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Friday, November 10, 2006



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Top Stories

Business and Economy
  • Second Green Revolution Needs Major Reform
    Investigations and studies behind consistent suicides by farmers around the country is increasingly pointing to “avoidable, man-made” conditions ranging from drop in financial support, lack of agricultural support systems, to impractical Federal policies.
    <More>

  • Malaysia Invites Indian Investment
    Malaysia inaugurated a representative office of the Multimedia Development Corporation (MDeC) in Bangalore and invited further Indian investments to the 15 kilometer (km) wide and 50 km long special corridor dedicated to multimedia.
    <More>

Democracy, Politics and Judiciary

Environment, Health and Education

  • New Bird Flu Strain
    A new strain of bird flu virus, like the one originally found in China’s Fujian Province by researchers from the University of Hong Kong and American St. Jude's Children's Research Hospital at Tennessee, has spread to 6 other provinces and 3 other countries.<More>

  • Modest AIDS Allocation
    At the valedictory function of a three-day national workshop on HIV/AIDS for teachers Minister of State for Health and Family Welfare Panabaka Lakshmi says that the Federal Government had allocated Rs. 906 crore (USD 196 million) to combat AIDS.<More>

Terrorism, Defense, Security and Science & Technology
  • “Pakistani Taliban” Claims Responsibility
    The Pakistani Taliban with whom Pakistan had signed a peace agreement owned up to carrying out the suicide attack on an army camp in North West Frontier Province in response to the airborne attack on a Madrasa in the neighboring Bajur tribal district.<More>

  • Madrasa Bombing Inspires Protests, Reprisals
    The monster Pakistan created came back to haunt the master with a reprisal attack in response to a helicopter attack on a madrasa alleged to be a terrorist training camp as thousands of armed tribals protested against the Army action.<More>

Neighbors

  • Hu’s Visit Aimed at Building Trust
    Ahead of Chinese President Hu Jintao's visit to India from November 20-23, both nations are building up the tempo through orchestrated sound-bites focusing on the positives and not referring to the disagreements plaguing bilateral relations.<More>

  • India Asks Pak to Stop Stalling SAFTA
    Setting the tone for upcoming Foreign Secretary level talks, External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee asked Pakistan to remove “obstructions” and allow “free flow of trade” and go beyond the expanded trade basket.<More>

World

  • The Donkey’s Kick
    As Democrats routed the Republicans in the US mid-polls and seized both houses of the Congress after 12 years, there is a lot of fear in India that Indo-US relations, specifically the nuclear deal, assiduously built by the Bush Administration may be a casualty.<More>

  • Saudis Warn of Iraq Disintegration
    Saudi Arabia believes that Iraq is a “lost battle” that will disintegrate because of Iranian “interference,” Kurdish drive for quasi- independence, and there is no “endgame” to the US occupation that has “failed by every single measure.”<More>

 
Hot Topics
  The Donkey’s Kick
  Second Green Revolution Needs Major Reform
  New Bird Flu Strain
  “Pakistani Taliban” Claims Responsibility
  Malaysia Invites Indian Investment

Featured Analyses     More

 

Madrasa Bombing Inspires Protests, Reprisals

The monster Pakistan created came back to haunt the master with a reprisal attack in response to a helicopter attack on a madrasa alleged to be a terrorist training camp as thousands of armed tribals protested against the Army action.

 

Security and Telecom Investment

 

IB Says Cannot ISI Info to Pak

 

Saddam to Hang

 

Disinvestment Not for Judicial Review

 

Constitutional Crisis in Bangladesh

 

Internal Security Concerns to the Fore

Featured Edits

Senate may take up Bill on nuclear deal: Mulford

Steps to put anti-terrorism mechanism in place

When Robert M. Gates came calling

Life for Pakistani men for killing white teenager

Worries about India-China economic ties

Nuclear deal: delayed but not quite dead

Rail rivalry in Kashmir

Inscription

South Indian Inscriptions

Ancient Indian dynasties documented their administration, significant developments, grants, and milestones as inscriptions in temples. The Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) has documented these inscriptions from 1886. These pages contain inscriptions from Pallava, Chola, Pandya, Western Chalukya, Eastern Chalukya, Rashtrakuta, Hoyasala, Vijayanagara, Vishnukundin, Kakatiya, Reddi, Vaidumba, Chinda, Eastern Ganga, Gajapathi, Kalchurya, Qutb-Shahi of Golkonda, and Moghul,  dynasties.


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