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Sunday, November 22, 2009

The grandma hypothesis!As in 2005, PM the driving force for finalising nuke deal with US in 2009.China won't play third party role in India-Pak talks.

The grandma hypothesis!As in 2005, PM the driving force for finalising nuke deal with US in 2009.China won't play third party role in India-Pak talks.


"Big Bang" experiment advancing fast.Headley said: 'We'll retaliate against India'.Israeli president discusses Mideast talks in Egypt.26/11 mastermind Saeed freely roaming, preaching in Pakistan.With India raising strong objection to the U.S. suggesting a role for China in South Asia, Beijing seems to be backing away from mediating between India and Pakistan.Talks with New Delhi yet to start: Mirwaiz


Troubled Galaxy Destroyed Dreams, Chapter 426

Palash Biswas

http://indianholocaustmyfatherslifeandtime.blogspot.com/

  1. Indo-US civilian nuclear agreement - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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  1. palashbiswas's blog - Palash Speaks

    Palash Biswas. Indo-Nepalese relations From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: ... 2009‎ Taking Indo-US strategic partnership to a higher le. ...
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  6. Declassify 1962 war report - Contribute - MSNIndia

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    Palash Biswas. With vast experience in operating behind enemy lines in ... Cope India-2009, the sixth in the series of Indo-US air exercise that began in ...
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    Palash Biswas. A Must Read. The Great Khalil Jibran saw what WE would be doing in ... of how the Indo-US relationship would develop in the next few years. .... The incomplete agenda of the Indo-US nuclear deal too is likely to be taken ...
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    Palash biswas द्वारा 24 जुलाई, 2009 3:39 PM पर पोस्टेड # ... to visit US from July 20-25Sify - ‎Jul 16, 2009‎Taking Indo-US strategic . ...
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  1. Why sachin has to defend Indians in Mumbai - Contribute - MSNIndia

    by Palash Biswas 14 Nov 2009. This story has been read 42 times. ... after Auto Oprationilsation of Indo Us Nuclear Deal amidst oUnprecedented Parliamentary ...
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  1. Palash chandra Biswas's Blog at BIGADDA >> To exist is to resist ...

    18 Nov 2009 ... by Palash Biswas 24 Oct 2009. This story has been read 615 times. ..... auto operationalised and Strategic Realliance in US and Israel lead. ...
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    INDIA in GLOBL ZIONIST ARMS INDUSTRY, US AFPAK Policy, STRATEGIC Realliance and the POOR! Troubled Galaxy Destroyed Dreams: Chapter 189 Palash Biswas World ...
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Twin blasts rocks Assam, five killed, 50 injured

22/11/2009

India not worried about US honouring N-deal: PM

Ahead of his meeting with President Barack Obama, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has said India has no worries about US honouring the Indo-US nuclear deal, but would like to get a "positive reaffirmation" of the present administration to carry forward the process.

Singh, who is on his way to Washington from Geneva, said India would like to operationalise the "watershed" agreement and ensure that the objectives for the nuclear deal are realised in full merit.

"We have no worries, but we would like a positive reaffirmation of this administration to carry forward the process," Singh said in an interview to Newsweek magazine, full transcript of which was released by the Ministry of External Affairs on its website.

He was asked whether he was concerned about the US honouring the consent agreement.

Singh said the partnership with US was for sustained and sustainable development of India and the new global world order which is in search of a new equilibrium.

"India and the United States could be partners in refocusing our attention on an equitable, balanced, global order," Singh, who will meet Obama on Tuesday, said.

Asked whether India is worried about the Test Ban Treaty which President Obama seems very intent on pushing through the senate, Singh said "Why should we be worried?. We are not worried at all."

The prime minister said India has a unilateral moratorium on testing imposed voluntarily and that it stands by that.
"We would like to work with President Obama to promote the cause of global nuclear disarmament, a world free of nuclear weapons," Singh said.
"I think that is a world which has been the dream of our leaders from Jawaharlal Nehru to Rajiv Gandhi. We would like to work with all like-minded countries to achieve that goal," he said.

Singh also hoped that the US will be "more liberal" in transferring technologies to India and clear the way for implementing the landmark agreement on nuclear cooperation.

"We had a watershed and a landmark agreement with the US on nuclear cooperation. We would like to operationalise it and ensure that the objectives for the nuclear deal are realised in full merit," he said.

Singh said the restrictions on technology transfers to India "make no sense" since the country has an impeccable record of non-proliferation.

Top Indian and US officials are holding hectic parleys to conclude a deal on reprocessing of spent fuel before the Singh-Obama meeting.

Source: PTI


22/11/2009

US shares info with India on Headley's ISI links

Geneva: The US Saturday disclosed to India new information linking the anti-terror plot hatched by expatriates David Coleman Headley and Tahawuur Rana with some elements in the ISI and said it will reveal the name of a key Pakistani national linked to the Mumbai carnage in a week's time.

The disclosure came when National Security Adviser M.K. Narayanan held talks with CIA chief Leon Panetta in New Delhi Saturday, reliable sources said.

The new information given by the US reinforces Indian investigations that have pointed to links between Headley and Rana, who were arrested by the FBI in Chicago last month in connection with a Laskhar-e-Taiba terror plot against India, with the Mumbai carnage.

The latest disclosures nearly coincide with the first anniversary of the Mumbai carnage.

Two key suspects in the Headley-Rana case have been arrested by Pakistan, the sources said.

The two officials also discussed finer details of a counter-terror plot that is expected to be signed after Prime Minister Manmohan Singh holds talks with US President Barack Obama in the White House Tuesday.

The counter-terror pact seeks to take existing cooperation in this area between India and the US to a new level by focusing on closer coordination of intelligence agencies and the US sharing the latest surveillance and interdiction technologies with India.

The two also discussed the volatile situation in Pakistan and Afghanistan that will also figure prominently in discussions between Manmohan Singh and Obama. Increasingly, there is a convergence of views of India and the US on the AfPak situation.

The US shares India's perception that Pakistan is not keen to act against anti-India militants even as it continues its crackdown on Taliban militia in South Waziristan, sources said.

The US was not very optimistic whether Pakistan will act against anti-India terror infrastructure, sources said.

The CIA chief also indicated that Obama will announce a major troops surge in Afghanistan. The US is hoping to see some concrete results in Afghanistan in the next 12-18 months, the sources added.

India has made it clear that it has stakes in the success of the US' AfPak strategy. But New Delhi is opposed to any distinction between good Taliban and bad Taliban. The consequences of the Taliban victory are not good for India, the US, the region and the world, the sources said.

The official, however, ruled out any military involvement of India in Afghanistan and added that there was no request from the US side on this front.

Source: Indo-Asian News Service

Obama Touts Asia Trade for US Economic Recovery

In his weekly radio and Internet address, Mr. Obama stressed that the US needs to place a greater emphasis on exports in order for the economy to grow.

President Obama (file photo)

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Mr. Obama says Asia does the most trade with the U.S. and that the U.S. could gain economically from intensifying the trade relationship even further.

U.S. President Barack Obama says trade with Asia is crucial to U.S. economic recovery.

In his weekly radio and Internet address, Mr. Obama stressed that the U.S. needs to place a greater emphasis on exports in order for the economy to grow.

The address, published in advance on the White House Web site, was recorded in South Korea during Mr. Obama's first presidential trip to Asia.

He said Asia does the most trade with the U.S. and that the U.S. could gain economically from intensifying the trade relationship even further, saying if the U.S. could increase exports there by 5 percent, it could lead to hundreds of thousands of new jobs.

And he recapped diplomatic moves from his tour, including a joint message with Russia and China to Iran on North Korea on their nuclear programs and a set of clean energy agreements with China.

http://www1.voanews.com/english/news/usa/21nov09-obama-address-saturday-economy-asia-70698852.html



Sun, Nov 22 12:33 PM

Guwahati, Nov 22 (IANS) Two powerful explosions rocked Assam's Nalbari town Sunday, killing five people and wounding more than 50, police said.

The explosions are seen as a retaliatory strike by the outlawed United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) after two of its senior leaders were arrested earlier this month, officials said.

The blasts took place in a span of about 20 minutes, beginning at 10 a.m. Nalbari town is about 70 km west of Assam's main city of Guwahati.

'Preliminary reports indicate five people were killed and more than 50 injured in the twin explosions,' a senior police official said.

Police had earlier claimed there were three explosions. They later confirmed there were just two blasts, and the third was just firecrackers going off in a nearby locality.

The first explosion took place just outside the Nalbari police station, while the second went off about 20 meters away around 10.20 a.m. near a market.

'Both the bombs were packed in sacks and kept on parked bicycles,' the official said.

Most of the victims were morning shoppers or vendors as there was a Sunday market teeming with people close to the blast sites.

'It was total panic and chaos with human limbs strewn all over the place and blood splattered on the road,' Ankur Das, a witness, told IANS.

'The sound of the first blast was deafening. The second explosion took place in front of our eyes. Many people who came rushing to the site of the first explosion got injured in the second blast,' another witness Biplab Barman said.

Police blamed the ULFA for the twin explosions.

'The modus operandi of the two blasts suggests it was the handiwork of the ULFA. The explosions are nothing but attempts to make a point after two of their top leaders were arrested,' the official said.

ULFA 'foreign secretary' Sasha Choudhury and 'finance secretary' Chitraban Hazarika, in police remand since Nov 6, were arrested by the Border Security Force (BSF) near Gokul Nagar in Tripura Nov 5 while trying to sneak into India. The duo were based in Dhaka. The ULFA has denied their arrest.

There have been reports in a section of the media that the two were arrested in Bangladesh and handed over to the Indian authorities Nov 2.

On Monday, ULFA rebels blew up a petroleum-laden train in eastern Assam. At least 20 wagons went up in flames and a loss of Rs.100 million was estimated.

The ULFA is a rebel group fighting for an independent homeland in Assam since 1979. The insurgency in the state has claimed about 10,000 lives in the past two decades.
Indo Asian News Service

The grandma hypothesis

Sun, Nov 22 04:56 AM

The question is asked in every language, in every era: "So, dear, when will you give me grandchildren?" Darwin would approve. At least he would if the "grandma hypothesis" is right.

According to this idea, the reason women—uniquely among primates—outlive their child-bearing years is that a female who survives past menopause can contribute to the care of her children's children, improving their chances of reaching adulthood. Natural selection favours behaviour that increases an individual's genetic contribution to future generations; surviving long enough to help grandkids is thus an evolutionary adaptation.

Too bad data don't support this intriguing notion. In some studies, a grandmother living nearby was indeed associated with better survival of grandchildren, as the hypothesis predicts. But other studies found no such benefit.

Leslie Knapp, a biological anthropologist at the University of Cambridge, and her graduate student Molly Fox wondered if the inconsistency reflected a basic fact of genetics—namely, that because of how the X chromosome is passed down from parents to children, grandmothers are more closely related to some grandkids than to others.

Here's why. A paternal grandmother, like all women, has two X chromosomes. She passes one to her son (who gets his Y chromosome from Dad, which is why he's a he). He then passes grandma's X—the one and only X he has—to his daughter. But Dad passes his Y chromosome to his son, who therefore does not carry his paternal grandma's X. A maternal grandmother, too, passes one of her X's to her daughter; there is a 50-50 chance that that X will be transmitted to the daughter's child, of either sex. A maternal grandmother, therefore, has only a 50-50 chance that her X will be transmitted to a grandchild. A little math shows that maternal grandmothers are related to granddaughters and grandsons equally, for an "X-relatedness" of 25 percent. But paternal grandmothers are twice as close to granddaughters (50 per cent) and not at all to grandsons (zero per cent), explains Knapp. It may seem arbitrary to focus on X, one of 23 chromosomes, but it has 8 per cent of all our genes.

Many of those earlier, inconsistent tests of the grandma hypothesis lumped together both kinds of grandmas (maternal and paternal) and both sexes of grandkids. Given the different degrees of X-relatedness, says Knapp, "we decided to look at the data from a genetic perspective. Since it is adaptive to favour those with whom we share the most genes, evolution should favour women who invest in grandchildren in a way that mirrors X-relatedness."

She, Fox, and colleagues analysed existing data on the survival of 43,000 children in seven traditional societies, from rural farming villages in Japan and Malawi to towns in Germany and Canada, from the 1600s to today. "The most striking effect was of the paternal grandmother," says Fox.

In six of the seven societies, having a paternal grandmother nearby improved the survival of granddaughters (50 per cent X-relatedness) by up to 4.5-fold, but for some unknown reason decreased the survival of grandsons by 8 to 29 per cent. And a boy had a greater chance of survival if he lived with his maternal grandmother (25 per cent X-relatedness) than with his paternal grandmother (zero per cent). In four of the seven societies, a girl had a better chance of survival if she lived with her paternal grandmother (50 percent) than her maternal grandmother (25 percent).

In other words, the effect of a grandmother perfectly tracked the DNA. "The higher the X-relatedness," the scientists write in Proceedings of the Royal Society B, "the more beneficial effect the grandmother has on that child's" survival.

But there is no evidence grandmothers consciously treat grandsons and granddaughters differently, or a son's children different from a daughter's. Grandmothers will surely recoil at the very idea, which is why the reader is advised not to leave this column lying around during a multigenerational Thanksgiving.
Newsweek

'We don't want just a buyer-seller relationship with US'
Chidanand Rajghatta22 November 2009, 02:14am IST

Not since Jawaharlal Nehru's sister Vijayalakhsmi Pandit swept through America in 1949 has India had a female ambassador in the US. Tough and
accomplished, Meera Shankar is also the first career-diplomat to be sent to Washington in more than two decades. At a time when Indo-US ties are pregnant with promise and expectation, Shankar tells Chidanand Rajghatta what to expect when Prime Minister Manmohan Singh arrives in Washington for a state visit. Excerpts from the interview:

Q: There is a sense among the commentariat that the Prime Minister's upcoming visit is more pomp than substance and things are pretty cool with the US after the nuclear deal...

A: Well, our relations with the US today are wide-ranging and diverse. While the civil nuclear initiative remains a potent symbol of the transformed relationship and has helped remove a major past irritant, there is a need to look beyond it and focus on other aspects also...

Q: Such as?

A: For instance, our counter-terrorism cooperation has grown exponentially and the recent visit of the home minister (to the US) has laid the basis for its further development. Cooperation in renewable and green technologies will be a new area of focus. Enhanced partnerships between US and Indian educational institutions would be in tune with the priority being given to expansion and qualitative improvements in the educational infrastructure in India. We expect initiatives in this sector.

Q: But isn't there a feeling that things have eased off a bit after the ardour of the Bush administration?

A: In the US, there is a bipartisan consensus on improvement of relations with India. The PM's visit next week, as the first state guest of President Obama, would provide an opportunity to chart the course for a steady growth of relations during the term of the new administration.

Q: How would you characterize defence and military engagement between the two? Is it just a business proposition or is there strategic underpinning?

A: Well, defence relations have seen steady progress as an important aspect of the strategic partnership. Our Defence Policy Group (DPG) and its sub-groups, which meet annually, have acquired substance and depth in their deliberations. There has been an increase in the interaction between our armed forces. All our three services now conduct annual exercises with their US counterparts. At the same time, we are also looking at the US as one of the possible suppliers of weapon systems as we continue to modernize our armed forces. We would like the relationship not just to be limited to a buyer-seller relationship but also to move into areas of joint development and transfer of technology. Our armed forces are also cooperating in areas such as maritime security, which is vital to economic and national interests of both our countries.

Q: Lots of talk about space being the next big-ticket item after the nuclear deal. What's cooking here?

A: Well, as you know we have had good collaboration between ISRO and its US counterpart. The recent Chandrayaan mission carried a US experimental payload which identified the presence of water on the moon. During the recent visit of Hillary Clinton (to India) we had finalized the Technology Safeguard Agreement, which would allow American satellites and also third-country satellites containing US components to be launched on our satellite launch vehicles. We have recently signed an agreement for the US to access data from our Oceansat satellite. The two sides are keen to collaborate further in application of space technology for development purposes. Easing of US export controls would enable us to realize the potential for cooperation in this sector.

Q: It sounds like some wrinkles remain. But the two sides do have differences, don't they, such as on climate change?

A: We do have our own perspectives on the climate change negotiations but the two sides are also looking at ways to promote bilateral cooperation in clean energy, energy efficiency and renewables. It would be beneficial for both sides to look at opportunities for practical collaboration in these areas. We have launched a National Action Plan on Climate Change with its eight missions. These missions also provide opportunity for both our countries to work together in areas such as clean coal technology, wind and solar energy and in exploring ways and means to increase energy efficiency.

Q: But isn't it a fact that the nuclear deal itself is not complete and there are some residual issues?

A: Well, both our countries are making progress to complete the remaining elements of the Civil Nuclear Initiative. Consultations on Arrangements and Procedures for Reprocessing have begun and we have already had three rounds of talks. As per the 123 Agreement provision, these talks are to be completed within one year of commencement, viz. by August 2010. We hope to complete the negotiations earlier than that. The Government of India has already announced two sites that would be offered to US companies for nuclear power plants. We are also moving ahead in establishing a Civil Nuclear Liability Regime in India, which is in our interest, particularly as the share of nuclear energy in our overall energy mix increases.

Q: There is also a sense that the Obama administration expects movement from India on various non-proliferation initiatives. What is India's response to US expectations on the nuclear non-proliferation treaty (NPT), Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) and the Fissile Material Cut-off Treaty (FMCT) etc?

A: As regards the NPT, the US is very well aware of our stance (India has said it will not sign the NPT so long as it remains discriminatory and places India outside the recognized nuclear five). On the FMCT, we have conveyed our willingness to participate constructively in negotiations in the Conference on Disarmament as and when they commence, for a multilateral, non-discriminatory and verifiable FMCT. Our voluntary moratorium on nuclear explosive testing continues to be in place.

Q: We recently had this dubious landmark - Indian students arriving in the US to study crossed 1,00,000. How does the government view this – as a form of investment? Is it something that can be leveraged?

A: Yes, Indian students now constitute the largest number of foreign students in the US. This is a reflection of the high reputation that US educational institutions enjoy in India as also the inadequacy of the existing infrastructure for higher education in India, which the government is giving a high priority now. Of course, these talented and hardworking Indian students are an important bridge between India and the US and a potential resource for India's fast-growing economy. Trade in services between India and the US is broadly balanced and growing in both directions and that is the point we have been making that benefits flow in both directions.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/sunday-toi/all-that-matters/We-dont-want-just-a-buyer-seller-relationship-with-US/articleshow/5256325.cms

Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is traveling to the United States for talks on how the two countries will work together on critical issues in coming years,reports voice Of America.Before departing for Washington on Saturday, Mr. Singh released a statement saying he will meet with U.S. President Barack Obama on topics including terrorism, nuclear disarmament, the global economic slowdown and climate change.

Mr. Obama also is expected to inform Mr. Singh about his decision on a U.S. troop surge for Afghanistan.  New Delhi has expressed concern the war there could further destabilize Pakistan, India's nuclear-armed neighbor and longtime rival.


 David Headley, a Pakistani origin American citizen at the centre of a global terrorism investigation on charges of plotting terror attacks in India and Denmark, has been portrayed as a man 'with feet in East and West.' He also wrote in e-mail messages about retaliation against India.on the other hand, he alleged mastermind of the 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks in which more than 179 people died was openly spotted in Lahore delivering the Friday sermon to thousands of people at the Jamia al-Qadsia mosque.Meanwhile.With India raising strong objection to the U.S. suggesting a role for China in South Asia, Beijing seems to be backing away from mediating between India and Pakistan.The Obama White House is getting prepared for its first full state visit when US President Barack Obama will host India's Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. Manmohan Singh's three-day state visit starting on Nov. 23 is being seen as a touchstone of Obama's intention of sustaining a relationship that deepened under his predecessor George W. Bush. Global terrorism accused David Headley always felt pulled between his strict Pakistani upbringing and bohemian American culture, where he arrived at the age of 17, Investigators have said. Global terrorism accused David Headley always felt pulled between his strict Pakistani upbringing and bohemian American culture, where he arrived at the age of 17, Investigators have said.The Indian consulate in Chicago was allegedly negligent in issuing visas to Tahawwur Hussain Rana, the Pakistan-born Canadian citizen accused of planning a terrorist attack on a Danish newspaper, an internal investigation has found.For the best part of a year, Italian investigators watched patiently over a nondescript business in Brescia, hoping that two men who played a critical role in guiding the terrorists to their targets in Mumbai last November would one day show ...

However, IBn Live reports that China has allayed concerns of India over the US-China joint statement, saying that it advocated direct negotiations between India and Pakistan to resolve their bilateral issues.

A senior official of Chinese Foreign Office conveyed to Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao that Beijing respected New Delhi's position that bilateral issues between India and Pakistan should be resolved through dialogue, reliable sources said.

The Chinese have told us they advocated direct negotiations between India and Pakistan to resolve their dialogue, the sources said.

They respect our position, the official said, downplaying apprehensions among some sections in India about the US-China joint statement issued after talks between US President Barack Obama and Chinese President Hu Jintao that envisaged a role for China in South Asia and in India-Pakistan affairs.

The statement was seen by some sections in India as an instance of the Obama administration's focus on China at the expense of India.

Reacting to the joint statement, India's external affairs ministry ruled out any third party mediation in issues relating to India and Pakistan.


Ahead of his meeting with President Barack Obama, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has said India has no worries about US honouring the Indo-US nuclear deal, but would like to get a "positive reaffirmation" of the present administration to carry forward the process.

Singh, who will arrive in Washington on a three-day State Visit late tonight, said India would like to operationalise the "watershed" agreement and ensure that the objectives for the nuclear deal are realised in full merit.

"We have no worries, but we would like a positive reaffirmation of this administration to carry forward the process," Singh said in an interview to NewsWeek magazine.

He was asked whether he was concerned about the US honouring the consent agreement.

Singh said the partnership with US was for sustained and sustainable development of India and the new global world order which is in search of a new equilibrium.

"India and the United States could be partners in refocusing our attention on an equitable, balanced, global order," Singh, who will meet Obama on Tuesday, said.

Asked whether India is worried about the Test Ban Treaty which President Obama seems very intent on pushing through the senate, Singh said "Why should we be worried?. We are not worried at all."

Consolidation of banks is good in a way as it envisages healthier banks in the global scenario and banking market, believes Canara Bank Chairman and Managing Director A C Mahajan.

The Indian Navy has floated a Request for Information (RFI) for a newer generation of aircraft which can operate from the two indigenous aircraft carriers it will commission over the next 10 years.

Indian Communists, especially the CPM, may hold the view that China or any other country has no role to play in resolving the decades-old differences between India and Pakistan, but comrades from Islamabad beg to differ.

Communist leaders from Pakistan are of the view that China, which has close links with Pakistan, can "influence" Islamabad and can in fact play the role of mediator. This at a time when the CPM has ruled out scope for any third party intervention in the light of Indo-Pak ties finding a mention in the US-China joint statement.

"China can influence Pakistan. The Indo-Pak issue has been going on for long. Somebody will have to act to bring in peace in the region. We are against any intervention by the US. Washington has no role whatsoever to play in South Asia or Asia. But China is a neighbour. When two neighbours fight, a third neighbour can mediate," Imdad Qazi, a central secretariat member of the Communist Party of Pakistan, told The Sunday Express. Qazi is here to attend the international Communist conference where China is represented by a four-member delegation.

Meanwhile, CPM and CPI leaders conveyed to the Chinese delegates that China should refrain from any such intervention. CPM leader Sitaram Yechury said, "They have told us that Beijing does not interfere nor does it gives views on such matters." "There is no role for any third party," the CPM Politburo member added. The head of the Church of England has personally confronted the Pope over attempts by the Catholic Church to convert disillusioned Anglicans.

The United States has spent 53 billion dollars in relief and reconstruction work in Iraq since the 2003 invasion, but American officials fear that Iraq will not be able to maintain the facilities once the Americans have left, a report in The New York Times said on Saturday.

Oil-exporting Venezuela is in recession, its socialist President Hugo Chavez said on Saturday, adding that the capitalist system of measuring economic growth was established in the United States.

Sixty-five world leaders have confirmed they will attend a U.N. conference in Copenhagen in December that will try to clinch a new global climate deal, and many more are considering, Danish officials said on Sunday.

Headley said: 'We'll retaliate against India'

26/11 mastermind Saeed freely roaming, preaching in Pakistan!A high level meeting has been convened at the Prime Minister's Office in Delhi tomorrow to review security arrangements at the Sabarimala Ayyappa temple, where the two-month-long pilgrimage season began on November 15.On the other hand, Bhopal gas tragedy victims seek more compensation!Stating that the Bhopal gas tragedy victims have not been paid adequate compensation even after 25 years of the world''s worst industrial disaster, Bhopal Gas Peedit Mahila Udhyog Sangathan (BGPMUS) today asked the Centre to release more funds. "The Centre should step in and make available funds to adequately compensate the Bhopal gas tragedy victims," BGPMUS convener Abdul Jabbar told reporters.He said only a flat amount of Rs 25,000 each was paid as compensation to the affected people which compared poorly with compensation amount given in other tragedies. He pointed out that the victims of Uphar Cinema (Delhi) were given Rs 18 lakh each by way of compensation while the victims of World Trade Organisation (WTO) in US received Rs 24 crore each.

Clad in a maroon and gold sherwani, businessman Raj Kundra today arrived in a horse-drawn chariot to marry Bollywood actress Shilpa Shetty in Khandala.CPI-ML(Liberation) has given a call for Bihar bandh on November 24 demanding among others land reforms. Samajwadi Party leader and former Uttar Pradesh chief minister Mulayam Singh Yadav, who celebrated his 71st birthday Sunday, said the Rs.7,266 crore special package by the central government was insufficient for drought relief and agricultural development of the Bundelkhand region.The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA) plans to target the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA) in parliament on the issue of the Madhu Koda scam Monday, said a senior BJP leader here Sunday.



Facing allegations of holding a "quiet dialogue" with the Centre, Hurriyat moderates, headed by Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, today said talks with New Delhi for resolving the Kashmir issue were yet to start. Though several interlocutors had met the leadership of the Hurriyat urging the need for a dialogue with New Delhi, talks were yet to commence, Mirwaiz, chairman of the moderate faction of the Hurriyat Conference, said.

"People like former Chief Information Officer Wajahat Habibullah, Prem Shanker Jha and others met us and urged us to start a dialogue with New Delhi. "We did speak to them but that does not mean we have entered into a dialogue with New Delhi," Mirwaiz said.

Setting pre-conditions for talks, the Hurriyat dove said "if New Delhi is serious about the dialogue, it should first release prisoners, revoke all draconian laws, start phased withdrawal of troops and fulfil other conditions put forward by us." Asserting the stand of the Hurriyat on talks was clear, he said "we want to talk to both India and Pakistan for the resolution of the Kashmir issue.

In July 2005 and in the months and years that followed, the Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh, was feted as the visionary architect and driving force of the landmark US-India civil nuclear cooperation deal.

At that time, the key significance behind the signing was the ending of India's more than 30 years of isolation in the field of nuclear commerce.

More than four years since that first historic signing and the hard-balled and excruciating negotiating process that has followed, Dr. Singh is once again emerging as the driving force for fine tuning the deal with Washington, keeping India's interests upper most in his mind.

Sources accompanying him on his trip to Washington revealed that he is on the phone almost on a daily basis with a team working on the bilateral civil nuclear cooperation deal just as he did in 2005 when interacting with the Bush White House.

Dr. Singh is keen for the deal to be signed and sealed and President Barack Obama appears to be showing the same level of enthusiasm and interest.

Going by what the sources are saying, the signing of this deal and ironing out perceived differences on the reprocessing issue could be the "big ticket" item of the entire trip.

According to sources, there are just one-and-a-half points to be covered. The negotiations are on the last stretch and a high-powered team is in Washington working out the nitty-gritty aspects well ahead of and in time for the formal discussions between the heads of government in the White House on Tuesday.

The American leadership is already on record as saying that this historic agreement should be seen as a thanksgiving event that will play a part in the much broader framework for facilitating an enduring friendship with India.

Senior officials have described the agreement as an effort to cement ties between the world's largest democracy with the world's oldest democracy, and credited "a lot of architects and driving forces behind this agreement."



The view in Washington is that the deal is and will good for democracy and good for the world.

Former US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is on record as saying that "As much as the civil nuclear agreement is a breakthrough, this (US-India) is also a friendship that is based on values, a friendship that is based on ties, people-to-people ties."

The Indian side sees the deal as representing a change and a transformation, emblematic of a new relationship, a beginning of deeper cooperation.

The ultimate aim of the US-India civil nuclear deal is to enable India to gain access to state-of-the-art civil nuclear technology to enable it to keep pace with the growing demand for energy, achieve energy security, and help it to diversify and promote clean and environment-friendly source of energy.

Since August of 2007, both India and United States have adopted a step-by-step process to negotiate and agree on signing India-specific IAEA protocols on nuclear safeguards; securing exemption from the 45-nation Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) to facilitate civil nuclear trade with India; and seek US Congressional approval to the 123 Agreement.

At home, Dr. Singh's government has worked hard to secure a vote of confidence in Parliament in spite of stringent opposition to the deal, which the latter views as a pandering to American interests.

The signing and sealing of the deal during this visit, will indeed be the icing on Dr. Singh's efforts of the past four-and-a-half years. By Smita Prakash


The chief of terror outfit Lashakar-e-Taiba, Hafiz Mohammed Saeed, is neither in hiding nor in jail.

"God has promised to make Muslims a superpower if we follow the right path," Saeed told his followers.

"Our rulers are the slave of America and have sold their conscience for a few dollars," The Times quoted the founder of LeT, as saying.

Meanwhile, US Ambassador to India Timothy Roemer has backed Indian calls this week for Pakistan to bring Saeed and six other Mumbai terror suspects to justice.

"We need to see actions and results from Pakistan," he said after India handed Pakistan a seventh dossier of evidence on the Mumbai terror attacks.

The real problem lies with Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence agency, which backed Saeed when he founded LeT in 1990 to fight India in Jammu and Kashmir, according to analysts.

Under pressure from the US, Pakistan banned the group in 2002, but it continued to operate under the banner of Jamaat-ud Dawa, which Saeed also founded and calls a charity organisation.

A UN Security Council resolution last December declared Jamaat-ud Dawa a front for Lashkar-e-Taiba, forcing Pakistan to freeze its assets and jail many of its activists.

Saeed was put under house detention, but released after a few months when a court ruled that action against him and his group was illegal.

'The trip from a strict Pakistani boarding school to a bohemian bar in Philadelphia has defined David Headley's life,' the New York Times wrote Sunday in a report with inputs from Pakistan, Canada and the US.

Raised by his father in Pakistan as a devout Muslim, Headley arrived back in Philadelphia at 17 to live with his American mother, a former socialite who ran a bar called the Khyber Pass.

'Today, Headley is an Islamic fundamentalist who once liked to get high. He has a traditional Pakistani wife, who lives with their children in Chicago, but also an American girlfriend - a makeup artist in New York,' the daily said citing a relative and friends.
'Depending on the setting, he alternates between the name he adopted in the United States, David Headley, and the Urdu one he was given at birth, Daood Gilani. Even his eyes - one brown, the other green - hint at roots in two places,' the Times said.

Headley, is accused of being the lead operative in a loose-knit group of militants plotting revenge against a Danish newspaper that published cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad. Accused co-conspirator, Tahawwur Hussain Rana, who was born in Pakistan, is a citizen of Canada and runs businesses in Chicago.

The men, who became close friends in a military academy outside Islamabad, were arrested last month in Chicago. Since then, the investigation has widened beyond Chicago and Copenhagen.

The authorities have learned more, with cooperation from Headley, about the two men's network of contacts with known terrorist groups, including Al Qaeda and Lashkar-e-Taeba, a Pakistani militant group, as well as officials in the Pakistani government and military, the Times said.

United States and Indian investigators are also looking closely into whether the two Chicago men, who travelled to Mumbai before the deadly assault there last November, may have been involved in the plot.

Headley, 49, and Rana, 48, stand out from the young, poor extremists from fundamentalist Islamic schools who strike targets in or close to their homelands, the times noted.

Instead, their privileged backgrounds, extensive travel and bouts of culture shock make them more like Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, the self-proclaimed architect of the Sep 11,2001 attacks, who attended college in the US, and Mohammed Atta, one of the lead hijackers.

In 1998, Gilani, then 38, was convicted of conspiring to smuggle heroin into the country from Pakistan, the Times said. In 2006, he changed his name to David Headley, apparently to make border crossings between the US and other countries easier, court documents say. Headley also shifted to Chicago where he claimed to work for Rana's immigration agency.

E-mail messages of his show that Headley stayed in regular contact with classmates from the military high school he attended in Pakistan, often engaging in impassioned debates about politics and Islam, the Times said.

Earlier this year, Headley complained about 'NATO criminal vermin dropping 22,000 lbs bombs on unsuspecting, unarmed Afghan villagers' or 'napalming southeast Asian farmers.' Writing about Pakistan's chief enemy, he said, 'We will retaliate against India.'

"Big Bang" experiment advancing fast

After a year's delay, scientists at the world's biggest accelerator have restarted an experiment to recreate "Big Bang" conditions that had sparked suggestions the earth would be sucked in by millions of black holes.

Scientists at the European Organisation for Nuclear Research (CERN) have established circulating particle beams in both directions in the underground Large Hadron Collider, a step that is already beyond where the experiment stalled during a first attempt in September 2008, CERN spokesman James Gillies said.

The high-profile experiment, through which tiny particles are smashed in a bid to learn more about the birth of the universe, failed just nine days after it was launched due to a technical problem that took longer than expected to fix.

"We are further advanced now than where we were after five days of experiment last year," said CERN's Director for Accelerators Steve Myers, saying the extra year had allowed researchers to upgrade instrumentations and computer software.

Myers added that researchers had increased the sensitivity of the protections at the 10 billion Swiss franc ($9.82 billion) collider under the French-Swiss border.

"If anything happens, we would not have the same amount of damage we had last year," he said.

CERN, a 55-year-old organisation that counts 10,000 scientists and technicians worldwide working on its research projects, has vigorously rebuffed any suggestion the ground-breaking experiment would cause the world to end.

CERN's Director General Rolf Heuer said getting the experiment re-started had been an "herculean effort".

"We've still got some way to go before physics can begin, but with this milestone we're well on the way," he said.

If things continue to progress at this speed, scientists may be able to accelerate particles at the highest energy level ever tested before Christmas, although high-energy collisions that may shed light on the secrets of the universe would only happen in the new year, Myers said.

The experiment will be fully under way when the particle beams will be smashed at high energy levels. This will most likely happen in January.

The next important step in the experiment will be low-energy collisions, expected in about a week from now, CERN said.

The experiment can be followed http://twitter.com/cern.

Iran launches war games to protect nuclear sites
Iran's armed forces launched large-scale air defence war games on Sunday to show off the country's deterrence capabilities in the face of pressure from the West over its nuclear programme.

The display of military muscle comes at a time of rising tension between Iran and six major powers, which fear Tehran's nuclear programme is aimed at producing nuclear weapons. Tehran denies this is the programme's purpose.

Iran's elite Revolutionary Guards and military forces jointly started five days of manoeuvres in various parts of the Islamic state, Brigadier General Ahmad Mighani said, according to state television.

"It is the biggest war game, which takes place over an area 600,000 sq km (230,000 sq miles). The aim of this war game

is to promote military power of the armed forces against any attack," the television quoted Mighani as saying.

The United States and Israel, which Iran does not recognise, say they want a diplomatic solution to the nuclear standoff, but refuse to rule out military action if diplomacy fails.

Iran has warned of a "crushing" response to any military action against its nuclear facilities.

"The aim of the drill is to display Iran's combat readiness and military potentials," Mighani said.

"Defence policies, psychological operations and innovations during the war game are among the objectives of the drill."

Iran has staged several war games in the past, including firing long-range Shahab-3 missiles, which it says have a range of 2,000 km (1,250 miles), putting Israel or U.S. bases in the Gulf in range.

World powers have urged Iran to reconsider its rejection of a U.N.-drafted deal which aimed to delay Tehran's potential ability to make bombs by at least a year by divesting the country of most of its enriched uranium.

The deal, brokered by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), calls on Iran to send some 75 percent of its low-enriched uranium to Russia and France, where it would be turned into fuel for a Tehran medical research reactor.

Iran ruled out on Wednesday sending enriched uranium abroad for further processing, saying it would consider swapping it for nuclear fuel provided it remained under supervision inside the country.

U.S. President Barack Obama has warned Tehran of a package of sanctions against the country within weeks. Iran has been hit by three rounds of U.N. sanctions over its refusal to halt sensitive uranium activities.

Israeli president discusses Mideast talks in Egypt

Israeli President Shimon Peres held discussions in Egypt on Sunday on efforts to restart Middle East peace talks after the Egyptian president accused Israel of creating obstacles to a settlement with the Palestinians.

Egypt, the first Arab state to sign a peace deal with Israel, has long played a mediation role. That has recently included involvement in a bid to secure an Israeli soldier's release from Gaza in return for Palestinian prisoners.

Speculation has been mounting that a deal to free Gilad Shalit in exchange for hundreds of Palestinian prisoners might be concluded by the end of this month. But sources on both sides have said there was no certainty of finalising a deal by then.

A day before Peres arrived, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak told parliament that Israel was making "new obstacles" to peace.

"I tell them, stop your practices in the West Bank and lift the siege on Gaza and respond to the call of peace," he said in a speech to mark the start of parliament's new session.

Egypt and other Arabs have blamed the United States for not doing enough to push Israel to stop building settlements on occupied Palestinian land.

Peres, whose post is largely ceremonial, last visited Egypt in July for talks with Mubarak. He was met in Cairo by Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit, a witness said.

"The two presidents will discuss recent developments in the Middle East, advancing the peace process between Israel and the Palestinians and various bilateral issues on the agenda," the Israeli president's office said in a statement before the trip.

MEDIATION ROLE

An Israeli diplomat said the talks were also expected to cover Egypt's mediation between rival Palestinian factions.

Egypt has been hosting reconciliation talks for more than a year between Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas's Fatah group, which leads the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank, and the Islamist group Hamas, which has controlled Gaza since 2007.

But there has been little sign of progress.

Israeli and Palestinian sources said this month there were hopes a deal on Shalit, which would commence a process of exchange lasting weeks, might be struck when the Muslim festival of Eid al-Adha begins later this week.

Sources close to the negotiations have said Hamas, in the first part of a deal, would hand over Shalit to Egypt and Israel would release some 350 to 450 prisoners, some of whom would go into exile abroad rather than return to the West Bank or Gaza.

More prisoners would be released when Shalit was transferred from Egypt to Israel, while other prisoner releases could take several more weeks to complete.

All off record when Chidambaram dons his jacket

Home Minister P. Chidambaram can be at his expansive best when he is entertaining. But then his revelations are strictly off the record - if he is donning a jacket and pant and not his trademark veshti and shirt!

At a high tea organised for scribes on the home beat as well as for those who covered him when he was finance minister, Chidambaram played the perfect host with delectable goodies, mostly from southern India. The sharp as nails minister let his hair down for once, took occasional jibes at reporters and also showed his irreverent side.

He dwelt on what was his high point during a recent US visit and made suggestions for television channels seemingly carrying out parallel investigation in the Headley-Rana terror plot probe.

Unfortunately, none of it could be reported. The reason? He was not in his trademark white veshti and shirt and was wearing a blue jacket instead. At the outset he made it clear: 'All off the record, I have my jacket on!'

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Winter session marks a thaw
It is an open secret that Minister of State for Railways E. Ahamed and his boss Mamata Banerjee have not been on the best of terms. But they seem to be warming up to each other with the beginning of winter.

Many believe Didi's unhappiness stemmed from the fact that the Indian Union Muslim League, to which Ahamed belongs, fielded a candidate in the Trinamool Congress chief's South Kolkata constituency during the general election.

But things may have changed. The buzz in the ministry is that Ahamed has made peace and even won her confidence by offering full support to her party in the recent by-elections in West Bengal.

The two were seen sharing some light moments when parliament opened for the winter session. For Ahamed, perhaps the diplomatic skills honed from his stint as minister of stateff foreign affairs in UPA-1 came in handy.

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Small is beautiful, Tharoor shows how

When the foreign minister of a tiny West African country comes to town, does anyone notice? Not the media, which missed out on a golden chance to watch Minister of State for External Affairs Shashi Tharoor turn on the charm offensive - sometimes in French!

Away from the media spotlight, Tharoor was quite happy to court Cape Verde's Jose Brito, who headed a delegation of two, for talks and lunch at the stately Hyderabad House. He fluently conversed in French with the visitors.

When Tharoor offered Indian help in the health sector to Cape Verde that has a population of only 450,000, Brito said he wanted Indian help in the IT sector and a line of credit to buy computers for each of the 8,000 teachers in his country.

And when lunch was over, Tharoor saw to it that his guests partook 'paan' (betel leaves), saying this was one delicacy Indians didn't export - only used for their own digestion.

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The Shivraj Patil memoirs - sans spice

With all the time on his hands after his unceremonious exit as home minister following the Mumbai terror attacks, Shivraj Patil is busy writing his memoirs. The handwritten manuscript is around 1,000 pages long and is expected to be published next year.

Patil had drawn flak on many occasions for changing his trendy 'bandgalas'. When Delhi was rocked by serial blastsb last year, he is said to have changed his suits thrice on the day.

A close aide says the memoirs would reveal his take on the episode. But the book, like the man himself, is not expected to reveal any spicy bits about his tenure as home minister or as Lok Sabha speaker.

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Shhh, Jharkhand polls coming up

Sensing a chance to reap some dividends in Jharkhand after a season of defeats, the Bharatiya Janata Party has apparently sought an assurance from its vocal brigade to refrain from speaking out of turn till the assembly polls get over in the state.

The voluble Shatrughan Sinha, MP from Patna, who has given jitters to the party leadership in the past with his remarks, has gone into a shell, telling journalists that his views on the party's presidential post would be known only after the election results.

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AIIMS has sympathetic minister in Azad

Journos hoping for controversial statements on the premier AIIMS from Health Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad should be disappointed. Unlike his predecessor Anbumani Ramadoss, Azad nicely dodged questions about the institute's current director.

At an informal get together recently, Azad was asked about current director R.C. Deka's reported unhappiness with the faculty. But he chose to expound instead on why the focus should be on improving the institute.

'AIIMS is like a railway station. People from Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand and West Bengal come for treatment here. AIIMS is overburdened,' he exclaimed.

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Blessings from elsewhere?

It's rare for a union minister to speak out against a governor. So the slugfest between Parliamentary Affairs Minister Pawan Kumar Bansal and Punjab Governor S.F. Rodrigues has evoked curiosity in political circles. It is said that the latter has the blessings of some powerful people.

Rodrigues, who is also administrator of Chandigarh, has made allegations against Bansal and union minister Ambika Soni regarding allotment of land to a school society in Chandigarh. The ministers denied the charges.

Rodrigues had apparently courted controversy over some of his utterances as army chief but now Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar had come to his rescue then too. Rodrigues, who hails from Goa, had served as army chief when Pawar was defence minister in the early 90s.

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IAF vice chief testing waters?

Was there a design behind the Indian Air Force (IAF) vice chief Air Marshal P.K. Barbora's outburst against the political establishment for allegedly stalling the procurement of military hardware?

Many do believe that the political establishment has been the biggest obstacle to the modernisation of Indian armed forces, despite what A.K. Antony has been proclaiming since he became defence minister three years ago.

Perhaps what he was referring to was the proposal the IAF has quietly floated to purchase some 50 basic trainers. The force has said it is not satisfied with Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd, whose HPT-32 trainers it now deploys but which have been grounded due to apparent mechanical defects.

His outburst was perhaps the first salvo to gauge the government's response to the IAF proposal.

-Indo-Asian News Service

Mulayam urges party to penetrate rural areas
 Samajwadi Party leader and former Uttar Pradesh chief minister Mulayam Singh Yadav celebrated his 71st birthday Sunday when he asked his party cadres to reach out to the rural population.

Addressing over 500 party workers who gathered at the party headquarters for celebrations, Yadav told them that demonstrating on roads and courting arrest in large numbers cannot be termed a revolution.

'We should reach out to the rural and poor population and make them aware of education and employment,' he said.

There are educated people in rural and poor areas and we need them to build a stronger base for the party, he added.

Yadav also warned the Congress-led central government of similar protests like the one held in New Delhi last week to demand a better deal for sugarcane farmers.

'The state is having a huge quantity of standing paddy crops and the central government is still planning to import rice. We will again head for Delhi and hold a similar demonstration if the government goes ahead with its plan,' Yadav said.

Earlier in the day, Yadav cut a 71 kg cake brought by his supporters. Even after he left the party office at around 1 p.m., his supporters continued to dance and celebrate.

But his son Akhilesh Yadav and party general secretary Amar Singh were not present. Mulayam Singh Yadav was accompanied by his younger brother Shivpal Yadav and other state party leaders.
Indo Asian News Service

Parties promise corruption free government in Jharkhand

Political parties contesting the Jharkhand assembly elections are promising a corruption free government and cheaper food grain to the poor.

The manifestoes of major parties read alike promising to subsidize food to families living below the official Below Poverty Line (BPL).

And with former chief minister Madhu Koda in the dock over serious corruption charges, everyone is promising to stamp out sleaze.

The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which feels it has a good chance to take power from the staggered elections starting Nov 25, says that money earned through corrupt practices will be seized by the government.

It says it will make the state vigilance more active.

The Congress, on the backfoot over supporting the Koda government for 23 long months, also talks of rooting out corruption.

It has taken a simple, and what it thinks will be an effective, line: In the last nine years there have been five chief ministers. None of them belonged to the Congress. And it was only during President's Rule that an operation was launched to crack down on corruption.

The argument is: Vote for the Congress.

'We will ensure that legislators and ministers declare their assets every year,' its manifesto said.

The Jharkhand Vikas Morcha (JVM-P) of former chief minister Babulal Marandi, who has forged an alliance with the Congress, also talks about rooting out corruption. A similar promise has been made by the Jharkhand Mukti Morcha (JMM) of Shibu Soren.

The BJP is trying its best to make the rising prices of essential commodities an election issue.

The BJP has promised rice and wheat at Re.1 a kilo to BPL families and salt at 25 paise a kg. It says a BJP government will give loans to farmers at 2 percent rate and ensure issue of ration cards in three months.

The Congress vows to supply rice and wheat at Rs.3 per kg to BPL families.

The JMM and JVM-P are determined to follow suit.

All the major political parties are also saying that they will keep in mind the interests of the poor who get displaced when their land is taken away for infrastructure and industrial development.

Congress president Sonia Gandhi told a rally in Dhanbad Friday that there will be no displacement without prior rehabilitation.

Displacement -- an official euphemism for loss of homes -- is a major issue in Jharkhand. Nearly a third of its population has been displaced over the years for setting up steel, mining and other companies.

The political parties are also promising to solve the Maoist problem, which has claimed thousands of lives in Jharkhand both before and after it was set up following Bihar's division.
Nityanand Shukla

Karnataka, its crisis, controversies and elections

 Karnataka is fast becoming a state that lives on crisis, controversies and elections.

Political parties are busy drawing up strategies for the Dec 18 election to fill 25 seats in the Vidhana Parishat or legislative council, the upper house of the assembly.

Including the May 2008 polls to the assembly and the April-May 2009 election to the Lok Sabha, this will be the fifth time in two-and-a-half years that political parties will spend time and money on electioneering.

The other two were by-elections to the assembly, caused either by defection of Congress and Janata Dal-Secular (JD-S) legislators to the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), or of legislators resigning the seat after entering the Lok Sabha.

A sixth election is also on the cards, for the Greater Bangalore City Corporation. That too may be held in December.

But people will be largely spared of campaign harangue for the Dec 18 ballot.

Only members of local elected bodies - gram panchayats to zilla panchayats - and legislators and MPs form the electoral college to choose the 25 members.

The council has 75 members, of which 25 each are elected by legislative assembly members and local authorities, seven each by graduates and teachers. Eleven are nominated.

The BJP, recovering from a bitter feud between Chief Minister B.S. Yeddyurappa and his detractors, the main opposition party Congress and the third major player JD-S have begun selecting candidates.

Contestants can file nomination papers from Nov 24. The last date is Dec 1. Polling is on Dec 18 and counting Dec 21.

Of the 25 seats, 19 are held by the Congress, four by BJP and one by JD-S. The other seat is vacant.

The Congress hopes the crisis that rocked the Yeddyurappa ministry following the campaign to remove him by dissident leader Tourism Minister G. Janardhana Reddy would help it retain all the seats it held.

That would be a difficult task as the party has fared poorly in all the elections starting from May 2008. If the Congress fails to retain all the seats, the BJP would gain majority in the council also. At present both parties have 28 members each.

Even as the state heaved a sigh of relief that the BJP managed to patch up the differences in its Karnataka unit that paralysed the government for two weeks from Oct 26, there was an ugly spat in Bangalore University between the vice chancellor and newly appointed registrars.

The vice chancellor, N. Prabhu Dev, reportedly did not allow two academicians, M.G. Krishnan and M.S. Talwar, to take over as registrars on Nov 16 on the ground that they were not his nominees. Prabhu Dev denied this.

The university students resorted to demonstrations at the campus against the vice chancellor and the new registrars assumed office Nov 19. Prabhu Dev is a cardiologist and headed the premier state-government run Jayadeva Institute of Cardiology prior to his new appointment.

Another controversy is brewing.

Governor H.R. Bhardwaj, who was law minister in the first United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government, has expressed dissatisfaction over the pace and extent of relief work in flood hit north Karnataka.

Yeddyurappa has reacted saying he would direct the chief secretary to brief the governor.

The Congress claims the chief minister had insulted the governor by his reported statement that he will take Bhardwaj also in a delegation to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to seek larger financial assistance.

Yeddyurappa has not contradicted the statement attributed to him, though he has asserted there was no truth in the governor's assessment that relief work was shoddy.
Indo Asian News Service

Kashmir separatists: China has stake in S.Asia peace

China has a stake in peace in South Asia, and Kashmir in particular, as part of the disputed region is under Beijing's control, Kashmir's main separatist alliance said.

The mention of China's role in resolving the dispute and its control over a part of the Himalayan region -- the first by separatist leaders since a revolt against New Delhi broke out in 1989 -- could hurt chances of resuming peace talks with the government.

India rules 45 percent of Kashmir and the bulk of its more than 11 million population. Pakistan has about 35 percent of the territory and China controls the rest.

"It (China) has a direct link with Kashmir as certain parts of Kashmir, including Aksai Chin, are under its control," Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, chairman of the All Parties Hurriyat (Freedom) Conference, told thousands of Muslim worshippers late on Friday.

"I believe that China is not a party to the Kashmir conflict but it has stakes as far as peace in the region is concerned."

Farooq, also the chief priest of Kashmir, said he is planning to visit China soon.

"Hurriyat welcomes the approach adopted by China and America jointly in terms of addressing the issue of Kashmir in South Asia," he said.

He was referring to a joint statement issued by the United States and China after President Barack Obama met his Chinese counterpart Hu Jintao, which included a line of support for the improvement of India-Pakistan relations.

New Delhi said in response it does not need any external help to improve ties with neighbour Pakistan.

HURT PEACE TALKS?
With violence down in Kashmir in recent years, India is pulling out troops from the region and has initiated secret talks with separatist groups to come up with a solution, which could also be greater autonomy.

Experts said the latest Hurriyat comment will have an impact on the future of official peace talks, which broke down in 2006. Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh offered to resume talks last month during a visit to Kashmir.

"This is something that was not desirable and Mirwaiz's suggestion that China could play a role along with Pakistan on the Kashmir issue will never go down well with the government," Uday Bhaskar, a New Delhi-based strategic affairs expert, said.

"I am sure the Hurriyat's latest statement will irritate New Delhi further," said Noor Ahmed Baba, dean of the faculty of social science at the Kashmir University.

A clear government reaction was not immediately available.

"It is unfortunate for them (separatists) to say so. We are watching the situation closely," said one home ministry official, who was not authorised to speak to the media.

India and Pakistan, who claim the whole region, have fought two of their three wars over Kashmir, where tens of thousands of people have died in two decades of violence.

Ties between the two neighbours nosedived after last November's Mumbai attacks, in which 166 people were killed and New Delhi blamed Pakistan-based militants for the attacks.

(Additional reporting by Bappa Majumdar in New Delhi; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)

Sheikh Mushtaq
reuter

Lastnight India
Sun, Nov 22 04:56 AM

New Governors for Gujarat, Assam

NEW DELHI: In a late evening reshuffle, Tripura Governor Kamala Beniwal was moved to Gujarat, Maharashtra Congressman D Y Patil was appointed Governor of Tripura and former Orissa chief minister J B Patnaik was made the Governor of Assam. Patnaik was appointed in place of Sibtey Razi. Beniwal has been asked to take charge as Governor of Gujarat, a post lying vacant since the death of D N DWIVEDI.

Reddy brothers to 'stay in ministry'

BANGALORE: Karnataka Chief Minister B S Yeddyurappa has ruled out dropping Reddy brothers of Bellary from his ministry despite a committee appointed by the Supreme Court indicting them for illegally running mining operations in neighbouring Andhra Pradesh. "A situation has not arisen for dropping of these ministers," Yeddyurappa told reporters here on Saturday.

'PPP in education okay within norms'

NEW DELHI: Minister of State for HRD D Purandeshwari on Saturday said public-private partnership (PPP) model of education was welcome if it came with a regulatory framework. Addressing the National Consultative Meet on PPP in Education, Purandeshwari said, "The government feels that the PPP model can augment in a big way a phase-wise expansion which, otherwise, cannot be ensured due to budgetary constraints and lack of capacity in the public sector. At the same time it is imperative that a regulatory framework is put in place so that there is no commercial commodification of education."

Narrow escape for train passengers

BAGHA (Bihar): Passengers of a Muzaffarpur-Gorakhpur train had a narrow escape when alert gangmen stopped the train just before a broken track at Awsani halt station between Bagha and Balmikinagar in Bihar on Saturday. The driver applied emergency brake after he noticed a group of gangmen waving their red shirts and pointing to the broken track ahead, Rail Traffic Inspector (Bagha) Srilal Hansda told reporters here.

Naxal killed, 11 held in C'garh encounters

RAIPUR: A Maoist was killed in an encounter with security personnel in the Naxal-affected Dantewada district of Chhattisgarh and 11 Left extremists were arrested from different places in the state, the police said on Saturday. A Naxal was killed when security personnel were conducting a search operation in the forest near Gogunda village on Friday. In another encounter, seven Naxals were arrested from a forest near Pordem village. In a similar operation, four Naxals were arrested from the forests of Taroki in Kanker district on Friday.

Ancient idols of Jains stolen in MP

MORENA: Six ancient idols of Jain Gurus, believed to be nearly 700 years old, have been stolen by unidentified persons from Vareh village in the Morena, the police said on Saturday. The Jain idols, made of eight substances, were stolen on Friday night from an area under the Ambah police station. Three of these were Parshwanath Bhagwan idols, two were Mahavir Swami idols and one was a

Neminath idol, the police said.

Medicos call off strike in Bihar

PATNA: Over 1,000 junior doctors in Bihar, agitating for the past 11 days demanding increased stipend as promised by the state government, on Saturday called off their stir. The doctors at Patna Medical College Hospital and Darbhanga Medical College Hospital took the decision after meeting members of Bihar Health Service Association and IMA.
Express news service

 Israel gives cold shoulder to Hamas' rocket-cessation statement
www.chinaview.cn 2009-11-22 21:08:20           Print

    by David Harris

    JERUSALEM, Nov. 22 (Xinhua) -- Hamas announced on Saturday it reached an agreement with other Palestinian factions in the Gaza Strip to only fire rockets against Israeli targets in response to any future Israeli military incursion into the coastal enclave.

    Just hours after the Hamas statement, Israel responded to a rocket attack fired from Gaza earlier on Saturday. Israeli aircraft targeted what the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said were two weapons-making facilities in northern and central Gaza and one smuggling tunnel under the border between Gaza and Egypt.

    ROCKET FIRE FROM GAZA

    Fathi Hamad, interior minister of the deposed Hamas government ruling Gaza announced the rocket attacks cessation agreement during a meeting with journalists in Gaza on Saturday afternoon.

    Islamic Jihad, then, issued a statement denying that it was a signatory to any such understanding.

    Israel's reaction to the Hamas statement has been minimal. "We will judge them by their actions, not by their words," an Israeli official told Xinhua on condition of anonymity.

    However, just as the weekly cabinet meeting was underway Sunday in Jerusalem, the IDF did issue a statement regarding rocket fire.

    "Nearly 270 rockets and mortar shells were fired at Israel since the end of Operation Cast Lead on Jan. 18, 2009, in comparison to over 3,300 rockets and mortars fired in the year before the operation. The last month had seen approximately 15 rockets and mortar shells fired at Israel from Gaza," said the statement.

    "The IDF will not tolerate any attacks by terror organizations against Israel and its citizens," added the statement.

    Israel launched what it dubbed Operation Cast Lead in December in retaliation for what it claimed thousands of rockets fired from Gaza over a period of some seven years.

    During the 22-day military operation, as many as 1,300 Palestinians were killed, though Israel questions the number of civilians Palestinian officials said died during the fighting.

    Both Israel and Hamas have been accused of possibly committing war crimes in the Goldstone Report, which was compiled by a UN committee headed by South African judge Richard Goldstone.

    BEHIND HAMAS' STATEMENT

    Analysts believe there are a number of key reasons for Hamas's decision to hold rocket fire.

    Naji Shurab, professor of political science at al-Azhar University in Gaza, said Hamas wants to show Gaza residents that it takes the reins of the strip, but it will not negotiate directly with Israel.

    As a result, it made the declaration in order to show it can keep Gazans safe, he said.

    "If you want to keep your authority, you know that you have to guarantee that there is no threat to your strength, government or authority," said Shurab.

    Moshe Marzuk, a researcher at the International Institute of Counter-terrorism at Israel's Interdisciplinary Center, said that show of strength is not only aimed at Gaza, but also intended to deliver a message to the Palestinian National Authority (PNA).

    The PNA headed by Mahmoud Abbas, the leader of Fatah, Hamas' bitter rival, holds sway in the West Bank.

    Hamas is hoping that when elections are held in the West Bank sometime next year, support for Hamas will increase and will deal a damaging and possibly fatal blow to Abbas' political career.

    Marzuk believes that Hamas is trying to tell voters that its modus operandi achieves more for the Palestinians than that of Fatah and the PNA.

    Without negotiating directly with Israel, Hamas is trying to ensure a long-term stability for Gazans and it appears it will soon take the limelight with the release of some 1,000 Palestinians from Israeli prisons.

    Both Shurab and Marzuk see a direct connection to the ongoing talks between Israel and Hamas regarding the possible upcoming exchange of prisoners.

    Germany is currently mediating a mechanism for the swap of the Palestinians for Gilad Shalit, an Israeli soldier captured by Hamas more than three years ago.

    Shurab also highlighted what he believes Hamas' desire to be recognized as a credible player on the diplomatic scene. By showing it can act as an efficient government and not launch attacks on Israel, it hopes it will be treated as a serious regional player.

    TO JUDGE BY DEEDS

    Shurab did not believe that the announcement from Islamic Jihad is a bad news. Hamas "can keep security, can keep peace on the border between Gaza and Israel and can keep any Palestinian militia from launching missiles against Israel," he said.

    But Marzuk disagreed, saying, "Of course Hamas is in control, but not 100 percent. There's no such thing."

    Islamic Jihad and a couple of factions linked to Jihad have ways to bypass Hamas and launch attacks against Israel, according to Marzuk.

    The rocket launches in the past few days are a clear attempt by these organizations to scupper the prisoner-exchange deal between Hamas and Israel, he said.

    All the while Israel monitors the situation with more than a little passing interest.

    Despite the relative quiet in the past few months compared to the situation in 2008, Israeli radars and warning systems still encircle Gaza and residents of the towns and villages nearby still speak of their fear each time another rocket is fired in their direction.

    While Israel will not comment specifically on the Hamas statement regarding the cessation of rocket fire, it is very clear that it will retaliate anything it perceives as a terrorist activity -- that includes aerial attacks like those carried out overnight between Saturday and Sunday.

    "It's clear that Israel will judge Hamas by its deeds," said Marzuk, adding that Hamas knows full well that if it does not rein in the attacks, Operation Cast Lead will most definitely not be the last Israeli military strike against Gaza.

 Israel warplanes hit Gaza after Palestinian factions agreed to hold rocket fire
www.chinaview.cn 2009-11-22 18:09:08           Print

    by Saud Abu Ramadan

    GAZA, Nov. 22 (Xinhua) -- Israel warplanes struck the Gaza Strip on Sunday, after Gaza's Hamas rulers announced on Saturday that armed groups in its Gaza stronghold had finalized a deal to stop firing rockets into Israel.

    Medics and eyewitnesses said Israeli war jets waged three airstrikes on targets in southern, central and northern Gaza, wounding at least 10 Palestinians.

    The witnesses said two goldsmiths shops in central and northern Gaza Strip were destroyed, while three smuggling tunnels were destroyed in the city of Rafah in southern Gaza Strip.

    Local observers said Sunday's airstrikes were the first intensive Israeli air raid on the Gaza Strip since the end of a 22-day Israeli military offensive on Gaza.

    The war, which ended on Jan. 18, left at least 1,450 people dead, most of them women and children, and wounding around 5,000 people.

    The Israeli army said the airstrikes on Sunday were in response to rockets fired from Gaza Strip at southern Israel.

    A Gaza-based militant group, affiliated with Jihadi salafi group Ansar al-Suna, claimed responsibility on Saturday for firing two mortar shells and one homemade rocket from the Gaza Strip at southern Israel. According to Israeli Radio, no damages or casualties were caused.

    Fathi Hammad, interior minister in the deposed Hamas government, said on Saturday that Hamas and the Palestinian factions agreed to halt rockets attacks against Israel for the time being.

    However, he said the Palestinian armed groups retain the right to respond to any Israeli incursion or attack against the Gaza Strip.

    "We have agreed with the factions that nobody carries out any action involving rockets for now," said Hammad, adding that if Israel sends troops to the Hamas-controlled territory, then the militants would have "an open space to respond."

    Hammad said the agreement aims at avoiding another Israeli military operation and to enable people to relief and rebuild from Israel's offensive last winter, during which thousands of houses and public institutions were damaged.

    The war in Gaza was put to an end after Israel and Hamas reached an undeclared truce. But the fragile truce was repeatedly defied by radical armed groups which fired rockets at Israel, while Israel responded with limited incursion and quick airstrikes.

    On Sunday, Hamas' armed wing al-Qassam Brigades warned that it would respond to the Israeli airstrikes on the Gaza Strip.

    "These airstrikes won't easily pass, and we won't stay with hands tied towards what is going on," said a Hamas armed wing spokesman in a statement. "We will devote all our powers to confronting any Israeli offensive on the Gaza Strip."

    The spokesman confirmed the agreement between Hamas and the Palestinian factions to halt rockets attacks on Israel.

    However, he said the deal was made "not because we are weak, but we want to protect our internal front and the highest national interests of our people."

    Israel said it would never accept the continuation of Palestinian rocket attacks, adding that "the Israeli communities in southern Israel should stay calm and the Israeli army would respond to any attempt of Palestinian militants to violate the status of calm."

 Israeli army confirms airstrike at Gaza targets
www.chinaview.cn 2009-11-22 17:38:50
JERUSALEM, Nov. 22 (Xinhua) -- The Israeli army has confirmed that its fighter jets struck three targets in the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip early Sunday morning.

    During the attacks, "two weapons-manufacturing facilities in the northern and central Gaza Strip and one smuggling tunnel in Gaza's Rafah border area" adjoining Egypt were hit, said the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) in a statement.

    Palestinian witnesses and medical sources said that at least 10people were wounded in the airstrike, which the IDF said was launched "in response to the firing of a Qassam rocket at the city of Sderot on Saturday morning."

    The latest rocket fire from Gaza caused no casualty or damage, and no militant group in the Palestinian enclave has claimed responsibility for the attack.

    Shortly before Saturday's firing, Hamas Interior Minister Fathi Hammad announced that the group had reached an agreement with other armed organizations to halt rocket attacks at Israel for the time being in order to avoid Israel's retaliation.

    Last winter, Israel conducted a large-scale offensive in Gaza, killing over 1,300 Palestinians and destroying thousands of houses and public facilities. Thirteen Israelis died during the operation, which Israel said was launched in response to eight years of rocket attacks at its southern land and meant to put an end to the hostile fire.

    Statistics provided by the IDF in Sunday' s statement showed that since the Gaza operation, the number of rocket attacks has decreased dramatically.

    Yet while accusing Palestinian militants of attempting to rebuild their arsenal by smuggling weapons into Gaza through underground tunnels at the Gaza-Sinai border, Israel has frequently carried out air raids at the area and meanwhile urged Egypt and the international community to curb Gaza-bound weaponry flow.

 China's premium income top 936 bln yuan in first 10 months
www.chinaview.cn 2009-11-22 00:31:58           Print

    BEIJING, Nov. 21 (Xinhua) -- China's premium income hit 936.09 billion yuan (137.1 billion U.S. dollars) in the first 10 months, according to China Insurance Regulatory Commission.

    The figure represented an increase of 78 billon yuan, or 9.09 percent, over that in the first nine months.

    During January to October period, premium of property and casualty insurance was 243.18 billion yuan, and 692.9 billion yuan, respectively.

    Total asset of the country's insurance sector stood at 3.83 trillion yuan by the end of October.
Editor: Yan
 Mubarak calls on Israel to stop settlements
www.chinaview.cn 2009-11-22 21:30:18           Print

    CAIRO, Nov. 22 (Xinhua) -- Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak Sunday called on Israel to stop building settlements in the occupied lands, including East Jerusalem.

    "We want first, Israel to stop building settlements in the occupied lands, including East Jerusalem and to continue the negotiations from where it stopped, according to 1967 borders," Mubarak told a joint press conference with visiting Israeli President Shimon Peres in Cairo.

    "The current time witnesses a good opportunity to achieve peace which should not be wasted," Mubarak added.

    For his part, Peres reiterated that his country is ready to accept establishing two states living side by side in peace.

    "The Israeli government is ready to accept two-state solution," he said.

    "The minute the negotiations start, there will not be more settlements, there will not be confiscations of more lands, there will not be financial investment in new settlements," Peres added.

    On Saturday, Mubarak blamed Israel for ruining the chances of peace, saying the Jewish country obstructed the peacemaking efforts by its plans to Judaize East Jerusalem, its excavation under Al-Aqsa Mosque and its aggression against the Palestinians.
World Reactions


- Austria voices support to two-state solution to Palestinian-Israeli conflicts
- U.S. annoyed by Israel's plan to build houses in East Jerusalem
- U.S. "dismayed" at Jerusalem settlement expansion
- Argentina urges Israel to reach peace in Middle East
- France says Palestinians' unilateral action can be detrimental
- U.S. opposes call for unilateral Palestinian state
- Bill Clinton speaks at Rabin Center in Tel Aviv
- Egyptian intelligence chief to meet Abbas on peace talks, reconciliation
- No peace between Israel and Palestine without political concession: Brazilian president
- Israeli president starts official visit to Brazil
- Obama meet Netanyahu on stalled peace process
- Obama to meet Netanyahu in the White House
- Egypt extends borders opening before Gaza pilgrims
- China calls on all parties concerned to probe humanitarian law violations in Gaza conflict
- Brazil calls on Israel to "establish full, independent and credible investigations"
- Vietnam calls on Israel to respond to world appeals
- Clinton: Israeli settlement activity not legitimate
- Clinton discusses Middle East peace process with Mubarak
- U.S. stance on Israeli settlement unchanged: Mitchell
- UAE president reiterates support for Palestinians' independence
- Egypt opens Rafah crossing for stranded Palestinians
- Clinton urges Israel, Palestinians to immediately resume peace talks
- Clinton arrives in Israel to advance Mideast peace process
- France, Israel talk about bilateral ties
- Jordanians call for annulling peace treaty with Israel, expelling Israeli ambassador
- "Return Journey to Al-Aqsa" trip held to back Palestinians in Jerusalem
- China to continue playing constructive role in Mideast peace process
- Italian president meets Jordan's King Abdullah on Mideast peace process
- Palestinian negotiators in Washington to look for restarting peace process
- U.N. rights body endorses Gaza war crimes report
- UN rights chief reiterates support for Gaza conflict report
- UNICEF ambassadors slam Israeli closure on Gaza
- Indonesia to provide business skills training for Palestinians
- Austrian FM urges Israel, Palestine to work for Middle East peace
- Egyptian proposal for Palestinian unity
- Egypt to push for reconciliation pact amid growing Palestinian disputes
- Iran criticizes Arab States' silence over Palestinian issues
- Israeli envoys to travel to U.S. over Mideast peace talks
- Palestinian reconciliation deal might be delayed for weeks: Egypt's FM
- Turkey cancels joint air force drill with Israel: report
- Mitchell, Abbas discuss statehood with contiguous territory
- U.S. seeking early relaunch of Israeli-Palestinian peace talks: envoy
- Irish activist seeks L.American support to break Gaza blockade
- Egyptian FM warns against spoiling Palestinian reconciliation
- Report: Abbas' visit to Syria postponed
- Hezbollah congratulates Palestinians on detainees' release
- U.S. dismisses UN Gaza report
- Egypt calls on Quartet to control Israeli-Palestinian clashes
- Syria calls on Israel to commit to Middle East free of WMD
- Lebanon's PM-designate condemns Al-Aqsa clashes
- Jordan strongly condemns Israelis' breaking into al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem
- UNIFIL commander: No war between Hezbollah and Israel
- Kuwait calls on int'l community to take measures to end Israeli occupation
- U.S. activists tour war-torn Gaza
- Mitchell rules out resolving Palestinians refugees problem at Lebanon's expense
- U.S. Mideast efforts impaired amid Palestinian, Israeli infighting
- U.S. Middle East envoy to visit Israel, Palestinian territories
- World Bank urges to lift Gaza blockade to complete wastewatertreatment project
- Spain supports Palestinian statehood on 1967 borders: FM
- Freezing settlement first, normalization with Israel second: Egyptian FM
- Palestinian lawmaker reveals U.S. Mideast peace plan
- U.S. regrets Israel's planned settlement construction
- Senior Hamas delegation to visit Cairo Saturday
- Solana calls for Israeli settlement freeze in Palestinian territories
- Solana: EU supports future de facto Palestinian state
- S. Africa supports efforts to end Israeli-Palestinian conflict
- Int'l efforts advance Hamas-Israel prisoner talks: sources
- UNRWA appeals for cash to ease economic difficulty in Gaza
- Egyptian mediator explores Palestinian rivals ahead of dialogue
- Saudi monarch calls for vital Palestinian unity
- Egypt to help Fatah elect its Gaza representatives: official
- Egypt urges UN to pressure Israel over evicting Palestinians
- Report: U.S. presses Israel for yearlong settlement freeze
- Egypt opens Rafah crossing partially for stranded Palestinians
- Netanyahu meets U.S. national security adviser on Iran, Mideast peace
- Vast majority Gazans depend on aid: UNRWA director
- Israeli settlements hurting peace process with Palestinians, UN says
- Eight U.S. congressmen in Gaza for low-profile visit
- U.S. calls for international support for Palestinian Authority
- Switzerland calls for end to Israeli settlements
- UN chief urges Israelis, Palestinians to push forward Middle East peace process
- Russian Mideast envoy meets with exiled Hamas chief in Syria
- Egypt seizes explosives, mortars in Rafah
- UN official: removing Gaza war rubble needs over 8 months
- Gul says two independent states ensure genuine peace in Mideast
- Egypt says al-Qadoumi's accusations harm Palestinian reconciliation
- Lebanese president voices support for Mideast peace conference
- U.S. calls for Arab actions to improve ties with Israel
- EU foreign policy chief upsets Israel with Palestinian comments
- Egypt accelerates mediation before fresh round of inter-Palestinian dialogue in late July
- Egyptian security officials arrive in West Bank ahead of unity talks
- Reports: EU retracts critical statement on Israeli settlements
- President: Cyprus supports Palestinian cause, two-state solution
- Egypt opens Rafah crossing for Hamas, humanitarian cases
- Sixth round of Palestinian dialogue in Cairo concluded
- HRW accuses Israel of violating war laws in Gaza fighting
- Quartet asks Israel to stop settlement activity
- UN chief to attend meetings on Mideast, Afghanistan, Pakistan in Italy
- Italy calls for stop of Israeli settlements on Palestinian soil
- UN envoy: International community awaits response from Israel on Roadmap obligations




Israeli army confirms airstrike at Gaza targets

Israeli army has confirmed its fighter jets struck three targets in Gaza Sunday. During the attacks, "two weapons-manufacturing facilities in the northern and central Gaza Strip and one smuggling tunnel in Gaza's Rafah border area" were hit, said IDF in a statement.

15 dead, over 50 missing, 243 rescued after ferry sinks in Indonesia

Indonesian Health Ministry on Sunday evening reported 243 had been rescued after Dumai Express 10 ferry sank in waters off Indonesia.



Iran starts aerial defense maneuver

Iran started a large-scale joint aerial defense maneuver on Sunday to prepare itself for any potential attack against the country, state television reported.



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Pirates seize Greek-owned bulk carrier off Yemen

Presidential elections begin in Romania

Mubarak calls on Israel to stop settlements

Suicide car bomb kills three policemen in W Iraq

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  Asia & Oceania

  Americas



Australian survey finds insurers best service

Rescuers temporarily stop searching for victims of sunken ferry in Indonesia

Five militants killed in Pakistan's S Waziristan operation

German troops attacked in N Afghan province

Former Nepali PM returns from Singapore after treatment

190 policemen die in 2009 in Pakistani NWFP



U.S. Senate votes to move health care reform bill forward

Clippers broadcasters suspended for improper comments about Iranian player

American aircraft forced landing causes injuries in Mali

L.American countries mark 20th anniversary of UN children's rights convention

Brazil celebrates Day of Black Consciousness

Canada to increase liability limit for nuclear accidents


  Europe

  Middle East



Presidential elections begin in Romania

One in two Austrians consider new government better than before

Romania to hold presidential elections on Sunday

Russia to stick to five priorities in economic restructuring, says Putin

First Russian brigade with Iskander missiles to be formed in 2010

Russian defense orders to grow 8.5% in 2010: Putin



DM: Iran pursues delivery of S-300 missiles from Russia

Detained Saddam Hussein loyalists confess Baghdad deadly bombings

Mubarak calls on Israel to stop settlements

Spokesman: Iran criticizes Clinton's remarks on country's post-election issues

Israel gives cold shoulder to Hamas' rocket-cessation statement

TV: Iran starts aerial defense maneuver


  Africa

  World & Regional Organizations



Negotiators of Zimbabwe main parties to meet on Sunday

Pirates seize Greek-owned bulk carrier off Yemen

Nigeria condemns Kosovo secession

Sudan's elections to be held on scheduled time: first vice-president

Mediterranean states should cooperate to tackle unemployment:experts

Albania marks 20th anniversary of UN children's rights convention



UN chief hails Sri Lanka's decision to release more than half of IDPs

Small island youth at risk due to climate change

UNICEF urges stepped-up response to crisis in Somalia

IFRC calls for dramatic rethink on humanitarian assistance in Africa

World Bank commences climate change seminar for Nigerian youths

WB fund for poorest countries delivers record support during economic crisis


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Twin Bombings Hit Northeastern Indian State of Assam

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Indonesian Ferry Sinks, Kills 15, 230 Rescued

Police say the Dumai Express 10 was sailing from Batam island to Riau province Sunday morning when it sank

Rocket Hits Near International Luxury Hotel in Kabul, Injuring 4

Ministry spokesman says that rocket hit road between hospital and Serena Hotel, popular residence in Kabul for visiting foreigners

Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh looks on during the inauguration of a three-day India Economic Summit organized by the World Economic Forum in New Delhi, India, Sunday, Nov. 8, 2009.

India's PM Singh Travels to US Capital

Manmohan Singh says he hopes to build on strategic dialogue with US aimed at further bolstering ties

Afghan policemen gather at the site of an attack on lawmaker Abdul Rab Rasoul Sayaf in the Khaja Musafer area of Paghman district on the outskirts of Kabul on November 20, 2009.

Afghan MP Escapes Assassination Attempt in Kabul

Five bodyguards killed; earlier suicide bomber kills at least 16 people in southwestern part of country

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Obama Touts Asia Trade for US Economic Recovery

The US president stresses that the US needs to place a greater emphasis on exports in order for the economy to grow

robert_gates

Gates: US to Tighten Control of Afghan Aid in Anti-Corruption Effort

US defense secretary says multinational presence in Afghanistan provides significant influx of dollars through development contracts

Aamer Yaqub Janjua of Pakistan was arrested in an early morning raid in Brescia, northern Italy, where they managed a money transfer agency, 21 Nov 2009

Italy Arrests Pakistanis Suspected of Mumbai Links

Authorities say police arrested two suspected of helping fund, providing logistical support for last year's terrorist attacks in India

US, China May Set Emissions Reduction Goals

Obama, Chinese president endorse package of energy projects during talks in Beijing

Irene Khan, secretary general of Amnesty International

Amnesty International Chief Blasts Australia's 'Panic' Over Asylum Seekers

Irene Khan says Australian government should close immigration detention center on Christmas Island

UN General Assembly Condemns Human Rights Violations in Burma, North Korea

Assembly adopts resolutions urging both states to end systematic and widespread abuses against their citizens

Two-year-old Bangladeshi orphan, Krishna, seen at Royal Children's Hospital Melbourne, Australia (2009 file photo)

Australian Surgeons Separate Bangladeshi Siamese Twins

Two-year-old sisters Trishna and Krishna were joined at top of head, requiring delicate surgery to separate their brains

A close-up of a Siamese crocodile hatchling at Phnom Tamao Wildlife Rescue Centre, Cambodia, 19 Nov 2009

DNA Results Give New Hope for 'Extinct' Siamese Crocodiles

35 crocodiles at wildlife rescue center in Cambodia purebred Siamese

President Barack Obama speaks to troops at a US military airbase in Osan, south of Seoul, 19 Nov 2009

Obama Calls on N. Korea to Return to Talks

After meeting with South Korean President Lee Myung-bak, US president ends Asian tour with visit to American troops at Osan air base

Singapore PM Lee Hsien Loong, back to camera, gives welcome address to APEC leaders, in Singapore, 14 Nov 2009

APEC Leaders Agree to Chart New Growth in Asia Pacific

Leaders say regional economies can not return to normal growth

 Hamid Karzai (L) takes the presidential oath beside Afghanistan's Chief Justice Abdul Salam Azimi during his inauguration at the Presidential Palace in Kabul, 19 Nov 2009

Karzai Sworn in for Second Term as Afghan President

Afghan President Hamid Karzai sworn in after months of political uncertainty in wake of fraud-marred presidential election

Refugee Stand-Off Ends in Indonesia

Sri Lankan asylum seekers transferred to an Australian-funded detention facility on Bintan island

Supporters of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, shown in a photo on the altar, pray at his memorial after the Supreme Court upheld death sentences on five former soldiers in the killing the country's independence leader, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Thursday, Nov 19, 2009.

Bangladesh Supreme Court Upholds Assassins' Death Sentences

Five former army officers convicted of 1975 killing of country's independence leader, Sheikh Mujibur Rehman, could face death penalty

Drone Kills 8 in Pakistan

Pakistani officials say a suspected U.S. drone attack has killed at least eight people in the country's northwest

Pedestrian crosses footbridge over early afternoon traffic on smoggy day in Beijing, 19 Sep 2009

US, China Seen as Making Progress on Climate Change

China agrees to work with United States on carbon capture and sequestration technology

Monira Rahman

Monira Rahman Fights for Life Free of Violence

A cruel act of violence - acid thrown in face of a woman, sometimes a child; perpetrators are driven to disfigure rather than kill


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22 Nov 2009, 1746 hrs IST, NEHA DEWAN & LISA MARY THOMSON,ET Bureau

Leading real estate cos including Unitech, DLF, Omaxe said they were back in hiring mode albeit differently. India's top cities in development | Home loan: Myth & reality

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