|
|
|
|
|
|
Articles 16521 through 16620 of 27558:
- Leaping On To Anti-Us Bandwagon (Tribune, Tavleen Singh, Oct 13, 2001)
IT is, said the Taliban’s Ambassador to Ismalabad, an illegal action by the tyrant America.
- Musharraf Finds English Press Helpful (Tribune, Gobind Thukral, Oct 13, 2001)
OBVIOUSLY it is the US bombing of Afghanistan and the consequent protests in several cities that continues to dominate the mainline newspapers in Pakistan.
- Backwards Into The Future (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 13, 2001)
Punjab opposing the WTO policy on constitutional grounds shows how low the state has sunk.
- Sir Vidia’s Eye On India (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 13, 2001)
An excerpt from V.S. Naipaul’s 1977 critique,‘India: A Wounded Civilisation’.
- Right Place, Right Time (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 13, 2001)
Wordsmith Laloo Prasad Yadav recognises a member of his word-weavers’ ilk when he spots one.
- After The Taliban (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 13, 2001)
INDIA has good reason to be concerned about what shape a new post-Taliban regime will take.
- A Nobel For Mr. Naipaul (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 13, 2001)
FORTY-FIVE YEARS after he published The Mystic Masseur - the hilarious journey of a failed school teacher who becomes a revered mystic - Mr. V. S. Naipaul has been decorated with the Nobel Prize for Literature.
- America, Oil And Afghanistan (Hindu, Sitaram Yechury, Oct 13, 2001)
IT HAS finally happened. American imperialism has begun its unilateral war against Afghanistan.
- Hungary For Action Against All Forms Of Terrorism (Hindu, K. K. Katyal , Oct 13, 2001)
Hungary's is a typical case of the deep commitment of the European nations to combat terrorism after the recent attacks in the U.S.
- I Felt A Stinging Blow On My Back And I Looked Around To See The Policeman Swinging His Rifle At Me. I Turned And Bang! (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 13, 2001)
With four foreigners in custody, Omar Sheikh sends ransom notes to the embassies and the media. But an unexpected encounter with the police foils the plan.
- Complete Isolation Of Taliban (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 12, 2001)
THE beleaguered Taliban regime of Afghanistan has failed to evoke any sympathy even from the 57-nation Organisation of Islamic Conference (OIC).
- Chandrika On Backfoot (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 12, 2001)
SRI Lanka President Chandrika Kumaratunga appears to be fighting for political survival.
- Balancing Act (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 12, 2001)
The Jharkhand chief minister, Mr Babulal Marandi, had to do a difficult balancing act in formulating the new state’s reservation policy.
- Beyond Belief (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 12, 2001)
THERE is delicious irony in V.S. Naipaul’s Nobel moment.
- Their War, Not Ours (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 12, 2001)
SINCE the yardstick of the success or failure of India’s foreign policy is linked to Pakistan’s standing in the international community.
- The War On Television (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 12, 2001)
I don’t take Colin Powell’s statement on face value. The Americans don’t have the guts to go beyond Al Qaeda.
- Competitive Advantage: Alternative Scenarios (Business Line, S. Venu , Oct 12, 2001)
COMPETITIVE advantage is now an accepted buzzword in the strategic management jargon.
- World Bank Shift Gears Unobtrusively (Business Line, G. Srinivasan , Oct 12, 2001)
WITH the Washington Consensus of policy-based lending strategy of the Bretton Woods institutions such as the International Monetary Fund.
- Policy Of National Interest (Business Line, Kuldip Nayar, Oct 12, 2001)
NATIONAL interest can change a countrys policy. This is how the Pakistani President, Gen Pervez Musharraf, has defended his decision to support America.
- Are Fears Of Global Recession Real? (Business Line, R. Srinivasan, Oct 12, 2001)
ECONOMISTS and business analysts around the world are coming to terms with the fact that the global economy has arguably entered a period of recession and uncertainty.
- Making A Business Of Books (Telegraph, RAVI VYAS, Oct 12, 2001)
Hardly any business has a longer, deeper tradition of pessimism than the Indian book trade.
- Crusading Is The Idea (Telegraph, ASHOK MITRA , Oct 12, 2001)
Circa fifty years ago, the United States of America was in the midst of a frenzy of patriotism: a general call to arms, Korea-ward ho, Syngman Rhee, the devil incarnate, had to be installed as that country’s absolute ruler.
- Soft State, Soft Economy (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 12, 2001)
Lack of coherence to blame for sluggish growth.
- Vision Thing (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Oct 12, 2001)
I now understand why the senior Mr George Bush, when he was the US President, was riled by the `vision thing'.
- Little Sympathy In Oic For Pak. (Hindu, KESAVA MENON, Oct 12, 2001)
MANAMA (Bahrain) OCT. 11. Foreign Ministers of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference (OIC) get together to ponder the consequences that could befall the member-states as the U.S. retaliates for the terrorist strikes of September 11.
- Address Kashmir's Alienation (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 12, 2001)
EVER SINCE THE United States proclaimed its intention to mount a global `war' on terrorism in ``all its forms'', as a response to the September 11 carnage, India has been investing considerable energy in getting the Governments worldwide.
- Afghanistan After The Taliban (Hindu, T. Sreedhar, Oct 12, 2001)
SINCE THE last week of September, the media has been debating the post-Taliban scenarios for Afghanistan.
- Replacing Apm In Oil Products: Tough But Unavoidable (The Financial Express, R K Roy, Oct 12, 2001)
The administered pricing mechanism (APM) for oil products is slated to end this fiscal.
- Counter-Strikes And The Law (Hindu, V. S. Mani, Oct 12, 2001)
LOSS OF innocent human lives resulting from terrorist acts anywhere in the world must shock the conscience of humankind everywhere.
- The Opiate (Business Line, Timeri N. Murari , Oct 12, 2001)
DO TERRORISTS make good rulers?
- ‘Green Corporate Practices Will Pay In The Long Run’ (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, Oct 12, 2001)
At a time when environmental concerns are gradually showing up in corporate boardrooms, the Tata Energy Research Institute (Teri), in an effort to encourage this trend, has constituted the Corporate Environmental Awards.
- Export Credit Refinance Rate Should Be Delinked From Bank Rate (The Financial Express, Atmadip Ray, Oct 12, 2001)
So far, so good. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has scored a point or two by announcing a whole set of packages to give impetus to export proceedings.
- Regional War With Global Reach (Business Line, S. Sethuraman, Oct 12, 2001)
THE air and missile attacks the US has launched on Afghanistan will have far-reaching implications for regional and global security.
- History By Fiat (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 12, 2001)
THE LATEST DIRECTIVE by the Human Resource Development (HRD) Minister, Dr. Murli Manohar Joshi, to the National Council for Education Research.
- A Small Aircraft And The Clouds Of Doom (Indian Express, Hari Bhagat, Oct 12, 2001)
Flying through cumulo nimbus clouds requires both experience and nerves of steel.
- New Politico-Strategic Equations (Tribune, Hari Jaisingh, Oct 12, 2001)
WHAT will be the fallout of Afghan developments in the light of the changing politico-strategic setting in India's neighbourhood? What will be the nature of new alignments in the region?
- Walkers-In-Law (Tribune, V.K. Kapoor, Oct 12, 2001)
PEOPLE have an inherent need to feel connected and they will do it in whatever ways are easiest for them. Need to connect with others is a deep emotional need. People seek relationships that enrich life.
- Afghanistan: Looking Beyond The Taliban (Tribune, M.S.N. Menon, Oct 12, 2001)
AT last, America has struck back. It is the first phase to take on Bin Laden and the Taliban.
- Deadly War Dust And Environment (Tribune, M. Rajivlochan, Oct 12, 2001)
CONSIDER the effect of America’s unrelenting bombing on the environment of Afghanistan. Over 50 missiles and many hundred bombs are being showered on that country each day.
- United Front (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 12, 2001)
In his address to the congress, Mr George W. Bush, the president of the United States of America had sagely declared that his country was not at war with Islam but with the taliban, who in the name of Islam use violence to kill innocent people.
- The Myth About Islamic World (Hindu, Amit Baruah, Oct 11, 2001)
SINGAPORE, OCT. 10. The ``Muslim'' world has come under scrutiny after the September 11 terrorist attacks in the United States.
- Vijay Goel Comes A Long Way (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 11, 2001)
As the Minister of State in the Prime Minister’s Office, Mr Vijay Goel has come a long way.
- Treading More Cautiously (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 11, 2001)
THE UNITED NATIONS Secretary-General, Mr. Kofi Annan, has aptly assessed the worldwide mood of dismay over the killings of four U.N.-contracted civilian workers during the ongoing American aerial and missile attacks on Afghanistan.
- Here Is His Quota Of Trouble (Telegraph, MADHUSHREE C. BHOWMIK, Oct 11, 2001)
Reservation still remains a thorn in Babulal Marandi’s brittle bed of roses.
- Where Is The Reconciliation? (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 11, 2001)
ONE of the consequences of the end of the cold war is that it is no longer possible to cast global conflicts in simplistic ideological terms.
- New Resolve For A Thankless Exercise (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 11, 2001)
THE PUBLIC SECTOR disinvestment programme received a shot in the arm with the Government announcing on Friday the strategic sales of two undertakings.
- Biological Terrorism (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 11, 2001)
THE anthrax infection of two persons working in a newspaper office at Boca-Raton (Florida) may have been accidental, but it has created fear throughout the USA.
- Towards A Better Life (Tribune, Acharya Mahaprajna, Oct 11, 2001)
THANKS to our sense organs, to observe others and learn about them is one of our natural habits.
- Pitroda And Telecom Revolution (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 11, 2001)
Satyanarayan Gangaram Pitroda, popularly known as Sam Pitroda, brought about a telecommunications revolution in the country.
- The Label Of ‘Rogue Army’ (Tribune, G Parthasarathy, Oct 11, 2001)
A number of Western newspapers like the New York Times carried announcements labelling the Pakistan army a “Rogue Army” during the Kargil conflict.
- Thank You, Kapil (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 11, 2001)
SOMETIMES a small gesture is all that it takes for someone to show his true worth. On Tuesday Kapil Dev did just that and in the process earned the respect of the cricket-crazy nation.
- Military Significance Of Aerial Attacks Is Marginal (Indian Express, Satish Nambiar, Oct 11, 2001)
THE terrorist attacks on the World Trade Centre in New York and the Pentagon in Washington exactly a month ago has had a significant impact on the American people in many ways.
- War Impact On Economy (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 11, 2001)
UNION Finance Minister Yashwant Sinha is an inveterate votary of the feel good factor.
- Caring For Them And Their Children (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 11, 2001)
Operational strategies to converge service delivery at village levels include the following: 1. utilize village self help groups to organize and provide basic services for reproductive and child health care.
- Generals And Foragers (Telegraph, Bhaskar Ghose, Oct 11, 2001)
The world watches, almost as if it were mesmerized, as the taliban is punished for the carnage of September 11.
- Out Of Tune (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 11, 2001)
It was a common assumption that utopian ideas had made an exit from the Congress after Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi withdrew from the party’s affairs.
- Caught On The Blind Side (Telegraph, Sumantra Banerjee, Oct 11, 2001)
Pakistan just can’t believe its luck. If it isn’t a multi-million dollar gift cheque, then it’s the rescheduling of even larger amounts of debt.
- Beyond Rhetoric (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 11, 2001)
Electoral politics is not necessarily a dependable guide to a government’s diplomatic priorities.
- Coal Sector Needs Rejig In Case Of Change In Energy Use Pattern (The Financial Express, Sunil Mukhopadhyay, Oct 11, 2001)
While the full impact of the terrorist attacks in the United States on the economy is yet to be assessed, one sector that is sure to be affected is energy.
- Reporting From Trenches (Business Line, Menka Shivdasani , Oct 11, 2001)
WAR and television have always had a very strange and intimate relationship.
- Early Sightings (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 11, 2001)
I made several acquaintances and convinced a British chap called Trevor to come to the village after a few days.
- Burqa, By Choice Vs Decree (Business Line, Rasheeda Bhagat , Oct 11, 2001)
FOLLOWING the terror attacks in the US, and Osama bin Laden and his hosts, the Taliban, becoming dirty words across much of the world.
- Links In The Terror Chain (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 11, 2001)
The sooner Jaish-e-Mohammed is termed terrorist, the better.
- Nailing The Pak Lie (Indian Express, Manoj Mitta, Oct 11, 2001)
In September-October ’94, Sheikh combs Delhi to kidnap foreigners as part of the conspiracy to force the release of Jaish chief Masood Azhar. He catches a Briton but loses an American
- Re-Engaging Pakistan (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Oct 11, 2001)
ABOUT THREE weeks ago the Pakistan President, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, in defending his decision to support American military action against Afghanistan, called on India to lay off Pakistan.
- Only Agricultural Reforms Can Speed Up The Export Zone Process (The Financial Express, Ashok B Sharma, Oct 11, 2001)
The agro export zone (AEZ) scheme of the Agriculture and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority (Apeda) has given an opportunity to the Centre and states to introduce immediate reforms in agriculture.
- Two Years Of Mr Krishna’s Rule Leave A Mixed Bag For Karnataka (The Financial Express, K. P. Sethunath, Oct 11, 2001)
In the era of seamless images, every significant public event gets transformed into a display of self-righteous assertion or laudatory emptiness making any meaningful appraisal of the event a difficult task.
- Will The Graft Work? (Business Line, K. Srinivasan , Oct 11, 2001)
CO-OPERATION and competition are concepts which cannot be dovetailed.
- Reality Check On Afghan Front (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Oct 11, 2001)
THE US Defence Secretary, Mr Donald H. Rumsfeld, and the Chairman, US Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen Richard B. Myers, could scarce forbear gloating over the pounding of the Afghan cities for the fourth day and night in succession.
- Keystone Cops Go To War (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 11, 2001)
What our police urgently need: a sense of proportion.
- A General And A Rogue Army (Business Line, G Parthasarathy, Oct 11, 2001)
A NUMBER of Western newspapers, such as The New York Times, carried announcements labelling the Pakistan army a "Rogue Army'' during the Kargil conflict.
- Women Oppose War (Hindu, Mythili Sivaraman , Oct 11, 2001)
``We have all been overwhelmed by the attacks in the USA...
- Auditors And Fraud (Business Line, Pratap Ravindran , Oct 11, 2001)
THE last decade or so -- coincidental with but not necessarily causally related to -- the `liberalisation' of the Indian economy.
- The Bbc Show (Business Line, K. Ramesh, Oct 11, 2001)
THE economy of the nation is dependent upon the BBC show _ not that of the British Broadcasting Corporation _ but the anxiously watched moves of the Bin Laden-Bush-Colin Powell combine.
- Go For Margin Trading Through The Se Mechanism (The Financial Express, Deena A. Mehta, Oct 11, 2001)
Risk management, which is the key to success, has not been put in place in banks for the margin trading system announced recently.
- The War On Television (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 11, 2001)
‘‘The US might claim that their armed aircraft can fly with relative ease, but I feel that the danger still holds.
- The London Connection In The Plot That Killed Ahmed Shah Masood (Indian Express, Mohamad Bazzi, Oct 10, 2001)
The men who assassinated Afghan opposition leader Ahmed Shah Massood succeeded where the Soviets failed at least 15 times.
- Testing Time For Musharraf (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 10, 2001)
IN the US-led war against terrorism, Pakistani ruler General Pervez Musharraf is fighting his battle on two major fronts.
- Chastise Reasonably (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 10, 2001)
However, it is still widely felt that the rights of parents to exercise their parental responsibility and to bring up children without undue interference from the state also needed to be recognized.
- Degrading Treatment (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 10, 2001)
The “reasonable chastisement” defence breaches the European law on human rights, and article 3 of the convention:
Previous 100 Telugu Desam Party Articles | Next 100 Telugu Desam Party Articles
Home
Page
|
|