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  • The Emperor Has (no) Clothes? An Autopsy

    Niall Ferguson, Colossus: The Rise and Fall of the American Empire (Penguin Books, New York, 2005), pp. 386.

    October 2005

    China, Pakistan and the Global Nuclear Proliferation Network

    Event: 
    Fellows' Seminar
    October 01, 2005
    Time: 
    1030 to 1300 hrs

    Warlords, Drugs and the 'War on Terror' in Afghanistan: The Paradoxes

    Event: 
    Fellows' Seminar
    September 24, 2005
    Time: 
    1030 to 1300 hrs

    Resolution of North Korean Imbroglio

    The breakthrough achieved on September 19 at the six-party (US, North Korea, South Korea, China, Russia and Japan) talks in Beijing has the potential to satisfactorily resolve the North Korean nuclear imbroglio that has been festering since 2002 when Pyongyang unilaterally withdrew from the international agreements that it had entered into over its domestic nuclear programme.

    September 21, 2005

    Religious Extremism in Ferghana Valley: Myth and Reality

    Event: 
    Fellows' Seminar
    September 17, 2005
    Time: 
    1030 to 1300 hrs

    Conflict Resolution and Indian State: Tackling ULFA's Operational Strategy

    Event: 
    Fellows' Seminar
    September 10, 2005
    Time: 
    1030 to 1300 hrs

    Onset of Multiparty Democracy in Maldives

    June 2, 2005 will go down as a red lettered day in the history of Maldives. On this day, the Maldivian parliament voted to allow multi-party democracy for the first time in the tiny atoll nation that has been ruled by President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom since 1978. The parliament unanimously approved a resolution to allow political parties to seek recognition and contest elections, ending the no-party system in the nation. The motion was moved on the basis of a request from President Gayoom to review its earlier decision not to allow political parties in the country.

    September 03, 2005

    Post NPT Rev Con: Nuclear Factor in Indo-US Joint Declaration

    Event: 
    Fellows' Seminar
    August 27, 2005
    Time: 
    1030 to 1300 hrs

    Bangladesh Blasts: Wake up call

    A series of 434 bomb blasts that rocked as many as 60 of 64 districts in Bangladesh on August 17 may have been 'mild' by way of the number killed – just two people – but the symbolism is very significant and perhaps inversely proportional to the damage caused.

    Leaflets recovered from some of the blast sites demanded that the country become more Islamic and the needle of suspicion points to the banned Islamic group, the Jamaat-ul- Mujahedin. And while investigations are continuing, the implications of this incident are of potentially grave import.

    August 24, 2005

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