|
|
|
Articles 24621 through 24720 of 31829:
- Sri Lanka In Muddier Waters (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 13, 2005)
In the last two decades, it seemed that much of the Sri Lankan polity had reconciled itself to federalism (by whatever name called) as essential to a solution to the Tamil question.
- Post-Gaza Scenario (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Sep 13, 2005)
Finally, Israel has withdrawn from Gaza after a brutal occupation of 38 years. Seen against the background of the peace efforts made since Madrid, this is the first major development towards Arab-Israeli peace.
- When Bush Comes To Shove (Dawn, F.S. Aijazuddin, Sep 13, 2005)
President Musharraf has left to perform what might be called a pilgrimage in the United States.
- India And China Poised To Join Hands In Trade And Fiscal Areas As Both Countries Find The Easy Money Door To The West Is Closing (India Daily, Babu Ghanta, Sep 13, 2005)
India and China will have increasing difficulties in penetrating the Western nations for selling goods and services.
- Finite Ores, Implications For Mineral Policy (Hindu, Aditi Roy Ghatak , Sep 13, 2005)
India's per capita steel consumption is projected to grow from the current 30 kg to 200 kg over the next quarter of a century. One does not need to be a rocket scientist to figure out what should be the policy approach to the country's iron ore reserves.
- Homoeopathy-In The Line Of Fire (Deccan Herald, Venkat Krishnan, Sep 13, 2005)
Many allopaths argue that homoeopathy does not work and that its ‘medicine’ only has a placebo effect.
- Un World Summit 2005: What Is At Stake (Deccan Herald, Eveline Herfkens, Sep 13, 2005)
Neither the developed nor the developing countries can rest on their laurels and need better understanding
- Un's Moment Of Truth (Deccan Herald, PUNYAPRIYA DASGUPTA, Sep 13, 2005)
Bush’s decision to appoint Bolton to represent US at the UN amounted to declaring a war on the UN
- Will Polls Shore Up Afghan Democracy? (Deccan Herald, Reuters, Sep 13, 2005)
An Afghanistan expert is sceptical about the tangible gains from the elections since basic institutions are still in their nascent stage.
- 'Us Used Poison Gas In Iraq' (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 13, 2005)
The al-Qaida leader in Iraq has accused US and Iraqi forces of using poison gas in recent fighting in northern Iraq, where hundreds of insurgents were killed or captured, in an audiotape posted on the Internet.
- Pak To Seek Us Nuke Reactors To Abandon Pipeline Project (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 13, 2005)
Pakistan may seek US cooperation for the installation of four 1,000 MW nuclear power reactors to overcome any energy crisis in return for abandoning the Iran-Pakistan-India (IPI) pipeline.
- Our Image Abroad (Dawn, Touqir Hussain, Sep 13, 2005)
There has been much debate in the country recently about Pakistan’s image abroad.
- How The Us Wants The United Nations To Reform (Christian Science Monitor, Howard LaFranchi, Sep 13, 2005)
When President Bush speaks Wednesday at the largest gathering of world leaders in United Nations history, he will argue for major changes in a world institution that was conceived by the United States but has since become the object of much American ....
- India, Pakistan Leaders To Push Peace Process In U.S. (Reuters, Simon Denyer, Sep 13, 2005)
The leaders of India and Pakistan meet in New York on Wednesday to push forward a peace process which is beginning to offer a realistic chance of a lasting rapprochement between the long-time foes.
- N. Korea, Iran Say They Will Continue Nuclear Efforts (Christian Science Monitor, Tom Regan, Sep 13, 2005)
When President Bush speaks Wednesday at the largest gathering of world leaders in United Nations history, he will argue for major changes in a world institution that was conceived by the United States but has since become the object of much American ....
- As India's Economy Soars, Its Airports And Roads Can't Keep Up (Christian Science Monitor, Gretchen Peters, Sep 12, 2005)
Al Qaeda has marked the fourth anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks on New York and Washington with a warning of future strikes in Los Angeles and Melbourne, and this rebuke to the American people: You don't get what we're fighting for.
- India For Stepping Up Ties With France: Manmohan (Hindu, Special Correspondent, The Financial Express, Sep 12, 2005)
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said on Sunday that India was committed to further strengthening the "privileged relations of strategic partnership" with France.
- Flat Tax Is Economic Nonsense (Hindu, Will Hutton, Sep 12, 2005)
A new economic idea has seized U.S. neocons, and now British Conservatives. The trouble is it's batty.
- America Bids Farewell To The Rule Of Law (Hindu, Siddharth Varadarajan, Sep 12, 2005)
A Federal Appeal Court's ruling in the Padilla case means President Bush now has the right to lock up anyone, forever, without charge.
- Mubarak And His Political Shell Game (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Sep 12, 2005)
There was never any doubt that Egypt's President, Hosni Mubarak, would handily win yet another six-year term in office.
- France Looks To Firm Up Ties With India (Hindu, VAIJU NARAVANE, Sep 12, 2005)
While there is elation at India's desire to re-invest in the bilateral relationship, Paris is worried that New Delhi's rapprochement with Washington could diminish its own importance.
- Now,us To Use Nukes Against Militants (Deccan Herald, Reuters, Sep 12, 2005)
The US Defence Department has written a draft revision of its nuclear operations doctrine that outlines the use of nuclear weapons to pre-empt an enemy’s attack with weapons of mass destruction, according to a copy of the document available online.
- `Terrorism Can Cause Another World War' (Hindu, PTI, Sep 12, 2005)
Apprehending that international terrorism had the potential to start another world war, former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee on Sunday said the world would have to unite in order to wipe out this problem from its roots.
- Iran In The Soul (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Sep 12, 2005)
The UPA govt has unwittingly made Iran a test case for its ‘independent’ foreign policy
- A New Un Goal (Indian Express, A N Sudarsan Rao , Sep 12, 2005)
Women’s activist and rights-based organisations are waiting for the forthcoming high-level summit of the UN General Assembly on the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
- U-Turn By Pakistan? (Deccan Herald, M B NAQVI, Sep 12, 2005)
The Musharraf government has taken its first tentative steps towards normalising relations with Israel
- Arms At The Cost Of Development (Deccan Herald, D Ravi Kanth, Sep 12, 2005)
India went on an arms buying spree last year neglecting public health and other human development goals
- Pm Meets Chirac Today, It Will Give Some Elbow Room On Iran (Indian Express, C Raja Mohan, Sep 12, 2005)
A strong French support for ending India’s atomic isolation and the joint exploration of ways to delay, if not prevent, a confrontation between US and Iran over Tehran’s n-programme are likely to be the highlights of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s talks
- Don’T Just Research, Use It: World Food Man (Indian Express, Nirmala Ganapathy, Sep 12, 2005)
Word has spread among Andhra’s fish farmers that the man who pioneered the Blue Revolution and won this year’s World Food Prize, now lives among them.
- I Can Do Business With The General: Manmohan (Hindu, Harish Khare , Sep 12, 2005)
Three days before his scheduled dinner with President Pervez Musharraf in New York, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Sunday declared that he continued to "trust" the Pakistani leader and he believed that he could do "business" with the General. "I have no
- Lessons From The Past (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Sep 12, 2005)
It is difficult to define September 11, 2001. Was it an example of macabre poetic justice or an enactment of a revenge tragedy? To seek an answer, one must go back in time to another September 11, now almost lost in the annals of history.
- Musharraf For A "Way Forward" (Hindu, B. MURALIDHAR REDDY, Sep 12, 2005)
Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf has said he expected to discuss with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh a "way forward" towards the resolution of Kashmir.
The two leaders are scheduled to meet
- Four Years (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Sep 12, 2005)
In terms of tragedy, it is impossible — as well as prejudicial and insensitive — to compare terrorist strikes, to say which is greater or greatest.
- Pm Tells Pak To End Infiltration (Deccan Herald, PTI, Sep 12, 2005)
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Gen Musharraf will, on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly session in New York, review the Indo-Pak peace process.
- Give Them Back The Childhood They Have Lost (Deccan Herald, A N Sudarsan Rao , Sep 12, 2005)
The unfortunate engineering and medical students who took their own lives recently would possibly have thrived in other disciplines.
- Allies In The Left Front Force Buddhadev To Go Slow (Deccan Herald, Prasanta Paul, Sep 11, 2005)
Chief Minister M Buddhadev Bhattacharjee’s dream of pushing ahead with his programme of building an industrial township and a health city under a Special Economic Zone
- Discovery Of India (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Sep 11, 2005)
It took 55 trading sessions — and about 10 weeks — for the BSE's benchmark 30-share Sensex to shoot up from 7,000 to 8,000 points. Even at this level, the ratio of stock price to earnings per share — the PE multiple — is a relatively modest 16.7.
- Musharraf To Meet Manmohan (Hindu, B. MURALIDHAR REDDY, Sep 11, 2005)
Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf leaves for New York on Sunday in connection with the 60th session of the U.N. General Assembly. His engagements include a meeting with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and an address to the American Jewish Congress, the fi
- India's Invisible Billion-Dollar Economy (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Sep 11, 2005)
Online marketplaces like RAC (www.rentacoder.com) offer enough reason to generate effusive prose. It's the kind of place where 110,000 software programmers from across the world log on to earn a living. Of these, roughly 50,000 are Indians—all the way fr
- Hands Off (Hindu, A N Sudarsan Rao , Sep 11, 2005)
A woman gets assaulted every half an hour. But why are women silent about this issue?
- Want Better Hdi Ranking? Get A New Hrd Ministry (Indian Express, Tavleen Singh, Sep 11, 2005)
On the day that the UN Human Development Index revealed last week that even Bangladesh was doing better than India in human development
- Hands Off (Hindu, A N Sudarsan Rao , Sep 11, 2005)
SELDOM do people hold those robbed responsible for getting robbed, or those murdered responsible for getting murdered.
- Trivialising The Aggressor (Hindu, MITA KAPUR, Sep 11, 2005)
It is a mystery, but society has to wake up to the gross inaccuracy of the term "eve teasing".
- Perfecting The Past (Telegraph, GITHA HARIHARAN, Sep 11, 2005)
The present is always a difficult place to live in. Given the all-too-obvious imperfections of the present we have to make do with, it’s always instructive to see how much some people crave a perfect past.
- Once Upon A Time... (Deccan Herald, A N Sudarsan Rao , Sep 11, 2005)
She is colourful and vivacious. And the stories she tells make her a hit with children. Veena Pradeep meets Mama Nomusa whose powerful stories touch many young lives.
- The Children Of Paradise (Deccan Herald, Special Correspondent, The Financial Express, Sep 11, 2005)
Salman Rushdie misses out the appeal of the ordinary in his ‘continent crossing’ new novel, Shalimar the Clown, says Natasha Walter.
- Winning The Big Fight (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 11, 2005)
In their weaker bodies lie stronger desires. In their limitations lies their greatest strength. L Subramani profiles the success stories of some 'disabled' people who broke their shackles by sheer determination and the power of their dreams.
- Verdicts On Pakistan (Hindu, RAMACHANDRA GUHA, Sep 11, 2005)
... offered 40 years apart, in the same American magazine
We have never defined ourselves in our own right — only in relation to India. That is our tragedy
- Bringing Up The Parents (Deccan Herald, Mala Kumar, Sep 11, 2005)
Raising children today is a complex and crucial activity that needs sustained parental effort, writes Mala Kumar.
- Winning The Big Fight (Deccan Herald, Srivasta Krishna, Sep 11, 2005)
In their weaker bodies lie stronger desires. In their limitations lies their greatest strength. L Subramani profiles the success stories of some 'disabled' people who broke their shackles by sheer determination and the power of their dreams.
- Verdicts On Pakistan (Hindu, RAMACHANDRA GUHA, Sep 11, 2005)
We have never defined ourselves in our own right — only in relation to India. That is our tragedy.'
- Once Upon A Time... (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 11, 2005)
She is colourful and vivacious. And the stories she tells make her a hit with children. Veena Pradeep meets Mama Nomusa whose powerful stories touch many young lives.
- Starvation Deaths And Sonia’S Antics (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Sep 10, 2005)
A chief minister in whose state children die of hunger should not just be forced to resign but should be tried for criminal negligence
- Time To Kick The Barrel Habit (Business Line, G. Ramachandran, Sep 10, 2005)
Crude prices are just below $70, twice their level of five years ago. Five years is a long time in economics, innovation and technology. Yet India, transfixed by its dependence on crude oil and obsessed with pricing formulae, has been too slow to respond
- Us Moves Gingerly On Nuke Ties With India (Deccan Herald, L K Sharma , Sep 10, 2005)
The Bush administration has begun to feel its way around the legislative jungle in order to reach the goal of civilian nuclear cooperation with India.
- A Linked Future (Telegraph, Sunanda K. Datta-Ray, Sep 10, 2005)
Alice Hardgrove’s scholarly work on Marwaris cites European Jews and the Chinese of Indonesia.
- Ideological Twins (Deccan Herald, PARSA VENKATESHWAR RAO JR, Sep 10, 2005)
The way out of the impasse for Pakistan and Israel is to give up their claims to be homelands of their religions.
- American Bellyache (Indian Express, Vandita Mishra, Sep 10, 2005)
It’s been a spectacular and confusing September so far in America.
- Communists And Corruption (Business Standard, A N Sudarsan Rao , Sep 10, 2005)
Once or twice a year, I find it profitable to accept invitations to speak to college students. The boys are eager to impress the girls, and ask some very good questions.
- India, Pak To Sign Pipeline Pact (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, Sep 10, 2005)
Pakistan and India said on Friday a tripartite framework agreement to build a $7 billion gas project to pipe Iranian gas to South Asia would be finalised by December 2005.
- U.S. And The Middle East (Hindu, Simon Tisdall, Sep 10, 2005)
Despite claims that it is spreading democracy in the Arab world the general feeling is that the U.S. doesn't want to push the ballot box too much for fear of an unwelcome result.
- India-U.S. Deal And The Nuclear Ceiling (Hindu, R. Rajaraman, Sep 10, 2005)
India will suffer no loss of security if it were to abandon all further production of fissile materials for military purposes and declare all its power reactors open to safeguarding.
- G-20 Ministers Gearing For Wto Round (Hindu, B. MURALIDHAR REDDY, Sep 10, 2005)
The G-20 Ministers led by India, China and Pakistan, are here taking stock of distortions in the global agricultural market caused by huge government subsidies in the United States and the West.
- Manmohan To Host Dinner For Musharraf In New York (Indian Express, PTI, Sep 10, 2005)
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh will meet US President George W Bush and host a dinner for Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf in New York next week on the margins of the UN General Assembly session.
- Talk N-Issue Over: India To Iran, Us (Indian Express, Reuters, Sep 10, 2005)
India said on Friday it wanted differences between Iran and the United States on Tehran's nuclear activities to be resolved through talks, as New Delhi walks a diplomatic tightrope in its ties with both nations.
- China Gets Proactive Diplomatically (Hindu, P.S. Suryanarayana, Sep 10, 2005)
Peace, development, and cooperation on a global scale are the focus of China's policy.
- Crude Oil: Nuisance Or Bonanza For The Us? (The Financial Express, A N Sudarsan Rao , Sep 10, 2005)
Most of the bears were waiting for hurricane Katrina to validate their pessimism. It arrived and despite public protestations of sympathy for the victims
- Fissures And Face-Offs (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Sep 10, 2005)
The BJP’s latest crisis speaks volumes for its present fragility. The Lal Krishen Advani-Madan Lal face-off, even if it can be managed for the moment,
- Notes From Ground Zero (Indian Express, Ananya Vajpeyi, Sep 10, 2005)
Manhattan, SEP 2001: On Friday September 14, The New York Times reported a ‘‘sad paper trail’’ originating from the bombed World Trade Center to envelope parts of lower Manhattan and Brooklyn.
- A Million Bridges (Indian Express, A N Sudarsan Rao , Sep 10, 2005)
World Islam has been in crisis, its billion or so adherents being variously in a state of bewilderment, frustration, anger and despair.
- Nature Lays A Superpower Low (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Sep 09, 2005)
Natural disasters, whether in the form of storms or tsunamis, make no distinction between developed and developing countries.
- Mumbai After The Rain: Piecemeal Policies (Hindu, Kalpana Sharma , Sep 09, 2005)
Mumbai might have survived the floods but the challenge that people in the city now face is the deluge of piecemeal policymaking.
- Hands Across The Sea (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Sep 09, 2005)
HARROWING images from the disaster created by Hurricane Katrina along America’s Gulf coast have been beamed round the world and generated offers of help from likely and more unlikely quarters.
- Hurricane Katrina's Political Fallout (Hindu, Jonathan Freedland, Sep 09, 2005)
The neocons may have been damaged by Katrina, but progressives will have to fight for a new political settlement.
- Harsh Punishment (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Sep 09, 2005)
THE expulsion of the BJP’s Delhi strongman Madan Lal Khurana from the party for six years by party chief L. K. Advani does not show the latter in a good light.
- If Katrina Escapes Retirement, It May Figure In The 2011 List Of Scheduled Hurricanes (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Sep 09, 2005)
THE latest posting on the US Federal Reserve Board's site (www.federalreserve.gov) is the Beige Book, or the `informal review by the Federal Reserve Banks of current economic conditions in their Districts', dated September 7.
- Forty Years After 1965 War (Tribune, Inder Malhotra, Sep 09, 2005)
COME September 6 and every year our neighbour to the west observes the “Defence of Pakistan Day”.
- As Oil Prices Rise, Field Trips Get Cancelled (Tribune, Fem Shen, Sep 09, 2005)
The adults in your life are probably really cranky right now about having to pay more than $3 per gallon for gas.
- Is Justice Possible Without Looking For The Truth? (Hindu, Siddharth Narrain , Sep 09, 2005)
There is a demand that the NHRC take a more proactive role in the Punjab illegal cremations case.
- Challenges And Change In Persian Gulf — Why India Needs A "Look West" Policy (Business Line, G. Parthasarathy, Sep 09, 2005)
MILITARY INTERVENTION in Iraq could well prove to be a historic blunder for the United States, resulting from setbacks like those it faced in Vietnam, Lebanon and Somalia
Previous 100 Indo - US Relation Articles | Next 100 Indo - US Relation Articles
Home
Page
|
|