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Articles 27021 through 27120 of 35809:
- Chidambaram Calls For Proper Regulation (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 26, 2005)
The Foreign Exchange Management Act, which replaces FERA, is aimed at facilitating external trade and payments and orderly development and maintenance of forex markets.
- State Apparel Park To Be Ready By 2006 (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 26, 2005)
The Rs 69 crore apparel park being developed near Doddaballapur is expected to be fully operational by 2006.
- Bill On Domestic Violence: Activists Raise Concerns (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 26, 2005)
Expressing hope that the Protection from Domestic Violence Bill would provide relief to hundreds of battered women across the country, women activists said the provision of appointing Protection Officers should be implemented with caution.
- Annan Asks G-8 To Help Tackle Poverty, Terror (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 26, 2005)
Mr Annan has praised the G-8 nations for focusing their attention on the special needs of Africa and climate change.
- Religious Scholar’S Murder (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Jun 25, 2005)
Yet another religious scholar has been shot dead in Karachi.
- Comrades Conspiring To Create Chaos? (Deccan Herald, Tavleen Singh, Jun 25, 2005)
The comrades claim to speak for the ‘people’ but they have never led an agitation demanding that the people get that most fundamental of human needs: water
- Taking The High Road (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Jun 25, 2005)
The Bush administration is finally preparing to set new fuel economy rules. That’s reason to cheer, even if this hardly represents leadership.
- Improper Use Leading To Water Wastage (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 25, 2005)
Inefficient urban environmental planning has resulted in loss of available potential water resources, said Mr P S Rana, Secretary, Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation, Government of India.
- Politics Of Budgeting (Dawn, Kaiser Bengali, Jun 25, 2005)
The budget is a political document. It determines how much money will be taken out of whose pockets and how much of that money will be put into whose pockets.
- Singapore Alliance (Dawn, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Jun 25, 2005)
The special economic agreement will benefit both countries in the long term.
- Trade Deficit Manageable, Says Rbi Governor Reddy (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 25, 2005)
Though India’s trade deficit has widened further, it is still manageable at this stage and is consistent with our growth aspirations, the RBI Governor said.
- Amu Reservation, A Good Step (Indian Express, S.M. FAIZAN AHMED AND SANJAY SUMAN , Jun 25, 2005)
The issue of reservations for Muslims at Aligarh Muslim University worries many.
- Emergency’S Reality Czech (Indian Express, Shekhar Gupta, Jun 25, 2005)
A second trip to Prague provokes a second thought on Emergency: why do we forget the strangling of our economic freedom?
- Complying With Tax Notification Conditions Isn't An Empty Formality (Business Line, D. Murali , Jun 25, 2005)
Flex Industries supplied structures, reservoir tanks and so forth on behalf of Triveny Engineering to Punjab Energy Development Agency (PEDA) for use in a mini hydel project on a canal in the State.
- Ready For Take-Off (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 25, 2005)
The process of commercial leasing of the Delhi and Mumbai airports has gathered momentum with the go-ahead from the Centre’s Group of Ministers (GoM) on Thursday.
- Hang Democracy! (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 25, 2005)
It takes little time to make a blunder — but a great deal more to undo it. It is understandable that a man of culture would feel particularly at home in Calcutta’s Nandan complex
- Eu Lessons For East Asian Regionalism (Japan Times, ERIC TEO CHU CHEOW, Jun 25, 2005)
Recent referendums in both France and Netherlands dealt a blow to European integration as voters overwhelming rejected the proposed EU Constitution 55-45 percent and 64-37 per- cent, respectively. Nine countries, including Germany, Spain and Italy, . . .
- Comprehensive Step (Dawn, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Jun 25, 2005)
The Union Cabinet’s decision to introduce in Parliament a bill to protect women from domestic violence is a welcome step.
- Taliban In The Footsteps Of Iraqis (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Jun 24, 2005)
AS many as 76 people were killed in military operations launched by Afghan and US troops with warplanes’ support in the Mian Nishin district in Kandhar province that the Taliban had taken over last week.
- Door Wide Open For Resolving Korean Nuclear Issue (Japan Times, JAMES A. KELLY, Jun 24, 2005)
There is no country in Asia, indeed in the world, that behaves like the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK).
- A Slice Of India In A Corner Of China (Hindu, Nirupama Subramanian , Jun 24, 2005)
The ease with which foreign companies manage to set up shop has encouraged some 50 Indian names to venture into eastern China.
- Scientists Take On Science Media (Hindu, Hasan Suroor, Jun 24, 2005)
Sensationalim and "headline-grabbing" are more the stuff of tabloids but now an internationally respected academic journal is facing allegations of "scare-mongering" and "desperate headline-seeking"
- That Long Night Of Knives (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 24, 2005)
When India’s democratic structure was shaken to its roots
cutting corners ashok mitra
- Times View: Genius Can Thrive At An Advanced (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jun 24, 2005)
In keeping with our perennial obsession with youth, a recent study has apparently established that 29 is the age at which one is likely to come up with one's first big idea.
- A Tribute To George Dantzig — To Him, Impossible Was Nothing (Business Line, Niranjan Krishnan, Jun 24, 2005)
A YOUNG student walks into the classroom. He is late and finds the professor well into his lecture. He notices two problems written on the blackboard. He thinks they are routine assignments and copies them down in his notebook.
- Left, Congress Drift Apart (Tribune, Nilanjan Mukhopadhyay, Jun 24, 2005)
The period since the United Progressive Alliance has been in office has witnessed unremitting rhetoric from the National Democratic Alliance that prevented it from playing the role of Opposition that takes a critical look at policy and legislative . . .
- Poor Quality Control (Telegraph, ASOKENDU SENGUPTA, Jun 24, 2005)
The All India Council for Technical Education recently made its presence felt when it cut 38,000
- Mutual Gains (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 24, 2005)
The desirability of free trade agreements is often debated, theoretically as well as empirically.
- Devil’S Advocate: Go Get A Job (Times of India, Abheek Barman, Jun 24, 2005)
The world's largest and probably most exhaustive survey, India's census, says that 10% of working-age people don't have jobs. What's more, it shows that from 1991 to 2001,
- Middle: Where Rank Alone Matters (Times of India, Sunanda K. Datta-Ray, Jun 24, 2005)
Omar Abdullah was hugely amused when I was introduced as a former editor at a Srinagar gathering. "We're all 'former' here", he exclaimed.
- Steeling The Future (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Jun 24, 2005)
The Posco project will inspire others to follow suit
- First Egalitarian Creed (Dawn, Jafar Wafa, Jun 24, 2005)
ISLAM, unlike some superstitious religions, introduced egalitarian creeds focussing on the uplift of society by ameliorating the lot of the slaves, the orphans and the poor as a first step to the ennoblement of human life.
- Today's Editorial: No Mere Quibble (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jun 24, 2005)
The debate on the extent of poverty in India has become too serious to be left to economists alone.
- The Scourge Of Africa (Hindu, Olusegun Obasanjo, Jun 24, 2005)
There is a pain in the belly of Africa that just will not go away. It is gnawing at our development goals and undermining our economies.
- Moving Towards Closer Integration (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 24, 2005)
The sixth session of the Sri Lanka-India Joint Commission, held in Colombo recently, has taken the bilateral relationship to an enhanced level — well on the way to closer integration of the two countries and economies.
- Capitalism"s Future On Trial (Deccan Herald, Jeremy Rifkin, Jun 24, 2005)
EU’s crisis has obscured the fact that it has come closest to balancing market dynamism and social protection
- Captain’S Faux Pas (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 24, 2005)
The Congress knew it would be impossible to defend what Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh had done and has quickly accepted that his presence in a Canadian gurdwara known to be the hub of separatists was a “genuine mistake”.
- Mega Deal In Orissa (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 24, 2005)
Orissa is to have the country’s largest steel plant that will cost Rs 52,000 crore, provide direct employment to 13,000 and indirect employment to 35,000, pay Rs 25,000 crore in taxes to the state government and Rs 89,000 crore to the Centre in some 30 yr
- Ndc Meeting Ahead — Time For Treating Economic Ills (Business Line, G. Srinivasan , Jun 24, 2005)
The Mid-term Appraisal of the Tenth Plan is an important exercise as it lists the deficiencies in implementation of the Plan schemes as also the constraints plaguing the economy.
- Africa's Debt Deal: Not Out Of The Blue (Business Line, S. Sethuraman, Jun 24, 2005)
Africa is the flavour of 2005, described as a "make or break year" for the continent on which the UN, G-8 and international financial institutions are all focussed because it is where poverty is more intractable than in other parts of the developing world
- India's Drawbacks (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Jun 24, 2005)
There have been copious writings comparing India and China and discussing why one or the other is more or less attractive as an investment destination in the eyes of foreign observers.
- Massive Power Failures (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Jun 23, 2005)
Mercury soared to above 40 degrees Celsius in most parts of the country on Tuesday, and so did the number of power breakdowns.
- Camel Kids’ Plight (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Jun 23, 2005)
While it is a relief to know that the first batch of 22 Pakistani camel kids arrived in Lahore on Tuesday, after last month’s Unicef-UAE accord on the return of young jockeys in the Gulf to their home countries,
- Goodbye Friend (Deccan Herald, BHARATHI PRABHU, Jun 23, 2005)
Not only was she efficient and conscientious in her work but also in her personal life
- The Politics Of Arson And Violence (Dawn, Muhammad Ali Siddiqi, Jun 23, 2005)
The Sindh government has constituted a committee to inquire into the Karachi police’s failure to control the acts of arson (and riots) after last month’s bomb blast in Madinatul Ilm in Karachi.
- Reforming The Un (Dawn, Ghayoor Ahmed, Jun 23, 2005)
A High-Level plenary meeting, scheduled to be held in New York from September 14 to 16, 2005,
- The Leader Article: Cast For A New Coalition: In Up, Mayawati Aims For Dalit-Brahmin Alliance (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jun 23, 2005)
Icons define identity politics. Each political movement creates its own icons. They represent the ideology of the movement.
- India A Satellite Power? (Deccan Herald, PARSA VENKATESHWAR RAO JR, Jun 23, 2005)
There is no need to kowtow to the US. India should assert itself as a world power in its own right
- Two Major Initiatives Of Pervaiz (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Jun 23, 2005)
JUNE 21, 2005 would go into annals of the Punjab history as golden day. Chief Minister Pervaiz Elahi took two major initiatives on the day with far-reaching impact on the overall socio-economic conditions of the people of the province.
- Food Worries (Business Line, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 23, 2005)
THAT the Prime Minister and his agriculture and finance ministers should review the food stocks situation indicates a sense of unease pervading the government.
- Lower Fiscal Deficit Augurs Well (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 23, 2005)
The final fiscal data for 2004-05 seem to vindicate the Government's optimism on containing the fiscal deficit, not only over the medium term extending to 2008-09,
- A Win-Win Deal (Business Line, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 23, 2005)
The comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement between India and Singapore will mark a watershed in ties between the two countries because of the novelty surrounding the exercise.
- Developing Ideas On Development (Business Line, A. Vasudevan, Jun 23, 2005)
Good governance and sound policy reforms will not be enough if the growth rate is to go up and expand employment.
- The Touchstone Of Independence (Business Line, K. Parthasarathi, Jun 23, 2005)
Would more independent directors ensure better governance, asks K. Parthasarathi
- Oil Is Yet Again On The Front Burner (Business Line, V.K. Sharma, Jun 23, 2005)
Crude is back in news. The US light sweet crude July delivery rose to a 20-year high of $59.52 a barrel before settling at $58.80 on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
- Learn To Work (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jun 23, 2005)
The census figures indicate that 17 per cent of India's graduates are jobless. If employment is defined as productive work, this figure goes up to 40 per cent
- Tata Steel Plans To Invest Rs. 25,000 Cr. (Hindu, Special Correspondent, The Hindu, Jun 23, 2005)
Plans include expansion of Jamshedpur plant and new capacities in Orissa and Chhattisgarh
- Mega Deal For Steel Plant Signed (Hindu, PRAFULLA DAS, Jun 23, 2005)
South Korean major Posco's MoU with Orissa Government
- River-Linking: India Not For Unilateral Steps (Hindu, Amit Baruah, Jun 23, 2005)
Delhi, Dhaka stress the need for convening the Joint Rivers Commission
- Psu Banks’ Net Profit Declines During Fy ’05 (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 23, 2005)
Public sector banks witnessed an overall decline in profits by 6 per cent at about Rs 14,815 crore last fiscal, mainly due to falling bond prices, provision for bad loans and high operating costs.
- Hope For Siachen (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Jun 23, 2005)
There is some hope now for Siachen. Nine days after Indian Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh spoke of turning the glacier into a “peace mountain”, the follow-up from New Delhi is positive.
- Left Wave Sweeps Through Urban Areas Too (Hindu, Marcus Dam, Jun 23, 2005)
The recent emphasis on urban development seems to have paid off for the Left Front in the Kolkata civic polls.
- Mou Inked For Steel Plant (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 23, 2005)
South Korean steel major Pohang Steel Company (POSCO) on Wednesday signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Orissa government for its much-talked about mega steel plant to be set up at Paradip in the eastern State.
- Which States Make Up Russia's Enemies? (Hindu, Vladimir Simonov, Jun 23, 2005)
A recent poll among the Russian public throws up some surprise results.
- Goodbye To Cheap Oil? (Hindu, LARRY ELLIOT, Jun 23, 2005)
It was a question of when, not if, for oil traders on Tuesday as the price of a barrel of crude threatened to burst through the $60-a-barrel barrier for the first time.
- Is It Really Worth Going To University? (Hindu, Hasan Suroor, Jun 23, 2005)
The policy of one-size-fits-all has played havoc with higher education in the countries where it has been tried, including India, and the signs are that it is not likely to work in Britain.
- G7 To Help Wipe Out Poor Countries' Debt (New Zealand Herald, Sumeet Desai and Gernot Heller , Jun 22, 2005)
The Group of Seven wealthy nations have pledged to help rid the world's poorest countries of their crippling debt, launching a programme that falls short of the immediate action demanded by Africa.
- China Says Border, Tibet On Agenda At India Meet (New Zealand Herald, Reuters, Jun 22, 2005)
A longstanding boundary dispute between China an India will be on the agenda when Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao visits New Delhi ...
- Where We Stand In Bush's America (New Zealand Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 22, 2005)
Carroll du Chateau asks the ambassador to the US how he's getting on with the coveted free trade deal.
- Tsunami May Have Revealed Lost City (New Zealand Herald, Jan McGirk , Jun 22, 2005)
The mighty Boxing Day tsunami has revealed what archaeologists believe to be the lost ruins of an ancient city off the coast of Tamil Nadu in southern India.
- Chinese And Indian Economies To Overtake Japan By 2020 (New Zealand Herald, Reuters, Jun 22, 2005)
China and India will be the world's second and third largest economies by 2020, pushing Japan into fourth place, according to research by Deutsche Bank.
- Nepal Slips Back To Medieval Rule (New Zealand Herald, Justin Huggler, Jun 22, 2005)
The King of Nepal has just seized absolute power, sacked the entire Government and put the country's Prime Minister under house arrest.
- 'We Were Pinned Down By Fire In The Heart Of Kashmir' (New Zealand Herald, Justin Huggler, Jun 22, 2005)
When the gunfire suddenly sprayed across the street in front of us, we dived for the ground, scrabbling desperately to get behind a parked car.
- Exporter Importing Talent (New Zealand Herald, Owen Hembry , Jun 22, 2005)
Fonterra is the world’s leading exporter of dairy products but, in the fight for international executives, it has shown bottle as an importer.
- Goff Seeks To Lift Tourism, Film And Trade Deals With India (New Zealand Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 22, 2005)
India and New Zealand have pledged to increase their two-way trade from $500 million annually.
- Japan Set To Drop Out Of World's Big Three (New Zealand Herald, Reuters, Jun 22, 2005)
China and India will be the world's second and third largest economies by 2020, pushing Japan into fourth place,
- Double The Super Pleasure (New Zealand Herald, Owen Hembry , Jun 22, 2005)
The number of "super growth" companies in New Zealand has more than doubled, putting the country mid-table internationally, a new survey shows.
- New Zealand's Climate Change Challenge Increases (New Zealand Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 22, 2005)
The latest forecast of net greenhouse gas emissions for 2008-12 shows New Zealand will miss its Kyoto target unless further action is taken, according to a government minister.
- Musharraf A Considerable Player On The World Stage (New Zealand Herald, Fran O Sullivan, Jun 22, 2005)
Pakistani strongman General Pervez Musharraf concedes it is "indeed partially true" that before September 11 ...
- Australia: Regional Profile (New Zealand Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 22, 2005)
History: Australia is the world's smallest continent but the sixth largest country.
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