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Sorted by :  June  2017
by Sajjad Hussain on 30 Jun 2017 6 Comments

I have the honour to share some chilling facts about the atrocities committed by the Pakistani regime against 2 million indigenous people of UN-disputed Gilgit Baltistan. Political activists, religious persons and students of Pakistan-occupied Gilgit Baltistan (PoGB) who do not comply with Agencies’ diktat are framed under the Anti Terrorist Act, also known ...

by Claudia Waedlich on 29 Jun 2017 5 Comments

I, am honoured to speak at this June conference under the aegis of African Culture International (ACI) and its international friends that they have invited me to shed light on the human rights situation in Pakistan and the areas of the former princely state of Jammu & Kashmir which are illegally occupied by that country for more than seven decades. I had no...

by George Canning on 28 Jun 2017 10 Comments

“Dreamland.” The very name invokes the Earthly paradise of cities and suburbs of yesteryear, and journalist Sam Quinones begins his “True Tale” with a prefatory chapter on Dreamland’s story. It was a real place, the name of the shining, sprawling, modern swimming pool complex, built in the 1920s, in Portsmouth, Ohio that entertained families well into the...

by Sandhya Jain on 27 Jun 2017 8 Comments

With a sovereign wealth fund of $335 billion and a miniscule citizenry (12 per cent of 2.5 million residents), Qatar has long enjoyed the luxury of engaging in regional politics without fear of domestic unrest, unlike its neighbours. But on June 5, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Bahrain injected high voltage instability in the region by...

by B R Haran on 26 Jun 2017 4 Comments

Rajini has come a long way from being an ordinary bus conductor to a celebrated super star. He reached the pinnacles of glory by sheer hard work, commitment, perseverance and absolute faith in God. Recently, after a long hiatus, he met his fans in person continuously for five days in the month of May. He made kind enquiries and patiently took photographs wit...

by Naagesh Padmanaban on 25 Jun 2017 3 Comments

The political situation currently obtaining in Tamil Nadu is akin to a rudderless ship lost in a stormy sea. The splits in the ruling AIADMK, the naked power struggles among the feuding groups, the holding of MLAs at secret resorts, cancellation of the by-poll for the deceased chief minister’s constituency due to corruption, income tax raids on an...

by Claudia Waedlich on 24 Jun 2017 6 Comments

The state of Pakistan signed and ratified the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESR) along with the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. The Covenant is monitored by the UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. It is a multilateral treaty adopted by the United Nations General Assembly on 16...

by Israel Shamir on 23 Jun 2017 0 Comment

As a rule I try to see my glass half-full, leaving the half-empty one to other fellows. And now there are some good reasons for an eternal optimist to stick to his positive schedule. Though it tarried, the summer has come, after all, to the North. The skies are blue, the grass is green and lush, the flowers are breaking out; in short, there is nothing for ...

by G B Reddy on 22 Jun 2017 2 Comments

Media speculation and hype over Modi’s forthcoming visit to the USA and his meeting with Donald Trump will be real with experts on both side of the spectrum forecasting on possible outcomes – positive and negative. If Modi’s critics hype idealistic expectations of breakthroughs on key issues in bilateral relations, Modi’s ardent admirers would naturally atte...

by Thierry Meyssan on 21 Jun 2017 3 Comments

Donald Trump’s speech in Riyadh has sparked a wave of declarations against terrorism and against political Islam. The Arab world is expressing its thirst for secularism at the very moment that it is being misrepresented in Europe and used against religions. Faced with this breath of liberty, the British are organising the camp of political Islam around Qatar...

by Punarvasu Parekh on 20 Jun 2017 8 Comments

“What Sheikh Abdullah was really gambling for… was an independent principality whose continued existence would be guaranteed by the Indian armed forces and whose solvency was secured by the Indian treasury. There was, however, no idea of a quid pro quo from his side. He did not expect to be called to account either in respect of the internal administration o...

by R K Ohri on 19 Jun 2017 10 Comments

The mystery surrounding the delayed accession of Jammu & Kashmir to India has remained shrouded in mystery for the last seventy years. Radha Rajan has tried to clear the cobwebs of confusion surrounding this monumental event. In Jammu & Kashmir: Dilemma of Accession, the author has discussed the behind-the-scene developments relating to Jammu & Kashmir in th...

by Thierry Meyssan on 18 Jun 2017 2 Comments

While President Trump seems to have sorted out his problems of interior authority - more or less - the conflict has now moved on to concern NATO. Washington is currently speaking against the manipulation of terrorism, while London has no intention of giving up such a useful tool for the extension of its influence. The Bilderberg Group, initially organised as...

by Vipesh Garg on 17 Jun 2017 10 Comments

Public Law (P.L.)-480, a food-aid programme, was major part of American foreign policy during the Cold War, to liquidate communist influence. It was signed as Agricultural Trade Development and Assistant Act, 1954 by President D. Dwight Eisenhower and administered strongly under ‘Food for Peace’ during John F. Kennedy’s administration. Henry Kissinger, Secre...

by Naagesh Padmanaban on 16 Jun 2017 10 Comments

It is no exaggeration that Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is the one among a select band of leaders – probably a cherry picked few among Indian politicians in recent memory – who have been hounded by the main stream media (MSM) – both print and electronic. In that sense, he shares a common experience and can empathize with President Donald Trump of...

by G B Reddy on 15 Jun 2017 1 Comment

Nuclear energy offers tremendous prospects to achieve “Energy Security for AD 2050”. But, there are critical challenges to overcome including Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) admission, timely technology breakthroughs, successful implementation of joint ventures, admission into Generation IV International Forum (GIF), assured uranium resources at optimum costs,...

by G B Reddy on 14 Jun 2017 0 Comment

The study of various reports on “Energy Security AD 2050” makes an interesting exercise. Many varied requirements and generation targets have been suggested by different agencies. The significance of energy security needs no elucidation. Lenin’s quote “Communism - the power of the Soviets plus Electricity” highlights the significance of electricity from all ...

by Sandhya Jain on 13 Jun 2017 17 Comments

The agility with which the Congress party raises an uproar and/or takes to the streets to protest the alleged sins of omission or commission of the Bharatiya Janata Party at the Centre or in States ruled by it, is admirable. The BJP, in comparison, tends to be sluggish in its responses and often loses the perception battle, at least initially. Certainly the ...

by Paul Craig Roberts on 12 Jun 2017 2 Comments

Brzezinski’s death at 89 years of age has generated a load of propaganda and disinformation, all of which serves one interest group or another or the myths that people find satisfying. I am not an expert on Brzezinski, and this is not an apology for him. He was a Cold Warrior, as essentially was everyone in Washington during the Soviet era. For 12 years Brz...

by John Pilger on 11 Jun 2017 5 Comments

The unsayable in Britain’s general election campaign is this. The causes of the Manchester atrocity, in which 22 mostly young people were murdered by a jihadist, are being suppressed to protect the secrets of British foreign policy. Critical questions - such as why the security service MI5 maintained terrorist “assets” in Manchester and why the government d...

by Rahul Goswami on 10 Jun 2017 12 Comments

In the Konkan, small electrically operated oil presses that ingest limited amounts of dried copra to expel oil for households to cook with are common. These can press enough in a day (electricity supply permitting) to fill several dozen glass bottles with coconut oil. As such a filled bottle of freshly pressed coconut oil usually sells for Rs 130 to Rs 160, ...

by Israel Shamir on 09 Jun 2017 2 Comments

Life is not boring with President Trump. Perhaps he hasn’t yet fulfilled many wishes of his voters, but he definitely has made their news much more entertaining. Standing a few inches from impeachment, surviving lynch by media, hunted down by rogue Republican senators, the US President broke three taboos established by his predecessors: he removed the major ...

by G Clare Westwood on 08 Jun 2017 3 Comments

In 1960, there were some three billion people on the planet. Around that time, the Green Revolution with its package of so-called ‘modern technologies’ for agriculture was launched with the announced aim of feeding the poor, especially in the developing world. Yet in 2009, after almost a half-century of ‘modern’ agriculture, the number of hungry shot over th...

by James Petras on 07 Jun 2017 1 Comment

On a scale not seen since the ‘great’ world depression of the 1930’s, the US political system is experiencing sharp political attacks, divisions and power grabs. Executive firings, congressional investigations, demands for impeachment, witch hunts, threats of imprisonment for ‘contempt of Congress’ and naked power struggles have shredded the façade of politi...

by Naagesh Padmanaban on 06 Jun 2017 4 Comments

President Trump’s first five months in office have truly been action packed. Many of his new team members have been let go or have resigned on their own. This comes on top of the delayed confirmations of many of the President’s picks. Not to forget the series of street protests, arsons and other expressions of anger and opposition to the incumbent president....

by Vinod Saighal on 05 Jun 2017 1 Comment

The contrast could not be starker. Preferring the Arab Peninsula as his first trip outside the United States at a time when he is under increased domestic pressure, he needed to fill his bag with petro-dollars. The visit ended with a fat cheque for chief guest Donald Trump of 460 billion US dollars! Never before did any US president visiting the region get s...

by R Hariharan on 04 Jun 2017 3 Comments

The unsavoury episode of Justice C.S. Karnan has left many red faces, not only in the Supreme Court, but among all of us, including the “enlightened” citizens. From the popular perspective, repeatedly reinforced by the media, there is absolutely no justification for his unconscionable behaviour. Of course, it was an aberration waiting to happen, because of t...

by The Saker on 03 Jun 2017 2 Comments

Robert Fisk put it best: “Trump Is About To Really Mess Up In The Middle East”. Following his fantastically stupid decision to attack the Syrian military with cruise missiles Trump or, should I say, the people who take decisions for him, probably realized that it was “game over” for any US policy in the Middle East so they did the only thing they could do: t...

by G B Reddy on 02 Jun 2017 2 Comments

India faces horror prospects to overcome the challenges of the crisis of unemployment. The BJP president Amit Shah for a change hit the nail on the head when he recently stated that it was not possible to give jobs to everyone in a country of 125 crore. However, Amit Shah got the population figure wrong. As per the ‘WorldOMeter’, on 28 May 2017, India’s popu...

by Thierry Meyssan on 01 Jun 2017 2 Comments

Thierry Meyssan observes the actions that President Trump is taking to convince his allies and partners to drop the jihadists that they support, arm, and supervise. Contrary to the picture painted by the international Press and its political adversaries, for the last four months, the White House has been pursuing an anti-imperialist policy which is beginning...

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