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HindustanTimes Tue,18 Jun 2013
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Editorials

Keeping tabs on the political grapevine

The election to the two Rajya Sabha seats from Assam has put the Congress high command in a fix. The party has fielded Manmohan Singh and Santiuse Kujur, a tribal and a newcomer for the poll while Badruddin Ajmal’s United Democratic Front has also put up a candidate necessitating voting.

Singling out terrorists

The Woolwich attack, in which two radicalised Britons of Nigerian origin attacked and killed a British soldier, shook the world because of the gory nature of the crime. What came as more shocking was the motive behind the crime: the two ideologically motivated youths were protesting against British military action in Muslim countries.

Opening the next door

Contrary to proclamations in the foreign press, peace in Nepal is still a distant dream. The Maoists continue to ensure a status quo, writes Kanak Mani Dixit.

A very limited overs game

Many believe the current cricket spot-fixing crisis could perhaps have been avoided if the lessons of the 2000 scandal had been learnt. Instead, what we found as the T20 league came to an end is that the whole game is under a cloud.

Act tough on red terror

The dastardly attack on a Congress convoy by Maoists in Chhattisgarh must be condemned in the strongest possible terms. The attack proves that Maoists are threatening the idea of India.

Something to cheer about

Positive signs of the economy are in sight. But we must not allow political instability raise its head.

Witches don't exist

Operation Yewtree, set up to probe the Jimmy Savile sex scandal, is an indicator of this generation's judgement on the nasty cultural assumptions made in the past. Farrukh Dhondy writes.

Mechanisms to check a free-for-all

Some healthy constitutional conventions need to be revived in order to stop officials from exceeding their mandate. Ashok Kapur writes.

It's time to break the ice

Society must stop seeing interaction between opposite sexes as taboo. Omair Ahmad writes.

Banking on Everest

Two mountaineers have set a world record by being the first to use a mobile banking app on Mount Everest….they have successfully traded shares with Breeze Trade and conducted funds transfers with Breeze Banking: Standard Chartered Bank press release, May 23, Nepal. Manas Chakravarty writes.

The power of charm

You don't have to meet him to know he has that winning quality. You can hear it in his voice, see it in his gestures and sense it in the stories newspapers tell of him. The Chinese Prime Minister, Li Keqiang, has abundant charm. Karan Thapar writes.

Spot, the difference

Call me a Duckworth-Lewis squib, but it's the T20 we're talking about. What did you expect? Proceedings against bribes paid for a role in The Swan Lake at the Bolshoi Ballet leading to the Tchaikovsky estate's dissolution? Indrajit Hazra reports.

Well begun, hardly done

In the last nine years India has been let down by an indifferent UPA and an ineffective Opposition. Well, maybe better luck next time around. Chanakya writes.

When everyone has to pitch in

Allies of successive governments must account for themselves much better than they have done.

A hostile side to trials

The Jessica Lall case highlights the need for quicker trials and an effective witness protection programme.
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