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Articles 13921 through 14020 of 27558:
- Managing The `Nuclear Flashpoint' (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Dec 17, 2001)
NEW DELHI, DEC. 16. Indian analysts of foreign affairs used to bristle every time a visiting American scholar or policy-maker mentioned the phrase that Kashmir is a ``nuclear flashpoint.''
- Understanding Indian Muslims (Hindu, Balraj Puri, Dec 17, 2001)
Cultural heritage and political aspirations of a community are as much a factor in influencing its behaviour as its theological beliefs.
- Our True Heroes (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Dec 17, 2001)
At the tenth anniversary celebrations of The Pioneer on Friday, Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee made a wonderful, thought-provoking remark about the brave security personnel who laid down their lives in the line of duty.
- Shooting Terror (Indian Express, Shailaja Bajpai, Dec 17, 2001)
You had to watch it with a crowd of other people to experience the tension in your own taut muscles, to realise you, along with millions of other viewers across the nation, were waiting to exhale — at least momentarily.
- Bring Out The Evidence (Indian Express, Kuldip Nayar, Dec 17, 2001)
Horror over the terrorist attack on Parliament is understandable.
- Jail, Bail, Jail (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Dec 17, 2001)
Bail and jail have become a routine for former Bihar Chief Minister Laloo Prasad Yadav.
- December 13: Who Is To Blame? (Business Line, H. Kaushal , Dec 17, 2001)
THE December 13 attack on Parliament on December 13 is a challenge to the free world, not only in India.
- Can There Be Two Time Zones For India? (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Dec 17, 2001)
After debating for almost 50 years, the authorities have started examining whether there can be two time zones for the country so that people in the East and West get an equal share of sunlight while working.
- True Grit (Indian Express, Renuka Narayanan, Dec 17, 2001)
There are, alas, those who obviously sustain a peculiar belief in heaven as a place of orgiastic reward for killing innocents.
- The Demarche And Stark Choices (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Dec 17, 2001)
THE DASTARDLY ATTACK on the Parliament House and the venomous challenge from the terrorists understandably has compelled New Delhi to deliver a demarche to Pakistan about those who are suspected to have masterminded the evil plot.
- ‘Why Didn’t Govt Bring About Poto When Thousands Were Dying In J&k?’ (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Dec 17, 2001)
Bahujan Samaj Party’s national vice president, the 45-year old Mayawati, is perhaps one of the most underestimated politicians today, not only in Uttar Pradesh but in national landscape.
- Asset Reconstruction Companies -- Lessons From International Experience (Business Line, R. Kannan, Dec 17, 2001)
THOUGH there has been a considerable decline in banks non-performing assets over the last three years, the improvement has slowed down and the NPA levels remain high compared to international standards.
- Deteriorating Groundwater Quality Needs To Be Arrested (The Financial Express, Sunil Ghorawat, Dec 17, 2001)
Groundwater is a sustainable and reliable source of water supply. Since there is more groundwater than surface water, it is universally available and can be instantly developed and used.
- Growing Terrorism Stalks Maritime Shipping (The Financial Express, Vijay Sakhuja, Dec 17, 2001)
As the war on terrorism in Afghanistan reaches its final stages, the US and its coalition partners are engaged in blocking land routes to prevent the escape of Osama bin Laden.
- December 13 And After (Business Line, B. Raman , Dec 17, 2001)
EVEN WHILE lauding the remarkable reflexes and the bravery of the security personnel who prevented the terrorists from gaining access to the sanctum sanctorum of the Parliament House on December 13.
- Export Promotion In India -- Learning From The Us (Business Line, R. J. Venkateswaran , Dec 17, 2001)
THE Union Commerce and Industry Minister, Mr Murasoli Maran, has set up a high-level committee to evolve a five-year exim policy which would be in line with the Tenth Plan period (2002-2007).
- Reducing Poverty By Sharing Infrastructure (Business Line, P. V. Indiresan , Dec 17, 2001)
ERROR is to communication engineers what poverty is to economists.
- Inequality, Globalisation And A Social Framework (Business Line, S. Venu , Dec 17, 2001)
IN 1999, the World Bank President, Mr James Wolfensohn, observed of the global financial market: `At the level of people, the system is not working'.
- For A Spirited Celebration Of X’mas (The Financial Express, Upansana Pande, Dec 17, 2001)
In a unique initiative, the Park Royal, New Delhi, has collected over six vans full of toys from privileged sections of society to be distributed amongst the less fortunate children.
- Averting The Decline Of The East (Pioneer, Firoz Bakht Ahmed, Dec 17, 2001)
Culture is the measuring rod of civilisation.
- Calcutta’s Mismanaged Plenty (Telegraph, Joel Ruet, Dec 17, 2001)
Mumbaikars going to Delhi are surprised to find that Delhi, unlike the rest of India, has huge power shortage.
- Not Personal (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Dec 17, 2001)
Social change and legality are still tenuously connected.
- A Cricketing Story (Telegraph, S. L. Rao, Dec 17, 2001)
In 1994 I brought out a book on negotiation, Successful Negotiation. Drawing extensively on the research work in the Harvard negotiation project of Howard Raiffa and others.
- Developing An Objective Argument (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Dec 17, 2001)
I remember, Mr. Chairman, one of your illustrious predecessors mentioned in a meeting in this very same hall that the concept of single undertaking had a particular connotation at the time of the Punta Declaration.
- Assault On Nationhood (Pioneer, Bobby Sharma, Dec 17, 2001)
The terrorist attack on Parliament on December 13, 2001, so soon after the collapse of the Taliban in Afghanistan, reinforces two perceptions, one by India and another by Pakistan.
- Time For Total Unity (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Dec 17, 2001)
A crisis, as the Chinese say, is both an opportunity and a time for recrimination. The December 13 terrorist attack on the Parliament complex was one such in recent years.
- General Aurora Recalls ’71 War (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Dec 17, 2001)
The military hero of the 1971 war that resulted in freedom for Bangladesh has said the “turning point” came after Indian troops crossed the Meghna river even though the Pakistanis had blown up a strategic bridge.
- The Lankan Fire (Pioneer, Shubha Singh, Dec 17, 2001)
Just as the newly elected Sri Lankan Prime Minister, Mr Ranil Wikremesinghe, was putting his 25-member Cabinet together, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) made their first major military attack after the elections.
- The Final Phase (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Dec 17, 2001)
Finally, it has dawned on the Indian leadership that there is only one language the terrorists and their masters understand, that of pure and simple threat. The Government has acted swiftly this time.
- A Matter Of Rights (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Dec 17, 2001)
BY CALLING FOR a focus on the human rights of the weaker sections, the President, Mr. K. R. Narayanan, has made a timely intervention in the country's social discourse.
- Us’ Job Is Yet Not Done (Indian Express, Harinder Sikka, Dec 17, 2001)
The UN hopes to create peace and tranquility in war torn Afghanistan. It is a tall order indeed. It will not be easy to contain the volcano of anti-US hatred that still simmers.
- Managing The `Nuclear Flashpoint' (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Dec 17, 2001)
NEW DELHI, DEC. 16. Indian analysts of foreign affairs used to bristle every time a visiting American scholar or policy-maker mentioned the phrase that Kashmir is a ``nuclear flashpoint.''
- Breeding Little Hawks (Hindu, Javed Jabbar, Dec 17, 2001)
Getting children to raise hands in response to one-liner questions on issues as solemn as war and peace, as life and death, epitomised the superficial yet potentially dangerous uses to which TV is put.
- Rough Going Ahead (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Dec 17, 2001)
Three months ago, as the US was busy rounding up support for its new war on terrorism, there was a brief pause in the Bush administration’s relentless war against any treaties that might constrain American power in any way.
- The Demarche And Stark Choices (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Dec 17, 2001)
THE DASTARDLY ATTACK on the Parliament House and the venomous challenge from the terrorists understandably has compelled New Delhi to deliver a demarche to Pakistan about those who are suspected to have masterminded the evil plot.
- December 13 And After (Business Line, B. Raman , Dec 17, 2001)
EVEN WHILE lauding the remarkable reflexes and the bravery of the security personnel who prevented the terrorists from gaining access to the sanctum sanctorum of the Parliament House on December 13.
- On A Rebound (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Dec 17, 2001)
THE US was hitherto the ultimate haven and an inveterate defender of free market economy and the private sector.
- Understanding Indian Muslims (Hindu, Balraj Puri, Dec 17, 2001)
Cultural heritage and political aspirations of a community are as much a factor in influencing its behaviour as its theological beliefs.
- Hubris And Its Classic Follow Up (Telegraph, GWYNNE DYER, Dec 17, 2001)
“Get them by the balls, and their hearts and minds will follow,” went the Vietnam-era adage of the professional American military.
- Afghanistan: Third Time Lucky? (Tribune, Pran Chopra , Dec 17, 2001)
It has been often said that Afghanistan has been ruined by tribal rivalries, ethnic antagonisms, and clash of egos between irresponsible regional warlords.
- Haryana Regulates Wholesale Fish Marketing (The Financial Express, C. R. Rathee, Dec 17, 2001)
Haryana has, with immediate effect, decided to regulate fish marketing and has designated the Haryana State Agriculture Produce Marketing Board (HSAMB) as the regulatory authority.
- An Unequal Equation (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Dec 16, 2001)
RUSSIA HAS embarked on a second bonhomie with the United States since the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Union.
- Rarewala: A Punjabi-Loving Gentleman-Aristocrat (Tribune, Roopinder Singh, Dec 16, 2001)
Gian Singh Rarewala has left a lasting impression on the region. Soft-spoken and suave, his was a multi-faceted personality.
- What Happened To Zero-Based Budgeting? (Pioneer, C.M. Kulshreshtha, Dec 16, 2001)
The Government is rightly concerned with the need for garnering extra resources.
- There Is No One Loyalty (Telegraph, Amit Bhaduri, Dec 16, 2001)
If we refuse to learn from the happenings around us today, it would be a miracle if we did not have to pay a high price for it tomorrow.
- Time For A Review (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Dec 16, 2001)
Opinion-makers in Pakistan are urging Gen. Musharraf to seize the moment and re-fashion foreign policy.
- History As Told By Non-Historians (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Dec 16, 2001)
For too long, the illusion of a `debate' between evenly matched sides has been maintained...
- Changing The Rules Midstream (Hindu, Supriya Roy Chowdhury, Dec 16, 2001)
IN 1994, the Narmada Bachao Andolan had filed a writ petition as public interest litigation seeking to halt the Sardar Sarovar Project (SSP).
- Can One Man Carry Them All Along? (Hindu, B. MURALIDHAR REDDY, Dec 16, 2001)
As Hamid Karzai prepares to take over the reins in Afghanistan, he faces formidable challenges from within and without.
- Time For A Review (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Dec 16, 2001)
WITH THE military campaign in Afghanistan in its `final stages', those who matter in Pakistan are no longer shy about admitting the changed realities.
- Tactful? Not Him (Hindu, Hasan Suroor, Dec 16, 2001)
THESE ARE still early days for Mr. David Blunkett at the Home Office but he has already acquired the reputation as the most right-wing of the Prime Minister, Mr. Tony Blair's Ministers - an ``intolerant, illiberal home secretary''.
- Reading Messages From The Past (Hindu, Sudhanshu Ranade , Dec 16, 2001)
December 6 has become a standing reminder of many things. One is that we, as a nation, are yet to agree about what happened to us over the period before the British arrived;
- History As Told By Non-Historians (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Dec 16, 2001)
For too long, the illusion of a `debate' between evenly matched sides has been maintained...
- An Unequal Equation (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Dec 16, 2001)
RUSSIA HAS embarked on a second bonhomie with the United States since the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Union.
- Visible Face Of Kabul’s New Dispensation (Tribune, Harihar Swarup , Dec 16, 2001)
Dr Abdullah Abdullah has been the true voice of the Northern Alliance since the group took up cudgels against the Taliban.
- Can One Man Carry Them All Along? (Hindu, B. MURALIDHAR REDDY, Dec 16, 2001)
As Hamid Karzai prepares to take over the reins in Afghanistan, he faces formidable challenges from within and without.
- Changing The Rules Midstream (Hindu, Supriya Roy Chowdhury, Dec 16, 2001)
IN 1994, the Narmada Bachao Andolan had filed a writ petition as public interest litigation seeking to halt the Sardar Sarovar Project (SSP).
- It’s Perversion, Not Policy (Tribune, Abu Abraham, Dec 16, 2001)
A recent edition of the riveting programme, The Big Fight, on the Star News television channel was a revealing experience. The subject was the communalisation of education.
- Terrorist Attack Doesn’t Change Politicians (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Dec 16, 2001)
The camaraderie and unity shown by the members of various political parties on the day the terrorists attacked Parliament was shortlived.
- A Poet Without A Post Office (Indian Express, Muzamil Jaleel, Dec 16, 2001)
There are several wisps of stories floating around poet Agha Shahid Ali. But one of the most famous — and one of the most endearing — is the one about a little encounter at a Barcelona airport.
- Naga Talks Need New Address: India (Indian Express, Sanjoy Hazarika, Dec 16, 2001)
The recent meeting between Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee and the leaders of the National Socialist Council of Nagaland (NSCN I-M) at a hotel in Osaka, Japan.
- Saving History From Distortion (Tribune, Satish K. Kapoor , Dec 16, 2001)
Whatever the praxis of historical interpretation, the prime facts of history remain incontrovertible. None, for example, would dispute that Kalachuris were known as Haihayas;
- Reading Messages From The Past (Hindu, Sudhanshu Ranade , Dec 16, 2001)
December 6 has become a standing reminder of many things. One is that we, as a nation, are yet to agree about what happened to us over the period before the British arrived;
- Arafat's Time Is Running Out (Pioneer, Alexander Bovin, Dec 16, 2001)
For a long time Israel tried to tell the international community that terrorism is a planetary threat.
- Blasted Nuisance (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Dec 16, 2001)
The most striking feature of Thursday's terrorist attack on Parliament, located at the heart of the capital's high security zone, was the sheer audacity of it.
- Time To (En)act (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Dec 16, 2001)
Terrorists on Thursday attacked the very soul of Indian democracy, the Parliament House, and drove home, with such horrendous clarity, what terror can do to a nation.
- Causes Of The Taliban Collapse (Pioneer, Hiranmay Karlekar, Dec 16, 2001)
When the war clouds first started gathering over Afghanistan following the terrorist strikes on the United States on September 11.
- Jinnah’s Role In Partition Of India: A Reappraisal (Tribune, P.K. Ravindranath, Dec 16, 2001)
While conventional wisdom and perceived understanding of history has it that almost all the principal actors on the political stage, except Mahatma Gandhi.
- Deep Impact (Pioneer, Kalyani Shankar, Dec 16, 2001)
As I write this column, I am watching the ghastly attack inside the premises of the Indian Parliament.
- Some Weak Arguments (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Dec 16, 2001)
No awards for anyone in this case. Not even for Ramdas Athawale, MP from Maharashtra, for his provoking limerick, “Atalji ki lagake photo, Advaniji laye hain POTO, Kafan pe karke ghotala janata ka gala mat ghoto, tumhe harana hi hai hamara motto”.
- Time To (En)act (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Dec 15, 2001)
Terrorists on Thursday attacked the very soul of Indian democracy, the Parliament House, and drove home, with such horrendous clarity, what terror can do to a nation.
- Parliament Re-Dedicates Itself To Fighting Terror (Business Line, G. Srinivasan , Dec 15, 2001)
THE day after the appalling event at the temple of the world's largest democracy, Parliament was distinctly solemn.
- Soppy Move (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Dec 15, 2001)
IF THE FINANCE Ministry has its way, the tax incentives on small savings a principal source of parking of surpluses for small investors, should be on their way out, come next fiscal. But that would be unfortunate. On two counts mainly.
- Twisting Anti-Terror Norms (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Dec 15, 2001)
THE ARROGANT FIAT by Israel to immobilise Mr. Yasser Arafat, the internationally recognised President of the Palestinian Authority, within a tiny stretch of territory at Ramallah cannot be condemned enough in a civilised discourse.
- Selective Cleansing Won't Do (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Dec 15, 2001)
THE DISMISSAL OF Mr. Amarmani Tripathi, Uttar Pradesh Minister of State for Trade Tax and Institutional Finance, may well be held out as evidence of the BJP's value-based politics.
- Monitoring The Borders (Hindu, Varun Sahni, Dec 15, 2001)
It is high time Indian defence planners started analysing the viability of a more technology-intensive force structure.
- God Onhis Side (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Dec 15, 2001)
About 10 years ago Girish Khurana of Ludhiana came to see me.
- Diplomacy Precedes Military Response (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Dec 15, 2001)
NEW DELHI, DEC. 14. In considering various responses to the breath-taking terrorist attack on the Parliament House on Thursday, India has chosen to try out diplomatic approach first.
- The Factory Which Produced `Jehadis' (Hindu, Atul Aneja , Dec 15, 2001)
KABUL, DEC. 14. Around 10 km south of the main Kabul city stands Darul Aman, the administrative capital of the former Afghan King, Amanullah Khan.
- When Blood Speaks To Blood (Telegraph, Amit Bhaduri, Dec 15, 2001)
The observation is attributed to Plato that the study of man is far more interesting than the study of physical objects, as man, knowing full well that doing something is bad, still does it.
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