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Articles 21 through 120 of 500:
- Grim Reminder (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 31, 2007)
It must be a cynical creed that sanctions cold-blooded murder of innocent people. But that precisely has been the record of the “Maoist” rebellion in India.
- It Is Not A Textbook Case In State (Deccan Herald, B S Arun, Oct 31, 2007)
What do legal luminaries say of the Karnataka situation? The opinions are mixed as the top legal brains expressed both shades of opinion - that the House should be convened immediately to test claim as well as that the elections should be . . . .
- Herd Of Mlas (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 30, 2007)
POLITICAL leaders have feet of clay. This has been borne out, once again, by former Karnataka Chief Minister H.D. Kumaraswamy spiriting away Janata Dal (Secular) MLAs to a resort in the outskirts of Bangalore.
- ‘Bandh’ Panic Strikes Trains (Telegraph, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 30, 2007)
A “goof-up” by the Mugalsarai division of East Central Railway about a “Maoist bandh” in Bihar-Jharkhand today led the authorities to cancel and divert several trains plying along the Dhanbad division.
- Over 1,000 Killed By Maoists (Pioneer, Nityanand Shukla, Oct 30, 2007)
Despite spending considerable sums of money, security in the State remains a cause of serious concern.
- The Flying Bullet (Statesman, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 30, 2007)
The bullet alleged to have been aimed at Mamata Banerjee’s convoy is by any reckoning a major breach of the rule of law.
- Maoists Strike Again, In Jharkhand (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 29, 2007)
The conditions at a cultural programme organised in Chilkhadia village in Jharkhand on Friday night seemed ideal for the Maoists to strike.
- Jharkhand Shuts Down In Protest, Maoists Kill 5 More (Pioneer, Nityanand Shukla, Oct 29, 2007)
The dawn-to-dusk bandh called by the Jharkhand Vikas Morcha (Democratic) on Sunday, to protest the killing of 18 civilians including son of former Chief Minister Babulal Marandi by Maoists, evoked good response in the State.
- Killing Fields Of Giridih (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 29, 2007)
The massacre of newly married Anup, son of former Jharkhand Chief Minister Babulal Marandi, and 16 others by Maoists in a pre-dawn attack at Chilkhadih village of Giridih district on Saturday is yet another proof that no life or place is secure in . . . .
- Another Massacre (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Oct 29, 2007)
Maoist attacks on civilian and Government targets in Chhattisgarh, Orissa, Jharkhand, Bihar and West Bengal have now become a routine affair.
- It's Advantage Congress (Pioneer, Arun Nehru, Oct 29, 2007)
Coalition governance has been around for 20 years and while the last two Governments have mastered the art of survival, the issue of effective governance has been a serious casualty.
- Cpi(m), Cpi Condemn Jharkhand Massacre (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 29, 2007)
The Communist Party of India(Marxist) and the Communist Party of India have condemned Saturday’s Maoist attack at Chikhadiah village in Giridih district in Jharkhand. Eighteen persons, including Anup Marandi, the son of the former . . .
- Maoists Kill Five Villagers In India (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 29, 2007)
Five villagers have been shot dead by suspected Maoists in eastern India, a day after the left-wing rebels killed 18 people, including a former minister’s son, in an ambush, police said Sunday.
- Crpf To Flush Out Red Terror In Jharkhand (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 29, 2007)
A day after the latest massacre of innocent civilians by Naxalites, the Centre and the Jharkhand government have asked CRPF to go after the Left-wing extremists.
- Carbon Blueprint (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 29, 2007)
Having given up on the nuclear deal and with elections in the not-to-distant future, the Congress (in particular the prime minister) has turned its attention to economic reform and governance, which should have been priorities at the beginning of . . . .
- 17 Including Ex-Cm's Son Killed By Naxalites (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 27, 2007)
Seventeen people, including the son of former Jharkhand chief minister Babulal Marandi were killed by armed naxalites at Chilkhadia village in Giridih district in the wee hours of Saturday.
- 17 Including Ex -Jharkhand Cm's Son Killed By Naxalites (The Economic Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 27, 2007)
Seventeen people, including the son of former Jharkhand chief minister Babulal Marandi were killed by armed naxalites at Chilkhadia village in Giridih district in the wee hours of Saturday.
- Special (Statesman, A N Sudarsan Rao , Oct 27, 2007)
The season of film festivals is upon us once again.
- Naxalites Kill 17 People Including Marandi's Son (Hindustan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 27, 2007)
Seventeen people, including the son of former Jharkhand chief minister Babulal Marandi were killed by armed naxalites at Chilkhadia village in Giridih district in the wee hours on Saturday.
- Naxalites Kill 17 People Including Marandi's Son (Hindustan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 27, 2007)
Seventeen people, including the son of former Jharkhand chief minister Babulal Marandi were killed by armed naxalites at Chilkhadia village in Giridih district in the wee hours on Saturday.
- Energy On His Mind, Deal On Pause, Pm Frees Coal Blocks (Indian Express, Kandula Subramaniam, Oct 26, 2007)
Pushed back on the nuclear deal under pressure from his Left allies, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh today cleared the decks for freeing up 18 coal blocks that would have the potential to set up around 68,000 MW of coal-based power stations.
- Grain Of Truth (Telegraph, ABHIRUP SARKAR, Oct 25, 2007)
Ration shops are burning all over West Bengal. They are being attacked, looted and put on fire by groups of angry, disgruntled citizens, who seem to have decided that they have had enough.
- Allies Hold Koda Responsible (Telegraph, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 25, 2007)
Friends are fast turning foes. Chief minister Madhu Koda is vociferous and so are his allies.
- Low On Uranium, 5 N-Power Units Are Shut Early (Indian Express, Kandula Subramaniam, Oct 24, 2007)
Faced with an acute shortage of uranium to run existing power stations, the Nuclear Power Corporation of India Ltd has advanced its maintenance schedule and started shutting down individual power units.
- Q&a: 'Cabinet Secretariat Has To Act As A Facilitator' (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Oct 24, 2007)
In a first of its kind in federal governance, Union cabinet secretary K M Chandrashekhar travelled with 18 officials — most of them secretary-level officers in Union ministries — to Ranchi for a day in September, checked into Raj Bhavan and . . . .
- Jharkhand Naxals Make Rs 320 Cr A Year (Hindustan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 24, 2007)
Naxalites in Jharkhand earn Rs 320 crore levy annually, almost 10 per cent of the state's total revenue in a year. The latest edition of the Indian Defence Yearbook, quoting Union Home Ministry sources, provides a detailed account of the movement . . . .
- Karat Meets Unpa Leaders (Statesman, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 24, 2007)
The United National Progressive Alliance (UNPA), the Third Front grouping, has demanded that the Indo-US nuclear deal should not be operationalised unless it gets Parliament’s nod.
- Cloud Of Mystery (Frontline, R. Ramachandran, Oct 24, 2007)
Yet another monsoon is over and, with that, yet another test for the prediction skill of the statistical long-range forecast (LRF) model of the India Meteorological Department (IMD); this time it was a new model with a new methodology (Frontline, June 1).
- Quality Of Growth (Business Line, Ranabir Ray Choudhury , Oct 24, 2007)
Two reports appearing in Tuesday’s newspapers show clearly that the quality of development in India is perhaps as satisfactory as the quantitative performance.
- Right By The Constitution (Pioneer, A Surya Prakash, Oct 23, 2007)
I would like to dedicate this week's column to Justice RS Sarkaria and SR Bommai -- two individuals who played a significant role in strengthening the federal features in our Constitution and in putting an end to reckless use of Article 356.
- Sex Education Can Save Lives (Tribune, Usha Rai, Oct 22, 2007)
THE Indian adolescent is no different from young people in other countries in his sexual curiosity and half-baked knowledge about sex and its dos and don’ts.
- Poor Infrastructure Casts Shadow Over Centre's Nrhm Scheme (Pioneer, Rajeev Ranjan Roy, Oct 22, 2007)
The benefits of much-hyped National Rural Health Mission (NRHM) are far from percolating to the people in the States where the Centre's flagship scheme intends to make quality difference in primary and secondary health services.
- Increased Military Spending Keeps South Asia On The Boil (Deccan Herald, Gobind Thukral, Oct 18, 2007)
Rising defence spending will not only aggravate South Asias internal and external disputes, but also exacerbate human security.
- Let Men Do Their Bit (Pioneer, Shailaja Chandra, Oct 18, 2007)
For 30 years, vasectomy has been a political taboo, and the entire burden of family planning has been on women. But modern vasectomy techniques are a success in the West. India needs to try them
- India Whining (Pioneer, Hiranmay Karlekar, Oct 18, 2007)
Terrorism of the kind witnessed in the Ajmer bombings, followed by a theatre of the absurd, is a familiar story in the country
- The Nowhere People (Hindustan Times, HARSH MANDER, Oct 17, 2007)
Forgotten by their governments and their people, tens of thousands of people who were uprooted from their homes and villages by waves of ethnic violence are living hopeless lives in makeshift camps in Assam for more than a decade.
- Extracting Gains From Mining (Business Line, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 17, 2007)
In the light of the recent happenings in mineral-rich States of Orissa, Bihar, Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh , the transformation of mineral deposits into sustainable development gains would be a daunting task if the interests of all the stakehol . . . . .
- India's First Women Political Party Launched (New Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 17, 2007)
Touted as the country's first political party formed by women, the 'United Women Front' (UWF) was launched here on Tuesday.
- Anarchy Everywhere (Pioneer, JS Rajput, Oct 16, 2007)
When protesting farmers are fired at in Nandigram and Singur, it is not a democratic system of governance.
- Latest Official Survey Puts Obcs At 40% (Pioneer, Rajeev Ranjan Roy, Oct 12, 2007)
As it defends OBC reservations in higher education in the Supreme Court, the UPA Government has received another setback with the latest National Family Health Survey (NFHS) for 2005-06 putting the population of other backward classes . . . .
- Sixteen Rebel Suspects Arrested (Telegraph, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 11, 2007)
Sixteen suspected Naxalites, including their three sympathisers, were caught at Patamda, Ghurabandha and Rampur village between late last night and today.
- Entry Bar Shift Prompts Cop Job Recast (Telegraph, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 09, 2007)
The Jharkhand government is likely to quash the ongoing process for the recruitment of some 8,000 constables.
- Mid-Term Polls Imminent: Jd(u) (Hindu, Sujay Mehdudia, Oct 08, 2007)
The Janata Dal (United) on Sunday asserted that a mid-term election was imminent as the Congress had failed to adhere to the coalition dharma.
- Special Article (Statesman, Sumer Kaul, Oct 06, 2007)
Thanks to the severely professional and bent-on-revenge Aussies, the post-T20 euphoria has gone for a six, and this of the very second ball, so to speak. In Bangalore rain saved India; in Kochi nothing could.
- Constitutionally Off-Track (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 03, 2007)
Judges sometimes talk too much, on all manner of subjects, in the course of court hearings.
- Green Axe For Mla Homes (Telegraph, Amit Gupta, Oct 03, 2007)
A horticulture research programme could get the axe and make way for a residential complex for legislators if the Madhu Koda government has its way.
- Cm Orders Probe Into Mahto Waylay Attempt (Telegraph, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 01, 2007)
Chief minister Madhu Koda today ordered a probe into his deputy Sudhir Mahto getting caught in a trap laid by dacoits near Bengal’s Balrampur, about 60km from Jamshedpur.
- What Upa Won’T Tell You (Indian Express, Bibek Debroy, Oct 01, 2007)
Inequality is an important issue for the UPA government. The Approach Paper to the 11th Five Year Plan (2007-12) adopted in December 2006, mentions “inclusive growth” in the title itself.
- New Andhra Pcc Chief Likely Soon (Asian Age, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 01, 2007)
The Congress high command is expected to appoint a new Andhra Pradesh Congress Committee chief next month, while it has not made up its mind yet about changes in the Maharashtra, West Bengal and Madhya Pradesh PCCs.
- Fairly Good Job (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Sep 29, 2007)
Reports that the rural jobs programme will be extended countrywide acquire a special aura, because policywise so little moves in this government.
- Unhealthy State (Frontline, Jayati Ghosh, Sep 29, 2007)
India’s health system is iniquitous and inefficient. Only cooperative and communitarian solutions can lead to sustained growth and development.
- India Job Scheme 'Disappointing' (British Broadcasting Corporation, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 28, 2007)
India's most ambitious scheme ever to lift people out of poverty has met with largely disappointing results in its first year, studies suggest.
- Mittal Plants Ready For 2008 Takeoff (Telegraph, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 28, 2007)
ArcelorMittal is expected to go ahead with its greenfield steel projects both in Orissa and Jharkhand, with the Orissa project to begin from next year.
- Rot In The Head Is The Disease, Rest Symptoms (Statesman, Editorial, Statesman, Sep 28, 2007)
Sir, ~ This is with reference to the article, “Canker at the core” (14 September) by YP Gupta. By the use of the word “core” if he meant the epicentre or the source wherefrom corruption permeates, he did not reach there.
- Mittal’S Projects To Start By ’08 (Asian Age, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 28, 2007)
Arcelor-Mittal's two 12-million-tonne each greenfield steel projects - one in Jharkhand and another in Orissa - will come up as scheduled and construction work for both the plants would begin by October, next year.
- Less Than A Guarantee (Statesman, Editorial, Statesman, Sep 27, 2007)
Dr Suryakanta Mishra may have been saddled with a portfolio too many aside from health, the one that is by far the most critical.
- Culture Policing In Schools (Frontline, T.K. RAJALAKSHMI, Sep 27, 2007)
The nationwide Adolescence Education Programme (AEP), conceived by the Union Ministry of Human Resource Development and the National AIDS Control Organisation (NACO), is under review following protests from some State governments.
- Third Front In Poll Mode, Hammers Govt Over Setu (Hindustan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 27, 2007)
The United National Progressive Alliance (UNPA) has begun to prepare for possible mid-term polls by intensifying its attack on the Congress-led UPA on the Sethusamudram project and the government’s economic policies.
- Edits (Statesman, Editorial, Statesman, Sep 27, 2007)
Just how devastatingly divisive diverse interpretations of history can prove is exemplified by the entirely avoidable controversy surrounding the visit of a group of descendents of Britishers killed in the uprising of 1857.
- Political Project (Frontline, Venkitesh Ramakrishnan, Sep 26, 2007)
The Sangh Parivar revives a campaign that it had not so long ago found hard to sell.
- Naxal Leader Dies Of Snakebite Near C’Garh Border (Indian Express, Nitin Mahajan, Sep 26, 2007)
One of the highest ranking Naxalite commanders operating in northern Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand for several years, Rahul Tiwari alias Abhay (32), died after being bitten by a poisonous snake in the adjoining Gadhwa district of Jharkhand . . . . .
- Govt Diagnoses Governance (Statesman, Editorial, Statesman, Sep 26, 2007)
There has been a fair measure of sarkari hype over the first-ever visit by a Cabinet Secretary to the Maoist-infested states.
- Edits (Statesman, Editorial, Statesman, Sep 26, 2007)
What a way to win! Words fail to recapture the wondrous moments of a magnificent finale to a sustained performance of mammoth magnitude.
- Rahul Gets His Place Under Congress Sun (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 25, 2007)
Mr Gandhi will also be a part of the "Group to Look Into the Future", a new mechanism devised to formulate the party's programmes in tune with the needs of the coming times.
- Congress Basks In Son-Shine (Hindustan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 25, 2007)
Congress president Sonia Gandhi named her son Rahul one of the general secretaries of her party in a move seen as mixing youth with experience ahead of the general elections widely expected to be held before schedule.
- Moily, The Star On Congress Firmament (Deccan Herald, B S Arun, Sep 25, 2007)
As the party revamp has been made with an eye on the possible mid-term poll, Moily's task as chairman of the DEPCO becomes important from this point of view.
- Digvijay For U.P., Arunkumar For Tamil Nadu (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 25, 2007)
On the reconstituted All-India Congress Committee, Andhra Pradesh leader Arun Kumar has been appointed general secretary in charge of Tamil Nadu and Puducherry. Motilal Vora will remain treasurer with additional charge of Administration.
- Rahul Is Gen Secy In Major Congress Reshuffle (Asian Age, Venkatesh Kesari , Sep 25, 2007)
Congress president Sonia Gandhi on Monday inducted her son and Lok Sabha member Rahul Gandhi as a general secretary of the party.
- Violence During Cpi (Maoist) Bandh (Hindu, K. BALCHAND, Sep 24, 2007)
At least two persons, including a policeman, were killed during a bandh sponsored by the Communist Party of India (Maoist) in Bihar, Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh on Sunday protesting against the arrest of its activists.
- Heavy Rain Lashes Kolkata, 7 Killed (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 24, 2007)
At least seven persons were killed as torrential rains lashed the metropolis and adjoining districts today, with the weatherman-forecasting heavy showers till tomorrow.
- Indian Maoists Blow Up Railway Station, Tracks (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 24, 2007)
Maoist insurgents blew up a railway station and tracks in two Indian states on Sunday, severely disrupting the eastern rail network, but a day-long strike called by the rebels had limited impact, officials said.
- Jharkhand’S Pride (Asian Age, Editorial, The Asian Age, Sep 24, 2007)
What could the state of Jharkhand possibly produce for Indian cricket? This was a question that some people might have asked before the rise of Mahendra Singh Dhoni, who is India’s latest One-Day captain. Dhoni comes from Jharkhand.
- Top Maoist Leader Held (Hindu, K. Srinivas Reddy, Sep 22, 2007)
Security forces dealt a blow to the Maoist movement in eastern India with the arrest of top ranking Maoist leader Misir Besra in the newly formed Khunti district in Jharkhand on Friday.
- Cong Hits Poll Button (Deccan Herald, K Subrahmanya, Sep 20, 2007)
A snap Lok Sabha poll may truly be round the corner. Pointers in that direction are getting clearer as the UPA-Left nuclear deal gulf appears unbridgeable.
- Mahi Re (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Asian Age, Sep 20, 2007)
Much-needed fresh air is being infused into Team India.
- Cabinet Secy To Visit Naxal-Hit Areas (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 20, 2007)
With Left-wing extremists increasingly targeting mining facilities as well as power transmission and communication lines in states like Jharkhand, Chattisgarh and Orissa, the Centre has now fielded its senior-most bureaucrat . . . .
- Nepal Polls No Sure Thing (Asia Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 19, 2007)
All things being equal, as many as 17.6 million Nepali voters could conceivably to go the polls on November 22 to elect a Constituent Assembly to draw up a new constitution.
- Haryana Hurricane (Indian Express, ILA PATNAIK, Sep 19, 2007)
The regional distribution of investment in states offers some surprises and reinforces some stereotypes. Haryana and Orissa are witnessing big gains in investment, while Rajasthan, UP and Bihar remain BIMARU.
- India-Uk Begin Mly Drills In Ladakh (Dawn, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 18, 2007)
British troops, some of them recently deployed in Afghanistan and Iraq, on Monday began a three-week exercise with Indian units in the mountainous terrain of Ladakh.
- Cong Sliding But Upa Retains Goodwill (Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 18, 2007)
Earlier this month, The Indian Express reported that far from the heated debate in New Delhi over the possibility and outcome of a mid-term poll, most of the country was unaware of the nuclear deal and certainly didn’t want to face an election over it.
- Minister Admits To Rural Job Mistakes (Telegraph, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 18, 2007)
Union rural development minister Raghuvansh Prasad Singh today admitted that allegations of irregularities in the implementation of National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme have been received almost from all states.
- Indo-Uk Ladakh Drills From Today (Asian Age, Sridhar Kumaraswami, Sep 17, 2007)
The Indo-British military exercises, codenamed "Exercise Himalayan Warrior", are all set to begin from Monday in the Ladakh region of Jammu and Kashmir, which will involve elite troops of the armed forces of both countries.
- Bsp Is Best Placed Of All (Pioneer, Arun Nehru, Sep 17, 2007)
The Mayawati factor is going to dominate the political landscape over the next year.
- Down But Not Out (Frontline, N. Rahul, Sep 12, 2007)
NAXALITES in Andhra Pradesh are down but not out. The police offensive in 2005 following the failure of the peace talks in late 2004 has diminished their number considerably but not their capacity to strike.
- ‘All Parties Pursue Our Agenda’ (Frontline, N. Rahul, Sep 12, 2007)
Varavara Rao has been the face of the Marxist-Leninist movement and the revolutionary writers in Andhra Pradesh for nearly four decades.
- New Battle Zones (Frontline, AMAN SETHI, Sep 12, 2007)
FINALLY, it was a scrawl in the cryptic shorthand of a court stenographer that almost ruined Sudaram Nag’s monsoon crop. “Sudaram Nag, 50 yrs, Takraguda, Bastar. Section:107.116(b), 03-08-07,” it said, communicating to the 50-year-old rice farmer . . . .
- A Flawed Concept (Frontline, V. VENKATESAN, Sep 12, 2007)
IN 2003, when the Government of India identified 55 districts affected by left-wing extremism (naxalism) across nine States to address the issue of backwardness, its decision stemmed from the realisation that people were drawn into naxalism . . . .
- Naxal Terror (Frontline, Venkitesh Ramakrishnan, Sep 12, 2007)
“THIS is essentially to create a shock effect on the government and its agencies. More concrete and substantial political and organisational work of the Maoists is taking place at the grass roots in a number of States including Jharkhand . . . .
- Upa, Political Moment, Nation (Indian Express, Yogendra Yadav, Sep 11, 2007)
There are two ways of reading the political message of the Indian Express—CNN-IBN—CSDS poll.
- See No Evil (Hindustan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 11, 2007)
The bomb blasts at Hyderabad were another reminder that the Indian State, indeed India’s future, is becoming steadily more endangered.
- Bogus Sting Op: Tv Journalist Held, Govt Red-Faced (Pioneer, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 08, 2007)
Investigation by the Delhi Police in the Uma Khurana case has left many red-faced in the Delhi Government. With the arrest of the 'investigative-journalist' duo of Prakash Singh and Rashmi of Live India channel, it is now clearly evident that . . . .
- Tata Steel To Adopt Corus Technology For New Units (Singapore Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 08, 2007)
Tata Steel is working on a strategy roadmap entitled ‘Vision 2015’ to chalk out plan to emerge as a top league player in the global steel industry.
- Indo-Uk Drill In Ladakh (Asian Age, Sridhar Kumaraswami, Sep 06, 2007)
The Indian Army will be conducting exercises with British troops in the Ladakh region of Jammu and Kashmir from the middle of this month, Army official sources have confirmed.
- Special Article (Statesman, DEBAKI NANDAN MANDAL, Sep 06, 2007)
The National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (NREGA), launched on 2 February 2006 in 200 districts, has been a subject of controversy and debate since the days when experts of the National Advisory Council prepared its blueprint.
- Centre Seat Relief For Tribals (Telegraph, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 04, 2007)
The Centre, claimed a group of tribal leaders, said that there would be no reduction of either parliamentary or Assembly seats reserved for Schedule Tribes (ST) in the state.
- Jmm Secures Jamshedpur, Again (Telegraph, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 03, 2007)
Suman Mahto, JMM candidate and widow of Sunil Mahto, led from start to finish to romp home the Jamshedpur Lok Sabha by-election, defeating her nearest rival Dinesh Sarangi of BJP by a margin of 58,586 votes.
- Democracy At Discount (Deccan Herald, G S Bhargava, Sep 03, 2007)
It had been India’s pride – rightly – to be the world’s most populous democracy. We would claim parity with the USA – acclaimed as the world’s “greatest” democracy – to be the largest in the category.
- They Kill In The Name Of Mao (Pioneer, Prakash Singh, Sep 03, 2007)
Maoist Spring Thunder: The Naxalite Movement (1967-1972), Arun Prosad Mukherjee, KP Bagchi & Co, Rs 595
- Economic Growth Is Changing Caste-Based Deprivation Logic (Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 01, 2007)
Economic growth is changing conventional logic of caste-based deprivation in several states.
- Hc Heat On Sahay Transfer Pressure (Telegraph, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 31, 2007)
Jharkhand High Court today issued a notice to Union minister of state for food processing Subodh Kant Sahay, seeking an explanation over the transfer of a CCL officer to the Northeastern Coalfields.
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