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January Month Articles

January Month Articles

  • Reports of Communist Maoists Turning To Cannibalism In Orissa, India
    • by News Post India
      Maoists are turning cannibals. They eat human flesh to terrorize villagers. This was revealed by the residents of Bandiguda, 45 km from the district headquarters town of Malkangiri. The district police, under the leadership of daredevil SP Satish Kumar Gajbhiye, risked in organizing a community policing programme in a far-flung area, known as the Red Terror Zone of the district. .....
  • Rights groups blame Indian state for land violence
    • by Reuters
      The communist government of an eastern Indian state conspired with party workers accused of killing and raping villagers opposed to selling land for an industrial project, global human rights groups said on Tuesday. .....
  • Motorcycle thief could help expose HuJI network
    • by Vicky Nanjappa
      Mohammed Raziuddin Nasir, a resident of Hyderabad, arrested in Karnataka for his alleged terror links, has turned out to be a prize catch for the police and Intelligence Bureau. .....
  • Putting Jodha Akbar on trial
    • by IBOSNetwork.com
      There might be many issues in the coming months, for which Ashutosh Gowarikar, Hrithik Roshan and crew will be taken to task for in making their Jodha Akbar. Let's get right down to it and address some of them here. .....
  • Hizbul's south Kashmir commander killed in encounter
    • by Mukhtar Ahmad
      With the killing of the group's district commander and three other militants in south Kashmir's Kulgam district on Wednesday, the Kashmir police claim to have eliminated an entire group of the Hizbul Muzahideen operating in the district. .....
  • Buddhadeb a greater fundamentalist: Mahasweta Devi
    • by Rediff.com
      Eminent writer Mahasweta Devi has accused West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee of being a 'greater fundamentalist' who 'had conspired to throw Bangladeshi writer Taslima Nasreen [Images] out of the state' and demanded his resignation. .....
  • Australia to Apologize to Aborigines
    • by Rohan Sullivan
      As a girl, Mari Melito Russell felt out of place. She was darker than the other kids at school, she felt more comfortable in the forest than her suburban home and she had vivid dreams of an Aboriginal woman beckoning her. .....
  • This leader has no followers
    • by Swapan Dasgupta
      The mushrooming of non-official awards resembles a competitive theatre of the absurd. Last Thursday, many Indians must have been as puzzled as me on seeing Prime Minister Manmohan Singh being honoured with a Leader of the Year award by a leading media house. .....
  • India worried about Al-Qaida hold on Pak
    • by Indrani Bagchi
      As Pakistan continues to wallow in instability, India's internal assessment about the internal situation in Pakistan is looking more and more grim. Despite all the protestations from Pakistan's leadership, India has concluded that the Al-Qaida is now in virtual control of Pakistan's tribal areas, and Islamabad and the Pakistan army are making little headway. .....
  • Mahatma Gandhi, Dr B R Ambedkar and Atal Bihari Vajpayee on Christian Missionary Work
    • by Dr T Hanuman Chowdary
      Sri John Dayal and other strident spokespersons of Christian Church and missionaries have faulted Sri Atal Bihari Vajpayee, the Prime Minister, for the public expression of his opinion that the humanitarian services that the Christian missionaries are rendering through their schools and hospital have a conversion motive. .....
  • Family pension for jihadis
    • by Chandan Mitra
      This chat was downloaded from the web. It is a conversation that took place between the commander of a jihadi outfit and a middle-rung functionary operating somewhere in Jammu and Kashmir. To mask their personalities, we decided to call them jihadi 1(J1) and jihadi 2 (J2) respectively. .....
  • Cop's lover runs to police for cover
    • by Mumbai Mirror
      He had turned down marriage proposal from RPF constable girlfriend after their affair turned sour; she and her family are after his life now .....
  • I was administered wrong drugs: Taslima
    • by Sify.com
      Bangladeshi writer Taslima Nasreen, who was admitted to the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) in New Delhi for "suspected drug effect" on January 26, said Wednesday that she had been administered wrong medicines by government deputed doctors leading to the hospitalisation. .....
  • Of SIMI, Jehad and the NE Reach
    • by Bikash Sarmah
      In India, the genesis of Islamist fundamentalism, which has now transformed into a full-fledged jehad, can be traced back to the early forties of the 20th century. It was the Jamaat-e-Islami, founded by the influential Islamist ideologue Syed Abu Ala Maududi in 1941, that first sowed the seeds of a proposed Islamist dominion in pre-Independent India, to be governed by the Sharia. .....
  • Heaven is A Place On Earth
    • by Lisa Miller
      Reincarnation, according to the Merriam-Webster dictionary, is "rebirth in new bodies or forms of life; especially: a rebirth of a soul in a new human body." This ancient belief, a core belief of more than 800 million Hindus, has been in the news, most recently because of allegations in Andrew Morton's new book, "Tom Cruise: An Unauthorized Biography." .....
  • Forgive but never forget history - Rewriting Indian History
    • by Francois Gautier
      Rewriting Indian History is a provocative new book by the French writer Francois Gautier, who currently serves as the political correspondent in India for France's top newspaper, Le Figaro, and for Switzerland's leading daily, Le Nouveau Quotidien. .....
  • Indian musician goes back toroots
    • by OneIndia.in
      For Ustad Aashish Khan tracing his roots and recognising it has made him adopt the ancestral title Debsharma. From now he will be known as Ustad Aashish K Debsharma. Talking to the reporters during his sojourn to the city, he said, "This is an attempt to recoginse the roots or going back to the roots. Present generation of our country are more Westerners than the Westerners themselves. This is my personal choice of using the title Debsharma." .....
  • Life in danger for stepping into male domain
    • by Shiv Charan Singh
      Nazia Tabassum, a history (honours) student from Maulana Azad College, who shot to limelight after her election to Joint Secretary's post of the Ranchi University Students' Union (RUSU) in December 2007, now fears for her life, at the hands of the Anjuman Islamia, a social educational body of the Muslims. .....
  • Where did T R Baalu get engineering degree from?
    • by V Sundaram
      If Lord Rama's credentials as an engineer can be questioned by Dravidian leaders with impunity, then the common people of India would like to put these questions to T R Baalu taking note of his recent letter to A K Antony, Union Defence Minister .....
  • India blocks French move to honour Taslima
    • by Rediff.com
      India has poured cold water on a French government move to present a prestigious award to controversial Bangladeshi author Taslima Nasreen in New Delhi during the upcoming visit of President Nicholas Sarkozy. .....
  • Now, dole for jihadis' kin
    • by The Pioneer
      The Centre has decided to provide a relief package to the dependents of militants killed in encounters with security forces in Jammu and Kashmir. .....
  • Sri Sri inaugurates Exhibition on Sikhism
    • by ArtofLiving.org
      Renowned spiritual leader and founder of the Art of Living, His Holiness Sri Sri Ravi Shankar inaugurated an exhibition on Sikhism titled 'Sikhs, the Defenders of Indian Dharma' at Bangla Sahib Gurudwara, New Delhi. .....
  • Groom locked for no to nikaah
    • by Subhasish Chaudhuri
      Mayapur, Jan. 27: Sometimes a groom has to pay a price for marrying a girl. Shafiq Ali (25) of Nakashipara in Nadia district was made to pay Rs 20,000 for not marrying a girl. He was "detained" for 72 hours and was "released" only after his family paid a compensation of Rs 20,000. .....
  • 'Software shakhas' draw IT pros to RSS
    • by Gautam Siddharth
      The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh is adding colour to India's booming IT sector: saffron. Efforts to induct young, upwardly mobile IT professionals into its fold have gained momentum in "cybercities" across the country: from Pune to Hyderabad, and from Chennai to Noida. .....
  • The myth of Mahatma Gandhi
    • by Arvind Lavakare
      Sixty years ago, today, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi of the Indian National Congress was shot dead. The ensuing flood of tributes hailed the dead man as a martyr, as an apostle of peace, as a version of Jesus Christ, as the deliverer of India's Independence, as the Father of the nation and much else besides such eulogies. .....
  • Why am I proud of India?
    • by Ramananda Sengupta
      Before my posture stiffens and my heart fills with martial pride, as it does every Republic Day when I watch the parade on Delhi's Rajpath, I thought I would take a quick stock of what it means for me to be an Indian. .....
  • ISI hires Dawood to kill Advani, Modi
    • by Rediff.com
      Security around senior Bharatiya Janata Party leader L K Advani and Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi was reviewed on Tuesday following intelligence inputs that global terrorist Dawood Ibrahim has been asked by Pakistan's Inter Services Intelligence to assassinate them. .....
  • Briton admits plot to behead soldier
    • by Mark Trevelyan
      A man has pleaded guilty to a plot to kidnap and kill a Muslim soldier in the army by cutting off his head "like a pig", a court was told on Tuesday. .....
  • Monitor 'red corridor' in NE: Centre
    • by Rituraj Borthakur
      Worried over the gradual extension of the 'red corridor' to the Northeast, the Centre has asked the intelligence agencies to closely monitor the growing network of the Maoists and their nexus with the militant outfits of the region. .....
  • 'I am 27, my life is destroyed'
    • by Dionne Bunsha
      I was around 12 years old when the naxalites started coming to our village. During the meetings [they had with the village residents], they used to say young boys and girls should come forward so that we can bring about the rule of poor people. .....
  • The Forgotten Bangladeshi Genocide
    • by by The Pioneer
      I am always curious about one historical anomaly. Why is the Bangladeshi Genocide never considered in the same light as that of Rwanda, Darfur, Southern Sudan, Congo, Cambodia or other genocides? Why does it not even get a fraction of the attention paid to the Palestinian Question, the Kosovo Question, the Lebanese Question or a host of other minority based problems? I can only point to four reasons why this never hit the headlines. .....
  • Huff and puff
    • by The Pioneer
      Within months of Mr Tony Blair's departure from 10, Downing Street, the British establishment under Labour tutelage has once again begun to flounder on the issue of multiculturalism. .....
  • ISI agents held in Howrah
    • by The Statesman
      Two suspected agents of the Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) were arrested from Shalimar near Shibpur in Howrah last night. .....
  • India pays for Nehru's folly
    • by A Surya Prakash
      Republic Day is a day of celebration, but it also has its poignant moments, especially when the President confers gallantry awards on brave soldiers who lay down their lives in the line of duty. Often those who are honoured are young men in uniform who make the supreme sacrifice while pushing back militants trained in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir and sent into Jammu & Kashmir to indulge in murder and mayhem. .....
  • Jihadis switching to hitech methods
    • by Rajesh Kumar
      Chief Ministers and VVIPs are now on the hit list of Jihadis operating across the country. According to an advisory sent out by National Security Advisor MK Narayanan to Chief Ministers and DGPs, a fresh review of security has been sought as inputs have been received which point to Jihadis using "new wave tactics" to eliminate targets. .....
  • I won't go to France: Taslima
    • by The Times of India
      Noted author Taslima Nasreen has said that she does not intend to travel to Paris to receive the Simone de Beauvoir award. Even though the French government, on the Indian government's suggestion, has extended an invitation to Taslima, the writer feels that if she cannot receive the award certificate in India, she was not keen on going to Paris. .....
  • We are not prepared for May poll: K'taka Cong
    • by The Times of India
      The Congress in Karnataka is not prepared to face the election heat in May and has favoured holding it in October under the new assembly constituencies map stipulated by the Delimitation Commission. This was the consensus reached at a meeting of Union ministers, AICC and CWC members from Karnataka in New Delhi on Friday. .....
  • Attack on Hindu Seer by Evangelical Criminals in Orrisa; 3 arrested
    • by HinduUnity.org
      Tension gripped Orissa's Kandhamal district on Monday after four people were injured in a clash between two communities and an attack on An Aged Saint in two separate incidents, prompting heavy force deployment in sensitive areas, police said. .....
  • Northeast in the ISI net
    • by Nava Thakuria
      The Land of armed movements sustained by the anti-New Delhi separatists' militias has woken up to a new threat from religious fundamentalists fuelled by Pakistan's Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) to make Northeast India a volatile region in the continent. .....
  • 'Bangladesh is Supporting Insurgents: Buddhadeb'
    • by Bartaman
      West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharya complained that Bangladesh was assisting members of terrorist organizations in various places across India & West Bengal. Speaking at a public meeting organized by the Jadavpur Zonal Committee on Saturday evening, he said, 'Bangladesh is becoming a grave problem. Along the long border somewhere religious fundamentalists & elsewhere insurgents are active. .....
  • Islamic school closure a warning to others
    • by The West Australian
      The closure of a Muslim school by the West Australian government was a warning to other Islamic schools, the former head of Australia's peak muslim body says. .....
  • Vigilantes Kill 40 Women in Iraq's South
    • by Sinan Salaheddin
      Religious vigilantes have killed at least 40 women this year in the southern Iraqi city of Basra because of how they dressed, their mutilated bodies found with notes warning against ``violating Islamic teachings,'' the police chief said Sunday. .....
  • SikhGiving's experience with Christian missionaries in Punjab
    • by
      SikhGiving, a small sikh charitable organization was helping a Sikh Patient Jaswinder Singh and his family to cope with their medical costs of approx. $500 a month. "At first we didn't take up the case as we could not afford to support the case for a long period of 3 years", said Vicky Singh, a volunteer of the California based non profit organization. .....
  • CM had asked Mhada chief to explain SRA policy changes
    • by Prafulla Marpakwar and Nauzer Bharucha
      As CEO of the Slum Rehabilitation Authority (SRA), for which he held additional charge, T Chandrashekhar had withdrawn permissions granted to builders for redeveloping 120 slum pockets without seeking the permission of the government, and in particular the chief minister. .....
  • IIT lecture gets biblical tinge, students upset
    • by Hemali Chhapia
      Drawing parallels between the Bible and the Big Bang theory, stating that Christianity is true and Jesus is the way to God, would sound like Benny Hinn speaking on channel God. But this was said in a lecture delivered by Prof H F Schaefer, director of the Center for Computational Chemistry, University of Georgia, at the Techfest of the Indian Institute of Technology on Friday. .....
  • Govt's blue-eyed boy won't 'dive in muck' anymore
    • by Nauzer Bharucha
      He is known to be abrasive, brusque and has a reputation for pushing through infrastructure projects in a tearing hurry. His detractors-many of them in the bureaucracy itself-whisper about his closeness to a certain builder and how he bypasses his superiors and reports directly to the chief minister. .....
  • Slum rehab builders a front for city's politicians
    • by Nauzer Bharucha
      What do the son of a leading state minister, an MLA-turned-builder from the western suburbs, a former housing minister, the son-in-law of a deceased politician, and a senior party leader from Chembur have in common? Each of them has financial stakes in slum redevelopment schemes on public land in Mumbai. .....
  • Angry Mhada chief puts in his papers
    • by Prafulla Marpakwar & Nauzer Bharucha
      Seated in his spacious chamber on the fourth floor of Mhada headquarters in Bandra (east) on Friday afternoon, feisty bureaucrat T Chandrashekhar is busy preparing his biodata and arranging his passport-sized pictures. .....
  • Gujarat Riots- Ignored facts
    • by Manmath Deshpande
      The media- biased against the Sangh Parivar and the BJP- has written horribly about the Gujarat riots. Innocent well-meaning people have fallen prey to the media's evil designs. The Gujarat riots were plain riots- not pogrom' or 'massacre'. .....
  • Assam: Indian National Army, Assam formed to safeguard Assamese
    • by Navajit Bhagawati
      In Insurgency prone Assam, a new outfit has been formed to serve the interest of the local people. The new organisation called, the 'Indian National Army, Assam' (INAA) had been formed to safeguard the state from the grasp of immigrant Bangladeshis as published in the local media recently. .....
  • Who is a secularist?
    • by Free Press Journal
      A leading Mumbai lawyer, Mahesh Jethmalani, has posed the question: Who is a secularist? Writing in a contemporary, Jethmalani prefaced the above by taking note of the desperation of the so-called secularists to deny Narendra Modi credit for the BJP victory in the recent Gujarat Assembly poll. Indeed, he laments the fact that, ostrich-like, the professional Modi-baiters seem to be blaming the people for the outcome in Gujarat. .....
  • Unfazed Cong needles Maya
    • by The Pioneer
      Unfazed by BSP supremo Mayawati's open threat to withdraw support, the Congress has again accused her of misgovernance and demanded a separate State for drought-hit Bundelkhand carved out of Uttar Pradesh. .....
  • No takers for 'unviable' Sethusamudram project
    • by Sam Daniel
      The Sethusamudram controversy will figure in the Supreme Court on Wednesday with the three-month deadline for the Centre's response on the issue coming to an end. .....
  • What makes SC play Jallikattu with Hindus
    • by V Sundaram
      The Supreme Court of India has been consistently inconsistent on vital issues affecting the long cherished hopes, emotions, feelings, sentiments and sensibilities of the common people of India. Yesterday the Supreme Court reversed the ban it had imposed on Jallikattu in the Southern Districts of Tamil Nadu which it had imposed through an order on 11 January, 2008. This has been widely welcomed by the people of Tamil Nadu. .....
  • How US helps fund jihad
    • by Kanchan Gupta
      American Government and military officials have told The New York Times that much of the aid provided by the Bush Administration to Pakistan to fight Al Qaeda and the Taliban has been diverted for Islamabad's jihad against New Delhi. According to The New York Times report, funds have been "diverted to help finance weapons systems designed to counter India" and pay "tens of millions of dollars in inflated Pakistani reimbursement claims for fuel, ammunition and other costs". .....
  • Unholy ways of Holy Missionaries
    • by U. Mahesh Prabhu
      On December 25th when the whole world was celebrating the birth of the Jesus Christ, churches were burning in Gujarat. As per confirmed estimates 11 churches had been burnt. On December 27th Religious leaders in the national capital expressed their anguish over the continuing attacks on the churches in Orissa, saying violence in any form in unacceptable. .....
  • The Secular Road to Hell
    • by Ramananda Sengupta
      I have always wondered how such a seemingly innocuous word has turned into such a politically loaded noun in India. .....
  • ISI spies held at Howrah station
    • by The Times of India
      Tipped off by a retired army jawan, CID sleuths arrested two Bangla-deshi ISI agents from Howrah station on Wednesday. Secret defence documents, videos of fidayeen attacks and two gelatin sticks were found on them. .....
  • Setupatis the royal family who guarded the Rama Setu
    • by Dhananjaya Bhat
      Today when the description of Rama and creation of the Rama Sethu as a myth is creating a furore, it is interesting to note that for thousands of years, there was a royal family in South India with its headquarters at Ramanathapuram near Rameshwaram, known as the Sethupati Rajas or the guardians of the Sethu. .....
  • Nandigram - Lull before another storm?
    • by Sify.com
      Blood-red banners naming "martyrs" and proclaiming "shame on Buddha", walls painted with war cries, trees tied with black and red flags, burnt houses and a broken pathway lead to Nandigram, an ordinary village that turned into an unlikely battleground between communists and local residents protecting their land and livelihood. .....
  • Femme fatales: ISI's new weapon is no fake
    • by Brijesh Pandey
      The Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), Pakistan's dreaded espionage agency, has unleashed a new terror on India: women who courier counterfeit currency. .....
  • Bihar govt to develop country's 'oldest' temple
    • by Deccan Herald
      Referring to the inscriptions found around the temple and different official records, Kunal, who enjoys the rank of a minister of state, said the "temple was constructed in 108 AD and the practice of worship and sacrifice was continuing ever since". .....
  • Girls got property rights in 1800s
    • by Prashant Dayal
      This was one of Ahmedabad's grandest portals of the Muhammedan period, but few know that the Teen Darwaza, known as the finest gates of the ancient Walled city of Ahmedabad, also bears testimony to the liberation that the Maratha rulers gave to the girl child. Indeed an eyeopener to an era, which calls itself modern, but kills daughters in the womb. .....
  • Allah, Jihad and Martyrdom
    • by Emir Reza
      As a very quiet child I seldom harmed myself seriously in playground. Being an only child, my childhood at home was uneventful. My mother used to cook and sometimes do some needle works while I played in my own room. The worst I suffered was a fracture in my arm. This incident happened when I was engaged in my favorite sport of climbing on top of a cabinet. .....
  • Lessons from Pakistan
    • by Sri Sri Ravishankar
      When we retrace our steps in history perhaps we can learn some lessons from the unfortunate situation Pakistan is in today. .....
  • 'We want to offer sharia law to Britain'
    • by Clare Dwyer Hogg and Jonathan Wynne-Jones
      Islamic courts meet every week in the UK to rule on divorces and financial disputes. Clare Dwyer Hogg and Jonathan Wynne-Jones report on demands by senior Muslims that sharia be given legal authority .....
  • Brave, Chief Minister Modi
    • by Kanti B. Patel
      Congratulations to Gujarat BJP Chief Minister Narendra Modi for his spectacular victory in the Gujarat assembly elections (I-W, Dec. 28). He not only defeated Sonia Gandhi's Congress party but also Gujarat's number one enemy, the biased media, which worked very hard for the last five years to paint a negative picture of Modi by blaming the 2002 Gujarat riots on him while ignoring the Godhra train where 60 Hindus were burned alive .....
  • Get rid of communal budget: Modi
    • by Shubhangi Khapre
      BJP's Sunday rally at Shivaji Park set the stage for 2009 elections by projecting Gujarat chief minister Narendra Modi as the political role model capable of stoking passion through acerbic speeches on matters ranging from good governance to communalism. .....
  • HC seeks govt reply on plea against Sachar report
    • by Vikas Pathak
      The Delhi High Court has asked the Union Government to file its reply by February 7 on a PIL seeking a direction against the implementation of the Sachar Committee report. .....
  • An all-Christian village in Gujarat
    • by Nayan Dave
      You can't help raise an eyebrow when residents of Wallacepur introduce themselves. "Cecil Patel," says one as he shakes your hand, "Walter Dilojan Patel," another introduces himself. Wallacepur is the only Christian village in Gujarat. All of its 500-odd residents are Protestants. .....
  • Lanka banks on Ramayana to woo tourists
    • by Ashish Sinha
      Politicians may spar in India over whether Ram Setu was more than a figment of Valmiki's imagination but for neighbouring Sri Lanka, the Ramayana legends are an article of faith. .....
  • 'Conversions not out of choice'
    • by The Pioneer
      Appearing before the team of National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) on Friday, Swami Lakshmanananda Saraswati said that not a single person was converted to Christianity out of his choice. "They always adopt a means of allurement and fear to force and persuade innocent people to change religion," he said, adding that he was prepared for an open debate on this issue with any one. .....
  • Antiquity of Ramayan verified
    • by Sri Nandanandana Das
      As of late, in the year 2007, the idea of whether Lord Rama exists or not has been called into question, by no less than some of the politicians in India. So it is a wonder how such persons can be accepted as leaders of the people of India who should be concerned with preserving and protecting the culture of the country. .....
  • Jaish founder Azhar now fights Pak forces as ISI loses control
    • by The Indian Express
      Jaish-e-Muhammad founder Maulana Masood Azhar has broken free from ISI control and joined hands with other militants to fight Pakistani forces in the tribal area of Bajaur or nearby Dir where he is believed to be hiding, The New York Times reported today, quoting a former Pakistani intelligence official. .....
  • Putting value to values
    • by Anuj Kumar
      The serial that used to bring India to a halt in the late '80s is back in a new avatar. Yes, Ramayan is back two decades after it revolutionised television viewing in the country to woo the new generation. Again produced by Sagar Arts, it is going to be the flagship show of the new general entertainment channel NDTV Imagine to be launched on January 21. .....
  • State minorities panel wants ban on entry of Rushdie, Taslima
    • by The Indian Express
      The Maharashtra State Minorities Commission has demanded a ban on the entry of controversial writers Salman Rushdie and Taslima Nasreen into the country on the ground that they are hurting the religious sentiments of Muslims. .....
  • Swiping Reforms
    • by Amarnath K. Menon
      Tokala Rajita, 20, is challenged. But the deaf and dumb daughter of Kondal Reddy, a farm worker of Dharmasagar, needs no help in collecting her social security payout. All she has to do is turn up with a plastic card at the home of customer service provider (CSP) G. Vijayalakshmi, in this dusty village in Warangal district. .....
  • Rampur at the centre
    • by Abhinav Kumar
      The brave men, and increasingly women, who serve in the CRPF have begun to read the acronym as the 'Chalte Raho Pyare Force'. It expresses their exasperation and fatigue at the heavy and persistent burden of internal security that the CRPF bears, rushing its companies across the country from one flash point to another. .....
  • Tamil Nadu police bust LTTE cell, murder plot in India
    • by Jaya Menon
      The Tamil Nadu police have claimed to have thwarted an assassination bid on Indian soil, arresting eight Sri Lankan nationals, including a key member of the LTTE's intelligence wing, from suburban Madipakkam. Their target, according to the police, was the rival group member and Eelam People's Revolutionary Liberation Front (EPRLF) leader, Varadaraja Perumal, who has been living incognito in India since the Tigers put him high on the hitlist. .....
  • Can't go to Kolkata, Centre tells Taslima
    • by Arindam Sarkar
      The External Affairs Ministry has informed Bangladeshi writer Taslima Nasreen that she cannot return to Kolkata because of security reasons. .....
  • Is 'socialist' still valid in preamble, asks plea
    • by Malathi Nayak
      Thirty-one years after India rewrote its Constitution to call itself a "sovereign, socialist, secular democratic republic", this amendment has been challenged in the Supreme Court by a not for-profit organisation that is questioning the validity of introducing the word 'socialist'. .....
  • India's govenrment pledges help for Christian dalits
    • by Catholic World News
      In India the National Coordination Committee for Dalit Christians-- a joint program of the Catholic bishops' conference of India and other Church groups-- has hailed the government's assurance to end the discrimination against Christian dalits. .....
  • 7 Manipuri militants held
    • by The Times of India
      Two cadres of the banned People's Revolutionary Party for Kangleipak (PREPAK)'s Shanti group and their five accomplices were arrested from Jadavpur's Bapujinagar area early on Thursday. .....
  • End to Tribalism
    • by The Pioneer
      Despite the rhetorical cries of "betrayal" by the leaders of the Gujjar protesters in Rajasthan, it is difficult to disagree with the logic of the Justice Jasraj Chopra Committee, which has just submitted its report on the community's demand for Scheduled Tribe status. The Chopra panel has contended that, given current socio-economic realities, the very notion of according Gujjars ST status is open to question. .....
  • The aid curse
    • by Deven Kapur
      Democracy suffered a string of setbacks in 2007, many thanks to oil. Gushing oil revenues helped Vladimir Putin consolidate authoritarian rule in Russia, Hugo Chávez expand populism in Venezuela and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad confront the West. All the while, an analogous force was at work in Pakistan. For more than 50 years, Pakistan has reaped its own unearned manna, which has filled its coffers and kept its fragile state afloat. .....
  • Ulema angry with Godrejs for hosting Rushdie
    • by The Indian Express
      The All India Ulema Council on Thursday asked Parmeshwar Godrej to apologise to Muslims for hosting controversial author Salman Rushdie, failing which it would ask community members to boycott the company's products. .....
  • Games from ancient India on display at Xavier's
    • by Hindustan Times
      Vikram Jaiswal was goggle-eyed when he discovered that one of his favourite cyber games had roots way back in the 6th century BCE (Before Common Era). The second-year commerce student was one of the 200-odd visitors who came to know about the ancient games exhibit put up by St Xavier College's department of the Ancient Indian Culture in the campus on Thursday. .....
  • UPA guaranteed 100 days of work to poor, over 96% didn't get it, says first audit
    • by Ravish Tiwari & Ganesh Pandey
      Building a "Republic of Work," that's how the UPA government's latest advertisement showcases its most ambitious Rs 12,000-crore flagship National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme. Under this, households in 200 of the poorest districts in the country are promised, by law, to a maximum of 100 days employment at wages not below Rs 60 per day. .....
  • A dangerous mix
    • by Soumyajit Pattnaik
      What does it take to create a communal flashpoint? Some answers are obvious: a precipitating incident, simmering tensions be tween two religious communities and initial administrative failure to cope with the flare-up. .....
  • The Oracles Of Devi
    • by Madhavi Tata
      The family purohit, the medium of communication with the Almighty for most Hindus, conforms to a stereotyped image-dhoti-clad, sacred thread across the chest, a smear of turmeric/sandalwood paste/ash on the forehead, and a tongue that unleashes an avalanche of shlokas and mantras. He is also usually defined by two crucial words: Brahmin; Male. .....
  • The circle of creativity
    • by Amitabh Srivastava
      Did you know tikuli or bindi, as it is popularly called, takes an expert to make it? An ancient craft of the Mughal times, it involved melting glass, adding colours, tracing patterns out of it and thereafter embellishing it with gold-leaves to create the dot that defines the Indian woman even today. .....
  • The 'Q' factor
    • by The Asian Age
      Italian businessman Ottavio Quattrocchi must be a happy man. For no government in the world could have spent as much money and time to defend a foreign national wanted for questioning in a defence scandal, in this case the Bofors howitzer case, that brought down a government in India. The Central Bureau of Investigation spent lakhs of rupees to chase Mr Quattrocchi across the world, and returned each time without the gentleman in question. .....
  • 'Secular' Muslims want Taslima back in Kolkata
    • by Sify.com
      A section of secular Muslims on Monday spearheaded a move to bring controversial Bangladeshi writer Taslima Nasreen back to the city from where she was shunted out by West Bengal's ruling communists following street riots late last year. .....
  • The ISI connection, magnified
    • by Anil Bhat
      If the Ulfa began 2007 by giving the ISI a macabre New Year's gift by way of killing Biharis and Hindi-speaking people in Assam, then at the end of that year it presented a "bonus" by adding at least two more groups - Karbis and Adivasis - to Assam's terror network. .....
  • Crass minorityism
    • by The Pioneer
      That's what the UPA is up toThe Chief Ministers of BJP-ruled States have done well to oppose the sinister proposal of allocating 15 per cent of funds during the 11th Plan period for 'minority welfare'. Decoded into politically incorrect parlance, this means squandering public funds on crass minorityism and facilitating the Congress's obnoxious vote-bank politics at the expense of tax-payers. .....
  • Belgium Arrests 14 in Plan to Free Bomb Plotter
    • by Stephen Castle
      The Belgian authorities detained 14 people they described as Islamic extremists on Friday, saying they planned to use explosives to free a Qaeda sympathizer jailed for plotting an attack on an American air base. They said raids in 15 locations, mostly in Brussels, had turned up explosives and arms. .....
  • Obnoxious pandering
    • by Tarun Vijay
      Threat to part, communalise the most secular aspects of life, inflame and see the results resting on a couch till the final hour arrives. That's the Jinnah theory, propounded by the non-practising Muslim, who created and led a frenzy resulting in our motherland's Partition. .....
  • Why do they hate her so?
    • by Saswat Panigrahi
      Driven out of West Bengal after Left Front chairman Biman Bose indirectly declared her as persona non grata -- "if Ms Taslima Nasreen's stay disturbs the atmosphere of peace in the State, she must leave," Mr Bose had said -- the dissident Bangladeshi writer has already spent three weeks in virtual house arrest in an undisclosed place in Delhi. .....
  • Cleanse Kerala's temples of politics
    • by The New Indian Express
      The Justice Paripoornan Commission report on all that is wrong at Sabarimala, Kerala's famed hill shrine, can indeed make a difference if even 50 per cent of its 79 recommendations are imbibed in letter and spirit. But we prefer to stay on a realistic plane, at least until the first 10 suggestions are adopted and implemented; the rest can follow soon after. .....
  • Pastor Kent Brandenburg Attacks Sikh Religion
    • by Mygurdwara.com
      It is a general fact that the story of Jesus as presented in the four gospels of the New Testament is essentially a piece of fiction because there are not authentic references to such a figure in the works of any historians of the early 1st century. The pre-gospel writings of the early Christians also make no reference to the life and teachings of a recent historical Jesus. .....
  • A flat promise for Muslims
    • by The Statesman
      Chief minister Mr Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee today said that the state government was contemplating a policy to ensure reservation of flats for Muslims in the various townships that were coming up in the state. Details of the policy were being worked out, he said. .....
  • Banished Within & Without
    • by Taslima Nasreen
      Although I was not born an Indian, there is very little about my appearance, my tastes, my habits and my traditions to distinguish me from a daughter of the soil. Had I been born some years earlier than I was, I would have been an Indian in every sense of the term. .....
  • Unlike poll surveys, RBI statistics favour Modi
    • by Harit Mehta
      The verdict on who will rule Gujarat for the next five years will be out on Sunday. Most surveys suggest the going could be tough for the current chief minister Narendra Modi, but statistics suggest the state has done well under him on a number of parameters. .....
  • Rally demands return of Taslima to Kolkata
    • by Mahasweta Devi
      Demanding the return of the exiled Bangladeshi writer Taslima Nasreen to Kolkata, several civil society organisations took out a rally here on Saturday. .....
  • 'Focus on big picture was Modi's brief'
    • by Sushil Pandit
      Narendra Modi brie-fed me sometime in May, just before he was leaving for South Korea. Then, he was in the middle of his campaign, crisscrossing the state with scores of mahila sammelans, van-bandhu sammelans, sagar-khedu sammelans. .....
  • UPA trying to divide India
    • by Sandhya Jain
      If the British used communal electorates to secure Partition in barely four decades, the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance may succeed faster in eating the fruit of its desire to allocate 15 per cent of the funds for development and welfare schemes exclusively for minorities. .....
  • 975 die at Catholic healing centre
    • by Naveen Nair
      The Divine Retreat Centre in Kerala's Muringoor's claim to fame is that it is the largest Catholic healing centre in the world. It's catch line: come away by yourself to a lonely place and rest a while. .....
  • Babudom brings war hero to tears
    • by The Telegraph
      An elderly and ailing war hero whose pension had been stopped because he had no bank account was thrown out of a government office in Nadia when he went for a certificate of his being alive. .....
  • 'Dawood funded Hyderabad blasts'
    • by Vicky Nanjappa
      The investigation into the three bomb blasts at Hyderabad has taken a new turn with the narco analysis test of an accused revealing that fugitive gangster Dawood Ibrahim [Images] funded both the Mecca Masjid and twin blasts in Hyderabad earlier this year. The revelation that Dawood spent crores of rupees on the blasts was made by Majid, the youngest brother of Shahid Bilal, the HuJI operative, who is a prime suspect in the blasts. .....
  • The Color of Law On the Pope, Paternalism and Purifying the Savages
    • by David A. Love
      During his recent trip to Latin America, Pope Benedict XVI offended millions when he arrogantly suggested that Catholicism had purified indigenous populations, and called the resurgence of indigenous religions a step backward. He also said the native populations were longing for Christianity, and had welcomed the Catholic priests at the time of European conquest. .....
  • Orissa probes Maoist hand in violence
    • by Himansu S. Sahoo
      After evidence of Maoist involvement in certain incidents of violence in Kandhamal district, the Orissa government has started enquiring the activities of several foreign-funded NGOs in the district and their alleged links with the Maoist groups. .....
  • Rama Setu: Govt. affidavit will be delayed, Ambika Soni's advice to DMK MPs
    • by Maalai Murasu
      In Supreme Court… Rama Setu: Govt. affidavit will be delayed, Central Govt. hesitant because of coming Karnataka elections Since assembly elections are due to be held in Karnataka state, Central Government is likely to delay the submission of their affidavits on Rama Setu case pending in Supreme Court. .....
  • Yoga made part of school syllabus
    • by Suchandana Gupta
      BJP-ruled Madhya Pradesh will introduce yoga in the school curriculum from the next academic session beginning April. This was announced by chief minister Shivraj Singh Chauhan on Saturday at a surya namaskar yoga programme for students in Bhopal. .....
  • Vasundhara was wise on Taslima
    • by Lokpal Sethi
      If Vasundhara Raje led BJP government in Rajasthan had not acted timely and wisely, Bangladeshi writer Taslima Nasreen, who was literally thrown out from Kolkata by CPM led Left Front Government in West Bengal, would have faced enormous hardships. .....
  • Critics of Saudi Academy Say Textbooks Promote Intolerance
    • by The Washington Post
      Some textbooks used by an Islamic school in Fairfax County contain language intolerant of Jews and other groups as well as passages that could be construed as advocating violence, according to two reviews of the materials. .....
  • Hindu up against Sharia
    • by The Statesman
      Malaysia's highest court today rejected on technicalgrounds an appeal by an ethnic Indian Hindu woman to stop her Muslim convert husband from seeking a divorce in the Islamic Sharia court, while upholding the man's right to change the religion of their youngest son. The petition of Ms R Subashini(29) was rejected by the Federal Court as she had filed it within three months of the conversion of her husband, Mr Saravanan Thangathoray alias Mohammed Shafi Abdullah(32). .....
  • Seer defends Naveen govt
    • by Lalmohan Patnaik
      Describing the spate of violence in Kandhamal as a "natural reaction", Swami Laxmananda Saraswati today gave a clean chit to the Naveen Patnaik administration, saying that no government could have controlled such a "backlash". .....
  • Boy's dying declaration alleges torture by Christian missionaries
    • by Omer Farooq
      The Hyderabad Police has booked a case of mysterious death after a missing boy was admitted to a hospital in a critical condition by three unknown people who later disappeared from the scene. The 12-year-old boy Mohammed Arshad later died in the Osmania Hospital. .....
  • On this Winter Solstice, I am a Gujarati
    • by Rajeev Srinivasan
      The Gujarat election results were announced on a very appropriate day: the day after Winter Solstice, the beginning of the movement of the Sun towards the north. Uttarayanam is auspicious, a time of new beginnings; this is the time for which the aged Bhishma waited, in excruciating pain on the sara-sayya, bed of arrows. If we are lucky, we will be seeing a new beginning in the Indian political scenario as well. .....
  • Antidote to all formulas
    • by Balbir K Punj
      It seems the issue of development is a greater devil for the Congress to fear than Mr Narendra Modi or the BJP. Well, that is the lesson the Congress is repeatedly underlining in its post-election breast-beating. If the people of Gujarat have voted for development, the Congress should welcome it. .....
  • Muslim leader threatens street protests if Taslima returns
    • by DNA (Daily News & Analysis)
      An influential Muslim leader on Friday threatened violent street protests if Bangladesh writer Taslima Nasreen returns to this metropolis and demanded an apology from her for her allegedly derogatory comments against Islam. .....
  • Benazir Bhutto Killed by the real Pakistan
    • by Andrew C. McCarthy
      Aspirants to the American presidency should hope to score so highly in the United States. In Pakistan, though, the al-Qaeda emir easily beat out that country's current president, Pervez Musharraf, who polled at 38 percent. .....
  • Indefensible delay
    • by Coomi Kapoor
      A governor has written to Defence Minister A.K. Antony protesting that the Indian Army has not renewed the contract of some 30 lecturers who give discourses on various aspects of the Hindu religion to army jawans in different parts of the country. .....
  • Investigate Western, Christian charities
    • by Sandhya Jain
      Teresa betrayed those who generously supported her work because they did not realize how her twisted premises chocked all efforts to alleviate misery. Most donations simply remained in her bank accounts. The world now needs to know through a multi-nation enquiry. .....
  • Houston's Kusum Vyas takes "Save Ram Sethu Campaign" to Bali
    • by India Herald
      "As world leaders contemplate upon the ways to save the earth's environment, all responsible citizens of the global community must recognize that dredging and destroying Ram Sethu to create a ship channel in the region of the Gulf of Mannar translates into an ecological disaster" is the concern expressed by Dr. Kusum Vyas, the founder of "Save Ram Sethu Campaign" at Bali in Indonesia on Dec.15. .....
  • 'Let us all salute Narendra Modi'
    • by Arvind Lavakare
      Arvind Lavakare may be 71, but the fire in his belly burns stronger than in many people half his age. The economics post-graduate worked with the Reserve Bank of India and several private and public sector companies before retiring in 1997. His first love, however, remains sports. .....
  • Kerala CM first Marxist leader to visit Sabarimala
    • by The Times of India
      Creating history by becoming the first Marxist leader to visit the famed Sabarimala temple, 84-year-old Kerala Chief Minister V S Achuthanandan trekked an eight-km-long dense forest route to have a first hand knowledge of the problems faced by the devotees. .....
  • Farmers hook on to the net to reap a rich harvest
    • by Deborah Grey
      Standing in the middle of his vineyard with a laptop in hand, 30-year-old Sandeep Khode is perhaps the face of the new techno-savvy Indian farmer, who gets expert agricultural advice by posting queries online at www.aaqua.org. .....
  • Silent Jindal jolts university
    • by K.P. Nayar
      The bodies of the two Indian students murdered on the Louisiana State University (LSU) campus last week are expected to be repatriated to Hyderabad on Tuesday or Wednesday, notwithstanding a complete lack of support in the case by the incoming state administration headed by Indian-American Bobby Jindal. .....
  • Lakhs of sadhus in capital; demand Setusamduram scalp
    • by The New Indian Express
      Buoyed by the saffron surge in Gujarat, the Sangh Parivar on Sunday stepped up pressure on the Ram Setu issue with a huge VHP rally demanding scrapping of the controversial Setusamduram project. .....
  • Modi, a hero
    • by NotanOserver.rediffiland.com
      Though I also operate within the realms of Indian English media, though I am aware of its "pseudo-secular" credentials, I was baffled by the kind of lop-sided, anti-Modi coverage of the Gujarat elections, especially in the electronic media. .....
  • She resorted to anti-Indianism to please voters
    • by Francois Gautier
      Prime Minister Manmohan Singh described Benzair Bhutto as 'one of the outstanding leaders of our sub-continent, who always looked for reconciliation between India and Pakistan'. .....
  • Gujarat polls: The assertion of entrepreneurs
    • by R Vaidyanathan
      The election results of Gujarat have been analysed by the losers, namely the poll forecasters and other assorted media experts, most of whom had egg on their face. The real loser, namely the Congress Party, as usual declared victory for Sonia and Rahul. Then there was a cacophony of voices regarding inane things like Hindutva/ Moditva, etc. .....
  • A wake-up call to Hindus Oppression in Malaysia
    • by Prakash Singh
      In Malaysia, persons of Indian origin-Hindus, to be precise-have been economically marginalised. They are mostly at the bottom of the ladder. Article 153 of the Malaysian Constitution provides special privileges for Malayans only. Politically, they hardly count. They wanted to organise a rally to ventilate their grievances, but were denied permission by the police. .....
  • Message from Gujarat
    • by Prafull Goradia
      The return of Mr Narendra Modi as Chief Minister of Gujarat has a historic significance far beyond the debates about his election. Go back to Japan at the end of World War II in 1945, China on the morrow of Mao Zedong's successful revolution in 1949 and India's independence in 1947. .....
  • Nanotechnology not new to India, says Nobel laureate
    • by The Hindu
      Nanotechnology might be of raging interest to scientists world-over now. But Indians had used nano materials in the 16th century "unwittingly" and enabled Arab blacksmiths in making "Damascus steel sword" which was stronger and sharper. .....
  • 'Gospel of Wealth' Facing Scrutiny
    • by Eric Gorski
      The message flickered into Cindy Fleenor's living room each night: Be faithful in how you live and how you give, the television preachers said, and God will shower you with material riches. .....
  • Islamists in the other Europe
    • by Praveen Swami
      As radical Islam gathers momentum in western Europe, concerns grow in east and central Europe. .....
  • Kashmiri Pandits to intensify struggle for separate homeland
    • by Neeraj Santoshi
      This year end, Kashmiri Pandits from various parts of the country will meet in New Delhi to intensify their struggle for a separate homeland in the Valley, according to Panun Kashmir, an organisation of the exiled community. .....
  • Can Pakistan survive?
    • by Sushant Sareen
      Lt Gen Asad Durrani, the former ISI chief, dismisses these conspiracy theories as nonsense. He argues that no military commander will ever get hundreds of his troops killed and allow a situation to develop where large parts of the country go out of control of the state. He also defended his former organisation, ISI, by saying that it is silly to talk of the ISI as a state within a state. .....
  • Pakistan's lost frontier
    • by Sushant Sareen
      Nearly half a dozen of my cousins who are officers in the Army have quit in the last year", revealed a Pashtun journalist friend. According to another Pashtun journalist, who has been reporting the Islamist insurgency from ground-zero, there have been many desertions from the paramilitary forces (the Frontier Corp and Tribal Levies). .....
  • Let there be shari'ah!
    • by Sushant Sareen
      Education Minister and former ISI chief Gen Javed Ashraf Qazi is convinced that using the Army in a half-hearted manner will be counterproductive, and if the Army has to be deployed against the extremists and jihadis, then it must use all the force under its command to end the menace of extremism once and for all. .....
  • Islamists taking over Pakistan
    • by Sushant Sareen
      If Pakistan is an Islamic country, what is your objection to imposing shari'ah as is being demanded by the mullahs? As a believer, why are you afraid of shari'ah law?" I asked a former editor of an Urdu daily and currently the host of a TV programme. His answer: "As an Indian, you obviously would like to see Pakistan go into the Stone Age". .....
  • Study points to 500 BC Kerala maritime activity
    • by C. Gouridasan Nair
      Thiruvananthapuram: Kerala, or what later came to comprise it, may have had maritime contacts with far off lands as far back in time as 500 BC or even earlier, archaeological studies now suggest. .....
  • Local factors led to Kandhamal violence
    • by Ram Madhav
      For days, one TV Channel ran visuals of how Christians have been targeted for violence in Orissa's Kandhamal district. Several other so-called national channels too joined the chorus sufficient enough for Mombattiwalas (candlelight activists) to plunge into the ring and declare that 'entire Orissa', if not 'entire India', is in the grip of violence unleashed against 'innocent minorities' by 'Hindu nationalists'. .....
  • Throw Taslima out, Muslim leaders tell govt
    • by Nagendar Sharma
      Seven top Muslim religious organisations have asked the central government not to extend the visa of controversial Bangladeshi writer, Taslima Nasreen, and have decided to meet Prime Minister Manmohan Singh seeking strict action against her for hurting the religious sentiments of Indians. .....
  • Dredging projects remain on paper despite plan support
    • by The Economic Times
      Dredging sector seems to have received the least attention during the 10th Five Year Plan period as none of the major port deepening projects envisaged for the time frame has taken off. Quite oblivious of the reality, the present 11th 5-Year Plan (2007-12) plan document talks eloquently of the need for 'substantial capacity augmentation at major and minor ports'. .....
  • Return to the raaga
    • by Jaya Menon
      Every winter, as the clammy air turns into a wispy breeze, Chennai, a city often troubled by the torrent of change, loses itself in the comfort of an 80-year-old tradition. In music halls (sabhas) scattered across the city, techies from Silicon Valley and maamis in glittering temple jewellery, settle down in chairs. The chatter subsides, all eyes turn to the stage-and in the touch of the bow on the strings of a violin, the silence scatters. .....
  • After Ballia debacle, Maya turns heat on Brahmins
    • by The Times of India
      Dropping the bonhomie rhetoric that saw BSP drawing in Brahmin votes and leaders in last year's election, UP chief minister Mayawati has trained her guns on Brahmins, holding them responsible for the party's debacle in Ballia by-election. In a huff, she announced the dissolution of all the Vaishya and Brahmin bhaichara samitis, which were formed to bring the trading community and Brahmins close to BSP. .....
  • 23 surgeries, then yoga
    • by T Surendar
      Usha Devi walks with a noticeable limp but it is her pleasant smile that is distracting. You will find no outward evidence of the two road accidents that nearly destroyed her. She can now squat on her haunches, something her doctors told her would never be possible. She can even do the headstand, with a little help. You suggest miracle, she quickly corrects you. "Hard work and yoga.'' .....
  • Shukla guilty of flouting Guj poll code: EC
    • by The Times of India
      The Election Commission has held Congress MP Rajeev Shukla guilty of violation of the model code of conduct for his remarks against Gujarat chief minister Narendra Modi during the assembly polls in the state and advised him to be more cautious in the future. .....
  • Good News From Bihar
    • by Ramesh Thakur
      For the past decade, annual visits to family in Bihar, including this December, have served as a solid reality check against the glitter and glamour of Tokyo, London and New York. No matter how dismal the situation in the state and sophisticated our lifestyle overseas, Bihar is home and continues to pull at the heart strings. .....
  • Cong sees red at Maya's I-T relief, FM mum
    • by The Times of India
      The order of the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) that could legitimise UP chief minister Mayawati's valuable properties including bungalows in Delhi and crores in lockers has drawn flak from diverse quarters, with many expressing apprehension that it could dent the very basis of the Anti-Corruption Act. .....
  • Maha idea 'outrages' V-Cs
    • by Hemali Chhapia
      The state plan to ask universities to plough back their reserves into the state kitty surfaced in a closeddoor interaction held by governor S M Krishna in which he met vice-chancellors of all state universities. CM V Deshmukh, higher and technical education minister Dilip Walse-Patil and minister of state for higher education Suresh Shetty were also present. .....
  • In an antique land
    • by Dilip Patel
      An ancient township, nearly 2,200 years old, has been located buried under the Mahadev Mandir's dry jungles on the Bhuj-Nakhatrana road, 35 km from Bhuj in north-west Gujarat. .....
  • I am a victim of politics, says Taslima
    • by The Indian Express
      Comparing her stay in Delhi to house arrest, Bangladeshi writer Taslima Nasreen has alleged that even visits by her friends and relatives are monitored by the authorities. "This existence cannot be called living," she has said in an e-mail titled "how I am surviving" sent to her friends here. .....
  • Husband of dead Malaysian woman fights for her faith
    • by The Mumbai Mirror
      The Christian husband of a dead Malaysian woman sought to stop Islamic authorities on Thursday from giving her a Muslim funeral amid a dispute over whether she converted to Islam before her death. .....
  • Offensive proselytisation is the problem
    • by Sandhya Jain
      Orissa alone received Rs. 128.95 crores of foreign funds for the activities of 1005 mainly missionary organisations there in the year 2005, according to Home Ministry figures. Mr. Graham Staines and his wife Gladys were among these missionaries whose dubious activities in the state were funded by foreign governments to serve a larger agenda. .....
  • Caliphate of Pakistan
    • by Sandhya Jain
      The assassination of a charismatic but flawed leader has disguised the reality of a Pakistan that is emerging as a critical geo-political hub in an increasingly multi-polar world. So far unrecognised, the 'Caliphate of Pakistan' is adroitly positioning itself in an uncomprehending world. Mercifully, India has recognised the security implications for itself. .....
  • Shiv Sena leader killed in Jawhar
    • by Ram Parmar
      A senior Shiv Sena leader was brutally beaten to death by a group of people after he tried to prevent them from teasing a girl during a circus show at Jawhar on the New Year night. .....
  • Lalu's sons thrashed for alleged eve-teasing
    • by The Times of India
      Two sons of Railway Minister Lalu Prasad got into trouble for allegedly indulging in eve-teasing on New Year's eve and were beaten up by unidentified youths in south Delhi. .....
  • Don't embrace China blindly
    • by G. Pathasarathy
      Prime Minister Manmohan Singh commences his diplomatic calendar for 2008 with a mid-January visit to China. The Chinese are perfect hosts. Meetings and banquets in the Great Hall of the People, sumptuous meals of 'Peking Duck' and visits to the Great Wall and the Forbidden City leave Indian leaders breathless, enthralled and prone to making tall claims of the 'breakthroughs' and 'successes' they have achieved. .....
  • The reader is beginning to count
    • by The Hoot
      And the Hindu's Reader's Editor finally took note of the murmurings about the newspaper's coverage of Nandigram. A Hoot editorial on small victories in the battle for media accountability. .....
  • Gujaratis in Kenya: Modi writes 2nd letter to PM
    • by NDTV.com
      Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday shot off a second letter to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh requesting him to take immediate action for safety of people of Gujarati origin living in strife-torn African country of Kenya, official sources said. .....
  • We aren't that different
    • by Ajoy Bose
      India can seek pride from its progress when viewed in contrast to the slump of our western neighbour. Yet, instead of gloating over it, let the country be sobered by the fact that the fundamental catalysts that have caused Pakistan its misery are present in India as well .....
  • Bangla, Myanmar aiding ultras of NE: AR
    • by Sanjoy Ray
      Asserting that a host of militant outfits active in the North East region, including the proscribed United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) have taken refuge in the neighbouring countries like Myanmar and Bangladesh, Director General of Assam Rifles Paramjit Singh today said that Assam Rifles has urged the respective Governments of the neighbouring countries to deal with the matter effectively before the scenario aggravates. .....
  • B'deshis carrying on businesses, working illegally: BSF
    • by The Assam Tribune
      The arrest of two Bangladeshi nationals at Lantilla in Jaintia Hills district of Meghalaya has opened a new window on how Bangladeshis have been carrying on businesses and working in the major towns of the State. .....
  • What is erotic and what is art?
    • by Dr. Srinivasan Kalyanaraman
      What is erotic and what is art? If s'ivalinga is seen as an erotic representation of a human male reproductory organ, it will look erotic to the so-called purveyor of freedom of _expression who has a perverted notion of sex and sexuality. And, there are thousands of temples (devalaya) where s'ivalinga is worshipped by millions of Hindu. .....
  • UPA dips into SC, OBC funds to pay for 'Muslims first' policy
    • by Rajeev Ranjan Roy
      In a blatant discrimination, the Centre has reduced the fund allocation for the welfare of Scheduled Castes and Other Backward Classes by Rs 3,000 crore in the 11th Five-Year Plan, but trebled the allocation for the minorities to Rs 1,400 crore per annum against Rs 500 crore. .....
  • Rampur attack inside job, claim UP cops
    • by Preetam Srivastava/Rakesh K. Singh
      Logistical support to the terror module that carried out the 1/1 early morning raid at the Group Centre of CRPF in Rampur, Uttar Pradesh, was allegedly provided by an insider within the force, according to the initial investigation of the State police. .....
  • The Muslim rule of Spain
    • by Christopher Howse
      But I must say I was annoyed by another claim she made in her review of Spencer's book. This is something one hears all the time. "In Muslim Spain," she wrote, "relations between the three religions of Abraham were uniquely harmonious in medieval Europe." .....
  • Is 'socialist' still valid in preamble, asks plea
    • by Malathi Nayak
      Thirty-one years after India rewrote its Constitution to call itself a "sovereign, socialist, secular democratic republic", this amendment has been challenged in the Supreme Court by a not for-profit organisation that is questioning the validity of introducing the word 'socialist'. .....
  • 150 producers wait for release of their one movie this Friday
    • by Nitin Patil
      This Friday, an unusual movie will hit the screens. As many as 150 people-among them students, doctors and engineers from all over Maharashtra-have pooled in money to make the full-length feature film in Hindi, Humne Jeena Seekha Liya. .....
  • Programmes initiated, not implemented
    • by J.S. Rajput
      The educational initiatives taken in 2007 generated more controversies than confidence. Educational planning and programme implementation over the last couple of years have received far more criticism for their failures than appreciation for their achievements. .....
  • Rise of the religious amusement park
    • by Priyanka P. Narain
      When twilight descends, the voice of Bollywood actor Amrish Puri rises over the waves from the nearby sea, and the show begins. Tracing back several millenia, Puri narrates the story of Somnath, the temple that houses the oldest Shiva lingam in India. .....
  • Fears not unfounded (Letter to Editor)
    • by M Krishnamachary
      Narendra Modi's election victory is a positive sign for India's future. A few months back, I went to Gujarat to make a presentation to the board of directors of a large state-owned public sector company for a project proposal. I was pleasantly surprised to find that they spent a lot of time and had come prepared with a thorough background study. .....
  • Modism does work (Letter to Editor)
    • by N S Venkataraman
      Narendra Modi's election victory is a positive sign for India's future. A few months back, I went to Gujarat to make a presentation to the board of directors of a large state-owned public sector company for a project proposal. I was pleasantly surprised to find that they spent a lot of time and had come prepared with a thorough background study. .....
  • Pakistan turmoil raises security fears in Gujarat
    • by The Times of India
      There is no point chest-thumping that Gujarat has been successful in its war against terror. If terrorists did not damage Gujarat to the extent feared after the 2002 riots, they targeted Gujaratis in Mumbai. .....
  • Blinking in terror radar
    • by Haidar Naqvi
      The Fidayeen (suicide) attack at the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) camp in Rampur on marks a paradigm shift in strategy and tactics of the jehadi groups, hell bent on making Uttar Pradesh their major theatre of operation. .....
  • What more is needed to stoke reaction?
    • by Arun Shourie
      The Task Force on Border Management, one of the four that were set up in the wake of the Kargil War, reported with alarm about the way madrassas had mushroomed along India's borders. On the basis of information it received from intelligence agencies, it expressed grave concern at the amount of money these madrassas were receiving from foreign sources. .....
  • Taslima frets in 'house arrest'
    • by The Times of India
      The Centre has told controversial Bangladeshi writer Taslima Nasreen that she will have to stay put where she is and would not be allowed to return to Kolkata under any circumstances. .....
  • Niazi's book mocks Jamaat's claim
    • by Zayadul Ahsan and Shakhawat Liton
      An account of events chronicled by the commander of Pakistani occupying forces in 1971 renders rather untrue Jamaat-e-Islami Bangladesh's vehement claim that they were not involved in anti-liberation activities, by categorically saying that the Army of Razakars was formed by the erstwhile Pakistan government itself to fight against the liberation forces of Bangladesh. .....
  • CPM's web of deceit
    • by The Pioneer
      It is unfortunate that the investigations into the violence of March 14, 2007 at Nandigram in West Bengal have now been brought under a cloud of controversy. The report on the March massacre at Nandigram submitted by the CBI to the Calcutta High Court is disturbing for it has put a question mark on the fairness of the police investigation, such as it was, ordered by the Left Front Government, as also on the establishment of peace -- as claimed by the Marxist regime -- in this district. .....
  • Ex-rebel spills Dhaka beans
    • by E.M. Jose
      The surrendered chairman of a separatist group has revealed that he lived in Dhaka for several years, possibly the first time a militant leader has publicly contested Bangladesh's claim that it does not host rebels. .....
  • Now, a fatwa on viewing television
    • by Rediff.com
      Television is a tool of enjoyment and most widely used for 'prohibited' things and impossible to use 'without a sin,' says a fatwa by Islamic seminary Darul Uloom Deoband, a view brushed aside by three influential Muslim organisations. .....


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