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BJP going to win
by bahubali s on May 05, 2008 07:34 PM   Permalink | Hide replies

BJP going to win is going to win in KARNATAKA.

Jai Kannadamba.

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  RE:BJP going to win
by akshay gupta on May 05, 2008 07:50 PM   Permalink
Yes they should but these BJP idiots forget the hindus once in power. Eg the Bali Hindus asked Vajpayee for funds to develop their Hindu temples and Vajpayee told them that India being a secular nation could not give funds to them. At the same time King Abdullah of Saudi gave millions to develop Jama Masjid in Delhi and to develop terror cells and our govt had no objection. Long live Islamic replublic of India

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  RE:BJP going to win
by mahabodhi on May 05, 2008 09:03 PM   Permalink
The BJP/Vajpayee is friends od Saudia/Indonesia!But si is America and though one talks of only funding some temples why no freedom for Balinese!See what America did to Indonesia !It gave freedom to East Timor !
Following a UN-sponsored agreement between Indonesia, Portugal and the United States and a surprise decision by the Indonesian President B. J. Habibie, a UN-supervised popular referendum was held on August 30, 1999 to choose between Special Autonomy within Indonesia and independence. 78.5% of voters chose independence, but violent clashes, instigated primarily by elements within the Indonesian military and aided by Timorese pro-Indonesia militias led by Eurico Guterres, broke out soon afterwards. A peacekeeping force (INTERFET, led by Australia) intervened to restore order. The militias fled across the border into Indonesian West Timor, from which sporadic armed raids were attempted. As these raids were repelled and international moral opinion forced Indonesia to withdraw tacit support,[citation needed] the militias dispersed. INTERFET was replaced by a UN force of International Police, the mission became known as UNTAET, and the UNTAET Crime Scene Detachment was formed to investigate alleged atrocities. UNTAET was headed by the late Sérgio Vieira de Mello as UN Transitional Administrator from December 1999 to May 2002. On December 2, 1999 De Mello established the National Consultative Council (NCC), a political body consisting of 11 East Timorese and four UNTAET memb

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  RE:RE:BJP going to win
by mahabodhi on May 05, 2008 09:03 PM   Permalink
On December 2, 1999 De Mello established the National Consultative Council (NCC), a political body consisting of 11 East Timorese and four UNTAET members charged with overseeing the decision-making process during the transition period leading to independence. However, UNTAET experienced difficulties initially in establishing its credibility amongst the Timorese leadership, leading to street violence. An important workshop on March 1, 2000 brought the Timorese and UN leadership group together to tease out a revised strategy, and identify institutional needs. The Timorese delegation was lead by José Ramos-Horta, and included Mari Alkatiri. The outcome was an agreed blueprint for a joint administration with executive powers, including leaders of the National Congress for Timorese Reconstruction (CNRT), led by future president Xanana Gusmão. Further details were worked out in a conference in May 2000. De Mello presented the new blueprint to a donor conference in Lisbon [1], on June 22, 2000, and to the UN Security Council on June 27, 2000 [2]. On July 12, 2000, the NCC adopted a regulation establishing a Transitional Cabinet comprised of four East Timorese and four UNTAET representatives. [3]. The revamped joint administration successfully laid the institutional foundations for independence, and on September 27, 2002, East Timor joined the United Nations.

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