Articles 25821 through 25920 of 31829:
- Making The Most Of Yuan Revaluation (Business Line, S. Majumder , Jul 30, 2005)
The combined effect of the lower-than-expected yuan revaluation and the US' suspicion over China's interest in the US energy sector, should give India the leverage to woo American investors.
- Musharraf Cannot Be Trusted: Arun Shourie (Deccan Herald, L K Sharma , Jul 30, 2005)
Mr Shourie refused to say if he supported the continuation of Mr Advani as the BJP president.
- Beyond Kyoto (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jul 30, 2005)
Concerns expressed in Parliament over India's decision to join the Asia-Pacific Partnership on Clean Development and Climate are not entirely unfounded.
- Islamophobia Springs From Myths (Pioneer, Sheikh Mohd.Iqbal, Jul 30, 2005)
It is disheartening that the bias of Islam's treatment of non-Muslims has generally been misconstrued as a result of careless study.
- Political Vacuum In Pakistan (Tribune, M B NAQVI, Jul 30, 2005)
Two news items illustrate what is happening today in Pakistan. One is the ongoing campaign to arrest terrorists, the Taliban really, who are causing so much trouble to the coalition forces in Afghanistan.
- Climate Pact Creates Ripples (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 30, 2005)
An important question has been raised – if the new convention comes into effect, would there be pressure on India to reduce its emission levels?
- Complication In Share Application (Business Line, T. C. A. Ramanujam , Jul 30, 2005)
T. C. A. Ramanujam on a High Court ruling that application for shares in cash will attract Section 269SS of the I-T Act
- A Chaos Theory For Mumbai (Indian Express, Amrita Shah, Jul 30, 2005)
There are many ways to look at the crisis brought about by the sudden and unexpected intensity of the monsoon in Mumbai last week. As a tragedy: people died, in landslides and on the streets.
- A True Champ (Times of India, ARCHANA JAHAGIRDAR, Jul 30, 2005)
Alexander the Great, it is believed, wept that he had no more worlds to conquer. Is Lance Armstrong, seven times Tour de France champion, beater of a life-threatening illness like cancer, made of sterner stuff?
- The Most Pitiful Among Men Is He Who Turns Silver And Gold Into Dreams (Business Line, D. Murali , Jul 30, 2005)
O GOLD! I still prefer thee unto paper, which makes bank credit like a bank of vapour, exclaims Calvin Coolidge.
- Egypt Must Tolerate Open Debate (Hindu, Jonathan Steele, Jul 30, 2005)
Political Islam must be given the air to breathe. Open debate can tackle the dangers of fundamentalism.
- The Trade Route To Peace (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 30, 2005)
The resumption of trade by road between India and Pakistan after a hiatus of 40 years will go some way towards rectifying the anomalous nature of economic interaction between the two neighbours.
- Historic Shift (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Jul 30, 2005)
The IRA strategy to end armed struggle will speed up the peace process
- Raw Deal For The Farm Sector (Deccan Herald, Devinder Sharma , Jul 30, 2005)
While the outlay on farming remains negligible, the govt expects a high outcome from it
- Thank You, President (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 30, 2005)
The President has withheld assent to the Haryana Casino Bill. This was quite expected for two reasons.
- Nothing Fictitious About Islamic Fanaticism (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jul 30, 2005)
The escalated manifestation of Islamic fundamentalism is a matter of deep concern for the entire world today.
- Qazi Threatens To Close Down Madaris (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Jul 30, 2005)
Education Minister Javed Ashraf Qazi has threatened that the Madaris that fail to get themselves registered by the deadline of December this year would face closure. Speaking at a seminar in Islamabad on Thursday he said the Interior Ministry is introduci
- Our Pipeline Of Control (Indian Express, Shekhar Gupta, Jul 30, 2005)
Finally, our political and parliamentary debate is breaking out of the straight-jacket of national consensus.
- Questions And Answers (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jul 30, 2005)
The PM’s response to fears raised about the India-US treaty was forthright and clear
- South India Digital Atlas (Hindu, Rajesh Nair, Jul 30, 2005)
Venture by the French Institute with the help of varsities
- "No Compromise On Strategic Assets" (Hindu, SANDEEP DIKSHIT, Jul 30, 2005)
India will retain "unrestricted, complete" control over military nuclear programme
India's commitments conditional
Three-stage nuclear programme will continue
- Us Shifts On India, Pakistan (Christian Science Monitor, editorial, Christian Science Monitor, Jul 29, 2005)
Historic realignments are best perceived in retrospect, but it may be that we are witnessing a historic change in attitudes toward India and Pakistan.
- Time For Peace And Healing In Indonesia (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 29, 2005)
The draft peace deal between the Indonesian Government and the rebel Free Aceh Movement, which has the potential to end a nearly three-decade-old militancy in the biggest province of the archipelago, marks a bold and wise step in the search for peace
- Eroding Women's Rights (Hindu, Margaret Owen, Jul 29, 2005)
Iraq's draft constitution is about to go before the national assembly for approval. It seems likely to mean a massive erosion of women's rights.
- From Conflict To Politics (Hindu, Alastair Crooke, Jul 29, 2005)
As Hamas and Hizbullah find success at the ballot box, calls are heard for them to disarm
- Quotas Will Enhance Efficiency (Times of India, Udit Raj, Jul 29, 2005)
The United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government seems to have succumbed to pressure from Indian industry to scuttle private sector reservations.
- Unwarranted Objections (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Jul 29, 2005)
There seems to be no change in the American opposition to the Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline project.
- Will Karnataka Be The Next Gujarat? (Deccan Herald, Krishna Prasad, Jul 29, 2005)
Regardless of whether the strife within the Janata Dal (Secular) reaches its threatened climax this weekend or not, the moot point is whether the simple caste arithmetic that seems to be guiding the Congress’ strategy at the moment has the potential to yi
- Us And Us (A Non-Expert View) (Indian Express, Saeed Naqvi, Jul 29, 2005)
One gasps at the audacity of pundits who plunge head long into debates — ranging from Imrana to the US-India nuclear compact or the Iran pipeline — without making sure that they are in possession of the basic facts.
- Like Chairman, Like Chairperson (Pioneer, Rakesh Sinha , Jul 29, 2005)
The Gurgaon incident has exposed the hypocrisy of the Communists. For the common people, ...
- Why Americans Don't Pull Up Islamabad (Pioneer, Anil Narendra, Jul 29, 2005)
What is common between the Mumbai serial bombing in March 1993, the attack on the United States on 9/11, the explosions in the London Underground on 7/7, and Sharm al-Sheikh?
- After The Floods (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Jul 29, 2005)
One would like to know more about the comprehensive plan that NWFP Chief Minister Akram Khan Durrani says his government has drawn up to tackle the flood situation in the province.
- A Peace Built By Nukes And Cash (Dawn, Rajan Menon, Jul 29, 2005)
The Bush foreign policy squad has not had much to cheer about lately. The Iraqi insurgency won’t die.
- Champion Of All Time (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Jul 29, 2005)
This sportsman was not going to accept defeat easily
- Skating On Thin Ice (Times of India, SYED IQBAL HASNAIN, Jul 28, 2005)
Visiting the Siachen glacier, prime minister Manmohan Singh said that he wants to make the world's highest and coldest battlefield a 'peace mountain'.
- Insipid Excuses (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 28, 2005)
The reverberations of the Gurgaon police barbarism continue to rock the nation and Parliament, and understandably so.
- Restore With Hammer And Tongues (Telegraph, Barun De, Jul 28, 2005)
Laldighi, and not Dalhousie Square, should be the motif for the new restoration work being planned by the state government, writes Barun De
- Ruled By The Nominee (Indian Express, T V R Shenoy, Jul 28, 2005)
When Vijayalakshmi Pandit arrived in August 1947 to take up her post as India’s first ambassador in Moscow,
- Malls Of The Few, Chawls Of The Many (Hindu, P. SAINATH, Jul 28, 2005)
The scenes from Gurgaon gave us more than just a picture of one labour protest, police brutality or corporate tyranny. It presented us a microcosm of the new and old Indias. Different rules and realities for different classes of society.
- Is Al-Qaeda Really Dismantled? (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Jul 28, 2005)
President Pervez Musharraf, in his enlightening address to a news conference in Lahore on Monday, dwelt at length on a number of crucial issues facing the country.
- Double Talk On Gas Pipeline (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Jul 28, 2005)
Insisting that there was no ‘double-speak’ from the Government on multi-billion-dollar Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline project, Indian Petroleum Minister Mani Shankar Aiyar on Monday said he met Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to explain the project.
- Deft Moves By The Chinese Dragon (Deccan Herald, D Ravi Kanth, Jul 28, 2005)
China has made so much progress that it is now in a position to influence future global trade negotiations
- Treating The Causes, Not Symptoms (Dawn, A.B. Shahid, Jul 28, 2005)
In a jointly authored article published in the New York Times, US national security advisor Stephen J. Hadley and Homeland Security Advisor Frances Fargos have proposed a fundamental change in US approach to confronting terrorism.
- Wings And Prayers (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Jul 28, 2005)
Asked what went through his mind while waiting for countdown, John Glenn, the pioneer astronaut and the first American to orbit the Earth,
- Unseemly Clashes (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Jul 28, 2005)
The Gurgaon clashes could have been handled with more tact by the police
- Extremists Are Violating An Unwritten Pact (Deccan Herald, L K Sharma , Jul 28, 2005)
When Pakistan and Saudi Arabia start telling the UK to reform itself, it seems the allies in the war against terrorism have something to settle among themselves.
- Only Resort (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 28, 2005)
Egypt is not unacquainted with terrorist attacks. So the three coordinated explosions at Sharm el-Sheikh,
- Us Warns Customers Against Buying Iran Oil & Gas (Deccan Herald, L K Sharma , Jul 28, 2005)
Under current US policy, oil and gas producers such as Iran, Sudan, Burma and Venezuela are bad boys.
- President Kalam Reminisces (Hindu, T.S. Subramanian, Jul 28, 2005)
Twenty-five years ago, on July 18, 1980, India joined the space club with the successful flight of the 22-metre-tall, 17-tonne Satellite Launch Vehicle - 3.
- Say Mullah And You Also Say Military (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 27, 2005)
Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf's image has been shattered by the bombs.
- Double Talk On Gas Pipeline (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Dawn, Jul 27, 2005)
Insisting that there was no ‘double-speak’ from the Government on multi-billion-dollar Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline project, Indian Petroleum Minister Mani Shankar Aiyar on Monday said he met Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to explain the project.
- Explanations For Our Plight (Dawn, Mahir Ali, Jul 27, 2005)
Last Thursday, on the day that a second attempt — fortunately unsuccessful — was made to bomb London’s transport network,
- Lift Sectoral Caps To Lure Fdi, Says Us Trade To India (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 27, 2005)
The American Chamber of Commerce in India, on Tuesday, said the Centre should move ahead with reforms, prepare a proper policy framework and remove sectoral caps to encourage foreign investments.
- Turbulent Times Stare Doha Talks (Deccan Herald, D Ravi Kanth, Jul 27, 2005)
The ongoing Doha trade negotiations are going to experience severe tremors this week when members of World Trade Organisation fail to adopt a realistic blueprint that would help achieve a balanced result in the liberalisation of global trade. . .
- One Product, One Village (Dawn, Hafizur Rahman, Jul 27, 2005)
Nowadays every country of the world strives to find an international market for its produce, whether the produce is industrial or agricultural or mineral.
- Suicide Bombing Phenomenon (Dawn, Zubeida Mustafa, Jul 27, 2005)
Suicide bombers have attacked London twice in the past month. Baghdad is the scene of such attacks on practically a daily basis. Yet not much is known about suicide bombers.
- Iran And The U.S. (Hindu, Hamid Ansari, Jul 27, 2005)
An impression is gaining ground that India's American commitments seem to insist on intruding on India-Iran relations.
- Gender Budget (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Jul 27, 2005)
AN innovation introduced by the Finance Minister, Mr P. Chidambaram, in the budget last year
- Did Kargil Have An N-Dimension? (Deccan Herald, P R CHARI, Jul 27, 2005)
New questions arise with revelations of nuclear activism during the Indo-Pak Kargil conflict
- Power To All (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Jul 27, 2005)
By electrifying all the villages, the poor will be empowered
- Field Notes For Growth (Indian Express, Yoginder K. Alagh, Jul 27, 2005)
The last time we had talked of the importance of nuclear energy cooperation with the Americans and the compulsions of a trading agriculture in our global stances.
- Is Al-Qaeda Really Dismantled? (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Jul 27, 2005)
President Pervez Musharraf, in his enlightening address to a news conference in Lahore on Monday, dwelt at length on a number of crucial issues facing the country.
- Is The Iranian Gas Pipeline A Pipe-Dream Now? (Deccan Herald, N. Chandra Mohan, Jul 27, 2005)
India desperately needs Iranian gas but with the promise of US cooperation in civilian nuclear energy and a broader energy dialogue, the geo-economics of this pipeline project has changed in a trice.
- Should Doctors Accept Gifts? (Tribune, Stephen Cha, Jul 27, 2005)
When it comes to accepting gifts from the marketing reps of pharmaceutical firms, the American College of Physicians-American Society of Internal Medicine suggests that its members apply a simple litmus test:
- Do We Need The Nuclear Deal With The Us? (Rediff on the Net, Commodore Jasjit Singh (retd), Jul 26, 2005)
The new nuclear bargain means different things to different people, both here and in the United States -- a case of the elephant and the blind men!
- Ending Our Nuclear Winter (Indian Express, C. Raja Mohan, Jul 26, 2005)
As you tune into India’s great debate on the nuclear pact that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has signed up with President George W. Bush, don’t let the experts flummox you with all the jargon.
- Will East Meet West In Myanmar? (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jul 26, 2005)
No one is taking the country seriously enough
- Egyptian Forces Trade Fire In Hunt For Nine Pakistanis (Indian Express, Reuters, Jul 26, 2005)
Egyptian police exchanged fire with gunmen on Monday as they hunted for six to nine Pakistanis suspected of involvement in deadly bombings at the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh.
- Vsnl To Acquire Teleglobe (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 26, 2005)
$239 m deal to be carried out through amalgamation with a Bermuda subsidiary
- Tourists Rush To Get Out Of Egypt (Tribune, Henry Chu, Jul 26, 2005)
The Menatours travel agency was awash with customers on Sunday, but for all the wrong reasons
- Shoot To Kill (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Jul 26, 2005)
Brazil has sought explanation from the United Kingdom over killing of a Brazilian electrician by British police as a suspect in the recent terror bombings. The head of London’s police expressed regrets for the action but at the same time he also. . .
- Koreans Hold Parleys Ahead Of Six-Party Talks (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 26, 2005)
No time limit has been set
- Friend In Dire Need (Telegraph, Malvika Singh, Jul 26, 2005)
The prime minister in Washington, the pomp and circumstance, the Americans bending over backwards wanting a friend in the extended geopolitical region where India sits,
- New Delhi And Washington Grow Closer (Japan Times, B. GAUTAM, Jul 26, 2005)
Madras India -- It seems that India and the United States are finally on the same side.
- Parliament Off To An Auspicious Start (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 26, 2005)
Speaker could not wish for a better birthday present than a promise of an orderly, business-like session
- State Terrorism By Another Name (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 26, 2005)
London or Kashmir, there is something uncivilised about a policing system that, in the name of nation, queen, democracy or whatever,
- Prospects Of Us-Iran Detente (Dawn, Ghayoor Ahmed, Jul 26, 2005)
It is reassuring that despite US President George Bush’s uncharitable remarks about him and questioning the legitimacy of his election,
- The Fault Lies Elsewhere (Dawn, Kaiser Bengali, Jul 26, 2005)
Addressing the nation in the aftermath of the London bombings, General Musharraf has rightly said that England too needs to do more to deal with the problem at hand.
- The Dangerous Dichotomy (Dawn, Robert Fisk, Jul 26, 2005)
That fine French historian of the 1914-18 world conflict, Stephane Audoin-Rouzeau, suggested not long ago that the West was the inheritor of a type of warfare of very great violence.
- Bihar Nda Mlas Have Made Out A Case: Sc (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 26, 2005)
The court has given three weeks’ time to Bihar Governor and the Centre to file their responses.
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