This Months Article
This Months Article
Starting: Thu November
1, 2001
Ending: Fri November
30, 2001
Messages: 302
-
Saffron State as
terrorist
-
Sitaram Yechury, The Hindustan Times,
November 28, 2001
>>> Not with standing verbose pontification
and spreading of motivated disinformation by Union ministers, the Prevention
of Terrorism Ordinance (POTO) has clearly been promulgated more to advance
the RSS/BJP's partisan political agenda than to combat terrorism. ......
-
Seven Days in a
forest
-
M G Vaidya, Tarun Bharat, November
25, 2001
>>> Mananiya Shri M. G. Vaidya,
now the Spokesman of RSS had been to Jashpurnagar in Chhatisgarh State
for the annual meeting of Sangh Pracharaks in November. The journey
is through forest area. They were only for seven days in this area populated
by forest-dwellers or tribals. A brief account of their exhilerating
experience and what they saw there. ......
-
'Five Britons died
fighting for the Taliban in Mazar'
-
Cahal Milmo, The Independent, UK,
November 17, 2001
>>> Five British Muslims have been
killed while fighting for the Taliban in the strategic city of Mazar-i-Sharif
captured by Northern Alliance troops last week, it was claimed yesterday.
......
-
The real damage
has been done outside Afghanistan
-
Alice Thomson, The Daily Telegraph,
UK, November 16, 2001
>>> Mad Mullah Omar can urge his
troops to stop scattering like slaughtered chickens, but it's nearly over.
The roses at the embassy in Kabul are being pruned to receive the first
British ambassador in 21 years. Food is floating into Afghanistan on barges.
In Kabul, the men have shaved off enough facial hair to supply all the
journalists with soft mattresses. ......
-
Saudi Prince Warns
Clerics on Rhetoric
-
International Herald Tribune, UK,
November 16, 2001
>>> Saudi Arabia's crown prince
has asked clerics to tone down their sermons to avoid embarrassing the
kingdom or aggravating anti-Muslim sentiment around the world following
the September attacks on the United States. ......
-
Rejoicing in Kabul
raises questions for Muslim scholars
-
Philip Smucker, The Daily Telegraph,
UK, November 16, 2001
>>> While the brainwashing of Muslim
young men continued in earnest in Pakistan's hard-line Islamic schools
yesterday, confused students began to cast doubt on the diatribes of their
mentors. ......
-
The war is just
beginning, say extremists in Britain
-
Richard Alleyne, The Daily Telegraph,
UK, November 15, 2001
>>> Members of extreme Muslim groups
in Britain remained defiant yesterday despite the apparent collapse of
the Taliban regime. ......
-
Opportunistic cronies
-
Faisal Bodi, The Guardian, UK, November
13, 2001
>>> In a calamity a thief but sees
an opportunity to steal. Far be it for me to accuse fellow Muslims of behaving
like the fabled kleptomaniac of the Arabian Nights, but if the thief of
Baghdad had a modern political equivalent he would surely be found in the
pack of opportunists capitalising on the fallout from September 11. ......
-
Harrowing tales
of depravity Where child marriage is the norm
-
Star Roving Team, The Daily Star,
November 10, 2001
>>> Despite intensive campaigns
by successive governments, child marriage is widely prevalent in Bhola
district, particularly in the Hindu community, for what they call "lack
of security for female children." ......
-
Honest intellectuals
must shed their spiritual turbans
-
Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga,
International Herald Tribune, UK, November 8, 2001
>>> On Oct. 7, while American-led
forces were making their final preparations to deliver the first strikes
in the new world war against terrorism, the armed forces of my country
were bracing for further attacks by terrorists who have killed 64,000 Sri
Lankans in 18 years. ......
-
Sri Lanka Knows
About Terrorism
-
Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga,
International Herald Tribune, UK, November 8, 2001
>>> On Oct. 7, while American-led
forces were making their final preparations to deliver the first strikes
in the new world war against terrorism, the armed forces of my country
were bracing for further attacks by terrorists who have killed 64,000 Sri
Lankans in 18 years. ......
-
Hypocrisy Wins
-
Editorial, International Herald
Tribune, UK, November 8, 2001
>>> "You don't belong to a country
club that excludes blacks or Jews," Bernadine Healy, outgoing president
of the American Red Cross, once said. Her departure is a blow to an organization
that profited greatly from her leadership for two years. ......
-
Religious schools
'need to broaden curriculum'
-
Amit Roy, The Daily Telegraph, UK,
November 8, 2001
>>> The Pakistani High Commissioner
to London has called for urgent reforms to the religious schools in Pakistan
and Britain. ......
-
Keepers of British
war graves pay the price
-
Sandra Laville, The Daily Telegraph,
UK, November 8, 2001
>>> For more than 100 years the
Bakhush family has tended the graves of British soldiers, guarding the
resting places of the men who died in the second Afghan war, and welcoming
relatives of those who were killed defending an outpost of the Empire.
......
-
Taliban forces hide
in mosques and hospitals
-
Philip Smucker, The Daily Telegraph,
UK, November 7, 2001
>>> The Taliban and its allies
in the al-Qa'eda terror network are developing ever-more ingenious methods
of eluding American bombs, including the redeployment of forces to ancient
archaeological sites, mosques and even relief organisation offices. ......
-
A corrosive national
danger in our multicultural model
-
Hugo Young, The Guardian, UK, November
6, 2001
>>> When immigration was first
becoming an issue in British politics, the question of patriotism barely
arose. Loyalty was not the major problem, let alone the right of a citizen
to support war against Britain and her allies. ......
-
The Anti-Semitism
of the Islamo-Fascists
-
The New Republic, November 5, 2001
>>> One of the most vivid experiences
of my time as a graduate student at Harvard was a seminar I took with the
preeminent liberal political theorist John Rawls. The discussion centered
on Rawls's later work, in which he divorced his liberalism from the claim
of absolute truth. ......
-
What are we fighting
against? It's simple - fundamentalism
-
Barbara Amiel, The Daily Telegraph,
UK, November 5, 2001
>>> In The Times of November 2
a page titled "War on terror Israel" Michael Binyon wrote a short history
of the Jewish state. It contained the following paragraph: "Britain tried
to govern a largely Arab Palestine while encouraging Jewish immigration.
Clashes grew, and by 1945 Britain tried to halt the influx. ......
-
British jehadis
and the definition of war
-
Farrukh Dhondy, The Times of India,
November 5, 2001
>>> There is growing anxiety in
Britain about what Bush, Blair, Osama bin Laden and Mullah Omar, the leader
of the Taliban, are all agreed is a war. Bush and Blair say it's a war
against terrorism and consequently a war against the Afghan State which
shelters it. ......
-
From the bloody
pages of Al-Qaida's killing manual
-
Nick Fielding, The Times of India,
November 5, 2001
>>> A unique manual for Islamic
terrorists, detailing every aspect of how to fight a guerrilla war, from
biochemical attacks to finding the fatal pressure point during hand-to-hand
combat, has been obtained by western intelligence agencies. ......
-
Victory Changes
Everything . . .
-
Charles Krauthammer, The Washington
Post, November 30, 2001
>>> Hundreds of holy warriors lie
dead in a prison near Mazar-e Sharif. Ramadan is violated by the hail of
American bombs. Infidel Americans land in force on Muslim soil near Kandahar.
"We now own a piece of Afghanistan," says Brig. Gen. James Mattis. ......
-
Don't stress non-issues
-
MC Joshi, The Daily Pioneer, November
29, 2001
>>> In his write-up 'In the grip
of Islamophobia' (November 13) Mr Sidharth Bhatia has said that in recent
years, currying favour with the Indian Government and basking at the new
found acknowledgement of their presence by their adopted countries, Hindu
NRIs have become more vocal at getting their point of view across ......
-
The silent Imams
-
Charles Krauthammer, Mid-Day, November
29, 2001
>>> President George Bush visits
the main Washington mosque and declares Islam a religion of peace. He urges
Americans to publicly accompany and protect 'women of cover' - Islamic
faithful wearing the shawl. He encourages American school children to find
a Muslim pen pal. ......
-
Fortune cookie crumbles
-
Anil Narendra, The Pioneer, November
29, 2001
>>> September 11 and November 13
are two dates which Pakistan's President General Pervez Musharraf will
always remember. After the September 11 attacks, General Musharraf became
an overnight star in the Western world. However, November 13 brought him
down to "ground zero". ......
-
Lend a helping hand
to Bangladeshi Hindus - Mohan Bhagwat
-
Organiser, November 25, 2001
>>> An endless flow of Hindu refugees
from Bangladesh into Bharat seeking shelter and security has once again
put the Hindu society in a cruel dilemma. Branded as the pro-Awami League
voters in the recent elections, the Hindu minority was chosen as the target
by the Muslim murderous mobs backed by their own political masters. ......
-
World accepts India's
agenda on terrorism - Arun Jaitley
-
Aniket Raja, Organiser, November
25, 2001
>>> "Fifteen years of terrorism
in India has cost India 54,000 lives which no single war would have done
that loss, and terrorist organisations such as Al Qaida and Lashkar-e-Toiba
are spreading terrorism in India under the cover of jehad and freedom fight.
......
-
Check Minorities
commission or close Archaeological Survey
-
Prafull Goradia, Organiser, November
25, 2001
>>> It is not widely realised that
just one. 19th century archaeologist, Lt Gen Sir Alexander Cunningham has
left behind records sufficient to fill 23 hard bound volumes recently published
by the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI). This quantum of records are
a miniscule part of the survey treasure available with the ASI. Hardly
any of this literature is referred to in the books of Indian. history that
I happen to have read. ......
-
Fighting for freedom
-
M. V. Kamath, Organiser, November
25, 2001
>>> In recent weeks there has been
a great deal of talk about 'Freedom fighters' in Jammu and Kashmir with
Pakistan's General Pervez Musharraf going out of his way to describe terrorists
operating in there as "freedom fighters". The General has some queer idea
about fighting for freedom. ......
-
POTO in toto
-
A R Kanangi, Afternoon Despatch
& Courier, November 24, 2001
>>> Can we trust the police? Can
we allow a police officer to be a magistrate as well? Can we really expect
a policeman not to use force - third degree - to extract a confession from
an accused. ......
-
Al Qaida Killing
Taliban fighters to prevent surrender
-
The Times of India, November 19,
2001
>>> A grim situation prevails in
the northern Afghan town of Kunduz with hundreds of Taliban fighters holed
up in the besieged city killing each other to avoid capture by the advancing
Northern Alliance troops. ......
-
Refuge in New York?
-
Swaminathan S. Anklesaria Aiyar,
The Times of India, November 18, 2001
>>> As Yogi Berra would have put
it, its deja vu all over again. Eleven years ago, when George Bush Sr launched
the Gulf War against Iraq, Indian intellectuals let loose a cannonade of
articles on how stupid and dumb Bush was; on how he failed to see the religious
consequences of attack ......
-
Does President Mushrraf
have only a single-point agenda: Kashmir? (Part II of II)
-
Ayaz Amir, The Times of India, November
18, 2001
>>> Kashmir is important for Pakistan
and President Mushrraf not least because the UN Security Council resolutions
calling for a plebiscite there remain unfulfilled. But Kashmir does not
define Pakistan just as Taiwan does not define China. ......
-
Does President Mushrraf
have only a single-point agenda: Kashmir? (Part I of II)
-
Brahma Chellaney, The Times of India,
November 18, 2001
>>> The answer has to be an emphatic
yes, given Musharraf's phobic fixation on Kashmir. Musharraf's career,
with its record of combat in Siachin and commando operations elsewhere
in Kashmir, is testament to the need he has always felt to prove his credentials
in the Punjabi-dominated military establishment. ......
-
Hindu seers condemn
religious conversions in India
-
Sugita Katyal, Yahoo News, November
15, 2001
>>> Hindu religious leaders and
scholars voiced strong opposition on Thursday to religious conversions
in India and urged different faiths to live together in harmony instead.
......
-
Pakistan Sends Supplies
To Taliban
-
Bill Gertz, The Washington Times,
November 1, 2001
>>> The Taliban militia is receiving
military and other supplies covertly from Pakistan despite the Islamabad
government's backing for American military operations, according to U.S.
officials. The military goods, including ammunition and fuel, are being
sent with the help of elements of the Pakistani government, said officials
familiar with intelligence reports of the transfers. ......
-
ISI does not give
a damn about American Threat
-
Rediff on Net, November 30, 2001
>>> Former Inter Services Intelligence
operative in Kashmir Mir Khursheed claims he can organise the surrender
of Kashmiri militants if the Government of India promises them amnesty.
......
-
China must stop
missile supplies to Pakistan: US
-
Reuters, Yahoo News, November 30,
2001
>>> Washington, November 30: The
United States, underscoring a post-September 11 pledge to defeat terrorism,
will hang tough in high-level talks with China on Friday and renew a demand
that the Chinese curb missile cooperation with Pakistan, a senior US official
said. ......
-
US feared ISI during
Clinton's Pakistan visit: Report
-
Rediff on Net, November 30, 2001
>>> A belief among United States
security agencies that Pakistan's Inter-Service Intelligence was 'badly
penetrated by terrorists', including those from Al Qaeda, had prompted
them to undertake major diversionary tactics during the visit of President
Bill Clinton to Pakistan last year, according to a prominent American daily.
......
-
Pakistan preparing
to push Taliban into Kashmir, India
-
The Tribune, November 30, 2001
>>> Pakistan may try to push in
as many as 1,000 Taliban militia fighters who have fled Afghanistan through
the Line of Control (LoC) into the Jammu region within the next fortnight,
a top military official has warned. Brig P.C. Das of 16 Corps said here
this afternoon that large- scale preparations were on across the LoC to
ensure the entry of 1,000 Taliban men into India in the first phase within
the next fortnight. ......
-
The king of Greater
Afghanistan
-
Tariq Ali, The Guardian, November
30, 2001
>>> The Pandora's box of the American
empire is still open, releasing its monsters and fears on a world still
not fully under its control. The Northern Alliance is a confederation of
monsters. Attaching dissidents to the chains of a tank and crushing them,
executing defenceless prisoners, raping men and women, these are all in
a day's work for the guardians of the heroin trade. Blemishes of yesteryear?
No such luck. ......
-
What happened in
Kunduz?
-
Rajeev Srinivasan, Rediff on Net,
November 30, 2001
>>> A large number of Taleban were
surrounded by Northern Alliance forces. This included both Afghan Taleban
and several thousand "Arab, Pakistani and Chechen" fighters. Several Pakistani
planes (and helicopters) were observed by eyewitnesses landing at night
and ferrying away several hundred of the 10,000 or so besieged Taleban.
......
-
With antiquated
weapons, they fight hitech terrorists
-
Dinesh Manhotra, The Daily Excelsior,
November 30, 2001
>>> With 'antiquated' 303 rifles
on their shoulders, three youth in their teens, were patrolling the Khalani-Guha
road which has been considered as IED prone. Even security personnels do
not dare to move on this track but these youth, without fear on their faces,
have been manning the track. ......
-
Terrorists could
use Pakistani nukes against India, Israel, US
-
P. Jayaram, The Hindustan Times,
November 30, 2001
>>> "If there is a coup d'etat
in Pakistan and extremists and terrorists get hold of their nuclear weapons,
they will use them to destroy three countries -- you, us and the US" said
Joseph Lapid, member of an Israeli parliamentary team currently visiting
India. ......
-
Action against extremists
-
M. Ismail Khan, Dawn, November 29,
2001
>>> Sufi Mohammad is back from
'Jihad-i-Afghanistan' and has walked straight into Dera Ismail Khan jail.
The Tehrik Nifaz-i-Shariat Muhammadi (TNSM) chief, who had gone to Afghanistan
with thousands of his armed supporters trailing behind, keen to fight a
holy war against the United States, lost no time in heading home when tables
against Taliban began to turn. ......
-
The 'airlift of
evil'
-
Michael Moran, MSNBC, November 29,
2001
>>> A convoy of several hundred
Taliban soldiers evacuate their northern foothold of Kunduz to surrender
to opposing Northern Alliance forces earlier this week. ......
-
Chinese Regime Threatens
Existence of a Diocese
-
ZENIT.org, November 29, 2001
>>> The Catholic Diocese of Feng
Xiang in the central Chinese province of Shaanxi may be in danger of disappearing.
......
-
Man And Religion
-
Swami Sandarshanananda, The Statesman,
November 28, 2001
>>> "War begins at heart". Unless
the heart is cleansed of evil, hostility will persist. It is now a crisis
of rationality. Man is rational only when he is spiritual. What is being
taught in the name of religion today is pure and simple barbarism. The
significance of religion in human life is irrevocable. But it is not the
same religion which provokes so-called jihad or "crusade" or dharma-yuddha.
......
-
US shelves trade,
tariff concession package
-
Sajid Aziz, The Jung, November 28,
2001
>>> The US government has shelved
the plan to extend a package of trade and tariff concessions to Pakistan
as compensation for the colossal losses the country's trade with US had
suffered in the wake of September 11 incidents, sources said here Tuesday.
......
-
'Vajpayeeji helped
me make this film'
-
Rediff on Net, November 27, 2001
>>> He was called the crown prince
of the revolutionaries. Veer Savarkar led the life a legend. And the saga
of this martyr and freedom fighter captured on 70 mm is all set to hit
screen later this week to inspire the latent patriot in all Indians. ......
-
Justice, 200 Years
Later
-
Bob Herbert, The New York Times,
November 26, 2001
>>> The Cayuga Indians are a tiny,
poverty-stricken, widely scattered tribe that lost its ancestral home in
western New York more than 200 years ago. ......
-
Bangla Minorities
-
Editorial, The Statesman, November
25, 2001
>>> It is disappointing to hear
the same cliches being repeated by ministers of the BNP-led government
that they would not tolerate persecution of minorities in Bangladesh. Heart
rending reports of their continuing persecution and the killing of a principal
of a Chittagong college in broad daylight by supporters of Jamat e Islami,
are still being published by Bangladesh's press. ......
-
Destruction of Decorum
-
George Fernandes, The Statesman,
November 25, 2001
>>> Is India's Parliament which
represents the collective will of a billion Indians becoming an irrelevant
institution or is it degenerating into another state assembly of Bihar
where rules are meant to be broken and the well of the House is treated
as a wrestling ring? ......
-
When it comes to
tinkering with textbooks, LF Govt isn't far behind
-
HT Correspondent, The Hindustan
Times, November 24, 2001
>>> Despite repeated Opposition
charges of tampering with State's school textbooks to incorporate a heavy
dose of red ideology, the Left Front Government's education department
refuses to take heed. ......
-
'Jehad turns sour
for Pak volunteers'
-
Cecile Feuillatre, The Times of
India, November 24, 2001
>>> They left Pakistan with their
heads held high to fight a holy war with their Taliban "brothers" in Afghanistan,
only to return without having fired a shot and with a deep sense of betrayal.
......
-
Islamic terrorists
or just plain terrorists?
-
Arvind Virmani, The Economic Times,
November 24, 2001
>>> Since September 11 many of
us have taken a close interest in the media debates on terrorism. One of
the issues that have repeatedly come up is the unfairness involved in calling
terrorist organisations such as 'Al Qaeda' as 'Islamic terrorists.' There
is an unstated implication that those who use this appellation are anti-Islam
and are using this unfortunate episode to tar all Muslims and Islam with
the same brush. ......
-
Alliance Reports
Planes Flew Into Kunduz to Rescue Fighters
-
Dexter Filkins and Carlotta Gall,
The New York Times, November 23, 2001
>>> Northern Alliance soldiers
said today that Pakistani airplanes had once again flown into the encircled
city of Kunduz to evacuate Pakistanis who have been fighting alongside
Afghan Taliban forces trapped there. ......
-
Curry 'may slow
Alzheimer's'
-
BBC News, November 21, 2001
>>> A spicy ingredient of many
curries may be an effective treatment for Alzheimer's disease, say researchers.
......
-
'Stop bombings to
stop boycott'
-
Mid-Day, November 20, 2001
>>> The happy images on television
of Afghans celebrating the flight of the Taliban from Kabul have not convinced
Mumbai's Sadik Ali to give up his boycott of American soft drinks and food
products. ......
-
The CM and the Commissars
-
Editorial, The Telegraph, November
17, 2001
>>> The meaningless controversy
over the Russian film, Taurus, contains a warning for the chief minister,
Mr Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee. It is clear that stalwarts within his own party,
the Communist Party of India (Marxist), have decided to pressurize and
override him on his own turf, culture. ......
-
Come all ye faithful
-
Rudrangshu Mukherjee, The Telegraph,
November 17, 2001
>>> P.C. Joshi, the legendary general
secretary of the Communist Party of India, who, in the words of an admirer,
"lit up the lives of some of us", had a remarkable story to tell in one
of his pieces. The story was about Susobhan Chandra Sarkar, another legendary
figure in the world of history teaching in Calcutta. Joshi considered Sarkar
to be one of his "best friends". ......
-
Yesterday's homilies
thrown to the bin
-
Sandeep Gopalan, The Statesman,
November 17, 2001
>>> Greatness is a tremendous burden.
As America indulges in repeated assertions of its own greatness, allowing
the word's tonic quality to soothe residual doubts, one wonders, if it
is so great after all. ......
-
Natural allies in
the making
-
K P Nayar, The Telegraph, November
16, 2001
>>> An unfortunate aspect of Atal
Bihari Vajpayee's just concluded visit to Washington was the relatively
low public profile of the prime minister's day-long activities in Capitol
Hill on the first day of his stay in America's capital. ......
-
Christian widows
to get share in husband property
-
Our Special Correspondent, The Telegraph,
November 16, 2001
>>> The Cabinet today agreed to
amend the Indian Succession Act to give a Christian widow her "distributive"
share in the property of her deceased husband. More important, she will
get her share even if there is a contract to the contrary. ......
-
The new terror in
Bangladesh: tortured Hindus flee to India
-
M V Kamath, The Free Press Journal,
November 15, 2001
>>> First it began in Pakistan.
Even before partition formally took place, several million Hindus and Sikhs
left territory that had been formally marked out as Pakistan for safety
in India. How many millions were killed, injured and mutilated has never
been accurately accounted. Numberless women were raped or converted into
Islam. Today there are hardly any Hindus in Pakistan. ......
-
Record Diwali turnout
in Durban
-
Farook Khan, Independent Online,
November 12, 2001
>>> A record crowd of 120 000 turned
up for the Diwali festivities on the Durban beachfront at the weekend.
......
-
On a low key
-
Editorial, The Telegraph, November
6, 2001
>>> Seeing a problem in its right
perspective is often half solving it. There is no point denying, as officials
at Writers' Buildings and the Bangladesh deputy high commission in Calcutta
initially did, that some Hindu families had actually fled their homes in
that country and crossed over to West Bengal. ......
-
The need for a new
Indic school of thought
-
David Frawley, European Business
Review/New European, Volume 13, No. 6, 2001
>>> During the Eurocolonial period,
Indian history and civilization were distorted to fit European perceptions.
A new school of thought is needed that will see Asian history and tradition
with Asian eyes and thought, beginning with India. ......
-
The West's great
psychological blunder
-
David Frawley, Hindu Vision
>>> The West has made many blunders
relative to Islam. These have resulted from a failure to understand the
Muslim psyche and its psychology. What America doesn't realize is that
the country is now making perhaps an even greater blunder as they belatedly
go after Islamic terrorism after it has just brutally attacked them, an
attack that they should have seen coming. Most terrorists begin as disturbed,
angry, dispossessed or humiliated young men. ......
-
Islamic Terrorism
springs from Quranic Jehad
-
Ibn Warraq, Hindu Vision
>>> Given the stupefying enormity
of the acts of barbarism of September 11, moral outrage is appropriate
and justified, as are demands for punishment and reprisals. But what is
not justified or permissible in a civilised society is acts of vengeance
by lynch mobs who blindly attack all those whom they perceive as "Muslims"
or Arabs. ......
-
In defence of 'Saffronisation'
-
K. R. Malkani, Hindu Vision
>>> Recently the National Council
for Educational Research and Training (NCERT) produced the National Curriculum
Framework for School Education.' Here was, in the words of NCERT Director,
Prof J.S. Rajput, 'the first ever honest attempt to modernise education
by Upholding not only the deepest but forgotten values of Indian civilization,
but also the sagely advice of the founding fathers of our nation." ......
-
A Federation of
Swadeshi Churches
-
Hindu Vision
>>> RSS Sarsanghchalak Shri K.S.
Sudarshan has called for forming a federation of Indian Christians who
subscribed to the idea of a Swadeshi Church. This, according to him, would
be the first step towards the creation of a National Church in India which
would be free of foreign controls of all kinds. ......
-
India, US reach
pact on military intelligence
-
Deepak K. Upreti, The Deccan Herald,
November 30, 2001
>>> In a major policy decision
India, for the first time, has agreed to exchange military intelligence
(MI) with US with both the countries agreeing to work out contours of the
co- operation in future meetings. ......
-
Tattle on terrorism,
get US visa
-
Chidanand Rajghatta, The Times of
India, November 30, 2001
>>> The US Justice Department on
Thursday announced the "Responsible Cooperators Program", under which it
will offer immigration incentives to non-US citizens, including illegal
aliens already in the country and aspirants living abroad, who come forward
with credible information on terrorists. ......
-
Taliban offer £30,000
a head to kill reporters
-
Ian Traynor, The Guardian (UK),
November 30, 2001
>>> Mullah Mohammed Omar has promised
Afghans blood money for the murder of western journalists. With the roads
of Afghanistan becoming ever more perilous for the huge international media
presence in the country to report the war, the Taliban leader announced
a bounty of $50,000 (£30,000) to any Afghan gunmen who shoot a western
journalist. ......
-
'Musharraf planned
Kargil when I was PM' : Bhutto
-
Vir Sanghvi, The Hindustan Times,
November 30, 2001
>>> In an exclusive interview,
Benazir Bhutto demolished General Pervez Musharraf's claim that Kargil
was a mujahideen operation. Ms Bhutto confirmed that when she was Prime
Minister, General Musharraf had presented the same blueprint for an invasion
of Kargil in the shape of a 'war-game'. "I put my foot down," Ms Bhutto
recalled. "I said that if anything like this happens, it will be a big
setback for Pakistan. We will be forced to withdraw." ......
-
Minority cleansing
in Bangladesh
-
Hiranmay Karlekar, The Pioneer,
November 30, 2001
>>> Begum Khaleda Zia, Prime Minister
of Bangladesh, must be grateful to the war in Afghanistan which continues
to hog media attention the world over. Otherwise the large-scale atrocities
on the minorities (Hindus, Buddhists and Christians) and the Fascist repression
on political opponents and dissenters, continuing in that country since
the general elections of October 1 which returned her Bangladesh Nationalist
Party (BNP) to power with a massive majority, would have attracted worldwide
condemnation. ......
-
Debate on conversion
law back to the fore
-
Soumyajit Pattnaik, The Times of
India, November 30, 2001
>>> Several instances of religious
conversions, which are in violation of Orissa Freedom of Religion Act (OFRA),
have been reported in the state in the last few months. Reports of conversions
were previously confined to the tribal dominated districts in the state.
But the problem is now spreading to coastal Orissa after the super cyclone
and the floods. ......
-
'Musharraf weaker
after Kabul's fall' (Interview with Benazir Bhutto)
-
The Indian Express, November 29,
2001
>>> Q.: On balance, has Pakistan
gained or lost due to the recent developments in Afghanistan?
A.: It depends on perception. My
own party feels the Taliban was giving Pakistan a bad name. We had called
upon the military regime to break relations with the Taliban in 1998. ......
-
Most detainees are
Pakistanis: US
-
Tahir Mirza, Dawn, November 29,
2001
>>> More than a third of those
rounded up after the Sept 11 attacks and still in custody are people of
Pakistani origin, according to official figures released here on Tuesday.
......
-
India's spy satellite
boost
-
Habib Beary, BBC News, November
27, 2001
>>> India's Technology Experiment
Satellite (TES), which can be used as a spy satellite, has been beaming
down what space officials call "excellent pictures". ......
-
Seeds of discord
(Letters to the Editor)
-
M Ratan, The Pioneer, November 23,
2001
>>> Sir - Mr A Surya Prakash, in
his 8-part essay, 'Islam and the Indian Constitution' has raised many serious
questions that have an important bearing on secularism and national cohesion.
Since this is a very sensitive subject, any one who dwells on it with a
degree of frankness, exposes himself to the familiar charge of anti-Muslim
prejudice and communalism. ......
-
Double-faced Marxists
-
Editorial, The Free Press Journal,
November 21, 2001
>>> A propos the ongoing debate
on the viability or otherwise of POTO, we fail to understand the reasoning
behind CPI (M) leader Somnath Chatterjee's objection. ......
-
When in Manhattan,
don't forget rickshaw
-
Bhupesh Bhandari, Rediff on Net,
November 16, 2001
>>> On your next visit to Manhattan,
you may have the option to travel from one appointment to another in a
cycle rickshaw put together at Agra. Srichakra Cycles Pvt Ltd is in negotiations
with Manhattan Taxi Service to supply rickshaws at $500 apiece. ......
-
'POTO and India
just not made for each other!'
-
Prakash Singh, The Hindustan Times,
November 9, 2001
>>> India is different, and it
must remain so. While other countries are gearing up to fight international
terrorism, we need not be unduly disturbed by the threat. Matters nearer
home are far more important. ......
-
National anthem
row takes new turn
-
K S Dakshina Murthy, The Hindustan
Times, November 29, 2001
>>> The controversy over the refusal
of three students to sing the national anthem at a school in Madikeri,
Karnataka, has taken a new turn. They refused to accept a show-cause notice
from the school authorities. ......
-
Know your values
-
K R Malkani, The Hindustan Times,
November 29, 2001
>>> Recently, the NCERT produced
the National Curriculum Framework for School Education. Here was, in the
words of NCERT Director J.S. Rajput, "the first ever honest attempt to
modernise education by upholding not only the deepest but forgotten values
of Indian civilisation, but also the sagely advice of the founding fathers
of our nation". ......
-
US and Pak: Sleeping
with the enemy
-
Chidanand Rajghatta, The Times of
India, November 29, 2001
>>> Despite all the protestations
about military ruler Gen. Pervez Musharraf's "bold and courageous stand"
and Islamabad's status as a frontline ally, there is a growing sense in
Washington that Pakistan has worked against US interests in Afghanistan.
......
-
Retaliatory firing
destroys 16 Pak bunkers in Kashmir
-
Press Trust of India, www.expressindia.com,
November 29, 2001
>>> Sixteen Pakistani bunkers were
destroyed in retaliatory shelling and firing by Indian troops along Line
of Control (LoC) in Poonch sector on Tuesday night, official sources said
on Wednesday. ......
-
US says it has al
Qaeda members in custody
-
Agencies, www.expressindia.com,
November 29, 2001
>>> Members of the al Qaeda network
the US government blames for the September 11 terror strikes may have been
caught in a dragnet by US law enforcement agencies, Attorney General John
Ashcroft has revealed. ......
-
J&K encounter
enters second day, toll rises to 20
-
The Times of India, November 29,
2001
>>> Srinagar: Eleven Army soldiers
and nine Muslim militants have been killed in a gunbattle in Kashmir which
entered a second day on Wednesday, a defence spokesman said. ......
-
Omar orders Taliban
to fight to the last
-
The Times of India, November 29,
2001
>>> Desert Airstrip, Afghanistan:
Mullah Mohammad Omar, defiant after a U.S. raid failed to hit him, ordered
his beleaguered Taliban to stand firm on Wednesday, sources in the radical
Afghan militia said. ......
-
2 Pakistanis Linked
to Papers on Anthrax Weapons
-
Douglas Frantz with David Rohde,
The New York Times, November 28, 2001
>>> Pakistan said today that it
had detained two retired nuclear scientists after the recent discovery
in offices they had used in Afghanistan of documents describing ways to
use anthrax as a weapon and other suspicious material. ......
-
Recent Atrocities
Against Minorities in Bangladesh
-
Report from Bangladesh on November
28, 2001
>>> While we reached at the village
namely Anandaprasad one Aicha Ram Das (50) years and his wife Kanchan Mala
Das (35) started to narrate the manner of torture by the local miscreants.
The miscreants on 2nd October, 2001 with ram dao, kirish and deadly weapons
approached to Kanchan Mala Das to use her house to rape two neighboring
hindu girls, but as Kanchan Mala vehemently refused to allow them to do
so the local miscreants threatened to rape Kanchan ......
-
Musharraf's wife
house hunting in the US
-
Onkar Singh, Rediff on Net, November
28, 2001
>>> Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf
appears to be making contingency plans in the event of the situation in
his country getting out of his hand and his ouster seems imminent. ......
-
Rescuing The Enemy
-
Tunku Varadarajan, The Wall Street
Journal, November 28, 2001
>>> Last Thursday the Indian press
carried reports that two helicopters of the Pakistani air force had landed
in the heart of Kunduz--an Afghan town then under siege by the Northern
Alliance, but still under Taliban control--and "flew out soon after carrying
two chopper loads of personnel." These included two brigadiers of the Pakistani
army. ......
-
Cash Connection,
Germans Nab Hijack Suspect
-
Christel Kucharz, www.abcnews.com,
November 28, 2001
>>> German police today arrested
a man accused of keeping a bank account that financed Sept. 11 hijackers.
......
-
Laden moves close
to Pak border
-
The Daily Excelsior, November 28,
2001
>>> For the first time since September
11 terror strikes in US, Pakistani intelligence agents have entered Afghanistan
with a task to track Osama bin Laden and frustrate Al-Qaeda's attempts
to search for a new base in Pakistan, according to a senior Pakistani intelligence
official. ......
-
Choose between terrorism
and dialogue, India tells Pak
-
Press Trust of India, www.expressindia.com,
November 28, 2001
>>> Indian Ambassador to the US,
Lalit Mansingh, has said that while Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee
and Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf are expected to meet on the sidelines
at SAARC next January, a "dialogue" will require Islamabad to give up cross-border
terrorism. ......
-
What Muslim societies
are grossly lacking
-
Kaiser Bengali, Dawn, November 28,
2001
>>> Briefing reporters in Washington,
State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said that "while we still had
two Americans detainees and other foreigners detained in Afghanistan, we
felt it was useful for (the Taliban) office to be there, to be open to
offer the possibility of communication on the subject of our detainees
should that be necessary. ......
-
Tension follows
Hindu story
-
Pioneer News Service, The Pioneer,
November 27, 2001
>>> Violence has erupted in several
places in Karnataka in the last two days following the publication of a
feature in the "Young World" supplement of the Bangalore edition of 'The
Hindu.' ......
-
Mystery of Disappearing
al-Qaeda Soldiers
-
November 27, 2001
>>> While US troops scour the mountains
and caves for Osama bin Laden, the bulk of his al Qaeda army has also disappeared.
It was found to be missing when the Northern Alliance seized control of
the northern Taliban enclave of Konduz-Khanabad on Monday, November 26.
......
-
Fight With Prisoners
Rages at Northern Afghan Fort
-
Carlotta Gall, The New York Times,
November 27, 2001
>>> A battle raged here today between
Taliban prisoners and the American-backed troops of the Northern Alliance,
and the Bush administration revealed that five Americans had been wounded.
......
-
Balawaristan National
Front's letter to Indian prime minister
-
www.tehelka.com, November 27, 2001
>>> I have the honour to draw your
kind attention towards my earlier petition (Sub: "Include Gilgit Baltistan
in J&K (Jammu and Kashmir) dialogue" dated December 18, 2000), on the
subject cited above, and inform you further about the prevailing anti-people
activities of Pakistan in Balawaristan (Pakistan Occupied Gilgit-Baltistan
(POGB)). ......
-
Pakistan's Choice
-
The Washington Post, November 27,
2001
>>> Two Months ago, Pakistan's
President Pervez Musharraf made the right choice in the war on terrorism.
In a televised address, he pledged his "full support" for the United States,
including use of Pakistan's airspace, intelligence and airfields. Though
he wavered when he called for an ill-advised interruption to America's
bombing campaign during Ramadan, Mr. Musharraf has broadly stuck to his
position, facing down anti-American demonstrations and jailing prominent
clerics who support the Taliban. ......
-
'A terrorist isn't
a freedom fighter'
-
Agencies, The Economic Times, November
22, 2001
>>> The US ambassador to India
said on Wednesday Washington and New Delhi were on the brink of a major
relationship, and pledged the war against terrorism would not be over until
terrorism ended against both countries. ......
-
Steps to resume
ties with Afghanistan gather pace
-
Our Political Bureau, The Economic
Times, November 22, 2001
>>> India's diplomatic initiatives
in Afghanistan gathered pace with special envoy, SK Lambah leading the
first Indian diplomatic mission to Kabul today. Mr Lambah will also represent
India at the forthcoming intra-Afghan talks in Berlin on the 26th, said
sources. ......
-
Seeking refuge in
the Buddha
-
Lakshmi Iyer, India Today, November
19, 2001
>>> Like Kanshi Ram, he chose to
manipulate the support of Scheduled Caste/Scheduled Tribe government employees
to enter politics. He, however, used religion as a short-cut. He tried
to re-enact B. R. Ambedkar's final act of leading Dalits into Buddhism.
Ram Raj, president of the All India Confederation of SC/ST Organisations
and joint -commissioner at the Income-Tax Department ......
-
US bans Jaish &
Lashkar; labels them as terrorists
-
The Economic Times, November 4,
2001
>>> The US has banned two Pakistan-based
terrorist groups operating in Jammu and Kashmir, conceding one of India's
major demands four days before the arrival of Prime Minister Atal Bihari
Vajpayee. Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) and Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM), which have
been blamed for several terrorist attacks in Jammu and Kashmir, have been
branded Foreign Terrorist Organisations (PTO) in the US. ......
-
PM refuses to chat
with General during UN summit
-
Devesh Kumar, The Economic Times,
November 3, 2001
>>> Two days before he sets off
on a three-nation tour, including the United States, PM Atal Bihari Vajpayee
effectively scotched all speculations about a possible meeting with Pakistan
President Pervez Musharraf on the sidelines of the UNGA meet. ......
-
BJP to US: Take
care of J&K too
-
Devesh Kumar, The Economic Times,
November 3, 2001
>>> India's unease with the growing
US-Pakistan cooperation in an attempt to finish off the Taliban found its
echo in the BJP national executive meeting which began here this morning
amidst unprecedented security. Party president Jana Krishnamurthy, in his
introductory speech, had this piece of advise for the Bush administration:
'America should remember that elimination of terrorism ......
-
Baptist Head Urges
Prayers for Muslim Conversion
-
The Associated Press, The New York
Times, November 27, 2001
>>> The head of the Southern Baptist
Convention is asking its members to "pray and fast that God will miraculously
reveal himself through Jesus Christ to Muslims" at the end of Ramadan,
Islam's holy month. ......
-
Killings of civilians
in Kashmir terrorism, accepts Musharraf
-
K. J. M. Varma, The Hindustan Times,
November 27, 2001
>>> Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf
on Monday night described as "terrorist act" the killing of civilians in
bomb blasts in Jammu and Kashmir and asked Pakistani extremists not to
get involved in foreign countries. ......
-
House sealed under
terror law in J&K
-
The Times of India, November 27,
2001
>>> Srinagar: In what may be the
first action under the controversial Prevention of Terrorism Ordinance,
a house in downtown Srinagar has been sealed by the Jammu and Kashmir police
for providing a "safe hideout" to militants, official sources said Monday.
......
-
Underground dissent
looms over PoK
-
www.tehelka.com, November 27, 2001
>>> An unknown freedom struggle
is quietly taking shape in Pakistan. Leaders of an underground political
movement in Pakistan-occupied Gilgit and Baltistan (POGB) are appealing
to India to highlight the plight of the "two million downtrodden people"
that they claim to represent. ......
-
New Zealand adopts
stringent anti-terror laws
-
The Times of India, November 27,
2001
>>> Wellington, New Zealand: Moving
to meet United Nations anti-terrorism controls, New Zealand approved stiff
new regulations on Monday to prohibit funding and recruiting for terrorist
groups. ......
-
Pakistani clerics
announce day of mourning
-
The Times of India, November 27,
2001
>>> Islamabad: Pakistani clerics
Monday deplored the deaths hundreds of foreign prisoners in northern Afghan
city of -i-Sharif and announced a nationwide day of mourning against what
they called the barbaric act of the U.S. and -Taliban forces. ......
-
Israel detains Pakistanis
for alleged Laden link
-
The Times of India, November 27,
2001
>>> Jerusalem: Four Pakistani nationals,
suspected of having links with Osama Bin Laden's al-Qaeda network, were
detained in Israel after they entered the country's territorial waters
by a ship, a media report here said. ......
-
Coalition for the
Defense of Human Rights
-
PRESS RELEASE, November 26, 2001
>>> (Alexandria, VA) Dramatic accounts
of detention, torture and death highlighted the recent symposium sponsored
by the Coalition for the Defense of Human Rights, held in Alexandria, VA
on November 16-17. Participants received updates on the results of radical
Islamism from such wide-ranging locations as Nigeria and Indonesia. ......
-
A season for Marxist
follies
-
Not mentioned, The Free Press Journal,
November 26, 2001
>>> Patriotism may or may not be
the last refuge of scoundrels but insanity certainly becomes our China-centric
Marxists. Otherwise, do you think anyone claiming to be responsible would
have openly justified the terrorist attacks against the Twin Towers in
New York? The West Bengal CPI(M) leader, the venerable Subash Chakravorty,
made bold to say the other day that his childhood dream to see the Towers
crashed was realized when on September 11 bin Laden's religious maniacs
banged aircraft-bombs against them. ......
-
Bangla Govt draws
flak on scribe's arrest
-
News, The Times of India, November
26, 2001
>>> Kolkata: The arrest of Bangladeshi
rights activist and journalist Shahriar Kabir has provoked angry across
the world. In Dhaka, more than 2000 people staged an angry demonstration
demanding against Kabir's arrest. watchdog Reporters Sans Frontiers (RSF)
has demanded immediate release of Kabir. ......
-
What's True Islam?
Not For U.S. To Say
-
Daniel Pipes, The New York Post,
November 26, 2001
>>> The U.S. government wants you
to know that the Taliban, who yet rule part of Afghanistan, are bad Muslims.
Instead, it should be showing that they are totalitarian thugs. There's
a big difference. ......
-
India's hopes for
Afghanistan talks
-
Alastair Lawson, BBC News, November
26, 2001
>>> The Indian Government's special
envoy to Afghanistan, Satinder Lambah, has gone to the German city of Bonn
to observe talks that start on Tuesday on the future of Afghanistan. ......
-
Pak. scientist wanted
more Islamic States nuclearised
-
The Hindu, November 26, 2001
>>> Pakistani Intelligence is investigating
alleged terrorist links of a scientist who once strongly advocated extensive
production of weapons-grade plutonium and uranium enrichment with a view
to equipping other Islamic countries with nuclear capabilities, an American
newspaper has reported. ......
-
300 revolting Al
Qaeda prisoners killed
-
Rediff on Net, November 26, 2001
>>> United States Defence Department
spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Dan Stoneking on Sunday night confirmed reports
that atleast 300 Chechen, Pakistanis and Arabs -- belonging to Al Qaeda
-- were killed after US airstrikes were used to control an insurrection
by the militiamen, who had surrendered and were jailed in the Qalai Janghi
fortress, near Mazar-e-Sharif. ......
-
Many Taliban and
Allies Holding Out at Last Northern Stronghold
-
Dexter Filkins & Carlotta Gall,
The New York Times, November 25, 2001
>>> Hundreds of Taliban soldiers
streamed out of the besieged northern city of Kunduz today, some to the
welcoming arms of joyous crowds, others to the custody of their adversaries,
each group following a script of surrender that culminated a two- week
standoff in one of the last Taliban strongholds. ......
-
Wanted in Pakistan,
someone to bell the cat
-
Husain Haqqani, The Indian Express,
November 24, 2001
>>> The turn of events in Afghanistan
over the past two weeks is being described as a strategic debacle for Pakistan.
After 20 years of involvement in Afghan affairs, Islamabad suddenly finds
itself without any significant friends across its Northwest frontier. The
Taliban, hitherto cultivated by Pakistan at the expense of friendly relations
with other nations, are bitter about General Pervez Musharraf's U-turn
against them. ......
-
Kespur Line
-
Editorial, The Statesman, November
23, 2001
>>> The CPI-M were exposed after
its political cleansing in Midnapore, Hooghly, Bankura and north 24 Parganas
districts both before and during the rigged election of 10 May last. What
Alimuddin mandarins said at Kespur recently has reinforced popular perceptions
that its ideology is Stalinism. The opposition must be annihilated or forced
into submission. ......
-
Pakistan's debacle
in Afghanistan
-
G Parthasarathy, The Pioneer, November
22, 2001
>>> Speaking on Pakistan's independence
day on August 14, General Pervez Musharraf proclaimed: "The Taliban are
the dominant reality in Afghanistan and the international community should
engage, rather than isolate them". There were good reasons why General
Musharraf could then smugly make this assertion. ......
-
20 British Muslims
trapped in Kunduz
-
Ian Cobain, The Statesman, November
22, 2001
>>> Up to 20 British Muslims were
reported to be trapped in Kunduz last night, after Washington made clear
its determination to see all the Taliban defenders of the besieged city
either killed or captured. ......
-
Text Of Nbc Transcript
on Pakistan evacuating its troops in Afghanistan
-
>>> MR. RUSSERT: Both Northern
Alliance soldiers and Taliban soldiers have told The New York Times that
Pakistan has airlifted Pakistani fighters aligned with the Taliban out
of Afghanistan and brought them safely home. Can you confirm that?
AMB. KEITH: I cannot confirm that.
The Pakistani government is denying it. We have no knowledge of that. ......
-
Expansion and Contraction:
-
Dr. Frank Gaetano Morales, Hindu
Vivek Kendra, November 26, 2001
>>> In its relatively short - and
decidedly Western-centric - history, a wide variety of academic terms have
arisen from within the discipline known as Religious Studies in the expressed
order of assisting the field's specialists to more ably grasp the structure
and outlook of religious sects and institutions. One pair of such terms
that we encounter are the concepts of "Expansive" versus "Contractive".
......
-
White Man's Arrogance
-
Prem Shankar Jha, Outlook, November
26, 2001
>>> The great powers of the western
'coalition' seem incapable of learning, either from history or from their
own past mistakes. The Taliban are down but not yet out. Mullah Omar and
Osama bin Laden are still very much at large and the dead of September
11 remain unavenged. There is still a lot of fighting ahead and if there
is one thing the Americans have learned in the past month, it is that this
is best left to the Afghans. ......
-
Pakistan's Anxiety
Grows as Taliban Collapse
-
John F. Burns, The New York Times,
November 25, 2001
>>> A senior Pakistani official
watched in dismay today as the television in his office showed Taliban
fighters, streaming out of Kunduz, Afghanistan, to surrender to the Northern
Alliance. ......
-
Resentment as a
religion
-
Marian Kester Coombs, The Washington
Times, November 25, 2001
>>> The questions of the hour are
"Is Islam the problem?" and "If so, then what is Islam?" The West had been
waiting for the formidable Salman Rushdie - a man who has been living under
a "fatwa" a few years longer than the rest of us - to weigh in, and he
did so in early November, answering the question "Is it Islam?" with a
resounding yes. ......
-
Ambedkar and Partition
-
Prafull Goradia, The Pioneer, November
25, 2001
>>> According to Nehru, Mahatma
Gandhi was a Hindu and an Indian, the greatest in many generations, and
he was proud of being a Hindu and an Indian. (He broadcast this on 14 February,
1948). What the Mahatma wrote, said and did is widely known. The track
record of Dr BR Ambedkar as a Hindu is not so well known. ......
-
Pakistan and other
donors question Hurriyat about funds utilisation
-
Sumir Kaul, Rediff on Net, November
25, 2001
>>> Simmering differences between
the Hurriyat Conference and Pakistan over utilisation of funds by the former
came to fore when the entire executive council of the 23-party amalgam
did not attend the Iftar party hosted by Pakistani High Commissioner Ashraf
Jehangir Qazi in Delhi on Friday. ......
-
Indonesia Extremism
Worries U.S.
-
Slobodan Lekic, Associated Press,
November 25, 2001
>>> After decades of dormancy under
the iron-fisted rule of former dictator Suharto, Islamic militancy is on
the rise in Indonesia and U.S. officials fear its newfound democracy is
threatened. ......
-
Pakistanis Again
Said to Evacuate Allies of Taliban
-
Dexter Filkins, The New York Times,
November 24, 2001
>>> Northern Alliance soldiers
said today that Pakistani airplanes had once again flown into the encircled
city of Kunduz to evacuate Pakistanis who have been fighting alongside
Afghan Taliban forces trapped there. ......
-
Meteorology: Folk
wisdom
-
The Economist, November 24, 2001
>>> Can traditional rules of thumb
provide accurate weather forecasts? Researchers in Junagadh, India, are
trying to find out. Most farmers in the region grow one crop of peanuts
or castor per year. In a wet year, peanuts give the best returns, but if
the rains are poor, the more drought-tolerant castor is a better bet. In
April and May, before the monsoon comes, farmers decide what to plant,
buy the seed, prepare the soil and hope for the best. An accurate forecast
would be extremely helpful. ......
-
Fear of last stand
by foreign fighters hangs over surrender deal
-
The Associated Press, November 24,
2001
>>> Amid fears that foreign fighters
loyal to Osama bin Laden could stage a bloody last stand rather than surrender
in the northern city of Kunduz, a northern alliance commander said Saturday
it was believed Pakistani planes were ferrying out Pakistanis who fought
on the Taliban side. ......
-
Pak losing opinion
war over Kashmir
-
Chidanand Rajghatta, The Times of
India, November 24, 2001
>>> Washington: Pakistan's credibility
and claim over Kashmir is coming under great strain following mounting
evidence that the same set of terrorists and jehadis flit from Kashmir
to Kandahar and Kunduz and back. ......
-
British Taliban
supporters should not be prosecuted, London mayor says
-
Associated Press, MSNBC Online,
November 24, 2001
>>> British Muslims who went to
Afghanistan to fight for the Taliban should not face prosecution when they
return home, London Mayor Ken Livingstone said. ......
-
Academic's murder
sparks Hindu protest
-
Alastair Lawson, BBC News, November
24, 2001
>>> Minority Hindus in the southern
Bangladeshi port city of Chittagong have staged a violent protest following
the murder of a prominent university professor. ......
-
British anti-terror
proposal under fire
-
Anne Barnard, The Boston Globe,
November 23, 2001
>>> Tensions heightened yesterday
between the United States and Pakistan as the countries disagreed over
the fate of Pakistani pro-Taliban fighters who are trapped in the embattled
Afghan city of Kunduz. The new dispute came as the Pakistani government
severed diplomatic ties with the Taliban regime - at the request of the
United States - and closed its embassy here. ......
-
British anti-terror
proposal under fire
-
Daniel Strieff, MSNBC Online, November
23, 2001
>>> In a country where attacks
by Northern Ireland terrorists remain a greater threat to internal security
than Islamist militant groups, the British government is facing fierce
criticism over proposed anti-terror legislation that Prime Minister Tony
Blair is rushing to law. ......
-
Inquiries Into Failures
of Intelligence Community Are Put Off Until Next Year
-
James Risen and Todd S. Purdum,
The New York Times, November 23, 2001
>>> Congressional leaders have
agreed to delay until next year any major investigation into the government's
failure to prevent the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and
the Pentagon, citing the need to give the administration time to focus
on the war in Afghanistan and the global effort to destroy the Qaeda terrorist
network. ......
-
An Investigation
in Egypt Illustrates Al Qaeda's Web
-
Susan Sachs, The New York Times,
November 21, 2001
>>> To support their terrorism,
they skimmed money from a charity for Muslim orphans in Albania and robbed
an Italian diplomat's home in Jordan. They acquired or forged seals from
universities, border guards and the Saudi Arabian Interior Ministry. ......
-
Taliban Supreme
Leader names successor
-
Pakistan Observer, November 20,
2001
>>> The Corps Commander of five
southern Afghan provinces, Mullah Akhtar Usmani, has been named the successor
of Taliban's Supreme Leader Mullah Muhammad Omar in case of latters death,
Taliban officials said. ......
-
Muslim Group Seeks
to Meet Billy Graham's Son
-
Gustav Niebuhr, The New York Times,
November 20, 2001
>>> A Muslim advocacy organization,
the Council on America-Islamic Relations, said yesterday that it had sent
a letter to the Rev. Franklin Graham, to discuss remarks that Mr. Graham,
an evangelist, made describing Islam as evil. ......
-
States, MPs backed
law panel's draft POTO
-
Pioneer News Service, The Pioneer,
November 17, 2001
>>> The Prevention of Terrorism
Ordinance (POTO) story is getting curiouser and curiouser. The POTO is
in some ways a revised version of the Law Commission's draft Prevention
of Terrorism, 2000, Bill which was circulated to the States for their response.
......
-
Pakistan Fighters
Abandon Taliban
-
Mort Rosenblum, AP, November 17,
2001
>>> Pakistani holy warriors are
deserting Taliban ranks and streaming home in large numbers, tribal leaders
said Friday, while in the streets of Peshawar, portraits of Osama bin Laden
go unsold. Here where it counts, just across the Khyber Pass from the heartland
of Afghanistan, the Taliban mystique is waning. ......
-
It's Bad News For
Pakistan
-
Tashbih Sayyed, November 16, 2001
>>> What Pakistan dreaded for a
very long time became a fact when victorious Northern Alliance forces,
entered Kabul yelling "Death to the Taliban!" and "Death to Pakistan!"
Now Pakistan has on its western borders, a government that has reasons
to be hostile toward it. ......
-
He Wants To Have
His Cake After Having Eaten It!
-
Nayyar Zaidi, The Hindustan Times,
November 16, 2001
>>> The Pakistani political and
bureaucracy elite are proud of one thing: They do not read newspapers.
Why? Well, there is nothing in newspapers that they already do not know.
......
-
Homegrown terrorism
-
Ardeshir Cowasjee, Dawn, November
11, 2001
>>> Since I wrote last week, Bagh-i-Rustom
has lost its illustrious neighbours. The consulate-general of the Islamic
Emirate of Afghanistan with its huge mosque and its adjacent comfortable
living quarters lies sealed and shut. ......
-
India's dilemma
in coping with terrorism
-
J.N. Dixit, The Free Press Journal,
November 10, 2001
>>> India's attention is so focussed
on the campaign led by the U.S. against Afghanistan that it seems unaware
of the consequences of the drive in terms of its own struggle against terrorism,
of which it has been a vhttp://features.samachar.com/101101-fpj.htmlictim.
......
-
Fighting bin Ladenism
-
Thomas L. Friedman, The New York
Times, November 6, 2001
>>> If you want to know why the
U.S. is hated in the Arab street, read the recent editorial in the semi-official
Egyptian daily, Al Ahram, written by its editor, Ibrahim Nafie. After saying
that the U.S. was deliberately making humanitarian food drops in areas
of Afghanistan full of land mines, Mr. Nafie added: "Similarly, there were
several reports that the [U.S.] humanitarian materials have been genetically
treated, with the aim of affecting the health of the Afghan people. ......
-
Nepali Man Arrested,
Linked to Hijackers
-
CNN News, November 5, 2001
>>> A man was arrested Saturday
night at O'Hare International Airport in Chicago, Illinois, when he tried
to board a flight with nine knives, a can of Mace and a stun gun, police
said. ......
-
Pak choppers in
Kundez pull out trapped commanders
-
www.expressindia.com, November 23,
2001
>>> Two Pakistan Air Force helicopters
pulled out two of their top military commanders trapped in the beseiged
Kunduz town, the last Taliban stronghold in northern Afghanistan, according
to highly placed Defence sources in New Delhi. ......
-
Pak allows 'wanted'
scientists to escape
-
Rahul Datta, The Pioneer, November
23, 2001
>>> Pakistan has allowed two nuclear
scientists, wanted by the USA for questioning over their possible connivance
with Osama bin Laden's Al Qaeda, to slip away to Myanmar. The military
junta of Myanmar has for long defied international opinion on a host of
issues from human rights to supporting terrorists. ......
-
Pakistani held on
terrorism charges:
-
Dawn, November 22, 2001
>>> Peru said on Tuesday it had
arrested a Pakistani man on "terrorism" charges after coordination with
US and European intelligence agencies and Interpol. ......
-
Delhi dispatches
mission to Kabul; likely to start flights
-
Nilofar Suhrawardy, Arab News, November
22, 2001
>>> India staged a comeback in
Afghanistan yesterday by sending its first diplomatic mission there since
the closure of its embassy in Kabul in 1996. ......
-
America's dirty
Afghan secret: it's a war over oil
-
www.tehelka.com, November 21, 2001
>>> A book written by two French
intelligence analysts is certain to embarrass President George W Bush and
his administration. The book, Bin Laden, La Verite Interdite (Bin Laden,
the Forbidden Truth), released recently, claims that Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI) Deputy Director John O'Neill resigned in July in protest
over Bush's obstruction of an investigation into Taliban's terrorist activities.
......
-
Alliance's Rise
Catches Pakistan Off-Guard
-
Susan B. Glasser and Kamran Khan,
The Washington Times, November 21, 2001
>>> More than a week after the
Taliban retreat from the Afghan capital of Kabul and other cities, Pakistan
is reeling from the rout of the strict Islamic militia it helped create.
......
-
Osama plot revealed:
How he got the bomb
-
The Washington Times, November 20,
2001
>>> Osama bin Laden is not a Georgetown
hostess's dream of the extra man for a dinner party, but he may be the
man to invite to your next snipe hunt. ......
-
Hundreds of al Qaeda
'sleeper agents' living in Europe
-
Agencies, www.expressindia.com,
November 20, 2001
>>> Washington, November 19: Hundreds
of al Qaeda "sleeper agents" are living in Europe waiting for orders to
attack, according to a report in The Washington Post citing France's chief
counter intelligence officer. Jean-Jacques Pascal, head of France's DST
counter intelligence agency, said a number of "neo-Afghans," or Algerians
who trained in Afghan terrorist camps, had resettled in Europe. ......
-
Sectarian secularism
vitiates atmosphere
-
Sandhya Jain, The Pioneer, November
20, 2001
>>> Even by the deplorable standards
of public discourse in India, the cloying communalism of leftist Muslim
academics and the utter falsehoods being propagated by their secular comrades
are breathtaking. In the two months since the apocalyptic attack on the
symbols of American military and economic power, the worldwide Islamic
intellectual industry and its dhimmi clientele has been overactive trying
to ensure that the confrontation with the Taliban and Osama bin Laden is
not expanded into a drive against all terrorist organizations and nations
harbouring them. ......
-
US 'let terror chiefs
off hook'
-
Toby Harnden, The Telegraph (UK),
November 19, 2001
>>> American pilots have had senior
Taliban and al-Qa'eda targets in their sights as many as 10 times in the
past six weeks but were unable to open fire because authorisation did not
come through in time, it was reported yesterday. ......
-
US efforts to make
peace summed up by 'oil'
-
The Irish Times, November 19, 2001
>>> The fate of John O'Neill, the
Irish-American FBI agent who for years led US investigations into Osama
bin Laden's al-Qaeda network, is the most chilling revelation in the book
Bin Laden: The Hidden Truth, published in Paris this week. ......
-
Defiant Taliban
says bin Laden no longer its guest
-
Sayed Salahuddin and Rosalind Russell,
www.expressindia.com, November 19, 2001
>>> US bombs pounded Afghanistan
again on Sunday but the beleaguered Taliban held on in its southern bastion
of Kandahar, dismissing reports that it would retreat to fight a guerrilla
campaign in the mountains. The Taliban said Osama bin Laden -- prime suspect
for the September 11 hijack attacks that killed some 4,600 people in the
US -- had left the territory they controlled and they did not know where
he was. The Pentagon said he was still in the country. ......
-
'There's more support
for the Ram Temple today than ever before' (Interview of Pravin Togadia)
-
Sukhmani Sangh, The Indian Express,
November 18, 2001
>>> Q. The PM has set up a special
Ayodhya cell to resolve the Ram temple issue. Do you have faith in him?
A. Everyone in Bharat should have
faith in an elected PM. We have faith in him but we don't depend on him
for construction of the Ram temple. That depends upon the people of Bharat.
We have planned one of the biggest mass mobilisation movements, involving
50 million people, for the temple construction. ......
-
Recipe for disaster
-
I D Swamin, The Hindustan Times,
November 17, 2001
>>> Pakistan should stop harping
on that out-worn theme 'the will of the people' for the purpose of pursuing
political terrorism, for capturing Indian territory. UN Secretary General
Kofi Annan and former US President Bill Clinton have ruled against plebiscite
in Kashmir. Yet, Pakistan continues to harp on this camouflaged and out-worn
catch-phrase for waging a proxy war against India. ......
-
Liberalism in Islam:
An issue for Indian Muslims to debate
-
R.Upadhyay, South Asia Analysis
Group, November 16, 2001
>>> The puritans of Islam are anxious
to wheel back the contemporary world order to the fourteen hundred years
old concept of their faith and create a pan-Islamic world polity. Those,
who take a vow to accomplish this mission through violent Jihad, have now
become the cult figures for the Muslim community. ......
-
Pakistan: America's
worst nightmare CBS '60 minutes'
-
Following are the highlights from
tonight's CBS weekly show '60 Minutes'., November 15, 2001
>>> The elected prime minister
is in jail. The generals who seized power are beholden to Islamic radicals,
and militant fundamentalists could end up controlling nuclear weapons.
......
-
Tilting Again
-
Richard Rapaport, San Francisco
Chronicle, November 13, 2001
>>> America's new best friend,
Pakistan's President Pervez Musharraf, has been a busy strongman since
September 11. Weekly, U.S. Cabinet secretaries, the British prime minister,
generals and diplomats arrive at Islamabad's President's House to pay court.
Saturday, at a joint press conference in New York, Major Gen. Musharraf
was given President Bush's public seal of approval and a billion dollars
in aid. ......
-
No path to reformation
-
Varsha Bhosle, Rediff on Net, November
12, 2001
>>> Last week, many readers wrote
in asking what I had meant by 'Don't Christians have a New Testament?'
I admit, that closing paragraph is inscrutable. The reason being that the
original one was felt to be too 'hot,' and so was changed - with my consent.
For, toning it down would have required considerable space. Now, by no
stretch of imagination am I well-versed in scriptures - any scripture.
......
-
A letter from London
-
Vir Sanghvi, The Hindustan Times,
November 11, 2001
>>> For a country that was once
regarded as being riddled with the virus of racism, Britain has made astounding
progress over the last 20 years. It is, for my money, the most genuinely
multi-cultural, multi-ethnic society in the West. And unlike the United
States, which prides itself on being a melting pot, where distinctive national
traits are melted down to create an all-American identity, England is happy
to be a mosaic, allowing citizens to retain Indian, Jamaican or Bangladeshi
identities while calling themselves British. ......
-
Beijing produces
videos glorifying terrorist attacks on 'arrogant' US
-
Damien McElroy, The Daily Telegraph
(London), November 11, 2001
>>> The Chinese state-run propaganda
machine is cashing in on the terror attacks in New York and Washington,
producing books, films and video games glorifying the strikes as a humbling
blow against an arrogant nation. ......
-
'India Has the Resolve,
strength and stamina to Resist This Terrorism': Vajpayee
-
The Washington Times, November 9,
2001
>>> Indian Prime Minister Atal
Bihari Vajpayee responded to written questions submitted to him by Washington
Post editors. ......
-
Rocky Road To Asian
Peace
-
Mohammed Ayoob, The Washington Times,
November 8, 2001
>>> The Indian prime minister's
visit to Washington this week provides an opportunity for President George
Bush and Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee to exchange views on a whole
host of issues that are likely to include coordinated responses to terrorism,
but must go beyond that subject. ......
-
CNN: an ally in
the war
-
Arvind Singh, South Asia Analysis
Group, November 6, 2001
>>> Sometimes we get requests from
scholars to get their paper published in our web site. While we take
no responsibility for the contents, we would publish selectively papers
of interest. We thank Mr. Arvind Singh for sending his paper. The views
expressed are his own. - Director. ......
-
200 terrorists contact
security forces
-
Dinesh Manhotra, The Daily Excelsior,
November 6, 2001
>>> Antagonized over inhuman activities
of so-called Mujahideens, a large number of disenchanted foreign terrorists,
who had infiltrated in to this side to wage Jehad, have been desperately
trying to return to their native places. ......
-
'Jihad Is My First
Obligation'
-
Pamela Constable, The Washington
Post, November 6, 2001
>>> Shahid Hussain, a bright and
articulate man of 19, carries two plastic identification cards in his vest
pocket. One is from a private college where he has studied science part
time for the past two years in hopes of becoming a doctor. ......
-
Cong no to refugee
status for intruders
-
Times News Network, The Times of
India, November 5, 2001
>>> Kolkata: West Bengal Pradesh
Congress Committee president Pranab Mukherjee is against declaring as refugees
people who are arriving in the state from Bangladesh for shelter after
facing religious and political persecution in the wake of the election
victory of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP). ......
-
Bangla immigrants
to be pushed back
-
Times News Network, The Times of
India, November 5, 2001
>>> Siliguri: Those entering West
Bengal from Bangladesh without valid papers will be considered simple intruders
and pushed back, chief minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee said in Siliguri
on Sunday. ......
-
You either buy peace
or convert'
-
Aditya Ghosh, The Times of India,
November 5, 2001
>>> Money can reduce ideological
and religious differences to a great extent but being poor and living among
those who consider you as an enemy can be worse than death, feel the 60-odd
Bangladeshi Hindus who crossed over to India this week. ......
-
How Afghanistan
Went Unlisted as Terrorist Sponsor
-
Mary Pat Flaherty, David B. Ottaway
and James V. Grimaldi, The Washington Post, November 5, 2001
>>> Each year, the U.S. State Department
formally rebukes and imposes penalties on governments that protect and
promote terrorists. But since 1996, when the Taliban seized power in Afghanistan,
the nation harboring Osama bin Laden has never made the department's list
of terrorist-sponsoring countries. ......
-
Who's the general
to preach to us'
-
Omar Abdullah, The Times of India,
November 4, 2001
>>> Keep talking, people tell us.
They advise us to show restraint, when we are suffering due to the lack
of restraint by another country. India has restrained itself since Independence
and even after Kargil. How many countries can be so when their territorial
integrity is challenged and soldiers killed? But others have taken advantage
of that and attacked US. ......
-
White House knows
of Pakistan aid to Taliban militia
-
Bill Gertz, The Washington Times,
November 2, 2001
>>> Senior Bush administration
officials acknowledged yesterday that Pakistan is supplying covert military
assistance to the Taliban militia, but they praised Islamabad's cooperation
in the U.S. anti-terrorism campaign. ......
-
Misuse of mosque
loudspeakers
-
Editorial, Dawn, November 2, 2001
>>> The government has decided
to clamp down on the misuse of loudspeakers in mosques, and directed the
provincial governments to strictly implement this ban. The use of mosque
loudspeakers will now be restricted to calling the faithful to prayer and
for the Friday khutba (sermon). ......
-
Announcement Of
A Protest Against The Government Of Bangladesh
-
>>> Hindu Human Rights group (HHR)
is deeply concerned about the current oppression of the Indigenous
Hindu Minority in Bangladesh. The situation is all the more
worrying following the recent election of the BNP (Bangladesh
National Party) which includes extremist Islamic elements. ......
-
Text of Indo-US
joint statement
-
>>> Since September 11, the people
of the United States and India have been united as never before in the
fight against terrorism. In doing so, they have together reaffirmed the
enduring ties between both nations, and the importance of further transforming
the US-India relationship. In their meeting, President Bush and Prime Minister
Vajpayee discussed ways to accelerate progress towards these goals. ......
-
Fighting Militant
Islam, Without Bias
-
Daniel Pipes, City Journal, Autumn
2001
>>> The whole country, and New
York especially, has to face an urgent question in the wake of the September
11 attacks, organized by a militant Islamic network and carried out by
Arabic-speaking Muslims resident in North America: how should Americans
now view and treat the Muslim populations living in their midst? ......
-
Gestures And Ground
Reality
-
V. Sudarshan, Outlook, November
26, 2001
>>> Q: Will the United States try
to get involved in a settlement of Kashmir?
US Secretary of State Colin Powell: The two sides
have to settle that and there needs to be a dialogue between Pakistan and
India. To the extent the US can be helpful in fostering their dialogue,
fine. But we cannot become the mediator, the arbitor, or the intermediary
between them. (Interview on NBC's meet the press programme, November 11.)
......
-
Outmanoeuvred, Mr
Musharraf?
-
Mariana Baabar, Outlook, November
26, 2001
>>> Never before in the last 52
years has Pakistan been left wringing its hands in anguish over a foreign
policy debacle as it's doing now. With the Northern Alliance (NA) riding
on US shoulders to occupy Kabul, and the Taliban on the run, it seems Islamabad's
Afghan cards have been snatched away overnight. Pakistan now faces the
grim prospect of isolation abroad and violent convulsions at home.
......
-
Many can't stomach
Bush Ramzan feasts
-
Hanna Rosin & Thomas B. Edsall,
The Indian Express, November 22, 2001
>>> As President Bush hosts Ramzan
feasts at the White House this week to bolster Muslim support for the war
on terrorism, he is shadowed by criticism of the administration's outreach
efforts to American Muslims during the past two months. ......
-
The secularism of
celebration
-
Amrita Shah, The Indian Express,
November 22, 2001
>>> Sociologists claim that the
farther the contemporary Indian travels from his roots the more he seeks
to return to them. Technology oddly plays a significant role in bridging
the gap. Over a decade ago the forces of Hindutva showed how the media,
for instance, particularly the new media, could be used to sell a revivalist
message. ......
-
'Strong reaction'
if Pak militants killed in Afghanistan, fundos tell Islamabad
-
Press Trust of India/Agence France-Presse,
www.expressindia.com, November 22, 2001
>>> Islamic radicals in Pakistan
warned on Wednesday of a "strong reaction" if Pakistani militants were
massacred in the besieged city of Kunduz, the Taliban's last stronghold
in northern Afghanistan. "The United Nations and the government of Pakistan
must do something for their rescue soon otherwise there will be a bloodbath
in Kunduz," a top Muslim cleric, Mufti Nizamuddin Shamazai, told AFP.
......
-
Osama's spiritual
envoy still walks freely
-
Rashmee Z Ahmed, The Times of India,
November 22, 2001
>>> London: As the Western coalition
hunts Osama bin Laden down in Afghanistan, the man alleged to be his "spiritual"
ambassador to Europe remains free for the moment and in the comparative
comfort of his west London home, according to reports that the Spanish
authorities have identified 40-year-old Abu Qatada as a pivotal figure
in the al-Qaeda network. ......
-
US issues fresh
warning to countries supporting terrorists
-
Agencies, www.expressindia.com,
November 21, 2001
>>> As US special forces pressed
on with their hunt for suspected terrorist mastermind Osama bin Laden in
Afghanistan, Washington issued a stern warning to states it accuses of
assisting terrorists, particularly Iraq. ......
-
Militant responsible
for J&K assembly attack arrested
-
Mukhtar Ahmad, Rediff on Net, November
21, 2001
>>> The Jammu and Kashmir police
on Wednesday claimed to have arrested a member of Jaish-e- Mohammed group
that carried out the lethal strike at the state assembly complex on October
1 this year, which killed 35 persons and injured 40 others. ......
-
US asks Pakistan
to close Taliban embassy in Islamabad, expel diplomats
-
AFP, November 21, 2001
>>> The United States said Wednesday
it had asked Pakistan to close the Taliban embassy in Islamabad and expel
the militia's diplomats because their presence was no longer "useful."
State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said the request had been made
after eight western aid workers, including two Americans, detained by the
Taliban in Kabul were freed and then rescued by US troops last week.
......
-
Methods of al-Qaida
operations in Europe emerging in Spanish investigation
-
Jerome Socolovsky, The Associated
Press, November 21, 2001
>>> In 1994, Palestinian- born
Anwar Adnan Mohamed Saleh began passing out leaflets on radical Islam to
other young immigrants at one of Madrid's main mosques. Over the next few
years, Spanish prosecutors say, Saleh and his Syrian successor, Imad Eddin
Barakat Yarkas, persuaded at least a dozen mosque- goers to fight in Muslim
holy wars in Afghanistan, Bosnia and Indonesia. ......
-
Polarization of Kashmir
a cautionary tale
-
Martin Regg Cohn, The Star, November
21, 2001
>>> Worshippers crowd into the
Makhdoon Sahib shrine for more than their midday prayers. They also bring
their babies along for a ceremonial first haircut. ......
-
Bangla Hindus' persecution:
BJP MPs are agitated
-
Pioneer News Service, The Pioneer,
November 21, 2001
>>> Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)
MPs have expressed their concern over atrocities against Bangladeshi Hindus
which was forcing them to flee to India. ......
-
Pakistan's uncertain
future
-
Brahma Chellaney, Rediff on Net,
November 20, 2001
>>> Much before America's declaration
of war on terrorism forced Islamabad to turn against its own creation,
the Taleban, Pakistan faced an uncertain future. The events since September
2001 have cast further doubt on the political stability and internal cohesion
of the world's seventh most populous nation, which has both terrorists
and nuclear weapons on its territory. ......
-
Letter to Bush Regarding
Rapprochement with Sudan
-
Zenit.org, November 20, 2001
>>> Below is the text of a letter
sent to President George W. Bush regarding U.S. overtures to the Khartoum
regime following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. ......
-
U.S. Assailed for
Shift in Its Sudan Policy - 100 Religious and Rights Leaders Send Letter
to Bush
-
Zenit.org, November 20, 2001
>>> A U.S. "policy trade-off" with
Sudan triggered an outcry from religious and rights leaders who charge
that Washington is discarding human rights concerns in exchange for promises
on terrorism. ......
-
The case against
Pakistan's dictator
-
Tunku Varadarajan, The Wall Street
Journal, November 20, 2001
>>> Which president, of a country
that is ostensibly--and ostentatiously--a part of the international coalition
against terrorism, made the following public remarks (and numerous others
like them)? ......
-
America's Game Plan
-
K Subrahmanyam, The Times of India,
November 19, 2001
>>> The fall of Kabul and the rapid
collapse of Taliban resistance in north and central Afghanistan should
make a lot of commentators who talked of the futility of US bombing and
the likely resistance from the Taliban reflect and re-examine their earlier
assumptions. ......
-
Foes Claim Taliban
Are Killing Soldiers Who Seek to Defect
-
Dexter Filkins, The New York Times,
November 19, 2001
>>> Foreign soldiers fighting for
the Taliban have begun killing their Afghan Taliban comrades in a desperate
effort to hang on to the encircled city of Kunduz, refugees and Northern
Alliance soldiers here say. ......
-
Wrong Side Of Religion!
-
C R Irani, The Statesman, November
18, 2001
>>> Ever since America's world-wide
campaign against terrorism in early October, we have been crying ourselves
hoarse that Pakistan and Taliban are locked in an inseparable embrace and
Pakistani inputs would be misleading. They are now finding out for themselves,
which is always the best way to learn! Witness the fiasco over commando
raids inside Taliban territory and the murder of Abdul Haq, a Northern
Alliance commander, led to his death by Pakistani officers in league with
Taliban. ......
-
America as neighbour;
but India not worried
-
Chidanand Rajghatta, The Times of
India, November 17, 2001
>>> Washington: In an occasional
jab at belittling Pakistan, BJP foreign policy experts like to point out
that long before that country and Afghanistan came into existence, India
shared a common border with the Persian civilisation. Now something new
is afoot at the start of the 21st century. ......
-
Is Pakistan marginalised?
-
C. Raja Mohan, The Hindu, November
17, 2001
>>> Has Pakistan been marginalised
in the current war against international terrorism? The dramatic advances
made by the forces of Northern Alliance into Kabul are no doubt a setback
to Islamabad. But India should resist seeing the war in Afghanistan solely
through the distorting prism of Pakistan. ......
-
De-legitimise terror
as state policy
-
KPS Gill, The Pioneer, November
17, 2001
>>> Most ruthless in the suppression
of their own hapless people, and most cowardly in battle. This is how history
will probably judge the Taliban. In under a week, once the real fighting
started, a Force that had been most arrogant and indiscriminate in its
use of violence against its own people was suddenly in full flight, without
even a fig leaf of resistance to conceal its disgrace. ......
-
Terrorist Sponsors:
Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, China
-
Ted Galen Carpenter, The Cato Institute,
November 16, 2001
>>> The United States has assembled
a superficially impressive international coalition against the threat of
terrorism. Many countries in that coalition, however, contribute little
of significance to the fight. Even worse, the willingness of some members
of the coalition to actually combat terrorism is doubtful. ......
-
Shut the backdoor
-
Editorial, The Pioneer, November
16, 2001
>>> Russian President Vladimir
Putin's frank admission, before American journalists in a recent press
conference in Moscow, that the Taliban in Afghanistan and international
terrorism in general were products of Cold War rivalry, is refreshing.
His remarks are a first step towards recognising the systemic origins of
the current world order, without acknowledging which there cannot be any
meaningful efforts at crafting a better one. ......
-
Bin Laden's proud
alums: Graduates of al-Qaida camps say U.S. too late to stop Islamic militancy
-
Gregg Jones, The Dallas Morning
News, November 5, 2001
>>> Yes, there was a time when
he wasn't a model Muslim, Rashid Hussain earnestly admits. He prayed infrequently.
He drank alcohol. He gambled on cricket matches. He even lusted after women.
......
-
Trap the chameleon
as it changes 'color'
-
Wilson John, The Pioneer, November
14, 2001
>>> Finally we are saying what
we should be saying. It is such a relief to hear Prime Minister Atal Bihari
Vajpayee, for a change shedding all diplomatic niceties in New York, telling
Pakistan to forget about Kashmir. Well, General Musharraf, you can shout
till you drop dead, Kashmir is an Indian state and will remain so.
......
-
Rout of the Taliban
-
Editorial, The Pioneer, November
14, 2001
>>> A RAGTAG ARMY of radical Islamic
students, who seized control of most of Afghanistan five years ago and
set in motion an immensely harmful chain reaction in the volatile regions
of Central and South Asia, is on the run. Considering all the chest thumping
and bravura that characterised the early reaction of the regime in Kabul
to the U.S.-led bombing campaign, the collapse of the Taliban has been
surprisingly rapid. ......
-
No US mediation in
Kashmir, No F-16s to Pakistan
-
Pioneer News Service, The Pioneer,
November 13, 2001
>>> The flow of discouraging news
for Pakistan from Washington continued with United States (US) Secretary
of State Colin Powell ruling out supply of F-16s to Islamabad as also any
role as "mediator" in the Jammu and Kashmir dispute. ......
-
In Pakistan, It's
Jihad 101
-
Thomas L. Friedman, The New York
Times, November 13, 2001
>>> Peshawar, Pakistan: You need
only spend an afternoon walking through the Storytellers' Bazaar here in
Peshawar, a few miles from the Afghan border, to understand that America
needs to do its business in Afghanistan - eliminate Osama bin Laden and
his Taliban pro tectors - as quickly as possible and get out of here. This
is not a neighborhood where we should linger. This is not Mr. Rogers's
neighborhood. ......
-
Hope Over Experience!
-
Editorial, The Statesman, November
11, 2001
>>> It took an international film
festival in Kolkata to bring the CPI-M and BJP on the same platform. The
change was evident in Buddhadev Bhattacharya's style before Sushma Swaraj
arrived in the city on Saturday. When Saugata Roy was stopped at the gates
of Writers' Buildings where he had gone to meet the chief minister, it
was due to overreaction of security staff. ......
-
India protests assault
of its embassy officials in Pakistan
-
Press Trust of India, www.expressindia.com,
November 10, 2001
>>> India on Friday lodged a strong
protest against the abduction and assault of two Indian High Commission
officials in Pakistan by ISI agents and demanded that appropriate action
be taken against those responsible for it. ......
-
Kashmir's 1947 Whodunnit
-
C Dasgupta, The Times of India,
November 10, 2001
>>> One of Jawaharlal Nehru's most
controversial decisions was to refer the Kashmir issue to the UN Security
Council at the end of 1947. The decision is commonly ascribed to his idealism
and unrealistic faith in the UN. ......
-
"Islamism is fascism"
-
Eric Boehlert, Salon.Com, November
9, 2001
>>> Daniel Pipes says leading American
Muslim groups want Islamic law to rule the U.S.-even if they won't admit
it-and must be carefully watched. ......
-
A Friend For More
Than A War
-
Bill Richardson, The Los Angeles
Times, November 9, 2001
>>> With each passing day, the
U.S. military action in Afghanistan puts greater focus on America's allies
in South Asia. In the war against terrorism we're now waging in the region,
the U.S. finds itself with friends of necessity, friends of convenience
and friends who share mutual long-term economic, social and political goals.
......
-
Vajpayee, Bush meet
over terrorism war
-
CNN News, November 9, 2001
>>> Indian Prime Minister Atal
Bihari Vajpayee Friday expressed his "sympathy, solidarity and support"
with the United States in its war against terrorism. ......
-
Putin Warns Against
'Double Standards' on Terrorism
-
Clara Ferreira-Marques, Reuters,
November 9, 2001
>>> Russian President Vladimir
Putin said on Tuesday that any double standards in the international fight
against terrorism could split the global coalition formed after the September
11 attacks on U.S. landmarks. ......
-
India Muslim Cleric
Backs Taliban
-
Rajesh Mahapatra, The Associated
Press, November 9, 2001
>>> The chief Muslim cleric in
New Delhi said Friday that he supports the Taliban, and called the U.S.-led
airstrikes on Afghanistan (news - web sites) an attack on Islam.
......
-
India rejects US
proposal for military alliance
-
AFP, November 9, 2001
>>> India reportedly thumbed its
nose at a US proposal to become Washington's "foremost military ally" and
a "counterweight" to China and Islamic states in the region, India Today
magazine reported Friday. ......
-
FBI 'was told to
back off bin Laden family'
-
Press Association, The Sydney Morning
Herald, November 8, 2001
>>> London - United States special
agents were told to back off the bin Laden family and the Saudi royals
soon after George Bush became president, although that has all changed
since September 11, a BBC television program has claimed. ......
-
Why I will not sign
the Pledge to British Muslims
-
Charles Moore, The Daily Telegraph,
November 7, 2001
>>> The week before last, I received
a letter from Sher Khan, the national of the Islamic Society of Britain.
As I was "one of an 40 key opinion formers", I was invited to sign "The
Pledge to British Muslims". This would indicate my "long-term support for
Muslim ", as part of Muslim Awareness, he said. ......
-
Life 'Worse Than
Death' For 13-Yr-Old, Mother Of 3
-
Sunando Sarkar, The Telegraph, November
6, 2001
>>> Lakshmi Das is 37. Her eldest
daughter, Durga, is 18. Rani Sil, who hid in the paddy fields for three
days, is 25. And Sadhana Poddar is all of 13. None of them was, however,
too old or too young to escape what each would first deny and then break
down and simply describe as "something worse than death". ......
-
One word: Khilafat
-
Varsha Bhosle, Rediff on Net, November
5, 2001
>>> On October 7, 1996, PTI reported
a symposium held at the Haj House in Mumbai and organised by the (now belatedly
banned) Students Islamic Movement of India to call for the establishment
of Khilafat, the Quranic concept of a world government based on moral principles
laid down in the Sunnah. ......
-
Sectarian secularism
vitiates atmosphere
-
Sandhya Jain, The Pioneer, November
20, 2001
>>> Even by the deplorable standards
of public discourse in India, the cloying communalism of leftist Muslim
academics and the utter falsehoods being propagated by their secular comrades
are breathtaking. In the two months since the apocalyptic attack on the
symbols of American military and economic power ......
-
Who's afraid of the
new ordinance?
-
Arun Shourie, The Hindustan Times,
November 20, 2001
>>> The provisions of TADA were
much more stringent than those of POTO. The constitutionality of those
provisions, of TADA itself, had been challenged in the courts. The Supreme
Court specifically upheld TADA, and declared its provisions - the much
more stringent provisions - to be in accord with the Constitution.
......
-
More facts on POTO
-
Arun Shourie, The Hindustan Times,
November 19, 2001
>>> 'But look at Chapter V. It
allows the police, the intelligence agencies to listen in to and intercept
communications between any of us whatever means we use: electronic, wire,
oral, paging devices, tracking devices. This wasn't there in the Law Commission
draft. It is a clear licence to police, IB, CBI, anyone the government
fancies, to invade our privacy.' ......
-
Victory Shifts the
Muslim World
-
Daniel Pipes, The New York Post,
November 19, 2001
>>> Early on Nov. 9, the Taliban
regime ruled almost 95 percent of Afghanistan. Ten days later, it controlled
just 15 percent of the country. Key to this quick disintegration was the
fact that, awed by American air power, many Taliban soldiers switched sides
to the U.S.-backed Northern Alliance. ......
-
Muslims in India
must choose between Talibanic Islam and being true Indians
-
Tavleen Singh, India Today, November
19, 2001
>>> If it had not been for the
hate mail my last piece on Indian Muslims provoked I might not have felt
the need to write again on the subject. Let us say that the letters inspired
me because they came as proof that what I wrote about Indian Muslims needing
to distance themselves from Taliban-type Islam needed to be said.
......
-
Going after the raiders
of the dark
-
Anil Narendra, The Pioneer, November
16, 2001
>>> Osama bin Laden has now threatened
to use nuclear and biochemical weapons. But this is not the first time
he has threatened to do so. In mid-September a few days after the September
11 attacks, in an interview to Al-Jajeera, TV he disclosed that he possesses
nuclear and biochemical weapons and will use them at the appropriate time.
......
-
Taliban's defeat
victory of good over evil: PM
-
The Times of India, November 16,
2001
>>> Prime Minister Atal Bihari
Vajpayee Thursday described the defeat of Taliban in Afghanistan as the
'victory of good over evil' and said a common thread of religious intolerance
ran through different instances of terrorism like the destruction of Bamiyan
Buddhas, the US terror strikes and cross-border terrorism in Jammu and
Kashmir. ......
-
PM sits pretty while
the General fumes
-
Vir Sanghvi, The Hindustan Times,
November 15, 2001
>>> Vajpayee was originally only
scheduled to visit Moscow. Then Colin Powell delivered an invitation on
behalf of President George W Bush and Washington was added to the list.
Given that he was going to be in America, Vajpayee reckoned he might as
well address the rescheduled General Assembly session in New York.
......
-
Who is misleading
whom?
-
Dawn, November 12, 2001
>>> President General Pervez Musharraf's
appeal to the US-led coalition for a pause in bombing during Ramazan and
for keeping the war short and targeted has now become too repetitive to
be heard over its own din. In fact, it now appears as if he is repeating
himself simply for the sake of playing to the Islamic gallery the world
over rather than for any effect. ......
-
North 24-Pgs a safe
haven for fleeing Bangladeshis
-
Kaushik Ghosh, The Statesman, November
18, 2001
>>> Hiralal Sarnakar travelled
for three days, mostly on foot, from Tetulia village in Jessore in search
of "safety" in a foreign land. ......
-
Six Pakistanis held
in Nigeria
-
Dawn, November 18, 2001
>>> Nigeria police have arrested
six Pakistani Islamic preachers accused of inciting religious violence
in the country's southwest Ogun state, newspapers reported on Saturday.
......
-
Asia eyes radical
Islam
-
Patrick Chalmers, The Globe and
Mail, November 17, 2001
>>> Mohamad, a retired soldier
living near Malaysia's high-security Kamunting detention centre, is unimpressed
by talk of rising Islamic militancy. ......
-
Hawks Debate: Is
Terror the Problem, or is it Islam?
-
Kelley Beaucar Vlahos, Fox News,
November 16, 2001
>>> Washington - Two months into
America's war on terror, some conservative strategists are starting to
disavow President Bush's dictum that the conflict is not against Islam,
insisting that to fight terror means to fight the fundamentalist streak
wound through much of the world's third largest religion. ......
-
The World View Of
The Expat Pakistani
-
Khaled Ahmed, Friday Times, November
16, 2001
>>> One may at times feel that
the general attitude of the expatriate Pakistani tends to be more extreme
than Pakistan's domestic opinion. He may look at the American press as
a massive Jewish conspiracy. He may believe that Ramzi Yusuf was blameless
for the 1992 attack on the World Trade Center and that that attack was
actually carried out by the Jews. ......
-
The night of the
lost nose-pins
-
Mohammad Badrul Ahsan, The Daily
Star, November 16, 2001
>>> What about the men who inflicted
those wounds? They have gone back to their mothers, wives, daughters and
sisters with the calm of a storm that has spent its force. What will they
do? Will they ever feel guilty for what they did? How will they cope with
the love for their own women if the contorted face of their victims flash
in their minds? ......
-
George ready to bend
rules to arm troops
-
Gaurav C. Sawant, The Indian Express,
November 16, 2001
>>> In A sweeping statement today,
Defence Minister George Fernandes said that the government will bend rules
if they come in the way of speedy acquisition of equipment for troops at
the borders. Evaluating the situation at the Punjab and Rajasthan borders,
where Pakistani forces had begun a major troop mobilization in October,
Fernandes said India had to resort to counter-mobilization since Pakistan's
motives were not clear. ......
-
People rise against
Taliban in Kandahar
-
Reuters, www.expressindia.com, November
16, 2001
>>> The people of the southern
Afghan city of Kandahar have risen up against the embattled fundamentalist
Taliban and heavy fighting was raging in the city on Thursday, a leading
opposition figure said. Pakistani border officials said US jets were bombing
the city but they had heard of no fighting in the city, fuelling the confusion
over who controls the stronghold of the Taliban and their last major bastion
not yet captured by opponents. ......
-
Muslims pray for
American defeat, bin Laden victory as Ramadan starts
-
Adnan Malik, The Associated Press,
November 16, 2001
>>> The first prayers of the holy
month of Ramadan brought forth a groundswell of pro-Osama bin Laden sentiment
across the Middle East on Friday, with no let up in calls for America's
defeat in Afghanistan despite its successes this week. ......
-
What now for Pakistan?
-
Shireen M Mazari, The Jung, November
15, 2001
>>> With the fall of Kabul and
other Taliban strongholds, presently it is a matter of academic debate
whether the Taliban have been decimated or have deliberately chosen to
retreat and regroup in order to conduct a guerrilla war. It would appear
that for the present their sloganeering was louder than their fighting
abilities and they may now lose respect within the Pushtun community, which
may leave them with no sympathisers at all. ......
-
Crisis of Hindu Bengalis
-
Abhijit Bhattacharyya, The Pioneer,
November 15, 2001
>>> The ruling Bangladesh Nationalist
Party's call for imposition of Jaziya on the Hindu Bengalis (as reported
in the Bangla daily, Sangbad) typifies the phrase: "History repeats itself."
What was a hypothesis yesterday, however, is a reality today as Hindu Bengalis
in Bangladesh are facing the grim prospect of forced conversion, inevitable
death or inevitable (and ignominious) migration to India. ......
-
Tense Dilemma In
Islamabad
-
Arnaud de Borchgrave, The Washington
Times, November 15, 2001
>>> For Pakistani President Pervez
Musharraf it was an unmitigated disaster. Already the Pakistani media are
accusing the U.S. of betrayal and Gen. Musharraf of being rolled by President
Bush. Pakistan's enemies are now in Kabul. ......
-
White House to highlight
Taliban treatment of women
-
Kelly Wallace, CNN Washington, November
15, 2001
>>> The White House will kick-off
a campaign Friday to highlight the Taliban's treatment of women, CNN has
learned, including a radio address Saturday by Laura Bush -- the first
time a first lady has delivered the entire weekly presidential radio address.
......
-
Tribal body to fight
Church 'domination'
-
Statesman News Service, The Statesman,
November 15, 2001
>>> Leaders of the Tripura Jamatiya
Hill community have announced a programme of setting up schools and cultural
units in the state's hill villages to counter the influence of the missionary-run
schools. ......
-
Freed hostage returns
a convert, Muslim rebels murdered US boyfriend
-
AFP, November 15, 2001
>>> A shell-shocked Filipina hostage
was freed from nearly six months captivity Thursday, having been forced
to convert to the religion of her Muslim Abu Sayyaf kidnappers who murdered
her American boyfriend. ......
-
ATTACK ON AFGHANISTAN
INVESTIGATION: Al-Qaeda camps 'trained 70,000 in terror' INTELLIGENCE BRIEFING
GERMAN COUNTER-TERRORISM AGENCY WARNS THAT ISLAMIC MILITANTS WILL REGROUP
TO STRIKE AGAIN:
-
Hugh Williamson, The Financial Times,
November 15, 2001
>>> At least 70,000 Islamic militants
have been trained in camps associated with Osama bin Laden in Afghanistan,
Pakistan and other countries in recent years, according to the head of
Germany's federal criminal agency. ......
-
Why Won't The Bushies
Give The Northern Alliance Its Due? - Unstated Objective
-
Lawrence F. Kaplan, The New Republic,
November 15, 2001
>>> A wonderful thing happened
this week in Afghanistan. So why does everyone in the Bush administration--everyone,
that is, except officials at the Pentagon--sound so glum? Because with
the fall of Kabul, the United States achieved an impressive military victory
and suffered an impressive diplomatic defeat. ......
-
Start of Construction
on Nazareth Mosque Stirs a Protest
-
zenit.org, November 14, 2001
>>> Excavation began this week
for the foundation of what will be a mosque in front of the Basilica of
the Annunciation in Nazareth, triggering a protest from the Catholic Church.
......
-
When Muslims Want
a Crucifix Removed (Interview with Head of Italian Catholic Jurists on
Islam and Tolerance)
-
zenit.org, November 14, 2001
>>> Italy, long known for tolerance,
especially of other religions, may have gone too far, some news media say.
......
-
Johns Hopkins admits
staff used Indians as guinea pigs
-
Pallava Bagla, The Indian Express,
November 14, 2001
>>> A researcher from America's
highly rated medical school, the Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore,
has been found guilty of using Indians as human guinea pigs in the now
well-publicised illegal cancer drug trials at the Regional Cancer Center
(RCC), Thiruvananthapuram. ......
-
Troops recover over
500 kg of RDX, 3 killed in J&K
-
Rediff on net, November 14, 2001
>>> In a major recovery, army troops
seized 512 kg of RDX, and a huge cache of arms and ammunition from an abandoned
militant hideout, while elsewhere in Jammu and Kashmir, a sarpanch was
among three persons killed and two wounded in militancy-related incidents
since Tuesday evening, an official spokesman said on Wednesday.
......
-
Analysis: Pakistani
fears for Afghan future - Northern Alliance successes have not been welcomed
-
Zaffar Abbas, BBC News, November
14, 2001
>>> Pakistan's President, Pervez
Musharraf, returned to the country after a week-long foreign tour only
to realise that the rapidly changing situation in Afghanistan had deprived
him of whatever leverage he had for striking a bargain over a future government.
......
-
J&K exiles can
return, claim property
-
Arun Joshi/Syed Liaquat Ali, The
Hindustan Times, November 13, 2001
>>> The Supreme Court has paved
the way for Pakistanis to get Indian citizenship - in Jammu and Kashmir.
After a 19-year legal tussle, the J&K government can now resettle people
who migrated to Pakistan from the state between March 1, 1947 and May 14,
1954. Their widows, wives and descendants can also return to the state.
......
-
Bin Laden Aide Took
Green Beret Plans
-
Fox News, November 13, 2001
>>> A former Army sergeant who
was a close adviser to Usama bin Laden took sensitive documents that showed
plans of special operations units, The News & Observer of Raleigh reported
Tuesday. ......
-
Deported journalist
'uncovered collusion'
-
BBC News, November 12, 2001
>>> A British journalist who was
deported from Pakistan at the weekend says she believes the action may
have been triggered by her discovery of collusion between some Pakistani
army officers and the Taleban. ......
-
Muslim doctors in
Mumbai boycott medicines of US, British companies
-
Satish Nandgaonkar, The Hindustan
Times, November 12, 2001
>>> More than 2,000 Muslim doctors
in Mumbai and its suburbs would boycott medicines of American and British
companies in protest of the US-led strikes against Afghanistan, the Doctors'
Association said on Monday. ......
-
Pakistan Moves Nuclear
Weapons - Musharraf Says Arsenal Is Now Secure
-
Molly Moore and Kamran Khan, The
Washington Post, November 11, 2001
>>> Pakistani President Pervez
Musharraf ordered an emergency redeployment of the country's nuclear arsenal
to at least six secret new locations and has reorganized military oversight
of the nuclear forces in the weeks since Pakistan joined the U.S. campaign
against terrorism, according to senior officials here. ......
-
A Test of True Allies
-
Jim Hoagland, The Washington Post,
November 8, 2001
>>> The United States made many
demands on allies and friends in launching military operations in Afghanistan.
None has been more difficult to field than the request made to Israel and
to India: Restrain your own wars against terror so we can get on with ours.
......
-
Let's have a 'sensitive'
war
-
John Leo, townhall.com, November
7, 2001
>>> By late 1942, after Adolf Hitler
had invaded most of the nations of Europe, relentlessly bombed England
and declared war on the United States, the vexing question naturally arose:
What's better, to fight back or to sit down and study the root causes of
Germany's behavior? ......
-
India-Pakistan conflict
affecting war coverage
-
Mark Jurkowitz, The Boston Globe,
November 7, 2001
>>> Concerns that the government
of Pakistan is refusing to give visas to some reporters of Indian ethnicity
trying to cover the war in Afghanistan has prompted several journalistic
organizations to lodge protests over an issue that appears to be an outgrowth
of the simmering tension between India and Pakistan. ......
-
New York survivor'
son turns traitor
-
Damon Johnston, The New York Post,
November 6, 2001
>>> Mohammad Junaid's mother was
led to safety from the blazing World Trade Centre by New York's brave firefighters
and policemen. ......
-
Nepali Man Arrested,
Linked to Hijackers
-
CNN News, November 5, 2001
>>> A man was arrested Saturday
night at O'Hare International Airport in Chicago, Illinois, when he tried
to board a flight with nine knives, a can of Mace and a stun gun, police
said. ......
-
Bangladesh Hindus
migrating to W. Bengal
-
The Hindu, November 5, 2001
>>> Scores of men and women have
left their homes in Bangladesh and bundled up their belongings to sneak
into the border districts of Malda, Uttar Dinajpur and Dakshin Dinajpur
of West Bengal. ......
-
Rumsfield, Say No!
-
Editorial, The Statesman, November
5, 2001
>>> There is something incongruous
in retired Air Marshal Haider of Pakistan expounding to the BBC on the
need for the United States to stop all offensive activities in Afghanistan,
specifically bombing raids during the month of Ramzan; he was echoing what
President Musharraf is expected to urge on Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
when he comes calling. Rumsfeld should have a few pertinent quesions for
Musharraf. ......
-
Pakistan's big lie
-
Editorial, The Washington Times,
November 3, 2001
>>> How long does the United States
need to be deceived before it confronts Pakistan about the lies? That is
the logical question following revelations by this newspaper's reporter
Bill Gertz that elements within the Pakistani military and intelligence
agencies have been secretly sending military goods to the Taliban.
......
-
BJP asks Govt. to
pursue policy of 'hot pursuit'
-
PTI, The Hindu, November 3, 2001
>>> A day after Prime Minister
Vajpayee ruled out any Indian aggression against Pakistan, BJP today asked
the Government to pursue the policy of `hot pursuit' "if the situation
demands." ......
-
Feds raid apartment
-
Larry Hanover, Lisa Coryell and
Kevin Shea, The Times, November 3, 2001
>>> The federal investigation into
the bioterrorism attack on America led to North Olden Avenue in Trenton
yesterday, where authorities raided an apartment and detained a Pakistani
man before testing the residence for anthrax. ......
-
Kashmir tensions
complicate rumsfeld trip
-
Matt Smith, CNN News, November 3,
2001
>>> U.S. Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld's weekend trip overseas wraps up with stops in India and Pakistan,
where tensions over the disputed Himalayan territory of Kashmir could damage
the U.S.-led antiterror campaign in Afghanistan. ......
-
Al-Qaeda to release
another video: Kuwait newspaper
-
Dawn quoting al-Rai al-Aam, November
3, 2001
>>> Osama bin Laden will appear
for the second time in a pre-recorded videotape soon to be distributed
to Qatar- based al-Jazeera satellite television channel, Kuwait's al-Rai
al-Aam newspaper said today quoting an al-Qaeda member. ......
-
US designates LeT,
JeM as terrorist organisations
-
PTI, The Hindu, November 3, 2001
>>> Fulfilling India's long-standing
demand days before Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee's visit, the US
banned Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Toiba and Jaish-e-Mohammad by designating
them as "foreign terrorist organisations", to further the current campaign
against global terrorism. ......
-
White House knows
of Pakistan aid to Taliban militia
-
Bill Gertz, The Washington Times,
November 2, 2001
>>> Senior Bush administration
officials acknowledged yesterday that Pakistan is supplying covert military
assistance to the Taliban militia, but they praised Islamabad's cooperation
in the U.S. anti-terrorism campaign. ......
-
Mission diabolique
-
Editorial, The Pioneer, November
2, 2001
>>> The arrest of three persons
in the parking area of the Lodhi Gardens on Monday night provides yet another
reminder of the kind of threat Delhi continues to face from Pakistan-based
terrorist outfits. It also vindicates the Government's stand, reiterated
once again during the German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder's recent visit
to India ......
-
When the past awakens
-
Shamlal, The Telegraph, November
1, 2001
>>> The hopes of a quick fix in
Afghanistan are fading fast. Over three weeks into the war, the big boys
in the Pentagon do not have much to show for all their bluster. Some of
them are even in danger of losing their nerve, unable to answer awkward
questions from the media. ......
-
Pillars in Peril
-
Leela Jacinto, abcnews.com, November
2, 2001
>>> Nov. 1 ? Many senior officers
in the Pakistani Army still remember the days when, not so long ago, evenings
were spent in crusty officers' messes, buying or being bought a round of
whiskey with "the boys" before retiring for the night. ......
-
Brand Lashkar, Jaish
terrorist groups: Ashcroft
-
PTI, Rediff on Net, November 2,
2001
>>> United States Attorney General
John Ashcroft has recommended to the State Department the formal branding
of Lashkar-e-Tayiba, Jaish-e-Mohammed and several other outfits, whose
finances have been frozen by the Bush administration, as 'terrorist organisations'.
......
-
BJP seeks wider war
on terrorism
-
Reuters, The Indian Express, November
2, 2001
>>> Bharatiya Janata Party said
on Friday that the global war on terrorism should be extended to Kashmir.
Echoing the government's view, BJP president Jana Krishnamurthy told a
party conclave that the US-led battle against terrorism was unlikely to
succeed if confined to the Taliban rulers of Afghanistan. ......
-
Osama VCDs puts Assam
police in a tizzy
-
G Vinayak, Rediff on Net, November
2, 2001
>>> The seizure of two video compact
discs containing speeches, and a message of Osama bin Laden in the northern
Assam town of Tezpur on Thursday evening has put the police and the intelligence
agencies in a tizzy. ......
-
The Muslim Moment
-
Fred Barnes, The Daily Standard,
November 1, 2001
>>> The Image Of American Muslims
has been badly bruised since September 11--this, despite vigorous efforts
by President Bush and others to defend their loyalty and protect them from
threats and violence. Muslim leaders (but not grass-roots Muslims across
the country) are at least partly to blame. ......
-
'This is not RSS
Govt'
-
Hindu Vision
>>> In a recent interview to Indian
Express Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee said he had told crities of
his government in the Sangh Parivar that they were harming "their government".
......
-
The U.S. Is Ignoring
India's War On Terrorism
-
Vir Sanghvi, Time Asia, November
5, 2001
>>> When the war against terror
began in the immediate aftermath of the World Trade Center attacks, India
cheered. We are also a democracy, the largest in the world in fact-and
we have also suffered because of terrorist violence. We welcomed America
to our fight. Given that Washington and New Delhi have moved closer in
recent years, we believed that this would be a war fought by the free world
against all terrorists and the dictators who sponsor them.
......
-
India says Pakistan
making provocative troop moves
-
Sanjeev Miglani, Reuters, November
1, 2001
>>> India accused Pakistan Thursday
of carrying out provocative troop movements near the border in the bitterly
disputed Kashmir region as tension between the nuclear foes mounted.
......
-
Watching The Warheads
-
Seymour M. Hersh, The New Yorker,
November 1, 2001
>>> The Bush Administration's hunt
for Osama bin Laden and his Al Qaeda network has evolved into a regional
crisis that has put Pakistan's nuclear arsenal at risk, exacerbated the
instability of the government of General Pervez Musharraf, and raised the
possibility of a nuclear conflict between Pakistan and India.
......
-
U.S. asking Indian
navy for support in move to strengthen nations' ties
-
Sumana Chatterjee, The San Jose
Mercury News, November 1, 2001
>>> The Bush administration is
preparing to enter a new military arrangement with India that would allow
the Indian navy to refuel U.S. ships in the Arabian Sea and Indian Ocean,
officials in both governments said. ......
-
UN says Kashmir comments
not official policy
-
Irwin Arieff, Reuters, November
1, 2001
>>> The United Nations said on
Thursday that a peacekeeping official did not reflect U.N. policy in comments
accusing New Delhi and Islamabad of playing "political games" over the
disputed region of Kashmir. ......
-
Pakistan hunts for
key terror suspect
-
Zahid Hussain, The Associated Press,
November 1, 2001
>>> Authorities have launched a
nationwide manhunt for a key suspect in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks
after he apparently entered the country from Afghanistan, officials said
Thursday. ......
-
Bombing shouldn't
stop for Ramadan
-
Staff Editorial, The Collegiate
Times, November 1, 2001
>>> Since the Sept. 11 attacks,
the United States has launched a campaign to fight terrorist activity.
America's fight has never been about Christianity versus Islam, or religion
for the United States. ......
-
India says Pakistan
making provocative troop moves
-
Sanjeev Miglani, Reuters, November
1, 2001
>>> India accused Pakistan Thursday
of carrying out provocative troop movements near the border in the bitterly
disputed Kashmir region as tension between the nuclear foes mounted.
......
-
U.S. to fight through
Ramadan, bin Laden defiant
-
Stuart Doughty and Sayed Salahuddin,
Reuters, November 1, 2001
>>> The United States cannot afford
to halt its military campaign in Afghanistan for the Muslim fasting month
of Ramadan and is planning to put more troops on the ground, officials
said on Thursday as Osama bin Laden sought to portray the conflict as a
war against Islam. ......
-
The Danger Within:
Militant Islam in America
-
Daniel Pipes, Commentary, November
2001
>>> In the aftermath of the violence
on September 11, American politicians from George W. Bush on down have
tripped over themselves to affirm that the vast majority of Muslims living
in the United States are just ordinary people. Here is how the President
put it during a visit to a mosque on September 17: "America counts millions
of Muslims among our citizens, and Muslims make an incredibly valuable
contribution to our country. ......
Last Article
date:
Fri November 30, 2001
Archived on: Fri November
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