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Articles 23021 through 23072 of 23072:
- Why Vajpayee, Musharraf Should Bite Into Afghan Pie (Indian Express, Rajinder Puri, Nov 16, 2001)
MY reaction to President Bush’s declaration of war against terrorism was that America could win battles but lose the war if it fights only terrorists.
- Balkan Bachelor (Pioneer, Sudhansu Mohanty , Nov 16, 2001)
The first time I spoke to Youliy was when he hit his nose against the glass-pane and had a mild concussion.
- Clarifications On Terrorism (Pioneer, Vivek Kumar, Nov 15, 2001)
Much ink has been spilt for and against the US attack on Afghanistan.
- The ‘Secular’ Side (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Nov 15, 2001)
A lot is known of bin Laden’s rich Saudi ties.
- Will Futures Trading In Individual Stocks Succeed In Filling Up The Badla Void? (The Financial Express, M. R. Mayya, Nov 15, 2001)
The decision taken by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) on November 1, 2001, to introduce futures in individual stocks in which options contracts have already been permitted is no doubt welcome as it has quite a few positive features.
- The Difference Between A Militant And A Terrorist (The Financial Express, G. V. Ramakrishnan , Nov 15, 2001)
We frequently hear the terms militant and terrorist in newspapers and on television.
- South Via Kabul? (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Nov 15, 2001)
It took more than five years for the Northern Alliance to return to Kabul, and under circumstances that are completely different from those that prevailed in the past.
- Crisis Of Hindu Bengalis (Pioneer, Abhijit Bhattacharyya , Nov 15, 2001)
The ruling Bangladesh Nationalist Party's call for imposition of Jaziya on the Hindu Bengalis (as reported in the Bangla daily, Sangbad) typifies the phrase:
- A Better Way To Fight Terrorism (Indian Express, Abhik Siddiqui, Nov 15, 2001)
We are often told that terrorism has no address. A terrorist is a terrorist no matter where ever he exists, whatever form he takes.
- Clarifications On Terrorism (Pioneer, Vivek Kumar, Nov 14, 2001)
Much ink has been spilt for and against the US attack on Afghanistan.
- A New Yorker (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Nov 14, 2001)
Yet another bolt of fear is bad news for the airline industry.
- The Fall Of Kabul (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Nov 14, 2001)
Now it must be a war for the Pushtun heart.
- The ‘Secular’ Side (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Nov 14, 2001)
NAJWA Ghanem’s family is terribly worried about her safety. Not only is the mother of 11 living in the Taliban-controlled section of Afghanistan.
- From A Village Boy To A Scholar (Tribune, Reeta Sharma, Nov 14, 2001)
THIS is a follow up on the life graph of a boy from village Bara Gaon in Varanasi.
- Politics Before Independence (Tribune, V. N. Datta, Nov 14, 2001)
IT was at the all-India Congress session held at Wardha on January 15, 1942, that Mahatma Gandhi designated Jawaharlal Nehru as his heir.
- Crisis Of Hindu Bengalis (Pioneer, Abhijit Bhattacharyya , Nov 14, 2001)
The ruling Bangladesh Nationalist Party's call for imposition of Jaziya on the Hindu Bengalis (as reported in the Bangla daily, Sangbad) typifies the phrase:
- South Via Kabul? (Pioneer, Editorial, The Tribune, Nov 14, 2001)
It took more than five years for the Northern Alliance to return to Kabul, and under circumstances that are completely different from those that prevailed in the past.
- The Doha Ivory Tower (Business Line, P. R. Brahmananda , Nov 14, 2001)
THE Report on the course of world trade in 2000 presented by the WTO about the same time as the Doha ministerial meeting is a grim pointer to the probable worse tidings ahead of the world economy in the immediate future.
- Did I Pass Or Fail? (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Nov 14, 2001)
Edward said points out how, in the global panorama of cultures, not all peoples are endowed with the equal right to narration and representation.
- How Prepared Is India To Tackle Bio-Chemical Terror? (The Financial Express, Ashok B Sharma, Nov 14, 2001)
“Though so far there has been no confirmed case of the spread of anthrax virus in the country, the threat of bio-chemical terrorism and radiological and nuclear warfare is real, not imaginary.
- The Indian Muslims Trial By Fire (Business Line, Rasheeda Bhagat , Nov 14, 2001)
SOON after the bombing of Afghanistan began, one of the favourite topics for the Indian media was splitting the Indian Muslim population into what hacks loved to call fundamentalists and moderates.
- Dying Unwept And Unsung (Hindu, Inder Malhotra, Nov 14, 2001)
Some may consider it rather late in the day for me to write about B.K. Nehru, one of the most distinguished Indians of our times and a rare blend of a civil servant.
- Facto Non Verba (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Nov 13, 2001)
Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee's statement that Pakistan will never get Kashmir is a strong rebuff to Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf's obession with Kashmir.
- In The Grip Of 'Islamophobia' (Pioneer, Sidharth Bhatia, Nov 13, 2001)
The Germans have an apt word for it-schadenfruede-which means a sense of gloating over someone else's misery and misfortune.
- Century Of Resistance (Pioneer, A. Surya Prakash, Nov 13, 2001)
Past experience shows that they (religious beliefs and social attitudes of Hindus and Muslims) are too irreconcilable and too incompatible to permit Hindus and Muslims ever forming a single nation.
- Tourist Police (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Nov 13, 2001)
THE Delhi Tourism Development Corporation has come out with an innovative proposal for minimising the incidents of harassment of tourists by unscrupulous elements.
- Temples Cry For Security (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Nov 13, 2001)
PURI being one of the four dhams (the four most important pilgrim centres) of the country, the theft of idols from the Jagannath temple there has led to a flurry of activity, with the enquiry being handed over to the CBI quickly.
- The Heat Is On (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Nov 13, 2001)
Reports of increasing levels of global warming-the last few years towards the turn of the millennium have been recorded as the warmest ever in recent history-make it imperative for earth's residents to take action necessary to save the planet.
- Glow Worms To Diyas (Indian Express, K. K. Khullar, Nov 13, 2001)
The winged insect called ‘jugnu’ in India is the world’s first glow lamp. Thousands of years ago when man lived in caves the firefly, or the glow worm, provided him light at night.
- Automobile Industry -- More Variety, More Competition (Business Line, N. Ramakrishnan , Nov 13, 2001)
WHEN THE first car rolled out of Maruti Udyog's plant in Gurgaon on December 14, 1983, it marked the beginning of a revolution in the Indian automobile industry.
- Jyoti Malhotra (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Nov 13, 2001)
THE corridors of the UN General Assembly in New York are a great place to network in, especially in session, when the building is crawling with leaders of all shapes, sizes and colours.
- Gasping For Breath (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Nov 13, 2001)
THE TRAGIC DEATHS of twelve infants in a hospital in Lucknow within a span of forty-eight hours last week is an alarming signal of the poor state of post-natal care available to the general public.
- Killing Caste By Conversion (Hindu, DIPANKAR GUPTA, Nov 13, 2001)
There is no reason why a single Dalit should still remain a Hindu. What has Hinduism done for them except to cripple and handicap them in every conceivable way?
- Potential For Swiss Investment Into India Yet To Be Fully Tapped (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, Nov 13, 2001)
Switzerland has been one of the stable trading partners of India.
- A Licence To Kill (Indian Express, Sudhir Vohra, Nov 13, 2001)
If hills have been denuded, you can plant trees. But how do you save a city scarred forever.
- Memory Bank (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Nov 12, 2001)
THE best scientific brains are yet to unravel, and, indeed, even to understand, the mysteries of memory.
- ‘Without Sanjay’s Version, Lies Kept Building Upon Lies’ (Indian Express, Vrinda Gopinath, Nov 12, 2001)
The other bahu of the Gandhi household, Minister of State for Culture and Animal Welfare, Maneka Gandhi, is triumphant after she won the libel suit against Harper Collins.
- Electoral Ballet In Uttar Pradesh (Indian Express, Seema Alavi, Nov 12, 2001)
UTTAR PRADESH is gearing up for assembly elections early next year. A war of words has already begun between the Samajwadi Party and the BJP.
- No, Mr Rushdie, It Is Not About Islam (Tribune, Davinder P. S. Sandhu, Nov 12, 2001)
SALMAN Rushdie has written that the terror trauma the world is facing is about Islam.
- Lessons From Christianity (Pioneer, A. Surya Prakash, Nov 12, 2001)
The process of modernism began in Christianity long before the Hindus got into the act.
- The Message From Doha (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Nov 12, 2001)
ON Sunday China’s Foreign Trade Minister handed over to WTO chief Mike Moore in Doha a document from President Jiang Zemin, thus concluding China’s 15-year quest for WTO membership.
- Dousing The Fires (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Nov 12, 2001)
The rejection last week by the Supreme Court of India of the petition that sought to glorify sati is to be welcomed unequivocally.
- Pakistan On Fire: Scenario I (Pioneer, Bobby Sharma, Nov 12, 2001)
In the 'Second Opinion' 'Is Pakistan Burning' (November 5, 2001) three scenarios under which Pakistan's President General Musharraf may be ousted were outlined.
- Us Needs A ‘Few Good Men’ For Cracking Osama’s Code (The Financial Express, Prashant Bakshi, Nov 12, 2001)
The key to clandestine operations lies in covert communications: a fundamental principle that is only well understood and cleverly mastered by Al Qaeda’s chief architect, Osama bin Laden.
- Twists And Turns In Public Policy (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Nov 12, 2001)
ECONOMIC THINKING THROUGHOUT the developed world is undergoing a major transformation in areas such as the role of government in business and social sectors.
- Security Of Pakistan's Nuclear Arsenal (Hindu, K. Santhanam, Nov 12, 2001)
AS THE war in Afghanistan enters the fifth week, concerns have emerged about the safety and security of Pakistan's nuclear arsenal.
- They Have Only Their Chains To Lose (Hindu, Kalpana Sharma , Nov 11, 2001)
ALMOST every day there is a story about some unspeakable atrocity committed on a person because he or she is a Dalit.
- Iran Keeps All Its Options (Hindu, KESAVA MENON, Nov 11, 2001)
THEY HAVE more reason to hate the Taliban than almost anyone else, they are allied with arguably the most competent anti- Taliban commander in the field and they have a lot to gain from the collapse of the Taliban.
- Myanmar: The Core Of India’s ‘Look East’ Policy (Tribune, Ashok Kapur, Nov 11, 2001)
FOLLOWING its independence in 1948, Myanmar had a policy of neutralism and isolationism up to the 1980s but when the Myanmar military disallowed Sui Kyi to assume power following the 1990 elections, the country’s external stance changed.
- History Of Conflict (Pioneer, Priyadarsi Dutta, Nov 11, 2001)
Hagia Sophia was built as a Christian Cathedral between AD 532 and 537 by the orders of the Byzantine Emperor Justin I at Constantinople, now Istanbul (Turkey).
- They Have Only Their Chains To Lose (Hindu, Kalpana Sharma , Nov 11, 2001)
ALMOST every day there is a story about some unspeakable atrocity committed on a person because he or she is a Dalit.
- Is Bjp Really Going The Congress Way? (Pioneer, C P Bhambhri, Nov 11, 2001)
A very important public meeting was held at Jaipur on October 14, 2001 to celebrate 75 years of the RSS.
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