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Strategies & Market Trends : India Coffee House -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: JPR who wrote (12412)7/31/2002 7:16:24 AM
From: JPR  Respond to of 12475
 
A forked tongue delivers a tongue-lash--JPR

Dawn.com
Delhi flayed for remarks against Musharraf

ISLAMABAD, July 30: Pakistan hit back on Tuesday at India's accusation that President Pervez Musharraf was guilty of "terminological inexactitude" with a carefully worded insult of its own.
India's foreign ministry spokeswoman Nirupama Rao made the remark in response to Gen Musharraf's insistence, before talks on Sunday with US Secretary of State Colin Powell, that militants had ceased crossing into occupied Kashmir from Azad Kashmir.
Foreign Office spokesman Aziz Ahmed Khan retorted by declaring "she is suffering from terminological ineptitude."
Powell was back in the region at the weekend to keep up the pressure on both the countries to scale down their-seven month military standoff over Kashmir.
He pronounced tensions were down and the likelihood of war had subsided since late May, telling reporters as he flew from Islamabad to Bangkok "it was not as though we were on the eve of war."-AFP



To: JPR who wrote (12412)8/2/2002 8:07:59 AM
From: JPR  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12475
 
Terrorism is From Paki Side --Javier Solana
Pakistan can't pull the wool over the world's eyes


News:
The European Unions High Representative for Foreign Affairs, Javier Solana, said. …

Mr. Solana was speaking to journalists on the sidelines of the meetings here between the Association of South East Asian Nations and its dialogue partners, which include India but not Pakistan. Noting that Kashmir dispute "cannot be hidden from the international community's gaze", Mr. Solana said that it was time Pakistan addressed the issue of "trans-border terrorism that was taking place from its side into India"



To: JPR who wrote (12412)8/18/2002 9:07:43 AM
From: JPR  Respond to of 12475
 
Survey
Of the 17,776 people surveyed, 68 percent viewed Pakistan as "an enemy," according to the poll, commissioned by news magazine India Today and conducted by market research firm ORG-MARG.

The magazine said this finding illustrated the "hawkish perceptions" of the majority of Hindu Indians. Only 37 percent of the Muslim respondents considered Pakistan as an enemy.

"Forty-nine percent of Muslims have a rather charitable view of Pakistan as an estranged brother, a friend and a future ally," the magazine said.