1 month ago
#445640 Quote
Dueo Why US missed India s 1974 N-tests
The struggle to build a railway to troubled Kashmir has become a symbol of the infrastructure gap with neighbouring China, whose speed in building road and rail links is giving it a strategic edge on the mountainous frontier.        HT Image    Nearly quarter of a century after work began on the project aimed at integrating the revolt-torn territory and bolstering the supply route for troops deployed there, barely a quarter of the 345-km  215-mile  Kashmir track has been laid.   Tunnels collapsed, funds dried up and, faced with the challenge of laying tracks over the 11,000 foot  3,352 meter  Pir Panjal range, railway officials and geologists bickered over the route, with some saying it was just too risky. The proposed train <a href=https://www.cups-stanley-cups.co.uk>stanley cup</a> , which will run not far from the heavily militarized border with Pakistan, has also faced threats from militants fighting Indian rule in the disputed region, with engineers kidnapped in the early days of the project. China s rail system has been plagued by scandal. A bullet train crash in July killed 40 people and triggered a freeze on new rail project approvals, but the country managed to build the 1,140-km  710-m <a href=https://www.stanley-cups-uk.uk>stanley cup</a> ile  Qinghai-Tibet line, which crosses permanently frozen ground and climbs to more than 5,000 meters above sea level, in five years flat. It has also built bitumen roads throughout its side of the frontier, making it eas <a href=https://www.cups-stanley.ca>stanley cup</a> ier for Chinese troops to move around -- and mass there, if confrontation ever escalates. India has long fretted about the eco Kvzc Feel shame, our brothers and sisters can wage war in God s name: Pope
Journalists were on Thursday beaten, bloodied, harassed and detained by raging supporters of Hosni Mubarak, even as the new Egyptian Prime Minister Ahmed Shafiq apologised for deadly unrest between the supporters and the protesters at Cairo s Tahrir Square.        HT Image     I offer all my apologies for what happened yesterday and there will be an enquiry <a href=https://www.crocss.com.de>crocs</a> ,  Shafiq told state television as the fighting on Tahrir raged for a second day with at least seven people dead.   Even as Shafiq, said earlier that the deadly unrest would be investigated, journalists became targets, beaten, bloodied, harassed and detained by raging men, most all in some way aligned with President Mubarak, CNN, ABC News and other media outlets reported. They said members of thei <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.es>stanley cup</a> r staffs had been attacked, most on the streets of Cairo yesterday, a day after the 82-year-old Mubarak refused to step down to end his 30-year reign. In several cases, news personnel were accused of being  foreign spies,  seized and wh <a href=https://www.adidas-originalss.fr>adidas originals</a> isked away, and often assaulted, the report said.  It was pandemonium. There was no control. Suddenly a man would come up to you and punch you in the face,  said CNN s Anderson Cooper, describing being attacked by pro-Mubarak demonstrators with two colleagues outside of Tahrir Square, the hub of Wednesday s bloody confrontations. Mubarak s supporters turned up on the streets yesterday in significant numbers for the first time and some were hostile to journalists and foreigners. CNN s Hala Gorani, who
0