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Articles 13521 through 13620 of 27558:
- Changing Profile Of Terrorism (Tribune, V.K. Kapoor, Dec 25, 2001)
Terrorism is death and destruction by design when victims are totally unrelated to the cause espoused. Attacks on New York’s World Trade Center on September 11 and India’s Parliament on December 13 point to a sharp change in the profile of terrorism.
- A Nation On The Edge: Abort, Retry, Escape (Indian Express, Najam Sethi, Dec 25, 2001)
PAKISTAN’S military leaders have had a propensity for adventure unmatched by other dependent states in the modern age.
- Exim Measures (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Dec 25, 2001)
The new exim policy, however, is not without checks and balances.
- Fractured Verdict From Doha (Business Line, Anil K. Kanungo, Dec 25, 2001)
WHETHER the verdict from Doha went largely in favour of India or against its interests is still not quite clear.
- Conference On Fraud? (Business Line, K. Gopalan, Dec 25, 2001)
THIS seems to be an age of seminars and symposia.
- ‘Bilateral Trade Has Not Touched The Real Potential’ (The Financial Express, HUMA SIDDQUI, Dec 25, 2001)
While there is enough scope for furthering trade, priority needs to be given to consolidation, says the Algerian ambassador to India, Adbelrim Belarbi.
- Christmas Past (Indian Express, George N Netto, Dec 25, 2001)
YOU know Christmas is round the corner in Munnar when you wake up in the morning to find your bedroom window frosted, your lips chapped and your extremities benumbed by the cold.
- Shadow Boxing In Tn (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Dec 25, 2001)
The battle between the ruling AIADMK and the DMK in Tamil Nadu has assumed a new dimension, this time over the removal from the Marina beachfront in Chennai of the statue of the second century symbol of Tamil womanhood, Kannagi.
- Spit And Polish (Indian Express, Jyoti Malhotra, Dec 25, 2001)
IN my next birth, ambassador K S Bajpai is once known to have famously remarked, I would like to be born as the Pakistani high commissioner to India.
- Implications Of Doha For India - Ii (Hindu, Muchkund Dubey , Dec 25, 2001)
We should prepare for negotiations on all Singapore items rather than continue to entertain the hope of blocking them two years hence.
- Response To Pakistan's Terrorism (Hindu, V. R. Raghavan , Dec 25, 2001)
There are leverages available to India in the economic, political and societal arenas that are potentially as and perhaps more effective than the military ones.
- The Myth Of The Popular Will (Hindu, Swami Agnivesh, Dec 25, 2001)
It is always risky, and often unfair, to read situations by speculating on the motives that are alleged to underlie them.
- Call Of Duty And Line Of Fire (Pioneer, Nilanjan Mukhopadhyay, Dec 25, 2001)
The injury caused to ANI cameraman Vikram Singh Bisht in the attack on Parliament has once again turned the spotlight on the hazardous nature of journalism.
- The Post-Taliban 'Spirit' (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Dec 25, 2001)
AN INTERIM GOVERNMENT, which has been strenuously put together under the auspices of the United Nations, has assumed office in Kabul to herald a post-Taliban era in Afghanistan.
- This Is Where The Terrorists Work (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Dec 25, 2001)
“Infrastructure facility” means any publicly or privately owned facility providing or distributing services for the benefit of the public, such as water, sewerage, energy, fuel or communications.
- Why The Global Economy Is Limping (Telegraph, Alok Ray, Dec 25, 2001)
Seldom do the three major economic areas in the world experience recession (meaning close to zero or negative growth) at the same time.
- The Politics Of War (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Dec 25, 2001)
AS this might be the last Christmas of peace and goodwill on our benighted subcontinent, before we go hurtling down to the disaster which overcame Europe through the first half of the last century.
- Ways To Revive And Refresh (Telegraph, SRINJAY CHAKRAVARTI, Dec 25, 2001)
India’s exports have hit the trough following the terrorist attacks on the United States of America and the subsequent war in Afghanistan.
- Security Needs A New Mindset (Indian Express, Yoginder K. Alagh, Dec 25, 2001)
THE setting up of a Joint Parliamentary Committee on national security and the indications that all the major political parties are clearly committed to the objective after the attack on Parliament.
- Industry: From Slowdown To Crisis (Business Line, S. D. Naik, Dec 25, 2001)
IF THE industrial slowdown was a major disappointment last year, it has reached crisis proportions in 2001.
- Double Standards (Pioneer, Bharat Jhunjhunwala, Dec 25, 2001)
The American people are unable to comprehend why their culture of markets, democracy and freedom evokes such a lot of hostility across much of the world.
- Is This A Place In Time Warp? (Pioneer, Anuradha Bhattacharjee, Dec 25, 2001)
After virtual call cards (VCC) were introduced some months ago, BSNL sent its subscribers in Noida a mailer listing eighteen authorised agents.
- Going From Bad To Verse (Pioneer, Sidharth Bhatia, Dec 25, 2001)
As another year draws to a close and the nation takes stock of the triumphs and tribulations-mainly the latter-that it brought, it is time to cast aside gloom and get into a cheerful mood.
- No Resting On Oars (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Dec 25, 2001)
External Affairs Minister Jaswant Singh's presence at the inauguration of the interim Afghan government in Kabul last Saturday and the warm welcome given to Indians in the Afghan capital, are developments that should not cause surprise.
- Peace, Through War (Indian Express, Abhisel Sarda, Dec 25, 2001)
CAN war bring peace? In fact, only war can bring peace. History tells us war has brought peace to most of the regions where it was fought. World War II brought peace to most of Europe and America.
- Last Resort (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Dec 25, 2001)
India’s diplomatic relations with Pakistan have reached a new nadir after the December 13 terrorist attack on Parliament. New Delhi has withdrawn its high commissioner from Islamabad.
- Implications Of Doha For India - I (Hindu, Muchkund Dubey , Dec 24, 2001)
Some important gains were made and some of the losses minimised even while India had to give in on several critical issues because of its essentially weak bargaining position.
- The New Crisis In Ties With Pakistan (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Dec 24, 2001)
THE POLITICAL LOGIC of India's decision to recall its High Commissioner to Pakistan, Mr. Vijay Nambiar, seems to suggest that the latest crisis in bilateral relations can yet be managed with care and prudence from both sides.
- The Pakistan Conundrum (Hindu, Amitabh Mattoo, Dec 24, 2001)
In the long term, the only hope is that the Pakistani state and society, through introspection, or other means, will move away from its anti-Indian identity.
- Good Ending (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Dec 24, 2001)
People’s initiatives can go a long way in influencing perceptions and decisions of political leaders.
- Changeover (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Dec 24, 2001)
A coup should be appreciated. The chief minister of Chhattisgarh, Mr Ajit Jogi, has apparently pulled one off.
- Global Inequalities (Telegraph, S. Venkitaramanan , Dec 24, 2001)
An article by William Easterly and Ross Levine in a recent issue of the World Bank Economic Review discusses what we have learnt from a decade of empirical research on growth.
- Democrat Into Dictator (Telegraph, GWYNNE DYER, Dec 24, 2001)
“Last week we could not afford bread. This week we cannot get bread,” said a Zimbabwean worker last October, after President Robert Mugabe imposed price cuts on basic foods.
- How To Delight The Tourist (Business Line, Alex Abraham, Dec 24, 2001)
SEMINARS, conventions, papers, and forums on the topic of leveraging India's tourism potential abound.
- Money & A Knowledge Society (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Dec 24, 2001)
THE UNION CABINET'S decision to create a special fund to facilitate the flow of finances from non-resident Indians and domestic philanthropists is timely in that it opens up a potential channel.
- Lessons To Learn (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Dec 24, 2001)
If Ministers and MPs are not secure right in Parliament House, what about the security of the common people of the country?
- Sock Value (Pioneer, Sunil Kapoor , Dec 24, 2001)
Boys inevitably end up in their father's shoes but for once I found myself in my son's socks.
- The New Crisis In Ties With Pakistan (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Dec 24, 2001)
THE POLITICAL LOGIC of India's decision to recall its High Commissioner to Pakistan, Mr. Vijay Nambiar, seems to suggest that the latest crisis in bilateral relations can yet be managed with care and prudence from both sides.
- Money & A Knowledge Society (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Dec 24, 2001)
THE UNION CABINET'S decision to create a special fund to facilitate the flow of finances from non-resident Indians and domestic philanthropists is timely in that it opens up a potential channel.
- Aftershocks From Enron's Collapse (Business Line, S. Venkitaramanan , Dec 24, 2001)
FOR THE last few years, Enron Corporation has been in the centre-stage of Indias financial news. The future of Dabhol Power Corporation is in doubt, with suitors for its assets still unsure of its revival prospects.
- Words Over Troubled Waters (Telegraph, Jack Fairweather, Dec 24, 2001)
David Blunkett, the British home secretary, recently posed the question, “How do they [immigrants] avoid a conflict between embracing the history and identity of someone born abroad and identifying with Britain.
- Implications Of Doha For India - I (Hindu, Muchkund Dubey , Dec 24, 2001)
Some important gains were made and some of the losses minimised even while India had to give in on several critical issues because of its essentially weak bargaining position.
- Continued Neglect (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Dec 24, 2001)
THE NASSCOM and the Computer Society of India (CSI) have been paying scant attention to a growing virus.
- The Pakistan Conundrum (Hindu, Amitabh Mattoo, Dec 24, 2001)
In the long term, the only hope is that the Pakistani state and society, through introspection, or other means, will move away from its anti-Indian identity.
- Striking At Will (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Dec 24, 2001)
Our biggest handicap is our soft-state image. The terrorists have foreknowledge of this.
- Caricature Leader (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Dec 24, 2001)
Just as a debt crisis in Argentina can stampede investors into a panic-stricken exodus from markets throughout Latin America, so a political crisis in Zimbabwe can lead them to treat the whole of southern Africa as “unstable”.
- A Lesson In Adulthood (Tribune, Amrik Singh , Dec 24, 2001)
I was not yet 14. My father was a government doctor who got posted to a jail hospital.
- Is India Really A Soft State? (Tribune, A.N. Dar, Dec 24, 2001)
Doubtless, December 13 took us all by surprise. The glorious sandstone structure of our Parliament House had never before witnessed this kind of an attack.
- Uti Unmasked (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Dec 24, 2001)
It is a devastating indictment of the UTI but the shocked investors or the Finance Ministry will not benefit from it.
- Tasks Before Karzai Regime (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Dec 24, 2001)
This is the beginning of a new era in war-torn Afghanistan.
- Downslide Begins (Pioneer, Shubha Singh, Dec 24, 2001)
The September 11 terrorist attack at the World Trade Center and the Pentagon hit at the heart of American sensitivity; it changed the world for the US.
- Global Inequalities (Telegraph, S. Venkitaramanan , Dec 24, 2001)
An article by William Easterly and Ross Levine in a recent issue of the World Bank Economic Review discusses what we have learnt from a decade of empirical research on growth.
- Good Ending (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Dec 24, 2001)
People’s initiatives can go a long way in influencing perceptions and decisions of political leaders.
- No Soft Option (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Dec 24, 2001)
The terrorists have no fixed constituency. They can attack anywhere, everywhere and at any time.
- The Rage Of Reason (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Dec 24, 2001)
Three consecutive Decembers that have seen three terrorist strikes have left us in the winter of our discontent.
- It’s A Start, Mr Bush (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Dec 24, 2001)
US President George Bush’s decision to freeze the Lashkar-e-Toiba’s assets by itself amounts to little.
- Looking Beyond Mere Karma (Pioneer, P. D. Pant, Dec 24, 2001)
During his speech in the Lok Sabha on the conclusive day of the session on December 19, Prime Minister Vajpayee refuted the old philosophic notion that life being perishable, all efforts to save it will be fruitless.
- That’s Entertainment? (Indian Express, Shailaja Bajpai, Dec 24, 2001)
It is that time of December when we remember the time gone by.
- Merits Of Inaction (Indian Express, Kanti Bajpai, Dec 24, 2001)
Sometimes not doing anything is the best strategic course. In India, we have lost sight of this and have become enthralled by the cult of ‘‘action’’. The BJP is the party most at fault here.
- What Is The Way Ahead? (Indian Express, H. Kaushal , Dec 24, 2001)
The prime minister and Home minister have spoken about tackling Pakistan.
- Now Relief, On A War Footing (Indian Express, Himmat Singh Gill, Dec 24, 2001)
On Saturday, as India’s high-powered delegation headed into Kabul for the installation ceremony of the Afghan interim government, Indian diplomacy seemed fully on track.
- Connecting With 20-M Forgotten Children Of Mother India (The Financial Express, Rohit Bansal, Dec 24, 2001)
An indepth report under jurist LM Singhvi tells us how very little we have done to convert the deep and abiding ties among 20-million diaspora with India into a national strength.
- Good In Parts (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Dec 24, 2001)
Two inferences can immediately be drawn from the statement United States President George W. Bush made while announcing the freezing of the US funds of the Lashkar-e-Toiba.
- Contemplation On Continuity (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Dec 24, 2001)
For cricketers a century mark is a record of personal achievement.
- Unilateral Us Decision On Steel Imports May Spur A Trade War (The Financial Express, T. S. Vishwanath , Dec 24, 2001)
The United States’ pressure on the multi-billion-dollar steel industry world-wide to check a global slump in prices is slowly leading to some very hard decisions.
- The Right(s) Approach To Globalisation (Pioneer, Joginder Singh, Dec 24, 2001)
Income inequality is growing, as are the number of people in abject poverty.
- ‘Our Critics Would Have Liked Us To Be Trigger-Happy’ (The Financial Express, S. S. Tarapore, Dec 24, 2001)
S S Tarapore is no stranger to the world of banking and finance.
- Dealing With E-Mail (Business Line, C. Gopinath , Dec 24, 2001)
HERE is a New Year resolution you can make right now: Stop the scourge of e-mail! Every one of us needs to do his or her bit to control this epidemic.
- Realistic Expectations Best For Optimism In 2002 (Business Line, Anantha Nageshwaran, Dec 24, 2001)
PERHAPS, the traditional good feeling that one has towards the end of the year as the festive season approaches got the better of my cautious instincts.
- Argentinian Lessons (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Dec 24, 2001)
THE COLLAPSE OF Argentina's Government led by the President, Mr Fernando de la Rua, has an important message for the developing world: Messing up a national economy beyond a point can lead to abrupt loss of political power.
- Terrorist Attack On Parliament Thwarted, But.... What About Demolition From Within? (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Dec 24, 2001)
THE NATION cannot be too grateful to those belonging to the Central Reserve Police Force, the Delhi Police and the Watch and Ward of Parliament House.
- Measured Response (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Dec 24, 2001)
The Government's decision to recall India's high commissioner to Pakistan and terminate the plying of the Samjhauta Express and the Delhi-Lahore bus service, has not come a day too soon.
- 2001 Set To Be Second Warmest Year Ever (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Dec 24, 2001)
The year 2001 is the second warmest in world history. According to data available till date, the average temperature during 2001 was 14.42 degrees.
- Biggest Carousel Beckons From Kolkata (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Dec 24, 2001)
A good news for the carousel lovers. At Kolkata’s Nicco Park, a giant version, in fact the biggest in the country, has been installed with 63 horses and three chariots made of fibre glass.
- Low Interest Rates Policy Fails To Click (The Financial Express, R.K. Roy, Dec 24, 2001)
The weak demand for bank credit from the commercial banks, sustained despite cutbacks in lending interest rates, is baffling. Banks have funds aplenty.
- Feeling The Heat (Hindu, VLADIMIR RADYUHIN, Dec 23, 2001)
RUSSIA HAS emerged as the biggest winner in the global war on terrorism.
- What They Say... (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Dec 23, 2001)
Mehbooba Mufti, senior vice-president People's Democratic Party, says ``The gun is not the problem in Kashmir but it is the alienation which has increased manifold with the bad governance and wrong policies of the Government''.
- Wary Dragon (Hindu, Amit Baruah, Dec 23, 2001)
The Chinese are very concerned about the American decision to abandon the ABM Treaty... Beijing and Washington also differ in their perceptions on terrorism.
- Setting Its House In Order (Hindu, VAIJU NARAVANE, Dec 23, 2001)
THE REFORMERS: Giscard d'Estaing, Giuliano Amato and Jean-Luc Dehaene. The European Union has set up a body headed by Valery Giscard d'Estaing to suggest reforms.
- The Rot Within (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Dec 23, 2001)
The "party with a difference", is not, it appears, very different after all. The recent defection, in the newly-formed state of Chhattisgarh, of 12 MLAs from the 35-member Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) bloc in the 90-member state assembly.
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