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Articles 621 through 720 of 21681:
- Karunanidhi Urges Allies To Work With Government (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Nov 02, 2006)
"To achieve the aim of having Tamil in all spheres"
- Pm Takes A Dig At Left On Foreign Policy (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Nov 02, 2006)
Choosing Left-ruled Kerala to answer critics of his government’s foreign and economic policies, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Wednesday said globalisation does not cause agrarian crisis.
- Europe Unites To Fight Jihad (Pioneer, G Parthasarathy, Nov 02, 2006)
The twenty-seven member European Union, stretching from the Atlantic to the Baltic Republics, encompasses a region where economic integration and a growing consensus on foreign and security challenges are replacing old animosities and prejudices.
- Manmohan: No Change In Foreign Policy (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Nov 02, 2006)
"Nation could not be tied to the past"
"There is a bid to create confusion"
Says we need peace in neighbourhood.
- Upa’S Petrol Scam (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Nov 02, 2006)
The lead story in the Organiser , ‘Profiteering in petrol’, slams the UPA government for not reducing the petrol prices despite the “steep fall” in the international crude oil price from an all time high of $79 per barrel on August 8, 2006, to below . . .
- Azad’S Report Card: But Where’S The Politics? (Indian Express, Muzamil Jaleel, Nov 02, 2006)
After one year as J&K CM, Ghulam Nabi Azad comes across only as an efficient administrator. His tenure has seen a weakening of the Indo-Pak peace process
- Pricing The Pol Less Painfully (Dawn, Sultan Ahmed, Nov 02, 2006)
President Musharraf has stressed the need to facilitate the common man’s access to resources through broadening the economic opportunities.
- Us Losing Its War On Terror (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Nov 02, 2006)
Pakistan, a non-NATO ally of the US, seems poised to achieve its political and military objective in Afghanistan.
- Pak Shuts Out Shoaib For 2 Yrs, Asif For 1 (Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Nov 02, 2006)
With his pony-tailed hair and penchant for fast living, top Pakistan pacer Shoaib Akhtar has always lived up to his famous nickname.
- Singapore Dollar, Baht Post Sharp Advances (Singapore Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Nov 02, 2006)
The Singapore dollar rose Wednesday to the strongest in nine years and the Thai baht touched a seven-year high on optimism the two nations' economic growth will accelerate.
- The Fata Fallout (OutLook, B. Raman , Nov 02, 2006)
Unease mounts in Pakistan army over the Bajaur strikes that killed 80 madrasa students in face of eye-witness accounts that 15 were children below 10 years of age and that the majority of the rest were between 10 and 20 years of age.
- A Milestone In Our Sectarian War (Daily Times, Editorial, Daily Times, Nov 02, 2006)
An Anti-Terrorism Court (ATC) has sentenced to death two members of the banned sectarian outfit, Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, for killing six Shia employees of the Space and Upper Atmosphere Research Organisation (Suparco) in 2003 in Karachi.
- Wider Dimensions Of Security (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Nov 02, 2006)
President Pervez Musharraf hit the nail on the head when he told a seminar in Islamabad on Tuesday that national security depended on pursuing defence, foreign and domestic policies in line with the needs of the regional environment.
- Sovereignty Is More Important Than Foreign Fund Flows (Business Line, R. Vaidyanathan, Nov 02, 2006)
India needs to develop a global strategy encompassing investments and politics. It is time the government looked at security, foreign flows and foreign affairs in an integral fashion and constituted inter-ministerial groupings. Perhaps, experts . . .
- Will Hu Or Will Hu Not? (OutLook, B. Raman , Nov 02, 2006)
Will Chinese President Hu Jintao visit Gwadar in Balochistan to formally inaugurate the Chinese-aided Gwadar port and the Northern Areas (Gilgit and Baltistan) to inaugurate a project for the upgradation of the Karakoram Highway?
- Fata On Fire (OutLook, B. Raman , Nov 02, 2006)
Pakistan smoulders as80 people are killed in a missile attack on a madrasa in Bajaur agency by, what is being seen as, a joint operation of the Pakistan Army and the US forces based in Afghanistan.
- How North Korea Fulfilled Its Nuclear Dream (International Herald Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Nov 02, 2006)
For two years in the mid- 1980s, Kim Dae Ho produced propaganda on North Korea's efforts to become a nuclear power.
- Paris Airport Bars Muslim Staff (British Broadcasting Corporation, Correspondent or Reporter, Nov 02, 2006)
More than 70 Muslim workers at France's main airport have been stripped of the security clearance for allegedly posing a risk to passengers, officials say.
- Pakistan School Raid Sparks Anger (British Broadcasting Corporation, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 31, 2006)
Funerals have been held in Pakistan for people killed in a helicopter strike on an Islamic school which the government says was used by militants.
- Royal Madrassa Trip Called Off As Storm Grows Over Air Strike (Times Online (UK), Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 31, 2006)
The Prince of Wales’s controversial visit today to a madrassa in the border town of Peshawar has been cancelled over fears for his safety, after calls by Islamic leaders for revenge for a Pakistani airstrike that destroyed another religious school about 6
- Pakistan Attack Sets Back Border Peace (Christian Science Monitor, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 31, 2006)
Missiles rained down Monday on what the military said was an Al Qaeda hideout in Bajaur district, a restive tribal area along Pakistan's border with Afghanistan.
- Pakistan Kills 80 In Raid Against Militants (International Herald Tribune, Salman Masood, Oct 31, 2006)
The Pakistani military said Monday that it had destroyed a religious school used for training militants in the Bajur tribal area, which straddles the border with Afghanistan.
- Pakistan And Blasts: The Evidence Is Credible, Says Pm (The Economic Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 31, 2006)
In the midst of a controversy over national security advisor MK Narayanan’s comments, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Tuesday said there was “credible evidence” of Pakistani involvement in the July 11 train blasts in Mumbai.
- History Of J&k~ii (Statesman, Editorial, Statesman, Oct 31, 2006)
Gulab Singh, an in-trepid soldier, by 1820 had Jammu conferred upon him by Ranjit Singh with the title of Raja, while Bhimber, Chibal, Poonch and Ramnagar went to his brothers.
- Edits (Statesman, Editorial, Statesman, Oct 31, 2006)
The foreign secretary’s first offshore exercise in Bhutan last week ~ the onshore detour to Gopalan Bhavan was an aberration ~ was remarkable as he was able to place bilateral relations fair and square in the context of the impending transition in . . .
- 80 Killed In Pakistan Madrasa Raid (Hindu, Nirupama Subramanian , Oct 31, 2006)
It was pro-Taliban, says Islamabad
Foreigners among slain madrassa inmates
Military action sparks riots in the area
- Challenge And Response (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 31, 2006)
Both the Mysore Police and the Intelligence Bureau deserve credit for preventing what could have ended in one more of the horrific acts of urban terrorism in India.
- British Sikhs And Multiculturalism (Hindu, Hasan Suroor, Oct 31, 2006)
Are there any lessons that Muslims can learn from the Sikh experience? The `war on terror' may have complicated matters.
- Advantage India, Says Prince Andrew (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 31, 2006)
A better investment destination for British companies than China, says the Duke of York
- Saran: If Deal Fails, We Have Our Own Programme (Hindu, Amit Baruah, Oct 31, 2006)
Also, it would imply loosening of international nuclear market for India
- Iraq's Oct Toll: 100 Marines (Times of India, Chidanand Rajghatta, Oct 31, 2006)
The US passed the grim milestone this weekend of losing 100 soldiers in October in Iraq, amid a precipitous decline in Republican popularity ten days ahead of mid-term congressional elections.
- Veil Or No Veil (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 31, 2006)
Veil-wearing Muslims have suddenly become the most- feared women in Britain!
- Over 80 Killed As Pak Gunships Hit Madrasa Near Afghan Border (Indian Express, Salman Masood, Oct 31, 2006)
The Pakistani military said today that it had destroyed a madrasa which was being used for training militants in the Bajur tribal area, straddling the border with Afghanistan.
- Firms Point To A Biometric Future (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Oct 31, 2006)
Today, biometric systems are rapidly being designed and applied to several aspects of our daily lives
- Avoid Knee-Jerk Reactions, Says Kasuri To India (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 31, 2006)
Asking India to avoid “knee-jerk” reactions to terror attacks, Pakistan has said it is interested in improving ties but made it clear that “two-way trust” has to be developed...
- Terror Creeping Into State: Cm (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 31, 2006)
Three or four global terrorist outfits, besides the Al Qaeda and Al Badr, are believed to be spreading their tentacles in Karnataka, according to Chief Minister H D Kumaraswamy.
- Should Dawood Escape Too? (Deccan Herald, Sushant Sareen, Oct 31, 2006)
Interestingly enough, most of those demanding clemency for Afzal don’t question his guilt.
- Iaf, Army Should Stress Joint Operations (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 31, 2006)
In any country, the security aspect is mainly the responsibility of its Armed Forces. The Army, Air Force and Navy should operate together in close cooperation.
- Playing The Doctor (Telegraph, Jyoti Malhotra, Oct 31, 2006)
Furthering bilateral ties with an eastern neighbour on the boil will severely test the skills of the new foreign minister, writes Jyoti Malhotra.
- Siachen Heat On Upa (Hindustan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 31, 2006)
A day after Pakistan foreign minister Khurshid Mehmood Kasuri said a breakthrough on the Siachen issue was in sight, the armed forces on Monday said the government had assured it that national security concerns will be safeguarded in any settlement.
- Subcontinent Adrift (Hindustan Times, Editorial, HindustanTimes, Oct 31, 2006)
When the area in which one lives in experiences turmoil, the residents of the biggest house in the neighbourhood have two options.
- Fight The Hidden Enemy (Pioneer, Prafull Goradia, Oct 31, 2006)
Terrorists should be denied the facility of civil justice. Instead, they should be tried as war criminals, says Prafull Goradia.
- Qazi Calls For Protests Today Against Attack: Us Blamed For Bombing . . . (Dawn, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 31, 2006)
The Muttahida Majlis-i-Amal (MMA) president and Jamaat-i-Islami Amir Qazi Hussain Ahmed has condemned what he called the US bombing of a seminary in Bajaur Agency in which 80 religious students and their head teacher were killed and announced a . . .
- Deal On The Sly (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Oct 31, 2006)
By being excessively secretive and reluctant to take the people into confidence on foreign policy and related security issues, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and his coterie of advisers - including certain bureaucrats in the Ministry of . . .
- Karbala To Mecca (Pioneer, Sandhya Jain, Oct 31, 2006)
Political Islam took its first mature step to recover agency from its Western tormentors by applying a healing touch to the bleeding fields of Karbala, where Mohammed's nascent faith split irrevocably into Shias and Sunnis.
- Fountainhead Of Jihad (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Oct 31, 2006)
Pakistan's lax attitude towards terrorism has revived the Taliban in Afghanistan, thus destabilising the entire region, says Lisa Curtis.
- Pakistan Keen To Promote Peace, Say Musharraf, Aziz (Dawn, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 31, 2006)
Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz and President Gen Pervez Musharraf on Monday said Pakistan was keen to promote peace in the region.
- Pml Celebrates Diwali (Dawn, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 31, 2006)
The ruling Pakistan Muslim League (PML) on Monday celebrated the Hindu festival of Diwali in show of solidarity with the Hindu minority and announced to celebrate in few days the festivals relating to Baba Guru Nanak, Easter, Christmas and Holi.
- A Resurgent Private Sector (Dawn, Shahid Javed Burki, Oct 31, 2006)
I have now reached the end of the list of the positives I said I would explore in this series of articles.
- 82 Die As Missiles Rain On Bajaur: Pakistan Owns Up To Strike; Locals . . . (Dawn, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 31, 2006)
Eighty-two people were killed, 12 teenagers among them, in an air strike at a religious seminary in Damadola in the Bajaur tribal region on Monday morning.
- An Investment In Our Collective Future (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 30, 2006)
We must act today if we are to prevent calamity tomorrow.
- Terror: 3 More Held In Mysore (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 30, 2006)
An investigating team, on Sunday, arrested three persons in connection with the Mysore terror case. Sadiq, a resident of Mandi Mohalla, was held for allegedly helping Mohammad Ali Hussain, one of the Pakistani militants arrested in the case, get . . .
- Kasuri: Close To Pact On Siachen (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 30, 2006)
Pakistan Foreign Minister Khurshid Kasuri said on Sunday that India and Pakistan were close to reaching an agreement to resolve the Siachen issue and suggested a "breakthrough" on this was expected next month to enable Prime Minister Manmohan . . .
- Gun-Battle In Mysore (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 30, 2006)
The arrest of two Pakistani terrorists after a gun-battle in Mysore on Friday has an important lesson to learn.
- Fdi: Is Bias Against Nations Justified? (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Oct 30, 2006)
The popular saying, money has no colour, is obviously, incorrect when the money gets linked to control and management.
- Turn In The South (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Oct 30, 2006)
The news about two Pakistani terrorists affiliated to Al Badr Mujahideen being arrested by the police in Mysore last Thursday night indicates the extent to which jihadis have infiltrated India's southern States, especially Karnataka.
- Al Badr Resurfaces (Pioneer, B Raman, Oct 30, 2006)
The arrest of two terrorists in Mysore proves that the ISI is using Al Badr, one of the oldest jihadi outfits, to spread mayhem in south India, says B Raman
- No Cause For Muslim Grievance (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Oct 30, 2006)
During my recent visit to Pakistan, I made sure, as I always do when I travel abroad, that I read the local newspapers, to discover the issues that concern people in that country.
- History Of J&k~ii (Statesman, Editorial, Statesman, Oct 30, 2006)
Gulab Singh, an in-trepid soldier, by 1820 had Jammu conferred upon him by Ranjit Singh with the title of Raja, while Bhimber, Chibal, Poonch and Ramnagar went to his brothers.
- India-Pak Close To Striking Deal On Siachen: Kasuri (The Economic Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 30, 2006)
Pakistan foreign minister Khurshid M Kasuri said on Sunday that India and Pakistan were close to reaching an agreement to resolve Siachen issue and suggested a ‘breakthrough’ on this was expected next month to enable prime minister Manmohan . . .
- Case Registered Against Fahad's Relative (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 30, 2006)
She had housed the suspected militant and his father
- Pal To Prepare Ground For Indo-Pak Secy-Level Talks (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 30, 2006)
India’s new High Commissioner to Pakistan Satyabrata Pal is expected to hold wide ranging consultations with the Pakistani leadership in order to prepare ground for the Foreign Secretary-level talks next month.
- A Tough Fight Lies Ahead (Pioneer, Arun Nehru, Oct 30, 2006)
We have three crucial Assembly elections coming up in Uttar Pradesh, Uttaranchal and Punjab.
- Nato Says 70 Militants Killed (Frontier Post, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 30, 2006)
NATO and Afghan troops killed 70 suspected militants who attacked a military base in southern Afghanistan, while a roadside blast killed one NATO soldier and wounded eight others, the alliance said Sunday.
- Kasuri Foresees Breakthrough On Siachen (Dawn, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 30, 2006)
Foreign Minister Khurshid Mehmud Kasuri has said India and Pakistan were close to reaching an agreement to resolve Siachen issue and suggested a “breakthrough” on this was expected next month to enable Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to visit Pakistan.
- Fighting Terrorism For Money (Daily Times, Editorial, Daily Times, Oct 30, 2006)
An official report released in Washington says Pakistan has received the lion’s share of a “total of $6.64 billion for 2002-2007 for the coalition fighting terrorism:
- Al Badr In Mysore (OutLook, B. Raman , Oct 30, 2006)
Karnataka Police claims the arrest of two Pakistani terrorists belonging to Al Badr—the oldest of the existing jihadi terrorist organisations of Pakistan, considered as close to Pakistan's ISI as the LET.
- Higher Growth Is Vulnerable (Dawn, Sultan Ahmed, Oct 30, 2006)
High economic growth in Pakistan is more vulnerable than in China or India as it has few cushions or reserves to finance external shocks, says the World Bank.
- Deal On Siachen Close (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 30, 2006)
Foreign minister says much work on Siachen solution already done
Hopeful foreign secretaries meeting next month will pave way for Manmohan’s visit to Pakistan
- Taliban Has Winter Plans To Storm Kabul (Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 30, 2006)
The Taliban are planning a major winter offensive combining their diverse factions in a push on the Afghan capital, Kabul, intelligence analysts and sources among the militia have revealed.
- Fight To Information (Indian Express, Maja Daruwala & Navaz Kotwal, Oct 30, 2006)
The popular perception is that it is impossible to gain convictions in riot cases.
- Pak Promised To Fight Terror, Took Several Billion Dollars From Us (Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 30, 2006)
Pakistan has received billions of dollars in reimbursement for its support of US-led counter-terrorism operations, while US Congress has appropriated billions of dollars to pay Pakistan for its support.
- Cops: Kalam E-Mail Threat Sender Is A Jilted Lover (Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 30, 2006)
Kerala Police have taken into custody a youth from Cherthala for sending a e-mail threat to the President and the PM. The provocation for the e-mail, police said, was a failed love affair.
- Easy Come Easy Go (Deccan Herald, PRASENJIT CHOWDHURY, Oct 29, 2006)
This book of short stories is told in a simple style which also reflects the simplicity of its protagonists.
- In A State Of Perennial Siege (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 29, 2006)
Reena Saini Kallat externalises her anxieties about the human condition, and hopes to neutralise them, by creating talismanic objects.
- North Korean Nodong Has Become Ghauri In Pakistan (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 29, 2006)
Confirmation comes from President Musharraf himself
- A Strategic Impasse? (New Indian Express, Swapan Dasgupta, Oct 29, 2006)
India will soon have to fight its own war against a force oozing with confidence
- Did India Deport Its Own To Pakistan? (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 28, 2006)
You deport foreigners living illegally in your country. You don't deport your own citizens to a neighbouring country with whom your ties have been strained.
- Were They Planning Iisc-Like Attack? (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 28, 2006)
It is yet to be known whether the two Pakistan militants nabbed here by the police were actually planning an attack on the Central Institute of Indian Languages here on the lines of the recent militant attack on Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore.
- A Plea For Justice To Jessica (Deccan Herald, Khushwant Singh, Oct 28, 2006)
Sodhi and Sonia have revived hopes that justice may yet be done. Bless them!
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