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Guru of Joy?
The fastest growing
guru in the marketplace of happiness is presiding over an empire of air-and
breathing with him are the despairing and the dandy in over 135 countries.
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PAKISTAN
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Tussle Within
As the war drags on, the US discovers the perils
of allying with a dictator who wants to appear a statesman abroad and
a politician at home.
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Battle Weary Wasteland
An exclusive photo feature
captures images of Afghan life during unending conflict.
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ECONOMY
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Down and Out
An account of sebi's
undoing under D.R. Mehta and the tasks for a new team that will be at
the helm in the regulatory body early next year.
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OTHER STORIES
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AFGHANISTAN: WAR DIARY
Battle Weary Wasteland
The scars of war are everywhere. Machine guns are
now an extension of the body, a walk to the battlefield a daily chore,
the debris of destroyed tanks grotesque milestones. There is not much
left now to live for in Afghanistan. Or to die for, as Chief Photographer
Dilip Banerjee, who travelled through northern Afghanistan, found.
GUNFIGHT AT SHOMALI
The frontline, just 30 km from Kabul, is an
anticlimax. Artillery and tanks are nowhere in sight. Instead it is
a battle for control over villages that dot the vast scrub covered
Shomali plains, acting as the line of control between the Taliban
and Northern Alliance. Like in the Rabat outpost where Alliance soldiers
trudge each day with their Kalashnikovs and rocket propelled grenade
rifles and take positions atop sheltered rooftops. They let loose
a volley of fire on Taliban soldiers, who are ensconced in houses
just 200 metres away. There are a few victories and minor advances.
In most areas, by the end of the evening it is a stalemate. |
CAUGHT IN
A TIME WARP
Much of Afghanistan is like journeying back
in time. The market town of Barak near the city of Faizabad in northern
Afghanistan hasn't changed in centuries. Carpet sellers jostle with
fruit vendors. Stones from the rivers are used as weights. The Afghani,
the official currency of the Alliance government, has seen its value
drop so drastically in recent times that you need gunny sacks to carry
the amounts needed for big purchases. A dollar is worth 80,000 Afghanis.
The war has brought in American imports: Pepsi cans. As well as yellow
food packets dropped by US planes as relief. |
DEATH OF INNOCENCE
In Afghanistan dreams die very young.
As does innocence. At 40 you are over the hill, at fourteen
fully grown. Boy or girl. At Shamali village near Kabul, 14-year-old
Yashmin is one of the many teenagers in her village toting
Kalashnikovs with ease. The Alliance forces are more liberal
than the Taliban. Schools for girls continue to remain open.
But dropout rates are high and early marriage a rule. Yashmin
shunned marriage and a life of servitude to take up arms.
Her fragile loveliness doesn't hide her calm determination
to defend her village from the Taliban forces. Death is a
constant companion. But fear rarely crosses her eyes. |
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Web
Exclusives |
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With foodgrain
prices crashing and debts mounting, farmers in Kerala are now resorting
to suicide. Is there no lasting solution to the grassroots problem, asks
India Today Principal Correspondent M.G. Radhakrishnan
Dying
Fields
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