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Articles 121 through 220 of 500:
- 440 Changes Proposed In Report On Kashmir (Dawn, Correspondent or Reporter, Jan 13, 2007)
A record number of 440 amendments have been moved in the Baroness Emma Nicholson’s report on Kashmir which she had prepared on behalf of the European Union Foreign Affairs Committee.
- Ulfa And The Liberal Dilemma (Hindu, Harish Khare , Jan 12, 2007)
The latest dose of terror administered by the United Liberation Front of Asom is based on realpolitik calculations. The Centre should be in no hurry to dignify violence and death by indulging the outfit in any kind of dialogue.
- After Saddam (Statesman, Editorial, Statesman, Jan 10, 2007)
It is said that those whom the Gods wish to destroy they first make mad. But does this hold true if there is diabolical method in the madness?
- Army Opposes Demilitarisation, Joint Management (Hindustan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Jan 09, 2007)
Ahead of External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee’s maiden visit to Pakistan, the Indian Army has outright rejected any suggestion of demilitarisation of Jammu and Kashmir, saying such a step would be "fatal" in the given terrorism - hit situation . . .
- R.K. Raghavan: Case For Gun Control (Dawn, R. K. Raghavan , Jan 04, 2007)
In the unprecedented coverage of two recent judgments, the media missed an opportunity to draw attention to the perils of a growing gun culture.
- Winds Of Hope In Up (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jan 04, 2007)
The BJP’s good showing in the mayoral elections in UP has suddenly changed the atmospherics not just in the party but also in the Sangh Parivar and the pages of the Organiser reflect this new buoyancy.
- Pak May Hand Me Over To India: Salahuddin (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 27, 2006)
Chief of the Muzaffarabad-based United Jehad Council Syed Salahuddin, has fears that Pakistan may hand him over to the Government of India.
- Authentic Information, Nothing Left To Imagination (Statesman, Editorial, Statesman, Dec 25, 2006)
Sir, ~ I am thankful to Sankar Prasad Kundu (letter, 6 November) Dibyendu Nath Mitra and Subir Kumar Ghosh (letter, 18 November) for the interest they have taken in my letter (31 October).
- Kashmir Peace Dividends (British Broadcasting Corporation, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 23, 2006)
Three years after India and Pakistan declared a ceasefire along the Line of Control that divides the disputed region of Kashmir, life has changed for the better for the people of the border village of Makri.
- Border Villages Enjoy Peace (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Dec 22, 2006)
Makri is surrounded on three sides by Pakistan. After the ceasefire the people are slowly moving on.
- Treading Through A Minefield (Frontline, PRAVEEN SWAMI, Dec 21, 2006)
As the peace process gathers momentum, new challenges become apparent.
- Protests Galore On Human Rights Day (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 11, 2006)
Protest marches and seminars marked World Human Rights Day today while the police held more than 50 protesters preventing them from marching to the office of the UNMOGIP to submit memoranda seeking an end to the alleged human rights violations in Kashmir.
- A Step Closer To Consensus (Frontline, A.G. NOORANI, Dec 11, 2006)
General Pervez Musharraf has imparted to Pakistan's Kashmir policy a dose of stark realism.
- A Step Closer To Consensus (Frontline, A.G. NOORANI, Dec 10, 2006)
Every leader of Pakistan left his own distinctive imprint on the Kashmir dispute. It was Ayub Khan who courageously made a break from the past.
- Lashker, Jaish Expand Terror Network To B’Desh, Nepal (The Economic Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 07, 2006)
Pakistan-backed terrorist groups Lashker e Taiba and Jaish e Mohammed are using territory and elements in Bangladesh and Nepal for movement of terrorists and finances, according to a status paper on internal security presented in Parliament.
- United Jihad Council Attacks Musharraf Peace Offer (Hindu, PRAVEEN SWAMI, Dec 07, 2006)
Dubs four-point charter a "unilateral concession"
Says no compromise on Kashmiri self-determination
Insists on Pakistan-based terror coalition
- Musharraf Raises Peace Hopes (Times Online (UK), Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 06, 2006)
President Musharraf offered yesterday to abandon Pakistan’s longstanding claim to the disputed region of Kashmir, which has caused three wars since 1947, and to supervise it jointly with India.
- Hurriyat May Be Invited For Talks (Hindu, PRAVEEN SWAMI, Dec 02, 2006)
APHC reaches out to New Delhi with `self-rule' proposal
New Delhi's change of heart follows dramatic new offer by Hurriyat It seeks debate over self-governance at people's level.
- Lashker, Jaish Expand Terror Network To B’Desh, Nepal (The Economic Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 02, 2006)
Pakistan-backed terrorist groups Lashker e Taiba and Jaish e Mohammed are using territory and elements in Bangladesh and Nepal for movement of terrorists and finances, according to a status paper on internal security presented in Parliament.
- Hurriyat Has Own J-K Solution, Out Of India, Pak Constitutions (Indian Express, RIYAZ WANI, Dec 01, 2006)
Feeling overtaken by the mainstream National Conference (NC) and the PDP who have been advancing their own respective political formulae for the resolution of Kashmir, Hurriyat moderates today came out to defend and define their own version of . . .
- United Jihad Council Backs Down On Ceasefire Offer (Hindu, PRAVEEN SWAMI, Dec 01, 2006)
Spokesperson for terror coalition shatters hopes of winter truce in J&K
"Hizb chief did not make the offer"
Geelani rejects Shah's call
- Lashker, Jaish Expand Terror Network To B’Desh, Nepal (The Economic Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Dec 01, 2006)
Pakistan-backed terrorist groups Lashker e Taiba and Jaish e Mohammed are using territory and elements in Bangladesh and Nepal for movement of terrorists and finances, according to a status paper on internal security presented in Parliament.
- Top Hizb Commander Killed In Kashmir (Hindu, PRAVEEN SWAMI, Nov 29, 2006)
Key player in secret negotiations to put a ceasefire in place
Second in Hizb hierarchy
Commanded high-profile car-bombings.
- War And Peace-Making In Kashmir (Hindu, PRAVEEN SWAMI, Nov 29, 2006)
Even as Hizb-ul-Mujahideen commander Mohammad Ashraf Shah led a grim war against India in which hundreds were killed, he was a key player in a secret search for peace.
- Hizb Chief’S Terms For Ceasefire (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Nov 29, 2006)
Syed Salahuddin, supreme commander of Hizbul Mujahideen and chief of the PoK-based United Jehad Council, has offered conditional ceasefire in Jammu and Kashmir.
- Hizb 'Commander' Killed (WhatIsIndia Publications, Aravind Sitaraman, Nov 29, 2006)
Security forces killed the 'commander' of the Hizb-ul-Mujahideen's South Kashmir division Mohammad Ashraf Shah who is ranked 2nd in Hizb's hierarchy and earned a reputation of clever and ruthless terrorist who also tried facilitating a ceasefire.
- Hizb ‘Commander’ Killed (World Socialist Web Site, Correspondent or Reporter, Nov 29, 2006)
Security forces killed the 'commander' of the Hizb-ul-Mujahideen's South Kashmir division Mohammad Ashraf Shah who is ranked 2nd in Hizb's hierarchy and earned a reputation of clever and ruthless terrorist who also tried facilitating a ceasefire.
- Ceasefire Completes Three Years (Tribune, S.P.Sharma, Nov 23, 2006)
Villages on the border of Jammu and Kashmir are humming with normal activity as the ceasefire between India and Pakistan completes three years. However, infiltration of terrorists from the Pakistani soil has not stopped.
- Hu Supports Better India, Pakistan Relations (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Nov 23, 2006)
Visiting Chinese President Hu Jintao said on Wednesday that his country welcomed improving relations between rivals India and Pakistan.
- Let Threat To Nuclear Plants (Hindustan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Nov 23, 2006)
The Indo-US nuclear agreement has made the country’s atomic power plants "highly vulnerable" to terror threats, Home Minister Shivraj Patil told India’s police chiefs on Wednesday.
- Indian Forces Kill 8 Kashmiri Fighters (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Nov 16, 2006)
Eight suspected Islamic militants were shot dead by troops in Indian-held Kashmir on Wednesday in gunbattles, police said. Seven of the militants were killed in three gunbattles in northern Kashmir along the heavily-militarised ceasefire line that . . .
- Stand At Ease (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Nov 14, 2006)
It's entirely inappropriate for an army commander in Siachen to advise journalists that a withdrawal from the glacier will render Indian defences weak.
- India Bullish On Disputed Glacier (British Broadcasting Corporation, Correspondent or Reporter, Nov 13, 2006)
India maintains Siachen is of strategic value
India's army has ruled out a compromise with Pakistan over the disputed Siachen glacier, days before a new round of talks between the two countries.
- Toy Bomb Kills Five Children In Ajk Village (Dawn, TARIQ NAQASH, Nov 11, 2006)
Five minor girls were killed in a remote border village of Azad Kashmir when a small bomb they were playing with went off, police said on Friday.
- First Impression (Hindu, Suchitra Behal, Nov 07, 2006)
Remember the adage: "Oh what a tangled web we weave; when first we practise to deceive".
- Special Article (Statesman, Sumer Kaul, Nov 03, 2006)
As I see live pictures on TV of yet another dance of death in Srinagar, my mind goes down memory lane, for the nth time.
- Azad’S Report Card: But Where’S The Politics? (Indian Express, Muzamil Jaleel, Nov 02, 2006)
After one year as J&K CM, Ghulam Nabi Azad comes across only as an efficient administrator. His tenure has seen a weakening of the Indo-Pak peace process
- Yesterday Once More (Hindustan Times, Editorial, HindustanTimes, Oct 31, 2006)
Not surprisingly, the latest round of talks between India and the National Socialist Council of Nagalim (Isaac-Muivah) have ended without a breakthrough.
- Pak Promised To Fight Terror, Took Several Billion Dollars From Us (Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 30, 2006)
Pakistan has received billions of dollars in reimbursement for its support of US-led counter-terrorism operations, while US Congress has appropriated billions of dollars to pay Pakistan for its support.
- Staying The Course In Kashmir (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 28, 2006)
For decades, Indian policy-making on Jammu and Kashmir has consisted of doing the same things again and again — and hoping they will somehow have a different outcome.
- Kargil Red-Hot Again (Hindu, Nirupama Subramanian , Oct 26, 2006)
The renewed controversy over the 1999 operation spurs demands for an enquiry commission.
- Nc Pulls Out Of Working Groups (Hindu, PRAVEEN SWAMI, Oct 26, 2006)
Renewed contact with secessionists behind decision?
- Losing & Winning (Times of India, Lalit Mohan, Oct 24, 2006)
In his memoirs Pervez Musharraf has added his two bits to the debate on the outcome of the 1965 conflict between India and Pakistan.
- The Truth About The Kargil Episode (Dawn, Shamshad Ahmad, Oct 15, 2006)
We now have two clearly delineated and mutually dismissive versions of the Kargil episode — a controversial as well as painful saga of our history.
- Pakistanis Mourn On Quake Anniversary (Reuters, Kamran Haider, Oct 09, 2006)
Pakistan united in mourning on Sunday in memory of about 73,000 people killed in an earthquake exactly a year ago, while survivors vented frustration over the pace of reconstruction.
- Mirwaiz Frustrated With Indian Inflexibility On Kashmir (Daily Times, Khalid Hasan, Oct 06, 2006)
Mirwaiz Umer Farooq, head of the All Parties Hurriyat Conference, has expressed frustration with the lack of movement on Kashmir in New Delhi as compared with the “flexibility” shown by President Pervez Musharraf.
- Mufti Heads Non-Official Team To Unga (Indian Express, Neerja Chowdhury, Oct 03, 2006)
Former J&K CM Mufti Mohammed Sayeed will lead the non-official delegation from India to the UN General Assembly this year. The delegation includes Congress MP Rahul Gandhi, who is already in the US.
- Musharraf’S Kargil Account Wrong: Aziz (Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 03, 2006)
Rejecting President Pervez Musharraf’s claims on Kargil, Pakistan’s former foreign minister Sartaj Aziz has said the conflict disrupted the Lahore peace process.
- No Change (Daily Excelsior, Editorial, Dailyexcelsior, Oct 03, 2006)
It is unfortunate that the latest assertion of Hizbul Mujahideen supremo Syed Salahuddin eliminates the possibility of truce now or later.
- Gandhigiri, Mamu! (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Sep 29, 2006)
The talk of a ‘Ramazan ceasefire’ in J&K struck a chord with none of the interested parties. Yet it has threatened to open up some deliciously interesting possibilities.
- Hizb Under Pak Pressure To Declare Ceasefire (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 29, 2006)
Hizbul Mujahideen chief Syed Salahuddin is under pressure from Pakistan for declaring ceasefire in Jammu and Kashmir, but he has developed cold feet following the resentment shown by other constituents of Muzaffarabad-based United Jehad Council, . ..
- Facing The Truth (Frontline, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 28, 2006)
Pakistan has solved its border problem with China, but India is caught in a prolonged dispute.
- 'No Signs Of Qaeda Activity In J&k' (Pioneer, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 28, 2006)
Recent recovery of propaganda in the form of CDs, showcasing activities of al Qaeda operatives in unidentified training camps, from the twin border districts of Rajouri and Poonch in Jammu and Kashmir may have created ripples within the State . . .
- Hardcore Ultras Massing In N Kashmir Hideouts (Pioneer, Rahul Datta, Sep 28, 2006)
India may have given the benefit of doubt to Pakistan by agreeing to set up a joint mechanism on terrorism in Havana, but security and intelligence reports reveal that highly trained militant groups from Pakistan had been crossing the Line of . . .
- Pretexts, Provocations And Consequences (Dawn, Mahir Ali, Sep 28, 2006)
When a series of bomb blasts ripped through seven commuter trains, causing mayhem in Mumbai nine days ago, it was hardly surprising that suspicion immediately fell on Islamist militants, with Lashkar-i-Taiba becoming the main focus of attention on . . .
- Trial By Fire (Tribune, Gen V.P. Malik (retd), Sep 27, 2006)
I have confronted death and defied it several times in the past because destiny and fate have always smiled on me.” “… unlike most leaders, I am also a soldier, Chief of the Army Staff and Supreme Commander of my . . .
- Musharraf Airs Doubt Over Singh In Memoir (Reuters, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 26, 2006)
In a book released just over week after agreeing with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to resume a stalled peace process, Pakistan's President Pervez Musharraf described his fears that the Indian leader had fallen under the influence of New Delhi's old guard
- General Admits: Pak Army Fought Kargil, Aq Khan Helped Iran (Indian Express, Pranab Dhal Samanta, Sep 26, 2006)
There may still be differences over the extent to which Pakistani regulars were involved in the Kargil conflict but for the first time in seven years Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf has admitted — in an effusive tone — that the Pakistan Army . . .
- Musharraf And The Truth About Kargil (Hindu, PRAVEEN SWAMI, Sep 25, 2006)
General Musharraf's account of the Kargil war is a feisty defence of Pakistan's military — but sits ill with well-established facts.
- "Joint Mechanism To Test Pakistan" (Hindu, K.V. Prasad, Sep 25, 2006)
"There is trust deficit in relations, but things cannot stand still"
- Centre Ready To Discuss All Issues With J&k People: Pm (Daily Excelsior, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 25, 2006)
Noting that there had been a "trust deficit" between India and Pakistan, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh today said the two countries have to find ways and means to tackle their problems including terrorism.
- Hizb Under Pak Pressure To Declare Ceasefire (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 25, 2006)
Hizbul Mujahideen chief Syed Salahuddin is under pressure from Pakistan for declaring ceasefire in Jammu and Kashmir, but he has developed cold feet following the resentment shown by other constituents of Muzaffarabad-based United Jehad Council, . . .
- Infiltration Down, But Violence Continuing In Ihk: Indian Army (Daily Times, Iftikhar Gilani, Sep 22, 2006)
The Indian Army has admitted that infiltration has gone down in Jammu and Kashmir over the past few months, but says there has been no let up in violence.
- Security Forces Against Ceasefire (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 22, 2006)
Top officers of the security forces fighting terrorism in Jammu and Kashmir are not in favour of the government announcing ceasefire with ultras during the holy month of Ramzan.
- Is India Compromising Dangerously On Terror? (Business Line, G. Parthasarathy, Sep 22, 2006)
There are some in India who appear eager to let the Pakistani President, Gen Pervez Musharraf, off the hook, by agreeing that he has no control over the terror infrastructure in Pakistan and PoK.
- Compromises In Havana (Pioneer, G Parthasarathy, Sep 21, 2006)
Speaking to a cheering audience primarily of his supporters from Pakistan and Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir on September 12 in Brussels, an impassioned General Pervez Musharraf thundered: "Kashmir runs in the blood of every Pakistani."
- Is It Too Much To Hope? (Daily Excelsior, Editorial, Daily Excelsior, Sep 21, 2006)
Will Pakistan be sincere enough in setting up an anti-terrorism institutional mechanism along with India? More importantly, will it allow such a joint apparatus to work efficiently and smoothly?
- No Ceasefire Until Conditions Are Met: Hizb (Hindu, Nirupama Subramanian , Sep 21, 2006)
"Unless there is a result on Kashmir... all these meetings [Manmohan-Musharraf] are meaningless"
- Dangerous Compromises (Tribune, G. Parthasarathy, Sep 21, 2006)
Speaking to a cheering audience primarily of his supporters from Pakistan and Pakistan Occupied Kashmir on September 12 in Brussels, an impassioned General Musharraf thundered: “Kashmir runs in the blood of every Pakistani”. . . .
- The Show Must Carry On (Daily Excelsior, Editorial, Daily Excelsior, Sep 18, 2006)
It is a matter of relief that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf have met on the sidelines of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) summit in Havana.
- Manmohan Carries Kashmir Brief For Musharraf (Dawn, Jawed Naqvi, Sep 15, 2006)
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh will be carrying the support, and some key suggestions, of Kashmiri leaders when he meets President Gen. Pervez Musharraf in Havana on Friday, informed sources said on Thursday.
- Ceasefire Proposed In Kashmir (Dawn, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 14, 2006)
The chief minister of Jammu and Kashmir has suggested that a ceasefire be observed by militants and security forces in the disputed state during Ramzan, the Indian Express reported on Wednesday.
- Our Men In Havana (Indian Express, C. Raja Mohan, Sep 14, 2006)
It would seem a pity that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has to travel half way round the world to meet Pakistan’s President Pervez Musharraf. But look at it differently; isn’t it better that the two leaders see each other in Havana than not at all?
- Towards A Doctrine For Internal Security (Hindu, Harish Khare , Sep 14, 2006)
There is a notion that all it takes is sturdy political will for the Indian state to defeat the increasingly lethal non-state actors. The result is ignorance about the nature of internal disorder.
- A Kashmir Ceasefire? (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Sep 14, 2006)
Tuesday's call by the Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad for a ceasefire between the security forces and the Kashmiri militants could not have come at a more appropriate moment.
- Cm’S Response To Militants’ Ceasefire During (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 14, 2006)
While mainstream political parties have hailed the Chief Minister’s offer of a positive response to any ceasefire by militants during Ramadan, the separatist political and militant organisations have expressed reservations over the issue.
- Manmohan Singh To Raise Issue Of Support For Terrorism With Musharraf (Hindu, N. Ravi, Sep 13, 2006)
"I cannot carry Indian public opinion with me if terrorist acts continue to plague our polity"
- Ramzan Truce On The Cards In J&k (Statesman, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 13, 2006)
If one believes the buzz in Kashmir political circles, then a Ramzan truce is on the cards in the violence-hit state of Jammu and Kashmir.
- Mine Blast Kills Policeman In Kashmir (Dawn, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 12, 2006)
An Indian policeman was killed and his colleague hurt when Muslim rebels set off a landmine in occupied Kashmir, police said on Monday. The explosion took place late on Sunday when militants targeted a police patrol in the southern district of . . .
- Azad Offers Conditional Ceasefire In Held Kashmir (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 12, 2006)
Indian-occupied Kashmir Chief Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad has offered a conditional ceasefire in the valley during the upcoming month of Ramazan.
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