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Articles 21321 through 21420 of 27969:
- Not Quite Creditable (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Aug 23, 2005)
With the explosive growth of credit cards — especially after the large number given free — to 13 million in circulation, it is no surprise that the Reserve Bank of India has turned its spotlight on this segment.
- Out Of Sight, Out Of Mind (Telegraph, PARIMAL BHATTACHARYA, Aug 23, 2005)
Image is all and hand-pulled rickshaws must go. But, asks Parimal Bhattacharya, what of the other sordid sights that Calcuttans must live with?
- Gaza In Reverse (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Aug 23, 2005)
Over the last few days, the Gaza Strip has been history’s hall of mirrors. Within the larger history of displacements
- The Freedom-Development Interface (Business Line, Bhanoji Rao, Aug 23, 2005)
Just over a week ago, Independent India became 58 years old. The Mahatma is remembered fondly for all the sacrifices he personally made and inspired thousands to make,
- Demand-Driven Supply Networks — Collaborative Enterprise, The Key (Business Line, Pawan Sohi, Aug 23, 2005)
As a manufacturer, wouldn't you welcome a system where there are no warehouses, inventories or paper invoices, just plug-ins that monitor your supplier network automatically, in real-time, everywhere, simultaneously?
- India's Strides In The Services Sector (Deccan Herald, D Ravi Kanth, Aug 22, 2005)
India has turned a full circle — from opposition to trade in services to its show of enthusiasm for it .
- Intelligent Design (Dawn, George Monbiot, Aug 22, 2005)
All is not lost in America. When George Bush came out a couple of weeks ago in favour of teaching “intelligent design”
- Un Bush-Whacked (Business Line, Pratap Ravindran , Aug 22, 2005)
The resignation of Mr Benon Sevan, a senior official of the United Nations (UN), as also the arrest of another senior official, Mr Alexander Yakovlev,
- True Islam Or Islamic Formalism? (Dawn, Mansoor Alam, Aug 22, 2005)
Bernard Lewis, a western scholar of Islam recently wrote a book with the title “What went wrong?”
- Poisoned Planet (Statesman, YP GUPTA, Aug 22, 2005)
It is seriously questioned these days whether petroleum, the harbinger of modern civilisation,
- Power Play In Central Asia (Dawn, Tariq Fatemi, Aug 22, 2005)
While most of the world, and especially local analysts like us, have remained focused (for understandable reasons)
- Target Next (Greater Kashmir, Editorial, Greater Kashmir, Aug 22, 2005)
Iran is marching towards its entry in the nuclear club. This decision raises several questions, comments Minhaj Qidwai
- The West And Asia's Perceived Dominance (Business Line, S. Venkitaramanan , Aug 22, 2005)
Many observers of the global economy have noticed the rising importance of Asia in the global power equation.
- The Milk That Waters Life (Greater Kashmir, Editorial, Greater Kashmir, Aug 22, 2005)
You can’t have a better gift for a child than this, Tariq A. Rather writes on the importance of mother’s milk for a new born baby
- Who Is To Blame For All The Rubbish? (Deccan Herald, Lucy Siegle, Aug 22, 2005)
The multinationals must take responsibility for pile-ups of waste
- Security On Another Plane (Telegraph, N.K. Pant, Aug 22, 2005)
The Centre’s announcement last week that it was adopting a tough anti-hijack policy, which envisages no talking to hijackers and the shooting down of a hijacked plane, may be necessary in the light of what happened to the World Trade Center and the....
- India's 'Hugging Saint' Escapes Attack (Sacramento Bee, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 22, 2005)
Three followers of an Indian religious leader known as the "hugging saint" overpowered an assailant who tried to attack her on Sunday during a prayer meeting in southern India, a state official said.
- This Is How We Perceive The Problem Of Kashmir-Iii (Greater Kashmir, Editorial, Greater Kashmir, Aug 22, 2005)
We are reproducing the full text of the discussion between Muhammad Yasin Malik, Chairman Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front and Omar Abdullah,
- Weaving A Plan To Re-Emerge As A Star (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 22, 2005)
TILL about a decade ago “S Kumars” was one of the respected brands in textile industry in the country.
- Wb Irrigation Projects: Farmers Body Asks Representation (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 22, 2005)
In a letter to WB, CIFA Secretary General P Chengal Reddy said many of the hurdles in implementing irrigation projects can be overcome if farmers are involved.
- Indo-Us Strategic Alliance (Dawn, Talat Masood, Aug 21, 2005)
India and the United States are natural allies, but India’s Nehruvian philosophy of non-alignment and its aspirations to play a global role in exploiting the capitalist and communist blocs during the cold war kept them apart.
- Racial Health Gap In U.S. (Hindu, Jamie Wilson, Aug 21, 2005)
Black Americans get fewer operations, tests, medications and other life-saving treatments than white Americans and have less access to the best doctors,
- Indo-Us Agreement (Daily Excelsior, Samuel Baid, Aug 21, 2005)
Pakistan's disappointment at the India-United States agreement on defence relationship is quite understandable.
- Pak Committed To Furthering Peace Process: Kasuri (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 21, 2005)
Downplaying Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s allegation about the existence of terrorist infrastructure in Pakistan, Foreign Minister Khurshid Mehmud Kasuri has said his country is committed to the ongoing composite dialogue process with India.
- Not Forgetting The Gujarat Carnage (Dawn, Kuldip Nayar, Aug 20, 2005)
A pakistan television network based in Dubai asked me whether Prime Minister Manmohan Singh would tender his apology to Indian Muslims as he had done in the case of Sikhs for the Delhi riots 21 years after the violence
- Futures Trading In Plastics Launched (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 20, 2005)
Trading unit specified at two tonnes
- A New Nuclear Era (Washington Post, Editorial, Washington Post, Aug 20, 2005)
The bush administration is known for gambles, and Monday's about-face on nuclear cooperation with India qualifies as such.
- Why Bush Co-Opted India As A Friend? (Daily Excelsior, M. S. Patwardhan, Aug 18, 2005)
The Bush administration has some advice for SAARC countries leery of the growing US-India relationship:
- Why The India Deal Is Good (Tribune, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Aug 17, 2005)
THE White House decision to ease restrictions on the transfer of civilian nuclear technology to India has been criticised with two arguments: that the United States “secured so little in return’’
- Infrastructure To Transfer Krishna Water (Deccan Herald, T. Ramakrishnan, Aug 15, 2005)
Andhra plans to facilitate speedier flow Andhra Pradesh plans to facilitate speedier flow of floodwater to Chennai
- Bush’S Threat To Iran (Dawn, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 14, 2005)
As the impasse between Iran and the European Union on uranium enrichment intensifies,
- All Action, No Rhetoric (Hindu, K.K. GOPALAKRISHNAN , Aug 14, 2005)
Eugenia Cano Puga is an internationally known mime artist from Mexico. On a tour of Kerala for research and conducting workshops, she found time to talk about her art form.
- Tribals Seek Independence From A British Law (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 14, 2005)
They will hold demonstrations on August 15
If the bill were not given go-ahead by October 2, they would intensify movement
More than 5000 forest villages have no legal recognition
- Arguments For A Better World (Hindu, Siddharth Varadarajan, Aug 14, 2005)
Amartya Sen's new book, The Argumentative Indian, is an original journey into the history of ideas. He says India's traditions of democratic discussion and secularism stretch back longer than we care to think. Excerpts from an interview.
- Sri Lanka Declares State Of Emergency (Guardian (UK), Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 13, 2005)
The Sri Lankan government today described the assassination of the country's foreign minister as a "grave setback" to the island's fragile peace process and declared a state of emergency.
- Indo-Us Strategic Ties Significant’ (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 12, 2005)
The US hopes its new Indian policy will be understood by Pakistan because the entire region is expected to benefit from it.
- Identifying A Civilian Nuclear Facility Is India's Decision" (Hindu, T.S. Subramanian, Aug 12, 2005)
Under the nuclear agreement with the United States, "what is going to be identified as a civilian facility is going to be an Indian decision ... taken at appropriate points of time,"
- Doubts Over N-Deal (Tribune, Inder Malhotra, Aug 12, 2005)
Fierce controversy over the Indo-US nuclear deal, signed by the Prime Minister, Dr Manmohan Singh, and the US President, Mr George W. Bush, has had an invaluable outcome.
- Responding To Indo-Us Defence Pact (Dawn, MIRZA A. BEG, Aug 11, 2005)
A significant geo-political shift is likely to occur, with the signing of the Indo-US defence pact.
- Ifs And Buts Of Nuclear Pact (Times of India, P R CHARI, Aug 11, 2005)
The Manmohan Singh-George Bush joint statement makes radical commitments by both sides on the nuclear issue.
- Nuclear Accord With Us (Tribune, K. Subrahmanyam, Aug 10, 2005)
Following the Indo-US joint statement of July 18, 2005, not only were there accusations in India that Dr Manmohan Singh sold off India to the Americans,
- Journalist In Jail, But For What Cause? (Tribune, Shakuntala Rao, Aug 10, 2005)
Writing about the recent jailing of New York Times reporter Judith Miller, Tribune’s (July 9) editorial makes a strong point, “Journalism is all about the public’s right to know and to have access to information.
- Indo-Us Security Ties On A New High (Tribune, Maj-Gen Himmat Singh Gill (retd) , Aug 10, 2005)
AT the face of it, the Manmohan Singh-Bush agreement augurs well for the country. For the first time Americans rightly understanding our peaceful nuclear track record.
- Indo-Us Nuclear Agreement (Dawn, Najmuddin A. Shaikh, Aug 10, 2005)
Much has already been written and said on the nuclear agreement reached between the United States and India in the Pakistani, Indian and international media.
- A Unipolar To Tripolar World (Indian Express, Arvind Virmani, Aug 10, 2005)
How India can help make this happen with some strategic planning
- Private Sector To Fuel India-U.S Relationship (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 09, 2005)
Attempt to bring back American infrastructure companies
- Ties With China (Tribune, Air Marshal R.S. Bedi (retd), Aug 09, 2005)
One of the veiled objectives of the US in making overtures to India is to achieve a balance of power in Asia.
- How The Figures Add Up (Telegraph, Alok Ray, Aug 09, 2005)
Alok Ray looks at what a revalued yuan means, both for India and the US
- Born Of Discrimination (Indian Express, Babu Joseph, Aug 09, 2005)
The law must be amended to give the Christians in India equal opportunity to adopt children
- There’S A World Out There (Indian Express, C. Raja Mohan, Aug 09, 2005)
The utterly predictable reaction of the Left parties against the Indo-US defence and nuclear pacts confirms that the CPI(M) and CPI are very clear about what India should not do.
- Changing Face Of America (Dawn, F.S. Aijazuddin, Aug 09, 2005)
The phrase ‘What sort of American is a Cablinasian?’ was coined by Tiger Woods, the US golf phenomenon, to describe his parentage — born as he was of an African-American father and a Thai mother.
- Benefits Of Coming Clean (Times of India, T.P. Sreenivasan, Aug 08, 2005)
US nuclear deal will improve India's global standing
- Questions Raised On India’S Nuclear Deal With Us (Tribune, Ashish Kumar Sen, Aug 08, 2005)
In a sign of the hurdles that await the realisation of U.S.-India civilian nuclear cooperation, a new report indicates some observers believe the steps India has promised to take to separate its civilian and military facilities are “insufficient.”
- Team Manmohan At Work, At Last (Hindu, Harish Khare , Aug 08, 2005)
For the first time, a new party-government synergy seems to be at work.
- Joint Declarations And `Secret Clauses' (Hindu, Inder Malhotra, Aug 08, 2005)
Rare is the international agreement India has been party to in the last 40 years that has not evoked the same suspicions as those evoked by the Indo-U.S. nuclear deal.
- Singh’S Us Visit And After (Dawn, A.B. Shahid, Aug 07, 2005)
The variety of negative reactions to the statements he made during his visit to the US must have shocked Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. He is an economist par excellence but, may be, not nearly as good a politician.
- Myth Or Reality? (Deccan Herald, Arvind Kumar, Aug 06, 2005)
From experience India should know that the United States will not do anything unless it is in its own interest
- Yuan Revaluation — Implications For China, Us And India (Business Line, Alok Ray, Aug 05, 2005)
China has ended its decade-old fixed peg to the dollar by allowing a mere 2 per cent appreciation of the yuan vis-à-vis the dollar.
- Us Shift On India Nuclear Policy Tilts Regional Balance (Christian Science Monitor, editorial, Christian Science Monitor, Aug 04, 2005)
Perhaps nowhere else do American foreign policymakers face more contradictions than in the area stretching from Israel to Korea.
- No Secret Agreement With U.S.: Manmohan (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 04, 2005)
Nuclear arms programme not compromised
Not ganging up with U.S. against China
U.N. seat: When the time comes, I have reason to believe that we will not be ignored
Negotiations were held up for 14 hours because I wanted final draft approved by AEC Ch
- Skyrocketing Markets (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Aug 04, 2005)
All major indices in the country’s stock markets seem to be moving in only one direction: up.
- A Bad Deal With India (Washington Post, Lawrence J. Korb and Peter Ogden, Aug 03, 2005)
Many of the people who are made uncomfortable by President Bush's ideologically driven foreign policy have been pleasantly surprised by his recent decision to supply India with nuclear energy technology.
- Sweeping India Off Its Feet (Indian Express, Kuldip Nayar, Aug 03, 2005)
Whether we make the nuclear club status or not depends on India’s Parliament and the US Congress.
- Argumentative Indians (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Aug 03, 2005)
The debate on the Indo-US nuclear pact, in Parliament and outside it, should be welcomed
- Constructive Criticism (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Aug 03, 2005)
The Left parties’ reservations continue to remain on several Govt policies
- Time Spent Under Water (Indian Express, Jyoti Punwani, Aug 02, 2005)
That's the one word that best sums up the qualities of Mumbai’s ‘teeming millions’, seeing their conduct on Deluge Tuesday.
- Climate Change: Gleneagles And After (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Aug 02, 2005)
The Gleneagles Summit of the G8 in early July, which British Prime Minister Tony Blair had relied upon to bring the United States in line with the European commitment to targeted reduction of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, has had a contrary outcome.
- Cool Technology (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Aug 02, 2005)
US-Asia-Pacific partnership on clean development to deal with emissions
- New Opportunities For Nuclear Energy (Hindu, M. R. Srinivasan, Aug 02, 2005)
The negotiations with international partners following the India-U.S. nuclear deal cannot be left to diplomats and civil servants, but must be entrusted to acknowledged leaders in the nuclear field.
- Cozying Up To India (The Heritage Foundation, Peter Brooks, Aug 01, 2005)
The Bush administration's most unheralded foreign policy success — besides Libya's WMD disarmament and freeing Lebanon from Syria's iron grip — is the dramatic upswing in U.S.-Indian relations.
- F-16s: Thank You Mr Bush! (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Aug 01, 2005)
The Bush administration has approved an initial shipment of two older F-16 fighter jets to Pakistan. The decision has come in just about two weeks after President Bush’s approval of development of civil nuclear power sector by India. Key lawmakers at the
- The Holy Cow (Tribune, T.P. Sreenivasan, Aug 01, 2005)
December 13, 1982, was a normal day at the UN General Assembly. I was elated that morning as my boss,
- Strategic Ties With China (Dawn, Anwer Mooraj, Aug 01, 2005)
Before Chiang Kai-shek destroyed warlords in 1920, westerners heard astonishing stories of the people who lived in that huge tract of land that stretched across Asia from Kashi in the west to Jixi in the east.
- Indo-Us Pact — A Gamble? (Dawn, Afzaal Mahmood, Jul 30, 2005)
Three weeks after the signing of a 10-year defence agreement that will enable New Delhi to buy sophisticated US military equipment, President George W. Bush has now agreed to provide American civilian nuclear knowhow and nuclear fuel to India, . . .
- Pm Dispels Nuke Doubts (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 30, 2005)
Dr Singh said reciprocity was the key as India’s actions at every stage would be contingent on actions taken by the US.
- Pm’S Statement In Parliament On Us Visit (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 30, 2005)
The purpose of my visit was to sensitise the US Government about the full extent of the changes that have taken place in India since 1991.
- A Persistent Irritant Goes With A Grand Bargain (Hindu, N. Ravi, Jul 30, 2005)
For India to attain energy security, breaking out of the nuclear isolation was essential and accepting non-discriminatory safeguards was but a small price to pay.
- Bombing Mastermind Aswat Held In Zambia (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 30, 2005)
US intelligence agancies also want to question Haroon Rashid Aswat who, they say, tried to set up terror training camps for US-born al Queda recruits
- Qazi Threatens To Close Down Madaris (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Jul 30, 2005)
Education Minister Javed Ashraf Qazi has threatened that the Madaris that fail to get themselves registered by the deadline of December this year would face closure. Speaking at a seminar in Islamabad on Thursday he said the Interior Ministry is introduci
- It Is Just Eyewash Mr President (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Jul 30, 2005)
President Pervez Musharraf and his US counterpart George Bush spoke by telephone on Thursday. The latter is reported to have assured the former that the recent Indo-US defence pact was not directed against Pakistan and Washington would not allow the . . .
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