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Articles 21121 through 21220 of 21784:
- Musharraf And Cross-Border Terrorism (Pioneer, Hiranmay Karlekar, Jan 11, 2002)
How much can India rely on President Pervez Musharraf ending the proxy war through cross-border terrorism that Pakistan has been waging against it for over two decades?
- Other Side Of Palestine (Pioneer, Ashok Patnaik, Jan 11, 2002)
N Jamal Ansari's 'Zionist ideology behind it all' (Second Opinion, December 22, 2001) would serve as a hot meal for any hungry semi-literate this winter.
- 'Heads I Win, Tails You Lose' (Pioneer, M L Kotru, Jan 11, 2002)
If terrorism be terrorism, how come terrorism against the US is to be accepted as more heinous than terrorism against India?
- The Makings Of A Police State? (Hindu, Rajeev Dhavan , Jan 11, 2002)
The BJP-led coalition is converting India into a police state in which legislation bypasses Parliament and targets ordinary citizens.
- Plums For Mps, Peanuts For Police (Pioneer, Shibani Dasgupta, Jan 10, 2002)
The scars on the Indian psyche following the terrorist attack on Parliament House are still raw.
- Backfooted General (Pioneer, Anil Narendra, Jan 10, 2002)
Looking back at the track record of General Pervez Musharraf, it is difficult to trust him. Under pressure, he can say or do anything.
- Imagining History (Indian Express, Mushirul Hasan, Jan 10, 2002)
In the second half of the 19th century, textbook transmission formed but one facet of the wider significance of print culture.
- ‘Pak’s Moves Are Based On Supposed Assurances From Uk Govt’ (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jan 10, 2002)
British generals in India and Pakistan maintained informal channels of communication on Kashmir developments.
- Growing Ties (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jan 10, 2002)
Israel's Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Shimon Peres' visit to India-the third in the space of a year-underlines the warmth and understanding characterising India-Israel relations.
- Free Trade Still A Long Way Off (Hindu, K. K. Katyal , Jan 10, 2002)
`Regional cooperation remains only on hoardings' - this headline of a despatch on the SAARC's record in a Nepalese daily, The Kathmandu Post, may be too harsh a commentary on the working of a grouping which has several in-built handicaps.
- Free Trade Still A Long Way Off (Hindu, K. K. Katyal , Jan 10, 2002)
`Regional cooperation remains only on hoardings' - this headline of a despatch on the SAARC's record in a Nepalese daily, The Kathmandu Post, may be too harsh a commentary on the working of a grouping which has several in-built handicaps.
- Super B-Schools (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Jan 10, 2002)
Business India and AIMA have a list of India's best business schools for 2001.
- Remember Syed Tahir Hussain? (Indian Express, Manoj Mitta, Jan 10, 2002)
In the welter of statements made on India’s list of 20 wanted terrorists, it is significant that the Pakistan President, General Pervez Musharraf, has so far not agreed — not even in principle — to consider the option of extradition.
- Super B-Schools (Business Line, L. Jayarangan, Jan 10, 2002)
Business India and AIMA have a list of India's best business schools for 2001.
- Making Inroads (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jan 10, 2002)
The recent visit of the Chinese president, Jiang Zemin, to Myanmar has gone almost unnoticed by the Indian media.
- Smiles And Handshakes (Telegraph, SHAM LAL , Jan 10, 2002)
Pervez Musharraf is as smart at staging public relations coups as at masterminding seizure of power from an elected government in his country.
- Baker’s Attitude Can’t But Prejudice Indo-Uk Relations: Nehru (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jan 09, 2002)
The first of a two-part series from War and Diplomacy in Kashmir 1947-48 by India’s former Ambassador to China and the EU, C DASGUPTA
- An Epistle To Mr Advani (Telegraph, K.P. NAYAR , Jan 09, 2002)
Dear Advaniji,
You have begun what is unquestionably the most profound and consequential interaction between our country and the United States of America.
- No Truck With The Ltte (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jan 09, 2002)
THE STRENUOUS ATTEMPT by or on behalf of the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) to secure a new foothold within India's territory for the ostensible purposes of a ``direct dialogue'' with Sri Lanka is neither innocuous nor simply stupid.
- The Opportunity In Kashmir (Hindu, Harish Khare , Jan 09, 2002)
It is now for the Hurriyat Conference leaders to prove their democratic credentials in a democratic contest (the Assembly elections due in seven months) under the watchful international eye.
- Slipshod Indian Diplomacy (Hindu, Inder Malhotra, Jan 09, 2002)
Handshakes - or lack of them - have been leaving their imprint on diplomacy long before the SAARC summit at Kathmandu.
- The Opportunity In Kashmir (Hindu, Harish Khare , Jan 09, 2002)
It is now for the Hurriyat Conference leaders to prove their democratic credentials in a democratic contest (the Assembly elections due in seven months) under the watchful international eye.
- Despondency Before And After (Hindu, K. K. Katyal , Jan 09, 2002)
On the face of it, bracketing Agra and Kathmandu may not be proper, but there is a connecting link because of which a comparative analysis is in order.
- Handshake Or Crossing Of Swords? (Business Line, Rasheeda Bhagat , Jan 09, 2002)
ONCE again it is time for the media, and through it, the nation to interpret the body language, or rather, the handshakes of the Prime Minister, Mr Atal Bihari Vajpayeee, and the Pakistani President, Gen Pervez Musharraf.
- Dse Clean-Up Drive Opens Pandora's Box (Business Line, Ambarish Mukherjee, Jan 09, 2002)
THE Delhi Stock Exchange's (DSE) latest bid to cleanse the bourse of companies which have not complied with the listing agreements has thrown up a list of who's who of troubled industrial groups in the country.
- Relevance Of Gadgil's Economics (Business Line, P. R. Brahmananda , Jan 09, 2002)
Indian economics has a rich tradition. Even economists such as Lewis and Nurkse had recognised that the Indian scene had specificities and heterogeneities in its geographical, historical, political, economic and social settings.
- Handshake Or Crossing Of Swords? (Business Line, Rasheeda Bhagat , Jan 09, 2002)
ONCE again it is time for the media, and through it, the nation to interpret the body language, or rather, the handshakes of the Prime Minister, Mr Atal Bihari Vajpayeee, and the Pakistani President, Gen Pervez Musharraf.
- Slipshod Indian Diplomacy (Hindu, Inder Malhotra, Jan 09, 2002)
Handshakes - or lack of them - have been leaving their imprint on diplomacy long before the SAARC summit at Kathmandu.
- No Truck With The Ltte (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jan 09, 2002)
THE STRENUOUS ATTEMPT by or on behalf of the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) to secure a new foothold within India's territory for the ostensible purposes of a ``direct dialogue'' with Sri Lanka is neither innocuous nor simply stupid.
- Despondency Before And After (Hindu, K. K. Katyal , Jan 09, 2002)
On the face of it, bracketing Agra and Kathmandu may not be proper, but there is a connecting link because of which a comparative analysis is in order.
- Relevance Of Gadgil's Economics (Business Line, P. R. Brahmananda , Jan 09, 2002)
Indian economics has a rich tradition. Even economists such as Lewis and Nurkse had recognised that the Indian scene had specificities and heterogeneities in its geographical, historical, political, economic and social settings.
- A Hand Of Friendship And After (Hindu, K. K. Katyal , Jan 08, 2002)
KATHMANDU, JAN. 7. That the India-Pakistan tensions would dominate last week's SAARC summit was expected but what form it would take was not clear.
- The Bjp's Game Plan In U.P. (Hindu, Zoya Hasan, Jan 08, 2002)
The intertwined issue of temple and terror is designed to redirect the electorate's attentions from the problems of governance and economic development.
- The Bjp's Game Plan In U.P. (Hindu, Zoya Hasan, Jan 08, 2002)
The intertwined issue of temple and terror is designed to redirect the electorate's attentions from the problems of governance and economic development.
- Entangled In Steel (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Jan 08, 2002)
IT IS PERTINENT to ask if financial institutions did their home work properly when they decided in mid-2001 to take over the management of debt-ridden Malavika Steels and Bellary Steels and rescue the half-finished projects in which the FIs had sunk.
- Terrorism: The Two Faces Of Us (Business Line, B. Raman , Jan 08, 2002)
IN THE early 1980s, Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) had handed over to a group of Sikh terrorists, who had hijacked a plane of the Indian Airlines (IAC).
- An Anti-Terror Dialogue (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jan 08, 2002)
THE PRIME MINISTER of the United Kingdom, Tony Blair, may have hoped to exert a ``calming influence'' on India and Pakistan so as to encourage them to pull back from the brink in their latest confrontation.
- An Anti-Terror Dialogue (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jan 08, 2002)
THE PRIME MINISTER of the United Kingdom, Tony Blair, may have hoped to exert a ``calming influence'' on India and Pakistan so as to encourage them to pull back from the brink in their latest confrontation.
- A Hand Of Friendship And After (Hindu, K. K. Katyal , Jan 08, 2002)
KATHMANDU, JAN. 7. That the India-Pakistan tensions would dominate last week's SAARC summit was expected but what form it would take was not clear.
- Entangled In Steel (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Jan 08, 2002)
IT IS PERTINENT to ask if financial institutions did their home work properly when they decided in mid-2001 to take over the management of debt-ridden Malavika Steels and Bellary Steels and rescue the half-finished projects in which the FIs had sunk.
- Us Afghan Envoy To Land In Delhi (Indian Express, Jyoti Malhotra, Jan 08, 2002)
President George Bush will be sending his special assistant to South-West Asia and Middle East and envoy to Afghanistan, Zalmay Khalilzad, to New Delhi on January 16-17.
- Frozen Frame (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jan 08, 2002)
It is too early to say if the tension between India and Pakistan has been reduced after the recent summit of the south Asian association for regional cooperation at Kathmandu.
- Terrorism: The Two Faces Of Us (Business Line, B. Raman , Jan 08, 2002)
IN THE early 1980s, Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) had handed over to a group of Sikh terrorists, who had hijacked a plane of the Indian Airlines (IAC).
- Tax Consumption, Not Income (Indian Express, Bharat Jhunjhunwala, Jan 08, 2002)
Finance Minister Yashwant Sinha believes in increasing income tax because that is more equitable.
- Attack On Parliament (Business Line, Subhash Chandra Agrawal, Jan 08, 2002)
The terrorist attack on Parliament was also partially due to the craze of MPs and VVIPs to show off. This includes using the red light on their cars and bypassing metal-detectors.
- ‘Our Know-How About Lca Avionics Is Very High, We Don’t Need Outside Help’ (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jan 07, 2002)
The US-led war on Afghanistan has once again proven the importance of air power in modern warfare.
- Complexities, Contradictions (Hindu, K. K. Katyal , Jan 07, 2002)
KATHMANDU, JAN. 6. The heights of Nepal provide a perfect view of the political panorama of South Asia, with all its details - its charming characteristics as also its complexities and contradictions.
- Us-64 Nav-Repurchase Price Difference -- Budgetary Grant For Uti To Bridge Gap (Business Line, Shaji Vikraman , Jan 07, 2002)
The bail-out cost to the Government for the next fiscal could work out to around Rs 6,400 crore, assuming that the net asset value of US-64 stays at the current level of Rs 6.21 in May 2003.
- Complexities, Contradictions (Hindu, K. K. Katyal , Jan 07, 2002)
KATHMANDU, JAN. 6. The heights of Nepal provide a perfect view of the political panorama of South Asia, with all its details - its charming characteristics as also its complexities and contradictions.
- Questions About Merit And Social Justice (Hindu, C. V. Gopalakrishnan , Jan 06, 2002)
THIRUVANANTHAPURAM, JAN. 5. The denunciation by the Nobel Laureate, Amartya Sen, in Kolkata, of the moves made by the Centre to impart religious values as part of primary education is prompted by the emphasis.
- Questions About Merit And Social Justice (Hindu, C. V. Gopalakrishnan , Jan 06, 2002)
THIRUVANANTHAPURAM, JAN. 5. The denunciation by the Nobel Laureate, Amartya Sen, in Kolkata, of the moves made by the Centre to impart religious values as part of primary education is prompted by the emphasis.
- Appropriate Expectations (Business Line, T. C. A. Ramanujam, Jan 05, 2002)
IT IS Budget time once again. Chambers of commerce and captains of industry have, as usual, begun lobbying for relief, rebates and concessions through amendment in the annual Finance Bill.
- The Many Faces Of `Restraint' (Business Line, Ranabir Ray Choudhury , Jan 05, 2002)
THE Prime Minister, Mr Atal Bihari Vajpayee has played his diplomatic cards so deftly that Pakistan is now feeling the heat of international diplomatic opinion vis-a-vis its Kashmir policy.
- Bharti To Join The Cellular Brandwagon In Mumbai (Business Line, Kripa Raman, Jan 05, 2002)
WHILE the fourth cellular operators have started the spadework for launching services in their respective circles, one question that plagues the Mumbai user is how many brands will the metropolis eventually have?
- All Houses Are Not Equal (Business Line, S. Murlidharan , Jan 05, 2002)
AS IT is, there is a uniform tax-free limit of Rs 50,000 applicable across the board to, among others, all individuals.
- All Houses Are Not Equal (Business Line, S. Murlidharan , Jan 05, 2002)
AS IT is, there is a uniform tax-free limit of Rs 50,000 applicable across the board to, among others, all individuals.
- The Region And The World (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jan 05, 2002)
For many decades, regional integration was viewed as a panacea.
- An Unconventional Meeting (Telegraph, Khushwant Singh, Jan 05, 2002)
I have attended many writers conferences in different parts of the world: Phillipines, England, Scotland, the United States of America and India.
- The Business Of Saarc (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Jan 05, 2002)
KATHMANDU, JAN. 4. Will the business of SAARC ever become business?
- National Trust: Giving The Disabled A Sense Of Belonging (The Financial Express, S. Rohini, Jan 05, 2002)
The disabled population in the country as per a rough estimate is around 3 per cent.
- Highlighting India's Case (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jan 05, 2002)
INDIA'S COMPELLING CASE about a systematic terrorist threat to its national interest is being unnecessarily undermined by the unseemly and wholly avoidable controversy involving Pakistan over the question of supportive evidence.
- The Business Of Saarc (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Jan 05, 2002)
KATHMANDU, JAN. 4. Will the business of SAARC ever become business?
- Highlighting India's Case (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jan 05, 2002)
INDIA'S COMPELLING CASE about a systematic terrorist threat to its national interest is being unnecessarily undermined by the unseemly and wholly avoidable controversy involving Pakistan over the question of supportive evidence.
- Stridency For The Hustings (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jan 04, 2002)
THE BELLICOSE TENOR of the Prime Minister, Atal Behari Vajpayee's speech laced heavily with jingoistic flourishes at Lucknow on Wednesday is in sharp contrast to the sense of sobriety.
- Transparent Dishonesty (Telegraph, ASHOK MITRA , Jan 04, 2002)
The unsinkable Molly Brown, please move over. You have competition, the defence minister of India has proved himself equally unsinkable.
- Talking Storms (Business Line, Timeri N. Murari , Jan 04, 2002)
IT was Chairman Mao who said: `Walk softly and carry a big stick.' Had he been an Indian, he would have said: `Talk softly and carry a big stick.'
- Talking Storms (Business Line, Timeri N. Murari , Jan 04, 2002)
IT was Chairman Mao who said: `Walk softly and carry a big stick.' Had he been an Indian, he would have said: `Talk softly and carry a big stick.' There is a big difference between the two sayings.
- Stridency For The Hustings (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jan 04, 2002)
THE BELLICOSE TENOR of the Prime Minister, Atal Behari Vajpayee's speech laced heavily with jingoistic flourishes at Lucknow on Wednesday is in sharp contrast to the sense of sobriety.
- Now You See It, Now You Don’t (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jan 04, 2002)
THAT Kabul has become a common dateline creates the illusion that it has become accessible. It has not. An Indian reporter’s journey to Kabul has all the trimmings of surrealistic drama.
- The Partition Debate - Ii (Hindu, Mushirul Hasan, Jan 03, 2002)
As a metaphor, an event and memory, Partition has to be interpreted and explained afresh to remove widely-held misconceptions.
- India-Pakistan Face-Off -- Testing Time For Sagacious Leadership (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Jan 03, 2002)
By a process of elimination, what is left as the only abiding solution is to come to terms with Pakistan with a sense of realism and constructive engagement.
- India-Pakistan Face-Off -- Testing Time For Sagacious Leadership (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Jan 03, 2002)
By a process of elimination, what is left as the only abiding solution is to come to terms with Pakistan with a sense of realism and constructive engagement.
- Shadows Over The Summit (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Jan 03, 2002)
KATHMANDU, JAN. 2. There is more than one shadow hanging over the summit of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) under way here.
- A Perfect Counterfoil (Indian Express, Renuka Narayanan, Jan 03, 2002)
It seems highly presumptuous to write of a woman with whom one had the slenderest of acquaintances.
- Saarc: A Slow Boat To Nowhere? (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Jan 03, 2002)
Without India's leadership, SAARC will continue to drift aimlessly.
- Stable Friends (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jan 03, 2002)
Even contrarians will concede that there are few relationships that are as critical for India today as the one with the United States of America.
- Independent Thinking (Telegraph, Chandrashekar Dasgupta, Jan 03, 2002)
Is non-alignment still relevant after the end of the Cold War? When the United States of America launched the war against al Qaida and its taliban patrons, a debate erupted in India over the principle and practice of non-alignment.
- A Perfect Counterfoil (Indian Express, Renuka Narayanan, Jan 03, 2002)
It seems highly presumptuous to write of a woman with whom one had the slenderest of acquaintances.
- The Partition Debate - Ii (Hindu, Mushirul Hasan, Jan 03, 2002)
As a metaphor, an event and memory, Partition has to be interpreted and explained afresh to remove widely-held misconceptions.
- A Journey With Other People (Telegraph, SUDIPTA BHATTACHARJEE, Jan 03, 2002)
Today, the Nagas just want peace, believesBy Sudipta Bhattacharjee.
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