The Telegraph
 
TT Epaper
 
IN TODAY'S PAPER
WEEKLY FEATURES
CITY NEWSLINES
FEEDS
  RSS
  My Yahoo!
SEARCH
 
Archives Web
 
ARCHIVES
Since 1st March, 1999
 
THE TELEGRAPH
 
 
Road to Yangon
It’s never easy to balance ethics and expediency in foreign policy. Throughout the month-long anti-junta stir in Myanmar, India was at the receiving end of domestic and overseas criticism for being indifferent to the struggle for democracy. The land ...  | Read.. 
 
Letters to the Editor
Strike it down
Sir — The two Supreme court judges, B.N. Agarwal and P.P. Naoleker, must be congratulated for quash ...  | Read.. 
 
EDITORIAL
SEPARATE TASKS
It is not wise to keep crossing over the fence into a neighbour’s territory. Everyone’s garden is likely to end up as an undi...| Read.. 
 
BAD DEAL
If Bengal’s ruling Marxists are to be believed, food is not a problem for the poorest of the state’s people. Such people woul...| Read.. 
 
BONA FIDE
 
Get a dose of high culture
Cricket has become tukka baazi. This is evident when Indians take on champion teams such as Australia. Indian crickete...  | Read.. 
SCRIPSI
We are not concerned with the very poor. They are unthinkable, and only to be approached by the statistician or the poet. — E.M. FORSTER
 
BOOKS
Señor C
DIARY OF A BAD YEAR By J.M. Coetzee, Harvill Secker, £10.25...  | Read.. 
 
Winding routes from the roof of the world
THE HIGH ROAD TO CHINA: GEORGE BOGLE, THE PANCHEN LAMA AND THE FIRST BRITIS...  | Read.. 
 
Comedy of errors
This book, written by an Oxford don, is a howler-seeker’s delight. Turning ...  | Read.. 
 
Asian triangle
BETWEEN RISING POWERS: CHINA, SINGAPORE AND INDIA By Asad-ul Iqbal Latif,...  | Read.. 
 

A very nuanced language