Friday,
December
4,
2009, Chandigarh, India
Updated at 3:00 am (IST)
Won’t accept
binding carbon cuts: Ramesh
Spells out ‘non-negotiables’,
hints at flexibility New Delhi, December 3
India will never accept legally binding emission cuts at
Copenhagen, announced Union Minister of State for Environment
and Forests Jairam Ramesh here today. Ramesh was giving an
account of India’s stand on climate change which would be
spelt out at the Copenhagen conference, scheduled later this
month.
CAST
YOUR VOTE
Has
the level of
security
improved a
year after
the 26/11
terrorist
attack?
Gogoi: Rajkhowa with
govt
‘We are ready to do anything if
talks progress well’ Guwahati, December 3
It is now official. One of India's
most wanted fugitives, chairman of the outlawed United Liberation Front
of Asom (ULFA), Arabinda Rajkhowa is in Indian custody, probably at an
Army base in New Delhi.
Baloch Unrest Pak fabricating evidence: India New Delhi, December 3
Accusing Islamabad of ‘striving
hard’ to fabricate evidence to somehow link India with the unrest in
Balochistan, the government today ruled out the resumption of the
composite dialogue process with Pakistan until it brought to justice the
perpetrators of the Mumbai terror attack.
Battery blast: Army
doesn’t rule out sabotage Jalandhar, December 3
The forensic experts from
Chandigarh today found vital clues and evidences from the blast site at
20 SATA Regiment of Vajra Corps here. While the Army authorities had
initially claimed it to be an accidental blast, they had not so far
ruled out the possibility of sabotage.
Batman Returns: Virender Sehwag raises his bat on completing his double century as Rahul Dravid cheers on, in Mumbai on Thursday. Sehwag was unbeaten on 284 at the end of Day 2. — PTI
(Details on Sports page)
Headley trail takes NIA
to Pushkar Jaipur, December 3
A team of National Investigation
Agency (NIA) is in the holy town of Pushkar to investigate whether the
Pakistan-born suspected terrorist David Coleman Headley stayed there
after Mumbai terror attacks last year. During his interrogation by the
FBI, Headley has reportedly admitted that he had stayed in Pushkar after
26/11. According to sources, the NIA team has searched various hotels in
Pushkar, especially the ones preferred by Israeli tourists, and took
possession of guest records over the last couple of days.
It’s raining snow in Himalayas
Raises hopes of more flow in
streams Chandigarh, December 3
There could be some reason for
environmentalists to cheer. This year has seen a significant
increase in snowfall in the upper region of Western Himalayas, the
primary source of river water for northern India, vis-à-vis the
past few years. This translates to the prospect of longer winters
and increased fresh water flow in spring.
Editor-in-Chief, Publisher & Printer: H.K. Dua Published from The Tribune House, Sector 29-C,
Chandigarh, India, 160030
for The Tribune Trust. Phone: (91-172) 2655066. Fax: (91-172)
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Copyright : The Tribune Trust, 2006.