|  Two PMs, two voices THIS refers to the news
        item, Two PMs, two voices by Hari Jaisingh
        (Sept. 25). International laws speak of Pacta Sant
        Servanta i.e. all states should respect the
        agreement entered between two states. Any such treaty
        held for more than 25 years becomes a custom, an
        international custom. Simla Accord is one such treaty
        covering both aspects. The laws are broken by the
        bigger powers themselves. India is confident of its
        position on Kashmir and the mentioning of Kashmir by
        others should not worry it, especially in the context of
        advocating a peaceful settlement of a potentially
        combustible international dispute. Winning a cold
        war is as important as winning a hot
        war as in each case our liberty and our free
        institutions are at stake. A period of flux seems to be
        ahead where the Indian foreign policies need curvature. VIVEK SINH
        MARGIRANKurukshetra
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        * * Anti-democratic The partisan
        recommendation of Bihar Assembly dissolution just hours
        from the Rabri Devi Government proving its majority in
        the Assembly smacked of the sinister design of the
        BJP-led coalition government. This authoritarian,
        blatantly anti-democratic, unethical and heinous crime
        was condemned with all force by the cross-section of
        public opinion and almost all political parties which
        adhere to democratic values. The BJPs habit of
        acting in haste and repenting later is well-known. The
        bankrupt Central leadership bulldosed the Governor into
        recommending the dissolution and the Governor denigrated
        his office by going public in using Article 356. He acted
        as a stooge of the BJP Government. The role of the
        Governor in the Assembly was unparalleled in the history
        of parliamentary democracy. Even Mr R.K. Hegde, the Union
        Commerce Minister, and the ruling front constituent,
        criticised his act as against the principle of
        federalism. The Rabri Devi Government
        had not only decisively won a confidence vote, it had
        also defeated a Central Bill on the formation of
        Vananchal. Should not the rejection signal the Central
        Government to resign? The Bihar Chief Minister by
        retaining the confidence of the House also vehemently
        conveyed the Assemblys lack of confidence in the
        Prime Minister and the Home Minister. The BJP, which had been so
        scrupulous about Article 356, has at the first available
        opportunity used it to serve its own political gameplan.
        Its swearing by Article 356, in retrospect of what it did
        in Bihar, sounds suspiciously like a case of the devil
        citing scriptures to suit his own purpose. However,
        thankfully, the President has hoisted them with their own
        petard, following the precedent in UP, with infamous
        goings-on of which another notorious Bhandari was
        involved. Prof P. SOODNew Delhi
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        * * Reservation
        policy I was pained to go through
        the main article written by Mr M.R. Sharma on reservation
        policy in The Tribune on September 28. His injudicious
        contention that reservation policy has dealt a blow to
        merit and efficiency is misplaced and erroneous. If Mr
        Sharma visits any government department, he would himself
        see how the officials belonging to Scheduled Castes and
        Backward Classes have surpassed and excelled in all
        spheres. Secondly, can Mr Sharma
        tell how scheduled castes are working in newspaper
        establishments and multi-million private concerns where
        there is absence of reservation policy? Does this mean a
        scheduled caste individual cannot be a good journalist or
        a top private executive? Mr Sharma should know that
        Indian society is run on a caste basis and not on
        economic basis. The reservation policy, on the whole, has
        considerably improved the lot of the SCs and BCs and it
        is required to be continued for more years to bring them
        into the mainstream of national life. Actually, there is nothing
        wrong in following the reservation policy for the SCs and
        BCs. What is more worrying is the problem that there are
        some Sharmas in India who are bent upon spreading canards
        and rumours thereby misguiding the general public. AVTAR SINGHMohali
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        * * Crime
        most foul Incidents like gangrape of
        four nuns in Madhya Pradesh (Crime most foul, TT, Sept
        26), assault on nuns and looting of convent (Convent
        looted, nuns beaten, Sunday Tribune, Sept 28) should make
        us hang our heads in shame and remorse. Christian nuns
        are known for their chastity and missionary spirit. Any
        assault on them is an attempt to throttle the concept of
        purity, truth, hard work and charity. The most painful
        thing is that these incidents are not the first of their
        kind. Peace-loving nuns have been many a time assaulted
        in our country and the Centre has never promised them
        adequate protection. Culprits doing such acts should be
        punished in a manner so that no one dares to repeat them
        in future. The community which is
        running some of the best educational, medical and
        charitable institutes in our country, not only deserves
        decent treatment but perhaps a little more. Dr SUNIL CHOPRALudhiana
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