Articles 25721 through 25820 of 31829:
- Who Is Thy Neighbour? (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Aug 04, 2005)
Phlegm and moderation prevail over fear and anger in Britain
WESTMINSTER GLEANINGS ANABEL LOYD
- Killing Hope (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Aug 04, 2005)
After the tempered optimism of last month’s Gleneagles summit come tragic reminders that Africa’s wounds are too deep to be easily balmed.
- No Alternative To Democracy (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Aug 04, 2005)
It would be wrong, perhaps, to see too much in Christina Rocca’s views about the relationship between the war on terror and the safety of nuclear weapons on the one hand and President Pervez Musharraf retaining his uniform on the other.
- The World Is Still Round (Dawn, Robert J. Samuelson, Aug 04, 2005)
One of the unheralded contrasts of our time is this: Everywhere we see the increasingly powerful effects of globalization, and yet the single most important reality for the economic well-being of most people is their nationality.
- The Shift In Us Policy (Dawn, Tanvir Ahmad Khan, Aug 04, 2005)
There has already been considerable comment in these columns on the recently announced Indo-US defence pact and the new US policy on nuclear collaboration with India.
- A Severe Identity Crisis In Britain (Hindu, Jonathan Freedland, Aug 04, 2005)
Britain should follow the U.S. approach to citizenship, which emphasises not only diversity but the ties that bind.
- Enter, The New Kashmiris (Indian Express, Ananya Vajpeyi, Aug 04, 2005)
On June 16, at Kaman Post in Baramulla District, the river Jhelum thundered through a gorge between two steep mountain walls.
- The Congress And Image Building (Hindu, K. V. PRASAD, Aug 04, 2005)
Is there a case for a media policy that is party-centric and not personality driven?
- Vsnl Refutes Ustr's Charges On Pricing Of Bandwidth (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 04, 2005)
Vague claims of anonymous U.S. operators passed on, says company
- Skyrocketing Markets (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 04, 2005)
All major indices in the country’s stock markets seem to be moving in only one direction: up.
- Us Grip On Internet (Deccan Herald, D Ravi Kanth, Aug 04, 2005)
In internet governance, the US might prevail over the collective will of all governments in the world
- Blue Collar Workers In The Boardroom (Hindu, Brian Ellsworth, Aug 04, 2005)
Worker-managed businesses have been the dream of the world's socialists. In Venezuela, they may become a reality.
- Mutual Funds Must Invest In Transparency (Business Line, A. Vasudevan, Aug 04, 2005)
A large body of investors may want to take advantage of a high equity market via the mutual fund route.
- A Cloudy Alternative (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Aug 04, 2005)
DARK CLOUDS APPEAR to be stealing over the Kyoto Protocol with the signing last week in Laos of the `Asia-Pacific Partnership for Clean Development and Climate' among four Asian countries
- In The Name Of Justice (Telegraph, Beena Sarwar, Aug 04, 2005)
Three frozen moments of grief, captured by wire photographs last week, stand out — anguished families in Brazil, Kashmir, and Iraq.
- As Insecure As Before (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Aug 04, 2005)
On the eve of another Hiroshima Day, Achin Vanaik exposes the hypocrisy of “responsible” nuclear powers like the US The author is professor of international relations and global politics, Delhi University.
- Suicide Terrorism Spreads (Tribune, Rajeev Sharma, Aug 04, 2005)
It required London’s 7/7 for the West to realise two things: the lethality of suicide bombers and the centrality of Pakistan in fomenting and preparing the generation next of global jehad, not necessarily in that order.
- Stamp It Out (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 04, 2005)
Everyone from harassed home owner to indigent farmer to reluctant corporate investor has been waiting for this one.
- Policy Response Should Be Well Informed About The Costs And Benefits Of Offshoring (Business Line, D. Murali , Aug 04, 2005)
As professionals in the truth business, it is only but fair that we read a hot report titled Truth and consequences of offshoring' by L. Josh Bivens, posted on http://epinet.org, the site of the Economic Policy Institute.
- Skyrocketing Markets (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Aug 04, 2005)
All major indices in the country’s stock markets seem to be moving in only one direction: up.
- A Bad Deal With India (Washington Post, Lawrence J. Korb and Peter Ogden, Aug 03, 2005)
Many of the people who are made uncomfortable by President Bush's ideologically driven foreign policy have been pleasantly surprised by his recent decision to supply India with nuclear energy technology.
- Sweeping India Off Its Feet (Indian Express, Kuldip Nayar, Aug 03, 2005)
Whether we make the nuclear club status or not depends on India’s Parliament and the US Congress.
- Unlearnt Lesson Of Hiroshima (Dawn, Zubeida Mustafa, Aug 03, 2005)
Sixty years ago on August 6, 1945, President Harry Truman issued a statement in Washington saying, “Sixteen hours ago an American airplane dropped one bomb on Hiroshima, Japan and destroyed its usefulness to the enemy.
- Death Of A King (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 03, 2005)
King Fahd, who died on Monday after protracted illness, will be remembered as the architect of modern Saudi Arabia.
- The Treaty-Wreckers (Deccan Herald, George Monbiot, Aug 03, 2005)
In just a few months, Bush and Blair have destroyed global restraint on the development of nuclear weapons
- Janus-Faced (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Aug 03, 2005)
Have you noticed the marked dichotomy in the behaviour of the same big shots when they are before people in the mass and when they are approached by one of those very people in the throng as an individual?
- Little Credit For Financial Services (Business Line, S. Srinath, Aug 03, 2005)
The recently-concluded Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement,
- The Booming Nuclear Weapons Business (Hindu, George Monbiot, Aug 03, 2005)
August 6 is the 60th anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima. The nuclear powers are commemorating it in their own special way: by seeking to ensure that the experiment is repeated.
- Future Of The Iran Pipeline (Dawn, Najmuddin A. Shaikh, Aug 03, 2005)
In the last few days much has been written about the pipeline and the impact that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s remarks on the fundability of the project has had on the ongoing talks between India and Pakistan.
- The Left Has A Gameplan (Indian Express, Neerja Chowdhury, Aug 02, 2005)
There is tension building up between the prime minister and the Left.
- Time Spent Under Water (Indian Express, Jyoti Punwani, Aug 02, 2005)
That's the one word that best sums up the qualities of Mumbai’s ‘teeming millions’, seeing their conduct on Deluge Tuesday.
- Informal Relations (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Aug 02, 2005)
The peace process is not affected by new Indo-US ties
- Iran To Take Right Step (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Aug 02, 2005)
Iran has threatened to resume ultrasensitive nuclear activity including resumption of uranium conversion on Monday in the absence of EU’s latest proposals in a mooted nuclear deal in the ongoing talks on its atomic programme. The move, however, . . . .
- Japan Slams Punitive Duty On U.S. Exports (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 02, 2005)
Levies would be in place as long as Washington maintains the 2000 law'
- Fahd Hailed As Moderniser Of Desert Kingdom (Hindu, Douglas Martin, Aug 02, 2005)
Monarch championed women's education
- China, U.S. Hold Strategic Talks (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 02, 2005)
China and the United States started their first strategic dialogue in Beijing on Monday, aiming to facilitate bilateral relations.
- Ira In A Reasonable Mode (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Aug 02, 2005)
The announcement by the Irish Republican Army that it has ordered an end to its three decade-long armed campaign against the British government is a momentous breakthrough in the Northern Ireland peace process.
- The Succession In The House Of Saud (Hindu, Gulshan Dietl, Aug 02, 2005)
The Saudi monarchy is vulnerable to the harsh political winds blowing in the region.
- The Power Of Holy Places (Hindu, Karen Armstrong, Aug 02, 2005)
Long Before human beings began to map the earth scientifically they created a sacred geography.
- Double Standards (Telegraph, Jay Bhattacharjee, Aug 02, 2005)
Why is it that one Japanese MNC clamps down on unions in Gurgaon while another welcomes them in Canada? asks Jay Bhattacharjee
- The Age Of Displacement (Telegraph, Sunanda K. Datta-Ray, Aug 02, 2005)
Parliament’s enthusiastic approval of the bill on dual citizenship, the arrest of yet another London bombings suspect and the Irish Republican Army’s promise to lay down arms all bear out Eric Hobsbawm’s definition of the 21st century as the age of . . .
- Kashmir As Catalyst (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Aug 02, 2005)
Terrorist influx into India indicates US pressure on Pakistan is not yielding desired results
- Buta Singh’S Ways (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 02, 2005)
The standoff between Bihar Governor Buta Singh and Chief Secretary G.S. Kang over the transfer of 17 IPS officers has snowballed into a major controversy with Mr Kang having proceeded on long leave in protest against the decision.
- Europe In Crisis (Tribune, S. Nihal Singh, Aug 02, 2005)
A common theme permeates the European continental countries as they face a future of some uncertainty and foreboding.
- Heart Surgery For Rs 5 A Month (Tribune, Jangveer Singh, Aug 02, 2005)
Twenty -year-old Prasanna, a farmer from Tumkur district of Karnataka, would have normally wasted away after he was stricken with a heart disease.
- Asha Parekh’S Nightmare In Mumbai (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 02, 2005)
Yesteryears Bollywood actress Asha Parekh was stuck 15 hours in the city’s life-stopping floods,
- Cozying Up To India (The Heritage Foundation, Peter Brooks, Aug 01, 2005)
The Bush administration's most unheralded foreign policy success — besides Libya's WMD disarmament and freeing Lebanon from Syria's iron grip — is the dramatic upswing in U.S.-Indian relations.
- Terrorists Of The Third Tier (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Aug 01, 2005)
That the bombers of London on July 7 were British is shocking to British public opinion.
- More To Rally Than Meets The Eye? (Indian Express, Sucheta Dalal, Aug 01, 2005)
The benchmark Sensex shimmied up 91 points in the first 30 minutes of trading last Friday when Indian stockmarkets re-opened for trading after the biggest deluge in history crippled India’s commercial capital and its largest listed company suffered extens
- Space Industry Has To Go Private In Future (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Aug 01, 2005)
The only reason the United States's — or for that matter any country's — space programme has been kept in government hands for so long is because it was inextricably linked with defence concerns and the bogey of "national security".
- Congress Depends On Rane To Checkmate Sharad Pawar (Tribune, Shiv Kumar, Aug 01, 2005)
The normal chill in the relationship between the Congress and its ally, the Nationalist Congress Party, in Maharashtra is plunging southward and dropping after Shiv Sena rebel Narayan Rane joined the former.
- Gas Pipelines Or Balloons? (Tribune, Sudha Mahalingam, Aug 01, 2005)
IF our energetic Petroleum Minister has his way, India should soon find itself tied up — not in knots, one hopes. . .
- The Holy Cow (Tribune, T.P. Sreenivasan, Aug 01, 2005)
December 13, 1982, was a normal day at the UN General Assembly. I was elated that morning as my boss,
- Call A Friend (Times of India, KAMALA BALACHANDRAN, Aug 01, 2005)
Over the years, in buses, in trains, in doctor's waiting room and at parties, I have made innumerable friends.
- Lb Poll Changes (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Aug 01, 2005)
It is impossible to expect that any election in Pakistan can take place without a chorus of accusations of pre-poll rigging.
- Prisoners In Their Own Land (Tribune, Laila El-Haddad , Aug 01, 2005)
I spent eight hours at Gaza’s Erez border crossing with Israel last month, waiting for Israeli approval to attend a reception in the West Bank, only to be denied entry based on dubious “security reasons.”
- The Scourge Of Terrorism (Dawn, Shahid M. Amin, Aug 01, 2005)
The shocking London bombings of July 7, and the less deadly repeat performance two weeks later, as also the subsequent bomb explosions in Sharm al Shaikh in Egypt, have brought world media attention on the issue of Islamic extremism.
- Regional Market, Key To Asian Oil Security (Business Line, Pratap Ravindran , Aug 01, 2005)
The Union Petroleum Minister, Mr Mani Shankar Aiyar, is quite correct when he says that the accident at ONGC's Bombay High North will not compromise India's energy security.
- Germany's Baby Bust (Business Line, Mohan Murti, Aug 01, 2005)
Germany's plunging birth rates are a cause for worry amidst the country's growing aging population.
- Playing In The Danger Zone (Telegraph, ARITRO GANGULY, Aug 01, 2005)
If London can think Karachi is unsafe, surely Milan can refuse to send its players to London after 7/7?
- Another Musharraf Charm Offensive (Hindu, B. MURALIDHAR REDDY, Aug 01, 2005)
On friday last, Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf held forth for over two hours with 80-odd foreign correspondents, some based in the country and some visiting it.
- Why They Hate Us (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Aug 01, 2005)
There have been thousand of stories about why people hate Americans (789,543 to be exact), but only five as to why the world likes Americans.
- Shootout In Srinagar (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Aug 01, 2005)
Indian troops stormed a hotel in Srinagar and killed an alleged militant who was reportedly holed up there since Friday evening.
- Gourmet's Pride (Deccan Herald, Rashmi Vasudeva, Aug 01, 2005)
God has given me a gift — the knowledge that as much stress as I take can all be dissolved in food
- Reserve Strengths (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Aug 01, 2005)
The world may not see a shortage of petroleum just yet, but the days of cheap oil may well be over, writes Alok Ray
- Threat To Russia's Hold On Caucasus (Hindu, VLADIMIR RADYUHIN, Aug 01, 2005)
Chechen rebels have fanned out to neighbouring territories, particularly Dagestan, increasing the pressure on Moscow.
- A Few Obscene Things (Telegraph, GWYNNE DYER, Aug 01, 2005)
Let’s talk dirty. The 9/11 suicide hijackers — all Arabs — attacked the United States of America instead of Brazil or Japan because the US government has been neck-deep in the politics of the Arab world for long, whereas the Brazilian and Japanese . . .
- Yuan Revaluation — How Much Is It Really Worth For Us? (Business Line, S. Venkitaramanan , Aug 01, 2005)
The US seems to be barking up the wrong tree when it insists that China's revaluation can be a cure for its own problems. Ultimately, its solution lies in its own hands.
- Fear Of Job Loss Due To Outsourcing — It Career Loses Sheen Among Us Students (Business Line, Moumita Bakshi Chatterjee, Aug 01, 2005)
Rising salaries and a growing software industry may have made IT one of the most sought-after careers for Indian students.
- No Better Solution Than Autonomy, Says Omar (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 01, 2005)
New Delhi, Islamabad have corrupted Hurriyat: Yasin Malik
- Asian Markets From Bombay To Sydney Soar To Record Highs -- While China Languishes (Post-gazette, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 31, 2005)
Seoul, South Korea -- In Asia, stocks are suddenly hot.
- At State, Rice Takes Control Of Diplomacy (Washington Post, Robin Wright, Jul 31, 2005)
Three weeks after taking office, Condoleezza Rice hosted Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and their Japanese counterparts at the State Department.
- Tatas, Birlas To Buy Out New Cingular's Stake In Idea For Rs 1,300 Cr (Business Line, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 31, 2005)
The Tata and A.V. Birla groups have agreed to jointly buy out New Cingular Wireless' 32.91 per cent stake in IDEA Cellular for $300 million (about Rs 1,300 crore).
- A New Environment (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Jul 31, 2005)
Why, after being so implacably opposed for so long to the Kyoto protocol, did the US perform a U-turn on Thursday? To the complete surprise of even its closest allies, it announced a new pact with five Asian-Pacific states to cut greenhouse gases.
- Workers Must Get Their Due: Brinda (Tribune, Tripti Nath, Jul 31, 2005)
The Rajya Sabha or the House of Elders will definitely be enriched further with the election of Mrs Brinda Karat as a member.
- All Those Peter Pans (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 31, 2005)
Comic strip characters have a life of their own but they seldom age.
- India’S Quest For Nuclear Status (Dawn, Ghayoor Ahmed, Jul 31, 2005)
According to a joint statement issued in Washington on July 18, US President George W. Bush and Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh have resolved to transform the relationship between their two countries and establish a global partnership in areas of....
- Imperatives Of Fair Polls (Dawn, Anwar Syed, Jul 31, 2005)
All of us in Pakistan say we want fair elections, but we know also that many of those who contest them will break the relevant law to their advantage if they can get away with it. Managers of vote banks and individual voters, who are willing to . . .
- Support To Local Auto Industry (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Jul 31, 2005)
The Government on Friday reiterated its full support to the booming local car manufacturing industry and made it clear that measures announced in the new budget and trade policy were only aimed at facilitating the Overseas Pakistanis.
- Pipeline Assurances (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Jul 31, 2005)
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s statement in the Lok Sabha that the US understood India’s need to have “unhindered access” to “adequate and affordable energy supplies from all sources” should allay fears that New Delhi might drop out of the ....
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