Bonhomie at the borderB. MURALIDHAR REDDYAs the buses from both sides rolled and people from both sides mingled with each other there was no stopping the dynamics unleashed.
Bonhomie at the borderB. MURALIDHAR REDDYAs the buses from both sides rolled and people from both sides mingled with each other there was no stopping the dynamics unleashed.
A wild west in the makingB. MURALIDHAR REDDYTribal-dominated Balochistan in southwestern Pakistan has witnessed unrest and insurgency-related violence for the past year leading to the impression
The American gameB. MURALIDHAR REDDYAs the U.S. unfolds its new strategy for South Asia by offering to arm both India and Pakistan, there is serious concern about its repercussions on th
A bus ride for peaceB. MURALIDHAR REDDY in IslamabadThe accord to allow a bus service between Srinagar and Muzaffarabad is a step towards boosting the peace process, though differences over crucial issu
A state in denialB. MURALIDHAR REDDY in IslamabadThe unravelling of the A.Q. Khan nuclear blackmarket continues to haunt the Pakistani establishment despite its attempts to distance itself from the s
The Musharraf formulaB. MURALIDHAR REDDY in IslamabadPresident Pervez Musharraf's new proposal on Kashmir is a clever one. But apparently it is a logical consequence of the pressures that Pakistan has co
A setback to politicsB. MURALIDHAR REDDYPAKISTAN has a brand new Prime Minister in Shaukat Aziz. He is acknowledged as intelligent, humane, suave and efficient. But the appointment has hardl
A crackdown and some doubtsB. MURALIDHAR REDDY in IslamabadPakistan has apparently stepped up the crackdown on Al Qaeda suspects, but the question whether the state has cut off all its links with indigenous an
Jamali's exitB. MURALIDHAR REDDY in IslamabadThe resignation of Prime Minister Mir Zafarullah Khan Jamali from his post once again points to the undisputed power that President Pervez Musharraf w
Cautious optimismB. MURALIDHAR REDDY in IslamabadPakistan's approach to the bilateral talks seems to be defined more by a concern to sustain the momentum of the peace process than any expectations of
Behemoth studios in the era of pan-Indian films Yash Raj Films used to set trends, not follow them. Can it turn the tide?
SlideshowCaptured in timeAs independent India turns 75, some of the defining images of those seven decades.