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December Month Articles

December Month Articles

  • Kandhamal killings split Orissa Maoists on religious lines
    • by Zeenews.com
      The killing of a Hindu leader and his associates that triggered attacks on Christians in Orissa have split the Communist Party of India-Maoist (CPI-Maoist) on religious lines for the first time, with many Hindu members breaking away to form a rival group. .....
  • Coming next: 26/11 never happened!
    • by Kanchan Gupta
      The Congress appears to have embarked upon a dangerous venture fraught with disastrous consequences for the nation. If the recent assertions of Minister for Minority Affairs Abdul Rehman Antulay and party general secretary Digvijay Singh, and the Government's official response to them, are any indication, the Congress is seeking to make political capital out of India's sorrow through the expedient means of 'politicising' the issue of terrorism. .....
  • Antulay's perverse conspiracy theory
    • by Prafull Goradia
      Why should Mr AR Antulay's contention have surprised most people in the country? They may or may not support him in public, but most Muslims are likely to empathise with his doubts. It is just that most Hindus and Christians have not taken the trouble to understand the Islamic mind. True, the Muslim posture since Independence has been misleading, possibly out of convenience or compulsion. .....
  • For this CPM MP, Modi is a model
    • by The Pioneer
      Gujarat Chief Minister and senior BJP leader Narendra Modi is still a 'hated person' for the communists of the country officially, but not all CPI(M) men think so. Kerala CPI(M)'s Young Turk AP Abdullakkutty, party MP from Kannur, sprang a surprise on Sunday by stating that Kerala should emulate the model of Modi in the matters of development. .....
  • Fight jihadis at home first
    • by Joginder Singh
      Whenever there is a terrorist attack the finger of suspicion rightly points towards Pakistan, a country that has sheltered, trained and protected terrorists over the last three decades. Whatever Government there may be in Islamabad, Pakistan has always tried to bleed India with a thousand cuts. Irrespective of the fact whether it is under Army or civilian rule, our western neighbour has been following a consistent anti-India policy. .....
  • Don't forget, don't forgive
    • by A Surya Prakash
      Of late, Mr Pranab Mukherjee has been adopting a tone and tenor worthy of the Foreign Minister of a great nation like India while dealing with a rogue state like Pakistan, which has made sponsorship of terrorism a key instrument of state policy. .....
  • Hamas's Strategy: The Rockets or the Media
    • by Barry Rubin
      Nothing is clearer than Hamas's strategy. It gives Israel the choice between rockets and media, and Hamas thinks it is a situation of "we win or you lose." .....
  • Missing pieces of the terror jigsaw
    • by Vicky Nanjappa
      The Indian Mujahideen has become the face of home-grown terror in India. While some key IM members have been arrested by law enforcement agencies, its leaders continue to evade the security net. .....
  • India's case gets stronger with Pak armyman's arrest
    • by M Saleem Pandit & Sanjay Khajuria
      India got more evidence on Tuesday of Islamabad's complicity in terror attacks on Indian soil when J&K police arrested three terrorists, including a Pakistani army regular. .....
  • J-K polls: High voter turnout shows people want peace
    • by Expressindia.com
      People in Jammu and Kashmir may have rejected the boycott call by separatists by turning out in large numbers to vote in the assembly polls but for many of them the sentiment for "freedom" hasn't died. .....
  • Srinagar votes, stunned hawk Geelani admits: Unthinkable
    • by Zahid Rafiq
      Policemen sit idle at the entrance, the gates are open, there are no visitors. This is Syed Ali Shah Geelani's home, the citadel for Kashmir's hardline separatists who announced a poll boycott from their rooftops only to see it come crashing down in the long lines outside polling booths across the Valley. .....
  • On the wrong road, as usual
    • by P R Ramesh
      One of the problems of those blessed with the pseudo-secular mindset is the belief that they have a monopoly on compassion. At regular intervals, they spring to the defence of imagined grievances or deliberate ploys of the easy-to-offend types and attempt to guilt trip the average citizen. .....
  • The war against India
    • by Tavleen Singh
      In the month that has gone by since the attack on Mumbai have we got any closer to dealing with Islamist terrorism? I fear not. We have a new Home Minister, a new central agency to deal with national security and there is talk of scattering commando units across the country but will all this make a difference? .....
  • Mumbai attack key to Pak Army comeback plot
    • by Pranab Dhal Samanta
      New Delhi is fast coming to the conclusion that the Terror attacks in Mumbai had the sanction of the highest levels in the Pakistan Army given the way events are unfolding one month on. .....
  • NCW seeks clarification on Pragya's alleged torture
    • by The Times of India
      Seeking clarification into the allegations of torture and inhuman behaviour meted out to sadhvi Pragya Thakur, an accused in the Malegaon blast case, by Maharashtra Anti-terrorist Squad (ATS), the NCW has written a letter to the Maharashtra government over the issue. .....
  • Pakistan must deliver on its promises
    • by Ved Nanda
      Thousands of demonstrators in Mumbai expressed their outrage at terrorist attacks on the vibrant city they love. They were angry at their government for its failure to prevent the attacks. Many called it India's 9/11. .....
  • Pune opens doorways to female Hindu priests
    • by Imtiaz Jaleel
      Women priests in Hinduism are not new. But for the first time, an institute in Pune is offering women a one-year course which will train them to become 'purohitas' or female priests. And the response so far has been quite encouraging, with many families specifically asking for 'purohitas'. .....
  • Unreal to hope from Pakistan
    • by Swapan Dasgupta
      There is an astonishing sense of déjà vu that confronts any half-detached observer of the post-26/11 mood in India. After the attack on Parliament seven years ago, Atal Bihari Vajpayee spoke menacingly of an aar paar ki ladai and ordered full military mobilisation. This time too India has swung between decrying war-talk and keeping "all options open". The romantic candles of sadbhavna have been snuffed out by the torches of assertive nationalism. .....
  • Antulay's doubt was brainless, shameless communalism
    • by Arvind Lavakare
      Arvind Lavakare may be 71, but the fire in his belly burns stronger than in many people half his age. The economics post-graduate worked with the Reserve Bank of India and several private and public sector companies before retiring in 1997. .....
  • Why the Congress won't make Antulay say sorry
    • by T V R Shenoy
      That line from Love Story -- the 1970 original, not any later Hindi drama -- is running through my head as I watch A R Antulay grinning gleefully as Parliament erupts. Senior members of the Union Cabinet may squirm in embarrassment but the minority affairs minister -- a post that should never have been created -- is loving every precious second of screen time. .....
  • Terrorists sexually Humiliated guests before killing them
    • by Santosh Mishra
      Disturbing photographs made available to this newspapers by police sources indicate that several of the guests at the Taj Mahal Hotel during the siege November 26 were sexually humiliated by the terrorists and then shot dead. .....
  • Heaven for the Godless?
    • by Charles M. Blow
      In June, the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life published a controversial survey in which 70 percent of Americans said that they believed religions other than theirs could lead to eternal life. .....
  • ISI of Pakistan planning to bomb Kolkata
    • by Manan Kumar
      After wreaking havoc in Mumbai, major towns of West Bengal, including Kolkata, are next on the hit list of Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence. .....
  • Imagined victimhood
    • by Khimi Thapa
      The way some Indian Muslims, including a handful of 'scholars' and Union Minority Affairs Minister AR Antulay in particular, have sought to spin a 'conspiracy theory' over the killing of ATS chief Hemant Karkare during the Mumbai carnage has put the community on the defensive once again about bloodshed in name of Islam. .....
  • Brutal massacre, unique case in judicial history
    • by The Pioneer
      The May 2, 2003 Marad massacre, in which eight Hindus were chopped and hacked to death under the darkness of night, was one of the worst-ever incidents of cold-blooded criminal act the history of communal hatred in Kerala and the case regarding that has been one of the rarest-of-the-rare affairs in the history of the criminal investigation procedure and judicial process. .....
  • Dawood has a quiet birthday in Islamabad
    • by S Balakrishnan
      Following the post-Mumbai glare on terror sanctuaries in Pakistan, Inter- Services Intelligence (ISI) has relocated India's most-wanted fugitive, Dawood Ibrahim, to a safe house in Islamabad. .....
  • Teacher couple hounded by CPM men
    • by The Times of India
      The aamra and ora us and them psyche that determines who are sheltered safely in their homes and who remain homeless in trouble zones like Nandigram and Keshpur, seems to have reached the chief minister's constituency, the Jadavpur area, too. .....
  • 2008 saw emergence of Islamic militancy in Assam
    • by Sanjoy Ray
      The year 2008 though witnessed lesser casualties of terrorist violence in the State compared to 2007, it, however, saw the emergence of Islamic militancy in the biggest way, even overpowering the impact of decade-old home-grown insurgency. More than 200 civilians have been killed in the State so far (Mid-December), besides 16 security personnel and about 130 terrorists taking the tally of casualties of insurgency to 369. .....
  • Man tells SIT sister died of TB, not in the '02 riots
    • by Vikram Rautela
      Zarina Mansuri, a 30-year-old Muslim woman who was believed to have been brutally hacked to death and later burnt by the mob in the Naroda Patiya massacre of February 28, 2002, was not even alive at that time. She had died of tuberculosis about four months earlier. .....
  • Pak textbooks build hate culture against India
    • by Arif Mohammed Khan
      The empowerment of terror in Pakistan has not happened overnight. This is the logical culmination of the politics and policies pursued by Pakistan for years now. .....
  • Maoists split in State
    • by The Pioneer
      The Maoist organisation in the State is heading for an imminent spilt. It came to light when an organisation identified itself as Hindu guerilla Bahini (army) distributed leaflets in Gajpati and other parts of the KBK area asking people to close down the shops on Thursday as mark of respect to the VHP's 86 year-old-monk Swami Laxmanananda Saraswati who was killed last year by some unscrupulous people. .....
  • Mumbai attacks cost Lashkar Rs 4 crore
    • by Vicky Nanjappa
      The November 26 attacks on Mumbai may have cost the Lashkar-e-Tayiba between Rs 3.5 crores (Rs 35 million) and Rs 4 crores (Rs 40 million), estimate Intelligence Bureau officers. .....
  • Hinduism doesn't preach Jihad: Rakesh Sinha
    • by ZeeNews.com
      A well known columnist, Rakesh Sinha has done a deep study of the RSS and the philosophy of Hinduism apart from following BJP's rise to power. Besides being a professor of Political Science in Delhi University, he has also authored a book on the RSS founder titled 'KB Hedgewar - A Biography'. .....
  • India must fight its own battle
    • by M.V. Kamath
      The first thing that India should have done on November 30, was to bomb Karachi to smithereens and then let Condoleeza Rice do the talking. We did not attempt it. We are too civilised. And now it is too late. Even if a war is waged after due thought, the price to be paid will be enormous. .....
  • LeT draws well-educated Pakistani youngsters: Report
    • by The Economic Times
      The Pakistan-based terror group Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), which is blamed for the 26/11 Mumbai attacks, is now attracting "more young, educated men, some of whom even hold advanced degrees," a US daily reported on Thursday. .....
  • Unraveling the Sufis of India: Villains in the Guise of Saints
    • by Ibrahim Lone
      India Has always was a land of diversity. Secularism and peaceful co-existence is not a concept in this land, it is a way of life. The credit goes to the understanding of our great Vedic ancestors (I count Hinduism as practiced today as not Vedic in spirit or essence) who were men of great letters and a mighty spirit. Christianity reached the Indian shores much before it reached Europe. .....
  • A compulsive terrorist
    • by The Pioneer
      Contrary to Pakistan's protestations, Pakistani jihadis continue to sneak into India with the purpose of unleashing terror through wanton death and destruction. The recent arrest of three Pakistani citizens in Jammu, who had planned to replicate the massive truck-bombing that wrecked Marriott Hotel in Islamabad on September 20, has once again brought to the fore evidence of terrorist groups operating without any let or hindrance from Pakistani soil. .....
  • Pak gets aggressive
    • by Rezaul H Laskar
      Vowing to defend Pakistan till the "last drop of his blood", President Asif Ali Zardari on Wednesday said there would be "no compromise" on the country's sovereignty and integrity amid escalating tension with India. "We will defend the country till the last drop of our blood," Zardari said at the annual day function of his alma mater, Petaro Cadet College, in Sindh province. .....
  • Myanmarese on way to J&K held
    • by The Times of India
      Thirty-two Myanmarese nationals were arrested from the Kolkata railway station on Wednesday morning while they were trying to board the Jammu Tawi Express. .....
  • BSP leaders on overdrive to collect funds for Mayawati's birthday bash
    • by Yahoo News
      Ever since Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati declared that her birthday Jan 15 would be observed as 'Aarthik sahyog diwas' (financial support day), party leaders and units across the state have been bending over backwards to ensure the collection drive for the occasion is a stupendous success. .....
  • 26/11: India is livid, but that has changed little
    • by Anil Bhat
      What the planners and perpetrators of terror attacks on Mumbai may not have factored in is how the Indian public at large joined Mumbaikars in condemning not only the terrorists and the country they hailed and came from - Pakistan - but also the government, in Maharashtra and at the Centre, for so many lacunae in administration and governance. .....
  • Clouded war
    • by News Today
      As India is keeping on mounting pressure on Pakistan, on its own as well as through international community, Pakistan is attempting to deflect the attention of the world by creating a sort of war hysteria. .....
  • MLA's arrest puts BSP in a spot
    • by Sify News
      A Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) legislator was arrested on Wednesday evening for lynching an engineer in Uttar Pradesh allegedly after he refused to pay extortion for Chief Minister Mayawati's birthday celebrations, the police said Wednesday. The state administration, however, said the incident had no connection with Mayawati. .....
  • Pakistan could sink into chaos and anarchy
    • by Richard M Bennett
      Pakistan is a martial nation with an outstanding reputation for its military prowess and a well deserved pride in its armed forces. However the Pakistan military and intelligence service have played a disproportionately influential role in mainstream politics over the last 60 years. .....
  • It's time to call Pakistan's bluff
    • by G Parthasarathy
      In the five years I lived in Pakistan, a constant feature was the ever-present ISI minders who followed me wherever I went. Their surveillance was crude. On one occasion they seated themselves next to a table at which I was hosting Ms Maleeha Lodhi (later Pakistan's Ambassador to the US) at the height of the Kargil conflict. .....
  • UPA stands by Antulay
    • by The Pioneer
      The Minister for External Affairs, no doubt on the basis of either what he had been told by the Prime Minister or what was discussed in the Congress core group meeting and possibly by the Cabinet Committee on Security, had promised that the Government would make a statement on Union Minister for Minority Affairs Abdul Rehman Antulay's rancid comments insinuating that Pakistani terrorists were not to blame for the deaths of Maharashtra ATS chief Hemant Karkare and two of his senior colleagues during last month's carnage in Mumbai. .....
  • It's foolish to trust Pakistan
    • by Ashok K. Mehta
      Even after 29 days of the Mumbai carnage, the Government is shadow-boxing with Pakistan, unable to forge a face-saving strategy that will assuage the anger of the people, not impair its electoral prospects next year on the charge of being soft on terror, and most of all force Pakistan to act against cross-border terrorism. The challenge lies in preventing the next attack. .....
  • Teesta Setalvad's former confidant files FIR against her
    • by Sify News
      Raees Khan, who has been accused of distorting facts in the affidavits of six Naroda Gam witnesses, alleged on Friday that activist Teesta Setalvad has been threatening him and said he has filed a police complaint against her. .....
  • The Mumbai Terror Apologists
    • by Sankrant Sanu
      The sound of gunfire and the counting of the dead had not yet been finished in Mumbai when the terror apologists had already explained it. Aryn Baker writing in Time Magazine, spoke of how "the roots of Muslim rage run deep in India." .....
  • NRIs ask UN to declare Pak terrorist state
    • by NDTV.Com
      Braving sub-zero temperature and cold wind, more than 200 supporters and workers of dozens of Indian-American organisation held a demonstration outside the UN, seeking the world body declare Pakistan a terrorist state. .....
  • Foreign students under scanner in Pune
    • by Imtiaz Jaleel
      The student town of Pune is under police spotlight. Over a hundred foreign students have been deported to their countries in the last three months. .....
  • Making an ass of our law
    • by Krishen Kak
      "The law is a ass" said Mr. Bumble famously in "Oliver Twist." The law is made by legislators, so that begs the question whether an asinine law presupposes asinine legislators. Ditto for law-interpreters and law-enforcers. .....
  • Govt defends Antulay
    • by The Pioneer
      Within hours of rubbishing his "conspiracy theory" behind Maharashtra ATS chief Hemant Karkare's killing, the UPA Government absolved Minority Affairs Minister AR Antulay of his scandalous propaganda, with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh saying "to err is human". .....
  • Dawood's empire is expanding
    • by Manoj K Das
      Eyebrows were raised when Russia first linked Dawood to 26/11, even before Indian agencies 'guesstimated' his role. The Russian enthusiasm, 'The New Indian Express' has learnt, was the first public acknowledgment of Dawood's increasing influence in almost all trouble spots in Russia, where Islamic fundamentalism is fast xeroxing al-Qaeda lessons. .....
  • Top HuJi militant arrested in Jammu
    • by Yahoo News
      The Jammu head of the Bangladesh-based militant outfit Harkat-ul-Jihad-e-Islami (HuJI) has been arrested, police in this Jammu and Kashmir winter capital said Monday. .....
  • A new hero emerges
    • by Vinod Kumar Menon
      Constable Ambadas Pawar's (28) short career may not have been as illustrious as those of top cops Hemant Karkare, Ashok Kamte and Vijay Salaskar. But in his unnoticed death that horrible night of November 26, Pawar made sure he went with a bang. Literally. .....
  • Cut the Loose Talk
    • by The Times of India
      The fan club for minority affairs minister A R Antulay seems to be expanding. And his admirers are not exclusively from the Pakistani establishment that wants the world to believe the terror attack in Mumbai was the handiwork of everyone but Islamist terrorists from Pakistan. On Saturday, Congress general secretary Digvijay Singh said there was nothing objectionable about Antulay's statement. .....
  • Dark shadow of jihad
    • by Sandhya Jain
      Afzal Guru of India, convicted for his role in the attack on Parliament House on December 13, 2001, and Ajmal Amir Kasab of Pakistan, seen striking terror at Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus on November 26, 2008, are the symbols of 21st century jihad against India. .....
  • Mumbai: Islamist Terror's New Modus Operandi
    • by Olivier Guitta
      Mumbai, India's financial capital is now only barely waking up from its worst nightmare. Last week in simultaneous attacks, Islamist terrorists killed at least 195 people and injured another 300 during a 60-hour killing spree. The tactics used by the terrorists were different from the classical jihadist playbook. Does it mean that Mumbai-style attacks are the new jihadist modus operandi? .....
  • What Pakistan is not, and never will be
    • by Hugh Fitzgerald
      The Pakistani government of "moderate" Asif Ali Zardari has thus announced it has no intention of handing over any of the those suspected terrorists, now living freely in Pakistan, whose names were given to it, not for the first time, by the government of India. .....
  • Mumbai terrorists promised sex with virgins in heaven
    • by Yahoo News
      The lone surviving terrorist of the Mumbai terror attack Ajmal Amir Kasab has admitted that he along with his militant partners were lured into the terrorist camps by the Pakistan army officers as they were made to believe that the 'Jehad' in which they are going to take part will offer them a chance to put an end to their quest for 'holy virgins'. .....
  • Go for Pakistan's jugular now
    • by Sify News
      Call it bravura, if you will, or the suicidal act of a fool, but you must hand it to the failed Islamic state of Pakistan that it hasn't gone down on its knees before the so-called international diplomatic pressure coming on it after 26/11 from the tough talk of the US Secretary of State, the British Prime Minister, the French President, the German Interior Minister et al. .....
  • A monster out of control: Pakistan secret agents tell of militant links
    • by Jeremy Page
      The Islamic fundamentalists who run the Markaz-e-Taiba complex near Lahore like to boast that it was inspired by Aitchison College, Pakistan's poshest private school. It is, as they describe it, the Eton of Wahhabi Islam, complete with polo ponies and a swimming pool. .....
  • Mohammed Azhar Masood: Praised, Luminous, Lucky
    • by Himanshu Jain
      Azhar Masood is the villain of several large attacks on Indian soil. These include the first suicide (fidayeen) attack in Srinagar, the attack on Parliament, and the 26 November massacre in Mumbai. Azhar Masood was freed by the NDA government in exchange for 166 lives in the IC-814 hijack. .....
  • Afzal and Ajmal: 1947 revisited
    • by Sandhya Jain
      Afzal Guru of India, convicted for his role in the attack on Parliament on December 13, 2001, and Ajmal Amir Kasab of Pakistan, seen striking terror at Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminal on November 26, 2008, are the symbols of twenty-first century jihad against India. .....
  • The art of war on terror
    • by Arun Jaitley
      Arun Jaitley analyses the National Investigative Agency Bill and the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Bill which were passed by Parliament last week. In comparison to TADA and POTA, he finds the new laws have several loopholes which will hamper both investigation into terrorist crimes and prosecution of terrorists. .....
  • Parsi lawyer faces social boycott
    • by B. R. Haran
      Pakistan is doing to India precisely what UPA has done to Hindus Yes! The UPA created a nonexistent 'Hindu Terror' with a motive of diluting the fight against Jihad, and in the process, it maligned Hindu religious leaders and Army officers implicating them in the Malegon blasts without any concrete admissible evidences in spite of a marathon two-month investigation by the Maharashtra ATS. .....
  • Parsi lawyer faces social boycott
    • by Barney Henderson & Rachna Pratihar
      Drop the brief or leave the community. That's the stark'warning the Bombay Parsi Punchayet (BPP) has given K.B.N. Lam, a Parsi advocate who hopes to represent Mohammed Ajmal Amir Kasab, the terror suspect arrested for the 26/11 attacks. .....
  • Terror Against India
    • by David Frawley
      The Indian media will not use the term terrorism for any religious group other than the Hindus. Terrorism perpetrated in the name of Islam will be called 'jehadi terrorism' or simply 'terrorism'. It is said that terrorism has no religion, but this is not the case if terrorism can be linked to Hinduism, a religion unlike most others, built upon non-violence. .....
  • Another PIL against Rane over remarks on politician-terror nexus
    • by The Indian Express
      Another public interest litigation (PIL) has been filed against former revenue minister Narayan Rane, seeking that he be forced to disclose the information about politician alleged links with terrorists that he has referred to Rane, who was recently suspended by the Congress party, alleged at press conferences on December 6 and 7that the terrorists who attacked Mumbai last month got logistical and financial support from some politicians. .....
  • Awaited, action on terror
    • by Rajiv Dogra
      We must honestly concede that we have consistently lost the battle of minds to Pakistan. In the media of the global world, speed is of essence. Unfortunately, in our anxiety to present the absolute and verifiable truth, we lose out to the quick and straight-faced lies of the other side .....
  • Let's play hardball with Pakistan
    • by Swapan Dasgupta
      Collectors of esoteric cricketing trivia may be aware of a letter published in The Times, London, on July 5, 1932. Written by O H T Dudley, a gentleman who spent 25 years teaching English in India, it recalled an intriguing sentence from an Indian schoolboy's essay on cricket: "Cricket is a very comfortable game: in it we disremember all our Condition." That, concluded Dudley, "seems to me a great saying worthy of the tongue that Shakespeare spake." .....
  • Nawaz dissents: Kasab from Pak, let's put our own house in order
    • by Rezaul H Laskar
      A day after Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari told the BBC there was no "real evidence" that the Mumbai attackers came from his country, former premier Nawaz Sharif said he had "personally checked" that surviving terrorist Ajmal Ameer Kasab belonged to Faridkot village in Pakistani Punjab. .....
  • Adamant Antulay makes Cong squirm
    • by The Economic Times
      With AR Antulay refusing to retract his theory on Hemant Karkare's murder, there is fear in the Congress about a significant depletion of its moral authority. .....
  • It was sad to see cops dying for our spineless netas
    • by Arindam Chaudhuri
      Watching the end-November siege of Mumbai without sleeping for a moment for the first 12 hours, I really felt sad for our brave policemen who gave up their lives - just like many other innocent people - for a non-committed, spineless, political class ruling this great country. .....
  • Valley's LeT Network
    • by Muzamil Jaleel
      In the scenic valley of Madhumati, a 5-km stretch from Bandipore town halts at Aham Sharief. Then an hour-long steep trek through a muddy path takes you to Bhootu-a village hidden inside dense pine forests. This is where the Lashkar-e-Toiba launched its first ever suicide attack-on a BSF camp near Bandipore-from, more than nine years ago. .....
  • Stop denials, get tough on terror, Pranab tells Pak
    • by The Times of India
      Maintaining a tough stand on Pakistan, foreign minister Pranab Mukherjee on Sunday asked the Asif Ali Zardari government to stop being in denial and dismantle the terror infrastructure inside that country. Simultaneously, the US told Pakistan it could not treat the Mumbai attacks as "an ordinary event'' that could be "swept under the carpet''. .....
  • 2 Britons guilty of Qaeda link get life
    • by The Indian Express
      A Briton, who was guilty of being an Al Qaeda member, was on Friday sentenced to life in prison, with a minimum term of 10 years. Thirty-three-year-old Rangzieb Ahmed, who was born in Rochdale, was found guilty of Al Qaeda membership, of directing an Al Qaeda cell in Britain and for possessing diaries containing leading terrorists' phone numbers. .....
  • Sena corporators link slums to terror; Cong, NCP disagree
    • by Shweta Desai
      The commercial capital is trying to forget 26/11 and spring back into business, but corporators at Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) are still in action mode. On Friday, there was pandemonium at the BMC over the Terror attacks, after Shiv Sena-BJP corporators asked for demolition of slums that have come up after 1995, the official deadline for legalising slums. .....
  • Iran reaction on Mum attacks hurts India
    • by The Times of India
      India on Friday conveyed to Iran that it was deeply disappointed by the way the country had reacted to the Mumbai terror attacks. Senior government officials admitted on condition of anonymity that visiting Iranian deputy foreign minister Mohammed Mehdi Akhoundzadeh had been given an earful by authorities for the widespread negative comments in the Iranian media about India. .....
  • Antulay playing ISI's attorney, alleges BJP
    • by The Times of India
      Minority affairs minister A R Antulay was unfazed by the Congress refusing to support him on his allegations on the killing of ATS chief Hemant Karkare. He virtually dared the Congress to sack him, offering to "explain'' the geography of south Mumbai to his party. .....
  • What Conspiracy, Ask Cops
    • by Mateen Hafeez
      There's fear of politicians. But there's also loathing for them. These two emotions stood out most clearly in the response that senior police officials had to union minority affairs minister A R Antulay's statement in New Delhi on Wednesday. .....
  • Naroda Victims retract statements, say fabricated
    • by Vikram Rautela
      Six victims of the Naroda gam (village) violence during the 2002 communal riots in Gujarat have told the Supreme Court-appointed Special Investigating Team that their statements submitted at several places in connection to the case were fabricated and recorded without their knowledge. .....
  • Pak's actions just cosmetic: Powell
    • by The Economic Times
      Former US secretary of state Colin Powell has criticised Pakistan for its failure to dismantle the terror network of LeT even though it had promised to do so after the 2001 Parliament attack. .....
  • Pakistan needs to act
    • by Gordon Brown
      I paid a short visit to India to meet Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Sunday. I wanted to offer, in person, my condolences to him and to the Indian people on the terrible terrorist attack in Mumbai, which shocked the world three weeks ago. .....
  • IM Indian wing of LeT: Delhi cops
    • by Medha Chaturvedi
      The Delhi police have found unmistakable links between terrorist outfits-Lashkare-Taiba (LeT) and Indian Mujahideen (IM) while interrogating Mohammad Sadiq Shaikh and Kayamuddin, the two accused in the Delhi serial blasts. .....
  • Pak trying to cover up Kasab links?
    • by The Times of India
      Pakistani authorities and residents of Ajmal Amir Kasab's village have apparently launched an effort to cover up their links with the terrorist arrested in Mumbai. .....
  • Unlikely saviours
    • by The Indian Express
      The Chennai Test, which concluded on Monday with an extraordinary, successful run chase and a come-from-behind Indian victory in the final session of the last day's play, was a wonderful advertisement for Test cricket. .....
  • Myths from Mumbai
    • by Arvind Panagariya
      Following the Mumbai Terror attacks, politicians, pundits and the press have created many myths, confusions and falsehoods. These deserve to be exposed in favour of clearer thinking. .....
  • Pakistan's ever lengthening shadow
    • by Rupinder Kaur
      Belgium: Terming them the "Belgian branch of the al-Qaeda" and "the most important anti-terrorism operation in the country", the authorities in Belgium arrested 14 suspected terrorists, including a jehadi who was allegedly planning a suicide attack, last week. Sixteen raids were executed by 242 police officers in Brussels and in the city of Liege. .....
  • Four Jamaat-ud-Dawa workers released in Pak
    • by The Indian Express
      Days after launching a crackdown on the Jamaat-ud-Dawa following a ban imposed by the UN, Pakistani authorities have released four detained workers of the outfit, even as reports said that the main complex of the organisation near Lahore was still open. In addition, authorities in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir withdrew police guards posted at the home of the group's regional head, Maulana Abdul Aziz Alvi. .....
  • Pak media more loyal than the king: Cong
    • by The Indian Express
      The Congress on Monday castigated the Pakistani media for giving a clean chit to Islamabad in the Mumbai Terror attacks and for trying to give a communal colour to the incident. .....
  • Kerry talks tough: 26/11 planned in Pak
    • by The Indian Express
      Adding to the international pressure on Pakistan in the wake of the Mumbai Terror attacks, US Senator John Kerry said on Monday that Islamabad should take on the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) and bring the ISI under civilian control. .....
  • Terrorists' phone intercept voices match those of Lashkar top brass
    • by Ritu Sarin
      Investigation into the Mumbai Terror attack have moved a step forward with intelligence agencies confirming that the Pakistani "handlers" whom the terrorists telephoned several times during the siege in the Taj Mahal Hotel and Nariman House were indeed top operatives of the Lashkar-e-Toiba Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi and Yusuf Muzammil. .....
  • SC affidavit wrong, didn't know what we signed: riot victim
    • by Ayesha Khan & Vikram Rautela
      In her new home in a narrow bylane of Ahmedabad, Madina Pathan (25) has no idea she has kicked up a storm with her deposition before the Supreme Court-appointed Special Investigation Team (SIT) probing the 2002 Gujarat riot cases. .....
  • IISc attacker trained terror team
    • by Abhishek Sharan & Debasish Panigrahi
      Abu Hamza, a Lashkar-e-Tayyeba (LeT) operative who carried out the attack at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc)-Bangalore three years ago, has been identified by the police as one of the main plotters of the November 26 attack. .....
  • State & religion
    • by The Indian Express
      A month ago, six thousand Muslim clerics congregated in Hyderabad to sign on to a declaration condemning terrorism. Initiated by the Jamiat Ulema-e-Hind, which is closely identified with the Darul Uloom at Deoband, the resolution sought to remind the nation that jihad and terrorism were "poles apart" and that "terrorism is the biggest crime as per the Quran". .....
  • Obama will want ISI under civilian control: Kerry
    • by Pranab Dhal Samanta
      With barely a month left for US President-elect Barack Obama to officially enter White House, influential Democrat Senator and likely next head of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee John Kerry made it clear that the Obama Administration will ask the Pakistan Government to bring the ISI firmly under civilian control. .....
  • Red bands on wrists were to deceive
    • by Abhishek Sharan
      Twenty one year old Mohammed Ajmal Amir Kasab, the alleged Lashkar-e-Tayyeba operative who is in the custody of Mumbai police, told interrogators that the main plotters of the Mumbai terror attack had instructed the 10-member-team, and not him alone, to wear red bands on their wrists during their attack. .....
  • Tainted Ministers must step down'
    • by Bhavika Jain
      About 50 Citizen and activists converge at Azad Maidan on Wednesday to protest the inclusion of 'tainted' minister in the law state Cabinet, and demand stricter political reforms. .....
  • No stealth hazards
    • by Gurmeet Kanwal
      The 'confinement' of Jaish-e-Muhammad (JeM) chief Masood Azhar and the arrest of the Lashkar-e-Tayyeba's (LeT) chief commander Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi suggest that the Pakistan government is cracking down on terrorist outfits on Pakistani soil. At the same time, President Asif Ali Zardari has rejected India's demand of handing them and others accused of fomenting cross-border terror over to New Delhi. .....
  • Anvil For Scimitars
    • by Amir Mir
      Some people don't evolve. They only ride the crest of passion hoping to realise their dreams of destruction. Nine years after that rabble-rousing in Lahore, the former professor of Islamic studies was back to spewing vitriol against India. .....
  • The Pirate Knows The Sea
    • by Smruti Koppikar
      As the scale and logistics of the 60-hour-long terror attack became clear to the Mumbai police, suspicions about the role played by underworld don Dawood Ibrahim Kaskar's gang gained ground. In the last week, the Crime Branch has kept a close tab on the activities of D-Company members. .....
  • The mentor of jehadis
    • by Muzamil Jaleel
      When the investigation into the Mumbai Terror attacks began, New Delhi insisted that the Lashkar-e-Toiba was the perpetrator. There was no reference to Jaish-e-Mohammad. However, whether in the times of war or peace, whenever India talked terror with Pakistan, one name always topped the list of the most wanted: Maulana Masood Azhar. .....
  • Armed with lathis and handguns, they saved the day
    • by Jaidev Hemmady
      For Senior Inspector Nagappa Mali from the D B Marg Police Station, November 26 was just another day. Until the news of Terror attacks reached police stations across the city through the walkie-talkies and control room phones. Recalling the fateful night, which turned some ordinary cops into heroes, Mali said, "Barricades had been erected at all vital exit points to prevent the terrorists from escaping. .....
  • No proof of LeT leader Lakhwi's arrest yet: US
    • by Mumbai Mirror
      Expressing scepticism over Pakistan's claim that it has arrested Lashkar-e-Taiba operation leader Zakiur Rehman Lakhwi, US counterterrorism officials have said that they were yet to have proof of capturing the Lashkar commander, a media report said on Wednesday. .....
  • Achuthanandan in a soup over Abhaya remark
    • by Gladwin Emmanuel
      Kerala CM V S Achuthanandan's remarks linking Congress leader K M Mani to the Sister Abhaya murder case triggered an uproar in the Kerala assembly on Wednesday. Opposition members rushed to the well of the House, demanding that he withdraw his remarks, after which the CM retracted his statement, sources said. .....
  • Serious Business Of War
    • by Maroof Raza
      The suggestion of external affairs minister Pranab Mukherjee that India could exercise a military option against Pakistan has alarmed the international community, particularly the US, that a war between the two nuclear-armed neighbours could see the first ever use of nuclear weapons by both sides. .....
  • Hindus Urge Slovakia Not To Forget Its Disadvantaged Roma Amidst Euro Celebrations
    • by Internet Centre Anti Racism Europe
      Amidst grand celebrations over its switch to euro and entry into euroclub, Hindus have urged Slovakia not to close the eyes to its Roma population who reportedly live in apartheid like conditions. Rajan Zed, acclaimed Hindu and Indo-American statesman, in a statement in Nevada (USA) today, said that it was moral obligation of Slovakia to take care of its most disadvantaged Roma population and stop human rights violations reportedly suffered by them. .....
  • CM asks Centre to pressurise Dhaka
    • by Assam Tribune
      Reiterating the need for a crackdown on ultra camps in neighbouring Bangladesh and Myanmar for effectively tackling terrorism, Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi today said that the Government of India needed to exert pressure on the two as was being done on Pakistan following the Mumbai terror attack. .....
  • 'Antulay has maligned entire police force'
    • by A Ganesh Nadar
      The minority affairs minister in the Manmohan Singh government set off a political storm with his demand that the circumstances surrounding the death of Mumbai's Anti Terrorist Squad chief Hemant Karkare at the hands of terrorists on November 26 be probed. .....
  • Plunging popularity
    • by Dawn
      The survey conducted by the International Republican Institute in the second half of October makes for grim reading for the government: Pakistanis are deeply troubled by the state of the nation and are pessimistic about the future. The government's performance in key areas, the economy, governance and security, has left the country unimpressed, and its standing is already comparable to Gen Musharraf's widely disparaged regime earlier this year. .....
  • Will Bangladeshi Hindus be ignored Again?
    • by Dr. Richard L. Benkin
      Less than a week after the Mumbai terror attacks, United States Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice was in South Asia trying to "reduce tensions" between India and Pakistan. (Funny, we did not see her flying around the United States with the same message after the Islamists' 9/11 attacks.) .....
  • Terror squad may have sneaked into Bengal
    • by Swati Sengupta
      First, confirmation that the Mumbai terrorists used SIMs bought illegally in Kolkata. Then, reports of HuJI operatives planning strikes in Bengal. .....
  • How Can We Make the Dog Bark?
    • by PoliticalIslam.com
      In a Sherlock Holmes story, Silver Blaze, the clue to the crime was that "the dog did nothing." The dog in question was a farm dog that would have barked had a stranger approached. .....
  • Story is of Terror: Agony is of a Muslim
    • by Yunus Mohammed
      I am a Muslim born and brought up here, studied here, grew up here and living happily with my family. This is my heaven. Today, I am a 65 year old man. .....
  • Those That Shall Deliver...
    • by Tehelka.com
      Al Qaeda has "benefitted from a network structure that allows passionate and committed individuals and groups to contribute to a wider purpose (whether for good or ill) with a minimum of co-ordination and administration. .....
  • 'I would have run over the terrorists'
    • by Rediff.com
      Maruti Madhavrao Phad is 32 years old and has been employed by the Maharashtra health department as a driver for ten years. He is married and has two small sons. He lives on the 11th floor at the GT Hospital staff quarters. His current employer is the state medical education secretary. .....
  • The Evil of Good Deeds and Good Thoughts
    • by Bill Warner
      After the Mumbai jihad there was a response of "Do good deeds." The Jews of Chabad (the sect that had its members tortured to death) asked for Jews to do "mitzvahs," good works. A yoga group that had some of its members killed believes that love will triumph. Then Deepak Chopra weighed in with his "think good thoughts" campaign. .....
  • Memo to US, China
    • by N.V.Subramanian
      While, ultimately, it is India's sovereign responsibility to avenge the Bombay terror attack, the rest of the world should not merely pressurize Pakistan to act against its terrorist elements and partly terrorist establishment because of Indian pressure, or to avert an Indo-Pak conflict. .....
  • Yahya, Lashkar's Bangla associate
    • by Indrani Roy Mitra
      If the Government of India has its hands full trying to force Pakistan to hand over the terrorists who masterminded the Mumbai attacks, the West Bengal police is busy tracking the source of the terror SIM cards. .....
  • Islamists in PM's team outed!
    • by Kanchan Gupta
      Last week this column referred to closet Islamists in Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's Cabinet, pointing out that Minister of State for External Affairs and Muslim League leader E Ahamed, while presenting India's case in the United Nations Security Council on December 9, had mentioned the fidayeen attacks on Taj Mahal Palace, Oberoi-Trident Hotel and Leopold Café, but not the siege of Chabad House where six Jews, including a rabbi and his pregnant wife, were tortured and killed. .....
  • Roma Children Dying of Lead Poisoning
    • by Paul Polansky
      The UN built camps in Kosovo for homeless Roma gypsies on top of the biggest lead mine in Europe. Every child conceived in these camps will be born with irreversible brain damage. .....
  • He held off terrorists for four hours
    • by Rediff.com
      The doctors have told Inspector Deepak Dole of the Colaba police station in south Mumbai to avoid sunlight and dust for at least three months. The reason: Large swathes of his skin, burnt by the fire started by terrorists in the Taj Mahal Palace hotel, are peeling off. .....
  • 'I am happy that I could save the lives of my men'
    • by Rediff.com
      When the fire raged, a hotel security guard was helping guide the police. "We were separated by the fire from the DCP and the guide. They were out and we were stuck inside. There were eight men behind me," says Inspector Dole. .....
  • An Open Letter To Arundhati Roy
    • by Abhinav Kumar
      To call the foreign funded insurgency in Kashmir and the terror attacks across the country as justified blowback for the failures of the Indian state and civil society is both false and callous. It implies a failure of the imagination and the intellect and the complete abdication of moral responsibility by you. .....
  • NGOs 'hijack' tribal kids to fill orphanages
    • by Jose Kurian
      It all boils down to making up the numbers. Cashing in on the harrowing situation of tribal communities, NGOs mushrooming in the district are on a massive hunt for tribal kids -- to fill their orphanages and institutions. .....
  • Dubious neighbour
    • by News Today
      Pakistan's approach and action towards the Mumbai terror attack has been dubious right from the beginning exhibiting a sequence of amazing double standards. .....
  • US not interested in India's security
    • by Dilbag Rai
      US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's recent visit to New Delhi and Islamabad was not just to express solidarity with India following the terrorist attacks on Mumbai and buy time to prevent an escalation of tension between the two countries, but also to safeguard US interests in the region. .....
  • The post-siege coverage
    • by S R Ramanujan
      The rare spectacle of unity and political consensus the Lok Sabha recently displayed to the world at large was lapped up (and rightly so) by the Indian media as if to atone for the rampaging campaign it ran against the political class. As everyone knows by now, the urban elite who came out for the first time onto the streets of Mumbai and Delhi immediately after Mumbai carnage, was exploited by the media. .....
  • Fake currency racket busted in Valley, may point to new militant trend
    • by Ritu Sarin
      In the first instance of its kind in the Kashmir valley, the state police raided and busted operations of a mini-printing press in the Pampore area of Anantnag last month. The 'prize catch' came even as law enforcement agencies and Opposition leaders bemoaned that the economy was being "destabilised" by the printing and distribution of large quantities of fake Indian currency notes (FICN), but there's another implication as well. .....
  • Godhra riot witnesses got Rs 1 lakh each
    • by Navin Upadhyay
      A controversial Gujarat-based NGO was instrumental in organising payment of Rs 1 lakh each to as many as ten witnesses in various post-Godhra riot cases. The money came from the CPI(M) relief fund and was distributed months before the witnesses deposed in the courts, five years after the clashes took place. Four other eyewitnesses received Rs 50,000 each. .....
  • Teesta Setalvad's former confidant files FIR against her
    • by IBNLive.com
      Raees Khan, who has been accused of distorting facts in the affidavits of six Naroda Gam witnesses, alleged Friday that activist Teesta Setalvad has been threatening him and said he has filed a police complaint against her. .....
  • In CPM-speak, N-Deal = 26/11
    • by Balbir K. Punj
      In Parliament's debate on the Mumbai events and its aftermath, the alibi that the Marxists were providing for the terror merchants did not come as a surprise. While all other political parties sought to emphasise a unanimous voice of India in their speeches, pinpointing Pakistan as the breeding ground of terror, the CPI(M) leader Sitaram Yechury was finding excuses, even justification, for the terrorists' attacks. .....
  • 'Terrorists used D-network'
    • by The Economic Times
      Russia believes that underworld don Dawood Ibrahim was directly involved in the Mumbai terror attacks and his network was used by the terrorists to carry out the multiple attacks. .....
  • Dawood's network financed Mumbai attacks: Russia
    • by Expressindia.com
      Russia believes that underworld don Dawood Ibrahim was directly involved in the Mumbai attacks, and his vast drug network was used by the terrorists to carry out the multiple strikes. .....
  • Sinister Minister!
    • by News Today
      Union Minister for Minority Affairs, Abdul Rehman Antulay has sent his resignation to the Prime Minister. Just as well, as he deserves to go. .....
  • The way out: Do a 'Pakistan' to Pakistan
    • by Virendra Parekh
      Indians are seething with rage. Even Manmohan Singh is muttering the right words in his beard. It was heartening to hear leaders of all parties speaking in one voice on the issue of terrorism. That is the minimum we need to tackle the challenge. But along with this new-found unity, alas, there persists the old-style naivety. .....
  • Rushdie Attacks Pakistan, Lashes Out at Arundhati Roy
    • by G. Anil Kumar
      In India every debate on conversion to Christianity ends with Hindu society's caste-based "poison of divisions". Missionaries and their supporters present conversion as the only "antidote" available. And missionaries are "doctors," hell bent on administering that antidote! And our "secularists" have been repeating it. .....
  • Qasab's full confession
    • by Mid Day
      Statement of accused Mohd Ajmal Amir Qasab; Age 21 yrs. Occupation: Labour, R/O - Faridkot, Tehsil -Dipalpur, Dist -Ukada, State -Suba Punjab, Pakistan .....
  • Bangla border fencing to get top priority
    • by The Assam Tribune
      The fencing project on the Indo-Bangladesh border has been accorded top priority, with Prime Minister, Dr Manmohan Singh directing completion of the Project within schedule. .....
  • Mark Steyn: Jews get killed, but Muslims feel vulnerable
    • by Mark Steyn
      "British Muslims Fear Repercussions Over Tomorrow's Train Bombing." Indeed. And so it goes. This time round - Mumbai - it was the Associated Press that filed a story about how Muslims "found themselves on the defensive once again about bloodshed linked to their religion". .....
  • Over 45,000 men protect our VIPs
    • by Aloke Tikku
      As the post-26/11 debate on whether politicians need more security than the public rages on, facts hidden in government figures show how India can be safer if only our VIPs do not turn security into a status symbol. .....
  • Terror has seldom seemed so ordinary
    • by Stephen McGinty
      It was to be an atrocity planned by text messages adorned with smiley faces, an attack whose lethal components were collected from the everyday; second-hand cars bought through Autotrader, satnavs from Currys and Calor Gas canisters picked up at B&Q. .....
  • Pak terror is bribe ruse
    • by Brahma Chellaney
      "Terrorists are still coming in from Pakistan," India's lumbering external affairs minister lamented in Parliament last week. India can be sure terrorists will keep arriving from across the borders, emboldened as they and their patrons would be from New Delhi's pusillanimity in not taking the smallest of small steps against Pakistan even as a token expression of India's outrage over the Mumbai assaults by 10 terrorists - all from Pakistan's Punjab province. .....
  • SC affidavit wrong, didn't know what we signed: riot victim
    • by Ayesha Khan & Vikram Rautela
      In her new home in a narrow bylane of Ahmedabad, Madina Pathan (25) has no idea she has kicked up a storm with her deposition before the Supreme Court-appointed Special Investigation Team (SIT) probing the 2002 Gujarat riot cases. .....
  • The confessions of Ajmal Ameer Kasab
    • by Sagnik Chowdhury
      As security agencies attempt to piece together the plot and identify the key players behind the 26/11 Terror strikes in Mumbai, the investigations hinge largely on the information provided by Ajmal Ameer Kasab, the only terrorist-of the ten who landed on Mumbai's shores-caught alive. .....
  • NIA Bill Debate - LK Advani's Speech
    • by L.K. Advani
      The government has introduced two Bills in this House - one to set up a National Investigation Agency (NIA) and the other to amend the law to bring in more stringent provisions to deal with terror crimes. Home Minister Shri P. Chidambaram introduced these two bills The National Investigation Agency Bill 2008 and the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Amendment Bill, 2008. .....
  • Obama taps evangelical for inauguration
    • by The Boston Globe
      President-elect Barack Obama (right) has tapped Rick Warren (left), the most prominent evangelical preacher of the post-Billy Graham generation, to deliver the invocation at his inauguration. The decision was announced today by the Joint Congressional Committee on Inaugural Ceremonies. .....
  • Union minister doubts terrorists killed Karkare, backtracks
    • by Rediff.com
      Under attack from the Bharatiya Janata Party and Shiv Sena, Union Minister for Minority Affairs Abdul Rahman Antulay sought to wriggle out of his controversial remarks on the killing of Maharashtra chief ATS chief Hemant Karkare saying he had not talked about who killed him but about who sent him in the wrong direction on that fateful day. .....
  • Some Gujarat riot victims retract charges before SIT
    • by Manas Dasgupta
      In a queer turn, some of the victims of the 2002 communal violence in Gujarat have retracted their charges of rape and bribing of the police by the rioters before the Special Investigating Team (SIT). .....
  • This battle has just begun
    • by The Spectator
      'I was excited and delighted by it in that first Bombay minute,' says the narrator in Gregory David Roberts's great novel Shantaram. .....
  • Northern hues at Tamil weddings
    • by Lakshmy Ramanathan
      Minutes before guests trickled in for his wedding reception in May, Subramanian G aka Subs recalls being confronted by a posse of six women. They had hidden his shoes and he was forced to part with Rs 5,000 even as ' Joote de do paise le lo' from Hum Aapke Hain Kaun played in the background. .....
  • 'The BBC cannot see the difference between a criminal and a terrorist'
    • by Sheela Bhatt
      The British Broadcasting Corporation, a state-sponsored but independently run, media organization has attracted sharp criticism for having "double-standards" in its coverage of the Mumbai terror attacks. Most times the BBC reporters referred to the terrorists who attacked Mumbai as "gunmen" or "militants". .....
  • The media-politician anti-Hindu nexus has to stop immediately, if we really don't want another 26/11
    • by Arindam Chaudhuri
      As I remained hooked on to Times Now (which, by far, gave the best coverage possible and reminded me of CNN's Iraq war coverage way back in 1991), and without sleeping for a moment for the first twelve hours, saw the mockery of our democracy, I really felt sad for our brave policemen who gave up their lives - just like the many innocent people who also paid the price - for a non-committed, spineless, political class ruling this great country. .....
  • Revealing the Faridkot-Mumbai link
    • by Dawn
      The targeting of Lashkar-i-Taiba and Jamaatud Dawa and the rounding up of the activists belonging to the two jihadi organisations appear to have been triggered by information originating in India following the capture of one of the 10 men who attacked several targets in Mumbai towards the end of last month. .....
  • NCW speaks up for Sadhvi Pragya
    • by Sandhya Jain
      Since 20 November 2008 when the Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act was invoked against Sadhvi Pragya, Lt. Col. Shrikant Purohit and others for alleged involvement in the 29 September Malegaon blast that killed six persons, the elaborately conceived 'Hindu terrorist' plot has been falling apart. .....
  • How Many Needles Can The Voodoo Doll Take?
    • by Mariana Baabar
      It was early on December 8, Monday morning, a little over 24 hours before the country was to celebrate Id, and villagers on the outskirts of Muzaffarabad, Kashmir, were waking from their sleep to the clatter of gunship helicopters. .....
  • God's own badlands
    • by Lalita Panicker
      The theory industry has gone into overdrive as always following a terror attack. Mumbai has seen an overflow of theories in print, television, among people on the streets, and, of course, the twitterati. All of them have a ring of truth. .....
  • UK may help find Pakistani general's killers
    • by Carey Schofield
      The brother-in-law of VS Naipaul, the British novelist and Nobel laureate, was murdered last month after threatening to expose Pakistani army generals who had made deals with Taliban militants. .....
  • Good bye to Apostasy , I am a Muslim again!!!!
    • by Ibrahim Lone
      I, Ibrahim Lone, hereby declare that I am reverting to Islam. I invite all of you to do the same. I have realized my folly in trying in leaving Islam, and to make up for my follies, I decided to grow a beard that would give Santa Claus a major inferiority complex. .....
  • Militants, attackers, gunmen or terrorists?
    • by Clark Hoyt
      When 10 young men in an inflatable lifeboat came ashore in Mumbai last month and went on a rampage with machine guns and grenades, taking hostages, setting fires and murdering men, women and children, they were initially described in The Times by many labels. .....
  • Naipaul's brother-in-law murdered
    • by The Asian Age
      Nobel laureate Sir Vidia Naipaul's Pakistani brother-in-law, Maj. Gen. Amir Faisal Alvi (Retd), was murdered on November 19 in Islamabad after he had "threatened" to expose senior Pakistani Army generals who had made "deals" with Taliban militants. .....
  • Profiles in courage
    • by Jaidev Hemmady
      An SRPF constable attached with the Solapur unit, Shinde had just appeared for his written examinations on November 14 which he had failed to clear during his recruitment in 2006 even though he had done exceptionally well in the physical tests. .....
  • Mystery grows over general's slaying in Pakistan
    • by Hindustan Times
      Pakistani newspapers gave prominent coverage on Monday to a British media report that a retired general gunned down in Islamabad last month planned to blow the whistle on fellow generals' dealings with the Taliban. .....
  • Mumbai, IISc attackers were trained together
    • by Naveen Ammembala
      The interrogation of Sabahuddin alias Saba, the alleged prime accused in the attack on the Indian Institute of Science, has clearly established the role of Pakistan's army and Inter-Services Intelligence in sponsoring and fomenting terrorist activities in India. .....
  • Pak releases four detained workers of Jamaat-ud-Dawa
    • by The Times of India
      Just days after launching a crackdown on the Jamaat-ud-Dawa after the UN banned it, Pakistani authorities have released four detained workers and removed police guards deployed at the home of a senior leader of the organisation. .....
  • Pakistan disowns its litter
    • by A Surya Prakash
      Despite incontrovertible proof provided by its media about 26/11's surviving terrorist Ajmal Amir Kasab's Pakistani nationality, the Pakistani establishment remains in denial mode and continues to claim that the perpetrators of this heinous act of terror are 'stateless actors'. .....
  • Pakistan not to ban Jamaat-ud-Dawa
    • by The Indian Express
      The Pakistan government has decided not to dismantle the vast infrastructure of the Jamaat-ud-Dawa, front for the Lashkar-e-Taiba, despite the UN security councils ban on the outfit in the wake of last months terrorist strike on Mumbai. .....
  • Andhra CM son-in-law's mammoth religious meet draws flak
    • by Mohammed Siddique
      Evangelist Anil Kumar's debut in Secunderabad bore all the hallmarks of a gala event. A sprawling parade ground packed with nearly 1.5 lakh people, a 250-member choir and guests including Chief Minister YS Rajasekhara Reddy, his wife and only daughter. .....
  • 'The BBC cannot see the difference between a criminal and a terrorist'
    • by Sheela Bhatt
      The British Broadcasting Corporation, a state-sponsored but independently run, media organization has attracted sharp criticism for having "double-standards" in its coverage of the Mumbai terror attacks. Most times the BBC reporters referred to the terrorists who attacked Mumbai as "gunmen" or "militants". .....
  • Jamaat-ud-Dawa's Muridke HQ still open in Pak
    • by The Indian Express
      The main complex of Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD), in Muridke on the outskirts of Lahore, which is linked to last month's Terror attack on Mumbai, is still open four days after the UN Security Council placed the group on a terrorist list, The Times has learnt. .....
  • Sethu affidavit: ASI officer files case against Soni
    • by Amitav Ranjan
      An Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) officer, suspended last year for not carrying out changes in a counter reply to the Supreme Court on the Ram Sethu project, has filed a case against Culture Minister Ambika Soni and her senior officials for making him a "convenient scapegoat" to save herself from the public furore that ensued. .....
  • Pak's own peril
    • by News Today
      British Prime Minister Gordon Brown's visit to India and Pakistan and his statements blaming Pakistan as a breeding ground of terrorism and the Pakistan based LeT as the perpetrator of Mumbai Terror attack has gained significance and added to the pressure being faced by Pakistan. .....
  • Mohammed Azhar Masood: Praised, Luminous, Lucky
    • by Himanshu Jain
      Azhar Masood is the villain of several large attacks on Indian soil. These include the first suicide (fidayeen) attack in Srinagar, the attack on Parliament, and the 26 November massacre in Mumbai. Azhar Masood was freed by the NDA government in exchange for 166 lives in the IC-814 hijack. .....
  • Pak scientists offered bin Laden N-weapons before 9/11
    • by The Indian Express
      Barely a month before the 9/11 terror attacks, two Pakistani nuclear scientists, said to be close to disgraced Abdul Qadeer Khan, met up with al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and offered to supply him with atomic weapons, according to a newly released book. .....
  • Qasab's full confession
    • by Mid-Day
      I am as above and reside at the above given address since my birth. I have studied up to 4th standard from Government Primary School. .....
  • Blacklist terror charity still open in Pakistan
    • by Jeremy Page
      The main complex of Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD), the Pakistani charity linked to last month's attack on Mumbai, is still open four days after the UN Security Council placed the group on a terrorist list, The Times has learnt. .....
  • Stop pampering Pakistan's military
    • by Brahma Chellaney
      The recent Mumbai terrorist assaults underscore the imperative for a major change in American policy on Pakistan - a shift that holds the key to the successful outcome of both the war in Afghanistan and the wider international fight against transnational terror. .....
  • A Belgian Victory over al Qaeda: More lessons to be learned
    • by Walid Phares
      Agence France Presse and the Associated Press are reporting that Belgian authorities have arrested 14 suspected Al Qaeda terrorists including a jihadi who was allegedly planning a suicide attack. Sixteen raids were executed by 242 police officers in Brussels and in the eastern city of Liege. .....
  • The Scene Steelers
    • by Anjali Puri
      As fragile security systems crumbled before sprays of bullets, and a battered infrastructure struggled to cope with the bloody aftermath of the terrorist attacks, all over the besieged city there were individuals, groups and teams that rose to the occasion. Without their stamina, courage, professionalism--and at times, even electrifying presence of mind--Mumbai would have been even worse off. Anjali Puri meets some who shone on a dark night. .....
  • Beijing silent on Pak hand in terror
    • by Kuldip Nayar
      Some 46 years ago on November 26 when Mumbai witnessed a terrorist attack, India was in the midst of an invasion by China. After its unilateral ceasefire on November 21, we were licking our wounds. .....
  • The Home Of Terror
    • by G Parthasarathy
      On December 13, 2001, well-armed terrorists stormed India's Parliament and were gunned down by alert security personnel. Investigations revealed that the terrorists had come from Pakistan and worked together with local contacts. .....
  • Pact targets Pakistan terror link
    • by BBC News
      Three-quarters of the most serious terror plots being investigated by UK authorities have links to Pakistan, UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown has said. .....
  • Pakistan foreign minister talks of war
    • by Sify.com
      United Nations/Islamabad: The Mumbai terror strikes and the Pakistan-based Jamat-ud-Dawa were in focus at the UN Security Council with India demanding the group be branded a terrorist outfit and Pakistan stating that it would do so only after completing investigations, even as a Pakistani minister warned of a war in the sub-continent. .....
  • Closet Islamists in PM's team?
    • by Kanchan Gupta
      Even before Mumbai's first night of horror was over, by early morning of November 27 Islamist websites were flush with claims that the multiple attacks had been planned and executed by Hindus, Jews and Christians to malign Muslims. .....
  • Clerical Terror
    • by Philip Jenkins
      If we needed reminding, the carnage in Mumbai proved yet again that South Asia is home to some of the world's deadliest Islamist terrorists. Usually missing from press coverage, though, is any sense of the origin of these movements, which are often assumed to be tied to the grievances of the Arab Middle East and the fate of Jerusalem. .....
  • A Brief Report on Pakistani-British Terrorism
    • by LaRouche Political Action Committee
      Certain U.S. institutions recognize that Lyndon LaRouche's role is critical to being able to flank a British war drive to turn the Mumbai atrocities into another India-Pakistan war. Only LaRouche is leading the way in identifying the Anglo-Saudi-MI6 operation as primary, rather than Pakistan as such. The report which follows was volunteered by an EIR source, in order to help LaRouche in this all-important effort. .....
  • Still Asleep After Mumbai
    • by Daniel Pipes
      Victims caught in terrorist atrocities perpetrated for Islam typically experience fear, torture, horror, and murder, with sirens screaming, snipers positioning, and carnage in the streets. That was the case recently in Bombay (now called Mumbai), where some 195 people were murdered and 300 injured. .....
  • Abu Hamza, the handler who managed the Mumbai attacks
    • by Vicky Nanjappa
      Intelligence agencies consider the attack on the Indian Institute of Science in Bengalaru on December 28, 2005, as one that went horribly wrong for the terrorists. An attack that could have ended with a very high body count went awry because a terrorist with a bagful of grenades was caught in one of Bangalore's nightmarish traffic jams and could not make it to the venue on time. .....
  • How to become a crorepati overnight
    • by J Gopikrishnan
      When the spectrum controversy began to spin out of control and Telecom Minister A Raja was recently attacked by political leaders from within the UPA and outside for his questionable decisions, his mentor and DMK leader M Karunanidhi condemned the critics as people who could "not tolerate the rise of a humble Dalit". .....
  • The Simple Life
    • by Hivani Vora
      The three dozen participants started out with two half-hour Buddhist meditation sessions before dawn. They then spent the next two hours doing what's called work practice, which consisted of scrubbing toilets and raking leaves, all in silence. .....
  • CPM links Mumbai attacks to Indo-US nuke deal
    • by The Times of India
      The CPM on Thursday sought to link signing of the Indo-US nuclear deal with the Mumbai terror strikes, alleging that the country has been exposed to "new dangers" with the signing of the pact. .....
  • Lok Sabha Debate on Mumbai Terror - LK Advani's Speech
    • by Offstumped.nationalinterest.in
      I join each and everybody in this august House to pay condolences to all those innocent civilians, both Indians and foreigners, who lost their lives in these attacks. I join all of you also in paying our grateful homage to the security personnel who were martyred in these attacks. .....
  • What Pakistan is not, and never will be
    • by Jihad Watch
      The Pakistani government of "moderate" Asif Ali Zardari has thus announced it has no intention of handing over any of the those suspected terrorists, now living freely in Pakistan, whose names were given to it, not for the first time, by the government of India. .....
  • Bangladesh Islamist party pledges military training in seminaries
    • by Thaindian News
      Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami, the country's largest Islamist party, has pledged the enactment of a blasphemy law and military training for students of Islamic seminaries (madrassas) in its manifesto for the Dec 29 general election, media reports said Friday. The blasphemy law is meant to prevent the criticism of religion in books, newspapers or electronic media and punishment for those responsible. .....
  • Portrait of an Artist
    • by Debesh Banerjee
      Ketan Mehta's outings in period films, so far, haven't been very successful (Note: Mangal Pandey: The Rising). "The scales are vastly different here," argues Mehta, in defence of Rang Rasiya which was screened at the London Film Festival and which he is currently promoting at the International Film Festival of India in Goa. .....
  • He Trained Me
    • by Bhupen Patel
      Amidst pressure from Pakistan to provide evidence that terrorists operate from its soil, the latest disclosure from Mohammed Ajmal Amir Iman, alias Qasab, will come as a breath of relief for the Mumbai police. Qasab has identified detained Lashkare-Toiba commander Zakiur Rehman Lakhwi as one of the men who trained him for the November 26 Mumbai attacks. .....
  • No release in Pakistan for SRK's Rab Ne
    • by Meena Iyer & Bharti Dubey
      The advance booking for the Aditya Chopra-Shah Rukh Khan flick Rab Ne Bana Di Jodi opened across theatres in India on December 10. However, trade sources say that despite best efforts from both sides, viewers in Pakistan (where SRK has a huge fan base) will not be able to see the film on December 12. .....
  • 'ID cards of terrorists had Hindu names'
    • by Vijay V Singh
      The terrorists who carried out the 26\11 attack were provided with student identity cards of colleges from Delhi, Hyderabad and Bangalore. The cards carried the pictures of the terrorists but the names were fake. .....
  • There is no moral equivalence
    • by Ramesh Thakur
      India reflexively blames Pakistan for nearly all terrorist incidents; Islamabad habitually denies any involvement or links. After last month's attacks in Mumbai, however, the proper response to Pakistani denials is the double positive of "yeah, right." .....
  • Here We Go Again!
    • by Ashley J. Tellis
      Whenever New Delhi points a finger at Pakistan in the aftermath of a terrorist attack in India, a weary world seems to say, "Here we go again!" The old enmity between the two countries can tire spectators who often quickly dismiss Indian accusations of Pakistani malfeasance are little other than political recriminations. .....
  • ISI raises Rs 1,800 crores for terror: IB
    • by Vicky Nanjappa
      Funds are instrumental in the success of a terrorist operation and India's war against terror will not be complete unless it acts on this crucial aspect. .....
  • Those who took away my son are my enemies, says Kasab's father
    • by Rediff.com
      The Lashkar-e-Taiyba and the Jamaat-ud-Dawa might have disowned him, but the father of the lone Pakistani gunman arrested for the Mumbai terror attacks has admitted that the young man whose photograph was beamed by media across the world, is his son. .....
  • Jamaat warns India, Pak: ban us, face consequences
    • by Amitabh Sinha
      Jamaat-ud-Dawa'h, considered to be front organisation for the banned Lashkar-e-Toiba, on Wednesday warned India and Pakistan of dire consequences if banned by the Government of Pakistan under international pressure. .....
  • Sureshkumar loses job for meddling in VS- Pinarayi tussle
    • by Shaju Philip
      The CPM group politics in Kerala has cost a senior IAS officer his job. The state Cabinet on Wednesday suspended K Sureshkumar, pending an inquiry by the Chief Secretary, for openly challenging two CPM leaders working as the secretary and political secretary to Chief Minister V S Achuthanandan. .....
  • New Delhi says ISI, Pak Army helped Lashkar strike
    • by Shishir Gupta
      With US help, India is said to have collected evidence that points to the role of the Pakistani ISI in the Mumbai Terror attacks. Pressure is now being mounted on Islamabad to ban the Muridke-based Jamat-ud-Dawa, which fronts for the banned Lashkar-e-Toiba, and move against its leader Hafiz Saeed. .....
  • India police 'name Mumbai gunmen'
    • by BBC News
      Indian authorities have released the names or aliases of the nine suspected militants killed during last month's attacks in the city of Mumbai (Bombay). .....
  • Hamid Gul: The man who knows too much
    • by Rediff.com
      Mumbai's 26/11 has all the makings of a watershed in world history. As a fallout, the United States is reportedly using its unmatched diplomatic clout to get the United Nations to brand four people as terrorists. .....
  • India not impressed by Azhar detention, wants handover
    • by The Times of India
      India said it was not impressed by the detention of Jaish-e-Mohammad chief Masood Azhar and Lashkar-e-Taiba commander Zakiur Rehman Lakhwi by Pakistan, saying that it was "nothing" as compared to what has been demanded by it. .....
  • Why is Mumbai Burning?
    • by Aijaz Zaka Syed
      Watching the terror nightmare unfold in Mumbai over the past three days on television with me, my kids repeatedly asked: "Who are these terrorists and why are they doing this?" And every time I wished I could offer them a convincing answer. .....
  • What was Ajmal and co's original plan
    • by Vicky Nanjappa
      From a petty thief to a dreaded terrorist. This is how one could describe Ajmal Kasab, the terrorist who is in the custody of the Mumbai police in connection with the dreaded Mumbai terror attack case. .....
  • Pakistan refuses to extradite Mumbai terrorists
    • by Jeremy Page
      Pakistan will not hand India any of the Lashkar-e-Taiba militants arrested on Sunday for their suspected role in the Mumbai terrorist attacks, but will try them under its own laws, the country's foreign minister said today. .....
  • The terrorism riddle
    • by Dawn
      Pakistan, never far from the news, has been firmly in the international spotlight since the Mumbai attacks. The steady drip of leaks from investigators in India and comments by Indian and American officials suggest that a Pakistani connection to the Mumbai attacks has been irrefutably established, at least in the eyes of the wider world. .....
  • How hotel staff made sandwiches, attended to guests even as they braved bullets
    • by Shashank Shekhar & Aditya Paul
      The weekend just passed by and for the first time in many years, on Marine Drive and on various other streets of Colaba, the buzz was lacking and instead of fast cars of party revellers usually trying to dodge police barracks armed with breathalysers, policemen hung around those very barracks without much work to do. .....
  • Tragedy's face that went around the world
    • by Shweta Desai
      "He walked towards me, holding two children. They were covered in blood. He said Sahib, my wife is probably dead, I have to find her, please take my children to the hospital. The children were crying Mummy, Mummy." .....
  • The 'charity' that plotted the Mumbai attacks
    • by Anthony Loyd
      Wriggling under the illumination of media scrutiny after accusations of its involvement in the slaughter in Mumbai, Jamaat-ud- Dawa's response last week was a workmanlike PR counter-move. Journalists were taken on a guided tour of the organisation's headquarters, 30 miles from Lahore, where a civilised lunch of spiced chicken and rice accompanied declarations of innocence, condemnation of the terrorist attack and claims to be nothing more than a charity group involved in relief work. .....
  • Pakistan and the Lashkar's jihad in India
    • by Praveen Swami
      "Whoever they are," Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari said last week of the terrorists who attacked Mumbai, "they are stateless actors who are holding hostage the whole world." "I very much doubt," he continued, asked about the arrested terrorist Mohammad Ajmal Amir, "that he's a Pakistani." .....
  • China's Reaction to Mumbai Terror Strikes: Pro-Pakistan Bias?
    • by D. S. Rajan
      While the leadership in the People's Republic of China (PRC) has been very prompt in conveying (27 November 2008) its condolences to India on the Mumbai terror losses, it took some more time for Beijing to formulate an official position on the terror issue; when it finally came in the form of an appeal (Foreign Ministry Spokesperson, 4 December 2008) to both India and Pakistan " to strengthen dialogue and bilateral cooperation" .....
  • Are we heading to being a failed State?
    • by Rajeev Srinivasan
      The invasion of Mumbai by Pakistani terrorists is but a replay of times past: The periodic and predictable arrival of barbarians over the Khyber Pass, laying waste to the countryside, and wreaking untold damage on a long-suffering populace. The only crime that the average Indian committed was to focus on the creation of wealth; of course, the barbarians came because of the wealth. Today, once again, India is generating capital, and the intention is to thwart its economic rise. .....
  • Divining truth beyond the Vaastu Shastra
    • by Ashutosh Maharaj
      Peace, happiness and health are the three prime goals of all human beings. Can Vaastu Shastra akin to the Chinese Feng Shui help us in this endeavour? Mythology says that the demigod Vaastu Purusha was a terrible giant. He is believed to reside in every plot, house and building. It is energy, the life force of the edifice. .....
  • Chinese media sees Hindu link to 26/11, India irked
    • by IBNLive.com
      The Indian government has taken "serious note" of a "mischievous and misleading" report on the Mumbai terror strike by a Chinese journalist in the People's Daily which speculated that "Hindu youth" could be behind these attacks. .....
  • Mumbai: tragedy and farce
    • by Sandhya Jain
      On 20 September 2008, when Islamabad's Marriott Hotel was gutted by a massive suicide bombing that killed 62 persons and injured over 120, I recalled with a shudder that barely two weeks prior to that grisly devastation, my sister-in-law, her son and father, had enjoyed a brief stay at that very hotel. At home in Delhi, similar feelings of blessed escape rose when bombs blew up in frequented markets like Lajpat Nagar, Sarojini Nagar, Connaught Place. .....
  • 'Only two things crossed my mind: Do or die!'
    • by Prasanna D Zore
      National Security Guard Commando Sunil Kumar Yadav fondly remembers his first visit to Mumbai (Bombay then) 10 years ago. He had heard about the Taj Hotel in Mumbai from his friends and neighbours in Haryana's Pataudi district. .....
  • Muslim plea to Obama: Return to 'Islamic roots'
    • by Aaron Klein
      Claiming Barack Obama has roots in the Islamic religion, an Egyptian cleric has broadcast a plea urging Obama to convert to Islam while warning if the U.S. doesn't withdraw its troops from the Middle East and provide aid to Muslims, those "eager for [death]" will attack America. .....
  • 26/11 terrorists trained by Pak army, navy instructors: Report
    • by The Times of India
      The ten terrorists involved in the Mumbai attacks were among 500 men trained to "elite" commando standards by the Pakistani army and navy instructors and were directly supported by the ISI, a media report here said on Sunday. .....
  • Mumbai locals helped us, terrorist tells cops
    • by S Ahmed Ali
      Did some Mumbai locals provide support to the Pakistani terrorists? Azam Amir Kasab, the only Pakistani terrorist nabbed alive, has revealed names and addresses of at least five people from the city who helped the terror operation. .....
  • India deserves more than sympathy
    • by Mahir Ali
      AT the weekend, media reports based on the interrogation of apparently the only terrorist to be captured alive in Mumbai, named as Azam Amir Kasab, evidently confirmed what many analysts - and most Indians - had suspected from the outset: a clear and direct Pakistan connection in the horrendous attacks that brought mayhem to India's largest metropolis late last Wednesday. .....
  • Pakistan hosting terrorists, using them against India: EU
    • by MSN News
      In a stinging indictment of Pakistan, the European Parliament has said there is "confirmed evidence" about the country hosting several terrorist groups like the Lashkar-e-Taiba and "criminal mastermind" Dawood Ibrahim and using them as "an instrument of terrorism" against India. .....
  • Flush out 'mini Pakistans' mushrooming in country
    • by ExpressIndia.com
      Criticising the Centre's attitude after every terror strikes across the country, the Shiv Sena on Wednesday said the government should first flush out 'mini Pakistans' mushrooming in India and then think of teaching the neighbour country a lesson. .....
  • View from Dubai: Why is Mumbai Burning?
    • by Aijaz Zaka Syed
      Watching the terror nightmare unfold in Mumbai over the past three days on television with me, my kids repeatedly asked: "Who are these terrorists and why are they doing this?" And every time I wished I could offer them a convincing answer. .....
  • Pitfalls of citizen power
    • by Chandan Mitra
      I am more amused than agitated by the sudden burst of activity among Page 3 people over the terror outrage in two of Mumbai's best hotels. During and after the carnage, celebrities have been holding forth, crying "Enough is enough" and demanding banishment of politicians from public life. They have argued that civil society is the only entity that should determine the response to Mumbai's angst. .....
  • Time to show extreme prejudice
    • by Swapan Dasgupta
      In his breathtaking account of The Last Battle for Berlin in 1945, published some four decades ago, Cornelius Ryan narrated the story of how one Berliner tried to anticipate the final collapse. Walking to work each morning, he would look into the drawing room of a prominent Nazi and focus on the lavish portrait of Adolf Hitler. The removal of the portrait, he had decided in his mind, would be the signal that the fall of the city was imminent. .....
  • Lashkar scoffs at handover cry
    • by The Telegraph
      Pakistan will not bow to India's demand to hand over Lashkar-e-Toiba founder Mohammed Hafeez Saeed in connection with the Mumbai terror strikes, a front created by the leader has said. .....
  • First lessons from the Mumbai Massacres
    • by James Lewis
      It now appears that 10 commando-trained terrorists with Pakistani jihadist training were able to kill at least 172 people and wound almost 300 more in Mumbai, India, over some five days. That suggests major failures among Mumbai's first responders, notably its armed police. .....
  • Taliban in 72 pct of Afghanistan, think-tank says
    • by Jon Hemming
      The Taliban hold a permanent presence in 72 percent of Afghanistan, a think-tank said on Monday, but NATO and the Afghan government rejected the report, saying its figures were not credible. .....
  • Jihad in Mumbai: Islamic Teaching in Action
    • by Sher Khan
      The horror of the recent Islamic attack (instantly re-branded "terrorist" attack) in Mumbai has once again shocked the world. The Commando style, simultaneous assaults on various places were somewhat different from the Islamic tradition of suicide bombing. .....
  • Pakistan raids camp of group blamed for Mumbai
    • by Kamran Haider
      Pakistani security forces on Sunday raided a camp used by Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), two sources said, in a strike against the militant group blamed by India for last month's deadly attacks on Mumbai. .....
  • More than 160 US, NATO vehicles burned in Pakistan
    • by Riaz Khan
      Militants torched 160 vehicles, including dozens of Humvees destined for U.S. and allied forces fighting in Afghanistan, in the boldest attack so far on the critical military supply line through Pakistan. .....
  • Kiran Bedi on terror attacks
    • by Mid-Day
      Could the 26/11 attacks have been avoided?
      Kiran Bedi: Yes, if there was proper coordination between the Intelligence Bureau, the Research & Analysis Wing [India's counter-intelligence agency], the Navy and the Coast Guard. India had the alert, but we did not act on it. .....
  • Interpol notices handed to Islamabad
    • by Amir Mir
      While demanding the extradition of 20 people from Pakistan for their alleged involvement in terrorist activities, the Indian authorities have provided to the Pakistani authorities Interpol Red Corner notices and details of the crimes committed by them, along with their fake names as well as their Pakistani passports and ID card numbers. .....
  • Bangladeshis are taking over Guj coast
    • by Urvashi Dev Rawal and Paras K Jha
      The risk of infiltration along the Gujarat's slackly guarded coastline is being gravely heightened by the sprouting of a maze of Bangla-deshi settlements, hundreds of which have already infested the state's seaboard. Curiously, foreign nationals have now become 'local residents', having acquired election and ration cards! .....
  • Time to show extreme prejudice
    • by Swapan Dasgupta
      In his breathtaking account of The Last Battle for Berlin in 1945, published some four decades ago, Cornelius Ryan narrated the story of how one Berliner tried to anticipate the final collapse. Walking to work each morning, he would look into the drawing room of a prominent Nazi and focus on the lavish portrait of Adolf Hitler. The removal of the portrait, he had decided in his mind, would be the signal that the fall of the city was imminent. .....
  • Pakistan Won't Cooperate with India
    • by Sumit Ganguly
      Upon her arrival in New Delhi this week, United States Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said she expected the Pakistani regime to "cooperate fully and transparently" with India to try and bring the perpetrators of last week's terrorist outrage in Mumbai to justice. Ms. Rice's position -- though seemingly sensible -- is actually off the mark. .....
  • The dangerous illusion of independent terrorists
    • by Greg Sheridan
      When us Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice was in India this week, all the talk was about "non-state actors" and the challenge they throw up to the international system. The assumption was that the Pakistan-based terrorists responsible for the murders of about 175 people in Mumbai, and the injuries to hundreds more, were non-state actors. .....
  • Pakistan's Jihad
    • by Bill Roggio & Thomas Joscelyn
      Just two days after the gunmen's siege in Mumbai ended, Pakistani president Asif Ali Zardari went on CNN's Larry King Live to plead his case. Even before the Indian authorities had brought the rampage to an end, they were laying blame on their neighbor to the north. And Zardari wanted the world to know they were wrong. "This is not the time to point fingers," Zardari protested. "The state of Pakistan is in no way responsible." .....
  • Tackling Pak
    • by Gurmeet Kanwal
      The rock solid electronic and circumstantial evidence that is now available about the origins, methodology, execution and minute-to-minute control in respect of last week's Mumbai terror attacks clearly establishes the complicity of Hafiz Muhammad Sayeed's Jamaat-ud-Dawa, the successor to the Lashkar-e-Tayyeba (LeT). .....
  • Two-nation theory has bred practice of hatred
    • by M J Akbar
      Why has Pakistan become synonymous with terrorism? The vast majority of Pakistanis surely find terrorism, which is the purest form of hatred, as repellent as Indians do. Why then does Pakistan breed an endless flow of suicide missionaries? .....
  • Revealed: home of Mumbai's gunman in Pakistan village
    • by Saeed Shah
      Since the terrorist attacks in Mumbai 10 days ago, speculation has been rife about the birthplace of the lone surviving gunman, Ajmal Amir Kasab. India and Pakistan have clashed over reports that he came from the Punjab. Saeed Shah, after spending days travelling throughout the region, tracked down the killer's home - and his grandfather - and found conclusive proof of his identity .....
  • Government can survive criticism, but not ridicule
    • by MJ Akbar
      We have enough evidence: There is a cabal of cyber terrorists employed by mobile phone companies to destabilise the honourable Government of Mr Manmohan Singh with evil jokes. Who else could be manufacturing those SMSes that begin to circulate whenever opportunity arises? This is a professional hit job. .....
  • Pak agrees to 48-hour timetable for action against LeT: Report
    • by The Times of India
      Pakistan has agreed to a 48-hour timetable set by India and the United States to formulate a plan to take action against Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and to arrest at least three Pakistanis who Indian authorities say are linked to the multiple attacks in Mumbai, a top US daily reported, citing a top Pakistani official. .....
  • India losing stature Ridicule goes on unabated
    • by Dina Nath Mishra
      The Mumbai terror attack has shown us that our political system is still in deep slumber, refusing to accept reality. The Government does not realise that India's stature in the comity of nations has fallen vertically as it has failed to harness terror-mongers .....
  • Police Foiled Earlier Plot Against Mumbai
    • by Robert F. Worth and Hari Kumar
      The Indian police foiled an attempt to destroy landmarks and wreak havoc in Mumbai early this year, breaking up a cell of Pakistani and Indian men who were directed by the same two Pakistan-based militant leaders they have accused of organizing last week's devastating attacks here, the police said. .....
  • Indian terror suspects linked to Mumbai plot
    • by Jeremy Page
      Police arrested four Indian Muslims for alleged involvement in a planned attack on Mumbai as early as February, a senior police officer who handled the case told The Times yesterday. .....
  • What the Islamic Invaders Did to India
    • by Rizwan Salim
      On the anniversary of the Babri Masjid demolition (December 6, 1992), it is important for Hindus (and Muslims) to understand the importance of the event in the context of Hindustan's history, past and recent, present and the future. .....
  • Reflections, reflected
    • by Sudeep Paul
      Mumbai, 26/11 might have done its bit to resurrect the long-dead notions of "national character". Even an elusive, momentary revival of this ghost would put us in an incredibly unflattering light. But how does it feel when sympathy and counsel come from foreign shores, but with "national character", a stereotype if ever there was one, blinkering columnists and papers? .....
  • 'They let them go as they were Muslims'
    • by The Times of India
      When faced with a volley of gunshots, while sipping coffee at the Oberoi Hotel on Wednesday night, Ali Arpaciouglu, a Turkish citizen on a business trip to Mumbai, chose to escape through the hotel kitchen and down a flight of stairs that opened onto the road outside. .....
  • Obama aide says attack was work of professionals
    • by Dawn
      US President-elect Barack Obama's adviser on South Asian affairs alleges that those who carried out last week's terrorist attacks in Mumbai had links to Pakistani intelligence agencies. .....
  • Terrorist Group Moves Beyond Kashmir
    • by Marc Perelman
      Lashkar-e-Tayiba, the jihadist group suspected as perpetrator of the stunning terrorist attack last month in Mumbai, has expanded its ambitions greatly since the late 1980s, when it was founded, with Pakistani military sponsorship, to battle the Indian Army in Kashmir. .....
  • Signs are Israeli hostages tortured, strangled: Police
    • by Sagnik Chowdhury
      Joint Commissioner of Police (Crime) Rakesh Maria on Thursday said there are indications that the Israeli hostages at Nariman House were tortured by the terrorists and some of them died due to strangulation. .....
  • LeT stage-managed Mumbai strikes: NYT
    • by The New Indian Express
      For three months before the terror attackers landed on Mumbai's shores, a top Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) operative was in Karachi to manage the assault, the New York Times reported, citing a Pakistani official. .....
  • The 'Islamophobia' canard after Mumbai
    • by Joel J. Sprayregen
      Saudi King Abdullah has been urging the United Nations to pass a universal law prescribing imprisonment for criticizing Islam. Some skeptics, including myself (notwithstanding that I twice enjoyed the King's generous hospitality in Riyadh), have suggested he start instead by establishing religious liberty in his own country, where all religious observance other than Wahabi Islam is banned. .....
  • BSF worried over border exodus
    • by Jayanta Gupta
      Border Security Force officials said that there had been an exodus across the 1,145 km porous Indo-Bangla border ever since the terror attack on November 26. .....
  • Are the Brits Feeling the Heat Over Links To Mumbai Attack?
    • by Citizens Electoral Council
      Many of the terrorists operating in London that were identified by EIR as wanted by countries, including Russia, India, Egypt, Turkey, and others have been at large for years in London, which has called itself the "haven for the oppressed"--as a cover for harboring terrorists--for over a century. .....
  • Don't petition Islamabad
    • by The Pioneer
      There's something nauseating about the manner in which the UPA Government has been petitioning the Government of Pakistan in the hope that Islamabad will do for New Delhi what the latter should do for India. While Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari's rude snub in response to the UPA Government's plea for assistance is no doubt obnoxious, we should not have expected him to react in any other manner. .....
  • Man who took bullets while saving guests loses battle for life
    • by Shalini Nair
      Rajan Kamble was shot at when he was herding the guests at the Taj, the hotel where he worked, to safety. He battled death for an entire night trapped in the hotel and for six days in the critical care unit of JJ hospital. On the seventh day, Kamble, 48, breathed his last. .....
  • Why blame politicians?
    • by S Gurumurthy
      A fallout of the jihadi attack on Mumbai is the huge outrage sweeping through the nation. While this anger is understandable, given the way the present ruling politicians have handled the issue of national security, what is intriguing is that the hate campaign is directed against politicians as a class. .....
  • Top Indian official admits 'lapses' in attacks
    • by Muneeza Naqvi
      India's top law enforcement official admitted Friday there were government "lapses" in last week's terror attack on Mumbai, amid a public uproar over security and intelligence failures in the deadly siege. .....
  • BJP pledges support to govt in fight against terror
    • by Onkar Singh
      The Bharatiya Janata Party on Thursday pledged full support to the UPA government in its fight against terror but with a few riders and said a consensus should be built before the government takes any major steps. .....
  • 'Nobody obeys Manmohan'
    • by The New Indian Express
      Attacking the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government for throwing the country into "disarray", senior Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader Jaswant Singh Wednesday said that "nobody obeys Prime Minister Manmohan Singh". .....
  • Dawood sitting pretty in Karachi
    • by S Balakrishnan
      Even as India seeks Dawood Ibrahim's extradition yet again, the don is ensconced safely in his plush bungalow in Karachi. .....
  • Why delay in handing Afzal Guru?
    • by The Times of India
      A terrorist has been on the death row for three years now. Had he been hanged after fair trail and all due review, it might have sent out the message that India was going to be tough on terror. .....
  • India needs a clear Pakistan policy
    • by Sunil Khilnani
      As Mumbai lifts itself back on to its feet, the most immediate question facing India's citizens and government is who exactly were the attackers and how did they manage to gain such ready access to the city and to hold it to ransom for almost three days? .....
  • Canal rehab is win-win for Jakarta
    • by Rodney Jensen
      The canals and Ciliwung River system of Jakarta are an amazing resource and asset for the City -- possibly a surprising assertion for those who associate the canals with flooding, offensive odors and the appearance of a waste tip or an open sewer. .....
  • Mumbai Attack Is Test for Pakistan on Curbing Militants
    • by Jane Perlez and Somini Sengupta
      Mounting evidence of links between the Mumbai terrorist attacks and a Pakistani militant group is posing the stiffest test so far of Pakistan's new government, raising questions whether it can - or wants to - rein in militancy here. .....
  • Heroes At The Taj
    • by Michael Pollack
      After a terrifying day, one eyewitness thanks his saviors. My story begins innocuously, with a dinner reservation in a world-class hotel. It ends 12 hours later after the Indian army freed us. .....
  • Kundapur: 'Hinduism is Gift of Saints'
    • by Daijiworld.com
      A 'Hindu Religious Awareness Conference' was held at R N Shetty Auditorium of Bhandarkar's College here on Sunday November 30. The conference was organized by the Hindu Jana Jagruti Samiti. .....
  • India minister wants all school kids to learn yoga
    • by Tan Ee Lyn
      India's health minister on Saturday said he wants to push all school-going children to learn yoga, in the hope that it can reduce the prevalence of diseases such as diabetes and hypertension in years to come. .....
  • Lets Stand up and Salute ASI Tukaram Omble
    • by Saravjit Kahlon
      Other than the three top cops of Mumbai police, Hemant Karkare, Ashok Kamte and Vijay Salaskar who were killed in the recent attack on Mumbai by terrorists, people have forgotten a real hero. Tukaram Omble, 48, Assistant Sub-Inspector (ASI), the only cop who with his daredevil courage was helped in the nabbing of a terrorist on 26/11 alive. .....
  • Quit India, Mumbai says again
    • by Saisuresh Sivaswamy
      Sixty six years after the clarion call went out from Bombay's Gowalia Tank asking its rulers to Quit India, the citizens of this amazing city came together in their thousands on Wednesday evening to repeat the call. .....
  • A German's View on Islam
    • by
      A man, whose family was German aristocracy prior to World War II, owned a number of large industries and estates. When asked how many German people were true Nazis, the answer he gave can guide our attitude toward fanaticism. .....
  • Lessons From Mumbai
    • by Lucy M. Caldwell
      Thanksgiving was rocked by the news from Mumbai, India: A small gang of terrorists had wreaked havoc on the region. Allegedly trained at a camp in neighboring Pakistan, the group was well prepared. They came with guns, grenades, satellite phones, and foodstuffs. .....
  • Stand up and be counted
    • by Lalit Koul
      Where does one start after such a terrible tragedy? It has been five days since the dastardly attacks on our land. We are trying to dust off, stand up and move on. Move on, we will. But forget we will not. Forget we should not. Not today, not tomorrow, not ever. We all need to remember this and other previous heinous attacks on our freedom and make sure that we keep our blood warm. .....
  • The Region: India and Israel: The parallels
    • by Barry Rubin
      For years, India has been subjected to periodic terrorist attacks throughout the country. But what happened in Mumbai is something new and different: a full-scale terrorist war. .....
  • Next terror attack on US will originate in Pak: Report
    • by NDTV.com
      Pakistan is the weakest link in world security and the next terror attack in the US will originate in that country, said a high-powered bipartisan US Congressional commision, adding it is the "intersection of nuclear weapons and terrorism." .....
  • 'I'm angry. Really angry'
    • by Rediff.com
      Like the scores of people who lost family and friends to the terror attacks in Mumbai on November 26, actor Aashish Chowdhury is in shock. The actor lost his sister Monica Chhabria and her husband Ajit on that fateful day. .....
  • The Gangster
    • by S Balakrishnan
      Mumbai is enraged and the anger is intermixed with grief. More than the slaughter of hundreds of innocents, people are fuming about the government's failure to demonstrate that it means business. .....
  • Mumbai terror probe - silence of the conspirators
    • by Radha Rajan
      There is a growing feeling among a small section of political commentators and the politically well-informed that there is a sinister silence in certain quarters of the media and the Indian intelligentsia about the core details of the Mumbai terror attack even as the government undertakes a major cover-up operation and goes through the motions of conducting a hard-nosed investigation into the terror plot. .....
  • Why are Jews so powerful, and Muslims so powerless?
    • by Dr Farrukh Saleem
      There are only 14 million Jews in the world; seven million in the Americas, five million in Asia, two million in Europe and 100,000 in Africa. For every single Jew in the world there are 100 Muslims. Yet, Jews are more than a hundred times more powerful than all the Muslims put together. Ever wondered why? .....
  • What have we done to protect ourselves?
    • by Swapan Dasgupta
      What a shame that the entire top brass of the Mumbai ATS was wiped out because it was led to believe that the carnage in Leopold Café was a burst of gangland madness. A little prior knowledge and the lives of 200 people, including 17 men in uniform, may have been saved. .....
  • Angst, anguish, anger
    • by B. S. Raghavan
      The only other occasion I can recall which gave rise to so much of anxiety, anguish and anger throughout the length and breadth of India as in the case of the Mumbai carnage was the Chinese invasion of 1962. I was at that time in the Union Home Ministry handling political issues, security, intelligence and matters connected with the Emergency and the enforcement of Defence of India Act and Rules. .....
  • People at risk but hundreds of crores to protect netas
    • by Rahul Tripathi & Kartikeya
      While they seem unable to protect ordinary people from terrorist attacks, politicians, cutting across party lines, spend hundreds of crores of tax-payers' money to protect themselves. Some of them may be at genuine risk, but there are numerous politicians who surround themselves with gun-toting commandos to flaunt their `status' and end up harassing ordinary people by blocking traffic and pushing vehicles off the road. .....
  • Pak TV channel says 26/11 hatched by Hindu Zionists
    • by Nandita Sengupta
      Mumbai's 26/11 was actually a plan hatched by "Hindu Zionists" and "Western Zionists", including the Mossad, said a self-styled Pakistan security expert on a Pakistan news television show, uploaded on www.hotklix.com. .....
  • Lashkar-e-Taiba
    • by Steve Coll
      Indian and American officials are now reporting that the Mumbai attackers seem to have connections to Lashkar-e-Taiba, the Pakistan-based Islamist organization. Among other analytical clues, over the weekend, one anonymous American official quoted in the Washington Post noted that Lashkar has a known "maritime" capability. .....
  • Psychotic terrorists in search of a grievance
    • by David Aaronovitch
      So, why kill the rabbi? There is a branch of apologetics - which I take crudely to be the belief that the crime is the fault of the victim - that assumes a milder form, and which I'll call explanetics. So the explanatists view of the Mumbai massacres last week is that the cause lies in what concretely has been done to, or in the vicinity of, the young, cool-looking men with the grenades and the machineguns. .....
  • Sonia's presence in Delhi is costing India dearly
    • by François Gautier
      In 1898, the French writer Emile Zola wrote an open letter to the then French president in the newspaper L'Aurore, titled j'accuse ('I accuse'), where he accused the French government of anti- Semitism towards Captain Alfred Dreyfus, a Jewish officer unfairly condemned for treason. .....
  • 'Only two things crossed my mind: Do or die!'
    • by Prasanna D Zore
      National Security Guard Commando Sunil Kumar Yadav fondly remembers his first visit to Mumbai (Bombay then) 10 years ago. He had heard about the Taj Hotel in Mumbai from his friends and neighbours in Haryana's Pataudi district. .....
  • People's anger and a crumbling spy agency
    • by Sheela Bhatt
      Six nights after the Mumbai terror attacks there are two distinct waves visible in India. One is the tsunami of emotions over the blasts in Mumbai. Newspaper reports and television channels are reporting the rich and powerful, poor and faceless people's anger, anguish and fury against government's massive failure on all fronts that has resulted in this attack. .....
  • Three terrorists held at Kovai
    • by News Today
      It seems that the new Union Home Minister P Chidambaram has got some job in his home State itself. Just days after a terror attack rocked Mumbai, three Islamic terrorists have been arrested at Coimbatore. .....
  • Pakistan's hand all but nailed
    • by The Times of India
      Pakistan's foreign minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi on Saturday promised to help India unearth the hand behind the Mumbai attack. He will not have to work hard. For, Indian agencies have managed to lay their hands on evidence that will rip apart Islamabad's perennial denial about the role of Pakistan's quasistate actors in the terror campaign against India. .....
  • Break the terrorist siege of India
    • by Brahma Chellaney
      Just as the blazing World Trade Centre in New York came to symbolise the 9/11 events, television footage of the fire raging in Mumbai's landmark Taj Mahal and Oberoi hotels has laid bare yet newer face of terror. The multiple, simultaneous assaults in Mumbai are just the latest example of how the world's largest democracy has come under siege from terrorist forces. .....
  • Inflicting wounds on patriotism
    • by M Rama Jois
      The statement made by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to the effect that assigning the name of any religion to any of the terrorist activities was wrong, is very timely. The statement is of utmost importance being in the interest of maintaining the feelings of different religions and is full of wisdom. .....
  • Dial Congress for terror
    • by Hilda Raja
      With no UPA allies condemning the Mumbai holocaust the silence maintained by Mr Lalu Prasad Yadav, Mr Ram Vilas Paswan, Mr Mulayam Singh Yadav and the otherwise eloquent Left parties exposes their vested interest of not losing Muslim votes. .....
  • But what about the Prime Minister?
    • by A Surya Prakash
      The pall of gloom and shame that enveloped the nation in the immediate aftermath of the audacious terrorist attack on Mumbai last week has since given way to unprecedented anger across the country over the deliberate and criminal neglect of national security by the United Progressive Alliance. .....
  • Pakistan government can't rein in ISI
    • by Arif Mohamed Khan
      India has been attacked again. The financial capital has proved to be our soft underbelly and terrorists, apart from holding Mumbai to ransom for more than 60 hours, have left behind a gory tale of blood and human suffering. .....
  • BJP ready for federal investigating agency, but wants Pota back too
    • by The Economic Times
      The BJP on Monday backed Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's proposal on the creation of a federal investigating agency to probe terror attacks, but said at the same that creating such an organisation without arming it with a tough anti-terror law would not serve the purpose. .....
  • 'But for slain major, not even a dog will visit his house'
    • by Rediff.com
      This was how Kerala Chief Minister V S Achuthanandan heaped scorn on Monday on the family of NSG Major Sandeep Unnikrishnan, who was killed in the Mumbai terror attack during commando operations, igniting a controversy after smarting under the snub from the father of the angry officer when he went to Bangalore to offer his condolences. .....
  • Guilty Before Being Tried!
    • by Gurmeet Kanwal
      Lt Col Shrikant Pasad Purohit of the Army's Intelligence Corps is "suspected" of terror. Yet, most television news channels and some newspapers violated all norms of journalism and went to town with malicious headlines: "Army's Image Stained", "Terrorism Tarnishes Indian Army" etc. .....
  • Jihad not terrorism
    • by Pudhari
      All the civil forces were unsuccessful to defeat the terrorist attacks in Mumbai and at last, different squads of Military forces had to end this civil crisis on war footing. Almost all are busy in the admiration of our armed forces for defeating or ending these infiltrating Jihadis. But it is doubtful as to how many have deduced the meaning of it. .....
  • Stench of death is overwhelming
    • by Bruce Loudon
      They are the images of terrorism, the scenes of horror and destruction that tell the awful story of India's agony. .....
  • India asks for Dawood, Masood Azhar's head
    • by IBNLive.com
      India has asked Pakistan to hand over gangster Dawood Ibrahim and terrorist leader Maulana Masood Azhar for their suspected involvement in the Mumbai terror attack. .....
  • Will this be avenged?
    • by The Pioneer
      Manmohan Singh promises to inflict 'costs' upon Pakistan. But diplomatic obfuscation, writes G Parthasarathy, has already let Islamabad off the hook. And politics has defanged India's capacity to undertake covert, 'seek and destroy' ops across the border .....
  • Group of Indians in Saudi may hold reins to terror attacks
    • by Josy Joseph
      A group of Indians in Saudi Arabia with deep links back home and abroad, especially in Pakistan, are emerging as key suspects besides the Lashkar-e-Taiba leadership in the investigations into the Mumbai attacks. .....
  • Barbarians break the gate
    • by Rajeev Srinivasan
      The audacious invasion of Mumbai casts a long shadow on the future of the Indian state. Our nation is bleeding profusely from self-inflicted, avoidable wounds. The failure of the political class has left the people stunned and angry. Today's heroes are men in uniform .....
  • US, India face Pak blackmail on terror
    • by Chidanand Rajghatta
      The United States and India face tactics bordering on blackmail from a militarized Pakistan - where civilian control is still very dodgy - as they coordinate efforts to eliminate terrorism in the region, according to analysts and officials on both sides. .....
  • Arrested terrorist says gang hoped to get away
    • by The Times of India
      The gang of terrorists who wreaked mayhem in Mumbai for three days were made to believe by their Lashkar bosses that they were not being sent on a suicide mission and that they would be coming back alive. .....
  • India: Al-Qaeda websites rejoice over Mumbai attacks
    • by AKI - Adnkronos International
      Al-Qaeda websites on Thursday were swamped with messages from people who were celebrating the devastating Mumbai attacks which have left over 100 people dead and 281 injured. "Oh Allah, destroy the Hindus and do it in the worst of ways," was one of the comments that appeared on Islamist forums on the Internet immediately after the attacks. .....
  • I want to live: Captured terrorist Azam
    • by The Economic Times
      His swaggering image as he walked around Chhatrapati Shivaji terminus dispensing death was captured by Mumbai Mirror photo editor Sebastian D' souza, and was the first glimpse of the terrorists who have held Mumbai hostage over the last 48 hours. .....
  • Calling All Pakistanis
    • by Thomas L. Friedman
      On Feb. 6, 2006, three Pakistanis died in Peshawar and Lahore during violent street protests against Danish cartoons that had satirized the Prophet Muhammad. More such mass protests followed weeks later. .....
  • Dawood sitting pretty in Karachi
    • by S Balakrishnan
      Even as India seeks Dawood Ibrahim's extradition yet again, the don is ensconced safely in his plush bungalow in Karachi. .....
  • Facing the truth
    • by Irfan Husain
      Even in my remote bit of paradise, news of distant disasters filters through: above the steady sound of waves breaking on the sandy beach in Sri Lanka, I was informed by several news channels about the sickening attacks on Mumbai. My Internet connection is erratic and slow, but nevertheless, I have been bombarded with emails, asking me for my take on this latest atrocity. .....
  • Railway timetable announcer saves lives at the CST
    • by Nimisha Srivastava
      The indiscriminate firing by terrorists at the Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus (CST) in Mumbai took many lives. However, many other lives were saved because of one ordinary Mumbaikar who announces railway timetables for a living. .....
  • Yes, the terrorists are winning
    • by Steven Emerson
      This past Saturday, the New York Times ran an op-ed piece entitled "What They Hate about Mumbai," focusing specifically on the free market sins of that great city. With contrived evenhandedness, the op-ed managed to blame both Hindus and Muslim extremists-without blaming either party in particular for the murderous attacks. .....
  • No Time to Hide for Muslims
    • by Aijaz Zaka Syed
      Watching the terror nightmare unfold in Mumbai over the past three days with me on television, my kids have repeatedly asked me: "Who are these terrorists and why are they doing this?" And every time I wished I could offer them a convincing answer. .....
  • Sadhvi Pragya: Truth will prevail
    • by Sandhya Jain
      While we are gratified that our small initiative has borne fruit, it is painful for a woman writer to confess that the National Commission for Women was less than helpful in the matter of Sadhvi Pragya's illegal detention, ill-treatment, and absence of women constables during an interrogation period that spanned 23-24 days! .....
  • CIA analyst says LeT tied in with Pak government
    • by Aziz Haniffa
      Bruce Riedel, a veteran Central Intelligence Agency analyst for nearly three decades, has ridiculed the Pakistani government's denials that its intelligence agency has no links to the Lashkar e Tayiba, that even the director of National Intelligence in the US has said is the number one suspect on American minds as the perpetrator of the deadly terrorist attacks in Mumbai. .....
  • Us is different from US
    • by News Today
      The US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who has come down to India with a message of 'support and solidarity', has been cautious in her statements about the ongoing diplomatic row between India and Pakistan. .....
  • Now in custody: Face of Mumbai's terror
    • by Rediff.com
      They may have come prepared for raining death and havoc on innocents, but the sole terrorist arrested in the audacious terror strike on Mumbai is not so sure he himself wanted to die, says the tabloid Mumbai Mirror. .....
  • Is yoga bad for you?
    • by Irfan Husain
      Is yoga bad for you? Several years ago, I developed something called arthrosis in my knees. This is a first cousin to arthritis, and is extremely painful. After a few months on painkillers, I enrolled in a yoga class out of desperation. .....
  • Dawood behind Mumbai attacks: ATS sources
    • by IBNLive.com
      Underworld don Dawood Ibrahim, who is hiding in Pakistan, may be involved in organising the attack on Mumbai, claimed Maharashtra Anti-Terrorism Squad sources. .....
  • Exclusive: LeT terrorist Ismail arrested in Mumbai
    • by Sheela Bhatt
      Azam Amir Kasav (who initially misled the Mumbai police by giving the name of his slain colleague Ismail alias Zakiruallah, when he was capture), a Punjabi from Faridkot in Pakistan who was arrested by the Mumbai police on Wednesday night during the terror attacks, is giving interrogators the complete story of how the sensational terror operation was planned and executed. .....
  • This is war waged against the nation
    • by The Pioneer
      The final death toll in the latest terrorist outrage in the country, this time in Mumbai, will be known only after the debris of the multiple attacks - scattered over 10 places in the mega city - are cleared and the casualties tabulated. .....
  • US officials fear Indian response to attacks
    • by Rediff.com
      US officials fear that should the firm evidence emerge that the Mumbai terror attacks were planned and directed from within Pakistan, it would certainly escalate tension between the neighbouring countries and could also provoke an Indian military response, even strikes against terrorists, a media report said on Saturday. .....
  • What all terrorists do before final assault?
    • by Rediff.com
      The militants, who entered into Mumbai by boats to carry out probably the worst terror attack on India, began their killing spree in the high seas where they killed five fishermen who're "missing" since last week. .....
  • Mumbai: A Price too High?
    • by Swati Parashar
      I shall not waste time by giving details about the Mumbai horror that still continues as I write this. Like you, I await familiar media headlines: appeals to communal harmony and to stay calm by our so called 'leaders'; Mumbai's resilience and how quickly life returns to 'normalcy' in the city; how our state and society endures such attacks bravely and 'defeats' the aims of terrorists; how we need to stand together as a 'nation' etc. .....
  • Murder in Mumbai
    • by The Wall Street Journal
      We will learn more in the coming days how terrorists invaded India's financial capital Wednesday night, killing more than 100 innocents and wounding hundreds more. But there are already two lessons emerging: The war on terror is far from won, and it is migrating to democracies with weak antiterror defenses. .....
  • Stirrings of change
    • by Shaibal Gupta
      Three years ago, when Nitish Kumar took over the reins in Bihar, he inherited a ramshackle state structure which had no history of work, coherence and dynamism, not just during the last regime but during the last century. The state could pursue its growth agenda even without an institutional memory of development, provided few other conditions were favourable. .....
  • We want to stand shoulder-to-should with Indian people: KP
    • by Press Trust of India
      England's captain Kevin Pietersen today back-patted his teammates for showing courage to stand "shoulder-to-shoulder" with the Indian people following the terror attacks but admitted that a final decision will not be taken until Sunday on whether to play the Test series. .....
  • Painful recall: How Mumbai police nabbed terrorist
    • by Shoaib Ahmed
      The reason why at least one of the perpetrators of violence in Mumbai was caught alive is because the quick thinking and courage of a few brave cops. One constable even lost his life accosting the terrorists at Girgaum. .....
  • Pak responsible, says Pranab
    • by Shobori Ganguli
      The already tenuous peace between India and Pakistan has been further strained. External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee has linked the Mumbai terror attack with Pakistan, asserting that, "Preliminary evidence, prima facie evidence, indicates elements with links to Pakistan are involved." .....
  • We trained in Lashkar camps: Arrested terrorist
    • by Sagnik Chowdhury & Ritu Sarin
      Interrogation of the lone gunman nabbed alive by the Mumbai Police after Wednesday's Terror attacks has left investigators in little doubt that the unprecedented raid on the country's financial capital was the work of Pakistani militant group Lashkar-e-Toiba. .....
  • Heroes of Mumbai
    • by The Pioneer
      Although the operation to neutralise all the terrorists who took over Mumbai's iconic hotel, Taj Mahal Palace, on Wednesday night is not yet over, the security forces, namely the National Security Guards, deserve to be commended for their outstanding role during the entire crisis. .....
  • 26/11: Fits the chilling Lashkar pattern
    • by Wilson John
      The two-day- long siege of Mumbai by over two dozen terrorists, which killed over 125 and turned the commercial soul of India into an island of fear, was part of a global jihadi conspiracy to turn the region into a cauldron of violence and establish a pan-Islamic network over Asia. .....
  • PM's terror stand comes back to haunt him
    • by The Times of India
      Of all his formulations, the one that has returned most often to haunt Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is the assertion that Pakistan too, like India, was a victim of terrorism. The macabre irony embedded in the peculiar hypenation plays itself out in a ghastly re-run with every terror strike. .....
  • Turkish couple let off by terrorists for being Muslims
    • by Clara Lewis & Anahita Mukherji
      When faced with a volley of gunshots, while sipping coffee at the Oberoi Hotel on Wednesday night, Ali Arpaciouglu, a Turkish citizen on a business trip to Mumbai, chose to escape through the hotel kitchen and down a flight of stairs that opened onto the road outside. .....
  • Under siege, Cama staff rose to the occasion
    • by Rahi Gaikwad
      The sixth floor of the Cama and Albless Hospital building, down the road from the Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus (CST), is pockmarked. Bullet and shrapnel marks are all over the walls, on the two metal lift doors and the ceiling as well. They bear testimony to the heavy exchange of fire that took place on the night of November 26. On the floor outside the lift are four small craters, presumably caused by grenades. .....
  • Putty in the hands of jihadis
    • by Sandeep B
      Instead of raising a din and forcing the Government to wake up to the threat of terrorism, our media is obsessed with the motivation of the killers and whether they were 'really' Pakistanis! .....
  • Zardari must walk the talk
    • by Sushil Vakil
      Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari's image makeover efforts and remarks like Pakistan wants to "stay off" the Kashmir issue and will not use "nuclear weapons first" are enough indication that it wants to shun its 'terrorist identity', however not its pivotal role in fostering the same. .....
  • Taj staff put their lives on the line
    • by Rhys Blakely
      They were heroes in cummerbunds and overalls. The staff of the Taj Mahal hotel saved hundreds of wealthy guests as heavily armed gunmen roamed the building, firing indiscriminately, leaving a trail of corpses behind them. .....
  • 'Only two things crossed my mind: Do or die!'
    • by Prasanna D Zore
      National Security Guard Commando Sunil Kumar Yadav fondly remembers his first visit to Mumbai (Bombay then) 10 years ago. He had heard about the Taj Hotel in Mumbai from his friends and neighbours in Haryana's Pataudi district. .....
  • India's Antiterror Errors
    • by Sadanand Dhume
      As the story of the carnage in Mumbai unfolds, it is tempting to dismiss it as merely another sorry episode in India's flailing effort to combat terrorism. Over the past four years, Islamist groups have struck in New Delhi, Jaipur, Bangalore and Ahmedabad, among other places. .....
  • India, like Israel, has to fight terror on its own
    • by Barry Rubin
      For years, India has been subjected to periodic terrorist attacks throughout the country. But what happened in Mumbai is something new and different: A full-scale terrorist war. .....
  • Giving Thanks to Heroes
    • by Nicholas D. Kristof
      This is a column to give thanks to you, the reader. You don't know it, but some of you are keeping women like Sajida Bibi alive here in this remote Pakistani village. And that is a far grander reason to celebrate Thanksgiving than even the plumpest turkey. .....


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