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Articles 15921 through 16020 of 27558:
- Unconverted (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 29, 2001)
Intimidation is no friend of logic. The Vishwa Hindu Parishad and the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh were never known for logic, simply because intimidation is the only mode of communication they know.
- Fiscal Stimulus Needed For Growth (Business Line, S. Sethuraman, Oct 29, 2001)
THE Mid-year Monetary and Credit Policy is a valiant attempt at making money cheaper and increasing liquidity in the hope of seeing an upturn in industrial output and keeping the economy on track to ensure at least 5 per cent growth this year.
- Another Cm On His Way Out (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 29, 2001)
SOON after the installation of Mr Narendra Modi as Chief Minister of Gujarat, when Mr Keshubhai Patel was asked by the BJP central leadership to resign, a similar exercise had been on in Uttaranchal Pradesh.
- Shadows In The East (Indian Express, ANURADHA KUMAR, Oct 29, 2001)
Indo-Bangla tensions have ebbed but today there’s a new factor that must be addressed.
- Globalisation Of Terrorism (Business Line, Sumantra Banerjee, Oct 29, 2001)
PAKISTAN just cannot believe its luck. If it isn't a multi-million dollar gift cheques, then it is the rescheduling of even larger amounts of debt.
- Civil Society And Small Families (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 29, 2001)
A committee of international and Indian experts, voluntary and non-government organizations and government may be set up to regularly review and recommend specific incorporation of the advances in contraceptive technology.
- World In Disarray (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Oct 29, 2001)
THE terrorists of the world must be doing what cricket players do when they make a catch or bowl a batsman out:
- Gender: The Inequality (Business Line, Jasjit Kaur, Oct 29, 2001)
THE Economic Survey of 2000-01 expressed the need for the social and economic empowerment of women.
- Farm Stakes (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Oct 29, 2001)
WITH KHARIF 2001 foodgrains and commercial crops production improving over the previous year and the prospects for the ensuing rabi (summer) harvest looking bright.
- Rourkela Steel Losses Blamed On Political Interference (The Financial Express, Sunil Mukhopadhyay, Oct 29, 2001)
Rourkela Steel Plant (RSP) is again on the downhill track.
- Polaroid: Slowly Fading Away? (Business Line, C. Gopinath , Oct 29, 2001)
WHY cant I see them now? As the story goes, Edwin Lands daughter wanted to see the pictures right away during a vacation in 1943 when Land had just completed a roll of film.
- From Shah Bano To Daniel Latifi (Tribune, Anupam Gupta, Oct 29, 2001)
“MUSLIMS will allow attacks on Allah,” wrote Wilfred Cantwell Smith, the noted scholar of Islam, “there are atheists and atheistic publications, and rationalist societies;
- Call Waiting (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 29, 2001)
After having been stuck, reforms seem to be inching forward on three fronts.
- More A Recipe For Reforms Than Economic Revival (The Financial Express, Renu Kohli, Oct 29, 2001)
Two clear strands mark the mid-term review of the monetary and credit policy recently announced by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI).
- Vajpayee's Us Trip Best Shelved (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Oct 29, 2001)
ALL INDICATIONS are that the Prime Minister, Mr Atal Bihari Vajpayees projected meeting with the US President, Mr George W. Bush, in Washington, on November 9 will end up in a big letdown for India.
- War Plans Go Awry (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 29, 2001)
THREE weeks on, the American bombing of Afghanistan has raised several disturbing questions.
- Protection From Poto (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 29, 2001)
It must not be allowed to curb the freedom of expression.
- Bio-Terrorism: Easier To Be Targetted Than Target (Indian Express, Richard A. Serrano, Oct 29, 2001)
In a Wisconsin courtroom a few years ago, a federal judge and two lawyers faced a bearded, long-haired figure known as the ‘‘Mad Scientist,’’ confronting then what now worries millions of Americans — the threat of biological terrorism.
- No Picnic This (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 29, 2001)
Haq’s execution calls for a reassessment of US strategy.
- Pm's Travels: Focus On Missile Defence (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Oct 29, 2001)
NEW DELHI, OCT. 28. The Prime Minister, Mr. Atal Behari Vajpayee's travels to Moscow and Washington next week is likely to put India back in the middle of the international politics of missile defence.
- One Party, Two Paths (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 29, 2001)
The problem of “communication gap” between the government and the BJP seems to have been sorted out and it now transpires that Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s aides did not tell him about the invitation to hoist the flag at the party’s golden jubilee celebrations.
- Two Years Of Nda Rule (Hindu, Harkishan Singh Surjeet, Oct 29, 2001)
IT IS two years since this edition of the Vajpayee Government came into office. The CPI(M) had warned that the formation of a BJP-led Government poses a threat to national unity and to the secular fabric of our country.
- How Jp Movement Helped Bjp (Tribune, M. G. Devasahayam , Oct 29, 2001)
ADDRESSING the BJP’s golden jubilee celebrations the other day, Mr L.K. Advani indulged in a bit of hyperbole when he drew a parallel between the resurrection of Jesus Christ and the birth of the Bharatiya Janata Party in 1980;
- Of Latest Interest (Telegraph, S. Venkitaramanan , Oct 29, 2001)
In formulating the mid-term credit policy for the last year, 2000-01, I recall that Bimal Jalan had ruled out, in advance, any changes in bank rate and cash reserve ratio.
- Wto And Social Responsibilities (Hindu, Swami Agnivesh, Oct 29, 2001)
We are getting together under the clouds of global tensions and economic uncertainties.
- Fate Of Poto Sealed (Hindu, NEENA VYAS , Oct 29, 2001)
NEW DELHI, OCT. 28. Almost all the major opposition parties have already let it be known that they will oppose ``tooth and nail'' the Prevention of Terrorism Ordinance 2001 (POTO) notified by the Government less than a week ago.
- Majoritarian Prescriptions (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 29, 2001)
THE RSS CHIEF has done it again.
- The Cost Of Aping First World Central Banking Style (The Financial Express, R.K. Roy, Oct 29, 2001)
Pressing down interest rates is an article of faith with our policy makers.
- Re-Charting Ties With Japan (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 29, 2001)
JAPAN'S POLITICAL DECISION to send its former Prime Minister, Mr. Yoshiro Mori, to New Delhi at this time is as important as Tokyo's parallel announcement about suspending its economic sanctions in relation to India and Pakistan.
- What Is Wrong With The Ecb? (Business Line, V. Anantha-Nageswaran , Oct 29, 2001)
THE European Central Bank (ECB) met on Thursday and decided to leave its policy rate unchanged at 3.75 per cent.
- Doubting Dragon (Hindu, Amit Baruah, Oct 28, 2001)
THE KEY word for China is ``temporary''. As American forces begin operations in Afghanistan through Pakistan and Central Asia, China, while extending support to the ``war'' against terrorism, is concerned about the nature and outcome of this conflict.
- Keeping The Flock Together (Hindu, Sridhar Krishnaswami, Oct 28, 2001)
THE BUSH administration is in a state of denial. It thinks it has the support of ``allies'' worldwide in the current campaign in Afghanistan when actually they are only from the Western world.
- Tiger Watch (Hindu, Nirupama Subramanian , Oct 28, 2001)
ONLY TWO months before the terrorist attacks in the U.S., in Sri Lanka, an outfit proclaimed as a terrorist organisation by at least four countries including the U.S.,
- Festival For All (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 28, 2001)
Once again, the Durga Puja in Calcutta was a mixture of administrative successes and failures.
- Unknown Dynasty (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 28, 2001)
Mediapersons were looking with askance at each other when names of a six-member delegation to China were announced at the BJP headquarters the other day.
- Mixed Mandate (Hindu, SURESH NAMBATH, Oct 28, 2001)
FOR THOSE who were claiming that Tamil Nadu was going the Bihar way, the election to the local bodies was only another pointer.
- Rampaging Youth (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 28, 2001)
For the BJP that takes pride in talking about its disciplined cadres, the conduct of its student wing is more than shocking.
- The Time's Come To Pay The Piper (Hindu, J. P. SHUKLA, Oct 28, 2001)
ELEVEN YEARS ago the Bharatiya Janata Party played the `Ram' card in Uttar Pradesh to counter the `Mandal' masterstroke of Mr. V. P. Singh.
- Ambassador Khalili’s Passport Saved His Life (Tribune, Harihar Swarup , Oct 28, 2001)
GRIEVOUSLY injured but miraculously survived Afghanistan’s Ambassador to India, Masood Khalili, is back on his job in New Delhi.
- The Harder It Gets, The Longer It Takes (Hindu, Muralidhar Reddy, Oct 28, 2001)
THE STREET protests in Pakistan against the U.S.-led military campaign in Afghanistan since October 7 had ebbed after the Musharraf Government cracked down on outfits that took the law into their own hands.
- 'With Us Or Against Us' Crisis (Hindu, Anjali Modi, Oct 28, 2001)
NEW DELHI, OCT. 27. Mr. Ahmed Bukhari, Shahi Imam of Jama Masjid, can be heard preaching from the pulpit every Friday.
- At Home, Salem Is Most Unwelcome (Indian Express, Amit Sharma, Oct 28, 2001)
Abu Salem is a person non grata here. He has not been seen in this eastern Uttar Pradesh town since the early ’90s. Yet his presence is very much felt here.
- The Cia’s One Billion Dollar Job (Tribune, V. Gangadhar, Oct 28, 2001)
THERE must be lots of laughter and good cheer at the Central Intelligence Agency. ‘Happy days are here again’, the personnel from the Department of Dirty Tricks (DDT) must be singing.
- Would A Bin Laden Trial Be Too Big For Us? (Indian Express, Henry Weinstein, Oct 28, 2001)
AS WARPLANES bomb Afghanistan and commandos scour that country’s forbidding countryside, US military strategists are trying to figure out where Osama bin Laden and his associates are hiding and how to inflict the most punishment on them.
- A Triumph For The Tribals (Hindu, Roy Mathew, Oct 28, 2001)
IT WAS an unusual agitation with an unusual beginning. Tribals from different parts of Kerala erected huts in front of the official residence of the Chief Minister, Mr. A. K. Antony, on August 30.
- Triple Divorce Should Be Abolished (Tribune, Asghar Ali Engineer , Oct 28, 2001)
THE Christian divorce law is being amended. It was quite outdated and heavily loaded in favour of man since it was enacted by the British Government in 19th century.
- The Changing Face Of Terrorism: A Global View (Tribune, A. K. Lal, Oct 28, 2001)
THE concept and nature of classical terrorism is being re-shaped in the modern era. There is an ongoing “Revolution in Terrorist Affairs” (RTA) due to the impact of modern technology, globalisation and the proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction.
- Wto Blues (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 28, 2001)
The Indian Government is jittery about the forthcoming WTO ministerial meet at Doha.
- Courage Under Fire (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 28, 2001)
Her name would be known the world over to people who take an interest in current events, read periodicals or watch TV.
- Abu Salem: From Driver To Don (Indian Express, S. Ahmed Ali, Oct 28, 2001)
‘‘Mein Abu Salem Bol raha hoon, Mera naam suna hai kya nahi?’’. Salem’s opening line over the cell phone has sent shivers through the spines of many Bollywood biggies.
- The Party And The Puja (Telegraph, Sunanda K. Datta-Ray, Oct 28, 2001)
The festive chaos of the last few days might have prompted an outsider to wonder whether the same mobs that fill puja pandals also vote for the Communist Party of India (Marxist) and its allies.
- Disturbing Fallout (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 27, 2001)
WHILE American fighter jets are pounding military installations of the Taliban and Osama bin Laden's Al-Qaeda network in Operation Enduring Freedom, some bombs are also falling in civilian areas.
- All Isn’t Right About The Bombing: Us Experts (Indian Express, Robin Wright, Oct 27, 2001)
Less than three weeks after the onset of military operations, some prominent experts on Afghanistan are starting to question, even challenge, the deepening US intervention in Central Asia.
- 5,00,000 Illegal Workers In Thailand (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 27, 2001)
Thailand registered more than 500,000 of its estimated two million illegal workers over the past month as part of a bid to control the flow from impoverished Laos, Cambodia and Myanmar.
- Another Hive Of Babus (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 27, 2001)
Not food production but bureaucratic reproduction!
- Wef On Asia To Eye Stalled Growth (The Financial Express, Andrea Ricci, Oct 27, 2001)
HONG KONG: Less than two months ago, the World Economic Forum (WEF) released a preliminary programme for its East Asia summit that asked the question, “How deep is the economic downturn in Asia?”
- Tea Strains (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Oct 27, 2001)
THE DIRECTIVE OF the Consultative Committee of Plantation Associations to tea estates in North India to stop plucking practically for the whole of December reveals a desperate bid to shore up the market.
- It Is A Free-For-All Country (Business Line, Timeri N. Murari , Oct 27, 2001)
WERE broke. The Centres broke and most of the States are broke. For the last 54 years, weve led the life of profligates.
- Trust Us, Trust Yourself, Americans Telling India (The Financial Express, Rohit Bansal, Oct 27, 2001)
Is this a ‘global’ war against terrorism going on in Afghanistan?
- Future Of Pakistan’s Nuclear Weapons... (The Financial Express, Jasjit Singh, Oct 27, 2001)
The world changed in many fundamental ways on September 11, 2001, the ramifications of which are not entirely clear as yet.
- Billed Impossible (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 27, 2001)
The much-vaunted fiscal responsibility and budget management bill is about to die an untimely death. It is a truth universally acknowledged that the fiscal situation is in a mess.
- What Will Galvanise Mr Sinha? (Business Line, Kuldip Nayar, Oct 27, 2001)
I HAVE never found the Finance Minister, Mr Yashwant Sinha, facing facts.
- How A Single Coup Changed 50 Years Of Mideast History (Indian Express, Ahmed Bouzid, Oct 27, 2001)
Imagine if August 19, 1953, had come and gone, uneventfully. Imagine if Operation Ajax, coordinated by the British MI6 and the American CIA, which toppled the flourishing democracy in Iran of Mohammed Mossadeq, had never left the drawing board.
- Gangster Farce (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 27, 2001)
Don’t make a Chhota Rajan of Abu Salem.
- India, Pak And Two Americas (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 27, 2001)
We both viw the US very differently, this could hold the key to our future.
- Falling Savings Ratios -- Why Not A Small Policy U-Turn? (Business Line, P. R. Brahmananda , Oct 27, 2001)
MONETARY policy in Indian conditions should properly have a number of non-conflicting objectives.
- A Post-Taliban World Order (Hindu, P. S. SURYANARAYANA, Oct 27, 2001)
A WORLD free from the politics of terrorism is said to be the creative objective of a long international `campaign' that ostensibly began with America's ongoing military offensive against Afghanistan.
- Correcting A Social Failure (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 27, 2001)
THE SUPREME COURT'S directive ordering an all-India survey of mental asylums is welcome.
- A Question Of Autonomy (Hindu, C. Rammanohar Reddy, Oct 27, 2001)
ISSUES RELATING to the World Trade Organisation are not the only ones that matter for Indian economic policy-making; for that would imply that the blame for all that is wrong at home has to be placed at the door of the WTO.
- Not Such An Enigma (Telegraph, ASHOK MITRA , Oct 27, 2001)
The Nobel awards are these days a much depreciated currency.
- Celebs Pay For Success (Telegraph, RAVI VYAS, Oct 27, 2001)
Many Indian publishers plan their new releases for October-March before the close of the financial year.
- Were The Tehelka Tapes Doctored? (Tribune, Tavleen Singh, Oct 27, 2001)
WOULD I like to see how the Tehelka tapes had been doctored, said the voice on the telephone, because if I did I could come along and take a look?
- We’ll Lose, But Will Die Trying (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 27, 2001)
Not accepting ANZ’s settlement makes NHB more vulnerable, but no official has the guts to say so
- Technology To The Rescue (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 27, 2001)
THE recent launch of the Technology Experiments Satellite (TES) is a laudable achievement. The need for proper surveillance was seriously felt during the Kargil war when there was infiltration from across the border.
- India’s Stakes In Afghan War (Tribune, Pran Chopra , Oct 27, 2001)
IT is unnecessary and shortsighted for India to be peevish about what Pakistan is getting out of the war in Afghanistan. What it is getting is not much, and some of it is what India is better off without.
- Forsaking Paradise:stories From Ladakh (Telegraph, Abdul Ghani Lone, Oct 27, 2001)
Forsaking paradise: Stories from ladakh by Abdul Ghani Sheikh is an absorbing collection of tales, translated and introduced by Ravina Aggarwal.
- Poto Is Very Much Here (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 27, 2001)
THERE are some simple truths about terrorist outfits. And everybody knows them and the exception is the government.
- Once Upon Another Time: A Parable (Telegraph, Sajni Mukherjee, Oct 27, 2001)
Once upon a time there was one world, one people, and only one language.
- How Afghans Knock Down Helicopters (Tribune, Cecil Victor, Oct 27, 2001)
US air superiority notwithstanding; its 21st century heliborne assault on Afghanistan will meet up with primitive but effective methods adopted by Afghan fighters using handheld rifles.
- Anthrax Scare Makes Us Rush To Labs (Indian Express, Rosie Mestel, Oct 26, 2001)
Long before anthrax set off scares and brisk Cipro sales across the US, a handful of scientists worked in relative obscurity to grasp how the tiny bacterium wreaks its havoc on the human body. They have made big strides.
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