our initiative is to include India, for the first time ever, in the global nonproliferation regime,”
- Banks Race To Snare Top Student Talents (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 12, 2006)
Some investment banks say their graduate intake is now close to an all-time high thanks to an uptick in the economic cycle and healthy profits.
- The Rise Of Asia (Deccan Herald, Alok Ray, Jul 12, 2006)
The implications of the Mittal-Arcelor story needs to be understood
- A Bargaining Chip? (Hindustan Times, Editorial, HindustanTimes, Jul 12, 2006)
Those applauding the introduction of plea bargaining in India have been pointing towards the US as confirmation of its usefulness in disposing of cases speedily.
- Bush Says Muslim Welcome To Head Un (News International, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 12, 2006)
US President George W Bush said he would expect an Asian candidate for being the next UN secretary-general as long as he was willing to "blow the whistle" on human rights abuses.
- Terror Bombs Cause Mayhem On Mumbai’S Lifeline: •Over 160 Killed, . . . (Dawn, Anand Kumar, Jul 12, 2006)
Bombs ripped through seven packed commuter trains and stations during rush hour in Mumbai on Tuesday evening, killing at least 163 passengers and injuring about 600.
- Enough Is Enough! (Rediff on the Net, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 12, 2006)
When the first of the explosives went off at the Bombay Stock Exchange on March 12, 1993, by chance I was in the vicinity.
- Message From The Mumbai Blasts: Don't Get Close To The Us (Rediff on the Net, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 12, 2006)
If ever there was a demonstration that cross-border terrorism remains a pertinent threat to freedom-loving people everywhere, it happened on 7/11 in Mumbai, the financial capital of India.
- Terror In Mumbai: It Could Be Next Target (Rediff on the Net, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 12, 2006)
Terrorism' has become a global industry. It appears to work like a multinational corporation with branches, local offices around the world. This industry has no accountability to society.
- Communal Riots Would Be Precisely What The Terrorists Want (Rediff on the Net, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 12, 2006)
Having just returned from a 'Peace Delegation' visit from Karachi, one had a sense of foreboding about coming events. Exploding population, rampant religious fundamentalism, spiralling prices, unemployment, a money order economy, violence in . . .
- Nuclear Links With India Will Improve Energy Security: Rice (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 12, 2006)
It will "ease" New Delhi's reliance on hydrocarbons "from unstable sources''
India and U.S. can accomplish great things in this new century
U.S. is for strengthening nuclear non-proliferation regime
- How Much Will India Endure? (Washington Post, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 12, 2006)
Yesterday's awful rush-hour bombings of trains in Bombay raise an important and ominous question: How far can India be pushed?
- Britain-U.S. Row Over Extradition (Hindu, Hasan Suroor, Jul 12, 2006)
Britain is embroiled in a quiet diplomatic tussle with America over the extradition of three high-profile British bankers wanted in the U.S. on fraud charges in connection with the collapse of the erstwhile energy giant, Enron.
- On My Own Trip (Indian Express, SUNANDA MEHTA, Jul 12, 2006)
Travel only with thy equals or thy betters; if there are none, travel alone — The Dhammapada
- Surge And Plunge Of The Paris Club (Business Line, K. Subramanian, Jul 12, 2006)
By design or chance, the Paris Club forged links with most other agencies and groups and played the role of a mysterious broker. It had to imbibe the changes in debt regime and operational styles.
- Terror Strikes Mumbai, Over 147 Killed (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 12, 2006)
Local trains targeted; explosions in first class compartments; 439 injured; commuters forced to walk
- Doubts Over Mexico Election (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 12, 2006)
There is evidence that Left-leaning voters have been scrubbed from key electoral lists in Latin America.
- A Tragedy Foretold (Hindu, PRAVEEN SWAMI, Jul 12, 2006)
It could take months to identify the perpetrators of the Mumbai bombings, but the recent past holds some clues.
- Domestic Imperatives In Iran's Foreign Policy (Hindu, Hamid Ansari, Jul 12, 2006)
A new exercise in consensus building is under way. The purpose is to present a unified approach and deny the interlocutor space to exploit internal disagreements.
- Terror Revisits Mumbai As 147 Die In Serial Blasts (Hindustan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 12, 2006)
Terror had a plan in mind as it visited Mumbai on Tuesday. The powerful explosions that killed at least 147 rush-hour commuters and tore apart seven local-train compartments were methodically executed to shock the country’s financial capital and . . .
- Fake Fir Scam: Judgment Ordering Cbi Probe Upheld (Hindu, J. Venkatesan, Jul 12, 2006)
State had challenged Madras High Court order in Supreme Court The Bench said that since thousands of crores of rupees was involved, the interests of the State had to be protected by proper investigation .
- Annan, Bush Join World Leaders In Condemning Mumbai Blasts (Press Trust of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 12, 2006)
United States President George W Bush, United Nations chief Kofi Annan were among several world leaders who expressed outrage over the Mumbai bomb blasts and urged urgent coordinated action against the scourge of terrorism.
- Centre Has Not Ensured Internal Security: Advani (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 12, 2006)
Bharatiya Janata Party leader L.K. Advani on Tuesday blamed the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance Government at the Centre for "failure" to ensure internal security.
- Post-Poll Campaign (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jul 12, 2006)
B B Tandon may no longer be chief election commissioner but the CPM believes there should be no let up in the campaign against him.
- 147 Dead, 439 Injured As Blasts Rock Mumbai Trains (Daily Excelsior, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 12, 2006)
At least 147 people were killed and 439 injured in a string of seven terror blasts that tore through first class compartments of suburban trains around 6 pm during the peak hour traffic here today.
- Politics Overtakes Secretary General's Contest (Daily Excelsior, Tushar Charan, Jul 12, 2006)
India seems to have raised many hackles by announcing that Shashi Tharoor, UN under secretary general for communications and public . . .
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