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Articles 5821 through 5920 of 21681:
- Al-Qaeda Applauds Mumbai Bombings (Taipei Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 14, 2006)
Abu al-Hadeed, claiming to represent the terrorist network in Kashmir, called on Indian Muslims to fight for freedom through 'jihad' and to promote Islam
- India Names 3rd Bombing Suspect (International Herald Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 14, 2006)
Indian authorities on Friday named a third suspect in this week's train bombings in Bombay, as the local media said the well-coordinated attacks that killed 200 people were planned by Pakistan's main intelligence agency.
- India Names New Suspect In Train Bombings (Khaleej Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 14, 2006)
India - Indian authorities on Friday named a third suspect in this week’s train bombings in Bombay, as the local media said the well-coordinated attacks that killed 200 people were planned by Pakistan’s main intelligence agency. Pakistan denied the charge
- Hundreds Detained Over Mumbai Bombings (Guardian (UK), Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 14, 2006)
Indian detectives searching for the Mumbai train bombers who killed more than 200 commuters have detained about 350 people for questioning.
- The Intelligent Way To Assuring Security (The Financial Express, Jayaprakash Narayan, Jul 14, 2006)
Strengthen national security capabilities, while checking alienation to cut down resentment
- Ghaffar’S Grandson Says Pak Sheltering Terrorists (Asian Age, Seema Mustafa, Jul 14, 2006)
The Pakistan government is providing weapons and safe houses for terrorists, according to Pakistan Awami National Party president Asfandyar Wali Khan, who is currently leading a delegation to India. He said that he had said as much to the interior . . .
- Tourists Flee Kashmir After Deadly Attacks (Reuters, Sheikh Mushtaq, Jul 14, 2006)
Holidaymakers are fleeing Indian Kashmir after a series of attacks by suspected Muslim militants on tourists in the Himalayan region killed eight visitors, tour operators and officials said on Thursday.
- Police Detains Suspects, Sees Lashkar Hand In Bombs (Reuters, Krittivas Mukherjee, Jul 14, 2006)
Indian officials named Pakistan-based militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba on Thursday as the prime suspect behind bombings that killed at least 156 people in Mumbai, as police said they had detained about 20 people.
- ‘150-200 Al Qaeda Men Hiding In Pak Tribal Belt’ (Asian Age, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 14, 2006)
An estimated 150 to 200 foreign militants owing allegiance to Al Qaeda are still holed up in Pakistan’s restive tribal belt bordering Afghanistan.
- Pak Ready To Assist India: Musharraf (Rediff on the Net, K J M Varma, Jul 14, 2006)
Amidst India's strong suspicion of Pakistani hand in Mumbai train blasts, President Pervez Musharraf has said his country is willing to assist with investigations being held to determine the culprits behind the incidents.
- Politics Of Self-Defeat (Pioneer, Shobori Ganguli, Jul 14, 2006)
Tuesday's serial blasts in Mumbai, yet another critical reminder of the asphyxiating grasp of terrorism on India, is an ominous signal to the political class in New Delhi that sadbhavana (goodwill) trips to Pakistan cannot obliterate the ideology of hate
- Blasts Kill Tourism In Kashmir (The Financial Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 14, 2006)
Holidaymakers are fleeing Kashmir after a series of attacks by suspected Muslim militants on tourists in the Himalayan region killed eight visitors, tour operators and officials said on Thursday.
- After Blasts, 'Congrats' Calls Expose Pak, Bangla Link (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 14, 2006)
Just after the Mumbai blasts, a call from Karachi to Dhaka said: "Mubarakan, mubarakan (congratulations)" — a clear mission-accomplished message.
- Pak Offers Help In Mumbai Blasts Probe (Times of India, Chidanand Rajghatta, Jul 14, 2006)
Pakistan’s foreign minister Khurshid Kasuri backed off from linking the terror attacks in India to resolution of disputes and Islamabad offered New Delhi unqualified help in probing the bombings after an UNSC directive to member states to cooperate . . .
- Us Lifeline To Pak Terror (Pioneer, Sunita Vakil, Jul 14, 2006)
The sale of F-16s to Pakistan will ensure that the lifeline the US provides to the principal source of global terror is not snapped.
- 'Congrats' Calls Expose Pak, Bangla Link (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 14, 2006)
Just after the Mumbai blasts, a call from Karachi to Dhaka said: "Mubarakan, mubarakan (congratulations)" — a clear mission-accomplished message.
- Masterly Inactivity (Times of India, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 14, 2006)
In the aftermath of the Mumbai blasts, government's response as well as the international community's reaction to terrorist acts is under scrutiny. Prime minister Manmohan Singh has promised that government will win the war against terror.
- Where Is The Political Will? (OutLook, KPS Gill, Jul 14, 2006)
You cannot prevail over terrorism by merely using strong language in Parliament or in the media. It is perhaps difficult to find even one politician in the country who holds the national interest above the interest of his
- Pak Planned Kargil Even Before Vajpayee's Visit: Musharraf (Press Trust of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 14, 2006)
President Pervez Musharraf has confirmed what the world had suspected for long -- that Pakistan's Kargil invasion had been planned even as the then Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee was preparing for his journey of peace by bus to Lahore in . . .
- Little Addressed (Statesman, Editorial, Statesman, Jul 14, 2006)
Showmanship has never been part of the Manmohan Singh make-up, sincerity constitutes his “appeal”. Yet timing is critical to any response to crisis situations and the Prime Minister came up short by waiting 24 hours to use . . .
- Dawood In Pocket, Pak Offers Help In Mumbai Blast Case (The Economic Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 14, 2006)
Rubbing salt to India’s wounds, Pakistan on Thursday said that it was ready to help India’s investigation into the Mumbai bomb blasts that killed 198 people on Tuesday.
- Don't Dismiss Al Qaeda (OutLook, B. Raman , Jul 13, 2006)
Renewed communal tensions, as witnessed in Bhiwandi recently, and a vigorous Al Qaeda propaganda aimed at exploiting the pockets of anger among the Indian Muslim youth over increasing coziness with the USA, should not be dismissed lightly, in the . . .
- Kasuri Pitches For Us N-Deal (Asian Age, Sridhar Krishnaswami, Jul 13, 2006)
Claiming that Pakistan’s nuclear weapons programme was "driven by the threat perception of India," Pakistan foreign minister Khurshid Mahmud Kasuri has said that Islamabad would "say yes" to a bilateral fissile material moratorium.
- Stringent Anti-Terrorist Law Needed: Advani (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
Leader of the Opposition in the Lok Sabha L. K. Advani on Wednesday demanded a stringent anti-terrorist law to combat terrorism and to shatter the image that a soft stance was being towards militants.
- Govern Or Get Out, Bjp Tells Manmohan Government (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
Resolution says attacks over past two years show a larger design to destabilise country
No scope for lasting peace with Pakistan'
`UPA afraid of losing Muslim vote'
To organise demonstrations on July15, 16 in all state capitals
- Message From Blasts: Don't Get Close To The Us (Rediff on the Net, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
If ever there was a demonstration that cross-border terrorism remains a pertinent threat to freedom-loving people everywhere, it happened on 7/11 in Mumbai, the financial capital of India.
- India After Mumbai (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jul 13, 2006)
A curious thing happened in Delhi on Wednesday, the day after seven bombs killed 200 Mumbaikars: the national government seemed to wake up to the fact that the country faces a security threat.
- A Nation Of Wimps (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jul 13, 2006)
Once again terrorists have sent a chilling reminder that they can strike at will.
- The Challenges Of Maximum Terror (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 13, 2006)
Maximum City, the writer Suketu Mehta called it. Mumbai's courage in the face of unimaginable horror is epic in scale, like the carnage it experienced on Tuesday.
- How Much Will India Endure? (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jul 13, 2006)
Yesterday’s awful rush-hour bombings of trains in Bombay raise an important and ominous question: How far can India be pushed?
- Ib Tracks Mumbai-Pak Calls (Asian Age, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
Maharashtra director-general of police P.S. Pasricha on Wednesday said the police had received crucial clues about Tuesday evening’s Mumbai train blasts from the intelligence agencies.
- Muslim Conference Wins 20 Seats (Hindu, Nirupama Subramanian , Jul 13, 2006)
The Muslim Conference, which won half the seats in the Pakistan Occupied Kashmir Assembly elections, is set to form the next Government in the region.
- Nepal Condemns Mumbai Blasts (Deccan Herald, SUDESHNA SARKAR, Jul 13, 2006)
The Nepal government on Wednesday strongly condemned the Mumbai blasts, calling it a “crime against humanity” and expressing solidarity with the Indian government and Indian people.
- State Of Vacuum In Times Of Terror (Indian Express, Pratap Bhanu Mehta, Jul 13, 2006)
The appalling bombing of trains in Mumbai should lull us out of the Arcadian complacency that had been creeping into our security discourse.
- Pak Under Scrutiny Over Mumbai Blasts (Times of India, Chidanand Rajghatta, Jul 13, 2006)
Pakistan's swift and all-to-quick condemnation of the Mumbai blasts and its commiseration with New Delhi notwithstanding, all eyes are on Islamabad's militaristic leadership to see if it has ceased to use terrorism as a state policy against India.
- Tuesday Terror (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Jul 13, 2006)
Another reminder of the need to tighten security
- Watch Thy Neighbour (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jul 13, 2006)
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s reluctance to name Pakistan in his address to the nation on Wednesday night, one hopes, does not imply that it is business as usual in the peace process. Although the foreign office underscored the importance of . . .
- India Makes Kasuri A Soft Target (Times of India, Indrani Bagchi, Jul 13, 2006)
In a woefully inadequate response to Tuesday's terrorist carnage in Srinagar and Mumbai, the UPA government on Wednesday attacked what can only be called a soft target — Pakistan foreign minister Khurshid Kasuri.
- Kasuri Did Not Link Blasts To Kashmir Dispute: Fo (Dawn, Qudssia Akhlaque, Jul 13, 2006)
The Foreign Office on Wednesday hastened to clarify reported remarks of Foreign Minister Khurshid Kasuri on the Mumbai bomb blasts that evoked a caustic reaction from the Indian Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) earlier in the day.
- Govern Or Get Out, Bjp Tells Upa (Pioneer, Rajeev Ranjan Roy, Jul 13, 2006)
In a blistering attack on the Centre for compromising national security, the main Opposition Bharatiya Janata Party on Wednesday told the United Progressive Alliance Government to either "govern or get out" in the interest of the nation and the people.
- A Breakthrough In Textiles (Dawn, Sultan Ahmed, Jul 13, 2006)
Pakistan's premier export industry is in a crisis. Although textiles which form about 66 per cent of Pakistan’s total exports rose by 18 per cent . . .
- Time Opportune To Talk Strategy (Pioneer, G Parthasarathy, Jul 13, 2006)
It was an interesting experience for me to again exchange views with key strategic thinkers in the US last month at a location close to the statue of Mahatma . . .
- No Public Bickering (News International, Editorial, The News International, Jul 13, 2006)
One supposes it is something to be welcomed that the United States "agrees," as Foreign Minister Khurshid Mahmood Kasuri said in Washington on . . .
- Terrible Tuesday (News International, Editorial, The News International, Jul 13, 2006)
It was indeed a terrible Tuesday for India, especially for the residents of its most cosmopolitan city and commercial capital, Mumbai.
- India Slams Pakistan For Linking Attack To Kashmir (Pioneer, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
India has slammed Pakistan for trying to link the Mumbai blasts with the Kashmir dispute and asked Islamabad to reign in terror outfits operating from its soil.
- Death Toll In Mumbai Train Blasts Rises To 250 (Pakistan Observer, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
The death toll from a series of bombs that struck Bombay’s packed commuter trains rose Wednesday to 200, and India demanded that Pakistan dismantle the “infrastructure of terrorism,” but leveled no direct accusation at its rival for the attacks.
- India Rejects Ajk Elections (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
India said on Wednesday said that elections in the Pakistani part of Kashmir held on July 11 “lacked credibility” and could neither be called “free” nor “an exercise towards self-governance”.
- Kasuri For Fissile Material Moratorium With India (Pakistan Observer, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
Foreign Minister Khurshid Mahmud Kasuri has said that Islamabad is ready for a bilateral fissile material moratorium with India saying that its nuclear weapons programme was driven by Indian threat perception.
- Isi’S Pervasive Role (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Jul 13, 2006)
The court proceedings in the case of missing persons should focus the nation’s attention on the invisible but pervasive entity that the Inter-Services Intelligence is.
- Indo-Pak Dialogue Can Help Resolve Disputes: Durrani (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
The composite dialogue between Pakistan and India can lead to the resolution of disputes between the two neighbours, Minister for Information and Broadcasting Muhammad Ali Durrani . . .
- Militants Bang On Target, Tourists Flee Kashmir (Pioneer, Khursheed Wani, Jul 13, 2006)
A day after Tuesday's serial blasts that killed eight visitors, tourists began leaving Jammu and Kashmir in large numbers.
- Blasts Will Not Derail Peace Process: India: No-One Can Make Us Kneel: Singh (Dawn, Jawed Naqvi, Jul 13, 2006)
A day after serial blasts killed close to 200 commuters in Mumbai’s local trains, India vowed on Wednesday to continue the peace process with Pakistan even as Prime Minister Manmohan Singh warned that no one could make his country kneel.
- Bjp Blames Upa’S Vote-Centrism For Bombings (Daily Times, Iftikhar Gilani, Jul 13, 2006)
Accusing Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh's Government of turning India into a “soft state” citing Tuesday's blasts in Mumbai and Srinagar, the Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP) bluntly . . .
- Jihadis On Rampage (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jul 13, 2006)
Does the UPA regime have the courage to confront them?
- Nawaz Was Briefed On Kargil And He Was On Board: Musharraf (Daily Times, Sarfaraz Ahmed, Jul 13, 2006)
President Pervez Musharraf has challenged former prime minister Nawaz Sharif’s allegations that he (Musharraf) did not take him into confidence on the situation in Kargil by presenting pictorial evidence of Nawaz Sharif’s visit to Kel in Kashmir in . . .
- Pak Seeks Nuke Deal, Again (Statesman, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
Claiming that Pakistan’s nuclear weapons programme was “driven by the threat perception of India,” foreign minister Mr Khurshid Mahmud Kasuri has said Islamabad would “say yes” to a bilateral fissile material moratorium.
- Serial Blasts In Mumbai (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Jul 13, 2006)
The serial bomb blasts in packed passenger trains in Mumbai on Tuesday that left over 160 dead and 600 wounded have shaken not only India but South Asia as a whole.
- Us Offers Help In Tracking Terror Agents (Indian Express, LALIT K JHA, Jul 13, 2006)
As India started the hunt for the terrorists responsible for the series of bomb blasts in Mumbai and Kashmir on Tuesday, the US said it was with India in its war against terror.
- Mumbai Blasts: Concern Over Peace Process (Hindu, Hasan Suroor, Jul 13, 2006)
Blasts front-page news in British papers
Attacks likely to play into the hands of those opposed to the peace process
- Mumbai Terrorism Must Be Seen In Context (Daily Times, Editorial, Daily Times, Jul 13, 2006)
The seven bomb blasts in Mumbai are bad news for many reasons.
- `Pakistan Must Act Against Terror Groups' (Hindu, Amit Baruah, Jul 13, 2006)
Kasuri's remarks appalling: India
Kasuri drew a link between Mumbai blasts and non-resolution of disputes between India, Pakistan
"Pakistan is in the forefront of international efforts to fight terrorism"
- Unfortunate Mumbai Killings (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Jul 13, 2006)
Bombs ripped through seven packed commuter trains and stations during rush hour in Mumbai on Tuesday evening, killing at least 163 passengers and injuring about 600.
- India To Review New Cbm Initiatives With Pakistan (Hindustan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
After serial bomb blasts killed over 200 people in Mumbai, India has decided to do a "rethink" on new initiatives for confidence-building measures in the composite dialogue process with Pakistan.
- Gender Battle (Tribune, Lt Gen Raj Kadyan, Jul 13, 2006)
An Army Lieutenant posted at Udhampur committed suicide recently.
- For Durable Ties With Us (Tribune, G. Parthasarathy, Jul 13, 2006)
Understanding the perceptions of those who influence US foreign policy provides an insight into the factors that shape the directions that global developments will take. It was, therefore, interesting to meet key strategic thinkers in the U.S last . . .
- Bush Condemns Mumbai Blasts (Tribune, Ashish Kumar Sen, Jul 13, 2006)
President George W. Bush expressed outrage over the bomb blasts that killed over 183 persons in Mumbai on Tuesday and said the United States stood with India in the war on terror.
- The Day After (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jul 13, 2006)
Few organisations would have both the ruthlessness and the logistical capabilities to mount attacks on the scale and intensity of the Mumbai train bombings, which killed 190 at last count and injured many more.
- Mumbai Blasts Derail Indo-Pak Peace Process (Tribune, Rajeev Sharma, Jul 13, 2006)
Yesterday’s serial blasts in Mumbai appear to have taken the most important toll — the three-year-old Indo-Pak peace process.
- Mumbai Blasts Derail Indo-Pak Peace Process (Tribune, Rajeev Sharma, Jul 13, 2006)
Yesterday’s serial blasts in Mumbai appear to have taken the most important toll — the three-year-old Indo-Pak peace process.
- Massive Hunt On As Death Toll Rises To 200 (The Daily Star, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
Indian police said yesterday the bombs which ripped through trains in Mumbai on Tuesday bore the hallmark of Islamic militants.
- Pointless Savagery (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 13, 2006)
Bombay's return to work yesterday after one of the worst terrorist attacks in Indian history was admirable. The stock market, almost perversely, even rallied by more than two per cent.
- Communal Riots Would Be Precisely What The Terrorists Want (Rediff on the Net, editoral, rediff on the net, Jul 13, 2006)
Having just returned from a 'Peace Delegation' visit from Karachi, one had a sense of foreboding about coming events. Exploding population, rampant religious fundamentalism, spiralling prices, unemployment, a money order economy, violence in . . .
- How Much Will India Endure? (Washington Post, Editorial, Washington Post, Jul 13, 2006)
Yesterday's awful rush-hour bombings of trains in Bombay raise an important and ominous question: How far can India be pushed?
- Moral Vacuum (Arab News, editoral, arab news, Jul 13, 2006)
terrorists have once again chosen to massacre innocent commuters. But why? What possible good could ever be achieved by slaughtering ordinary decent people as they go about their daily business? The hearts of the world have gone out to the citizens . . .
- Pointless Savagery (Telegraph (UK), Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
Bombay's return to work yesterday after one of the worst terrorist attacks in Indian history was admirable. The stock market, almost perversely, even rallied by more than two per cent.
- Editorial: Moral Vacuum (Arab News, editorial, Arab news, Jul 13, 2006)
FIRST Madrid, then London, now Bombay — terrorists have once again chosen to massacre innocent commuters. But why? What possible good could ever be achieved by slaughtering ordinary decent people as they go about their daily business?
- Editorial: World Stands With People Of Mumbai (Toronto Star, Editorial, Toronto Star, Jul 13, 2006)
A day after seven bombs ripped through Mumbai's commuter rail system, leaving at least 200 dead and more than 700 injured, the trains were running again yesterday in India's commercial capital.
- World Stands With People Of Mumbai (Toronto Star, editoral, toronto star, Jul 13, 2006)
A day after seven bombs ripped through Mumbai's commuter rail system, leaving at least 200 dead and more than 700 injured, the trains were running again yesterday in India's commercial capital.
- Former Aide Suspects Role Of Dawood In Serial Blasts (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
The Mumbai bomb blasts was probably the handiwork of Dawood Ibrahim.
- Bangla Immigrants: The Threat Within (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 13, 2006)
While investigators probing leads into the Mumbai train blasts are scouring for evidence linking the terror strike to groups like Lashkar-e-Taiba, there is rising concern over a large of pool of illegals from Bangladesh in the city providing . . .
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