|
|
|
|
|
|
Articles 15021 through 15120 of 31829:
- Us Congress Must Approve N-Deal With India: Bush (Tribune, Ashish Kumar Sen, Mar 22, 2006)
Admitting his decision to broker a civilian nuclear agreement with India was a controversial one, President George W. Bush says he is comfortable recommending it to the US Congress for approval and believes the lawmakers ought to approve it.
- Another Claim About Osama’S Whereabouts (Daily Times, Khalid Hasan, Mar 22, 2006)
A new investigative report in a leading American magazine claims that the Pakistan Army and its intelligence service are critical sponsors in the resurging Taliban activity in Afghanistan.
- Saddam's Fm Was On Cia Payroll (Hindustan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 22, 2006)
Iraq's foreign minister under Saddam Hussein spied for the CIA before the US-led invasion in 2003 in return for a $100,000 payment, a US television network reported.
- Bush Sees Troops Still In Iraq In Three Years (Reuters, Steve Holland, Mar 22, 2006)
President George W. Bush said on Tuesday it is possible some U.S. troops will still be in Iraq after his presidency ends in three years time, but he insisted civil war had not erupted there.
- Us Begins Probe Into Killing Of Iraqi Family By Its Military (Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 22, 2006)
The US Military said on Tuesday it was investigating Iraqi police allegations that its soldiers shot dead a family of 11 in their home last week. The probe comes a day after a magazine published allegations that US Marines killed civilians in . . .;
- Bird Flu: India Hit By Asian Strain (Times of India, Chandrika Mago, Mar 22, 2006)
The high-security animal disease lab in Bhopal, testing each bird or animal sample for bird flu, confirms that India has been hit by the Asian strain of the virus, not the Eurasian or North American strain.
- A Sulking Pakistan (Tribune, K. Subrahmanyam, Mar 22, 2006)
Remains unreconciled to a changed world
- For N-Deal, India Law Too Being Changed (Indian Express, PALLAVA BAGLA, Mar 22, 2006)
Seeking an India-specific waiver to get the civilian nuclear deal rolling, the Bush Administration has sent to the Hill a bill seeking amendments to the American Atomic Energy Act of 1954.
- He Knows Best (Indian Express, Husain Haqqani, Mar 22, 2006)
Pakistan’s fourth military ruler, General Pervez Musharraf, often makes statements that make eminent sense.
- Privatisation: Come Hell Or High Water (Hindu, P. SAINATH, Mar 22, 2006)
Converting water to a commercial good to be sold for profit invites disaster. Most of all for poor people whose already pathetic access to water will shrink swiftly.
- Russia's Glonass Satellites Available By 2009 (Hindu, Vladimir Radyuhin , Mar 22, 2006)
It will end India's dependence on U.S.' Global Positioning System
- India, Pakistan Making Progress: Boucher (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 22, 2006)
"Kashmir is a bilateral issue that should be solved by Delhi and Islamabad only"
- Who's Stone Age, U.K. Politicians Or Bushmen? (Hindu, George Monbiot, Mar 22, 2006)
Stone aged and primitive are what you call people when you want their land.
- India's Water And Sanitation Challenges (Hindu, David C. Mulford, Mar 22, 2006)
Public-private partnerships can accelerate solutions, and enhance operations and service.
- Nuclear Deal Is In Our Interest: Bush (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 22, 2006)
``Use of safe nuclear power should be encouraged''
- Culture Saved, Don Wins Textbook War (Deccan Herald, Shyam Bhatia, Mar 22, 2006)
‘Many youths hide their identity because they think Hindu children will be looked at differently.’
- Us Keeping Close Eye On Trial Of Afghan Christian (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 22, 2006)
The United States said on Monday it was watching closely the trial of an Afghan man who could face death for converting to Christianity in a test of religious freedom for the key US ally.
- Pakistani Taliban Bedevils Tribal Belt (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 22, 2006)
Strict social edicts have been handed down: shopkeepers may not sell music or films; barbers are instructed not to shave beards.
- The End Of Farmers (Deccan Herald, Devinder Sharma , Mar 22, 2006)
The second Green Revolution will serve the interests of the American agribusiness corporations
- China, Russia Unite To Resolve Iran Row (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 22, 2006)
After more than two weeks of discussions, the five veto-wielding members of the Security Council – China, Russia, the United States, Britain and France – have been unable to agree on a draft statement that tells Iran to stop enriching uranium.
- Grant Divorce If Marriage Is Beyond Repair, Says Sc (Times of India, Dhananjay Mahapatra, Mar 22, 2006)
Those trapped in unhappy marriages due to refusal of the partner to agree to a divorce, can take heart.
- Exposition Highlights Jobs In It Sector Abroad (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 22, 2006)
It brought together foreign buyers, Indian representatives
- Musharraf First To Know About Us Surveillance Plans (Daily Times, Khalid Hasan, Mar 22, 2006)
Long before the American media or public knew about the secret, warrant-less surveillance programme initiated by President George Bush as part of his anti-terrorism measures, President Pervez Musharraf was told about it, and by Bush himself.
- ‘Us-India Nuclear Deal Could Be Bad News For Kashmir’ (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 22, 2006)
Nuclear cooperation between the United States and India could have severe implications for the Kashmir issue, lead to an arms race in South Asia and strategic regional instability, speakers at a public talk said.
- Bush Briefs Australian Pm On India Nuclear Deal (Daily Excelsior, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 22, 2006)
US President George W Bush has briefed Australian Prime Minister John Howard on a U S nuclear deal with India in a move seen as groundwork by Canberra for a possible policy change to allow uranium exports to India.
- Two British-Indians In Cash-For-Peerage Row (Hindu, Hasan Suroor, Mar 22, 2006)
Allegations that nominations were in return for loans or donations to the Labour Party.
- Dell To Double Its Workforce In India (Daily Times, Khalid Hasan, Mar 22, 2006)
American information technology companies appear to be making a beeline for India, the latest being Dell, the world’s largest laptop maker, which plans to double the number of its employees in India to 20,000 in three years.
- Bush Briefs Howard On India Nuclear Deal (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 22, 2006)
Discusses nature and reasons for the agreement
Analysts say Howard could be signalling a policy change
- India Is Up To Some Mischief (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Mar 22, 2006)
Pakistan's Foreign Office has debunked Indian propaganda accusing Islamabad of breeding a new form of Jehadi terror aimed at fanning communal tensions within India. India’s National Security Adviser MK Narayanan had pointed out to the bomb attacks . . .
- Bird Flu Confirmed (The Nation, Editorial, The Nation, Mar 22, 2006)
That tests would confirm Pakistan's first cases of the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu was only a matter of time, considering Iran, India, Afghanistan and China have already tested positive.
- Saddam's Fm Was On Cia Payroll — Report (Jordan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 22, 2006)
Iraq's foreign minister under Saddam Hussein spied for the CIA before the US-led invasion in 2003 in return for a $100,000 payment, a US television station reported Monday.
- Anp’S Bold Stand On South Waziristan (Daily Times, Editorial, Daily Times, Mar 22, 2006)
Asfandyar Wali, parliamentary leader of the Awami National Party (ANP), said in a debate on the Balochistan and Waziristan issues in the Senate on Monday that Afghan interference in North and South Waziristan was to blame for the deteriorating law . . .
- The Rise And Rise Of The Un-West (Asia Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 22, 2006)
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said recently that Iran was the chief current challenge to Washington.
- Who Will Challenge Iran? (Los Angeles Times, Editorial, Los Angeles Times, Mar 22, 2006)
The Radioactive question of Iran's nuclear program has now landed in the lap of the United Nations Security Council. Which is downright odd because, according to many learned observers, the Security Council's authority all but vanished when the . . . .
- The Gm Foods Divide (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Mar 21, 2006)
In a draft ruling, the Dispute Settlement Body (DSB) panel in the World Trade Organisation (WTO) has upheld a 2003 complaint by the United States, Canada and Argentina that the European Union's (EU) de facto moratorium on authorisations for . . .
- Iraq Not In Midst Of Civil War, Says Cheney (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 21, 2006)
Iraq has not plunged into a civil war despite "serious efforts" by terrorists like Al-Qaida leader Al Zarqawi to foment trouble in the country, US Vice-President Dick Cheney has said.
- Anniversary Waltz (Statesman, Editorial, Statesman, Mar 21, 2006)
‘Swarmer’ just a ‘show’?
- 3 Years On, Iraq Still Bleeds (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 21, 2006)
Iraq on Monday marked the third anniversary of the US-led invasion amid a deadlock over the formation of a national government, rampant lawlessness and increasing threats of an all-out civil war.
- Wto: China And Decision-Making (Deccan Herald, D Ravi Kanth, Mar 21, 2006)
There is a top down approach while only lip service is paid to a bottom up . . .
- Internet Solution To Recycling Problem (Tribune, Martin Hickman, Mar 21, 2006)
MOVE over eBay, a new internet site is attracting the interest of tens of thousands of computer-literate trendsetters.
- India In Us Eyes (Tribune, Anita Inder Singh, Mar 21, 2006)
The us has surprised the world by admitting India into the nuclear club although India is not a signatory to the Non-Proliferation Treaty.
- Powerful Cyclone Slams Into Australia (Hindustan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 21, 2006)
Metal roofs littered streets, wooden houses lay in splinters and banana plantations were stripped bare after the most powerful cyclone to hit Australia in three decades lashed the country's eastern coast.
- Sleeping-Pill Users Face Kitchen Chaos (Statesman, Editorial, Statesman, Mar 21, 2006)
The problems of overweight Americans are usually ascribed to poor diet and a lack of exercise. But new research suggests another possible culprit: the country’s addiction to sleeping pills, the most popular of which may cause some people . . .
- Lukashenko Elected Belarus President (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 21, 2006)
Incumbent President Alexander Lukashenko won Belarus' presidential vote by a massive margin, the chief electoral official said early today, and the main opposition candidate called for new balloting as thousands of his supporters jammed a main . . .
- Nepal Violence Claims 16 Lives (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 21, 2006)
Communist rebels ambushed an army patrol in Nepal on Monday, sparking a clash that killed at least 13 soldiers and an insurgent, while a booby trap killed two civilians, officials said.
- Saddam Legitimate Iraqi Leader, Says Gaddafi (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 21, 2006)
Libyan leader Moammar Gaddafi said on Monday that Saddam Hussein should still be considered the legitimate president of Iraq, slamming the current government as illegal since it had been elected under an occupation regime.
- Fo Asks India To Be Serious About Peace (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 21, 2006)
Rejects Narayanan’s allegations g Says US-India N-deal ‘no good’
- Russian Nuclear Pellets Arrive In India (Daily Times, Iftikhar Gilani, Mar 21, 2006)
India has received a 30 tonne-consignment of Russian nuclear fuel pellets destined for the Tarapur atomic power station plant, sources confirmed on Monday.
- Shock, Awe And Humility (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Mar 21, 2006)
Three years ago, Iraqis were “shocked and awed” by the power of the US military. Today, Americans are shocked and awed by its limits. If the “cakewalks” of the 1980s and 1990s — Grenada, the Gulf War, Kosovo — restored America’s belief in its omnipotence,
- Mohammad Ali Bows Out (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Mar 21, 2006)
With the passing of Mohammad Ali, Pakistani cinema is poorer by another star from its fading galaxy.
- Tamil Cultural History (Hindu, A. R.VENKATACHALAPATHY, Mar 21, 2006)
Anandarangam Pillai's diaries written in the mid-18th century constitute a very important landmark in Tamil cultural history.
- Notions Of Water Scarcity (Hindu, Ramaswamy R. Iyer, Mar 21, 2006)
Case study exposing the social and power relations which usually underlie water crises
- Terrorist Attack On Varanasi (Dawn, M.J. Akbar, Mar 21, 2006)
If you want to hear the Indian story, listen to the sound of silence once the roar of the explosion has ebbed away into time. India’s weakness is institutional.
- Mr Narayanan’S Statement Bodes Ill For Peace Process (Daily Times, Editorial, Daily Times, Mar 21, 2006)
Mr Narayanan’s statement bodes ill for peace process
- Bangladeshi Prime Minister Arrives In India (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 21, 2006)
Trade, terror to top Khaleda Zia’s visit
- Dell Plans To Double Indian Headcount To 20,000 (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 21, 2006)
Dell Inc., the world’s top PC maker, plans to double its headcount in India over three years, its founder said on Monday, but there was no word on the location of a planned manufacturing unit in the country.
- Ibm Makes A Major Move To India (Daily Times, Khalid Hasan, Mar 21, 2006)
In what is being described as a “stunning example” of India’s progress from doing back-office work for foreign companies to a “centre for leading-edge innovation”, IBM has decided to move all the design and development of its business . . .
- China's Military Expansion (Daily Excelsior, V.N. Parnjape, Mar 21, 2006)
Pentagon is re-assessing Chi-na's strategic ambitions in view of its rapidly increasing defence expenditure. The woolly Chinese concept of "peaceful rise" lacks transparency and clarity. Therefore there are uncertainties and anxieties about China . . .
- Soil And Water (Daily Excelsior, Editorial, Dailyexcelsior, Mar 21, 2006)
To many it may come as a surprise that forest cover in the State has gone up by 30 square kilometres. According to the latest available official statistics it is up from 21237 sq kms in 2001 to 21267 in 2003.
- India, B'desh Set For Talks As Border Issues Loom (Reuters, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 21, 2006)
Neighbours India and Bangladesh begin talks on Tuesday that are expected to focus on New Delhi's concerns over illegal immigration and Islamic militants operating from Bangladeshi soil.
- Economic Interests And Foreign Policy (Business Line, Bhanoji Rao, Mar 21, 2006)
Foreign policy, like monetary or fiscal policy, should be seen as the means to ensure jobs for the millions.
- Violence As Iraq Enters 4th Year Of War (Jordan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 21, 2006)
Suspected insurgents marked the third anniversary of the US-led invasion of Iraq Monday with roadside bombings that killed at least eight policemen, and authorities reported finding 15 more bullet-riddled bodies, one of them a 13-year-old girl, . . .
- America By Choice (Business Line, R. Sundaram , Mar 21, 2006)
It cannot be gainsaid that the current state of warm relations between India and the US reflects the sentiments of the public, including the educated middle class.
- Uncle Tom Has Got It Plain Wrong (The Financial Express, PUSHKAR, Mar 21, 2006)
For the last few years, Thomas Friedman has been doing a great PR job for India.
- Right To Survive (Statesman, KISOR CHAUDHURI, Mar 21, 2006)
Many political ecologists tend to remain rigid in judging poverty as the prime factor in environmental degradation overlooking the effects of trade reforms in countries like India where, to match the global industrial pattern, there is increased . . .
- Death Of Film Legend (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Mar 21, 2006)
Muhammad Ali, who ruled the film world of Pakistan for about four decades, is no more with us. Like every living being he has left this temporal world but with a difference.
- Indo-Us Nuclear Deal Is In Washington's Interest: Bush (Press Trust of India, Sridhar Krishnaswami, Mar 21, 2006)
US President George W Bush has said that it was in America's interest to work out the civilian nuclear deal with India and develop the "important relationship" with New Delhi by setting aside cold-war era tensions.
- China Hits Back At White House Security Report (Reuters, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 21, 2006)
China hit back at the United States on Tuesday for a White House national security report that criticised its military buildup and trade policies, saying the remarks were "groundless" and harmed relations.
- Bush Briefs Australia Pm On India Nuclear Deal (Reuters, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 21, 2006)
Reuters) - U.S. President George W. Bush has briefed Australian Prime Minister John Howard on a U.S. nuclear deal with India in a move seen as groundwork by Canberra for a possible policy change to allow uranium exports to India.
- Cheney Says Iraq Not In Midst Of Civil War (Daily Excelsior, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 21, 2006)
Iraq has not plunged into a civil war despite "serious efforts" by terrorists like Al Qaeda leader Al Zarqawi to foment trouble in the country, US Vice President Dick Cheney has said.
- Bangalore Talent Lures Start-Ups In High Tech (International Herald Tribune, Saritha Rai, Mar 21, 2006)
Twenty young engineers, mostly from the Indian Institute of Technology, India's premier technology school, peer into computer monitors in the no-frills office of Read-Ink Technologies, a start-up company housed in a small building in the bustling . . .
- China Express "Strong Dissatisfaction" At Us Security Report (Press Trust of India, Anil K Joseph, Mar 21, 2006)
China today objected to what it termed United States' "wrong opinions" about Beijing's human rights record and its military spending.
- Bush's Quest To Be A Great War President (Hindu, Gary Younge, Mar 21, 2006)
In his bid for popularity, the President ignores the warnings of his backfiring democracies in favour of bloody war.
- Talking To Iran (Boston Globe, Editorial, Boston Globe, Mar 21, 2006)
If There is any chance to deflect Iran from its apparent quest for nuclear weapons, the Iranian and US governments will have to negotiate.
- Shias Mass In Iraqi City Amid Tight Security (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 20, 2006)
Shia Muslims massed in hundreds of thousands around Kerbala on Sunday for one of the biggest events of their religious calendar as Iraqi security forces sealed off the city to protect pilgrims.
- Muslims Are Being Stereotyped (Times of India, Imtiaz Ahmad, Mar 20, 2006)
It is natural that there should be disagreement whether public demonstrations against President George Bush should have been held during his visit to India.
- China Accused Of Locking Sane Dissidents In Asylums (Tribune, Clifford Coonan, Mar 20, 2006)
Wang Wanxing was one of China’s longest-serving dissident prisoners when he was freed last August after spending 13 years in one of the country’ sankang psychiatric hospitals.
- Albright Report Builds Case Against India (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 20, 2006)
Former weapons inspector in Iraq, Mr David Albright, has sought to portray India as a proliferator at a time when the US Congress is considering legislation on allowing civilian nuclear trade with the country.
- Culling Over; 2 Being Monitored For Bird Flu (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Mar 20, 2006)
A doctor with fever and respiratory problems was under observation in western India where tens of thousands of birds were culled to contain a second outbreak of avian flu, officials said on Sunday.
- Fuel For Tarapur (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Mar 20, 2006)
Russian offer will meet immediate need
Previous 100 Indo - US Relation Articles | Next 100 Indo - US Relation Articles
Home
Page
|
|