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REGIME OF BHARATIYA JANATA PARTY, 1998 A SELECT ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY DISSERTATION SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE AWARD OF THE DEGREE OF M^6ttv of Hibrarp Sc information ^titntt 1998-99 f BY GHUFRAN MOHSIN RollNo. 98LSM-22 Enrolement No. X-8222 Under the Supervision of Ms. Sudharma Haridasan (Lecturer) DEPARTMENT OF LIBRARY & INFORMATION SCIENCE ALIGARH MUSLIM UNIVERSITY ALIGARH (INDIA) 1999

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Page 1: M^6ttv of Hibrarp Sc information ^titntt · 1998-99 f BY GHUFRAN MOHSIN RollNo. 98LSM-22 Enrolement No. X-8222 Under the Supervision of Ms. Sudharma Haridasan (Lecturer) DEPARTMENT

REGIME OF BHARATIYA JANATA PARTY, 1998 A SELECT ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY

DISSERTATION SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE

REQUIREMENTS FOR THE AWARD OF THE DEGREE OF

M^6ttv of Hibrarp Sc information ^titntt 1998-99 f

BY

GHUFRAN MOHSIN RollNo. 98LSM-22

Enrolement No. X-8222

Under the Supervision of

Ms. Sudharma Haridasan (Lecturer)

DEPARTMENT OF LIBRARY & INFORMATION SCIENCE

ALIGARH MUSLIM UNIVERSITY ALIGARH (INDIA)

1999

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I 4 ^^«« iVJ .^ - _ _ ^ . . . .

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Page 4: M^6ttv of Hibrarp Sc information ^titntt · 1998-99 f BY GHUFRAN MOHSIN RollNo. 98LSM-22 Enrolement No. X-8222 Under the Supervision of Ms. Sudharma Haridasan (Lecturer) DEPARTMENT

Phone :(0571) 400039 Internal 193

Telex : 564-230 AMU IN Fax : 91-0571-400528

DEPARTMENT OF LIBRARY & INFORMATION SCIENCE ALIGARH MUSLIM UNIVERSITY, ALIGARH-202 002 (UP), INDIA

Ref. No

Dated

This is to certify that the IVI.L. & I.Sc.

dissertation of Mr. Ghufran Mohsin on Regime

of Bharatiya Janata Party, 1998 - : A select

annotated bibliography was compiled under my

supervision and guidance.

(Ms. Sudharma Haridasan) Lecturer

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CONTENTS

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

Page No.

AIM, SCOPE & METHODOLOGY III

INTRODUCTION

PART -ONE

1-19

BIBLIOGRAPHY

AUTHOR INDEX

TITLE INDEX

SUBJECT INDEX

PART - TWO

PART-THREE

20-149

150-154

155-162

163-168

LIST OF PERIODICALS DOCUMENTED 169

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cirznoimie^

Ian atone beiougkt for kelp and on him alone we depend.

J/- feet kiaklu indebted in exprediina mu profound 6enie of

aratitude to mu dianified duperuidor, % . SuA arm.a ^J^aridadan,

cyLecturer, <Jjepartment of cJLioraru (jf information ence,

^ . W l . y . ^ligark. J4er eite emed and araceful a uidance

immenieCu kelped me tkrougkout tkid project.

Jr feel immende pleasure in expredding mu regardd, deep 6en6e

of gratitude and keartful deuotion to f-^rof. .JDkabakat ^J4uiain,

Ck airman, epartment of cJLibraru tsf information Sci ence,

J . n . t l Jhcjark, for Lis constant encouragement, untiring

cooperation and prouiding me adeauate fcicilitn in the department.

^ am ueru grateful to mu dijtcngiiijiied teacher una iKeader,

'm. S.W.J.Q. Zaidi for prouidinCj necesiartt facilitiei and

elegant advice during tkii u/orh.

J appreciate tlie efforts of mcj te ackeri u/ko gaue me

important duggedtiond and moral support.

^ am aldo tka nhful to tlie non-teaching •^l^'-ff of the

.J-) epartment of cJLibrarii Cv information Science for rendering

Page 7: M^6ttv of Hibrarp Sc information ^titntt · 1998-99 f BY GHUFRAN MOHSIN RollNo. 98LSM-22 Enrolement No. X-8222 Under the Supervision of Ms. Sudharma Haridasan (Lecturer) DEPARTMENT

ere

m

Ir uariaoie kelp in dearcnina j^or material.

J/- expre66 mu iincere gratitude to rrlr. J^. /\aldul

JJ adan, rt/auiana ^^zad <=J~loraru, ^vv, / / / . 6/., ^^llaark. _///d

doilcltuae and diicernlble peripectlnlim. kaue cruclallu contributed to

tke formulation or tnld didiertation. Jj" mudt record mu dincere

appreciation to alt mu c(adimate6 who kaue provided a dtimului,

atlve and conduilue atmoipkere In tke 6ucce66ful completion of

u di66eratlo n eipeclaCiu mu friend, jflflr. vDa^eer .^kmad

^\azmi for kid kelp at different itaaei.

W^ tale parentd kaue aLaui Len a 6ource of 6plrituat

auldance durlna tke formatlue ueard of mu life. ^ am Indebted to

USkabl ff/d. ^kannaz ^atlma for ker kelp and loulna auldance

tk at enabled me in tke completion of mu worn, rr/u keartful tkanki

are aido due to mu brotkerd /f/r. J^ued /f/ondin r^aza and

irlr. J^i^ed /L.akeer ff/okiln ^or tkeir encouraaement tkrouakout

mu academic perdulte. Jr obedlentiu and dutlPuilu offer mu sincere

gratitude to ail tkeie beneracton of ml mine.

J/- am ueru tkankfui to rf/r. vDoou of ^^tda C^omput

/ko did a neat and tlmelu tuplng lob.

en

WHO aia a neal ana ccmeiu luptna jot

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AIM AND SCOPE

The Bhartiya Janata Party in power proved to be strong in

taking decisions, providing security as well as prosperity to its

countrymen. All this inspired me to select the topic "The Regime of

Bhartiya Janata Party 1998". This is an attempt to take

up all the major achievements and failures of the BJP/^vtJ through

the selection of articles related closely with its various activities viz.

the Pokhran Tests, Resolution of the Cauvery Conflict, the Mandir-

Masjid Issue, Bus Service from Delhi to Lahore and Calcutta to

Dhaka, being covered within the preview of the study.

This dissertation provides an annotated bibliography of all the

relevant material related to the significant events and mishaps

attempting to be exhaustive in its coverage.

In the process, it has included 200 articles dealing with BJP's

rule which may prove useful for all those who have are slight

interest in Indian Politics.

Part one of this dissertation deals with introduction of the

topic covered. Part two consists of an annotated bibliography of 200

articles on the topic. Part three consists of indices, author, title and

subject.

METHODOLOGY :

The primary sources were consulted in the following libraries,

i) Maulana Azad Libraries, Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh.

ii) Coaching and Guidence Cell, A.M.U., aligarh.

iii) Seminar Library, Department of Library Science, A.M.U., Aligarh.

iv) Bharatiya Janata Party, Central Office (New Delhi).

Ill

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STANDARD FOLLOWED :

The Indian standards recommended for bibl iographical

reference (18:2381-1963) and Classified Catalogue Code (CCC) of

Dr. S.R. Ranganathan have been followed. In some cases where ISI

do not give any guidance, I have taken appropriate decision.

ARRANGEMENT : The entries are arranged under subject heading which are

arranged alphabetically following letter by letter method. The entry

element of the author is in capitals, followed by the secondary

element in parenthesis using capital and small letters and then the

title of the articles, subtitle (if any) then by the volume number,

issued number, the year, month and date giving by using inclusive

notation of the pages of the articles. The each entry is than

followed by an informative abstracts of the articles.

Entries of periodical articels are arranged as follows :

a) Serial Number

b) Name of the Author/Author

c) A full stop (.)

d) Title of the contribution including subtitle and alternative title if

any

e) A full stop (.)

f) Title of periodical being underlined

g) A full stop (.)

h) Volume number

i) Comma (,)

j) Issue number

k) Semi colon (;)

I) Year

iv

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m)

n)

0 )

P)

q)

r)

Comma (,)

Month

Comma (,)

Date

Semi colon (;)

Inclusive pages of the articles

s) A full stop (.)

SPECIMEN ENTRY :

.139 CHATTERJEE (Partha). How we Loved the bomb and

Later Rule it-Economic and Political Weekly. 33, 34; 1998, June,

13; 1437-1441.

EXPLANATION :

This article is taken from the periodical "Economic and

Political Weekly" How we loved the bomb and later rule it" written

by "Chatterjee (Partha)" in 34th number of 33rd volume of 13th

June 1998, on the pages from 1437 to 1441 against this entry.

SUBJECT HEADING :

Attempt has been made to give co-extensive subject heading

as much as possible, it will facilitate the readers to find out desired

artjcle(s) from this bibliography.

INDEX :

The index part consists of indices, author, title and subject.

The index guides to the specif ic entry or entr ies in the

bibliography. It is hoped that it will be found useful in consultation

of the bibliography.

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r

PART OME

lMTR0t)VCT10><

I

• \

— i

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INTRODUCTION

Genesis of Bharatiya Janata Party :

The genesis of the Bharatiya Janata Party should be traced

to the Preindependent period in India when sections of Hindus

felt that the congress part^ Mahatma Gandhi was unnecessarily

appeasing the Muslims and neglecting the interests of the Hindus

who constituted the majority.

The history of the formation of Bharatiya Jana Sangh under

the inspiring leadership of late Dr. Shyama Prasad Mukherjee in

1951 is well known though not its back ground. The Late Dr.

Shyama Prasad Mukherjee/talented leader of the Mahasabha had

been importuned by Mahatma Gandhi, Nehru and Patel to Join the

first control cabinet in spite of the fact that he did not join the

congress.

In 1951 Dr. Mukherjee started work in East Bengal and

also Delhi, Punjab, Uttar Pradesh and other states. The first all

India session of the new party, Jana Sangh was held in Delhi on

21st October, 1951, where Dr. Mukherjee was unanimously

elected its first president. The first major attempt to suppress the

RSS was made in 1948, after the murder of Mahatma Gandhi.

Various (Canards were spread by its opponents that the murderer

belonged to the RSS that he had confessed and all sorts of

unbelievable trash. The RSS became very popular in northern

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India but after Gandhiji's association it was banned by the (^G^vtj

The ban was lifted with great difficulty. The main goal of the

RSS was to see a free, prosperous and great India emerging on

the International scene. The progress of the RSS under its

second Sarsanghehalok Shri Golwalkar from 1940 to 1973 was

multi dimensional. The RSS also contributed to the fight for

independence. After his demise the RSS workers who had already

joined the Jana Sangh came to position of prominence in that

organisation because there seemed to be no others alternative.

The Jana Sangh came to the election fray in 1952 under

the leadership of Dr. Shyama Prasad Mukerjee. It is one of the

post independence political parties. It having won only 3 out of

the 93 seats it contested. Only 35 out of a total of 725 Jana

Sangh candidate to the state assembles could win. When it

fought the 1957 election it was supposed to be a leaderless party

having no programme or policies or any economic ideology for

that matter. But the election results were encouraging, It had won

4 Lok Sabha and 46 Assembly seats its percentage of votes

rising to almost 6. Its representatives, Atal Behari Vajpayee came

to Lok-Sabha to raise its voice. Under the leadership of Dean

Dayal Upadhyaya, the emphasis in the Bharatiya Jana Sangh

from 1957 to 1962 was on strengthening the Organisation. After

Deendayalji's death in 1966, the progress continued. But the

political situation started undergoing a qualitative change from

1971 onwards.

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Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was born under stunning

circumstances over which it had no control, circumstances which

were both tragic and grotesque. Despite the fact that Bharatiya

Janata Party had no control over the aforementioned

circumstances, it is determined to have a complete control over

its destiny because it is a party which rests on the strength of

lakhs of selfless workers, has a popular national base and

represerts the aspiration of patriotic elements. The party is

determined to fulfil a national historic role with full sense of

responsibility and urgency. Bharatiya Janata Party has been

formed at a t ime when the nation is faced with an

unprecedented crises. The Janata movement started in 1973-74

and people of different Ideoslogies and parties combined to

create an alternative to congress.

When the Janata Party was launched in January, 1977 no

one had raised any objection to the association of former Jana

Sang members with the R.S.S. background. Even after Janata

Party come to power, dual membership remained a non-issue

until the internal power conflicts with in the party became very

sharp. The Jana Sangh component of the Janata Party tried to

cooperate with others but without much success. The mutual

bickerings of the leaders coupled with the activities of a group of

compulsive, chronic party spl i t tness undermined Morarji 's

Government and the Janata Party.

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As a result of this successful resistance Mrs. Gandhi's

Congress Party was trounced in the 1977 elections and af Janata

Party Government consisting of BJS, BLD, Congress (0) ,

Socialists and CFD took office. Here Shri Vajpayee as External

Affairs Minister and Shri L.K. Advani as Information and

Broadcasting Minister made memorable name. But within thirty

months this Government went to pieces, thanks to the vaulting

a.iibition of individual leaders.

Rise of BJP :

While the splintered Janata Party was routed in January

1980 their suicided "Dual Membership" campaign continued. The

BJS component found this situation impossible, went out and

reorganized itself as Bharatiya Janata Party. On April 6, 1980 the

Bhartiya Janata Party was launched. Some people had suggested

that the Jana Sangh should be relaunched. But Shri Vajpayee

firmly said, "No we should not turn back. We will make use of

our experiences in the Janata Party. We shall move ahead on

the strength of our original thinking and principles" A bright new

day had dawned in the chequered history of India. The very first

session of BJP in December 1980 in Bombay, presided over by

Sri Vajpayee was a glorious success.

The foundation session of the party at Bombay, carried his

personal stamp as the policy declaration was replete with terms

like-secularism, socialism and non aligenment. When the image he

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projected at the 1980 Bombay session got his party a miserable

two seats in parliament his policy stance came in for sharp

criticism with in.

Principles :

Bharatiya Janata Party put forward five principles which it is

determined to follow and on the basis of which a national

consensus can be created.

The first principle is Nationalism and National Integration.

BJP believes that people of different faiths and different

ideologies should be able to coexist in peace and harmony with

one another.

Second a fundamental plank of the J.P. movement and so

also of the BJP approach has been the commitments to

"Democracy" .

Third Bharatiya Janata Party believes in the policy of

positive secularism based moral values.

Fourth the ideology of the Bharatiya Janata Party would be

broadly speaking that of Gandhian Socialism.

Fifth the central point of Gandhian Socialism is that these

should be no poverty or explotation of man by man. BJP will

strive to build up such a value based politics.

With the over all ideological frame work of these five

commitments, BJP will take a flexible stand on other issues and

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will go a long way to cooperate with all those opposition parties

which have no extra-territorial loyalty in envolving a common

approach to resisting the authoritarianism, corruption and anti

national policies of the congress party.

Both interms percentage of votes polled and seats gained,

the graph of the Bharatiya Janata Party shows a steady rise

since 1984, when it had won just 2 seats. No other party has

shown a more consistent trend over the period.

BJP's steady progress from 1984 to 1999 is as follows :

Year Seats won

1984 2

1989 85

1991 119

1996 161

1998 177

196 1999 V

Clearly Ihe Bharatiya Janata Party has offered something to

India that has appealed to large sections of society. In the 1989

elections the Janata Dal effected adjustment of seats with the

BJP and proceeded to firm the Government without side support

from the BJP and the communists.

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From day one Shri V.P. Singh did not play ball. The

Bharatiya Janata Party had pladged him unconditional support,

which was probably a mistake : there is no charity in politics, no

free lunch. As BJP president L.K. Advani was heard remarking at

the time. "Shri V.P. Singh is like an old-style princeling. He is all

courtesy and all conspiracy". He would tell Shri Advani that he

himself would join him in Kar Seva and then issued a temple

ordinance only to with draw it within hours and have Shri Advani

arrested V.P. Singh Suddenly came up with the Mandal Report

not because his heart was bleeding for the poor but because he

thought that, on this issue he could dissolve the house go to the

polls, collect some 350 seats and rule the country on his own

without the bother of consulting anybody on anything. But it was

a gamble that failed, because the BJP had already raised the

Ayodhya issue. And it had done so early in 1989, not on the

basis of any electional calculation but on ideological conviction.

Historic wrongs had to be righted, however symbolically, for a

lasting solution of the Hindu-Muslim problem.

Sea Change in Political Scence :

Shri advani's Rath Yatra from Somnath to Ayodhya effected

a Sea Change in the political scene. While Mandal had divided

the people, Ayodhya united the people. What violence there was

in 1990 came only because the Government arrested Shri Advani

and the U.P. Chief Minister fired on Kar-Sevaks. Had they

allowed Shri Advani to reach Ayodhya and do symbolic kar-seva

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there would have been no bandh no violence, anywhere. Shri

V.P. Singh thought that BJP had secured 89 seats in 1989

because of seat adjustment with JD and that was true enough.

But he forgot that his JD had also got 143 seats only because

of seat adjustment the BJP would lose scores of seats. The BJP

had won 119 in 1991. Actually the BJP added 30 seats to its

old secure and it was the JD that declined to 59 seats.

Vajpayee came out of the shadows in 1992 when the Babri

masjid was demolished. He did not show the glee exhibited by

'ekdhakka aurdo' Uma Bharti and disassociated himself from the

pul deed by calling it unfortunate. The BJP ruled or supporter

state government in Indian states of Uttar Pradesh (U.P.) Madhya

Pradesh (M.P.), Rajasthan, Gujarat and Maharashtra are continuing

the Virulent anti-Muslim policy.

Unstoppable BJP :

The results of the 1995 election in Andhra, Karnataka,

Bihar, Orissa, Goa, Gujarat and Maharashtra were, if anything

even more remarkable. In Maharashtra, Shiv Sena and the BJP

have formed a fine coalition government. The BJP's historic

performance in the Assembly elections when there was no seat

adjustment with other parties and when the Ayodhya issue stood

frozen, is confirmation of the fact that basically the BJP is

forgoing ahead because of its excellent organisation, superb

leadership and patriotic people's policies. BJP State Government

enunciated a new education policy; they made copying in the

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exams a conginzable offence; they decentral ised the

administration; their Antyodaya took care of the poorest of the

land, they waired the bans of poor farmers and their war on

ciriminal elements and put them in jail.

Clear BJP Position :

The BJP position is very clear on this issue: Indian

science and technology have come of age, as examplified by our

defence and Research Development Organisation presided over by

Dr. Abdul Kalam. Therefore foreign capital is welcome only in

capital intensive hightech and infrastructural areas; however it

must come on fair and competitives terms. The new watch-word

is "Swadeshi". The world has been told in unmistakable terms by

the BJP that India cannot be taken for granted. Under foreign

pressure our missile programme has been capped. There have

been successes, too. BJP leaders have made the Government

agree to start and close parliament session with 'Vande Mataram".

The BJP Ekta Yatra Flag in Srinagar on Republic Day 1992. And

the BJP's Karnataka unit saw to it that the National Flag is duly

hoisted on the Huble Public ground, which is used for Nawaz on

Id-days.

This was amply proved in the 1996 general election. The

BJP set the tone for this election through Shri Advani's Suraj

Yatra which focus on corruption and the corrupt misdeals of the

Narasimha Rao regime. The BJP emerged as the largest single

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party with 161 seats. Its allies, the Shive Sena, the Haryana

Vikas Party, the Samata Party and the Akalidal, declared their

support to a BJP government at the Centre.

History was made on May 16, 1996, when Shri Atal Bihari

Vajpayee was sworn in as Prime Minister. This was the first truly

non congress Government to take charge of the nations affairs.

But alarmed by the prospect of the BJP firmly establishing

itself in power, the others ganged uptand struck an unholy

alliance of 14 parties. In the debate that followed on Shri

Vajpayee confidence motion, the nation was witness to the

pol i t ical chicanery of the non-BJP part ies. The Vajpayee

Government resigned after a fortnight but the country paid a

heavy price with the coming to power of the united front.

The tremendous success of Shri Advani's historic 59-days

15,000 kg, Swarna Jayanti Rath Yatra provides further evidence

of the BJP's popularity. The enthusiastic response to Shri Advani,

latest Yatra to commemorate the Golden Jubilee of India's

independence has firmly established the BJP as the primary

political power in the country.

BJP in power - 1988 :

Mr. Atal Behri Vajpayee the veteral leader of the Bharatiya

Janata Party was appointed Prime Minister by president Mr. K.R.

Narayanan on March 15, 1998. The number of MP's supporting

the BJP formation came to 264 on March 15, 1998, though short

10

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of the halfway mark in the total house of 539. Even thus nagging

anxiety was set at rest when the president of India was

telephonically assured by the leader of the Telugu Desam Party

and Chiefminister of Andhra Pradesh, Mr. Chandrababu Naidu,

that the 12 TDM MPs and would remain neutral. The prime

minister to prove his majority with in 10 days-on March 19,

1998. The BJP-Led coalition came went out with defetlons the

TDP's turn about in the first instance and the AlADMK's walking

out its fold in the final phase. Simiarly the Samata Party of

George Fernandes, Biju Janata Dal, Shiromani Akali Dal, H.V.P,

Mamta Banerjee's Trinamul Congress, Telugu Desam Party and

Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh, Mr. Chandrababu Naidu. The

present BJP Government may have a boon in not getting on

absolute majority the hardlines will not be able to have their way

and liberals must prevail.

The Bhartiya Janata Party led government completes its 100

day in office. The BJP led governemnt has decided on Nuclear

tests to stay in power, was necessary. The BJP wants India to

be a right winning militant state. It has pushed the country to a

different, to confrontation. The BJP led government is conniving at

efforts to communalise the atmosphere. In fact communalism has

increased since the advent of Vajpayee government. Reminded of

the Babri Masjid, Vajpayee said that the wanted the matter to be

settled through the court. Vajpayee had a good word for the

economy.

11

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Bharatiay Janata Party's Major Achievements :

The achievements of BJP are as follows :

Economy : The BJP stands for fair trade note free trade. Though

ostensibly a Swadeshi Government, the process of liberalisation

continues none the less, giving hope to TNCs exploring investment

options in India. The policy decision to reduce Government share

holding in non strategic public sector units to 26%, Approval of

Strategic sale of a few companies. Introduction of foreign

Exchange Management Act Bill, Anti-Money Laundering Bill and a

Bill Permitting private investment in the insurance sector in

parliament. Annoucement of changes in deposit norms for NBSCs.

Further reforms anticipated in the wake of western sanctions and

the US business interests in key areas like insurance.

Financial Sector : The Vajpayee's Government provide the

president regulations for banks tightened to require provisioning

for centre ans Stage Government Securit ies, Government

guaranteed loans and general provision for standard assests.

Canditions for public issues by infrastructure campanies eased,

100 percent book buklding permitted for issues above 25 crore.

Bill for strong independent Insurance Regulatory authority and

opening of insurance and pension funds to private companies

introduced in parliaments proposal to allow 26% foreign equity

and additional in percent NRI and Fll holding.

Information Broad Casting : The BJP led Government have

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introduce a sports channel, A24 hour news channel, FM radio for

private broad casters started and Rs 430 crore plan for J & K

up gradion of facilities for DD & AIR etc.

Agriculture : The BJP firmly believes that agriculture is the

backbone of Indian economy and conscience keeper of Indian

democracy. The BJP led Government they are 58% more

budgetary allocation in respect of ministry of agriculture for the

financial year 1998-99 provided, new Agricultural policy being

formulated to accord important role to cooperative to ensure both

high productivity and stable agro-commodities market, watershed

development programme given higher budgetary allocation. Rs

1627 crore provided to state Governments as assistance under

Accelerated Irrigation benefits programme to benefit formers

during 1998-99. Steps taken for introduction of modern technology

in handing, storage and transportation of foodgrains, reducing

losses to the minimum possible.

Empowerment of woman & Children : Bharatiya Janata Party's

led government they have provide legislation for reservation of

33% of the seats in parliament and state assemblies for woman.

The plan to provide free education for girls upto college level,

including professional courses and take ameasures to eleminate

child labour.

Corruption : Bhartiya Janata Party led government introduce in

parliament at path-breaking Lok Pal Bill to fight corruption at high

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places, brining in the office of the Prime Minister also within the

annbit of the proposal bill.

International Relations : The Vajpayee's Government have

achieve successful handling of post- Pokhran II through practive

diplomancy and they had multilateral summits, including SAARC in

Colombo, the NAM Summit in Durban and the Un-General

Assembly. Theere are initiative on joint global action against

terrorism and dismantling of weapons of mass distructions. A firm

message to Pakistan that while India seeds friendly relations and

can take an initiative such as the "Lahore Bus Journey", there

are equally firm in defeating any aggressive intentions. The

effective management ensured that Pakistan was isolated

diplomatically on the Kargil issue and the international community

endorsed the Indian stand that Pakistan was the aggression and

aggression must be vacated and security of LOG restored.

Information Technology : Bhartiya Janata Party's led government

have achieve national Task Force on Information Technology &

Software Development constituted to formulate National Information

Technology Policy with an aim to enable India to emerge as an

information technology super power with in the next 10 years.

Blue print already adopted.

BJP Government will be to ensure protection of life and

property from mafias and terrorists by giving a free hand to their

security process to deal with the menace of terrorism. They put

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an end to infiltration of foreign arms and terrorists from training

camps across the border.

The Bhartiya Janata Party Government wil l appoint a

National Security Council. It would review the nation's nuclear

policy and exercise the option to induct nuclear weapons. The

BJP is in favour of a nuclear free world. The BJP Government

will not accept the Fissile Material Control Regime (FMCR) as well

as Missible Technology Control Regime (MTCR). It would expect

the serial production of Prithvi and the development of Agni II.

Poor Vajpayee, he did not know what to do during the first

eight months after assuming power in 1998. The results prices of

essential commodities just boomed and the Vajpayee government

kept helplessly watching traders robbing consumers imagine,

onions sold beyond Rs. 50 per kg; tomatoes and potatoes price

hitting the roof. The Vajpayee government just looked the other

way and balamed the opposition for the sky rocketing price hike.

It annoyed the people so much that the Bharatiya Janata Party

lost Delhi and Rajasthan while failed to win Madhya Pradesh

during the November assembly election.

The Ayodhya disput has been there for a long time. It has

been dragged through courts and is still pending there though

decades have passed. It can be solved either through dialogue or

by law.

The politicisation of national issue did not stop at that and

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similar shiades of manipulative politics were discernible invaried

domains. The dismissal of Naval Chief Vishnu Bhagwat proved to

be he last straw. It could be betterer handled by giving him

private advice to resign, not by making it a public issue.

Jayalalitha making it a public issue. Jayalalitha made Bhagwat's

dismissal an issue of national security and demanded his

reinstatement and dismissal of defence minister George Fernandes

as the price for continuing support to the Vajpayee government.

The BJP in Government would resume the str ictest

implementation of existing laws to punish rapists and those guilty

of texual assault on woman. If the present laws failed to act as a

determinent, the death penalty will be considered for rapists.

The Bharatiya Janata Party is the leading player in the

coalition and drawing its stength from the authoritarian and

aggressive phalanx of the Sangh Parivar. The BJP wants to

create goodwill of its own, it must take action on these issues

which touch the commonman.

The National Agenda for Governance (NAG) adopted by the

BJP led government at the centre stated that government would

expedite comprehensive reforms of PSUs including restructuring,

rehabitation and disinvestment. After its first full budget 1998-1999

it became clear what was meant by NAG was "liquidation,

dismantling and privatisation" of public sector, fare well to the

lakhs of PSU workers under compulsory golden hand shake.

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unmindful of what happens to their future and what ever happens

to the self-reliant growth of the country. The hidden meaning of

'Swadeshi' agenda is to finish the really Swadeshi/National

enterprises. On account of the disinvestment, as per that budget,

the government was to get Rs 8,000 crores to meet the deficit.

The Bharatiya Janata Party seem to be a clean party and

capable providing a corruption free government. The people of

India wanted a fresh approach, a party that could provide an

efficient government

Conclusions :

Shri Vajpayee's government set itself to the task of fulfilling

the goal of making India strong and prosperous. Shri Vajpayee's

Government effectively ended this crises of leadership and

restored a sense of confidence and pride among the people.

They are to review India's nuclear policy In the context of

emerging security concerns and scenario. On 11 May 1998,

Pokhran II has not only instilled a sense of pride and security

among the people of India but it had made the wortd recognise

India as a powerful nation. They are subsequently mature and

responsible even in the face of extreme provocation, has made

the world recognise India as a responsible nuclear power.

The Bharatiya Janata Party led government's handling of the

economy has shown the ability to manage the nation's affairs.

India is once again on the path of industrial and agricultural

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growth. They have protected the national economy from the

effects of the fourth-east asian economic crisis. They ensured

stability of the national currency. They have protected the

interests of the common man by holding the price line.

The resolution of the cauvery conflict to the satisfaction of

all the states involved in the dispute for more than four decades,

is evidence of their commitment to consensus over conflict. The

BJP has worked to have better relations with our neighbours.

India's relation with Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Nopal are today

better and more robust than ever before. Shri Vajpayee's bus

journey to Lahore was has led by governments across the world.

They had held out to BJP a hand of friendship.

But Pakistan mistook Vajpayee's gesture of friendship as a

sign of weakness. They did not realise that the BJP Government

was willing to extend a hand in friendship, whereas they were

also prepared to use the other hand to crush any evil designs

on India's Unity and integrity.

The Pakistani instruction in Kargil was met with all their

might and determination. They have all seen the difficult terrain

in which Indian soldiers had to fight. The brave soldiers inflicted

a crushing military defeat on the Pakistani's Simultaneously, BJP

Government was a shining diplomatic victory-Pakistan was isolated

while the international community backed India's stand. No less

important is the fact that BJP's Government did not let the Kargil

IS

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conflict disrupt normal life. Nor did they pass on the economic

burden of the war on to the people.

Indias victory in Kargil has fetched our nation a new

respect. It has given to people a sense of confidence. It has

made us proud.

Vajpayee's Government set new parameters of purposeful

governance. The National Agenda of BJP is a sincere and

solemn covenant armed at changing the content and culture of

governance of this great nation, freeing it of the triple curses of

hunger (bhookh), fear (bhay) and corruption (bhrashtachar), and

transforming it in to a New India, that is prosperous, strong, self-

confident and at peace with itself and the world.

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/ ^

PART TWO

BIBLIOGRAPHY

I

— ^

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1. BHARATIYA JANATA PARTY, GOVERNMENT, ACHIEVEMENT.

MUKHERJl (Debashish). From balancing act the bus. The

week. 17,13; 1999, May, 14; 30-33.

The article deal with Prime Minister Vajpayee, after a

crises ridden year is working on winning back his public

appeal. His remarkable skill at one to one. Sessions has

seen Vajpayee build cordidi personal relations with not only

Nawaz Sharif but also Jayalalitha, Mamata and the rest of

his Volatile allies. The government do not add up to much

of a tally. There is undoubtedly the Pokharan blast which

BJP, leaders continued to take enormous pride in. The

temporary solution to the Vexed Cauvery dispute between

Tamil Nadu and Karnataka, was yet another Coup. The bus

trup to Lahore and the meeting of the prime ministers of

Pakistan and India is another significant achievement.

2. —., .—, — , PRIME MINISTER, INDEPENDENCE DAY.

PHADNIS (Aditi). Totter Totter Creak Creak. Sunday. 25. 34;

1998, August, 23; 19-20.

The author express his view that in the five month's

that it has been in power, the BJP's government has little to

boast of. So, when Vajpayee stood up and faced the nation

on 15 August there was little else he could talks of except

of course his own problems of governance. The government

has not really had much success (Indeed, t ime) for

governnance. The record of most ministers Is below par-not

only are they not implementing their own agenda they are

not implementing anyone else's agenda either. For the most

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part he concentrated on the BJP governments achievements,

namely the Pokhran and the Cauvery accord. Shut your

eyes and imagine India being overned by a BJP

government. What come to mind progromms riots, thought

police, righte wrong. The BJP is waiting for deliverance

from Jayalalitha. India is waiting from the BJP to stop

talking and start working.

..., ...., AGENDA, DEMOLITION, BABRI MASJID.

BHADRA (Gyon). Hindutva Card Never Pad off to BJP.

Nation and the World. 8, 172; 1998, Dec, 16; 10.

The author expresses his view about BJP-RSS

combine demolished the 464 year old Babri Mosque in

Ayodhya which led to a spate of rioting allover the country.

They were supported by a highly communal lsed

administration and police force. The BJP coupled with

Sangh Parivar firmly believed that it could stake its claim

to power in New Delhi. The BJP maintained before the

masses that the demolition of the Babri mosque was an

assertion of the feeling of Hindutva. The Hindutva card

played by BJP put the party in a 'nown' situation in the

elections. And this is the only reason which explain the

BJP's reductance to play 'Hindutva' card is successive

elections-both assembly and parliamentary held after 1993

election.

..., ...., ...., RAM MANDIR.

AHSAN (M.H.) BJP regimes wo not build Ram Mandir. Blitz.

58: 22; 1998 May 30; 7.

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Though the issue of erecting a Ram Mandir at

Ayodhya does not figure on the national agenda of the BJP

led coalition in New Delhi the Vishva Hindu Parishad (VHP)

is regardless going full steam ahead with preparation to

build the contentious temple. The VHP's recruitment target

of fulltime workers by the year 2000 is 50,000 of which

15,000 will hail from Andhra Pradesh. Their job will to be

help in the construction of the temples.

5 ...., ...., ...., WOOING MUSLIMS

YADAV (R.S.) Vajpayee Pushes His "Foul" Thesis. New age.

46, 30; 1998, Jan, 18, 24;1.

The author discuss about the Vajpayee's advise to

Muslims to Shake off their outmoded thinking. He declared

that Ram Janam Bhoomi, Kashi or Mathura is not on his

agenda now. If Atal Behari Vajpayee is to be believed, BJP

all along a Muslim baiter party-has turned into a party quite

sympathetic and considerate to Muslim interests. Vajpayee

and some other top leaders are wooing Muslims. Starting

from Aslam Sher Kham, they are in hot pursuit of any

Muslim, whosever, may agree for a press statement in

BJP's favour. Some people may course seek to business

with the BJP for personal gains. Bal Thackeray, the Shiv

Sena Supremo and the BJP's closest only is also speaking

in a different tone. Vajpayee is also pushing this pul thesis.

It is really pathetic to find that a leader who is being put

up before the people as their future prime ministerial

candidate, if voted to power, has stoped so low.

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6. —, .—, AGREEMENT, INDO-PAK

INDIA, PAK Sign Memorandum. The Pioneer. 9, 53; 1999,

February 22; 1.

India and Pakistan on Sunday agree to set up

appropriate consultative mechanism to monitor and ensure

implementation of the existing confidence building measurer

besides upgrading the communication links between the

director generals of military operations of the two nations

for maintaining peace and tranquility on the borders. These

commitments of under in a memorandum of understanding

which was signed by the foreign secretaries of the two

countries Mr. K. Raghunath and Mr. Shamshad Ahmad in

the presence of Priminister Atal Behari Vajpayee and Mr.

Nawaz Sharif. The two sides fully committed measures to

reducing the risks of accidental or unauthorised use of

nuclear weapons under their respective control.

7. ..., ...., ALLIANCE, REGIONAL.

GILLAN (Michael) . BJP and Transformation of opposition

politics in West Bengal. Economic and Political weekly. 33,

36; 1998, Sep. 5-12; 2391-2395.

The BJP Compaign in West Bengal reflects the

national strategy developed by the BJP to break its political

isolation and from important regional alliances through out

India. The basis for these alliances, as in the example of

West Bengal has been to form regional ties with state

opposition political formations whose primary concern is the

defeat of particular ruling parties at the state level. Whether

23

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the particular regional alliance between the Trinamul and

The BJP in West Bengal can be maintain in perhaps

secondary to the shortterm efficacy of the alliance in

allowing the state unit of the party to gain an electoral

posthold in the state for the first time. In order to facilitate

its alliance strategy, the BJP has been forced to adopt a

political style which is as accommodating as possible for

an avowedly 'ideological' party.

8. .—, .—, ASSEMBLY ELECTION.

KIDWAI, (Ansar). Punished. Nation and the World. 8, 172;

1998, December, 16; 14-15.

The BJP faced a rout in the November assembly poll

as widely predicted even though the Prime Minister Atal

Behari Vajpayee found it agains his party's expectations.

The party paid heavily for its misgovernance and promise

which proved follow. This Is the first time that economic

issue like that price rise and shortage of essent ial

commodities played such a major role in making or marring

the political fortunes of the major grouping in the fray. The

BJP-RSS have not been able to ride themselves.of their

communal hang-ups after the electorate put them in seats of

governance at the centre. The defeat of the BJP is bound

to be seen as a gain of the secularists. The BJP has

knack of speaking in two voices. This assertion denial

syndrome has been part of the BJP double speak.

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9. ...., ...., BUDGET 1998-99.

RAINA (R.) Political Budget : Protection to businessmen,

war on Public Sector. New Wave. 27, 42; 1998 June 7; 1.

The B.IP has taken its second major step to

consolidate its political hold by presenting a soft, please-all

budget. The first was the Pokhran tests. Both are designed

to create, a feel good atmosphere project the BJP as an

ultra nationalist party. The budget is going to extent this

isolation to the economic sphere. The budget has gone out

of its way to be benefit businessmen, protect the subsidies

of rich formers and the compensation to well off withdraw

from the global economy and resurrected the spetre of

stagflation. In that sense it is political objectives rather than

tacking economic issues.

10. VYASULU (Vinod). BJP's First Budget : The Pluses and

Minuses. Economic and Political Weekly. 33, 23; 1998,

June, 6-12; 1362-1366.

In this article the author confines himself to the

economic dimension, and the immediate context of the latest

budget. It means that what we are discussing many not be

the most important of the issues now facing the country.

Yet this agenda has been set by the finance minister

Yasvant Sinha. The BJP's first budget represents continuity

in some ways, but in others it breaks new ground. This

effort could, however, have gone further. Then of course,

there are many negative points in the budget. Do they out

weight the possitive ones. Finally, there is a great danger of

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inflation. Governments may come and go but their poverty

goes on for ever.

11 ...., ...., ...., PUBLIC SECTOR.

MAHADEVAN, (H). Budget 1998-99 : BJP Government's

Waron Public Sector. New age. 46, 27; 1998, July, 5-11; 9.

The author discuss about in a devastating move, the

BJP led government came out in clear and unambiguous

term on June 1, that t he central public sector in India w\\

be demolished. The budget 1998-99 presented by Finance

Minister Yashwant Sinha openly diclared a war on public

sector and in that process more than satisfied the IMF-world

bank dictates. The Budget 1998-99 opens up a red carpet

welcome to the private capitalists both Indian and foreign

who were hostile to the public sector since inception and

who want to own and enjoy the fruits of the blood sweat of

the working class.

12. -—, .—, BUS SERVICE, CALCUTTA-DHAKA.

MAHFUZAMAN. Trade wheels : Moving in the right direction.

India Today. 24, 16; 1999, April, 13-19; 44.

The direct bus service between Dhaka and Calcutta

comes over two decades too late. The bus link should also

help forge closer Indo-Bangia trade cooperation. Bangladesh-

India relations is that for the Indian it is hardly a part of

the domestic political agenda while for Bangladesh it is

nothing but. Where politics has failed, hopefully trade and

commerce will successed. The practical world of profit and

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loss should raise the level of discourse on India-Bangladesh

relation to a new, realistic level.

13. HAROON HABIB. Dhaka-Calcutta bus trial run on April 6.

The Hindu. 122, 72; 1999, March. 26; 8.

The article deals with the trial run of the bus service

between Dhaka and Calcutta will take place on April 6 to

facilitate road communications between the two neighbours.

The delegation from India will begin their journey for

Bangladesh on April 8 and will come along with the bus

from Bangladesh. With in a week of the trial run, the

commercial operation of the bus service between the

countries will follow an official said. The two countries

signed an agreement and a protocol on February 17 in

New Delhi enabling them to operate direct bus service

between Dhaka and Calcutta. Under the agreement and

protocol two bases from each side will ply for six days of

the week for the initial period of operation. The agreement

will be remined by the two governments after three months

of operation covering the share of traffic frequency of

service and other related issues the official added.

14. DHAKA REPICES as bus reaches city. The Hindustan

Times. 25, 167, 1999, June, 20; 1.

The inaugural Calcutta-Dhaka bus reached here this

evening at the Osmani Memorial Complex to a tumultuous

welcome in the presence of Prime Minister Adal Behari

Vajpayee and his Bangladesh counterpart Sheikh Hasina,

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thus heralding a new chapter in Indo-Bangia relations.

External Affair Minister jaswant Singh, his Bangladesh

counterpart Abdus Samad Azad, West Bangal Chief Minister

Jyoti Basu besides Union Ministers Nitish Kumar and

Kabindra Purakayastha were present at the function. Sheikh

Hasina said the bus service heralded a new era in bilateral

relations between the two countries. The bus to Dhaka was

flagged off from Calcutta amid usual trappings but missing

unmistakably was they fizz with the controversy surrounding

the denial of permission to writer Sunil Gangopalhyay by

the centre, casting its shadow over the historic event. The

Actor Vasanta Chowdhury boarded the bus at Salt Lake

International Bus Terminus.

15. JAHANGIR (Rahman). Bus to Bangladesh. Sunday. 26, 26;

1999, June, 27; 30-31.

The two neighbouring countries are now poised to

enter a new phase in their relations with the formal

inauguratory of a direct bus service on 19 June. The direct

bus service is being viewed by regular travellers as a

positive move in the right direction, aming at easing the

untold sufferings of passengers who visit India by road.

Shafi Sami : the successful operation of the Dhaka-Calcutta

bus service will decide the future of the Dhaka-Agartala and

Dhaka-Syedpur Sil iguvi bus links, pointed out foreign

secretary Shafiul Samil at a news briefing in Dhaka. The

token ride on 19 June was symbolic as both Priministers

Sheikh Hasina and Atal Behari Vajpayee and West bengal

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Chief Minister Jyoti Basu received nearly 80 passengers of

the two buses coming from Calcutta. Both Bangladesh and

India had in the meantime taken steps to promote regular

movement of people by relaxing visa rules. The Dhaka-

Calcutta direct bus service is a new era of cooperation

between neighbouring.

16 MOZFAFFAR ISLAM. A Ride to Dhaka. Nation and the

World. 8, 187; 1999, August, 1; 26-27.

There is general expectation that besides strengthening

bilateral relation between India and Bangladesh this step

goes a long way in signalling there abiding desire for good

neigboury relations. The two buses called 'Soharelya'

(Friendship) started their historic run from the newly

constructed Karunamage international bus terminus is salt

Lake city in Calcutta. The flower-bedecked 'Sohardya'

carying the Indian delegation from Calcutta was received by

Priminister's Atal Behari Vajpayee and Sheikh Hasina Wajed

along with West Bengal Cheif Minister Jyoti Basu with his

other colleagues. The two priministers later discuss a wide

range of issues including economics and the Kargel conflict.-

In an agreement with the Bangladesh government on June

20 India agreed to provide a creadit of Rs. 200 crore over

the next three years. The media in Bangladesh hailed the

Calcutta-Dhaka bus service as a historical event. However

given the goodwill and opportunetly the Calcutta-Dhaka

pasenger bus service would open a new chapter in the

history of India-Bangladesh cooperation. The two close

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neighbours and became a significant step in consolidating

peace and prosperity in South East Asia.

17. KHARE (Harish). Indo-Bangia ties strengthened. The Hindu.

122, 25; 1999, June 20; 1.

On June 19, The "People's Bus" from Calcutta railed

into Dhaka this evening, raising hopes of a substantive

integration at the popular level between Bangladesh and

India. Devoid of the high profile hype that accompained the

now bettered "Lahore Bus" the Calcutta-Dhaka bus run was

a rather low key affair but still underlining the Cultural and

political affimity between the two countries. The bus was

formally received by the two prime Ministers, Mr. Atal

Behari Vajpayee and Sheikh Hasina of Bangladesh at the

Osmani memorial hall. Mr. Vajpayee described the start of

the bus service as "One more stage in the active agenda

between India and Bangladesh and called the Occasion a

"Wonderful Celebration. The Bangladesh Prime Minister

hailed the bus service as reflection of a under desire for

easily available communication facil i t ies" which would

"strengthen and extend the existing cordial relation between

the peoples of the two countries. The Mr. Vajpayee chose

to travel to Dhaka in the midst of the Kargil conflict, seek

to under line India's friendly ties with the South Asian

neighbours with the possible exception of Pakistan.

18. BUS BRINGS back the Spirit of 71. Sunday Pioneer. 9,

169; 1999, June, 20; 1.

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A Historic landmark was established as the first

Calcutta-Dhaka bus rolled in this evening to a spontaneous

clap of the two nations top leaders. Hundreds of people

gathered at the Osmani Hall where priminister Atal Behari

Vajpayee and Bangladesh Priminister Sheikh Hasina

welcomed the passengers of the bus which had entered

Dhaka after completing a 380 km journey. This is indeed a

joyous occassion for people in both countries. This is a

service we have long planned for and today we see it as a

reality. We in South Asia are now engaged in establishing

arrangements for regional cooperation in this direction

through SAARC. The easily available communication facilities

will strengthen and extend the existing cordial relations

between the peoples of the two countries.

19. BANGLADESH for enhancement of bilateral relations. National

Herald. 31, 103; 1999, June. 21; 1.

The article deals with Calcutta-Dhaka bus service

being launched. The Priminister of two countries welcomed

the first direct Calcutta-Dhaka bus service here this evening

with a call for further .enhancement of ties between the

neighbours. Receiving the inaugural bus service here along

with Priminister Atal Behari Vajpayee and a host of other

dignitaries from India and Bangaldesh at a ceremony at

Osmani Memorial Hall here, Bangladesh Priminister Sheikh

Hasina said during our war of liberation 10 million people,

leaving their homeland had taken shelter in India. The

people of Bangladesh still remember the rare example set

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by India and her people with gratitude for saving a huge

number of refuges, providing them with food, clothing,

shelter and health care extending moral support towards the

liberation war" said Hasina. This is indeed a joyous

occasion for people in both countries" Vajpayee said as the

bus rolled in to the Bangladeshi capital.

20. CHAKARBATI (Ashis). Delhi, Dhaka get on board. The

Indian Express. 67, 223; 1999, June, 20; 1.

The article deals with both India and Bangladesh taking

giant step forward in improving bilateral relations. The two

priminister Atal Behari Vajpayee and Sheikh Hasina, were

here to welcom the passengers of the first directs Calcutta-

Dhakabus. This carries forward the journey the two countries

have begun in recent years with the signing of the Ganga

water shaving agreement in- December, 1997. Reinforcing

that this was just the beginning of the journey towards

peace and goodwell, Vajpayee promised that more routes

whould be opened up, more rail services introduced.

Travellers between the two countries Vajpayee said, included

students in large numbers, medical patients, businessmen,

tourists pilgrim and tourists who had relatives and friends

on either side of the border. The absence of a direct bus

service meant the travellers had to walk across the border

with their luggage.

21. —-, .—, , DELHI-LAHORE.

AIYAR (Manishankar). Vajpayee's bus lomacy. Sunday. 26,

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24; 1999, June, 13; 8-10.

This article beings with the view that the bus to

Lahore had arrived in Kargil. The relationships between

India and Pakistan was over-laid. The bus to Lahore was

neither about strategy nor about tactics. It left people on

both sides of the border mesmerised by vision of peace but

now where near any resolution of differences. Bus to

Lahore did serve the immensely important domestic purpose

of making the bumbing Vajpayee look like a world class

states man. The Lahore wastoo important to the survival and

image of the Vajpayee government for Vajpayee and his

collegues to jeoparadise the good. Whether for sustaining

his government or seaking a fresh minded, Vajpayee

desperately needed the Lahore spirite.

22. BUS JOURNEY to Pakistan. Competition Master. 40, 9; 1999

April, 5; 70.

The author discusses about India and Pakistan having

built a wall of hostility between. Hopes of peace and

cooperation were raised when priminister Atal Behari

Vajpayee task a bus journey to Lahore. Given the history of

hospility and suspicion between Pakistan and India every

new effort to mark a fresh beginning is greeted with great

optimism. The Shimla aggreement had raised hopes of an

improvement of relations among the two neighbours.

Subsequently many rainds of talks have taking place

between secretaries and leaders but the hostil ity has

remained. The bus journey Undertaken by India's Prime

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Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee is a historic step Indeed. It

was a defining movement of history because it may will be

a turning print of relation from suspicion and hostility to

trust and cooperation.

23. AMIT BARUAH. The bus to Pakistan. Frontline. 16, 4; 1999,

March, 12; 4-9.

Prime Minister A.B. Vajpayee bus ride to wagah and

the promise head his host, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif

made later in Lahore to the people of India and Pakistan

are only a big f irst step in a very long journey of

friendship between the two countries. The Prime Minister

Atal Behari Vajpayee crossed the wagah border checkpost

on February 20. The Vajpayee-Sharif talks focussed on the

entire range of bilateral relations, regional cooperation with

in the SAARC and issues of international concerned. The

broad principle of an emerging India-Pakistan relationship

with the Prime Minister of two countries sharing a vision of

peace and stability between countries. The responsibility for

both Vajpayee and Sharif will be torism in the hawks on

both sides.

24. JOSHI (Ishan). The Peace Ride. Outlook. 5,7; 1999, March,

17, 8-24.

The article indicates that the peace Initiative came

from PM's who lead hardline parties may be Ironic. But it

could also be the clincher. Atal Behari Vajpayee stepping

gingerly off the bus to Lahore at Wagah and Nawaz Sharif,

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pacing the red carpet perhaps a touch impatient ly,

embracing, a ceremonial guns boomed in solute. Feb 20,

1999, 4 P.M. Within movements of Vajpayee's first step on

Pakistani Soil, the mood had changed. A beginning had

been made to bring Vajpayee's word on Indian side " I am

going to Pakistan with your support with a message of

peace and friendship to fruition. It's a long hail on the

realbilateral issue. But if a bus crossing the border leads to

public euphoria, it's a start. The real break through has

been the symbolism the very act of embrance. While for

Vajpayee the bus ride is an attempt to take the initiative

away from the hawks, Sharif feels he can have it both

ways discuss Kashmir for the domestic audience and play

the stateman as well. Naturally both have no objection to

attention bing forced else where. All in al it's a fortuitous

encounter between vision, economics and global will. But

the sheer audacity of the wagah ren dezisus caught the

pulse of the people. Peacesuddenly seemed to make sense.

25. DELHI-LAHORE bus service from March, 16. The Hindu.

122, 61; 1999, March, 13; 1.

The author discuss the much awaited regular bus

service between Delhi and Lahore would begin from March

16, the Delhi Transport Minister, Mr. Parvez Hashmi

announced here today. The bus run four days a week-

Tuesday Wednes day, Friday and Saturday. Passengers

would be entitled to carry limited baggage as specified for

domestic travel. The super deluxe airconditioned bus with

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under and channel music would also have a mobile

telephone system which the passengers could avail of to

make calls on payment to any where in the country during

their journey between Delhi and wagah border. The 38

seater bus would have a five member crew with two drivers

two security guards and one liasion officer. The first bus

which undertask the historic journey to Lahore with the

Priminister Atal Behari Vajpayee, on board would be handed

over to the priminister is office. The bus would be puton

desplay of the PMO's penises from March 19 to coincide

with the Vajpayee Governments completion of one year in

office.

26. EQBAL (Ahmad). Enemies in Need could bring peace.

Nation and the world. 8, 179; 1999, April, 1; 14-16.

The author expresses his view t he Atal Behari

Vajpayee's bus journey' to Lahore is a historic events. They

make an unlikely pair of peace makers. Vajpayee and

Nawaz Sharif have developed a great foundness for each

other and are inclined to comprehand each other's grew

point, recognise domestic constraints and trust each other's

internations, A mutually agreed set of rules on safety

deploment and warning is requirement for preventing,

thermonuclear holocaust by accident, indvidual beyond the

symbolism of bus ride, bnuggy ride and Moghul point in

Lahore Possession of nuclear capability by both countries

has yielded a security environment characterised by

deference so that neither side can contemplate war.

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27. SAKSENA (Rashmi). Hope inspring. The weak. 17, 12;

1999, March, 7; 33-34.

Vajpayee's visit generated among the people of

Pakistan a desire for a more fruitful relationship with India.

The great moment of priminister Atal Behari Vajpayee's bus

crossing the Rad Cliffs lue at the wagah border had already

moved into the page of history. This is in solution to the

promise of peace between India and Pakistan. The two day

Vajpayee visit gave way to a new hope the day later.

Lahore posted the visit hoping that all the symbolism will

translate in to trade ties, casing of visa regulations and

f inal ly the resolut ion of Kashmir. Vajpayee and his

delegations has left behind a feel good sentiment. The

interaction has made the like of Tariq and Rubina disped

their inpressions about people across the border. Atleast in

Lahore to make friends review contacts establish trade links

and move on to a fruitful relationship. He may indeed be

hoping as are Punjabs industrialists and traders that the GT

Road to Pakistan may after them the trade opportunities that

coastlines offer people in other states.

28. KIDWAI (Ansar). Friendly bus streers towards peace. Nation

and the world. 8, 178; 1999, March, 16; 30-31.

The article deals with the Prime Minister Atal Behari

Vajpayee's bus journey from wagah to Lahore on February

20. The bus on both sides was a symbol of common

main's transport and as such. Peaceful protests and dissent

with in limits are part of the democratic way of life but

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violence has no place in this scheme. The joint declaration

signed by the two priministers and the memorandum of

understanding (Mou) worked but reach the two leaders the

men who really mattered. The friendly beginnings made

driving earlier regimes along with latest initiative need to be

consolidated to strengthen the aims of peace.

29. SHUKLA (Rajiv). Sustain the success. Sunday. 26, 10;

1999, March, 7-13; 11.

The author expresses his views as the follow up of

Vajpayee's Lahaore visit as the most successful visit. In a

very short time the Nawaz Sharif government made all

arrangement to make it a memorable event. Though nuclear

explosions on both sides, dashed hopes of friendship the

friendly feeling was still left in both Sharif and Atal Behari

Vajpayee. This feeling took Vajpayee to Lahore and made

Nawaz give him a read carpet welcome. Both the leaders

oepniy said that there should be no more war between the

two countries. Once trade is open business lobbies and

vested interests will force both the government to have

friendship. Both sides should withdraw forces from siachen

during winter when the soldiers of both countries suffer due

to the adverse weather and statusques should be maintained.

30. NAYAR (Kuldip). They did not Miss the bus. Nation and the

World. 8, 178; 1999, March, 16; 28-29.

The bus to Lahore opened avenus to greater peace

between the two neighbours. Flags of India and Pakistan

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were painted on its body. Tlie Priminister Atal Behari

Vajpayee sat in the front seat, the bus began its journey

to Lahore. Before long we were out of Atari and than at

Wagah. :Khushamdeed' to Pal<istan" were the first words

Nawaz Sharif spoke he embraced Vajpayee. Pakistani Prime

Minister also lined up to shakehands with Atal Behari

Vajpayee. Both Prime Minisert had shown coverage and

both may godown in history for having tried demalishing the

walls of distrust and hatred that have come up in the last

five decades. Atleast both can say that they have not

missed the bus.

31. — , — . , CAUVERY SETTLEMENTS, TAMIL NADU-

KARNATAKA

NAGARAJ (BS). Cauvery : Deal on, not quite. The Indian

Express. 66. 266; 1998, August, 8; 1.

Tamil Nadu and Karnataka agree on setting up an

authority, under the chairmenship of the priminister Atal

Behari Vajpayee, with Chief Minister of the four states as

member for implementation of the cauvery water disputes

tribunals interim order/. A monitoring committee comprising

central and state officers, to function under authority for

this purpose. Under this authority there would be monitoring

committee consisting of the designated officers of the

central government and the state government concerned.

32. LAST HURDLE in setting cauvery raw removed. The

Hindustan Times. 74, 220; 1998, April, 19; 1.

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The agreement reached on role of monitoring panel.

The final hurdle in the way of clinching an accord on the

cauvery issue was overcome today with the major parties to

the dispute, Karanata and Tamil Nadu. The decks have

been cleared for the implementation of the seven year old

interim award of the cauvery water fribunal by which

Karnataka will release 205 TMC of water every year to

Jamil Nadu. The Chief Minister of the four riparian states.

Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Kerala and pondichery had come to

abroad agreement on all contentions issues barring the role

and function of the monitoring committee at a high level

meeting convened by Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee

Yesterday.

33. KARNATAKA, TN approve draft. Sunday Pioneer. 8, 219;

1998, August, 9; 1.

A. major hurdle in implementing the water sharing

agreement among the four cauvery basin states was

removed on Saturday. Both Karnataka and Tamil Nadu, the

two main contending parties, approved a draft on the role

and function on the monitoring committee being set up to

assest the cauvery River Authority. Karnataka Law Minister

MC Naniab said the drafting committee which met under the

Chairmanship of the Cabinet Secretary last night, had

arrived at four broad proposals on the role of the monitoring

committee. The committee would only assist the authority,

and not have any independent executive or statutory powers.

It would function directly under the authority headed by

Prime Minister and four cheif minister.

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34. MENON (N.C.) Major break through in cauvery water issue.

Hindust Times. 74, 219; 1998 August 8; 1.

The article deals with four basin states arrive at a

broad agreement. The chief minister of the cauvery basin

states today achieved a major break through on the

implementation of the contentious interm award of the

cauvery water tribunal. The accord between Tamil Nadu,

Karnataka Kerala and Pondichery was reached after nine

hours of discussions spread over two days priminister Atal

Behari Vajpayee had with the chief ministers ahead of the

Aug. 12 deadline set by the supreme court for finalising a

scheme to implement the award. Under the four point

agreement there shall be a scheme for giving effect to the

interm award of tribunal and all related order. There shall

be an authority which will comprise the Prime Minister and

the chief minister of the four states.

35. BREAK THROUGH in cauvery row. The Pioneer. 8, 218;

199, Aug. 8; 1.

The Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee on Friday

managed to achieve a break through on the contentious

cauvery water issue with the four riparian states reaching a

boad agreement on removing barriers to the implementation

of the seven year old Interim award of the river water

tribunal. The success came a the end of three rounds of

talks between the Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee and

the Chief Minister of four states.Mr. JH Patel (Karnataka)

Mr. M Karunanidhi (Tamil Nadu), Mr. E.K. Narayan (Kerala),

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and Mr. Janakiraman (Pondichery). The centre has decided

to constitute a drafting committee headed by cabinet

secretary which will back in to power, duties functions and

the role of the monitoring committee. The agreement on it

reached under the leadership of Mr. Atal Behari Vajpayee

on all occasions he was the chief minister of Tamil Nadu.

MR. Karunanidhi thanked Mr. Vajpayee and planning

commission deputy chiarman Jaswant Singh for facilitating

the agreement.

36. ESWARAN (V.V) Cauvery water dispute : A break through

at last. Nation and the World. 8, 166; 1998, September, 16;

24-25.

This article deals with old cauvery waters dispute

priminister Atal Behari Vajpayee could seen as having

successfully taken the initiative in solving a serious problem.

The main tussle is between Karnataka where the river

priginates, and Tamil Nadu through which it mainly passes.

Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee made the chief minister

agree to compromise in the cauvery water dispute, since

Karnataka and Tamil Nadu appeared to be prepared to

developing the potential of the cauvery, the centres was only

too happy to assist them in formulating a concord that

could ensure the well being of both the states. The cauvery

waters dispute has made one thing clear. The pulls and

pushes of polit ical compulsion, inked both to popular

regional passions and local political rivalries, would always

stand in the way of a rational and amicable solution. The

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union government will not have to implement its promise as

stated in the national agenda of setting up National water

commission that would oversee all water related issues

allover the country. And the sooner the centre goes for it

the better.

37. GHOSE (Arabinda). Cauvery : From confrontat ion to

cooperat ion. Nation and the Wor ld . 8, 166; 1998,

September, 16; 26.

The author discusses the two largest states Karnataka

and Tamil Nadu have been fighting over sharing of the

waters of the cauvery river for the last seven years. This

war came to an end for the present at least on August, 7,

1998. The "armistice" in their war was brokered by Prime

Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee and his "trouble shooter"

Jaswant Singh when an agreement was arrived at leaving all

the four chief minister happy. International dimensions when

the country was partitioned in 1941 with the Indus system

in the West and the Ganga-Brahma Putra - Meghana (GBM)

system in east becoming international water courses.

Priminister Vajpayee resolved this tangle with the suggestion

that the proposal authority be claimed by himself and the

chief ministers of the four basin states be the members.

The present government proposes to seek solution to the

inter state river waters disputes through the political route

apart from the judiciations. The four state have adopted the

path of cooperation rather than confrontation in resolving

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this longstanding dispute. This is an encouraging

developments.

38. VENKATESAN (V). An Authority on test. Frontline. 15, 23;

1998, November, 7-20; 28-29.

The article indicated that the cauvery river water

authority met for the first time amidst continuing differences

between the states concerned failed to take any significant

decision. The first meeting of Cauvery River Water Authority

(CRWA) took place in New Delhi on October 28. The

meeting was chaired by priminister Atal Behari Vajpayee and

attended by the chiefministers of Tamil Nadu, Karnataka,

Kerala, and Pondichery and Senior Officials of the Union

Water Resources Ministery. The meeting was important for

three reasons, first the Authority is seen to be achieving its

aims, it wi l l be viewed as a tr ibute to the spirit of

cooperative federations that characterised the accord.

Secondly the CRWA has begun its work at a time when

there is uncertainty about when the cauvery water disputes

tribunal will announce its final award. It remains to be seen

whether the priminister's appeal to the chief minister to

continue in the spirit of mutual cooperation and under

standing that marked the setting up of the authority will help

in the spredy resolution of the cauvery dispute.

39. PILLAI (Sreedha). The cauvery card. Sunday. 25, 30;

1998, July, 26; 24.

The Tamil Nadu politicians use the river water sharing

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issue to embarrass the centre. Cauvery is an emotive issue

for the people of both Tamil Nadu and Karnataka seven

years have passed since the cauvery tribunal's interim order

asking Karnataka to release 205 meter fit of vi ater to Tamil

Nadu's former annually. Karnataka has not agreed to this.

In a game of one upmanship, Karananidhi hurriedly faxed a

latter to the PM., GK Moon paner called for an all party

meeting and Jayalalitha said Karnataka was blocking

implementation of the inter imaulard through ordinances and

lawsuits. It's totally unreasonable to expect the four month

old BJP government to solve a problem which has ben

hanging free for seven years.

40. SREEDHAR PILLAI. Troubled waters. Sunday. 25, 34; 1998,

August, 23-29; 30.

The art icle deal with tracing the history of the

cauvery dispute. The suit was closed in view of the scheme

notified by the centre which has created an authority

headed by the priminister with reparian stats as its

members cauvery has been at the centre of the over 150

year old dispute between Karnataka and Tamil Nadu. The

cauvery begins her 800 km journey from the picturesque

kodogu district in Karnataka. She has cades into two fills

before entering the plains of Tamil Nadu where she becomes

the lifeline of formers. The dams were build by both the

states across they cauvery. The supreme court ordered the

PM to solve the issue. Finally in a major break through

priminister Atal Behari Vajpayee was able to get the chief

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minister of the four reparian states to agreement scheme

for the implementation of the 1997 interm award of the

cauvery water disputes tribunal and for creating a river

valley authority with the priminister as the head.

41. VENKATESAN (V). The Cauvery conundrum. Frontline.

15,16; 1998, August, 1-14; 30-31.

The article deals with the supreme court setting a July

12 "deadline" for the centre to work out a negotiated

settlement to the cauvery dispute the Vajpayee Government

finds itself pulled in different directions by political parties in

Tamil Nadu and Karnataka. The BJP led coalition govrnment

at the centre is virtually being tern apart by interge

pressure from political parties in Tamil Nadu and Karnataka

on the cauvery water issue. It found negotiated settlement to

the decades olddispute between the two states. A

memorandum signed by members of parliament belonging to

all political parties in the AIADMK led front in Tamil Nadu,

barring the Marunalarchi Dravida Munpetra Kazhazam

(MDMK) was submitted to the priminister. The memorandum

submitted by the all party delegation to Atal Behari

Vajpayee stated. The solution to the problem does not lie in

the creation of a mechanism or a regulatory authority

equipped with statutory powers. Many observed believe that

an negotiated settlement between Karnataka and Tamil Nadu

is the only posssible solution to the cauvery dispute.

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42. VENKATESEN (V). Role of the Monitoring Committee.

Frontline. 15, 17; 1998, August, 15, 28; 25-28.

The author express his views that the deaks were

cleared for the announcement of a scheme to give effect to

the interm award of the cauvery water dispute tribunal with

the drafting committee finalising the role of and functions of

the monitoring committee at a late night meeting on August.

The committee wil l assist the authority in collecting

information and data the three states and Pondichery

agreed. Atal Behari Vajpayee have more powers than the

authority. The state and union Territory have also agreed

that the monitoring (committee will assist the authority in

setting up a well designed hydro-meterorological network in

the cauvery basin. The authority the first of its kind to be

created compulsing the Priminister Atal Behari Vajpayee and

chiefminister) in any river water sharing agreement would

offer the much needed political healing touch.

43. MURTHY (Sachidananda). Fruid Situation. The Week. 16,

36; 1998, August, 23; 44-47.

The article deals with the water sharing issue depends

the mistrust between Vajpayee and Jayalalitha. The cauvery

aggreement was the biggest betrayal. The cauvery issue it

was their turn to be arrogant towards the difficult lady of

Channai. Vajpay's men had worked elaborate plans on

cauvery. Jayalalitha's priminister's had thought that Vajpayee

would invite their leader for talks on the dispute before he

meet the chief minister of the four basin state on August 6.

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As he found Vajpayee was ignoring the major ally more

and more he softened considerably on the cauvery water

draft scheme. But Karunanidhi wanted to anger Jayalalitha

more by accepting the Vajpayee proposal . When

Ramamurthy finally met Vajpayee, the agreement had been

reached and water resources secretary. Z. Hasan had

already signed the gazette notification. Finally Vajpayee and

Jayalalitha had no mutual trust at all.

44. VENKATESAN (V). And quiet flows the Cauvery. Frontline.

15, 17; 1998, August, 15-28; 25-29.

In the case of the long festering cauvery issue

conciliation has last trumphed over confrontation. Decades

old dispute over the sharing of the cauvery rever water

between Tamil Nadu and Karnataka appeared to have been

almost resolved in two days on August 6 and 7, when

priminister Atal Behari Vajpayee held discussions with the

chiefministers of Tamil Nadu Karnataka, Kerala and

Pondhichery. The August 7 agreement seemed to satisfy

both the main contenders, Tamil Nadu and karnataka if one

by the ini t ial reactions. In ttie case of the cauvery

conciliation trumpted over confrontation. A key advisor to

Kamnanidhi on the cauvery issue, Guhan was of the opinion

that the cauvery systems in the world and there was little

surplus water available from it. He believed that all river

water disputes were amenable to solution if there was the

will for conciliation.

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45. NAGARAJ (B.S.)- Cauvery : Rain Saves the day for

Vajpayee. Indian Express. 67, 324; 1999, September, 29; 1.

Rains saved the day for priminister Atal Behari

Vajpayee who put off tomorrow is meeting of the Cauvery

River Authority after karnataka Chief Minister J.H. Patel

said he could not attend it because of his indisposition.

Tanil Nadu seemed releived that parts of the catchment

areas in th state and in Karnataka had received rains

which led to a five-fold size in the water level in Mettur

dam. The Priminister Atal Behari Vajpayee also did a good

turn to Patel whose refusal to release water immediately was

with an ege on the polling for five assembly seats on

October 3. The Tamil Nadu Chief Minister also wests to

Vajpayee asking him to persuade karnataka to realease

some water. The three member experts team led by water

resources secretary. Z. Hasan which visit the two states for

an on the spot assessment of the availability and needs of

water in the two state wi l l submit its report to the

priminister tomorrow.

46. CALMING THE water. Economic and Political Weekly. 33,

33; 1998, August 15-22; 2205.

The author express his view that the central of BJP

government counsil was able, after al l , to present the

supreme court with a draft scheme on cauvery waters

acceptable to all the basin states cannot but be regarded

as a triumph of Atal Behari Vajpayee's skills of persuasion.

The agreement at some point between Karnataka and Tamil

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Nadu and various committees proposal under the cauvery

river authority. However for the BJP led government at the

centre this success paves the way for the resolution of

other river desputes, such as that over the Sutlej - Yamuna

link between Punjab and Haryana, both currently governed

by parties foundly to the BJP. Also river waters policy to

provide the framework for settlement of inter-state water

dispute promised in the BJP manifests might well take

concrete shape.

47. THOMAS (K.M.). Trick or Treat. India Today. 23, 34; 1998,

August, 24; 20-22.

The article deals with the cauvery agreement that gave

the AIADMK chief yet another excuse to bring Vajpayee's

Government perilously close to a down fall. When Prime

Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee negotiated an agreement with

the chief minister of Tamil nadu, Karnataka and Pondichery

over the sharing of cauvery waters. Add chiefminister M.

Karunanidhi. "This is a victory for the people of the four

states. It was thanks to this triumph that the BJP led

Goviernment came perilosly close to being deprived of a

majority. During the latest cauvery crises the was distinctly

unenthasiastic. Jayalalitha saw the cauvery settlement as a

victory for Karunanidhi. Despite advise from BJP hard lines

who felt that the cauvery issue was the most appropriate

occasion for the Government to call he bluff and play

martyr, Vajpayee wanted to offer Jayalalitha an opportunity

to saveforce. Both the BJP and the AIADMK were not ready

with an alternative scheme to save the government.

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48. —-, -—, CIVILIAN-PRISONERS.

AMIT BARUAH. India, Pakistan to exchange Civi l ian

Prisoners Today. The Hindu. 122, 68; 1999, March 22; 1.

The article deals with Indian Priminister Atal Behari

Vajpayee and Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's

exchange of c iv i l ian prisoners at the wagah border

tomorrow. While India well hand over 43 prisoners to

Pakistan. Islamabad will realiease 15 Indian detenus. The

Prminister of both countries have agreed to facilitate more

contact between the separated families and prisoners and

for this purpose the procedure of interview prisoners is

being simplefied. In a joint statement issue on March 6,

Indian and Pakistani off icials had agreed to release

specif ied civi l ian prisoners in three weeks while the

fishermen and their boats were to be freed in month.

49. -—, —-, COALITION.

PALSHIKAR (Suhas). Manipulative polit ics continues.

Economic and Political Weekly. 34, 13; 1999, March, 27;

743.

The author had expected that through the present

ruling alliance of the Shiv Sena and BJP had not endeavour

itself to the electorate section of the traditional moratha

following of the congress which are not preparred to

accommodate the details or the OBCs have become

vulnerable to the appeals from the Shiv Sena and BJP.

The Shiv Sena - BJP victory was a combination of many

factors. In such a scenario, the task before the congress

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leadership would be to disintegrate the mythical maratha vote

and to seek build new alliance of the poor maratha with

other non maratha castes including the delites. The will

virtually mean writing a fresh text on the politics of the

state.

50. .—, .—, .—, AGENDA.

SHAMEEM FAIZEE . BJP Stammers out an Agenda for

Governance. New Age. 46, 12; 1998, March, 22-28; 1.

Despite all our efforts to win over the post poll allies

to Cobble up a majority by jettisoning several prepoll allies

and winning over individuals and small groups by all sorts

of inducement, Atal Behari Vajpayee has to be content to

be sworn in as priminister of a majority coalition of about

one and a half dozen parties and groups. He took over

office alongwith 43 others and 22 cabinet ministers and

equal number as minister of states. BJP Apart from

Vajpayee and Advani, Dr. Murii Manohar Joshi and Jaswant

Singh have also authanticated the document.

51. KAPOOR (Sanjay). Priminister Sick, but government is

sicker. Blitz. 58, 32; 1998, August, 8; 1.

Fuelled by rumours about the health of priminister Atal

Behari Vajpayee, moves to pull down the BJP-led coalition

government have begun In right earnest. The Vajpayee still

talks of peace some of his colleagues in government seem

to be pursuing a different agenda. The BJP's failure to

push its candidate for the post of deputy speakership of the

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Lok Sabha has also shown that it is no longer confident of

proving its majority. Only t ime wi l l te l l whether its

confidence in its ability to govern India has been eroded

for good.

52. .—, — , —., AGREEMENT.

KIDWAI (Ansar). Kicking up a Row. Nation and the World.

8, 159; 1998, June, 1; 14.

Author discuss his views about Home Minister and BJP

ideologue L.K. Advani has raised a stormby insisting on

review of the constitution and advocating the presidential

system of governance. Atal Behari Vajpayee spoke more

liked priminister than a party luminary; on the other hand

the out going party. Cheif L.K. Advani's Utterances were

marked by political rhetoric in his dual role as a party

ideologue as well as the home minister of the BJP led

coal i t ion. Vajpayee's emphasis was on strengthening,

evenexpanding, the present coalition arrangement. BJP

leadership has been at pains to make it clear that the

national agenda is a compact of compromise to ensure to

survival of the coalition arrangement else their original stand

on the construction of the temple at Ayodhya. The issue as

of course arguable both its pros and cons but the timing of

Advani's advocacy has tarred it with a deeply political

colour.

53. —-, —-, —., COMMUNALISM, PROMOTION.

NAYAR (Kuldip) 100 Days of BJP Led Government.

Radiance. 33, 26; 1998, June, 28; 8.

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The BJP led government completed its 100 days in

office. The BJP wants India to be right wining milliant

states. It has pushed the country to a different direction,

from peace to aggressiveness from conci l ia t ion to

confrontation. The Bhartiya Janata Party led coalition is

conniving at efforts to commualise the atmosphere. The

communalism has increased since the advent of Vajpayee's

government. The Vishwa Hindu Parishad, a member of RSS

Parivar, is openly talking about the Hindu Raj. The debate in

parliament should that the BJP was not varried. Over

jingoistic attitudes. At a time when the party shohid be

wooing people for consenius it is raising issue which will

further divide the nation.

54. —-, -—, -—, CONTRADICTION.

NAYAR (Kuldip). Controdiction at the Centre. Nation and the

World. 8, 162; 1998, July, 16; 40-42.

The author expresses, his views about the best thing

being probably to let the BJP led coalition fall under the

burden of its own contradictions. Prime Minister Atal Behari

Vajpayee is the person who should cabinet but the tells

openly that he has left proactive policy in the hands of

Home Minister L.K. Advani and the military. In the coalition

led by the BJP, there are 13 odd parties. The proactive

policy would have been finalised in consulting with them.

The AIADMK chief Jayalalitha has even spoken communalis

which has raised its head once again because of

determined stand by the BJP and the VHP to construct a

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Ram temple at the place where the Babri Masjid stood

before demolition. The differences between Vajpayee and

Advani on governance are too evident to be missed. And

everyone knows who wields real power. One way to

interpret him is that he has admitted the coalition failure.

The even negatively, the BJP allies stay in power.

55. .—, —., —-, DISAGREE, MANDIR-MASJID ISSUE.

SHAMEEM FAIZEE . Prime Minister Double Speak on the

temple issue. New Age. 46, 24; 1998, June, 14-20; 1.

The article indicates this is perfectly in tune with

policy of double speak in which the BJP leadership has

acquired mastery. After four days of rumpus in both the

houses of parliament over the construction activities for a

temple to be built at the site where Babri Masjid Stood in

Ayodhya, the Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee has

declared that his government will abide by the court verdict

and wil l not allow violation of the court order in the

meanwhile. Beyond that the priminister is not ready to

commit anything. On the contarary he reminded the Rajya

Sabha that his parity is commited to building the temple at

Ayodhya and there is no question of retreating from it. He

claimed that the issue has been kept in abeyance as other

partners in his ruling coalition do not agree with BJP on

this issue.

56. —-, —-, -—, ECONOMY, KICK START.

BHARAT (Ahluwalia). No Thank your for the Priminister.

Outlook. 4, 44, 1998, November, 9; 50.

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Vajpayee seems to be trying his level best but it is

not enough in the gloom doom scanar io. Business

confidence indices touch all time lows. All indicators of an

inert coalition government. The government is doing nothing

to push big infrastructure projects which could kickstart the

economy. At priminister Atal Behari Vajpayee's f irst

interaction with industry at the CII's annual general meeting

in April he made 10 pronouncements. Vajpayee announced

his intention to go through with some new initiatives

buyback of shares increasing the creeping acquisition limit

for promoters and the annual general meeting of FICCI that

he got them cleared by the cabinet within two days.

Unfortunately for Vajpayee while business had long been

clamouring for these concessions reactions was like warm.

Clearly Vajpayee's learning the hard way reality does not

matter perception does.

57. —-, —-, — , PERFORMANCE.

KIDWAI (Ansar). BJP performance you're being watched.

Nation and the World. 8. 164; 1998, Aug., 16; 14.

The Bass has been watching and this came in to the

open at a recent meeting of the BJP priminister's called by

the RSS top brass to give them a low down on good

governance and discipline. RSS Chief Rajendra Singh who

presided gaved piece of his mind to the BJP's top notchers

in the government, the thrust of the advice being on the

need to drastically toning up their functioning in line with

the poll promises. The leading partner of the coalition owes

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the major responsibi l i ty and accountabi l i ty for the

government functiokning. The rising prices and overall

economic failure compounded by a spate of strikes in the

essential sectors and the deteriorating law and order

situation have further added to the woes of the beleaguered

outfit headed by the BJP. Much of such problems stem

from the difficult allies-Jayalalitha perpatually and other like

Samata, the Akalidal and Trinamul COngress sporadically.

This would require developing a coalition culture based on

common interests and minimum ideological affinity. In a

substantial sense stability and good governance would go

hand in hand.

58. — , — , — , POLITICS.

WITHIN. A month BJP bares Itself. New Age. 46, 16;

1998, April, 19-25; 1.

The article deals with the fact that a month's time BJP

led coalition government has shown clearly that it is neither

a stable government nor wants to carry for ward the

tradit ions of coalition polit ics. Priminister Atal Behari

Vajpayee has said so in so many words. While addressing

the concluding session of the BJP's national executive,

Vajpayee exhorted the party workers to work for establishing

the single party rule of the party. He said that the present

coalition is a temporary phase and cannot be carried for

long.

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59. BHARADWAJ (Brij). New Twist in Coalition Politics. Nation

and the World. 8, 175; 1999, Feb., 1; 25.

The article deals with the coalition partners of the

BJP, also facing inner convulsions. The Samata Party which

is the mianstay of the BJP in Bihar with its leader like

George Fernandes acting as trouble shooters for the

priminister are facing rought times. The Samata Party has

recieved notice on their leaders calling upon them either to

resign or change the government policy on controversial

issues like insurance bill and patent bill. Parliamentary

Affairs Minister madan Lai Khurana Committee a faux pas

unfortunately at the instance of powerful Home Minister L.K.

Advani who was not keen to push they that without them

BJP will lose its identity are indications of growing of the

suffsion brigade with Vajpayee or his policies. The Sangh

Parivar is keen to seek votes in the name of Vajpayee. The

coalitions have to work on the basis of their respective

strength and not on the strength of power to black mail.

60. —-, —-, -—, PROBLEMS.

VENKATESAN, V. Persisting worries. Frontline. 15, 19;

1998, September, 12-25; 26.

The article deals with the BJP, continuously being

plagued by problems inspite of the full in its conflicts with

its coaliation partners at the centre. This could will turn out

to be the calm before the storm, for both the BJP and its

allies are playing the waiting game, unwilling to rock the

boat at the present stage. The BJP managed to contain the

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challenge from the AIADMK it faced a siege within. The

Swadeshi Jagran Manch dubbed some of the centre's

economic policies as ant ipeople. It is believed that

Vajpayee's Critics in the party have succeeded in Sowing

the seeds of conflict between him and the arises. The

BJP's relation with its other allies at the centre are less

than cordial.

61. .—, .—, .—, .—, STABILITY PLANK.

ASGHAR (AM). The BJP and stability. New Age. 46, 13;

1998, April, 4; 5.

The article states that the Indian democracy was

passing through several chalenges and stability under such

unstable conditions is not possible. The Lok Sabha elections

are over and the BJP was to form the government in Delhi.

The self styled party with a difference could not make it to

the magic number of 272 even with the support of its

prepoll allience. it is having problems with its allies, some

are dictating terms. The BJP campaigned on the stability

plank but political stability for such a disparate allience is

anything but assured.

62. -—, —-, —-, SELF DECEPTION.

FAIZEE (Shameem). BJP's self deception. New Age. 46,

35; 1998, August 30; 1.

The article indicates the self deception which has

taken over the BJP leadership since it assumed power at

the centre and its constant efforts to divert the people's

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attention from its continuing failures and follies on almost all

front. On almost all fronts it appeared to be apologetic for

the failure of the government. By skirting the discussion on

the continuing war inside the ruling coalition and launching

an attack on opposion that its "ganging up" to dislodge the

BJP led coal i t ion from the power, the BJP National

execut ive at Jaipur has attempt to gloss over the

administration. It has attempted to pass the back on past

rulers for all the sense it has committeed during its five

month rule. The self contradiction and self deception is

more vivid in the political resolution. The fact is that the

directionless and unstable government of Atal behari

Vajpayee has pavalysed the whole administration.

63. -—, —-, —-, SURVIVAL.

SUKUMAR (Muralidharan). A Coalition on hold. Frontline.

15, 18; 1998, August, 11; 9.

The article deals with fact that despite the serious

straints in the BJP led coalition, the Vajpayee government

has survived solely because of the inability of the opposion

to put together an alternative dispensation. Between his effort

to sort out the cauvery water sharing dispute involving four

socithern states and a supposedly routine bureaucratic

rashuffle at the centre, last for night it seemed that

priminister Atal Behari Vajpayee had arrived perilously close

to the final break. The Atal Behari Vajpayee and his cricle

of political confidants have seemingly had little time to

attend to the pressing taks of governance. The DMK is

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almost certain to sign up as a member of the BJP led

coalition should Jayalalitha decide to part ways with it.

Finally, it is this negative assurance that there is no

alternative, an ironic represe of the claims of dynastic

legitimacy in the congress that alone sustains the Vajpayee

Government.

64. MUKERJI (Debashish). Wobbly winner. The Week. 16, 15;

1998, March, 29; 32-34.

The article Indicates that the length of the tenure of

the Vajpayee government will be determined by its allies.

Top on the agenda of the new government is its own

survival. Contentious issues will be jettisoned but not

Swadeshi. Immediate on the BJP's agenda in the next

session are passing the Lok Pal bill to contain corruption,

pushing through the bill reserving 33 percent legislative

seats for woman and electoral reforms. In the first flush of

victory as Vajpayee takes charge, unpleasant realities have

been burred. How long they will take to resurface is

anybody gueses.

65. —-, —-, —-, SUSTAINED.

NAYAR (Kuldip). BJP's some soult on Bhandari beats all

norms. Radiance. 34, 9; 1999, March, 14-20.

The BJP's some soult on Bihar governor Sunder

Singh Bhandari beats all norms. Home Minister L.K. Advani

was justified in announcing that can a political governor be

replacing Bhandari who repeatedly said even in office that

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he was an RSS man. But then how could the Bhartiya

Janata Party refuse the fate of RSS which ultimately

controls the party. That L.K. Advani had to eat humble pie

is not so bad as is the unquestionable rule of an RSS man

over Bihar. The Bhartiya Janata Party has introduced the

phrase to the civilian lexicon by sustaining the coalition it

heads.

66. -—, —-, COMPROMISE.

NAYAR (Kuldip). BJP Looking for New Supporters.

Radiance. 33, 18; 1998, May, 3-9; 8.

Home Minister L.K. Advani, Human Resources Minister

Murii Manohar Joshi and the state Education Minister Uma

Bharti have been Charge-sheeted in the Babri Masjid

demolition case. Jayalalitha did not name then but was clear

to every body, that she meant all the three. The BJP had

only two options. Either the party comes clean or make

compromise. The BJP has been sucked in to vicious circles

of power. Some defence has been offered on their behalf

that the three are not involved in the corruption cases. They

have been accused of complicity in the destruction of a

structure that represented India's pluralistic society its

composite culture. And how can anyone forget the enormity

of Hindu-Muslim riots in the wake of Babri Masjid's

destructions. Already Vajpayee government looks too

compromising, too minity-priminy, too willing to leave out.

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67. —-, —-, CONCENCES, ISSUES.

NAYAR (Kuldip). Lack of Experience, Ideas Hounds BJP.

Radiance. 33, 39; 1998, October, 3; 9.

Priminister Atal Behari Vajpayee said candidly when I

asked him to go over the 200 days of his government 14

office and point out its achievements. The cauvery water

agreement people have welcomed it, infact every one. He

would like to sort out some other pending issues like

Kashmir and the northeast. I pointed out to Vajpayee that

the fault of his government was that it did not contact the

opposition to achieve a consensus on important matters,

some thing that the previous government were doing.

Reminded of the Babri Masjid Vajpayee said that he wanted

the matter to be settled through the court we have again

approached the judiciary to decide the matter quickly. At

one stage we had persuaded even the Vishwa Hindu

Parishad (VHP) he said. Mr. Vajpayee helpless in dealing

with various knotty issues confronting the country.

68. — , — , COOPERATION, INDO-SINO MEETING, FICCI.

MALHOTRA (Inder). Regional Cooperation. Sunday. 25, 49;

1998, December, 13-19; 28.

The author expresses his view about India's need to

have a balanced relation with China and Japan. Without

balanced and broadly cooperative relation among these three

giants of Asia neither the security and stability of the

continent can be assured nor will the 21st be the Asian

Century, as it would be all laws of logic be. China and

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Japan harbour deepest but to tally unstated suspicions and

reservation about each other. China's an"ger was fuelled by

Atal Behari Vajpayee unfortunate letter to Bill Clinton Citing

China as the main reason for this country going overtly

nuclear. A high power deligation of the Japan Business

Council, in Delhi for a FICCI meeting, called on the

Priminister and two governments have more or less finalised

a programme of official exchanges at a high level which

might begin in January with the two foreign secretaries

meeting in Tokyo. There is eagerness on both sides to

return to business as usual.

69. .—, -—, CRISIS, TELECOM.

KAPOOR (Sanjay). Telecom : The mess continuous.

Sundav.26. 32; 1999, August, 8-14; 38-40.

The author expresses his views about the telecom

crisis really of the Vajpayee governments making. Pramod

Mahajan announced a cabinet decision on 6 June to

replace the earlier license freebased regime with a new

revenue sharing arrangment was preparing a "multi crore

bail out plan for cellular operators for a hefty consideration.

The net out come of this aggressive lobbying is that

president K.R. narayanan, Election Commission and now the

courts have all intervened. Vajpayee has denied any

financial mal fearsance in the telecom deal. A pragmatist he

would be the last person to rule out the play of bribes in

international deal. Unfazed he has chosen to go ahead in

the hope that in the coming elections, his personal

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credibility and integrity would help him ride the telecom

storm.

70. — , .—, CORRUPTION CHARGES.

NAYAR (Kuldip). Vajpayee : Means to End. Mainstream. 16,

16; 1999, April, 11; 11.

The article indicate that the Bharatiya Janata Party

has learnt it the hard way. Jayalalitha, Chautala and Buta

Singh name anyone with curruption charges, they had

jumped in to the party bandwagon. The formation of the

cabinet indicates all that. The BJP realises it shaky

position. BJP has no easy choice. Nor can it review the

contentious issues like the Ramtemple, special status to

Jammu and Kashmir and Common Civil Code. The thins will

not come to head so long as a liberal person like Vajpayee

is the Priminister. He has the knack of giving the impression

of being everythings to everybody. He excides concilation. It

is an open secret that Vajpayee is only a means to an

end, not the end by itself. Strange, Vajpayee does not

realise it.

71. MUKHERJI (Debashish). From Crisis to Crisis. The Week.

16, 20; 1998, May 3; 32-36.

The author expresses his views that the Jayalalitha's

one point private agenda, of dismissal of the DMK

government in Tamil Nadu, has left the BJP led coalition

government tot ter ing on the brink. One month into

governance has shattered all the BJP's pretensions : its

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coalition seems to have more currupt people and appears

evenless stable thank the UF's even did. Jayalalitha has

chosen her targets fortitiously. JethmalanI (extreme riht) has

no support pase of any sort and owes his ministership

solely to his proximity to Vajpayee and Advani. If the

actions of Jayalalitha, Hegde and Jethmalani are any

indication, this is a tell order. Buta Singh mentioned not

only Hegde and Jethmalani but also L.K. Advani, Murii

Manohar Joshi and Uma Bharati all three chargesheeted for

their alleged involvement in the Babri Masjid demolition.

72. —., .—, DEMOLITION, BABRI MASJID.

MASUD (Iqbal). "Our" Separation with "Them". Nation and

World. 8, 173; 1999, January, 1; 20.

The author expresses his views about the fact is that

for most Muslims, December 6, 1992 is not yestarday. I

was the only one watching the telecast of the destruction

of the Babri Masjid brick by brick, it is not sadomasochim

which makes me recall that agonising hour, it is important

that Muslims today should reveal there true feelings about

this Karbala of so called modern India. Today the BJP

leaders talk of 'Unfortunate happing of confision. Mr. Naqvl,

BJP's Minister of State for informational broad casting has

said in effect in a number of interview Muslims have

forgotten the Masjid demolition. The recent reverses suffered

by the BJP in the election in Delhi, Rajasthan and MP will

possible be regarded as a late revenge for the demolition.

There is no distiction between BJP and hardcore. But

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Kalyain Singh is a cleaver, operating fascust. If he goes

down, he will like samson, bring down the state with him.

73. ...., -..., DIALOGUE, INDO-PAK.

AIYAR (Mani Shankar). The Thaw. Sunday. 26, 8; 1999,

February 21; 43-49.

The author deals with the two Priminister sho the

imagination to move matters decisively forward. If they do

new down could be breaking. The section of the Pakistan

Press, representing hard line Pakistani opinion have been

warning their readers to beware of Brahmins boarding

buses. The future of the thaw, allegedly taking place in

Indo-Pak relations, lies in Nawaz Sharif's hands particularly

because his longerity in office is as assured as Vajpayee's

is uncertain. The two Priminister's agree that even if the

time is not ripe for a strategy is break through on Kashmir,

a technical break through in pushing the dialogue as a

constructive priority is. That can be easily achieved by

restructuring the talks to fulfill the cardinal principal of

making the dialogue "uninterrupted and uninterruptible".

74. CHOPRA (Subhash). Indo-Pak talks Charade Time for give

and take. Nation and the World. 8, 172; 1998, December,

16; 44.

The article deals with the talks between India and

Pakistan have be came a routine affair with no concrete

result in sight. To witness the umpteenth round charade of

India-Pakistan talks. Both side realfirmed their commitment to

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the Indus Water Treaty of 1960, exchanged views and took

note of the discussions on the subject from October 1987 to

August 1992. The both side agree to continue talks the

differences continued to faster around the definition of the

project. The charade not with standing, the lively thing is

that two sides held the final day of the talks to promote

friendship and hold more talk. The bottom line of any

solution to the Indo-Pak war of Worlds and Occasional

bullets must be the realisation that there has to be some

give and take.

75. ...., ...., , ...., AGREEMENT.

MALHOTRA (Inder). Core issue. Sunday. 28, 32; 1998,

August 9-15; 11.

The article deal with Indo-Pak dialogue must be made

more meaningful and complete. It is something of an

achievement for Atal Behari Vajpayee and Nawaz Sharif to

have agreed on the resumption of the ruptured dialogue in

Colombo. Indian and Pakistan have now to be have with

the sense of responsibil ity enjoind upon them by the

possession of duly declared nuclear weapons. Even dead

lock over other issues, confidence building measures,

accident, misunderstanding or misjudgment, have to be put

in place. As for Kashmir both sides have or got to

recognise that both of them are man absolute bind. A

cooling off is a must for useful talks on Kashmir but by a

cruel twist of irony, no one seems in a mood to allow the

Kashmir situation to cool down.

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76. —-, -—, , —-, COLOMBO.

BAWEJAA (Harinder) . Breakdown. Indiatoday. 23, 32;

1998, August, 10; 60-64.

The article indicates that Atal Behari Vajpayee and

Nawaz Sharif failed to get the Indo-Pakistan dialogue moving

in Colombo. Both sides accused the other of intransigence

over Kashmir. India now faces a major chal lenge in

councing the would that tensions will not get out of hand.

The 10th South Asian Association regional Cooperation

(SAARC) summit was being held under the broad shadow of

the highly billed Vajpayee and Sharif talks. There were

greate expectations internationally. Pakistan declares talks

are a waste of time and the Vajpayee and Sharif dialogue

adds upto zero.

77. —-, — , , PRIME MINISTER, INDO-PAK.

PHILIPOSE (Pamela). Two Prime Ministers give friendship a

chance. Indian Express. 66, 107; 1999, February, 22; 1.

The article deals with both the Prime Minister agreeing

to reasolve all issue including Kashmir. The most substantial

gains of Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee visit to Lahore

seems to have been in the area of augmenting confidence

building (CBMs) between the two countries to prevent a

possible nuclear war Vajpayee and Sharif had two rounds

of one to one talks within a duration of 24 hours. The hope

of a no war declaration that many had hoped would

emerge from these current negotiations was belied, in a

Memorandum of Understanding signed between the foreign

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secretaries of India and Pakistan both nation agreed to

provide each other with advance notification in respect of

ballistic missle flight test. The both nation will undertake

national measures to reduce the risk use of nuclear

weapons under their respective control. The two leaders to

agree to meet periodically to discuss all issues of mutual

concern, including nuclear-related issues.

78. .—, —., , PRIME MINISTER, VAJPAYEE (A.B.) -

SHARIF (Nawaz).

NAYAR (K.P.). Colombo Diary. Sunday. 25, 33; 1998.

August, 16-27; 15.

Indian media management put Pakistani Prime Minister

Nawaz Sharif on the defensive and upset his applicant at

the SAARC Summit. After meeting the Prime Minister Atal

Behari Vajpayee Unitaterally announced that the two sides

had agreed on the resumption of talks. On the eve of the

Vajpayee - Sharif Summit, the Pakistani's were certain that

they could performed a hat-tuck in Colombo. They believed

they could repeat Male and New York with ease. The Sharif

had hoped to make his proposal for a peace, security and

development initiative in Colombo the half mark of the

Vajpayee-Sharif meeting. Vajpayee's announcement about the

resumption of dialogue made Sharif's initiative a damp

squeb. For once the policy makers and media managers

undersrtood each other and acted in concert to bring forth

results.

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79. BAWEJA (Harinder) . Dead Lock. India Today. 23, 31 ;

1998, August, 3; 46-49.

In this article indicates that the meeting between the

Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee and Nawaz Sharif at

the SAARC Summit in Colombo is likely to be market by

mutal suspicious and a hardening of political stands. While

India is willing to discuss Kashmir as part of the composite

subjects, Pakistan is itching to prove that talks without third

party mediation are doomed.

80. —-, —-, DISMISSAL BHAGWAT (Vishnu).

KUNJU (N). Indian Navy In Murky Waters. Alive; May,

1999, 199; 1999, May; 102.

The article deal with the Bhagwat issue has rocked

the boat of the JBP led coalition with both Fernandes and

Bhagwat trading charges. Is it merely a clash of egos or

the machination of the powerful arms lobby. The dismissal

of the chief of the Naval Staff, Admiral Vishnu Bhagwat,

has split the community of politician, retired generals, the

media and of cource, the serving armed forces officers in

to pro and anti Bhagwat camps.

81. ANEJA (AtuI). New twist to Bhagwat issue. The Hindu. 122,

68; 1999, March, 22; 1.

The author express hisview that the defence minister

and the former Navy Chief Admiral Vishnu Bhagwat,

continue to be at logger heads over the issue of an Annual

Confidential Report (ACR) of a navel officer, disclosures of

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an internal meeting of the Navy in whicii his issue among

others was discussed has added to the confusion. The

committee asserted that the naval head quarters had not

reported any Irregularity commited by ex CNS (Admiral

Bhagwat) to the Minister of defence. The legal implications

of the case are also being examined, it added. The board

also examined other allegations of suspected tampering of

the ACRs of other top officers by Admiral Bhagwat - After

examining the merits of each petition the board concluded

that the review done by ex CNS are as per regulations and

that no malafide intensions in any of these cases could be

established". The board acknowledged that the formar navel

chief reviewed the ACRs of officers of various branches and

ranks but only as per regislations" and as part of his

responsibilities.

82. SAURABH KATAIL. A Sacking Saga. Sunday. 26, 8; 1999,

February, 27; 6.

The article deals with the for giving of and an indepth

analyses of sacking of chief of Navel Staff (Vishnu

Bhagwat). It is said that the Prime Minister Vajpayee and

the defence minister did not divulge the facts of the

sacking sega. the reason cited, that Bhagwat posed a

security threat seems a bit vagie. As defence minister

George Fernandes must reveal the facts leading to

Bhagwat's dismissal. The Bhagwat appointment too was

shrouded in mystery. The Bhagwat's meeting his nemeses at

the hands of the bureaucracy is not surprising. The Indian

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Soldiers have to suffer at the hand of the government babus

while the president being the supreme commonder of the

armed forces had been relegated to the background.

83. AIYAR (Mani Shankar). A Bhagwat Primer. Sunday. 26, 15;

1999, April, 11-17; 8-10.

The author expresses his view that George Farnandes

in a jam. He thought he would get away with invocation of

the doctrinal mantora of the subordination of the military to

the civil authority and held his dark doings behind the veil

of national security and thush hush brouhaha Vajpayee

catch phrase Admiral Bhagwat made it to the top of the

naval forces. Bhagwat in this affi-davit informed to Raksha

Mantri at a briefing in part blair in May that these arms

were meant for rebels in the North East and had these

arms and ammunition not been apprehanded, these weould

have been sufficient to tie up one whole division of the

armed forces, for a period of about one year Bhagwat

records how every inst i tut ional norm was blantautly

transgressed to push in the sky post of Deputy Chief of

Navel Staff an off icers whose camulat ive record of

outstanding grading's stretched over all of 16 month of a

career spanning wellover threg decades. Bhagwat affirms to

be one of the most serious security risk in the country.

84. NAJMI (Quaied). Foreign hand. The Week. 17, 7; 1999,

April, 11; 36.

Former Chief of Naval Staff Admiral Vishnu Bhagwat,

while reluctant to speak about his dismissal matter pending

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before parliaments speaks out his mind on the arms dealers

mafia operating in the country. Bhagwat added that after the

pokharan tests last year, the government had said that it

was important to safe guard various sensitive installations in

the country. Bhagwat further says that the nexus between

big arms dealers and their middle men or agents and

foreign intelligence agencies and its implications on the

internal security of the L.K. Advani on December 1998

during meeting at the latters office in parliament house.

Advani had advised Bhagwat to meet president K.R.

Narayanan.

85. VIR (Sanghvi). Avenger and Admiral. Sunday. 26, 15; 1999,

April, 11-15; 17-21.

The author expresses his views that they key to

understanding the Fernandes Bhagwat despute lies in

understanding George Fernandes himself. All the issue that

arose because of dismissal of Admiral Vishnu Bhagwat the

most puzzling question in this is how is it that Fernandes

perceived by the armed forces as the soldiers friend, as

the best defence minister in living memory has suddenly

become the enemy of the Navy, the symbol of political

interference in the armed forces. As puzzling is the list of

misdemeanours that led to Bhagwat's sacking. Talk of

national security of defiance of civilian authority, why

Bhagwat was sacked but how he was appointed in the first

place. The thing to remember about thecurrent dispute is

that both men see it through the prism of their own

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experiences. Bhagwat sees himself fighting some politician

who is trying to interfere with his job. George Fernandes

sees Bhagwat as a v indict ive and unfair boss. The

Fernandes-Bhagwat story follows a smilar plotline.

86. PRASANNAN (R). Nailing of minister. The Week. 17, 17;

1999, April, 7; 41.

Bhagwat's Charges offer Fernandes no easy escape.

There are two options: reinstate Vishnu Bhagwat or remove

Fernandis from the defence ministry. It sacked. Bhagwat

without stating reasons and later explained that he had been

a security risk. It was on the Adamans issue that Bhagwat

nailed Fernandes. In February 1998 the navy, the army and

the coast guard launched an operation in the Adamans

following intelligence alerts. They captured a large quantity

of arms, arrest 73 persons and shot 6 in the operation.

These operations are only straigh tening the Bhagwat case.

Naval headquarters maintains that it has no authority to

challenge anyship in international water. But Bhagwat's

contenses which the ministry does not deny is that his

antiarms smuggling operations were within the exclusive

economi zone. Such actions can hit the moral of the forces.

Incidentally the number of naval officers who saught

premature retirement last year was the largest in the last 10

years. As many as 192 officers sought to leave against 134

in 1997 and 105 in 1996.

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87. —-, —., —-, CORRUPTION CHARGES.

CHENGAPPA (Raj). Trading charges. India today. 14, 12;

1999, March, 22; 53-55.

The author had expected that the slanging match

intensifying and the opposition trying to make capital out of

it in parliament, the storm over the dismissal of the Navy

Chief relusses to subside. The union defence minister knew

that format chief of naval staff Vishnu Bhagwat would not

as retired soldier normally do. The Bhagwat Summarily

desmissal nine month before his term a naval chief was. to

expire. As the opposition trained its guns on Fernandes

even levelling serious charges of curruption and malafide

intent, priminister Vajpayee personally intervenued to take

some of the heat off his favorite trouble shooter. Bhagwat

claims that he had proof to substantiate his charges. The

final out come Bhagwat is right about one thing. The issue

is not likely to fade away in a hurry.

88. —, -—, —-, NATIONAL SECURITY.

RAMDAS (L). Navy, Nation and National Security. Frontline.

16, 2; 1999, January,' 16-29; 17-20.

The dismissal of Admiral Bhagwat has brought into

focus fundamental questions of unequal power relation, weak

structures and unprofessional leadership obtaining within the

civilmilitary complex and the democratic set up. The BJP

Government to dismiss Admiral Vishnu Bhagwat as the Chief

of the Naval Staff was sudden and extraordinary. Defence

minister George Fernandes and the ministry of Defence

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anounced on 6 January their intention. If would almost

appear that Bhagwat has been made a kind of scapegoat

and sacrificed at the altar of the power play that has gone

unchecked for too long. Two related aspects of the current

situation created by the decission dismiss Admiral Bhagwat

need to be addressed : namely giving creadence and tacit

encouragement to demands for promotions, appointments

and transfer made by serving officers on political and/or

communal grounds. Making accusations that relate to

national security concern is a serious matter and justice

demands that Bhagwat be provided an opportunity to defend

himself one can only hope that good sense will prevent that

some form of inquiry wi l l be instituted, and that the

sacrifice made by Admiral Vishnu Bhagwat will not be in

vain.

89. -—, —-, ECONOMIC CRISES.

GHOSH (Jayat). The Economic effects of the BJP. Frontline.

16; 10; 1999, May, 21; 100.

During its 13-month term in office, the BJP led

government has managed to make a bad si tuat ion

substantially worse and has even has tend the processes

that are leading the country to Its next economic crisis.

This could even be suggested that the BJP led government

in herited an economic that was already in a fragele

condit ion, with an accentuated sectoral and regional

imbalance, unsustainable patterns of economic growth, more

unequal Income distr ibut ion. The two most important

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economic effects of the BJP's rule have probably been the

dramatic increase in food prices and the dwindling of

productive employment opportunities. Specially, the issue of

the high and rising price of food items-especially vegetable

(onion) and other essential items such as edible oil and

salt. The economy does remain a major issue. And it's one

which is for broader in its implication than the way it is

currently projected in the media in terms of getting the

budget quickly passed, meeting the international obligations

made in amend for pokhran, or keeping he stock market

satisfied. The economy is probably the aspect of the BJP's

rule which has been most negative for most of the

electorate.

90. .—, .—, ECONOMIC GROWTH, INVESTMENT.

VAJPAYEE (Atal Behari). Need for Rejuvenating the

Economic. Yojana. 43, 4; 1999, April; 4.

The author express his views that they need greater

fiscal discipline and responsibility, both the centre and in

state. So that public sector investment is not Jeopardized. It

will also help the private sector to perform its due role in

the many difficult task it has to perform to achieve our

target of seven percent economic growth in the next three

years. It wil l facil i tate greater inflow of foreign direct

investment, which are need in many critical areas. Scarcity

of public resources means inadequate investment in roads,

railways, power generation etc. which are vital for a strong

economy. The biggest loser will be the poor, the weakest,

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the under privileged in whose name many of the existing

populists policies are often justified.

91. ...., ...., ELECTION PLANK.

TEWARI, (Pradeep). Bardhan Appeals secular parties to unit

to defeat BJP. New age. 47, 29; 1999, July, 24; 14.

The author discusses that while talking to the media

persons here after two day meeting of the UP State

Council, A.B. Bardhan, general secretary of CPI criticised

the BJP and RSS for communalising the entire country was

united against the Pakistan sponsored armed intression. He

assailed the BJP president Kushabhau Thakre for his

repeated utterances to make the kargel an election plank.

The BJP is trying to gain political mileage even as our

jawans are laying down their lives to drive away the foreign

intruders he changed. Chief minister Kalyan Singh declaring

that the Ayodhya temple issue would be the major electral

plank of the BJP in the state.

92. NOORANI (A.G.). The BJP's projects. Frontline. 15, 14;

1998, July, 17; 108.

The article indicate that is eyes were set firmly on

the temple project, the BJP plans to go to the electorate on

the planks of the Bomb and Ayodhya, it is up to the

opposition to show that there is an alternative. The Sang

Parivars frenetic drive to build a Ram temple at Ayodhya

regardless of the judiciary and the law has justifiably

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aroused national concern. The BJP and its all ies in

Government the force of the so called "National Agenta" as

distinct from the BJP's manifesto and the party inherent in

capacity for moderation. By December 1997 the BJP was

deeply mired in realpolities. The party's National Executive

which met on December 19 did not refer to Ayodhya. But

the Next da Atal Behari Vajpayee said that a Ram temple

would be built by legislation. The BJP plans to go to the

electorate on the planks of the bomb and Ayodhya. The

alternatives is to let Vajpayee conduct his election campaign

with all advantage and facilities of a priminister office.

93. ...., -..., EXPANTION, CABINET.

SHUKLA (Rajiv). Expansion Slots. Sunday. 25, 30; 1998,

July, 26; 17.

The article deals with Vajpayee being under pressure

his party to expound the cabinet earlier but he deliberately

avoided it fearing problems to the government during the

session. Prime minister Atal Behari Vajpayee favour of

buying t ime inorder to check d iss idencew in the

parliamentary party. He still want to a leave a dozen slots

for the Telugu Desam Party and those who may joint from

other party. The two persons from the AIADMK will come

as replacements while one more will be inducted as a

minister of state. Chautala is also trying to make his

nominee the deputy speaker of the Lok Sabha. Even as the

priminister belongs to UP his party is in favour of giving

more representation to that state. The Kalyan Singh Camps

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has suggested that state party Chief Raj Nath Singh be

made a central minister and Kalraj Mishra be nominated

state unit president againt. The leadership, however has not

committed any thing.

94. ...., ...., FAILURE, KARGIL ISSUE.

SWAHI (Praveen). The Bungle in Kargil. New Age. 47, 26;

1999, July, 3; 3.

The article deals with the crisis in Kargil has its

origins in the Bharatiya Janata Party led government's

fai lure to comprehend the strategic consequences of

Pokhram-ll and its political blindness and failure to act an

military intellegence warnings. The spring of 1998, saw the

reinvention of George Fernandes as field Marshal. It has

taking just over a year for field Marshall Fernandes and

Bharatiya Janata Party-led coalition he represents to lead

India to its most embarrassing military debacle since the

war of 1962. The BJP led coalition was so desperate for

the success of the Lahore process that it inductlonated

itself with the belief that the wagah bus ride had been an

unmixed triumph.

95. ...., — , FOREIGN POLICY, SECURITY.

BJP's FOLLY in Politicising Security, Foreign Policy. New

Aqe . 47, 26; 1999, July, 3; 7.

The author express hisview that the Kargil misadventure

of Pakistan threatens to be very costly for both countries in

all respects havy cost in human and material resources as

also in embittering political relation between India and

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Pakistan. Thereby the gains at the popular level of recent

friendly contacts after the Lahore Declaration may be all

but wiped out. The Atal Behari Vajpayee was discussing

peace at Lahore. Pakistan was preparing for war in Kargil.

96. —-, —-, HINDU-MUSLIM RIOTS.

NAYAR (Kuldip). India is not the BJP. Nation and the

World. 8, 160; 1998, June, 16; 14-16.

This article indicates that the BJP is not India and

India is not ust the BJP. The BJP has only 180 seats in

the 543 member Lok Sabha, the lower house of parliament.

Priminister Atal Behari Vajpayee is considered a liberal who

is opposed to Hindu fundamentalalism and war-like postures.

But it appears he has no control over ministers like Advani.

The very fact that Pramod Mahajan denies any difference

between the priminister and the home minister. Confirms the-

impression that the two do not see eye to eye. The BJP will

rise above obscuranist views and give the country a secular

not Hindu government. The 13 parties had given their

support to Vajpayee, not Advani or other hardlines. Ashok

Singhal , heading the par ishad, has advocated the

establishment of Hindu Raj in India and a war against

Pakistan. Some responsible BJP leaders like Jaswant Singh

Urge Pakistan to go nuclear they should realise they are

playing with fire. The first remark made after the demolition

of the Babri Masjid was that two nation theory was proved

right underlining the Hindu and Muslims were two different

nations. True India has not yet be come a truly secular

country. True there are Hindu-Muslim riots.

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97. .—, —-, HINDUTVA AGENDA.

NAYAR (Kuldip). The Malady in Uttar Pradesh. Radiance.

31, 48; 1996, November, 9; 6-9.

The Bharatiay Janata Party is not my cup of tea. Its

communal politics has muddied waters of tolerance and

accommodation in the country. The malady, in UP, Gujarat

and elsewhere is that politics and power have got so inter

tulined that even the realisation to keep them separate is

not here. This is telling upon the system. What has been

done in UP, India's one sixth in population, to keep the

BJP out of power may push liberal elements, if not the

party, in to the background. The Rashtriya Swayamsevak

Sangh (RSS), the party's mentor, may bring back militant

Hindus to the centre stage and revive the old agenda on

the destruction of mosques, particularly in Mathura and

VaranasI, which share the premises of two Hindu temples.

Once again, the programme to formate communal troubles

may be put into action.

98. .—, —., .—, GLIMPSE.

VASFI (Ausaf Saied). A Glimpse of Hindutva at the centre.

Radiance. 31, 11; 1996, Feb, 11; 6-9.

The BJP- Shiva Sena led state government of

Maharashtra has exploded three myths that an open enemy

is better than the enemy passing as a friend, that the BJP

and Shiv Sena are secular, egalitarian and believe in the

much publicised justice for all and appraisement of none.

Third Myth, this myth rather is the hypotheses that the

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saffronites can provide an effective alternative to the plural

polity of India. Barring the BJP and its natural allies each

and every political party has critised the killing of the

Srikrishna commission. It has inflicted deeper injury to the

conscience of the nation than the calculated killings of

innocent Muslims. The systematic dismantl ing of the

minorities institutional structures in Maharashtra hinst at what

sort of rules the saffronites may prove at the centre.

99. .. . . , ...., . . „ , ICHR.

MURALIDHARAN (Shukia). The Hindutva takeover of ICHR.

Frontline. 15, 14; 1998, July, 17; 105-107.

In this article hetakes the Hindus and Muslims of India

hold separate views of their common history. The Hindu and

mUslim view oftheir common history have defferent in the

pas t .as they do today and that is a cause of their

separation in identity and action. The reconstitution of the

Indian Council of Historical Research (ICHR) giving positions

of authority to three VHP luminaries betrays a deep political

design on the part of the BJP led government. The

Hindutva takeover of the ICHR comes at a time when the

organisation is passing through a serious crisis. Cultural

nationalism is the unique political platform of the BJP which

few others share in the omnibus coalition it heads.

100. —-, —., —., POLITICS.

PATHAK (Avijit). Not by opportunism. Mainstream. 26, 12;

1998, March, 14; 3.

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The author of the article expectes that the BJP as it

had been reportedly argued by the leftists and securists, is

not just another rightist party. The fear is that it leads to

the communalisation of Civil Society, it is determined to

destroy the pluralistic ethos of Indian Society. Hindu religion

with its symbols and resources becomes an important

component of the BJP/RSS brand of Hindutva is exclusivist

in nature. As the arguments go has to be seen not as

some thing static, but as a dynamic process. The Bharatiya

Janata Party politics as indicated was also a kind of culture

politics. It had a cultural agenda. Unit India or the basis of

the Hindu identity use religion to arouse political embition.

101 — , -—, HISTORICAL BUSJOURNEY-DELHI-LAHORE.

GUHA (Seema). Vajpayee in Lahore on Historic visit. The

Sunday Times.7. 10; 1999, February, 21; 1.

Priminister Atal Behari Vajpayee on Saturday made a

historic bus journey to Pakistan, terming it a defining

moment in South Asian history and saying both countries

should make a new beginning putting a side the betterness

of the past Mr. Vajpayee was received with a warm hug by

his Pakistani Counter part Nawaz Sharif. I bring the good

will of the people of India for peace and harmony with

Pakistan, said Vajpayee. The two leaders to will held formal

talks on Sunday in the first highest political level interection

on Pakistani soil between the two sides after they resumed

official level talks in October last year following the nuclear

tests in May. Mr. Vajpayee along with Mr. Sharif later flew

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by a helicopter to governor's house in Lahore where the

Indian leader will be staying during his trip.

102. — , — , HYPOCRISY, PHYLOSOPHY, STRATEGIES.

VASFI (S. Ausaf Saed). BJP Double-Taik, Double-Deal Under

Sherpher Focus. Radiance. 33, 18; 1998, May, 3-9; 6-9.

Uprightness, perhaps is not the strong point of our

saffronite brethren. Probility does not appear to be in their

gain. It is their good fortune that nobady charges them with

catholicity, opines. Even foreigner feel they have two faces

and frequently indulge in double thought, double talk and

double deal. For a proof recall the well known. British

diplomat's reaction to Mr. N. Govinda Charya's logic. It is

probably for the removal of the impression of hypocrisy that

over foreign missions abroad have been recently instricted

to dispet misgiving about the philosophy and strategies of

the BJP led government and its good father the RSS. That

however is the fitness of things. The truth are not naive.

The have every right to point themselves white.

103. —-, —-, IDEOLOGY, HINDUTVA.

LAKDAWALA (M. Hanif). The BJP and its ideology onthe

road to oblivion. Radiance. 32, 49; 1997, December 6; 9-11.

The article indicates towards what prompted the BJP

In pulling off its mask of morality? Even Atal Behari

Vajpayee, its morality mascot, declared that what was done

by Kalyan Singh in U.P. would be repeated in Delhi too.

The lust for power, naked and brutal, made Vajpayee forget

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his own promise. He swore on May, 28, 1996, we (the

BJP) assure you, if power comes our way be breaking

other parties, I will never want to touch such power even

with a barge pole. BJP's Hindutva is being its relevance

Hindu Rashtra, Slogan no more attracts the people in the

changed scenario. Thus in the rise of BJP its ideology has

no important place. In future BJP may not be lucky to get

these benefits. BJP has become the party of contradiction.

Its economic policy is in a mass. The counter the

communal poli t ics of the BJP the simple strategy is

honesty, commitment and selfless service to the masses.

104. KIDWAI (Ansar). Vajpayee for governance, Not Politics.

Nation and the World. 8, 175; 1999, February; 28.

The author discusses his view that the Prime Minister

Atal Behari Vajpayee has asked several of his colleagues

but he has no regrets for his performance. The Vajpayee

government found itself at the receiving and for having given

ago by to the Hindutva ideology, preferring power to

principle, it all began with the formation of the Sangh

Parivar in the aftermath of the Ayodhya agitation. The

Vajpayee-Advani relationship is often likened to that of

Nehru and Patel in the congress. This is no relavance and

Advani is no Patel to Vajpayee's Nehru. Nehru was a

socialist while Patel was pragmatic and right wing. Both

Vajpayee and Advani had their political schooling with in

RSS fold andtheir differences are nuance-based K. Thakre

was present at the Nagpur conclave and was even a party

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to the pejorative appraisal of Vajpayee's style of governance.

Vajpayee found himself on a sufficiently safe ground to

have gone on the offensive against his detractors at

Bangalore. Thus the implications of Vajpayee winning the

'Banglore Round' can neither be over estimated nor under­

estimated.

105. —-, -—, INDO-PAK RELATION, BUS ERVICE, DELHI-

LAHORE.

SAGAR (S.G.). Will the bus move on. Alive. 1999, 198;

1999, April; 10-15.

The article deal with the bus diplomacy has created a

euphoria of sorts in Indo-Pak relation. But can the basic

contensions issues between the 2 countries be sorted out

through such dramatics. The bus diplomacy of the Indian

pr iminister Atal Behari Vajpayee and his Pakistani

counterpart Mian Nawaz Sharif has finally broken the ICC

in the strained Indo-Pak relations, once and all, means

overtaking history without taking into account the stark

realities.

106. MAHAUTI (Subhodh). Prime Minister's Historic Visit to

Pakistan. Employment News. 23, 48; 1999, March, 5; 1.

This article indicates that the Prime Minister Atal

Behrai Vajpayee paid a two day visit to Pakistan from

February 20 to 21 , 1999. The visit in which the Prime

Minister travelled to Lahore via Wagah border in a bus,

marks a historic break through in Indo-Pak relations and is

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widely being seen as a big step forward in improving

friendly ties between the two countries. The two priministers

during their talks touched upon almost all issues of mutual

concerned including that of Kashmir and also regional

cooperation within SAARC countries to increase not only

mutual trust and harmony but also broad base economic

cooperation, by sharing one another's human resources as

well as expertise in various fields. The diplomatic initiative

by the priminister Atal Behari Vajpayee has been widely

welcomed at home and abroad for it has once again

demonstrated that India was prepared to go an expramile to

improve its relation with Pakistan. The countries has open

up a new vista of friendship and close relations between the

people of India and Pakistan.

107. ----, ----, -—, ----, MUTUAL CONFIDENCE.

NAYAR (Kuldip). Bus Diplomacy. Periodical Humanist. 63, 3;

1999, June; 11.

The author discuss about the bus ride from wagah to

the other side blanket the two countries with hope and

confidence. The Nawaz-Vajpayee Summit was the stuff

drams are made of. The feel good factor in Pakistan-India

relations is a rarity and one is tempted to hang on to it

as long as possible, if for noting else than to relish the

exciting possibilities that it conjures. There are a host of

factors which have the potential of punctuating the bus

diplomacy which include domestic compulsions mutual

mistrust , uncertainty, second thoughts, di f fer ing

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in terpretat ions and in the extreme case fal l of the

government. These factors were swept away in the

background by the sentimental avalanche that accompanied

Vajpayee, Pakistan Visit. We can assume that as per

tradition peace between Pakistan and India is merely the

period falling between two round of battle. In fact the

Lahore Declaration should build mutual confidence. There is

no need for a third party.

108. —-, —-, INTERNAL RIVALRY.

KIDWAI (Praful). Hindutva and 'moth eaten' governance.

Frontline. 16, 4; 1999, February, 13-26; 15-16.

As the sordid drama of internal rivalry in the Sangh

Parivar unfolds, it should be clear that Prime Minister Atal

Behari Pajpayee is himself part of the force he complains

about. The government is beleaguered by its own ideological

mentors and organisational gate keepers. The RSS power

and authority in the BJP comes prior to such minor details

as elections or the politicl skills or merit of its nominees. It

does not rest on internal democracy. The RSS has the last

word in the BJP. It also has the first. What distunguishes

Vajpayee from his brothers in the Sangh Parivar is not

liberalism or secularism but that being in power the under

stands the importance of damage control, and has been

practising it, albeit ham-handedly. Ironically this has in many

ways had the opposi te effect. The BJP is being

disingenusus, in addition to being disgustingly communal, in

the anti-minorities compaign. The same seems true of the

central government's future. The sooner it goes, the better.

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109. .—, —-, INTRUDERS, KARGIL.

RAJA (D). "After me the Deluge" says Vajpayee. New Age.

1999, July, 17; 1.

Our army is fighting a heroic battle to recapture our

own territory occupied by the intruders in Kargil. it has

been paying tremendous price by shedding blood and laying

down precious lives of our officers and soldiers not only to

defend the borders in the extremely difficult mountainious

terrains and adverse climate of the Kargil region but also

for the failures and inept handling of the situation by the

BJP led care taker government. The BJP led government at

present in just a care taker government headed by Atal

Behari Vajpayee.

110. — , —., KARGIL ISSUE.

AGHA (Qamar). Crisis in Kargil. Nation and the World. 8,

185; 1999, July, 1; 38-39.

The author discuss India has kep the peace option

open. Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee had conveyed to

Islamabad that the conflict in Kargil may be peacefully

settled if Pakistan ends the instrusion and respects the line

of control. The western nations, particularly united states,

Britain and France had rejected the Pakistan moves to raise

the Kashmir issue in United Nations and advised the Nawaz

Sharif government to negotiate the dispute with India and

sort out its problem before it gets out of control. The US is

also putting pressure on Islamabad to improve its ties with

India and that is possible only if Pakistan gives up its

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support to separates elements in Kashmir and accept the

status-qvo in Jammu and Kashmir. In both the cases it is

going to face serious internal crisis.

111. KIDWAI (Anser). A Friendship Betrayed. Nation and the

World. 8, 187; 1999, August, 1; 16.

When bus diplomacy was initiated by Prime Minister

Vajpayee come about and seemingly earned full reciprocity

from his Pakistani counter part. The friendship bu rolled out

from Delhi for Lahore in February this year, two months

before the fall of the Vajpayee government. No body could

have then envisaged that the coming months would unfold a

sorded drama of bloodshed, horror and betrayal of the

worst order from the neighbouring side. The events in

Kargi l caused an irreparable damage to the peace

processes making the Shimla Agreement and Lahore

Declaration, a dead letter.

112. — , — , — , INFILTRATORS.

NAYAR (Kuldip). Who are the infiltrators? Nation and the

World. 8, 185; 1999, July, 1; 30-31.

There are no infiltrators; they are freedom fighters

who are fighting for their right of self determination, this

was Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's reply to Prime

Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee who told him that the

infiltrators must vacate the territory they had occupied on

the Indian side of the line of control (LOG). Yasin Malik and

Shabir Shah the two popular young leaders were among the

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freedom fight. They have realised that a peaceful expression

of grievances is for more effective than violence. It had

been proved beyond doubt that the Pakistan Soldiers

crossed the LOG to fight, lead and help the infiltrators In

the Kargil sector. At places the Pakistani force have been

fighting without even dressing up as infiltrators. It means

that the Pakistan forces had been fighting on the Indian

side of kashmir. The statment by both sides that it is a

war-like situation in ominous. The ray of hope is that the

two Prime Ministers still talk about the Lahore Declaration,

which exchews hostilities.

113. -—, —-, -—, STRATEGIES.

SHARMA (Narendra). Kargil Adds to BJP's woes. New Age.

47, 24; 1999, June, 19; 13-14.

The author discuss the differing perceptions about the

likely role and place of the new party formed by the power

Sangma trio in the national scene and the impact of Sonia

Gandhi's foreign origin have already made it difficult for the

BJP strategists to chalk out a coherent election strategy.

The Kargil development have added to their owes, according

to available indication. The BJP strategists are a more

worried lot due to the Kargil imbroglio which has already

taken the shine off the Prime Minister bus ride to Lahore.

This is easier said than done, given the penchant of the

BJP and its homew and defence ministers to trumpet their

concepts of national security.

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114. —., —-, LAHORE DECLARATION.

JOSHI (Manoj). Peace Pledge. India Today. 14, 10; 1999,

March, 8; 59.

The article deals with reducing the risk of accidental

nuclear holocaust was a key goal of the Lahore Summit. At

f i rst sight memorandum of understanding signed by

Raghunath and Ahmad in Lahore on February 21, appears

to be nothing more than a declaration of intent. Both the

sides need to reduce the risk of nuclear war and eventually

build a frameword of peace. Their commitment to discuss

security concepts and nuclear doctrines couldlead to path

breaking agreement on defence postures that do not

threaten the other. There are simple explanations. Nawaz

Sharif and Atal Behari Vajpayee created a diplomatic

firestorm by crossing the nuclear threshold in May 1998.

Their goad was preserving national security. Having achieved

this, they now seem to be signalling that the time has come

to get on with more urgent tasks of governing their poor

and backward nations.

115. CHERIAN (John). Lahore and Beyond. Frontline. 16, 5;

1999, March, 12; 9-10.

The author discusses about the various sections of

opinion in Pakistan that are sceptical about the Nawaz

Sharif-Atal Behari Vajpayee diplomatic initiative, but the

general impression is that it is a step in the right direction.

The Lahore declaration is an important step towards

establ ishing good neighbourly relat ions. The Lahore

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declaration talked in general terms with sides confining

themselves to recognising that the nuclear dimensions of the

security environment of the two countries adds to their

responsibility for avoidance of conflict. The Vajpayee's visit

has cuased a bit of political turmoil, Sharif has reason to

be happy with Vajpayee's referene to Kashmir in his

banquet speech and in the Lahore declaration. The once to

fulfil the expectations giving rise to the people of the two

countries is now onthe leadership of the two countries.

116. DHAR (M.K.). Death of Lahore Declaration. Nation and the

World. 8, 185; 1999, July, 1; 32.

The article deals with the political scene to warne

Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee of the parils of alow

himself to be troped by Nawazsharif in to Singing Lahore

Declaratin as it was worded. The Lahore Declaration says:

Recalling their agreement of 23rd September, 1998, that an

enviornment of peace and security is in the supreme

national interest of both sides and tha resolution of all

outstanding issues including Janimu and Kashmir is essential

for this purpose. Despete the havoc wrought to the defence

forces by Farnandes antics, the Jowans were valeantly

batted the intruders in the in hospitable terrain. The Lahore

Declaration had been clearly violated as it commits both

sides to refrain form intervention and interference in each

other's interenal affars.

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117. VAJPAYEE'S BUS Ride. Alive. April, 1999, 198; 1999, April; 8.

The author express his view that the Prime Minister

Atal Behari Vajpayee's bus trip to Pakistan in February this

year was hailed as a historic step towards building

friendship with that country. Mush as was made of the

Lahore Declaration that was signed at the end of the visit.

It was a great step towards building confidence between

India and Pakistan. The Declaration is that two sides wil

take immediate steps to reduce the risk of accident! or

unauthorised use of nuclear weapons. Vajpayee has his bus

ride to Lahore. Nawazsharif too may have his bus ride to

Amristar or New Delhi. It only means taking the people of

both the countries for a side, givingthem false hopes.

Kashmir in fact is an emotive issue with grave political

implications. The leaders who compromiseon it in both India

and Pakistan may well dig thier political graves.

118 , , , INDO-PAK, AGREEMENT.

AMIT BARUAH. The Declaration and After. Frontline. 16,

26; 1999, March, 26; 24.

The article indicates that any attempt by India or

Palistan to score political points has the patential to prevent

forward movement in the talks between the two countries.

TheLahore Declaratin signed by Prime Minister A.B.

Vajpayee and Nawazsharif, both leaders began playing to

the gallery at homeon the Kashmir issue. The memorandom

of understanding signed in Lahore duringVajpayee's visit with

the needto engage in regular consultation on security

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concept and need for peace and development. The Lahore

Declaration refers to the "issue of Jamu and Kashmir,"

while the Simla agreement refers to "a final settlement of

Jammu and Kashmir." In fact one roundof substantive

discussions on peace and security and Jammu and Kahsmir

issue was heldin Islamabad on October 1998. The

Vajpayee's "bus deplomacy" made a good impression on the

people of Pakistan. The two Prime Minister need to work

towards actualising the agreements entered into. Otherwise

the Lahore initative can easily descend into the same

quangmive the two countries had been struck in.

119. -—, , , —--, MUTUAL CONFIDENCE.

NAYAR (Kuldip). After Lahore Declaration what. Radiance.

34, 13; 1999, April, 18-24; 2.

The authors feels that Lahore Declaration would build

mutual confidence. It has made a new start possibleLinvingin

the past would only back better memones. If Great Britain

and France could be friends after fighting wars for 100

years why not India Pakistan. The Lahore declaration has

mention at more than one place that the problem wil be

settled peacefully, through belateral talks. Prime Minister

Nawaz Sharif has repeated the assurance even after the

declaration.

120. -—, —-, —-, RESTRAINT.

ZIA MIAN. Beyond : From transparency to arms control.

Economic and Political Weekly. 34, 16; 1999, April, 17; 938-41.

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The author state that what the US and USSR did

dcade ago. India and Pakistan have started to turn to

'transparency' measures as a way to reassure as a way to

reassure themselves and the international community, about

the nuclear dangers they have created. The measures

however do not confront the central fact that two countries

now have acquired the means to fight a nuclear war. The

recent test of Agnl II and Ghauri-ll and references to Agni

III Ghauri III and Shaheen I and II demonstrate just how

little restraint the Lahore agreements in poses on th two

states continuing to develop their nuclear arsenats. The

urgent task was to engage in the political work that would

put peace at the top of the agenda.

121. —-, .—, LIBERALISATION, IMPORT.

CHANDRASHEKHAR (C.P.). The Swadesh route to

liberalisation. Frontline. 15, 9; 1998, May, 8; 10.

The BJP led government's decision as reflected in the

eximpolicy, to accelerate import liberalisation, despite signs

of a widening current account deficit, shows that it is more

keen on pleasing the developed countries represented in the

WTO than pushing ahead with its Swadehiplank. Resorting

to increased tariffs however involves reversing the unilateral

decision taken by previous governments to ensure a

continuous decline in maximum and average applied tariff

rates. The BJP has nationalist rhetoric, including its stated

intensive to keep the nuclear option open would be can

done. The BJP has mastered the art of playing with

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symbols whether they be nebulous ones like swadeshi or

real ones like the bomb or the mosques it wants to destroy

and the temples it wants to build.

122. -—, — , NUCLEAR POLICY, AFFECTED.

RAM (N). The perils of nuclear adventurism. Frontline. 15,

11; 1998, May 23; 8-10.

The BJP led governments nuclear policy could now

swing from adventurism to compromise and appearement. It

is clear that the Vajpayee Government's RSS inspired

nuclear hawkinshness as demonstrated in the Pokhran

explosure and in the talk of nuclear weaponisation has not

served India's national and democratic inrterests at all.

Unitateral and unprovoked conversion of the nuclear option

into weapons backed by a delivery system will have very

harmful consequences for peace and security in the region

and especially for Sino-lndian and India-Pakistan relations

and wi l l harm India's reputation international ly. The

economic and political price for this act of adventurism is

also likely to be staff.

123. -—, —-, -—, CTBT.

MENON (S.M.). The Nuclear imperium and its vassal kings.

Economic and Political Weekly. 33, 31; 1998, August, 1-7;

2054-57.

Apart from seeking a special dispensation for India

within the CTBT regime, the new, emerging nuclear policy is

unclear and the terms of the engagement remain unstated.

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It begins to seem likely that the BJP-led government would

be willing to settle for a cosmetic, face saving concession

from the lords of the global nuclear imperium, rather than a

substantive one.

124. -—, -—, -—, INDIA.

KIDWAI (Praful). Seeking a paradigm Shift. Frontline, 15, 8;

1998, April, 24; 17-18.

The article indicate the BJP's nuclear policy is an

umprincipled violent break with long established consenses. It

will degrade India's security and legitimse horror weapons.

The government has no mandate for this. In reality the BJP

led Government 's stated nuclear policy is a major,

unconscionable, violent departure from the earlier official

posture. The premises that underlie the BJP government's

stated nuclear policy violate the Indian stand on this issue

for five decades-that nuclear weapons, being weapons of

mass destruct ion are moral ly indefensib le, legal ly

impremissible and strategically irrational. The BJP led

government will have to think twice before actually decldiing

to go over nuclear. The BJP which most vociferously

demands nuclearisation is also the party most associated

with bellicouse communal politics. After all the BJP with its

25 percent vote and its shaky ragtag government, has no

mandate to make long term, possible irreversible, policy

change.

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125. —-, -—, NUCLEAR POWER, IRONY, INDIA.

INDIA AS a Nuclear power. Competition Master. 39, 11;

1998, June; 932.

The author expresses his views that it would be an

irony of sorts if our country, that gave the message of

peace and non violance to the world were to became a

nuclear power India will have to show a lot of restraint if it

is to remain a non-nuclear state. Or will the BJP led

government give in to demand to developed nuclear

weapons. In this article we discuss the consequence of a

nuclear race in the region and what the future hold.

Whether we decide to go nuclear or not it is clear that

nation faces grave choice as it must respond to the

challenge from across the border.

126. -—, -—, NUCLEAR PROGRAME, CONSEQUENCES,

ECONOMIC, POLITICAL.

GIDWANI (Vanay Krishin). India's Nuclear tests : Loss of

moral station and coverage. Economic and Political Weekly.

33, 22; 1998, June, 5; 1312-15.

In India 1545 hours 1st, May, 11, 1998, will remain a

moment of moral incert i tute. The BJP led coal i t ion

government of India made two fateful decisions; first it gave

sanction to Indian defence scientists to test three nuclear

devices at Pokhran, one of these a thermonuclear device;

second it abandoned India's commitment to a peaceful

nuclear programme. While the economic and political

consequences and underlying logic of the nuclear tests

101

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require to be critically evaluated, the reasons for desmay at

India's nuclear turn are neither economic nor political. The

real cause for distress is India's loss of moral stature and

courage.

127. -—, ----, NUCLEAR TESTS, AFTER EFFECTS.

RAM (N). From nuclear adventurism to appearement.

Frontline. 15, 12; 1998, June, 19; 11-14.

The BJP led government's nuclear adventurism and

militarism have landed the government the country and the

region in a mess the like of which they have not faced

before. A new situation has been created by Pakistan's

tests but India is prepared to meet any eventuality. We are

committed to maintain deterrence. The Sharif and Vajpayee

statement of May 28, 1998, speak to a dangerously

destabilished, volatile situation in the region. The Vajpayee

government and the India nuclear energy establishment need

to come out with the full truth, backed by sufficient

evidence. The BJP's nuclear game plan if there was are

has back f i red and vitual ly cal lopsed. The BJP led

government's nuclear policy is well into a process of

swinging from hawkish adventurism to compromise and

appearsement.

128. —-, —-, —-, AGNI.

MEHTA (Ashok). Agni Pariksha. Sunday. 26. 16; 1999,

April, 18-24; 14-15.

Article deals with India's successfully lanching Agni II

102

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missile. By all accounts the scientists of the integrated

missile development programme have scored a bull's eye a

totally fault free launch and a perfect 11 minutes tracking

of the minute from launch to its designated point of infact

more than 2000 kns away. The agni tests will hot up the

multiply war of words between India and US India and

Pakistan and India and china. The prospect for the 10th

round of JW with China already delayed by a year may

become a non startert. The missile tests is likely to blow

away much sooner than the fall out of the nuclear tests.

129. —., - - , —., CODEMNATION.

SAROSH (Bana). Blast Em All. Blitz. 58, 20; 1998, May,

16; 1.

India ove rides global condemnation in realising its

nuclear deterance. Bludge oning the grounds well of world

wide condemnation that has not unanticipatedly followed,

India signalled its arrival as a weaponlsed nucfear power by

barnstormina the exclusivist atomic club at 3.45 p.m. on

Monday and then following them up with two additional

unannounced and equally unexpected detonations on

Wednesday. The US will rally world opinion against India on

this score its sanctions including halt to world bank credit

that last year amounted to $ 1.5 billion, and discontinuing

the annual $ 140 million government and as well as exports

of American computers parts and military technology. With

this planned series of five tests now complete and carried

out in the and wastes of Pokhran, 100 km from Rajasthan's

103

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border with Pakistan, India became a sixth member, 34

years after its fifth and last member, China, had joined it.

130. —., —-, —., CONSENSUS, HINDUTVA.

AJAZ AHMAD . The Hindutva Weapon. Frontline. 15, 11;

1998, June, 5; 21-23.

The author expresses his views, as a full scale

reactionary agenda begins to upfold, it is becoming clear

that the consensus behind the BJP's dangerus nuclear

adventure is an attempted consensus, behind Hindutva. The

Pakistan explosions have brought independent India to a

watershed comparable in its long term political significance,

to the sino-lndian war the emergency and the destruction of

the Babri Masjid. The BJP will act precisely the way it

acted on the Ayodhya issue and the way it has been

acting on the nuclear issue until now. The consensus

behind Vajpayee's nuclear policy, amounts to consensus

behind Hindutva. Equally strongly the point needs to be

made that this act of boguns ani-imperialism is designed to

facilitate the ability of the Hindutvia forces to implement a

programme of liberalisation and privatisation for more drastic

than anything, P. Chidombaram was able to implement or

even envision.

131. — , -—, — , CRUCIAL PHASE.

VANAIK (Achin). Crossing the Rubicon. Economic and

Political Weekly. 33, 24; 1998, June, 13; 1433-36.

The article deals with the overnight ruthless political

104

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force of great evil and determination that changed the

parameters of debate and struggle on so vital an issue as

nuclear security and insecurity, as well as on related

concerns such as India's relationship to its neighbours and

to the World. Vajpayee said that the on May, 11, 1998,

India crossed the nuclear Rubicon embarking on a journey

that can only bring more insecurity, tension, maldevelopment

even as it represents another crucial phase in the ongoing

efforts ofthe Sangh combine to total ly transform the

character of Indian Society.

132. - - , —., —., DISTRESS.

GIDWANI (Vinay Krishan). India's Nuclear Tests : Loos of

Moral stature and courage. Economic and Political Weekly.

33, 22; 1998, May, 30; 1312-15.

In India 1545 hours 1st May, 11, 1998, will remain a

moment of moral incert i tute. The BJP led coal i t ion

government of India made two fateful decisions : first it

gave sanction to Indian defence scientists to test three

nuclear devices at Pokhran one of these a thermonuclear

device; second it abandoned India's commitment to a

peaceful nuclear programme. While the economic and

political consequences and underlying logic of the nuclear

teste requrie to be critically evaluated the reasons for

dismay at India's nuclear turn are neither economic nor

political. The real cause for distress is India's loss of moral

stature and courage.

105

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133. -—, —-, —-, FISSION DEVICE.

RAO (Rama, M). India conducts 3 Nuclear tests. National

Herald. 30, 65; 1998, May, 13; 1.

The article deals with India, successfully conducted

three underground nuclear tests in Pokhran range on

Monday. The BJP a political weapon for calling, an early

midterm poll. The morale booster by the BJP faithful and

big surprise by rest of the world, the tests came exactly

twenty four years after India demonstrated its nuclear

capability with an under ground test with a fission device at

the same Pokhran site. This tests conducted today were

with a f ission dev ice , a low yield device and a

thermonuclear device. India remains committeed to speedly

process of nuclear disarmanent leading to total and global

elimination of nuclear weapons.

134. —-, -—, —-, INPT, CTBT, JAPAN.

SINGH (Rai). India as Sixth Nuclear Weapons State. Nation

and the World. 8, 16; 1998, June, 16; 17.

It has been accepted widely that India has emerged

as the new or the sixth nation of the world with capability

and capacity to produce nuclear weapons. Whether India

would actually produce and deploy nuclear weapons for its

defence in the near future is another matter. Priminister

Atal Behari Vajpayee had announced on May, 11, that India

had exploded three nuclear devices, including one thermo

nuclear at 3.45 pm at Pokhran. Japan wants India to stop

its nuclear testing immediately and sign the NPT and CTBT

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at the earlist. It may be recall that the French are keen to

increase their business cooperation with India. French which

is the leader of the airbus industries consortium has been

pushing hard to sell airbus aircraft to air India and also

Indian Air lines. The americans are also lobbying keenly to

self boeing commercial aircraft to India. India should also

reiterate its promise against the first use of nuclear weapon

against anyone. Declaration of moratorium on nuclear tests,

though welcome is not sufficient.

135. —-, —-, —-, LAHORE DECLARATON.

JAYARAMAN (T.), Lahore Declaration and Nuclear Issues.

Frontline. 16, 12; 1999, March, 12; 12.

The key message of the Lahore Declaration as well

as the Memorandum of understanding (MOU) is that the govt

are bent on holding course towards nuclear weaponisation,

whatever be the political, social and economic costs. BJP

led government holds to a policy of the uni tateral

deployment of nuclear weapons a peace threatening and

destabilising mores. Essentially the Declaration and the

MOD'S promise that the two parties will play the deterrence

game well and safety. The sale positive more has been the

confirmation and identifinity extension of the moratorium on

nuclear testing. Hope for future lies in the fact that for all

the hype, nuclear weaponisation in the subcostinent will

proceed slowly. There is time for new political leadership in

both countries to display the wisdom need to draw the

subcontinent back from the brints of nuclear weaponisation

107

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by Understanding fresh peace on ented initiatives.

136 - - , —-, - - , NEXT STEP, MISSILE, SURYA.

PRASANNAN (R). Going full Blast. The Week. 16, 23;

1998, May, 24; 33-35.

The article deals with a series of five explosion India

has forced its way into the nuclear club. The Hydrogen

bomb has stunned the world which now worries about

India's next step : the inter continental ballistic, missile

surrya. Priminister Atal Behari Vajpayee hardly 54 days into

rulling third world's India with a rag tag coalition, cocked a

nuke at the superpowers with their mega death bombs. Five

eearth shaking tests in the sandy wastes of Rajasthan and

a sixth nuclear power has been born for the third

millenium. Unlike that first test (Greater of 1974 explosion in

pokhran) there is no apologetic suffix of 'peaceful' to the

Buddha Purnima of 1998. There is a deliberate attempt to

flaunt the yet-to-be acquired weaponry.

137. -—, —-, —-, NUCLEAR WEAPON STATE, INDIA.

WELLS (H.G.). India's Nuclear Gamble. Competition Master.

39, 12; 1998, July; 1017.

The article analysis the nuclear compulsion of India on

May 11, 1998, India reaffirmed its nuclear powers by

conducting three under ground nuclear tests, code named

Shakti I to III in the Pokhran range in Rajasthan. These

were followed by two more tests on May 13. Priminister Atal

Behari Vajpayee said that India, thus joined the club of five

108

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nuclear weapon states. Despite pressures from USA and its

allies Pakistany conducted five tests on May 28, 1998 thus

increasing the possibility of a nuclear arms race in the

indian subcontinent. This article analysis the nuclear

compulsions of India, the background as also comments on

the future scanario. Priminister Atal Behari made the

announcement of India's nuclear tests on May 11 at a

hurriedly called press conference.

138. - - , .—, .—, PEACE, THREAT, SOUTH ASIA.

ROLL BACK Nuclear Weaponisation. New age. 46, 31 ;

1998, August, 2-8; 1.

The article deals with the nuclear explosion conducted

in May 1998 by the BJP government of India and Sharif

government of Pakistan and consequent talk of and moves

towards nuclear weaponisation, have given rise to serious

situation that threatens peace, security and well being in

South Asia. Nuclear weapons are weapons of mass

annihilation of a genocidal character. The achievement of

the BJP led government with in four months of assuming

office has been to undermine both the non mil i tary,

peaceful orientation of India's nuclear policy and the

country's leverage against the unequal global nuclear

bargain.

139. -—, —., .—, POKHRAN.

CHATTERJEE (Partha). How we loved the bomb and Later Rued It.

Economic and Political Weekly. 33, 24; 1998, June, 13; 1437-41.

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The article Indicates that with the test explosions in

Pokhran, the euphoria in India has evaporated. When

parliament debated the issue on May 28 and 29 the mood

was critical, worried, sometimes introspective. In real political

terms, the objective of the Indian elite is not Universal

d isarmament, but to move from the side of the

discriminated to that of the discriminators. That is the

underlying polit ical agenda on which a new national

consensus is being sought. If we do not keep this in view,

we will also fail to understand another bewildering turn that

has taken place in the last few weeks : the sudden

declaration that China is India's principal security threat.

140. JOSHI (Anuja). The man who never closes his mouth.

Sunday. 25, 30; 1998, July, 26; 8.

Madan Lai Khuana has given his party a lot to worry

about his mouth being almost always half open. Take his

performance in the last 100 days of the BJP government.

Immediately after the Pokhran blasts, Khurana did his unzip

mouth insert food act yet again. Both Vajpayee and Advani

pulled him up. The BJP government has become a bit of a

joke in parliament since in the past 100 days there have

been more walk outs by its allies than by the opposition. It

does not help that Khurana lacks the finesse and subtility

his job requires. It also does not help that every time he

makes a blunder he holds a press conference to highlight

that fact. It was Atal Behari Vajpayee who explain to

Khurana you must get out of regional politics and come to

no

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the centre. We need you there "said Vajpayee. And

Khurana was nnore than pleased to carry his open mouth.

But for how long is anybody's guess. The views of the

author are not necessarity those of the party.

141. ROY (Arandhati). The end of imagination. Frontline. 15, 16;

1998, August, 1-14; 4-7.

By afternoon the wind had fallen silent over Pokhran.

At 3.45 p.m; the timor detonated the three devices. Around

200 to 300m deep in the earth the heat generated was

equivalent to a mill ion degrees centigrade as hot as

temperatures on the sun. Instantly rocks weighing around a

thousand tons, a mini mountain underground, vapourized.

Shakwaves from the blast began to lift a mount on earth the

size of a foot ball field by several metres. One scientist on

seeing it said. "I can now believe stores of Lord Krishna

lifting a hill.

142. WALIA (Kaajal). Smiling Dharmaraj. Sunday. 26, 21; 1999,

May, 23-29; 7.

The article indicates towards Buddha Smiling at

Pokhran on 11 May. This year on 11 May, it was

'caretaker' Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee who could

not stops smiling at the impressure turnout at Shivaji Park

in Bombay. The first anniversary of India going nuclear. He

stressed that it was all meant for peaceful use. He also

recalled the positive outcome of his bus ride to Lahore.

The Information and Broadcasting Minister Pramod Mahajan

i n

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gave a spirit performance attacking the "lady witin Italian

origins". Vajpayee has been in public service since he was

15 years. The people who brought down the government

are the Kauravas. Vajpayee is Yudhister, AdvanI Is Arjun.

and Fernandes the might bhim.

143. —-, —-, —-, —-, BUDGET.

BANA (Sarosh). Nuclear racism. Blitz. 58, 22; 1998, May,

30; 2.

The Vajpayee's government will do will not to take

recourse to a harsh budget in an effort to escape the

economic noose that appears to be tightening round India in

the wake of its nuclear tests in Pokhran on May 11 and

13. If India has done will in standing up to world opinion in

exercising it nuclear option it should do will to stand up to

the sanctions as well by not crumbling under them in the

union budget.

144. KAPOOR (Sanjay). Budget to nuke reform process. Blitz.

58, 22; 1998, May, 30; 1.

The article deals with serial nuclear tests at Pokhran

and the sanctions inposed by the united states and other

western countries are likely to provide swadeshi hawks in

the BJP's coalition government with the excuse to push

through an isolationist agenda-beginning with the up coming

budget. The pain and suffering which may come in the

wake of economic sanctions, it contents, will strengthen the

process of national consolidation. The BJP led coalition

claims that it has a contingency plan to take care of

sanctions. The budget will unveil that plan, if there is one.

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145. —-, —-, -—, -—, FISSION DEVICE.

INDIA CONDUCTS thre nuclear tests. The Hindustan Times.

74; 131; 1998, May, 12; 1.

On May 11, India successfully conducted three

underground nuclear tests in the Pokhran range in

Rajasthan, 24 year after the nation had conducted the first

such tests. The dramatic announcement about the three

tests conducted at 3.45 p.m. was made by priminister Atal

Behari Vajpayee at a hurriedly convened press conference

at his residence here. The test had been conducted with a

fission device, a low yield device and a thermonuclear

device.

146. —., —., —., .—, HYSTERIA, CONSENSUS, POLITICAL.

RAINA (R). Hindu bomb. New Wave. 27, 40; 1998, May,

24; 3.

The insidious design behind the Vajpayee government's

Pokhran adventure is gradually manifesting itself. Now that

the mist of euphoria has started lifting both political parties

and commentators are having second thoughts over the real

reasons for the nuclear tests. Nuclear adventure for it's the

demol i t ion of Babri Masj id , aimed at captur ing and

consolidation political power for partisan ends. The other

myth is that the BJP will win the next elections which it

may hold before the Pokhran hysteria fully subsides. If the

BJP is sincere about restoring national honour it must

repudiate its antiminorities agenda and publicity abandon

divisive, exclusivist Hindutva Ideology. That alone will ensure

political consensus and national cohesion.

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147. —-, —-, —-, —-, POLITICAL PLAY.

KUNJU (N). Bread, Not Bomb. Nation and the World. 8,

175; 1999, Febraury, 1; 20.

The article deals with what India needs is not nuclear

bomb but economic development. Japan and Germany have

proved this point, the author discusses that the pokhran

tests were a political play by the BJP to divert the attention

from government's non-performance and internal squabbles.

The Atal Behari Vajpayee government pushed to the corner

by its non-performance, contradictions between its actions

and agenda that made its ranks restless and above all, has

taken refuge in the nuclear bang to overcome the

opposition, both internal and external. The Parivar Cadres

angry at not being able to build the Ram Mandir at

Ayodhya nad having to surrender the lion's share of power

to unsympathetic all iance partners, have now become

ecstat ic with this self procla imed. Hindutva nuclear

achievement. Advani has aid that India would suffer in the

preparation for conventional war because of the sanctions.

Nuclear bomb are not weapons of war but of mass

distruction.

148. —-, -—, -—, —., STATUS, INDIA.

JOSHI (Manoj). Nuclear shock waves. India today. 23, 21;

1998, May, 25; 22-30.

The art ic le deals with the Pokhran tests that

proclaimed India a nuclear weapons state took the world by

surprise. For the BJP however it was the fulfilment of a

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long standing promise, Risi^ing international opprobrium and

economic sanctions, the government has gone ahead with

the nuclear tests. Will the gamble work? And at what cast?

Priminister Atal Behari Vajpayee chose the auspicious

Buddha Purnima to trumpet India's status as the world's

sixth nuclear weapon state. These tests have proved that we

can make any kind of nuclear weapons.

149. -—, —-, —-, —-, THREAT, DEMOCRACY.

JOSHI (Manoj). Hawkish India. India today. 23, 22; 1998,

June, 1; 28-34.

May 11, 3.45 p.m. site of nuclear test in Pokhran.

The article Indicate that the Pokhran tests and their after

math have radically redefined India's foreign policy, forcing

other nuclear weapons states to reevaluate their basic

assumptions about the country being a benign democracy,,

slow to anger and action. It is now seen as nation

pursuiting its interests aggressively, discarding its self-

righteous halo Priminister Atal Behari Vajpayee stood at the

edge of the large crater caused by India's recent nuclear

blasts in pokhran and simply flashed the "V" Sign. In an

attempt to muscle its way into the big boys' club, India is

jettisoning its idological baggage and indulging in real politic

Calculations on China went awry, the tensions excalted and

India backed down, but the damage to relations is still

serious.

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150. —-, -—, —-, PRESSURE, WASHINGTON.

EUPHORIA AND reality. Frontline. 16, 6; 1999, March, 26;

23.

After Lahore, India and Pakistan appear to have

prepared in to antagonistic rhetoric. However evidently, they

are coordinating heir responses to nuclear and related

issues. India and Pakistan seem to have offered to sign the

CTBT before September 1999. The memorandum of under

standing signed in Lahore during Vajpayee's visit deals with

the need to engage in regular consultations on security

concepts and nuclear doctrines, to notify each other in

case of nuclear accidents and to provide early warning of

missile tests. The Kashmir issue continues to remain on the

front burner. Nawaz Sharif claim that during his visit to

Lahore Vajpayee had given an assurance that the question

of self determination would be considered. Indian offificals

claim that western investor confidence in South Asia has

increased after Vajpayee's visit to Lahore. Indian official

insist that there is a convergence of views of nuclear and

other related issues with Pakistan, they deny that India and

Pakistan are coordinating their efforts to face up to

pressure from Washington.

151. -—, - - , —., SHAKTI - 1998.

ONE YEAR after Pokhran. Competition Master. 40, 12;

1999, July; 1045.

The author expresses his news about India exploding

the shakti nuclear tests on May 11, 1998. The world was

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shocked last year when Indian and Pakistan exploted their

nuclear bombs. Disapprovals and economic sanctions were

quick to come. The world seemed to be a little move unsafe

as the two countries seemed poised to go and divastating

arm race. The country's nuclear weapons deterant has not

deterred Pakistan which has created war like conditions in

Kashmir. We examine the nucelar balance sheet after one

year of Pokhran, the benefits and the costs.

152. BARDHAN (A.B.) The Nuclear Explosions and After. New

Age. 46, 21; 1998, May, 24-30; 1.

The article deal with the six week old Vajpayee

government had distinguished itself by nothing more than

sheer non-governnance, a war of words and mutual in suits

and leg pulling among partners it has come as a great

reprieve for the government. The series of five nuclear tests

on May 11 and 13, named as shakti-1998, was bound to

capture the popular imagination. There has been an

euphoric out-burst, and a feeling that we are now a strong

power, no matter all our other interrent weakenesses. There

is admiration for the veil of secrecy which covered the

whole operation, so that big boy Clinton and his banch of

CIA spies with their snooping stallites were caught literally

napping. This is rather unusual for us, since we generally

leak like a sieve. No one can mistake this position as one

arising from weakness, or lack of capabilities.

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153. —-, -—, —-, STRATEGY, SECURITY.

BANERJEE (Subrata). Indo-Pak Nuclear Confrontation, US

Inspired. New Age. 46, 32; 1998, August, 9-15; 7.

The BJP government should discard the strategy of

national security built up over the last 50 years and opt for

the US designed foreign policy and security strategy. It one

looks a little carefully at US-India-Pakistan relations in

recent years, in the context of the current nuclear

confrontation in the subcontinent, one cannot excape

identifying US as the villain in the scenario as it has

evolved. The ruling classes of Pakistan, v\/ho have always

been junior partners in the US strategy for the Indian

subcontinent.

154. ...., ...., -..., TEST BAN TREATY.

CHENGAPHA (Raj). Future fire. India Today. 23, 21; 1998,

May, 25; 32-34.

India stil l needs to develop a range of fast and

accurate delivery systems for the N-bombs. Latest Nuclear

tests at Pokhran look like innocious craters. The nuclear

tests may have given a boost to India's defence arsenal,

but the country can not ignore the enormous cost of

weaponisation. These tests have proved that we can make

any kind of nuclear weapons. It is a controversial means of

testing the reliability of nuclear weapons adopted by the five

nuclear power to get around the comprehensive Test ban

treaty. Priminister Atal Behari Vajpayee spoke that the India

is now a nuclear weapons state.

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155. —-, —-, -—, THREATENED, WORLD PEACE.

PHANDI (Adit i). Toward peace. Sunday. 26, 8; 1999,

February, 21-27; 40.

India and Pakistan took the first tentative step towards

creating a mood that will dominate the next one thousand

years. When BJP government came to power and conducted

the nuclear tests, and Pakistan carried out its own nuclear

tests, new elements were added to the relationship. This war

the united states which made it clear to both India and

Pakistan that world peace would be threatened. They argued

that Indians and Pakistan are like the female monkey which

clutches the body of its child to its stomach because it

can not bear the thought that its child might be dead.

Indian and Pakistan are too used to quarrelling stop doing

it. But who knows peace might just breake out.

156. -—, —-, —-, WORLD PEACE.

SEN (Mohit). The Nuclear Fall Out. New Wave. 27, 41 ;

1998, May, 31; 12.

The nuclear weapons tests have now become a part

of national life, it has changed that life to an extent but life

goes on. The BJP leadership had also hoped the atomic

blast would make their allience partners easier to tame. We

did all this not only world peace and cooperation were our

objectives but because it was only in conditions of peace

that we could pursue our socio-economic goals. The BJP is

endangering our national prospect in the name of the

nuclear explosions. Strength should make us self confident.

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The BJP commanded government's behaviour is one of

paranoic nervousness placing the nation in danger.

157. ...., ...., NUCLEAR WEAPON, INTERNATIONAL POWER.

DESHINGKAR (Giri). Equating Technological Progress with

Nuclear Bombs. Economic and Political Weekly. 33, 22;

1998, June; 1297-98.

The faith in this theology is that nuclear weapons are

the currency of international power; other currency are

secondary. The second article of faith is that nuclear

weapons, excuding power as they do, cutting down on

conventional forces. A further articles of faith says that a

no first use pledge by Indian will clear all doubts about

India's basic peaceful intensions. The priminister Atal Behari

Vajpayee has decleared the day of Pokhran II, May 11, as

technology day' effectively equating technological progress

with nuclear bombs. In all nuclear weapons countries experts

have of may of bamboozling their political leaders with

science fiction project in the name of national security. The

government has already created a BARC-DRDO complex

under the ministry of defence. ISRO and the Airforce can

be integrated into that at appropriate times to make it a

truly for midable lobby.

158. -—, —-, —-, POWER.

MALHOTRA (Inder). National Interest. Sunday. 25, 30; 1998,

July, 26; 10.

The article states the signing of the CTBT-on suitable

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terms would be to India's benefit. India is now a nuclear

weapons power and this situation can not change except as

a result of total global disarmament. More importantly this

country needs no more tests. Having conducted subcritical

experiments can ensure the realiability and safety of its

weapons through laboratory tests. Atai Behari Vajpayee is

willing lo give the moratorium on nuclear testing a legally

binding basis. What's the difference between this and

signing the CTBT, provided of course this is not done

unconditional as demanded by the US and China. The

major objections to the CTBT was that in flagrant violation

of international law it was sought to be imposed on an

unwilling India by making the treaty's coming into force

dependent on India's adherence to it. If this country

refuses to subcribe to the CTBT it be comes a dead latter.

159. JOHN CHERIAN. The BJP and the Bomb. Frontline. 15, 8;

1998, April, 24; 4-9.

The author expresses his view that the Bharatiya

Janata Party and its earlier incarnation, the Jan Sangh,

have consistently advocated a hawkish line on matters of

national security part icular ly nuclear related Issued.

Possessing the "bomb" is an article of faith with the party

that now heads a coalition government at the centre. The

Nuclear weapons have always been viewed as a "currency

of power" and the "ultimate weapon" by the BJP. The BJP

led government's intention to exercise the option to induct

nuclear weapons marks a break with India's nuclear policy

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since 1974 and carries serious security and foreign policy

risks for India. The BJP's 1998 manifesto committed the

party to the expolitions development of the Agni series of

intermediate range balistic missiles which are capable of

carrying nuclear warheads.

160. —-, —-, —-, TESTS, VIOLATION, INTERNATIONAL LAW.

BANERJEE (Subrata). Politics of BJP's Nuclear Weapons

Strategy. New Age. 46, 27; 1998, July, 5-11; 5.

The author express his view on the matters as they

stand at the moment, each of the five nuclear weapon

power has the right to conduct nuclear weapon tests without

violating any international agreement. The BJP government's

nuclear weapon misadventure it needs to be emphasised that

India has violated no international law. The Comprehensive

Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) signed in 1996 by most states has

a significant clause. It requires all the 44 nuclear capable

states in the world to sign and ratify the treaty before it

can formally come into force. It was known at that time

that there was no possibility in the near future of India,

Pakistan and Israel signing and ratifying the treaty. Our

BJP politicians are no fools; nor they are military advisers.

The BJP's declared willingness to sign a suitable amended

CTBT too is hypocritical. No such scope exists for an

amendment.

161. .—, .—, ONION CRISIS.

REKHI (Shefals). The Great Onion Disaster. India Today. 23,

45; 1998, November, 9; 21-26.

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The article deals with prices continuing to spiral in

spite of frantic imports. The skyrocketing prices of onions

throughout the country have caused extreme hardship to the

poor and the middle classes. Is the BJP government to

blame or are they shortages real? The BJP leadership was

probably aware that Egyptian pharaohs regarded the onion

as a symbol of eternity. The BJP is busy importing. Atal

Behari Vajpayee Government in herited the congress

numberous white elephants which were blessed with

monopoly power. Through the onion crisis Vajpayee also

guaged the bureacracy's natural inclination to let inaction

prevail. Judging from the potentially damaging after effects

of the onion crisis on the BJP's electoral for tunes, he

does not have too options. The story of the great onion

disaster begins with bureaucratic loxicity.

162. —-, — , PERFORMANCE, VAJPAYEE.

NAQVI (Naseem). Abki Baari Atai Ki Baari.. Nation and the

World. 8, 175; 1999, February, 1; 14.

The author express his views about Atal Behari

Vajpayee being welcomed for his boldness in politics. The

odd Vajpayee watcher this comes as panful reminder that it

is the turn of politics to have one dayer syndrome, where

only the moment matter, brushing a side past performance.

Ataiji is treated by his parivar. The inducting three men of

this 'choice' into his cabinet throwing everyone from his

ruling partners to his sangh family member. Fron now

onwards it will be a different Vajpayee who will be a little

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more than the 'mask' his family members wanted him to be.

Atleast its the first step for Vajpayee tow a look and be

have priministeral. First the coalition partners then the

parivar rank and file had all but suffocated the government

and governance. Vajpayee's coterie wanted to keep itself

away from the mairstream saffronites. Vajpayee on a

confrontation course with sangh parivar's think tanks. And

yet this was done proving that the man means business.

The BJP with its numerous power centres, unfortunately,

behaves like this. It is time that Vajpayee shows more such

assertiveness and keeps the numerous leaders in the pack

fully leashed. Author said that Vajpayee is a new avtaar.

163. — , — , POLICE REFORM, INDIA.

ANSARI (Iqbal A.). Police Reform in India. Radiance. 33,

6; 1998, February, 8-14; 3.

It is a matter of great shame forthe India Republic

and its Citizenery that they are still being governed by the

policy and parliamilitary forces which are expected under

law to threat them as subject people. The debacle of

Ayodhya on December 6, 1992 presents one of the worst

examples of gross misue of political authority misdirecting

the civil administration and the police not to be use force

against rampaging nob of Kar Sevaks who continued for

long hours and days to unlawfully damage and destroy a

building whose protection was guaranteed under law.

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164. —-, —-, POLITICAL UNCERTAINITY.

ESWARAN (V.V.). Fortune for some lesson for others.

Nation and the World. 8, 173; 1999, Jan, 1; 44-45.

The author expresses that the year 1998 would be

remembered by the BJP as it fulfilled its long-cherished

dream of coming to power at the centre yet also of

shattering dreams when it lost assembly polls in three

states. At the same time congress comp rejoiced as the

year provided it with a ray of hope. In 1998, with stand

out as a period of political uncertainly and confusion.

Bridging the gab between the government and the party is

an inescapable and urgent task. In the back ground was

also on inference conflict between the camps of priminister

Atal Behari Vajpayee and Lai Krishna Advani which appears

to have been temporarily got over. The result was a massive

upsurge against the BJP among the poor, the minorities

and the women. The BJP has been punished for its non

performance as a government. The BJP thinks that by the

time the next assembly elections are held, the party would

have tied up loose ends and over come the short comings

which were visible this time. The onion prices can not shoot

up every time elections are held, it will be the BJP which

would be victorious.

165. -—, —-, —., SCENARIO.

MUKERJI (Debashish). Mission accomplished. The Week.

16, 19; 1998, April, 26; 44-46.

The article deals with the filing of nominations to the

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post of BJP national president was reached at 3 p.m. on

April 14. By down playing Ayodhya and forging valiable

alliances, L.K. Advani brought intellectual muscle and power

to the BJP. The Vajpayee image is a major advantage and

brought us many votes, admitted a senior office bearer.

"But when it comes to organisational ruts and bolts, there

is none to match Advani. He knows the party much better

than Vajpayee does. Leadership is important but we must

not forget that the general political conditions favoured us

said K.R. Malkani . "It is not just the president 's

achievement, the BJP got only two seats but that does not

reflect on Vajpayee alone, just because he was president

then. So much depends on the prevailing political scenario.

But to impute jealously to Advani, to believed that he

resents Vajpayee as priminister, is to misread the man

completely.

166. —-, —-, POST-POKHRAN POLICY, KASHMIR, DEBATE,

GROUPS, ETHNICS AND RELIGIOUS.

PUR! (Balraj). A post pokhran policy for Kashmir. Economic

and Political Weekly. 33, 45; 1998, November, 7-3; 2830-32.

An Internal debate among he different ethnic and

religious communities of Jammu and Kashmir on their status

within the state and on the state's external ties must

constitute the core of a post Pokhran Indian policy on

Kashmir. It was unnecessary to assume that the out come

of such a political process would necessarity go against

India. For any understanding among the various identities

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within Jammu and Kashmir can be built only on the basis

of a democratic and federal set up which is closer to the

Indian polity, with all its faults and short comings.

167. —-, —-, PRICE HIKES.

BARDHAN (A.B.). Fight the price rise to save your family.

New Age. 46, 29; 1998, November, 19-25; 1.

The article indicates towards the life of common

people is becoming more and more miserable. Nearly 39

percent of our population lives below the poverty line. It

means downright starvation dueto high prices of every

single food items. In the heat of controversy over several

other issues the way prices of literally every essential

commodity are soaring up to the skies, under the present

BJP-led dispensation, is not getting the desired attension.

Let us recall how a decade or two back, rising prices had

brought tens of thousands on to the streets, almost in every

centre. It is this government that has failed miserably in

economic management. Perhaps keeping prices down is not

on its priority list.

168. -—, —-, —-, ESSENTIAL COMMODITIES.

SONI (Thengamam). Onion price increase 1,000 percent;

countesy BJP Government. New Age. 46, 44; 1998,

November, 1-7; 2.

The article indicate that the BJP government in Delhi

had poured darkness into the lives of Delhites with spiralling

prices during the festival season of Dusserah and Divali.

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Even the middle class is struggling hard with escalating

prices. Onions, potatoes, edible oil all these essential

commodities have gone out of reach of common man. The

price of these article have touched an all time high. Still

the BJP government in Delhi talks about a new style of

governance.

169. ----, —-, PRICE RISE, ESSENTIAL COMMOTIES.

CHAKRAVARTI (Sundeep). Rising Prices. India Today. 23,

29; 1998, July, 20; 35-40.

The author discusses the crop failures over cautions

policies, a falling rupee and demand have collectively driven

up prices of essential commodities as never before in the

space of a year. And there no respite in sight for Indian

families who are being forced to tighten belts. The BJP

government of shielding hoarders and pannel Finance

Minister yashwant Sinha's "anti poor" budget. Mean while at

the centre the left is attacking the BJP-led government for

its failure to control prices.

170. — , — , PROGRAMM, HOUSING, VASUNDHARA YOJANA,

U.P.

SUNDERARAJAN (P). Vajpayee takes part in a community

meal. The Hindu. 122, 67; 1999, March, 20; 6.

The priminister Mr. Atal Behari Vajpayee today

celebated one year of his government by taking part in a

community meal with the people of this village. The menu

consisted of the typical rural fare of Dal, Sabzi and Roti

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served in earthern pots and plate made of levels. He also

handed over a cheque for Rs. 50 crores for 50,000 houses

that are to buiit in Uttar Pradesh with HUDCO assistance

under the two million housing programme laid the foundation

stone for new housing programme under the Vasundhara

Yojana of the Uttar Pradesh Housing and Development

Board and Under the Ashraja sudhar Vojana at Nandgram

and Baurao Devras Yojana of Pratab Vihar by the

Ghaziabad development authority. Besides he handed over

keys to the allottees of houses under the Vasundhara

Yojana.

171. . . . . , . . . . , PROGRAMME, NUCLEAR, THREAT, ALTER,

ISSUES, MILITANCY, INTERNAL SECURITY.

KAPOOR (Sanjay). Nuclear status to Quell Militancy. Blitz.

58, 21; 1998, May, 23; 1.

The momentous decision of the BJP government at

the centre ot weapons India's nuclear programme is now

threatening to radically alter the traditional approach of the

Indian establishment towards issue of militancy and internal

security. Even though the blasts have brought to the fore

the hypocrisy and double standards of the International

nuclear regime the BJP government appears to be benefit

of a coherent stragegy and seems unable to identify

individuals who can articulate India's case convincingly. The

BJP anticipated to build on the domestic euphoria and good

will generated by the bomb.

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172. —-, —-, —-, -—, WEAPONS, ECONOMY.

GHOSH (Jayati). The Bomb and the Economy. Frontline.

16, 10; 1999, May, 8-21; 37-39

The nuclear weapons programme which envisages the

spending of staggering amounts of resources on it even as

developmental and social spending is being cut back, is a

devastating reminder of the misplaced priorities of the BJP-

led government. The economic cost of categories core only

recently emerging. The expense of decontaminating and

clearing up radioactive sites; health care expense of afflicted

workers with in the nuclear complex and other involved in

production of radioactive material. Compare these amount of

Rs 20,000 crores plus for the weapons alone and another

Rs 160,000 crores for the related systems necessary for

weaponisation, with the government of India's total plan

outlay budgeted for the current year which is only Rs

77,000 crores. The nuclear weapons programme is a

devastating reminder of the misplaced priorities of the

government. It is now up to social pressure and action to

ensure that these priorities are reset.

173. .—, —., RAMTEMPLE, CONSTRUCTION.

MUKERJI (Debashish). Ayodhya Bomb. Making of the

Mandir. The Week. 16, 25; 1998, June, 7; 35-41.

The author discusses about the Mandir being

assembled in three workshops in Rajasthan and one in

Uttar Pradesh under the supervision of the VHP. The plan

is to start construction at the actual site in two years

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whether or not the BJP has a majority at the centre. Two

bombs have been ticking away in India for years, one in

the pokhraran desert of Rajasthan and the other in

Ayodhya. The BJP led government gladly pulled the pin at

pokhran flexing its nuclear muscle; a shakti peeth temple

that Hindu Sanyasins have planned near pokhran wil l

symbolise this victory. The BJP is worried about the political

cost of detonating this bomb, but the Vishwa Hindu

Parishad is defiant. The proposed Ayodhya temple is being

prefabricated by the sangh parivar in Rajasthan's Sirohi

district and in Kar Sevak Puram in U.P. One forth of the

work is complete.

174. ...., ...., REFORMS, BLENDING, SWADESHI.

BLENDING SWADESHI with reforms. Competition Master. 40,

3; 1998, October; 214.

This article deals with BJP government took the runs

of the country at a time when a down ward slide had

already set in the economy. Grwoth rate and productivity

both were on the decline. The economic problems were

compounded with economic sanctions imposed by several

countries, including the USA and Japan. It is not certain

whether Pokhran-ll has been able to dissuade he political

opponents of the government but it has certainly resulted in

decline in foreign aid. Under this circumstances, it was

expected that the Finance Minister would come out with

forward-looking and bold budget proposals. But the Union

Budget for 1998-99 failed leave up to the expectations and

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rather took a U-turn in matter like excise and custom

duties. As apprehended, the economy is already showing the

signs of gradual but continuous slide.

175. .—, —., REGIONAL PARTIES.

NAYAR (Kuldip). An atmosphere of Ennui Looms large.

Radiance. 32, 14; 1997, March, 16-22; 8.

The real malady, analyses is that political parties are

benefit of ideas. The BJP the largest block in the Lok

Sabha, has huffed and hawed for record. The BJP is still

in the midst of the crisis that has followed the demolition of

the Babri Masjid in December 1992. Advani is wrong in

concluding that the BJP has benefited from the 'secular

logic' that has brought 13 regional parties together. Once

the BJP leavs to compromise, it will find that t he type of

politics it follows is sterile. The BJP is wrong if it believes

that it is making in roads in the south. The party is still

seen in that part of India as a northern Hindu Chauvinistic

group. It is sliding downward partially in all the non-Hindi

speaking states. Regional Parties are gaining ground.

176. —-, —-, RELATION, INDO-PAK, FRIENDLY.

ZEYAUL HAQUE. The state of Indo-Pak Ties. Nation and the

Word. 8, 172; 1998, December, 16; 46.

Jaswant Singh whose party as wel l as the

mastermind, the RSS are hawkish on Indo-Pak relations has

been making Pak-friendly statement. The both India and

Pakistan are born of the sam womb. Advani's insistence on

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hot pursuit bothered Americans who saw it as sure recipe

for sudden escalation. Some how with American counselling

the idea of hot pursuit has been dropped. A peace process

has already been started between India and Pakistan thought

the guns keep booming on the Siachenglaciers and bayond

as well as along the landborder with Pakistan. The release

of hundreds of innocent fisherman languishing in Indian and

Pakistani jails for years is a welcome sign. So is the

invitation of a direct Delhi-Lahore bus service and relaxation

of Visa restrictions. Friendly exchange in education, sports

and calture too are part of the CBMS. Priminister Atal

Behari Vajpayee rightly points out, once the two estranged

neighbours develop enough trust in each other, solution of

larger and more enduring problems including Kashmir, would

be easier.

177. ...., ...., .-.., ...., KARGIL ISSUE.

MOHAN (Saumitra) Kargilization of Indo-Pak relations.

Politics India. 4, 2-3; 1999, August, September; 18-19.

Indo-Pak relations also seem to be suffering from the same

Sisyphean curse as the recent flareup in Kargil Indicates.

The entire country led by Atal Behari Vajpayee were raising

toasts to the success of the bus to Lahore and consequent

Lahore Declaration. Pakistan was engaged in dispatching its

troops to the icy heights of Kargil. Though India has

remonstrated against this breach of trust, the recent flareup

in Kargil exposes in sharp relief the chinks in our defence

armor. Even though Kargilization of Indo-Pak relation has

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dealt a heavy blow to the bilateral relations. India should

not completely lose hope. So India should strengthen it

security apparatus, the should simultaneously engage in

confidence building measures with Pakistan. After all there

is no substitute for peace. Hopefully the saner elements in

that country would prevail upon the leadership there to

usher in a strong bilateral relationship.

178. —-, -—, —-, —-, KASHMIR ISSUE.

RAGHAVAN (K.). being from Kashmir. Outlook. 5, 11; 1999,

March, 29; 8.

The author had expected that the real break through

in Indo-Pak relations has to be achieved, it's important to

address the Kashmir issue first, it went ahead with a

plebiscite befor taking over Sikkim. It's time was showed

manageminity to kashmir by declaring a plebiscite under

U.N. observers. Let's right the wrong our rulers commited

in 1949.

179. SUMANTRA BOSE, Kashmir : Sources, of Conf l ic t ,

Dimension of Peace. Economic and Political Weekly. 34,

13; 1999, March, 27; 762-78.

The article identifies and develops essential elements

of a multidimensional approach to gradually, incrementally

de-escalate the Kashmir conflict. It first pin points the

essential features of that conflict, stressing that the problem

has both exogenous source in the form of the broader

regional confl ict between India and Pakistan and

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endogenous sources, in the form of the existence of several

fundamentally different political allegiances and preferences

among the socially heterogeneous population of Kashmir.

The Indo-Pak relations following the Atal Behari Vajpayee

Shuttle bus diplomacy to Pakistan and Nawaz Sharif retur

visit to India. The article develops one by one three

interlocking dimensions of an alternative peace building

approach which takes account of the complex intersection of

multiple, comulating doemstic and international factor that

collectively define the contemporary Kashmir problem.

180. -—, -—, —-, INDO-RUSSIA, STRENGTHENED.

JOSHI (Manoj). Old Friends Calling. India Today. 14, 1;

1999, January, 4; 21.

The article deals with the visit of russian Priminister

and Shri lankan President & refocus on India's traditional

alliances. Russian Priminister yevgeny Primakor paid a tow-

day visit to India that reaffirmed the continuing friendship

between the two countries despite the trails of a post cold

war world. Durning the business like two-day visit the

Russian leader and his Indian counter part signed six

agreements designed to stabil ise their post cold war

economic and political relations and a seventh to confirm

and extend, despite considerable American pressure, their

military technical cooperation agreement till the year 2010.

Declaration of Strategic partnership to be signed at the next

summit, possible 1999, which would getnew parameters and

guide the progress of Indo-Russian partnership. A

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agreement on economic, industrial and financial cooperation.

Priminister Atal Behari Vajpayee could honestly till his

Russian guest, Relations with Russia are a matter of

national consinsus and enjoy all party support In India. With

Sri Lanka things have already got off the ground especially

the free trade agreement.

181. —., .—, .—, SINO-INDO.

DHAR (M.K.). Trusty Neighbours. Nation and the World. 8,

160; 1998, June, 16; 30-32.

The articles deals with India's neighbours in nuclear

determent capability and acquired the status of a nuclear

power in its own right. Indian should remain engaged in

pursuit of universal and complete disarmament and

developing relation with other countries, US, Russia and

China particularly though Pakistan, the most trouble some

neighbour, remain a difficult case while making out a case

for higher allocation for defence to improve the battle

worthines of cash-starved armed forces, Fernandes need not

underl ine the considered policy course adopted by

successive governments to improve Sino-lndian relations. The

BJP Government must also work for strengthening friendship

with neighbours and maintaining peace and tranquility along

its borders. Former chief General Sunders had earlier

calculated that a battery of 30 Agni and 45 Buthvi missiles

with nuclear pay loads would adequate for deterrent

capabilities. But now the estimate has gone up to 45 Agni

and 80 Prithvi batteries in the hope that the Vajpayee

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government will find resources for these project. India is

committed to constructive and cooperative relationship with

China, eliminating differences and promoting understanding,

hoping China will show sensitivity towards its concerns.

182. MALHOTRA (Inder). After Kargil. Sunday. 26, 31 ; 1999,

August, 1-7; 25.

The article deals with India's relation with both the US

and China reaching turning point. Kargil has been from our

point of view, a turning point. The rellentless manner in

which Bill Clinton forced Nawaz Sharif to withdraw force

from the Indian side of the LOC speaks for itself. This

combined with the distressing history of relat ionship

between the world's most pwerful and most popular

democracies. America influences all the major diplomatic

dynamics across the globe. In both investment and trade it

is India's biggest partner. An adversaries relationship with it

is not in this country's interest. The US would want a quid

proquo for better relations, most probably in the nuclear

field specifically in the form of signatures on the CTBT in

the first place. India needs good relation with both the

superpower and the most powerful neighbour on realistic not

illusory, terms.

183. -—, —., — , -—, DETERIORATED.

ACHARYA (Alka), Sino-lndian Relations since Pokhran-ll.

Economic and Political Weekly. 34, 23; 1999, June, 5-11;

1397-1400.

The article deals with the India-China relation having

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deteriorated after India's nuclear explosions. Both countries

have different and divergent views on the causes and

solutions to the imbroglio. Priminister Atal Behari Vajpayee

believes that China should be more sensitive to its security

and strategic concerns. China feel that the onus lies with

India to make good the damage done. India expects China

to be more sensitive to its security and strategic concerns.

It is possible for the two countries to temporarily shelve

problems which are intractable and improve bilateral relations

by other means.

184. — , —-, REMOVAL, BHANDARI.

MUKERJI (Debashish). The leack behind the apology. The

Week. 17, 12; 1999, March, 7; 38.

Author express his views about how Advani's men used

a section of the media to try and remove Bhandari as

Bihar Governor. Once more Advani pressed the need to

replace Bhandari and was trongly backed by Fernandes.

But Sinha curiously refused to take sides at the meeting

called by Vajpayee, maintaining he had learnt that some of

the names suggested for key posts by Advani were those

of Laloo Yadav's loyalists. Bhandari contacted Advani on

phone and pointed out that he had been speaking to

Advani on various matters every day since presidents rule

was imposed but he had been given no inkling at all Advani

reportedly responded and named the friendly newspaper. It

was Sushma Swaraj finally who played mediator. She visited

Bhandari and worked out the details of the public apology

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Advani finally delivered closing the chapter, where he

clarified that his comments on a political administration were

no rellection on the abilities or administration competence of

Bhandari.

185. —-, -—, RIVER, WATERS ISSUE.

SUBRAMANIAN (T.S.) Cauvery water tusseles. Frontline. 16,

21; 1999, October, 9-22; 108-110.

The article deals with Karnataka refuses to release

cauvery water to tamil Nadu as recommended by committee

of the cauvery river authority and the two governments trade

charges, the situation in the delta areas remains grim, with

the Kuruvai crop and samba nurseries in risk of withering.

The August 7, 1998 agreement signed by the Chief

Ministers of tamil Nadu, karnataka, Pondichery and Kerala

in the presence of Prime Minister Vajpayee was projected

as a mechanism that would resolve the dispute between

Tamil Nadu and Karnataka. The Cauvery Basin Said on

September 28, that 17 tmeft of water was required over the

next for night to save the standing Kuruvai Crops, and that

the total requirement for cultivation in the delta until

January 2000 would be 150 tmeft.

186. MENON (Parvathi). Unresolved Issues. Frontline. 16, 21 ;

1999, October, 9-22; 111-112.

Karnata's refusal to abide by the recommendations of

the Monitoring Committee of the Cauvery River Authority

show up the limitations of the agreement reached last year.

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Tamil Nadu's demand for water on an urgent footing to save

the standing kuruvai Crops in the Cauvery delta was turned

down by Karnataka on the grounds that the water stored in

Karnataka's reservoirs was insufficient to meet its own

irrigation and drunking water needs. The Cauvery River

Authority (CRA) should utilise the "peace time", (when there

is enough water in the reservoirs) to work out a range of

options of sharing water during scarcity.

187. —-, —-, SECULAR POLICY, HINDUTVA.

HAQUE (Mohd. Zeyaul). Secular in Srinagar, Communal in

Ayodhya. Nation and the World. 8, 164; 1998, August, 16;

45-46.

The author expresses his views about L.K. Advani

faces a crisis of credibility while reconciling his Jammu &

Kashmir and Ayodhya stances. There was nothing really to

write then without being suspected as a Muslim opposed to

Hindus or as a communist opposed to Muslims or as a

VHP agent opposed to unity. L.K. Advani an accused in

the Babri Masjid demolition is the Union Home Minister now

and the remark of late Pandit Kamlapati Tripathi about BJP-

HP double talk has come true after they broke the promise

to protect the mosque made before the supreme court,

National Integration Council and Parliament. Advani Home

Minister knows that only secular policy can work in the

sensitive states of Jammu & Kashmir, Punjab and North-

East and he is trying to be secular in handling these

areas. The secular stance has to be seen all over India.

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188. -—,.—, STABILITY PLANK.

DESAI (Radhika). The 'stability' plank. Frontline. 16, 11;

1999, June, 4; 40-42.

Stability in any case a natural plank of any party of

the Right, proved most useful . Masking its hideous

communalism, stability became the respectable face of the

BJP. The new political discourse certain around the slogan

of stability signals the demise of the political will to appose

the Bhartiya Janata Party on principle. The BJP led

government 's 13 months in power have ironical ly

demonstrated how its anti-secularism are parts of a much

larger authoritarian and dictatorial edifice. The BJP is

almost certain to be the winner in the "stability" stakes. BJP

had mad "stability" its own distinctive plank its branded,

political stock in trade, convincing the relevant class that

other parties are unlikely to do better. The coming elections

will feature sordid spectacles of the most foul and unseemly

al l iances and col lusions and the most be wi lder ing

competitions over who can offer more stability. The BJP is

already bridling at constitutional and customary restraint by

rejecting the nation of a "caretaker" Government.

189. —., .—, STEP DOWN, MANDIR, AGENDA.

NAYAR (Kuldip). BJP Beats about the bush. Radiance. 32,

41 ; 1998. October, 5-11; 8.

All the 49 who have been indicted should step down.

The forty nine top leaders of the Bharatiya Janata Party,

Rashtriya Swajamsewak Sangh and allied organisations such

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as the Shiv Sena and Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) have

been held guilty of conspiring to demolish the Babri Masjid.

All wear Hindutva on their sleeves and run down secularism.

Atal Behari Vajpayee has put party above principle. He says

the grounds for the charges are flimsy and that the case is

wrong and polit ically motivated. That the Masjid was

demolished stone by stone, with security forces quietly

watching, is an accepted fact. The judge says the Criminal

conspiracy began in 1990 and culminated on December 6,

1992. His pronouncement minces no words while Vajpaye is

equivocal and full of holes. In their statements on Varanasi

and Mathura, Advani and Vajpayee have said many a time

that the mosque are not on the party's agenda.

190. —-, —-, STRATEGY.

GOYAL (D.R.). Vajpayee and RSS strategy. Nation and the

World. 8, 175; 1999, February, 1; 30-33.

The article indicates that the end of a lack listre

period of ten months in office Atal Behari Vajpayee has

started efforts to brush up his image. Priminister Atal Behari

Vajpayee has asserted his authority, van quished the party

president Khusbhu Thakre and forced the national executive

to change its resolutions. Thakre declared that the BJP

would not exercise remote control over the government that

Vajpayee in driver's seat would be the final authority to

determined the direction of the government. Vajpayee is as

much a lame duck leader as the government he heads. He

has already declared his intention to quit parliamentary

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politics here after. And when the RSS controlled government

is formed with a clear majority the Mukhota would not be

required any more.

191. -—, -—, .—, REVIVAL.

CHAWLA (Prabhu). Recipe for Revival. India Today. 23, 35;

1998, August, 31; 32.

The aticle indicates Vajpayee should realise that only

drastic steps work. After five months office Priminister Atal

Behari Vajpayee finds himself in an unenuiable position. His

government is in peril and political instability and economic

stagnation continue to plague the country, it is the week

after the 51st Independence Day he had held several

strategy sessions with his close aides and this is their

prescribtion. Having just crossed his 150th day in office

Vajpayee is fast realising that it is no longer India's elite

that is disenchanted with his performance. People across

the country are questioning his government's ability to

deliver. If the priminister Atal Behari Vajpayee believe that

less government is better government he is in for a

surprise.

192. — , —-, SWADESHI, COMMITMENT.

SHIVA (Vandana). BJP on swadeshi : The Great 'U' Turn.

Nation and the World. 8, 159; 1998, June, 1; 39-41.

The article deals with two of India's well known

environmentalists are sceptical about swadeshi commitments

of the BJP. The recent decisions of the BJP led government

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have caused consternation in the mind of people who were

brought up to bel ieve that the BJP would base its

government policies on a strong swadeshi plank. The BJP

government could have studied the Issue and taken a

longterm decision in national interest rather than a short

term adhoc response purely to get good marks from WTO.

On the domestic from the Aquaculture Authority Bill (AAB)

which died ignoble death under the last government is being

resurrected by the BJP led government to protect the very

interests that were defended earlier by the united fron and

the congress. All will involve critical swadeshi component

and the national agenda about which there can be no

dispute. These decision would indicate whether the BJP can

be trusted to defend the country's interest or sell them

down the drain. The issues are as follows : Patents Bill,

Biodiversity legislation, farmers' right act, Export of Meat

and Raw Hides, Food, Grain Import. The BJP government

has already fai led test as far as food imports are

concerned. It has continues the mindless decisions of the

lastgovernment to import wheat, this time from Australia, to

the determinent of India's formers.

193. — , — , —-, CONTRADICTIONS.

PATNAIK (Prabhat) . The contradictions of swadeshi.

Frontline. 15, 11; 1998, June, 5; 92.

The author expresses his views on the assertion that

may appear stronge at first sight since the BJP has come

to power on a slogan of swadeshi. But swadeshi whether of

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the BJP variety or even in its most ideal from imaginable,

represents an untenable programme. The ideal of any

coherent swadeshi programme is to make domest ic

capitalists emerge as autonomous players in the global

arena with state support and this cannot possible happen

unless certain structural changes we made in the country.

These change are unacceptable to the existing classes.

194. ...., ..-., TELECOM POLICY.

SHAMEEM FAIZEE. A loot of the Exchequer with

Priminister's Connivance. New Age. 47, 29; 1999, July, 18-

24; 1.

The article deals with the forth coming Lok Sabha

election compaign of the BJP led National Democratic

Alliance will basically be financed by the private Telecom

operators who have been given helty concessions by the

caretaker regime. It is believed that the changes in the

Telecom policy announced by the Vajpayee government will

cause a loss of baout 1,00.000 crore rupees to the public

exchequer and the metro operators alone will get about Rs

50,000 crore rupees from the change over.

195. —-, -—, TEMPLE ISSUE.

KIDWAI (Anser). BJP's Misrule Doublespeak Speaks. Nation

and the World. 8, 166; 1998, September, 16; 8-9.

The article deals with BJP components over the moves

for rewriting history the Sangh parivar's double speak on

the temple construction issue, rehabilitation of Gods and the

\4i

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repression of the minorities in the BJP rules state of

Gujarat. The ignoming of its 13 day stint got washed out

by a curious turn of for tune. At the party to party level

the presence George Fernands as the Samata luminary In

the new set up has been indicative of his own part as well

as of the BJP. The wheel turned full circle when a more

sedate devote of the socialist movement, R.K. Hegde threw

his lot with the BJP. The BJP along with its post poll and

pre poll partners remains a minority outfit. The solution is

compounded by the daily ultimations issued by the mercurial

Jayalalitha threatening the survival of the dispensation. The

BJP as leading player would appear to have earned a

reprieve for the movement.

196. -—, -—, TEST BAN TREATY.

BHARDWAJ (Brij). Vajpayee on Cloud Nine. Nation and the

World. 8, 160; 1998, June, 16; 24.

Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee who was

sometime ago described by one of his colleague as looking

"jaided and tired" is now riding high on cloud nine. Yes the

series of nucleur explosions at Pokhran in Rajasthan has

done wonders to the morale of the two month old

government at the centre and for the country as well. There

is not doubt that the BJP government's decision to use

nuclear option has given a new lease of life to the

government. The BJP government has done well to soften

the blow by talking about India's willingness to sign test

ban treaty along with the announcements of the test, it

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obviously gives two options to Americans they can either go

ahead with sanctions as done in the past or negotiate fresh

agreements India has to be prepared to pay the price after

all the cost of entering exclusive club of supr powers is

very high. The defence minister George Fernandes while

raising the issue of India's security concerns with respect

to China. India having proved its point can now offer to

under taken never to be first to use nuclear weapons.

197. —-, —-, TREATY, MAHAKALI, INDO-NEPAL.

GYAWALI (Dipak). Mahakali impase and Indo-Nepal water

conflict. Economic and Political Weekly. 34, 9; 1999,

February, 27; 553-61.

The article attempts to put into perspective the

complex set of events that led to the signing of the treaty

and to understand and the dynamics of Napal-lndia water

confl ict in the last three years. The Mahakali Treaty

between India and Nepal was signed and rammed through

the Napal Parliament is extreme haste, pushing a side all

the serious doubts that were raised about the dam, highest

rockfill dam in the world in the seismic Himalayas. Indian

priminister Atal Behari Vajpayee in Delhi on September 19,

1998 had assured him that they would cooperate in

furthering the Mahakali Treaty as they had done during its

ratification. They assumed him that they were doing not

for petty interests or a few billion rupees but for furthering

friendship and bilateral relation with India.

147

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198. —., - - , WAR DECISION, PRIME MINISTER.

AKBAR (MJ). The silence of the sacrifical lamb. Blitz. 54,

77; 1999, June, 20; 3.

The author says that every Indian is deeply angry

with Pakistan. The most important war decision that prime

Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee may have taken in the last

fornight is to telt George Fernandes to keep his mouth shut.

The dividends of this decision are already becoming visible;

the government believes that it is no longer haemorrhaging

on the war issue. As a reward for good behaviour, Geroge

is going to be showered with occasional complements by

Mr. Advani.

199. — , — , WOOING MUSLIMS.

MUZAFFAR ASSADI. Wooing Muslims : BJP's Minorities

Conference. Economic and Political Weekly. 33.; 23; 1998,

June 6-12; 1367-69.

The author discuss about the BJP is attempting to

attact Muslims to its fold using several means: it is

projecting the nuclear scientist Abdul Kalam as the

quintessential new Muslims; it has attempted to appropriate

Tippu Sultan, a fonner ruler of Mysore who is something of

an Icon to the state's Muslims and most importantly it is

se lect ive ly cal l ing for the implementat ion of the

recommendations of the Goodawala and the Rahman Khan

commissions which sought to better, the conditions of the

minorities in the state. The BJP has a long way to go to

establish a strong base among the minorities particularly the

Muslims.

148

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200. -—, —-, YATRA, VHP-BAJRANG DAL, CHICKMANGLUR.

GAURI LANKESH. Ayodhya, once more. Sunday. 25, 49;

1999, December, 13-19; 23.

The article deals with the saffron brigade, tries to

reclaim a place of worship in Chickmanglur. But a recent

yatra organised by Vishwa Hindu Preshad and the Bajrang

Dal to reclaim the place for performing rites according to

the Hindu religion has vitiated the atmosphere, if the

government does not sort out the issue soon enough the

dargah might well go the way of the mosque at Ayodhya.

That the VHP and the Bajarang Dal religious and activist

wings of the BJP have for long sought to commullalise

issue in the state makes their highly suspect. On 3

December 10,000 saffron clad activists of the VHP and the

Bajarang Dal marched to the dargah, hoisted saffron flags

on the hill and demanded that idols of Dattatreya and

Ganesha be installed inside the shine. Though the Hindu

fundmantal ists created a communal frenzy over the

reclaiming of the dargah for the community the lagely Hindu

population of Chickmanglur opted to stay away from the

yatras.

149

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/

I

N

?ART THREE

IMDEX

J

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AUTHOR INDEX

NAME OF AUTHOR ENTRY NO.

ACHARYA (Alka) - 183

AGHA(Qamar) - 110

AHSAN(M.H.) - 4

AIYAR (Manishankar) - 21, 73, 83

AKBAR (M.J.) - 198

AJAZAHMAD - 130

AMITBARUAH - 23,48,118

ANSAR (IqbalA.) - 163

ANEJA(Atul) - 82

ASGHAR (Ali) - 61

AVIJITPATHAK - 100

BANA (Sarosh) - 143

BANERJEE (Subrata) - 153,160

BARDHAN(A.B.) - 152,167

BAWEJA (Harinder) - 76,79

BHADRA (Gyan) - 3

BHARDWAJ (Brif) - 59,196

BHARAT (Ahluwalia) - 56

BIDWAI (Praful) - 108,124

CHAKRABATI (Ashis) - 20

CHAKRAVARTI (Sudeep) - 169

CHANDRASEKHAR(C.P.) - 121

CHATTERJEE (Partha) - 139

150

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CHAWLA (Prabhu)

CHENGAPPA (Raj)

CHERIAN (John)

CHOPRA (Subash)

DHAR(M.K.)

DESAI (Radhika)

DESHINGKAR(Giri)

EQBAL (Ahmad)

ESWARAN (V.V.)

GAURI LANKESH

GOYAL(D.R.)

GHOSE (Arabinda)

GHOSE (Jayati)

GIDWANI (Vinaykrishan)

GILLAL (Michael)

GUHA (Seema)

GYAWALI (Dipak)

HAQUE(MohdZeyaul)

HAROONHABIB

JAYARAMAN

JAHANGIR (Rahman)

JOSHI (Manoj)

JOSHI (Ishan)

JOSHI (Anuja)

KHARE (Harish)

KAPOOR (Sanjay)

KIDWAI (Anser)

KUNJU (N)

191

87,154

115,159

74

116,181

188

157

26

36,164

200

190

37

89,172.

126,132

7

101

197

187

14

135

15

114,148,149,180

24

140

17

51,69.144,171

8.28,52,57,104,111,195

80,147

151

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LAKDAWALA(M.Hanif) - 103

MAHADEVAN(H) - 11

MAHANTI (Subodh) - 106

MAHFUZANAM - 12

MALHOTRA (Inder) - 68,75,158,182

IQBALMASUD - 72

MEHTA(Ashok) - 128

MENON(S.M.) - 123

MENON(N.C.) - 34

MOHAN (Saumitra) - 177

MUKERJI (Debashish) - 1,64,71,165,173,184

MURALIDHARAN (Sukumar) - 99

MURTHY (Sachidananda) - 43

MUZAFFAR ISLAM - 16

NAGARAJ (B.S.) - 31,45

NAJMI (Quied - 84

NAQVI (Naseem) 162

NAYAR (Kuldip) - 30,53,54,65,66,67,70,78,

96,97,107,112,119,175,189

NOORANI (A.G.) - 92

PALSHIKAR(Suhas) - 49

PAMELA PHILIPASE - 77

PARVATI - 186

PATNAIK(Prabhat) - 193

PHADNIS (Aditi) - 2,155

PILLAI (Sreedhar) - 40

PRASANNAN{R) - 86,136

PURI(Balraj) - 166

152

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RAGHAVON (K)

RAINA(R)

RAJA(D)

RAM (N)

RAS (Rama)

RAMDAS (L)

REKHI (Shefali)

ROY (Arundhat)

SAGAR(S.G.)

SAKSENA (Rashmi)

SAROSH (Bana)

SAURABH KATIAL

SEN (Mohit)

SHARMA (Narendra)

SHIVA (Vardana)

SHUKHLA (Rajiv)

SUKUMAR (Muralidharan)

SINGH (Rai)

SONI (Thengamam)

PILLAI (Sreedhar)

SHAMEEM FAIZEE

SUBRAMANIAN (T.S.)

SUMANTRABOSE

SUNDERAJAN(P)

SWAMI(Praveen)

TEWARI (Pradeep)

THOMAS (K.M.)

VANAIK (Achin)

178

9,146

109

122,127

133

88

161

141

105

27

129

82

156

113

192

29, 93

63

134

168

39

50,55,62,194

185

179

171

94

91

47

131

153

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VASFI (Ausaf Saied) - 98,102

VAJPAYEE (A.B.) - 90

VENKATESAN(V) - 38,41,42,44,60

VIR(Sanghvi) - 85

VYASULU (Vinod) - 10

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TITLE INDEX

NAME OF TITLE ENTRY NO.

Abkibaari Atal Ki Baari 162

AfterKargil 182

After Lahore Declaration 119

After me the deluge says Vajapyee 109

Agni Pariksha 128

And quiet flows the Cauvery 44

Atmosphere of Ennui looms large 175

Authority on test 38

Averager and Admiral 85

Ayodhya Bomb 173

Ayodhya, Once more 200

B Bardhan appeals secular parties to unite to deaft BJP. 91

Bangladesh for enhancement of bilateral relations 19

Being from Kashmir 178

Beyond : From transparency to arms control 120

Bhagwat primer 83

Blast Em All 129

Blending swadesh with reforms 174

BJP and the bomb 159

BJP and its ideology on the road to oblivion 103

BJP and Transformation of opposition politics in West Bangal 7

BJP Beats about the bush 189

BJP double-talk, double-deal, under sherperfocus 102

155

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BJP's First budget 10

BJP fully in politicising security, foreign policy 95

BJP Looking for new supporters 66

BJP's Misrule double speak speaks 195

BJP on Swadeshi 192

BJP's Performance your being watched 57

BJP's projects 92

BJP regimes wo not build Ram Mandir 4

BJP's Self deception 62

BJP's Some soult on Bhandari beat all norms 65

BJP and stability 61

BJP stammers at an agenda for governance 50

Bomb and the economy 172

Bread, not bomb 147

Break down 76

Break down 35

Breakthrough in Cauvery Row 11

Budget 1998-99

Budget to nuke reforms process 144

Bungel in Kargil 94

Bus brings back the spirit o f '71 ' 18

Bus to Bangladesh 15

Bus diplomacy 107

Bus journey of Pakistan 22

Bus to Pakistan 23

c Calming the water 46

Cauvery card 39

156

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Cauvery conundrum

Cauvery : Deal on, not quite

Cauvery

Cauvery : Rain save the day for Vajpayee

Cauvery water dispute

Cauvery wate tussle

Coalition on hold

Colombo diary

Contradiction at the centre

Controdictions of swadeshi

Core issue

Crisis in Kargil

Crossing Rubicon

100 Days of BJP led government

D Dead lock

Death of Lahore declaration

Declaration and after

Delhi, Dhaka get on board

Delhi-Lahore bus service from March 16

Dhaka-Calcutta bus trial run on April 6

Dhak repices a bus reaches city

Did not miss the bus

E Economic effect of the BJP

End of imagination

Enemies in need could bring peace

Equanting Technological progress with nuclear bombs

41

31

37

45

36

185

63

78

54

193

75

110

131

53

79

116

118

20

25

14

13

30

89

141

26

157

157

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Euphoria and reality

Expansion slots

F Fight the price rise to save your family

Friendly bus streers towards peace

Friendship betrayed

Foreign hand

From balancing act the bus

From crisis to crisis

From nuclear adventurism to appeasement

Fruld situation

Future fire

Future for some lession for others

G Glimpse of Hindutva at the centre

Going full Blast

Great Onion disaster

H Hawkish India

Hindu bomb

Hindutva card never pad off to BJP

Hindutva and 'month-eaten' governance

Hindutva takeover of ICHR

Hindutva weapons

Hope in spring

How we loved the bomb and later rued it 1 1

India's Nuclear tests : Loss of Moral Stature and coverage

150

93

167

28

111

84

1

127

127

43

154

164

98

136

161

149

146

3

100

99

130

27

139

132

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India as sixth nuclear weapons state 134

Indo-Bangia ties strengthened 17

India conducts 3 nuclear tests 133

India conducts nuclear test 145

India is not the BJP 96

Indian navy in murky waters 80

Indian as nuclear power 125

India's nuclear tests 126

India, Pak to exchange civilian prisoners today 48

Indo-Pak nuclear confrontation, US inspired 153

India, Pak sign MOU 6

Indo-Pak talks charade tirme for give and take 74

K Kargil Adds to BJP's woes 113

Kargilization of Indo-Pak relations 177

Kashmir: Source of conflict, Dimensions of peace 179

Kicking up a row 52

L Lackbehind the apology 184

Lock of experience, ideas hounds BJP 67

Lahore and beyond 115

Lahore declaration and nuclear issues 135

Last hurdle in setting cauvery raw removed 32

Loot of the exchequer with PM's convenience 194

M Mahakali impase and Indo-Nepal water conflict 197

Major break through in cauvery water issue 34

Malady in U.P.

Man who never close in mouth 141

159

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Manipulative politics onctinues 49

Mission accomplished 165

N Nailing of a minister 86

National interest 158

Navy, nation and National Security 88

Need for rejuvenating the economy 90

New twist to Bhagwat issue 81

New twist in coalition politics 59

Not by opportunism 100

No thank your for the PM 56

Nuclear explosions and after 152

Nuclear fallout 156

Nuclear gamble 137

Nuclear imperium and its vassal kings 123

Nuclear racism 143

Nuclear shock waves 148

Nuclear statis to quill militancy 171

Nuclear weaponisation 138

o Old Friends calling 180

One year after Pokhran 151

Onion price increase 1,000 percent 168

"Our" separation with "them" 72

P Peace pledge 114

Peace ride 24

Perils of nuclear adventurism 122

Persisting worries 60

160

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Police reform in India 163

Politics of BJP's nuclear weapons strategy 160

Political budget 9

Post-Pokhran policy for Kashmir 166

PM's Double-speak on the temple issue 55

PM's Historic visit to Pakistan 106

PM Sick, but government is sicker 51

Punished 8

R Recipe for revival 191

Regional cooperation 68

Ride to Dhaka 16

Rising prices 169

Roleof the monitoring committee 42

s Sacking saga 82

Secular in Srinagar, Communal in Ayodhya 187

Seeking a paradigm shift 124

Silence of the sacrificial lamb 198

Sino-lndian Relations since Pokhran II 183

Similing Dharmaraj 142

Stability plank 188

State of Indo-Pak ties 176

Sustain the success 29

Swadeshi route to liberalisation 121

T Telecom 69

Thaw 73

TN approve draft 33

161

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Totter Totter Creak Creak 2

Toward peace 155

Trading charges 87

Trade weels 12

Trick or treat 47

Troubled waters 40

Trustthy neigiibours 181

Two prime ministers give friendship a chance 77

u Unresolved issues 186

V Vajpayee and RSS strategy 190

Vajpayee's bus lomacy 21

Vajpayee's bus ride 117

Vajpayee for governance, not politics 104

Vajpayee in Lahore on historical visit 101

Vajpayee : Means to end 70

Vajpayee on cloud nine 196

Vajpayee pushes his "Foul" thesis 5

Vajpayee takes part in a community meal 170

w Who are the infiltrators 112

Will the bus move on 105

With in a month BJP bares itself 58

Wobbly winner 64

Wooing Muslims 200

162

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SUBJECTS INDEX

NAME OF SUBJECTS

A BJP, GOVERNMENT, ACHIEVEMENTS

.._.^ _..._...._ INDEPENDENCE

— , — , AGENDA, DEMOLITION, BABRI MASJID

—._ __________ RAM MANDIR

_—______ —_ WOOING MUSLIMS

— , — , AGREEMENT, INDO-PAK

— , -—, ALLIANCE, REGIONAL

— , — - , ASSEMBLE ELECTION

B — , —-, BUDGET

— , —-, BUDGET, PUBLICSECTOR

—-, —-, BUS SERVICE, CALCUTTA-DHAKE

—._...._ ...._ DELHI-LAHORE

c — , —-, CAUVERY SETTLEMENTS, TAMIL

NADU-KARNATAKA

— , — , CIVILIAN-PRISONERS

__________ COALITION

_____ _-.._ _____ AGENDA

-___—._...__ AGREEMENT

—-, -—, -—, COMMUNALISM

—______ _____ CONTRADICTION

ENTRY NO

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9,10

11

12-20

21-30

31-47

48

48

50,51

52

53

54

163

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CRISIS

—-, DISAGREE, MANDIR-MASJID ISSUE 55

—-, ECONOMY, KICKSTART 56

—-, PERFORMANCE 57

—-, POLITICS 58,59

—-, PROBLEMS 60

—_ — , STABILITY PLANK 61

-—, SELF DECEPTION 62

—-, SURVIVAL 63, 64

— , SUSTAINED 65

—-, COMPROMISE 66

—-, CONCENCES ISSUES 67

— , COOPERATION; INDO-SINO, MEETING, FICCI 68

TELECOM 69

CORRUPTION CHARGES 70-71

D DEMOLITION BABRIMASJID 72

DIALOGUE, INDO-PAK 73-74

-—,-—, AGREEMENT 75

—-, —-, COLUMBO 76

—-, PM, INDO-PAK 77

—-, PM, VAJPAYEE-SHARIF 78

—-, — , VAJPAYEE (AB)-SHARIF (NAWAZ) 79

DISMISSAL, BHAGWAT (VISHNU 80-86

—-, — , CORRUPTION CHARGES 87

—-,-—, NATIONAL SECURITY 88

— , - — , ECONOMIC RISiS

— , — , ECONOMIC GROWTH, INVESTMENT

89

90

164

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—_ — , ELECTION PLANK

— , — , EXPLANTATION, CABINET

F — , — , FAILURE, KARGIL ISSUE

— , — , FOREIGN POLICY, SECURITY

H — , — , HINDU-MUSLIM RIOTS

— , — , HINDUTVA, AGENDA

— , — , HINDUTVA. GLIMPSE

—_ — , —_ ICHR

— , — , HINDUTVA, POLITICS

— , — , HISTORICAL BUS JOURNEY, DELHI-LAHORE

— , — , HYPOCRISY, PHYLOSOPHY STREGIES 1 1

— , — , IDEOLOGY, HINDUTVA

— , — , INDO-PAK RELATION, BUS SERVICE,

DELHI-LAHORE

—-, -—,-—, —-, -—, MUTUAL CONFIDENCE

— , — , INTERNATIONAL RIVALRY

—-, — INTRUDERS, KARGIL

K — , — KARGIL ISSUE

— , — , — , INFILTRATORS

— , — , - — , STRATEGIES

L BJP, GOVERNMENT, LAHORE DECLARATION

—._ —_...__ INDO-PAK, AGREEMENT

-—, — , — , — , MUTUAL CONFIDENCE

91,92

93

94

95

96

97

98

99

100

101

102

103, 104

105, 106

107

108

109

110, 111

112

113

114-117

118

119

165

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—_ —_—._ RESTRAINT

— , — , LIBERALISATION, IMPORT

N — , — , NUCLEAR POLICY, AFFECTED

—_ —,_—_ CTBT

— , — , - — , INDIA

— , — , NUCLEAR POWER, IRONY, INDIA

— , — , NUCLEAR PROGRAMME. CONSEQUENCES,

ECONOMIC, POLITICAL

—_ — , NUCLEAR TESTS, AFTER EFFECTS

—-, — , — - , AGNI

—^ —,—-_ CODEMNATION

—^ — , — _ CONSENSUS, HINDUTVA

—^ —______ CRUCIAL PHASE

....^ —___._^ DISTRESS

_____ _.__,___._ FISSION DEVICE

_____.._.___.__ iNPT, CTBT JAPAN

...__ _._-_...__ LAHORE DECLARATION

_____ ...__.-_._ NEXT STEP, MISSILE, SURYA

...._ _.-._...._ NUCLEAR WEAPON STATE, INDIA

_____ —______ PEACE, THREAT, SOUTH ASIA

—_ —______ POKHRAN

—_ —_—_ —_ BUDGET

—_ __________ _____ FISSION DEVICE

— , — , - — , —-, HYSTERIA, CONSENSUS, POLITICAL

_____ _„____.__ _____ POLITICAL PLAY

_____ __________ _____ STATUS INDIA

—_ —___________ THREAT DEMOCRACY

120

121

122

123

124

125

26

127

128

129

130

131

132

133

134

135

136

137

138

139-142

143-144

145

146

147

148

149

166

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— —_—_ PRESSURE, WASHINGTON 150

—^ — _ — , SHAKTI-1998 151, 152

BJP, GOVT. NUCLEAR TESTS, STRATEGY, SECURITY 153

—^ — , — , TEST BAN TREATY 154

—_ —_—_ THREATENED, WORLD PEACE 155

—_ — _ „ . . , WORLD PEACE 156

— , — , NUCLEAR WEAPONS, INTERNATIONAL POWER 157

...__ —_—_ POWER 158, 159

— , — , NUCLEAR WEAPONS, TESTS, VIOLATION,

INTERNATIONAL LAW 160

o — , — . O N I O N CRISIS 161

P — , — , PERFORMANCE 162

— , — , POLICE REFORM INDIA 163

— , — , POLITICAL UNCERTAINITY 164

— , —-, POLITICAL SCENARIO 165

— , — , POST-POKHRAN POLICY, KASHMIR,

DEBATE, GROUPS, ETHNICS AND RELIGIOUS 166

-—,-—, PRICE HICKES 167

—_ — „.._ ESSENTIAL COMMODITIES 168

—-, — , PRICE RISE 169

— , — , PROGRAMME, HOUSING, VASUNDHARA YOJANA, UP 170

— , — , — , NUCLEAR, THREAT ALTER, MILITANCY

INTERNAL SECURITY 171

—-, — , — , NUCLEAR WEAPON, ECONOMY 172

R — , — , RAMTEMPLE, CONSTRUCTION 173

167

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— , — , REFORMS, BLENDING, SWADESHI

— , — , REGIONAL PARTIES

— . — , RELATION, INDO-PAK, FRIENDLY

—_ —_ _____ —_ KARGIL ISSUE

_____ __________ _____ KASHMIR ISSUE

— , — , RELATION, INDO-RUSSIA, STRENGTHENED

—_ —_ _____ SINO-INDIA

— , —-, REMOVAL, BHANDARI

— , — . RIVER WATER ISSUE

s — , — , SECULAR POLICY, HINDUTVA

_____—.STABILITY PLANK

— , — , STEP DOWN, MANDIR, AGENDA

— , — , STRATEGY

__________ STRATEGIES, REVIVAL

— , — , SWADESHI, COMMITMENTS

__________ _____ CONTRODICTIONS

T -—,-—, TELECOM POLICY

—-,-—, TEMPLE ISSUE

— , —-, TEST BAN TREATY

— . — , TREATY MAHAKALI, INDO-NEPAL

w — , — , WAR DECISION PM

— , — , WOOING MUSLIMS

Y — , — , YATRA, VHP-BAJRANGDAL, CHICKMANLUR

174

175

176

177

178,179

180

181-82

184

185, 186

187

188

189

190

91

192

193

194

195

196

197

198

199

200

168

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LIST OF PERIODICALS

NAME OF PERIODICALS FREQUENCY PLACE

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8.

9.

10.

11.

12.

13.

14.

15.

16.

17.

18.

19.

20.

21.

22.

Alive

Blitz

Competition Master

Economic and Political Weekly

Frontline

Hindu

Hindustan Times

Indian Express

Indian Today

Main Steam

National Herald

Nation and the World

New Age

New Wave

Out Look

Pioneer

Politics India

Radiance

Sunday

The Week

Times of India

Yojana

Monthly

Weekly

Monthly

Weekly

Fornightly

Daily

Daily

Daily

Weekly

Weekly

Daily

Fornightly

Weekly

Weekly

Weekly

Daily

Monthly

Weekly

Weekly

Weekly

Daily

Monthly

Delhi

New Delhi

Chandigarh

Bombay

Madras

Madras

New Delhi

New Delhi

New Delhi

New Delhi

New Delhi

New Delhi

New Delhi

New Delhi

New Delhi

New Delh

New Delhi

New Delhi

Calcutta

New Delhi

New Delhi

Delhi

169