Peace dividend
Material type:
- 9788174363183
- 327.172 PEA
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Gandhi Smriti Library | 327.172 PEA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 90300 |
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327.172 MUR "UN peacekeeping in Lebanon, Somalia and Kosovo" | 327.172 NEG Negotiating peace | 327.172 PAN Divine legacy | 327.172 PEA Peace dividend | 327.172 PEA Peace and conflict: the South Asian experience | 327.172 PER "Falling off the edge : globazation, world peace and other lies" | 327.172 SAI End of peace process |
As part of its mission to enhance and encourage the discussion and interaction among world leaders, thus creating international quality platforms aimed at solutions, The Hindustan Times, among India's most respected newspapers, recently unveiled The Hindustan Times Leadership Initiative. The Initiative's inaugural conference, 'The Peace Dividend: Progress for India and South Asia', was held in New Delhi in December 2003.
Key political and business leaders, strategists and thinkers—including Atal Bihari Vajpayee, prime minister of India, Sonia Gandhi, Congress president, Benazir Bhutto, former prime minister of Pakistan, Madeleine Albright, former US secretary of state and Richard Haass, president, Council on Foreign Relations—met to discuss and map the economic, strategic and geopolitical future of India and South Asia, and suggest ways of solving South Asia's most trying problems, from Kashmir to a general absence of trust. Here Prime Minister Vajpayee first broached the subject of a South Asian monetary union and a regional security council; Gandhi of a South Asian Parliament; and Bhutto of how Pakistan must radically rethink its India policy. The conference set the tone for much that transpired a few weeks later in Islamabad: a historic meeting between Vajpayee and President Pervez Musharraf that initiated a crucial thaw in Indo-Pak relations and encouraged hopes for a progressive and productive future for South Asia, home to a quarter of mankind.
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