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The Neighbourhood/World |
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Escaped Chinese lawyer ‘in U.S. protection' -
Ananth Krishnan, Hindu
The visually-challenged Chinese lawyer and crusader against forced abortions, Chen Guangcheng, who this week escaped from more than a year-and-a-half of house arrest is now under the protection of United States officials and is likely to be in the U.S. Embassy in Beijing, rights groups said on Saturday.
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Wait for Green Card could be ending -
Somini Sengupta, HindustanTimes
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This Pak general prefers the barracks -
Seema Mustafa, DNA
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Chickens can come home to roost -
G Parthasarathy, Pioneer
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Notes on three scandals -
Economist
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London attackers were on MI5 radar -
Indian Express
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Homework for Nawaz -
Khaled Ahmed, Indian Express
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Indian-American activism is acquiring critical force -
Prema Kurien, Indian Express
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From Brooklyn to Pakistan, a family feud turns deadly -
Mosi Secret, New York Times
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Start and sell: India’s new Valley success stories -
Shilpa Phadnis, Times of India
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India under a Eurosceptic lens -
Dipankar De Sarkar, Hindustan Times
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Polls expose Pak fault lines -
Karamatullah K Ghori, NewIndianExpress
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Inside America's war on terror -
Ajai Shukla, Business Standard
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South Asia: All in one -
TS Vishwanath, Business Standard
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Hamid Karzai leaves India empty-handed -
Nayanima Basu, Business Standard
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Muslims converts: Changing my religion -
Economist
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Syria: Outside patronage and a new offensive for the regime -
Stratfor
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China ready to talk FTA with India -
FinancialExpress
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US immigration bill may force jobs to be shipped overseas: Silicon Valley executives -
Economic Times
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The fear of China's economic downfall -
Daily Beast
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Will Nawaz Sharif be different the third time? -
Rajiv Dogra, DNA
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US becoming energy kingpin -
Sunil Kewalramani, Business Line
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‘The economy, the economy, the economy’ -
Rasheeda Bhagat, Business Line
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Chinese hackers resume attacks on US targets -
David E Sanger & Nicole Perlroth, New York Times
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'Sophisticated' Indian cyberattacks targeted Pak military sites -
Manu Pubby, Indian Express
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Fill the trade basket now -
Reshma Patil, Hindustan Times
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The UPA 2 government was conceived in corruption – and never really recovered from that taint. Right from the day the election results came in, the back-channel negotiations began for the reappointment of A Raja as Telecom Minister to advance the interests of certain telecom majors (in return for illegal gratification). It was an enterprise which set the stage for India’s biggest corruption scandal and virtually set the political tone for the rest of the four years. As subsequent exposes have established, Manmohan Singh and other key Ministers knew full well that mischief was afoot, but pointedly looked the other way. That was the beginning of the slide, and the UPA government in general – and Manmohan Singh in particular – was mortally wounded from that episode. But rather than press ahead with remedial action, the government slid further into the cesspool of corruption.
Venky Vembu |
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Split with Nitish will only boost BJP in Bihar - K Balakrishnan, LensOnNews WITH THE BJP seemingly decided on projecting Narendra Modi as its PM candidate and its close ally Nitish Kumar of JD(U) equally firm in his opposition to the idea, a split in the NDA alliance looks inevitable; most observers think it’s not a question of if, but when. |
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