Wednesday,
11 August 2004, 1900
hrs NATION & STATES Jehadi
groups must leave Pakistan if
Kashmir row is settled: Musharaff In a candid interview, the Pakistani president has said
militant groups on his territory would have to "pack
up" if India and Pakistan arrived at a resolution to the
Kashmir problem
FEATURED
STORIES
Asia Times India's
damaging deficit
While a number of factors are
stalling India's sustainable growth, it is the country's high
fiscal deficit that deserves the lion's share of the blame. If
the government fails to lower this deficit, the economy will
have to bear the consequences, including very high interest
rates, writes KUNAL KUMAR KUNDU
Rediff Not
a carat more, Mr Gujral The
former prime minister's idea of autonomy for Jammu and Kashmir
is flawed. Linking lasting peace in Kashmir with autonomy for
the state is akin to mixing oil with water. Relative peace had
reigned in J&K until the Soviet forces withdrew from
Afghanistan in 1989, thereby leaving hordes of CIA-trained
Pakistani jihadis unemployed, writes ARVIND LAVAKARE
Deccan
Herald Falling
behind collectively
No one would deny that the ongoing process of economic
liberalisation has had a far-reaching impact on our economy. If we do not develop appropriate
systems, self-centred competitiveness will go wild, creating chaos in society,
says CHIRANJIB SEN
The News Terror of anticipation
Nearly 40 years ago, eminent French director Francois Truffaut made a film in Britain which, sadly, never really gained the recognition it deserved. Loosely based on a novel by Ray Bradbury, the film narrates the transformation of a man engaged in carrying out an official policy of burning books. He slowly realises what treasures he is destroying, and in the end, like-minded people are shown preserving literary masterpieces by committing them to memory. The movie’s title is ‘Fahrenheit 451’, for that is the temperature at which paper burns.
By HANS B BREMER
Deccan
Chronicle Muslim
husbands and triple talaq
Last week, a popular television channel splashed a news item that a court in UP has granted “interim maintenance” to a divorced woman. In response, a Muslim clergyman commented that courts in India do not have the authority to interfere with Islamic
principles. FLAVIA AGNES elaborates on the status of the talaq
debate
From South India Original texts
from four states, transcribed from a definitive volume
published by the Archaeological Survey of India ONLY ON WHAT IS INDIA