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Articles 16721 through 16820 of 27558:
- Pilots Need Better Training (Indian Express, S. K. Sareen, Oct 08, 2001)
We learn from nature that the prospects of a young plant depend on how well it has been cared for, protected and nurtured as a young sapling.
- Designed To Master The Globe (Telegraph, Achin Vanaik , Oct 08, 2001)
Beyond the common condemnation of, and horror about, the tragedies of September 11 in New York and Washington DC there has emerged a serious political divide in India.
- Imf's Cautious Optimism On World Economy (Business Line, S. Venkitaramanan , Oct 08, 2001)
THE LATEST World Economic Outlook (W.E.O.) released by the IMF is noteworthy for its forecasts that the global economy will be 2.6 per cent this year and rise to 3.5 per cent in 2002.
- A Defensive Exercise (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 08, 2001)
THE LATEST SET of consultation papers released by the National Commission to Review the Working of the Constitution (NCRWC), like those brought out last January and May.
- Hounded And Harassed (Hindu, Kuldip Nayar, Oct 08, 2001)
BEHIND THE historical Red Fort, a weekly bazaar had come up from the days of Bahadur Shah Zafar, the last Moghul ruler, more than 150 years ago.
- Usa: The ‘Evil-Doer’ Wronged? (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 08, 2001)
RECENTLY at Chicago, President Bush declared a package of air security.
- Urban Employment -- Growth-Centred Programme, The Answer? (Business Line, Kala S. Sridhar, Oct 08, 2001)
A NUMBER of changes recently occurred in the country's urban employment base.
- Coping With Promotion (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Oct 08, 2001)
YOU may find the title intriguing, considering that promotion is what you have eagerly waited for, carrying with it the glow of recognition, higher pay and perks, greater scope for your talents and increased access to the powers-that-be.
- Rebels In Demand (Hindu, B. MURALIDHAR REDDY, Oct 07, 2001)
IF YOU are wondering about the delay in U.S. counter strikes on Afghanistan, then shift focus to the Northern Alliance and its increasing clout and control over territory.
- The Verdict And After (Hindu, HAROON HABIB, Oct 07, 2001)
THE FOUR-PARTY alliance led by the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) chief, Begum Khaleda Zia has got a stunning and unprecedented two-thirds majority in the elections held on October 1.
- Can The King And His Men Do It? (Hindu, VAIJU NARAVANE, Oct 07, 2001)
MOHAMMED ZAHIR Shah, the former ruler of Afghanistan who turns 87 on October 15, lives in a secluded villa surrounded by gardens in the northern Roman suburb of Cassia.
- Different Rules? (Hindu, NEENA VYAS , Oct 07, 2001)
THREE DAYS ago when the hijack drama of an Alliance Air plane took place - which turned out to be a false alarm due to a miscommunication.
- Dealing With A Stalwart's Loss (Hindu, Javed M. Ansari , Oct 07, 2001)
FOR A party that has been steadily losing the best and the brightest, the tragic death last Sunday of Madhavrao Scindia must be hard to take.
- The Perpetrators (Hindu, Shujaat Bukhari , Oct 07, 2001)
The following is a profile of the main militant outfits active in Jammu and Kashmir:
- Caught Unawares (Hindu, VINAY KUMAR, Oct 07, 2001)
AS THE attack on the Jammu and Kashmir Assembly complex left yet another tale of death and sufferings in the Valley, it became clear that the Centre had gone wrong in its initial assessment.
- Will It Ever End? (Hindu, Shujaat Bukhari , Oct 07, 2001)
KASHMIR'S AGONY is deepening with each passing day.
- Will It Ever End? (Hindu, Shujaat Bukhari , Oct 07, 2001)
KASHMIR'S AGONY is deepening with each passing day.
- Daunting Challenges Before Khaleda Zia (Tribune, Harihar Swarup , Oct 07, 2001)
TWO warring Begums of Bangladesh, not on talking terms and disagreeing on almost everything, have performed a feat; they have ushered in democracy in their poverty-stricken country.
- Dealing With A Stalwart's Loss (Hindu, Javed M. Ansari , Oct 07, 2001)
FOR A party that has been steadily losing the best and the brightest, the tragic death last Sunday of Madhavrao Scindia must be hard to take.
- Cutting Through The Short Cut (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 07, 2001)
Fit to size? For several decades, successive heads of the intelligence bureau of the country have enjoyed unrestricted access to the PM.
- Different Rules? (Hindu, NEENA VYAS , Oct 07, 2001)
THREE DAYS ago when the hijack drama of an Alliance Air plane took place - which turned out to be a false alarm due to a miscommunication.
- Afghanistan Caught In The Crossfire (Tribune, Rakshat Puri, Oct 07, 2001)
AFGHANISTAN is passing through a crucial phase in its history.
- Caught Unawares (Hindu, VINAY KUMAR, Oct 07, 2001)
AS THE attack on the Jammu and Kashmir Assembly complex left yet another tale of death and sufferings in the Valley, it became clear that the Centre had gone wrong in its initial assessment.
- Concerted Global Effort Needed To Combat Terrorism (Tribune, Kuldip Singh Bajwa, Oct 07, 2001)
THE terrorist strikes in the USA on September 11 have brought the scourge of terrorism into very sharp global focus.
- The Perpetrators (Hindu, Shujaat Bukhari , Oct 07, 2001)
The following is a profile of the main militant outfits active in Jammu and Kashmir:
- Defending War And Advancing Human Freedom (Tribune, M. G. Devasahayam , Oct 07, 2001)
‘MAKE no mistake about it’ — overwhelmingly supported by its people, the mightiest nation on earth is at war for ‘defending and advancing human freedom’.
- Non-Violence Isn’t A Hollow Proclamation (Tribune, Humra Quraishi, Oct 07, 2001)
FIRST things first. Together with the keyword of the month, terrorism, it is absolutely critical to add another to it: non-violence.
- Rebels In Demand (Hindu, B. MURALIDHAR REDDY, Oct 07, 2001)
IF YOU are wondering about the delay in U.S. counter strikes on Afghanistan, then shift focus to the Northern Alliance and its increasing clout and control over territory.
- Fighting A Battle For India In Eu (Indian Express, Gaurav C. Sawant, Oct 07, 2001)
AMONG the few supporters of India in the European Parliament, Oliver Dupuis feels if the world wants to fight fundamentalist forces like the Taliban, it has to strengthen democracies.
- Colour Rises (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 07, 2001)
A Bengali storyteller once constructed a fantasy in which Indians had colonized Great Britain.
- Selective Democracy (Telegraph, MUKUL KESAVAN, Oct 07, 2001)
How does the United States of America. combine democratic practice and dreadful cruelty with so little self-consciousness?
- Votes In The Right Boxes (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 07, 2001)
Evidently, in India, people do not cast their votes, they vote their castes.
- ‘Women Have A Big Role To Play In Conflict Resolution’ (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, Oct 06, 2001)
Conflict resolution addresses the underlying causes of conflicts as well as the residual elements that may trigger a return to violence.
- Helpless In The Afghan Quagmire (Tribune, Syed Nooruzzaman, Oct 06, 2001)
WHILE the USA, the leader of the anti-terrorism coalition, is busy applying its energies to punishing the perpetrators of the September 11 terrorist attacks in New York and Washington.
- Hasty Offer Of Help To Usa (Tribune, Sunanda K. Datta-Ray, Oct 06, 2001)
TO repeat what the majority leader in the German parliament said recently, adapting John F. Kennedy’s famous words in Berlin, Wir sind Amerikaner, We are all Americans.
- Looks Brown, Thinks White (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 06, 2001)
When Dinesh D’Souza recently referred to the terrorists who attacked New York as warriors on a late night television show, it created a furore in the USA.
- Pakistan’s Anti-Osama Policy (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 06, 2001)
IN a spectacular diplomatic somersault, the second in three weeks, Pakistan has disowned the Taliban and its honoured guest, Osama bin Laden.
- Economics: For, By And Of The People? (Business Line, K. Gopalan, Oct 06, 2001)
A SOCIETY is an organic whole, simultaneously active in various spheres, constantly getting transformed.
- Bankers' Reluctance (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Oct 06, 2001)
BANKERS ARE CLEVERLY drumming up opinion against interest rates cuts.
- Terrorism In Kashmir (Business Line, Ranabir Ray Choudhury , Oct 06, 2001)
THERE is, no doubt, whatever that Islamabad is actively engaged in aiding and abetting terrorist activity in the Kashmir Valley.
- Wanted, A United Resolve To Fight Terrorism (The Financial Express, Ashwani Kumar, Oct 06, 2001)
The terrorists’ strike of September 11, 2001, unprecedented in its fanatical savagery, is a turning point in the global endeavour against international terrorism.
- Central Bank Autonomy: Changing Contours In India (The Financial Express, Y. Venugopal Reddy, Oct 06, 2001)
Extracts from Reserve Bank of India Deputy Governor Y Venugopal Reddy’s speech delivered at the Indian Institute of Management, Indore, on October 3, 2001:
- Prepare An Iron-Clad Case Against Pak. Terrorists (Hindu, Kuldip Nayar, Oct 06, 2001)
I seldom watch Pakistan TV news. It is more biased than Doordarshan's. The other day, I was horrified to listen to Pakistan's reaction to the Jaish-e-Mohammed's attack on the Jammu and Kashmir Assembly building in Srinagar.
- This Deal Is All Gas (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 06, 2001)
FROM the very start, the $388 million deal between BG India and Enron Oil and Gas India Ltd signed on Wednesday appeared doomed based as it was on conditions to be met by a third party.
- Good Morning, America? (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 06, 2001)
YOU live an entire half century cowering under the fear of ‘‘third party intervention’’.
- Osama And The Deeds Of Mass Terror (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 06, 2001)
A FORCEFUL CASE has been presented by the British Prime Minister, Mr. Tony Blair, against Osama bin Laden, the suspected evil genius behind the atrocities of mass terror that stunned the world on September 11.
- A Humane Reading (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 06, 2001)
LAST WEEK'S RULING by a Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court - and earlier by lower courts in different parts of the country in recent years.
- Comedy Of Errors (Tribune, P. Lal , Oct 06, 2001)
ERRORS generally lead to trouble. Sometimes, however, they add spice to life. I recount a few such episodes below.
- After The Word, What? (Indian Express, Sunil Jain, Oct 06, 2001)
Read various newspaper reports of how the government got egg all over its face in the hijack that never was, and one of the things that strikes you immediately is that of the unlocked cockpit door.
- Hit Back (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 06, 2001)
There is a time to write and a time to act. The prime minister, Mr Atal Bihari Vajpayee, should recognize that the time to write polite, if pointed, letters to the president of the United States of America or the head of any other country is long past.
- Privy Purse To Politics (Telegraph, Sunanda K. Datta-Ray, Oct 06, 2001)
Summoning one of Gwalior’s sirdars, Madhavrao Scindia once showed me the swathe of cloth that hung from a peak of the man’s tilted Maratha turban.
- Away From Foreign Soil (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 06, 2001)
Most ministers, Central and state, have their proposals for foreign visits spiked by the prime minister.
- Of Rising Prices, Low Production... (Business Line, P. R. Brahmananda , Oct 06, 2001)
WHAT is the current state of the Indian economy according to the latest available information?
- Sense And Senescence (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 06, 2001)
Indian politicians should come with a ‘best before’ date.
- Cnn Vs Bbc, Bias Vs Balance (Indian Express, Rajeev Shukla, Oct 06, 2001)
THOSE who have been following both BBC and CNN after the September 11 attacks in New York and Washington DC, must have realised why the former is unquestionably the more professional and balanced of the two.
- Hijack Drama (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 06, 2001)
AFTER the September 11 World Trade Centre calamity, panic is in the air - literally. Every straying plane appears to be a ticking bomb.
- Learning To Forget (Hindu, DIPANKAR GUPTA, Oct 06, 2001)
IT IS said about the Bourbon Kings that they forgot nothing and they learnt nothing.
- Schoolbag May Become Lighter (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 06, 2001)
THE social sciences syllabus, said to have been so far loaded with information, will be made sleeker in the new syllabi for schools, according to India’s apex body that deals with school education.
- Saving The Taj (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 05, 2001)
THE Supreme Court on Wednesday warned about 80 foundries in Agra that they would be closed down if they did not stop using highly polluting coke or coal.
- Mockable Hijack (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 05, 2001)
It’s been a month-long crash course for aviation and terrorism experts. September 11 proved that to launch a missile attack, you don’t require missiles, kitchen knives aboard a civilian aircraft will do fine.
- Politics Sans Values (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 05, 2001)
THE EXIT OF Mr. Keshubhai Patel as Chief Minister of Gujarat (for the second time now) is yet another instance of the BJP's claims of being a party with a different political culture getting eroded.
- Bringing Up Parents (Indian Express, Rani Sharma, Oct 05, 2001)
WE are extremely well brought up parents. We have been subjected to strict discipline by our son right from his childhood. He had a mind of his own and he laid down the rules for us early in his life.
- Real Ideals (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Oct 05, 2001)
IN ALL religions, there is a gulf of difference between the ideal and the real.
- Handled With Much Finesse (Telegraph, K.P. NAYAR , Oct 05, 2001)
All through the period when P.V. Narasimha Rao struggled to change the course of India’s relations with the Islamic countries by building a partnership with Iran.
- Thus Far And No Farther (Tribune, Hari Jaisingh, Oct 05, 2001)
AMIDST new-found global determination to fight terrorism the official Indian voice tends to be marginalised, notwithstanding the fact that this country, as pointed out in my last column.
- Goodbye, Good Monsoon (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 05, 2001)
WHAT promises to be the Agriculture Ministry’s gain is the Food Ministry’s grin. The monsoon has been proficient this year and, barring a few subdivisions in west Madhya Pradesh, evenly spread.
- Terror: Concentrated And Unexpected (Business Line, P. Krishna Rao, Oct 05, 2001)
NO other tragedy in recent times has evoked a reaction of this magnitude as the terror attacks in Washington and New York did, though there have been bigger catastrophes caused by nature and man.
- Current Account Situation Worrisome (The Financial Express, Sachchidanand Shukla, Oct 05, 2001)
The Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) latest data show a capital account surplus in the first quarter to June 2001.
- Dubious Victory (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 05, 2001)
Electoral verdicts are not always even-handed with rewards and punishments.
- From Dummy To Mummy (Indian Express, I.M. Sahai, Oct 05, 2001)
WITH the induction of O. Paneerselvan as the new, ‘‘stopgap’’ chief minister of Tamil Nadu, the spotlight has again moved to political heads who were ‘remote-controlled’ like a ventriloquist’s dummy.
- Apartheid In The Mind (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 05, 2001)
It seemed inconceivable three weeks ago, but today, one can actually applaud the restraint Washington has demonstrated in the aftermath of September 11.
- Who Is An American? (Indian Express, Vibha Pingle, Oct 05, 2001)
America is awash in a sea of red, white and blue. The public and private displays of the flag, a symbol of patriotism, have reached levels not seen since the Cold War.
- Steel Is Flat (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Oct 05, 2001)
IF EVEN ON the eve of the busy season the steel industry is looking for sops from the Centre, instead of bracing itself for higher production, it is a sure sign of its helplessness.
- Raising Fii Investment Limits May Not Help (The Financial Express, Bhanoji Roa, Oct 05, 2001)
At a time when our economy needed help to combat the growth recession (see article “Fighting slowdown requires bold strategies”, September 4).
- Indian Ocean Rim Group: A Watered Down Version (Business Line, Gautam Murthy, Oct 05, 2001)
THE IOR-ARC (Indian Ocean Rim Association for Regional Cooperation), of which India is a member, was formed in March 1997 after a round of meetings called the Mauritius Initiative.
- Downgrading Respect For Accuracy And Truth (Tribune, S. Nihal Singh, Oct 05, 2001)
TEHELKA dot com has won applause in India and the world for its daring piece of investigative journalism.
- Economic Consequences Of Terrorism (Business Line, R. Parthasarathy , Oct 05, 2001)
NO DOUBT, America's response to the heinous terrorist attacks that resulted in the loss of thousands of innocent lives was initially one of anger.
- War Drums In The West, Peace Pipe In North-East (Indian Express, Sanjoy Hazarika, Oct 05, 2001)
AS war clouds gather to our North West, and hostile armies, terrorists and anti-terrorist forces confront each other, India’s eastern borders sound strangely subdued, even peaceful.
- 70 Per Cent Of Pak’s Privatisation Plan On Hold Over Crisis (The Financial Express, Jack Redden, Oct 05, 2001)
Pakistan said on Thursday that 70 per cent of a privatisation programme that was to raise $1 billion by the end of this year has been put on hold because of the Afghan crisis.
- The World Must Unite To Kill Terrorism (Business Line, Aravind Sitaraman, Oct 05, 2001)
WITH terrorism going global, it is important that its principal victims, the United States, India, Israel, and other democratic nations, pro-actively co-operate and collaborate to pre-empt and challenge this new destructive anti-democratic force.
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