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Articles 21121 through 21220 of 31829:
- Militants Attack U.S. Bases (Hindu, Atul Aneja , Dec 02, 2005)
Hundreds of heavily armed men fire mortars, rockets at buildings in Ramadi
- Solving Kashmir-Ii -By Subroto Roy (Statesman, SUBROTO ROY, Dec 02, 2005)
For India to implement such a proposal would be to provide an opportunity for all those domiciled in Kashmir Valley, Jammu and Ladakh to express freely and privately as individuals their deepest wishes about their own identities, in a confidential manner,
- Cope India 2005 — Lessons For Us (Daily Times, Editorial, Daily Times, Dec 02, 2005)
At Cope India 2005, the recently held two-week India-US joint air exercise, Indian pilots flying the Sukhoi-30 MKIs are reported to have outperformed the United States F-16s. Indian pilots not only came out the winners in various visible-range encounters,
- Why Mncs Need To Create Products For India, In India (Business Line, Prashant Sarin , Dec 02, 2005)
The operation of subsidiaries based in emerging markets and conducting research targeted at domestic consumers offer MNCs radically new big-win opportunities, as they will be defining a new segment, and growing it in the absence of competitors.
- Musharraf Seeks Us Help For J&k (Statesman, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
Seeking the USA’s support to resolve the Kashmir “dispute”, Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf today said India and Pakistan should move towards its “settlement” in the interest of “peace and stability”.
- To Madam With Love-By Sudha Palit (Statesman, SUDHA PALIT, Dec 02, 2005)
She had a rather unprepossessing appearance. Goan by birth, she was barely five feet tall and skeletally thin. her most prominent facial features were her aquiline nose and her protruding teeth
- India Tells Pakistani Cultural Group To Go Home (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
A Pakistan-based cultural action group, invited by a prominent women’s NGO to stage plays in India, has been abruptly asked to go back by the very NGO after its first performance here on grounds that it displayed an anti-US stance.
- ‘Kashmiris Died Because Pakistan Declined Indian Help’ (Statesman, Kavita Suri, Dec 02, 2005)
Accusing the Pakistani government of playing with the lives of thousands of people from PoK, a leading Kashmiri separatist in Britain said lives could be saved if Pakistan had not turned down the Indian offer of helicopters for earthquake relief.
- Wahhabi Islam: A Misnomer (Greater Kashmir, Dr. Sheikh Muhammad Iqbal, Dec 02, 2005)
Dr. Sheikh Muhammad Iqbal writes about the contribution of Sheikh Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab who rose in revolt against the socio-religious corruption prevalent during his times everywhere in Ottoman provinces
Thereafter,
- India To Fight Us For 2nd Spot? (The Financial Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
At a time when auto industry honchos in India refuse to predict even the next quarter's growth, US-based consultancy Keystone-a subsidiary of LaSalle Consulting Associates-has forecast that India will become the world's third largest automobile . . .
- Iran’S Nuclear Lies (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
IAEA has no authority to determine whether or not a country has a nuclear weapons programme. That is up to the UN Security Council. The IAEA’s job is to determine whether a nation has violated its safeguards agreement, and El Baradei has made it . . .
- Why Is Bihar A Failed State? (Business Line, Devendra Mishra, Dec 02, 2005)
A FEW years ago a senior advocate during a Supreme Court hearing, casually remarked that a particular government should not suffer from the `Bihar Syndrome'. It created a furore with several parties, organisations and people, . . .
- Refusal To Withdraw (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Dec 02, 2005)
Once again President George Bush has ruled out giving a time-table for the withdrawal of American troops from Iraq,
- Iran Needs Assurance: Iaea Chief (Dawn, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
The head of the United Nations nuclear watchdog has expressed hope that the contentious issue of Iran’s nuclear programme could be resolved by assuring international community that ‘it is not meant for developing nuclear weapons’ and by assuring Iranians
- India, Us Pledge Greater Cooperation In Technology (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
India and the United States vowed to implement steps to promote high technology cooperation on Thursday at the fourth meeting of the High Technology Cooperation Group (HTCG).
- Nothing Is More Obstinate Than A Fashionable Consensus (Business Line, D. Murali , Dec 02, 2005)
Recently,the Central Board of Trustees (CBT) of the Employees' Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO) spent five hours debating the rate of interest payable to more than three crore subscribers. But the board could not reach a consensus on the issue.
- Pm Calls For Cheaper Aids Drugs (Business Standard, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
Law to empower HIV patients likely: Sibal.
- Fourth Generation Of India's Combat Aircraft Joins Test-Phase (Press Trust of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
Software-intensive fourth generation Light Combat Aircraft Tejas (second prototype vehicle), indigenously designed and developed by India, joined the test phase today with its maiden flight here.
Its maiden flight launched at 1010 hours . . .
- Post-Quake, First Loc Bus Rolls (Indian Express, BASHAARAT MASOOD, Dec 02, 2005)
Karvan-e-aman, the Srinagar-Muzaffarabad peace bus that began service on April 7 this year, has resumed operations following the October 8 earthquake that devastated Uri and Muzaffarabad.
- Meet Needs Of The Industry, Ysr Advises Universities (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
``Equip students with the skills they will require''
- U.S. Confident India Nuclear Deal Will Be Approved (Reuters, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
The State Department expressed confidence on Thursday a controversial nuclear deal with India would be approved by Congress and said it would work with lawmakers to make it happen
- Embattled Nepal King To Return To Face New Challenge (Reuters, Gopal Sharma, Dec 02, 2005)
Nepal's King Gyanendra faces a fresh challenge to his rule on his return home from Africa on Friday after the main political parties and Maoist rebels joined hands to end absolute monarchy and restore democracy.
- Dan And Now (Hindustan Times, Editorial, HindustanTimes, Dec 02, 2005)
There is something about politics that encourages amnesia. Surely, the BJP would not like to remember how they helped a Congress government to survive a no-confidence motion in the mid-Nineties.
- Way "Open" For U.S. Payloads On Indian Lunar Mission (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
The way is "open" for the Indian lunar mission, Chandrayaan, to carry American payloads, Foreign Secretary Shyam Saran said at a joint press interaction with U.S. Under Secretary for Commerce David McCormick on Thursday.
- Iraq — Another Vietnam? (Dawn, Maqbool Ahmad Bhatty, Dec 02, 2005)
THE writer recalls the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearings of 1966 when Senator Fulbright brought under debate the growing US involvement in Vietnam. Though the conflict was proving costly, it was considered critical to the “war against communi
- Islam’S Pioneering Role (Dawn, Bilal Ahmed Malik, Dec 02, 2005)
Despite efforts to achieve world peace in the wake of two world wars, armed conflicts remain a prominent feature of our human landscape.
- Congress Will Approve India Nuke Deal: Us (News International, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
The State Department expressed confidence that Congress would approve a nuclear deal with India and said it would work with lawmakers to make it happen.
- Congressmen Delegation Lauds Pakistan Role Against Terrorism (Pakistan Observer, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
President General Pervez Musharraf Thursday stressed on the need for the United States to lend its support to the efforts aimed at resolving the Jammu and Kashmir dispute, which was at the root of tension in South Asia.
- Us Troops Withdrawal From Iraq (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Dec 02, 2005)
President Bush has warned that there will be violence for many years in case of US troops’ withdrawal from Iraq and thus refused to set a date for a pull out. Speaking at the US naval academy in Annapolis, Maryland, he said that the decision . . .
- Us Confident India Nuke Deal Will Be Approved (Hindustan Times, Reuters, Dec 02, 2005)
The State Department expressed confidence on Thursday that a controversial nuclear deal with India would be approved by Congress and said it would work with lawmakers to make it happen.
- India, Us Discuss Civilian Nuclear Cooperation Issues (India Daily, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
Discussions were on between India and the United States for working out modalities to realize the Indo-US understanding on civilian . . .
- Rallies Mark World Aids Day (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
NGOs asked to take effective steps to check spread of disease
- India, Us Close To Inking High-Tech Space Pact (Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
Taking forward the agenda of civilian space cooperation, India and US are looking at soon finalising a technology safeguard agreement (TSA) on cooperation in the sector.
- The Iraq Policy Runs Through Iran (Indian Express, Saeed Naqvi, Dec 02, 2005)
An earthquake in islands off Bandar Abbas in Iran sent tremors here in Dubai and other parts of the Emirates. The shockwaves felt here are a metaphor of sorts for all the GCC countries: they look with anxiety at the entire troubled arc from Iran to Iraq.
- Pushing The Boats Out (Indian Express, Shiv Aroor, Dec 02, 2005)
Like post-quake diplomacy in the mountains, post-tsunami diplomacy is paying off at sea, writes SHIV AROOR, in the lead-up to Navy Day on December 4
- Kalam Outlines Crucial Research Areas To Foster Growth (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
President seeks the help of scientists to help solve the issues
Proteomics much more challenging than figuring out the human genome
Urgent need to track multiple parameters and predict earthquakes
- Karvaan-E-Aman Resumes, 25 Cross Loc (Daily Excelsior, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
After nearly two months since the killer quake struck Jammu and Kashmir on October 8, the "Karvaan-e-Aman (Caravan of Peace)" from Srinagar to Muzaffarabad today resumed service from the Indian side up to the "Aman Setu (peace bridge)" on the . . .
- Intensive Aids Awareness Campaign Gets Under Way (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
265 voluntary counselling and testing centres in the Nilgiris
- "Parties Trying To Get Mileage Out Of Maniappan Issue" (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
Opposition accusation baseless, says Congress MP Jairam Ramesh
- Call To Join Crusade Against Aids (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
A wing has been constructed in Tirunelveli to deal with HIV positive people
- School Students Invent Method To Clean Polluted Water (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
To present paper at State-level conference
- Barnala Commends Hard Work Put In By Aids Agencies (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
Urges health institutions to come out with concrete plans to step up action against AIDS
- ‘Afghanistan Sitting On Hiv Time Bomb’ (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
Afghanistan has recorded only three deaths from AIDS but is sitting on a ticking “time bomb” of HIV with thousands of people injecting drugs, the United Nations and a think tank warned Thursday.
- United States Inks 5-Year Afghanistan Grants (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
The US government signed an agreement here Thursday committing itself to grants over five years for development in war-ravaged Afghanistan that could amount to about five billion dollars.
- Hekmatyar Rejects Reconciliation (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
An Afghan rebel group allied with the Taliban has rejected a government offer of reconciliation, saying there could be no peace as long as foreign forces were in the country.
- Musharraf Seeks Us Support On Kashmir (News International, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2005)
President Gen Pervez Musharraf on Thursday stressed the need for the United States to lend its support to the efforts aimed at resolving the Jammu and Kashmir dispute, which was at the root of tension in South Asia.
- Shun Gender Violence (Pioneer, Remya Mohan, Dec 02, 2005)
The White Ribbon Campaign (WRC) began as an endeavour by a small group of Canadian men who wore White Ribbons in memory of the brutal massacre at the Université de Montreal Engineering School where on December 6, 1989, a gunman shot dead 14 female student
- Those Aren't Netaji's Ashes In Renkoji (Pioneer, Udayan Namboodiri, Dec 02, 2005)
The Justice MK Mukherjee Commission of Inquiry (JMCI), which presented its final report to the UPA Government in early-November, has conclusively established that Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose did not die in an air crash at Taiwan's Taihoku airport . . .
- Hindsight As Foresight (Pioneer, Mumtaz Khan, Dec 02, 2005)
Just when it was time for Musharraf to make a grand gesture towards the unity of Kashmir, he fell victim to his old habits, says Mumtaz Khan
- Amman Blasts: Get The Message (Pioneer, B Raman, Dec 02, 2005)
International community must tackle jihadi terror of the Al Qaeda variety by eliminating the source of its violence, says B Raman
- Those Aren't Netaji's Ashes In Renkoji (Pioneer, Udayan Namboodiri, Dec 02, 2005)
The Justice MK Mukherjee Commission of Inquiry (JMCI), which presented its final report to the UPA Government in early-November, has conclusively established that Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose did not die in an air crash at Taiwan's Taihoku . . .
- The Day After (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Dec 02, 2005)
Ever since Health Ministers' Conference in London in January 1988, December 1 has been observed as World AIDS Day. The global struggle against the killer virus turned 18 this year, almost universally recognised as the age of consent, when adolescents move
- Under The Thumb (Economist, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 01, 2005)
In dampening resentment, nothing succeeds like success
- Death Of A Driver (Statesman, Editorial, Statesman, Dec 01, 2005)
Waters only get murkier with the National Security Adviser’s reported assertion that Pakistan had a hand in the killing of the Border Roads Organisation driver,
- Positioning Cultural Industries With Creative Intervention (Hindu, Rajeev Sethi, Dec 01, 2005)
A dynamic tradition never stops or slackens. The creative moves, nourishes, transforms, shapes, and furthers. Iqbal celebrates when he writes: "there is something that prevents our very being from being wiped out."
- If You Can't Shoot The Messenger, Lock Him Up (Hindu, Siddharth Varadarajan, Dec 01, 2005)
President Bush's alleged threat to bombAl Jazeerashouldn't surprise us. Ever since the NATO attack on Yugoslavia, the U.S. has looked at the media it can't control as the "enemy."
- Freedom Unlimitted, Disaster Indescribable (Greater Kashmir, Editorial, Greater Kashmir, Dec 01, 2005)
We can call it a sexual Glasnost. A world where buggery, bestiality, adultery, incest and all such diabolic deeds of a human being have made even devil blush with himself.
- Coal Back On The Agenda (Hindu, David Adam, Dec 01, 2005)
As the reserves of other fossil fuels start to run out, it seems inevitable that the world will turn back to coal for its energy needs
- Heading For A Stalemate? (Hindu, V.S. Sambandan, Dec 01, 2005)
Behind the LTTE's seemingly conciliatory gesture its stand is unchanged: nothing short of what it has already placed on the table.
- Solving Kashmir-I (Statesman, Editorial, Statesman, Dec 01, 2005)
India, being a liberal democracy in its constitutional law, cannot do in Jammu & Kashmir what Czechoslovakia did to the “Sudeten Germans” after World War II. On June 18 1945 the new Czechoslovakia announced those Germans and Magyars within their borders..
- Tiger, Tiger... (Statesman, Editorial, Statesman, Dec 01, 2005)
Tigers have fallen prey to methodical massacre in Arunachal Pradesh’s 1,985-sq km Namdhapa reserve forest or what else would explain the reported sighting of a lone animal which, too, is now untraceable?
- The Responsibilities Of A Free Press (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Dec 01, 2005)
The press in the United Kingdom has been warned that it will face legal action under the Official Secrets Act if it publishes a document that apparently shows how the United States administration was considering an even more savage assault on the media.
- Cash, Not Land, On Offer For The Displaced (Hindu, Meena Menon, Dec 01, 2005)
Despite Supreme Court orders to the contrary, Madhya Pradesh is offering cash and not land to those displaced by the Narmada project.
- Pakistan Courting Israel (Tribune, G. Parthasarathy, Dec 01, 2005)
Just on the eve of its nuclear tests on May 28, 1998, Pakistan summoned India’s High Commissioner Satish Chandra and alleged that Israeli F-16 aircraft based in Chennai were preparing to strike at its nuclear installations.
- Party Encounter (Telegraph, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 01, 2005)
There seems no easy way of return to glory. For Ms Uma Bharti, the exultation of victory by a three-fourth mandate in Madhya Pradesh is now most firmly in the past.
- Of Many Cultures (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Dec 01, 2005)
It seems a long time since my last ‘Westminster Gleanings’ and since my conversation with Lord Gilmour about the Middle East. Ariel Sharon’s new grab for the central ground, if such a thing really exists, of the Israeli political spectrum,
- Quake Survivors Plead For Help In Indian Kashmir (Reuters, Sheikh Mushtaq, Dec 01, 2005)
Sarwar Jan and her eight shivering children collect a handful of twigs to light a fire in their little tin shed as it snows heavily outside.
- Aids Stalks Indian Highways (Hindustan Times, Margie Mason, Dec 01, 2005)
Zalisz Ahmed paid US$1 and lost his virginity on the side of the road to one of India's countless young truck-stop prostitutes. He's had unprotected sex with many others since and says he's never heard of AIDS.
- Health Minister Says Concerned About Aids Awareness (Reuters, Kamil Zaheer, Dec 01, 2005)
India's health minister expressed concern on Wednesday about AIDS awareness, monitoring and treatment, saying the latest official count in India could have fallen short of the real number of infections.
- Lurking In The Mainstream (Hindustan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 01, 2005)
The discomfiture that followed Sir Mark Moody-Stuart’s announcement that the IT industry, including call centres, may be susceptible to the spread of HIV makes its own unfortunate statement.
- Icici Bank Seeks Fdi Hike In Insurance To Free Capital (Business Standard, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 01, 2005)
ICICI Bank wants foreign direct investment (FDI) in insurance to be raised to the promised 49 per cent so that it can free up a part of its capital invested in ICICI Prudential Life Insurance Company.
- 'Iran-Eu Nuclear Talks To Start Within Two Weeks' (Hindustan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 01, 2005)
Preliminary talks between Iran and the European Union over Tehran's nuclear programme will begin by mid-December, Iran's Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said in Ankara on Wednesday.
- Brazil Bucks Aids Trend, But Blacks Are Hard-Hit (Reuters, Andrew Hay, Dec 01, 2005)
Bucking a global rise in HIV infection, Brazil reported a slight fall on Wednesday in the spread of the virus last year but blamed racism for a marked increase in the proportion of AIDS cases among blacks.
- Pakistan's Bhutto Acquited Of Appointments Charges (Reuters, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 01, 2005)
A Pakistani court on Wednesday acquitted self-exiled former prime minister, Benazir Bhutto, of charges of making illegal appointments in the state-run Pakistan International Airlines (PIA).
- Wto Hong Kong Ministerial — Will A Consensus Emerge On Crucial Issues? (Business Line, M. R. Venkatesh, Dec 01, 2005)
WTO's so-called bad construct, political intransigence and little headway on crucial issues could see the Doha Round stymied in Hong Kong, says M. R. Venkatesh.
- The Substitution Effect On Access Deficit Charge (Business Line, Kala Seetharam Sridhar, Dec 01, 2005)
What are the implications of the ADC from a public finance point of view? First is the substitution effect. The ADC is analogous to a commodity-specific tax, being the charge on a specific telecom service (international long distance).
- U.S. Payloads Likely To Be Accepted On Chandrayaan (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 01, 2005)
Two sides moving forward in space cooperation: Shyam Saran
S & T accord will permit collaborative research
Civil nuclear energy is a component of larger dialogue
Nuclear agreement sends clear message
- Aids Fight To Shift Focus (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 01, 2005)
NACP-III to target rural areas
Intensive planning for third phase of NACP
Ministries to be asked to earmark funds
Coverage under Anti-Retroviral Therapy to be increased
- Separate Civil, Nuclear Facilities, Says Burton (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 01, 2005)
"U.S. Congress can make any changes in domestic law only after this is done"
- Bosnia’S Slow Progress (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Dec 01, 2005)
Before the war in Iraq,Bush administration policymakers used to deride the elaborate nation-building regime the Clinton administration and the European allies created in Bosnia.
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