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Subir Roy: An unbearable greyness
Subir Roy / New Delhi January 8, 2010, 0:42 IST

V V: The Terror Axis: Taliban, ISI & opium
Gretchen Peters’ Seeds of Terror: The Taliban, the ISI and New Opium Wars (Thomas Dunne Books, Hachette India reprint, Rs 495) tells you why Afghanistan and Pakistan’s North West Frontier provinces will always be on the boil that will spread into the Punjab and increase in intensity, as recent events have shown. Aided and abetted by rampant corruption spread by poppy growers to the Taliban and other local powers, to drug lords and their allies in government, the influence of opium money pervades Afghan life. Afghanistan today provides 93 per cent of the world’s heroin, far exceeding the combined production of Colombia, north Myanmar, Thailand and other regions of the world. Peters examines the depth of the opium problem and describes how opium sales have ballooned since 2001 and continue to grow exponentially, earning more than half a billion dollars off the opium trade. Why and what could be the consequences for us is the central question asked in the book.

News of the day

Sebi may allow higher stake for buyers
Corporate acquisitions in India could become costlier with market regulator the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) mulling making it mandatory for acquirers to make an offer for up to 100 per cent stake in any listed company.
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IATA hails Indian govt's bailout for AI

Welcoming the Indian government"s move to infuse equity in Air India, the IATA today said such support should be a "one-time shot" that should be followed up by an effective restructuring programme to ensure that the airline comes out of red. - AI union threatens strike from December 22 - IATA wants AERA to rationalise airport user charges - AI spoils Christmas party, threatens strike">AI spoils Christmas party, threatens strike - No termination of Alliance Airlines" cabin crew: minister - Air India gets award for energy efficiency - Air India to meet foreign pilots" hiring agencies to discuss wage cut "The airline industry as also Air India is down as a business. We normally do not support bailouts. But giving funds to meet an emergency situation is alright. However, it should be a one-time option," International Air Transport Association (IATA) director General and CEO Giovanni Bisignani told PTI in an interview here. The government has recently decided to infuse equity worth Rs 800 crore in the first tranche into Air India, which has a paid-up equity base of just Rs 145 crore but has ordered aircraft worth Rs 40,000 crore. The chief of the Geneva-based IATA said that the airline, as a follow up, should work on a "strong, effective restructuring programme so that it is able to run on its own leg". "Once the market has been opened up, you have to give the national carrier a chance to compete. In some cases it is okay to give money in an emergency situation especially if it is linked to major restructuring as is happening in Air India," Bisignani said. To questions on the problems facing the airline, which recently witnessed a strike by its pilots and strike threats by other sections of its staff, Bisignani said "an emergency situation demands that all sections tighten their belts and give up some things". In this context, Bisignani, who once headed Alitalia, referred to a situation facing the official Italian airline, saying it was forced to sack 5,000 workers while those left on the pay-rolls were forced to take a 30 per cent pay cut. Referring to the merger of Air India and Indian Airlines over three years ago, the IATA DG said that although the merger process has taken "a bit too long" but the "painful exercise has to be carried out" so that the merged Air India survives and flourishes. Noting that the new management has taken over the ailing Indian carrier six months ago, he said it has to push the restructuring plan right ahead and "reset some of its problems so that we can see Air India flying in the blue sky" by June next year when the IATA goes for its annual general meeting.


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