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Pakodi
Bewarse ke Bewarse!
Username: Pakodi

Post Number: 18511
Registered: 12-2004
Posted From: 70.25.153.15
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 11:26 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

Venu mama thanks:-)
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Venu
Desanike Pedda Bewarse
Username: Venu

Post Number: 7003
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 67.84.172.208
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 2:58 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

Papam annyayam gaa sampesaru, Indria Kantri kaani Rajiv manchode!!
Ye Desamegina Yendu Kaalidina Pogadara Mee Thalli Bhoomi Bharathi Ni!!
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Gochi
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Username: Gochi

Post Number: 14914
Registered: 07-2004
Posted From: 162.136.192.1
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 2:48 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

nenu vintam prakaaram rajiv gandhi hathya vishayamlo kooda TN govt LTTE ki saala help sesindhani...
G to the O to the O to the C, C to the H to the H to the I ,GOCHI thats what u say...
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Venu
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Username: Venu

Post Number: 7000
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 67.84.172.208
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 2:40 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

Indian Peace Keeping Force (IPKF) :

In addition to the experience gained in wars with Pakistan and China, the Indian army has been involved in two regional peacekeeping operations. The first was in Sri Lanka from 1987 to 1990, the second in Maldives in 1988. In addition, Indian forces have participated in ten UN peacekeeping forces.

Sri Lanka :

Since the early 1970s, ethnic conflict has pitted Sri Lanka's Tamil minority against the Sinhalese majority over issues of power sharing and local autonomy. The main combatants are the Sri Lankan army and the secessionist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam. Indian involvement, encouraged by pro-Tamil sentiments in its state of Tamil Nadu, which is close to Sri Lanka, and the Indian government's covert aid to and training of Tamil militants between 1977 and 1987, drew India into the conflict. The Indo-Sri Lankan Accord, signed on July 29, 1987, committed New Delhi to deploying a peacekeeping force on the island, making the Indian government the principal guarantor of a solution to the ethnic violence that had heightened dramatically since 1983. Nearly 60,000 Indian troops drawn from two divisions (one from the Central Command and the other from the Southern Command) were in Sri Lanka as the Indian Peace Keeping Force (IPKF) between 1987 and 1990.

Originally sent to Sri Lanka as a neutral body with a mission to ensure compliance with the accord, the IPKF increasingly became a partisan force fighting against Tamils. The popularity of Indian forces, which was never high, decreased still further amidst charges of rape and murder of civilians. Despite the considerable experience that Indian troops had gained in fighting insurgencies in India's northeast, the IPKF was at a marked disadvantage in Sri Lanka. In fighting Naga and Mizo guerrillas in northeast India, the army had fought on home ground, and the central government could couple the army's efforts with direct political negotiations. In Sri Lanka, the Indian forces did not possess an adequate local intelligence network. Despite the growth of the IPKF to 70,000 strong, the predominantly urban context of northern Sri Lanka imposed constraints on the use of force. It also is widely believed that Sri Lankan forces offered only grudging cooperation. Given the inability of the IPKF to prevent either Sinhalese or Tamil extremist actions, it steadily lost the support of both sides in the conflict.

As the Sri Lankan presidential elections approached in December 1988, both the contending parties, the ruling United National Party led by then Prime Minister Ranasinghe Premadasa, and the three-party United Front led by former Prime Minister Sirimavo Ratwatte Dias Bandaranaike, expressed their reservations about the 1987 accord. Premadasa was elected, and after he was inaugurated, he declared an end to the five-and-a-half-year state of emergency and asked India to withdraw the IPKF. In July 1989, the IPKF started a phased withdrawal of its remaining 45,000 troops, a process that took until March 1990 to complete.

During the three-year involvement, some 1,500 Indian troops were killed and more than 4,500 were wounded during this operation. Another casualty resulting from the Sri Lanka mission was the assassination of former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi by a Tamil militant in 1991. As a participant in what began as a peacekeeping mission, the Indian armed forces learned some valuable lessons. These included the realization that better coordination is needed between military and political decision makers for such missions. One of the commanders of the IPKF also noted that training, equipment, and command and control needed improvement.

In 1995, at the request of the Sri Lankan government, Indian naval ships and air force surveillance aircraft established a quarantine zone around the LTTE stronghold in the Jaffna area. The supply of military matériel by Indian sympathizers to the Tamil insurgents in Sri Lanka from Tamil Nadu, just thirty-five kilometers across the Palk Strait, was an ongoing problem that continued to keep India involved in the conflict.


Manollu Nijamgaane train chesara LTTE vallani?? Also IPKF vallu rapes chesara??
Ye Desamegina Yendu Kaalidina Pogadara Mee Thalli Bhoomi Bharathi Ni!!
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Gochi
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Username: Gochi

Post Number: 14913
Registered: 07-2004
Posted From: 162.136.192.1
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 2:24 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

pak lo oka reporter ni behead chesina vedio soosaaav maamaa
G to the O to the O to the C, C to the H to the H to the I ,GOCHI thats what u say...
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Freak
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Username: Freak

Post Number: 4260
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 84.167.148.191
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 1:46 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

maa fnd okadu oka site chopinchaadu.. aa site lo konni 1000 photos daaaka vunnai.. sayabu gaallu cruel gaa champtaalu... vammmooo that was heights.. in one pic a hindu was beaten to death in bangladesh by mullahs ... adi choosi nappatnunchii my views are completely changed...
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Freak
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Username: Freak

Post Number: 4259
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 84.167.148.191
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 1:41 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

budhism nu banee follow avutaaru...
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Venu
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Username: Venu

Post Number: 6998
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 67.84.172.208
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 1:35 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

Avunu, ye CHINA valla religion BUDDHISM kada?
Ye Desamegina Yendu Kaalidina Pogadara Mee Thalli Bhoomi Bharathi Ni!!
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Venu
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Username: Venu

Post Number: 6997
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 67.84.172.208
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 1:28 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

Discuss chesthundandi, nenu oka 30 minute meeting ki poyi ostha!!
Ye Desamegina Yendu Kaalidina Pogadara Mee Thalli Bhoomi Bharathi Ni!!
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Venu
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Username: Venu

Post Number: 6996
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 67.84.172.208
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 1:28 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

India Fights PAKISTHAN and CHINA :

PAKISTHAN :


The first test for the Indian armed forces came shortly after independence with the first Indo-Pakistani conflict (1947-48). The military was called upon to defend the borders of the state of Jammu and Kashmir when tribals--principally Pathans--attacked from the northwest reaches of Kashmir on October 22, 1947. India's 161st Infantry Brigade was deployed and thwarted the advance of the tribal forces. In early November 1947, the 161st counterattacked and successfully broke through the enemy defenses. Despite early successes, the Indian army suffered a setback in December because of logistical problems. The problems enabled the forces of Azad Kashmir (Free Kashmir, as the part of Kashmir under Pakistani control is called) to take the initiative and force the Indian troops to retreat from the border areas. In the spring of 1948, the Indian side mounted another offensive to retake some of the ground that it had lost. No doubt fearing that the war might move into Pakistan proper, regular units of the Pakistani army became more actively involved. As the conflict escalated, the Indian leadership was quick to recognize that the war could not be brought to a close unless Pakistani support for the Azad Kashmir forces could be stopped. Accordingly, on the advice of Governor General Earl Louis Mountbatten (Britain's last viceroy in India in 1947 and governor general of India, 1947-48), the Indian government sought United Nations (UN) mediation of the conflict on December 31, 1947. There was some opposition to this move within the cabinet by those who did not agree with referring the Kashmir dispute to the UN. The UN mediation process brought the war to a close on January 1, 1949. In all, 1,500 soldiers died on each side during the war.

The second Indo-Pakistani conflict (1965) was also fought over Kashmir and started without a formal declaration of war. It is widely accepted that the war began with the infiltration of Pakistani-controlled guerrillas into Indian Kashmir on about August 5, 1965. Skirmishes with Indian forces started as early as August 6 or 7, and the first major engagement between the regular armed forces of the two sides took place on August 14. The next day, Indian forces scored a major victory after a prolonged artillery barrage and captured three important mountain positions in the northern sector. Later in the month, the Pakistanis counterattacked, moving concentrations near Tithwal, Uri, and Punch. Their move, in turn, provoked a powerful Indian thrust into Azad Kashmir. Other Indian forces captured a number of strategic mountain positions and eventually took the key Haji Pir Pass, eight kilometers inside Pakistani territory.

The Indian gains led to a major Pakistani counterattack on September 1 in the southern sector, in Punjab, where Indian forces were caught unprepared and suffered heavy losses. The sheer strength of the Pakistani thrust, which was spearheaded by seventy tanks and two infantry brigades, led Indian commanders to call in air support. Pakistan retaliated on September 2 with its own air strikes in both Kashmir and Punjab. The war was at the point of stalemate when the UN Security Council unanimously passed a resolution on September 20 that called for a cease-fire. New Delhi accepted the cease-fire resolution on September 21 and Islamabad on September 22, and the war ended on September 23. The Indian side lost 3,000 while the Pakistani side suffered 3,800 battlefield deaths. The Soviet-brokered Tashkent Declaration was signed on January 10, 1966. It required that both sides withdraw by February 26, 1966, to positions held prior to August 5, 1965, and observe the cease-fire line agreed to on June 30, 1965.

The origins of the third Indo-Pakistani conflict (1971) were different from the previous conflicts. The Pakistani failure to accommodate demands for autonomy in East Pakistan in 1970 led to secessionist demands in 1971 (see The Rise of Indira Gandhi, ch. 1). In March 1971, Pakistan's armed forces launched a fierce campaign to suppress the resistance movement that had emerged but encountered unexpected mass defections among East Pakistani soldiers and police. The Pakistani forces regrouped and reasserted their authority over most of East Pakistan by May.

As a result of these military actions, thousands of East Pakistanis died at the hands of the Pakistani army. Resistance fighters and nearly 10 million refugees fled to sanctuary in West Bengal, the adjacent Indian state. By midsummer, the Indian leadership, in the absence of a political solution to the East Pakistan crisis, had fashioned a strategy designed to assist the establishment of the independent nation of Bangladesh. As part of this strategy, in August 1971, India signed a twenty-year Treaty of Peace, Friendship, and Cooperation with the Soviet Union. One of the treaty's clauses implied that each nation was expected to come to the assistance of the other in the event of a threat to national security such as that occurring in the 1965 war with Pakistan. Simultaneously, India organized, trained, and provided sanctuary to the Mukti Bahini (meaning Liberation Force in Bengali), the East Pakistani armed resistance fighters.

Unable to deter India's activities in the eastern sector, on December 3, 1971, Pakistan launched an air attack in the western sector on a number of Indian airfields, including Ambala in Haryana, Amritsar in Punjab, and Udhampur in Jammu and Kashmir. The attacks did not succeed in inflicting substantial damage. The Indian air force retaliated the next day and quickly achieved air superiority. On the ground, the strategy in the eastern sector marked a significant departure from previous Indian battle plans and tactics, which had emphasized set-piece battles and slow advances. The strategy adopted was a swift, three-pronged assault of nine infantry divisions with attached armored units and close air support that rapidly converged on Dhaka, the capital of East Pakistan. Lieutenant General Sagat Singh, who commanded the eighth, twenty-third, and fifty-seventh divisions, led the Indian thrust into East Pakistan. As these forces attacked Pakistani formations, the Indian air force rapidly destroyed the small air contingent in East Pakistan and put the Dhaka airfield out of commission. In the meantime, the Indian navy effectively blockaded East Pakistan. Dhaka fell to combined Indian and Mukti Bahini forces on December 16, bringing a quick end to the war.

Action in the western sector was divided into four segments, from the cease-fire line in Jammu and Kashmir to the marshes of the Rann of Kutch in northwestern Gujarat. On the evening of December 3, the Pakistani army launched ground operations in Kashmir and Punjab. It also started an armored operation in Rajasthan. In Kashmir, the operations were concentrated on two key points, Punch and Chhamb. The Chhamb area witnessed a particularly intense battle where the Pakistanis forced the Indians to withdraw from their positions. In other parts of Kashmir, the Indians made some small gains along the cease-fire line. The major Indian counteroffensive came in the Sialkot-Shakargarh area south and west of Chhamb. There, two Pakistani tank regiments, equipped with United States-made Patton tanks, confronted the Indian First Armored Corps, which had British Centurion tanks. In what proved to be the largest tank battle of the war, both sides suffered considerable casualties.

Though the Indian conduct of the land war on the western front was somewhat timid, the role of the Indian air force was both extensive and daring. During the fourteen-day war, the air force's Western Command conducted some 4,000 sorties. There was little retaliation by Pakistan's air force, partly because of the paucity of non-Bengali technical personnel. Additionally, this lack of retaliation reflected the deliberate decision of the Pakistan Air Force headquarters to conserve its forces because of heavy losses incurred in the early days of the war.

China

The Chinese have two major claims on what India deems its own territory. One claim, in the western sector, is on Aksai Chin in the northeastern section of Ladakh District in Jammu and Kashmir. The other claim is in the eastern sector over a region included in the British-designated North-East Frontier Agency, the disputed part of which India renamed Arunachal Pradesh and made a state. In the fight over these areas, the well-trained and well-armed troops of the Chinese People's Liberation Army overpowered the ill-equipped Indian troops, who had not been properly acclimatized to fighting at high altitudes.

Unable to reach political accommodation on disputed territory along the 3,225-kilometer-long Himalayan border, the Chinese attacked India on October 20, 1962. At the time, nine divisions from the eastern and western commands were deployed along the Himalayan border with China. None of these divisions was up to its full troop strength, and all were short of artillery, tanks, equipment, and even adequate articles of clothing.

In Ladakh the Chinese attacked south of the Karakoram Pass at the northwest end of the Aksai Chin Plateau and in the Pangong Lake area about 160 kilometers to the southeast. The defending Indian forces were easily ejected from their posts in the area of the Karakoram Pass and from most posts near Pangong Lake. However, they put up spirited resistance at the key posts of Daulat Beg Oldi (near the entrance to the pass) and Chushul (located immediately south of Pangong Lake and at the head of the vital supply road to Leh, a major town and location of an air force base in Ladakh). Other Chinese forces attacked near Demchok (about 160 kilometers southeast of Chusul) and rapidly overran the Demchok and the Jara La posts.

In the eastern sector, in Assam, the Chinese forces advanced easily despite Indian efforts at resistance. On the first day of the fighting, Indian forces stationed at the Tsang Le post on the northern side of the Namka Chu, the Khinzemane post, and near Dhola were overrun. On the western side of the North-East Frontier Agency, Tsang Dar fell on October 22, Bum La on October 23, and Tawang, the headquarters of the Seventh Infantry Brigade, on October 24. The Chinese made an offer to negotiate on October 24. The Indian government promptly rejected this offer.

With a lull in the fighting, the Indian military desperately sought to regroup its forces. Specifically, the army attempted to strengthen its defensive positions in the North-East Frontier Agency and Ladakh and to prepare against possible Chinese attacks through Sikkim and Bhutan. Army units were moved from Calcutta, Bihar, Nagaland, and Punjab to guard the northern frontiers of West Bengal and Assam. Three brigades were hastily positioned in the western part of the North-East Frontier Agency, and two other brigades were moved into Sikkim and near the West Bengal border with Bhutan to face the Chinese. Light Stuart tanks were drawn from the Eastern Command headquarters at Calcutta to bolster these deployments.

In the western sector, a divisional organization was established in Leh; several battalions of infantry, a battery of twenty-five-pounder guns, and two troops of AMX light tanks were airlifted into the Chushul area from Punjab. On November 4, the Indian military decided that the post at Daulat Beg Oldi was untenable, and its defenders were withdrawn over the 5,300-meter-high Sasar Brangsa Pass to a more defensible position.

The reinforcements and redeployments in Ladakh proved sufficient to defend the Chushul perimeter despite repeated Chinese attacks. However, the more remote posts at Rezang La and Gurung Hill and the four posts at Spanggur Lake area fell to the Chinese.

In the North-East Frontier Agency, the situation proved to be quite different. Indian forces counterattacked on November 13 and captured a hill northwest of the town of Walong. Concerted Chinese attacks dislodged them from this hard-won position, and the nearby garrison had to retreat down the Lohit Valley.

In another important section of the eastern sector, the Kameng Frontier Division, six Chinese brigades attacked across the Tawang Chu near Jang and advanced some sixteen kilometers to the southeast to attack Indian positions at Nurang, near Se La, on November 17. Despite the Indian attempt to regroup their forces at Se La, the Chinese continued their onslaught, wiping out virtually all Indian resistance in Kameng. By November 18, the Chinese had penetrated close to the outskirts of Tezpur, Assam, a major frontier town nearly fifty kilometers from the Assam-North-East Frontier Agency border.

The Chinese did not advance farther and on November 21 declared a unilateral cease-fire. They had accomplished all of their territorial objectives, and any attempt to press farther into the plains of Assam would have stretched their logistical capabilities and their lines of communication to a breaking point. By the time the fighting stopped, each side had lost 500 troops.

Ye Desamegina Yendu Kaalidina Pogadara Mee Thalli Bhoomi Bharathi Ni!!
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Freak
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Username: Freak

Post Number: 4258
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 84.167.148.191
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 1:26 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

gosii aa 1.3 billion looo 30% mana subcontinent loonee vuntaru...

motta complete north africa sagam daaaka conversion due to poverty
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Freak
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Username: Freak

Post Number: 4257
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 84.167.148.191
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 1:24 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

yea venu mama regarding indonesia correctee mama...
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Gochi
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Username: Gochi

Post Number: 14911
Registered: 07-2004
Posted From: 162.136.192.1
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 1:23 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

POPULATION BY RELIGIONS: WORLD

Christianity: 2.1 billion

Islam: 1.3 billion

Secular/Nonreligious/Agnostic/Atheist: 1.1 billion

Hinduism: 900 million

Chinese traditional religion: 394 million

Buddhism: 376 million

primal-indigenous: 300 million

African Traditional & Diasporic: 100 million

Sikhism: 23 million

Juche: 19 million

Spiritism: 15 million

Judaism: 14 million

Baha'i: 7 million

Jainism: 4.2 million

Shinto: 4 million

Cao Dai: 4 million

Zoroastrianism: 2.6 million

Tenrikyo: 2 million

Neo-Paganism: 1 million

Unitarian-Universalism: 800 thousand

Rastafarianism: 600 thousand

Scientology: 500 thousand
G to the O to the O to the C, C to the H to the H to the I ,GOCHI thats what u say...
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Venu
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Username: Venu

Post Number: 6995
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 67.84.172.208
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 1:20 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

Ye tokkalo INDONESIA, BANGLADESH, PAKISTHAN, NIGERIA anni MUSLIM countries ye!!

Ye langa naa kodukulu mottam prapancham lo thama varasulani BICHHEM yetta taniki tarumutharemo kani!!
Ye Desamegina Yendu Kaalidina Pogadara Mee Thalli Bhoomi Bharathi Ni!!
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Ranga
Vooriki Bewarse
Username: Ranga

Post Number: 2645
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 65.208.22.26
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 1:19 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

http://www.zackvision.com/weblog/2003/02/muslim-po pulation.html
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Freak
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Username: Freak

Post Number: 4256
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 84.167.148.191
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 1:19 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

indonesia loo percent of muslims ekkuva
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Venu
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Username: Venu

Post Number: 6994
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 67.84.172.208
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 1:18 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

http://www.theglobalist.com/quiz/sample.htm
Ye Desamegina Yendu Kaalidina Pogadara Mee Thalli Bhoomi Bharathi Ni!!
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Venu
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Username: Venu

Post Number: 6993
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 67.84.172.208
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 1:16 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

Chala ne talakaya noppilu unnay mama!! India China border issues oka godava ayithe, India Bangladesh border issues, infiltration oka godava, ika ye Paki naa kodukula sangathi telisinde kada!! BURMA tho 1400KM border undi ata India ki!! Akkada yemi godavalunnayo!!

NORTH EAST mana ki chala head ache area!!
Ye Desamegina Yendu Kaalidina Pogadara Mee Thalli Bhoomi Bharathi Ni!!
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Gochi
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Username: Gochi

Post Number: 14907
Registered: 07-2004
Posted From: 162.136.192.1
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 1:15 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

kosi kaaram ettali eee china/paki vollaki
G to the O to the O to the C, C to the H to the H to the I ,GOCHI thats what u say...
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Freak
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Username: Freak

Post Number: 4255
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 84.167.148.191
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 1:15 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

1st paki 2nd bangladesh and 3rd india mama
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Freak
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Username: Freak

Post Number: 4254
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 84.167.148.191
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 1:14 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

asala paki nayallu sagam chinese nayallu sagam attagee inka kinda kooda ee sambar nayallu srilankathoo kalsipothe atu sagam.. migiledi only center body...
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Venu
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Username: Venu

Post Number: 6992
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 67.84.172.208
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 1:14 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

"There are 300,000 active mosques in India, more than in any other country including the Muslim world."

TEMPLES anni unnayo levo!!
Ye Desamegina Yendu Kaalidina Pogadara Mee Thalli Bhoomi Bharathi Ni!!
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Venu
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Username: Venu

Post Number: 6991
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 67.84.172.208
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 1:13 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

Freak

India lo Muslim population 2nd highest after INDONESIA anukunta kada??
Ye Desamegina Yendu Kaalidina Pogadara Mee Thalli Bhoomi Bharathi Ni!!
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Ranga
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Username: Ranga

Post Number: 2644
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 65.208.22.26
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 1:09 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

There are 300,000 active mosques in India, more than in any other country including the Muslim world.
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Gochi
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Username: Gochi

Post Number: 14905
Registered: 07-2004
Posted From: 162.136.192.1
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 1:08 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

inkaa nayam peru kooda marchaledhu...arunaachala pradesh peru maarchi ching-chiong pradesh sesi dobbesthaaremo kooda futurlo
G to the O to the O to the C, C to the H to the H to the I ,GOCHI thats what u say...
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Gochi
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Username: Gochi

Post Number: 14904
Registered: 07-2004
Posted From: 162.136.192.1
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 1:07 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

ammani DNK gallu..
G to the O to the O to the C, C to the H to the H to the I ,GOCHI thats what u say...
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Freak
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Username: Freak

Post Number: 4253
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 84.167.148.191
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 1:03 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/c/c9/Chin a_administrative.png


andulooo kinda vuntundi choodu mama arunachal pradesh ...
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Deyyam
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Username: Deyyam

Post Number: 2245
Registered: 06-2004
Posted From: 155.226.255.42
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 1:03 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

>>aa state indiaki chendinadhi aa pesidentki appatidaaka theleedanta


Bhoot hoon main.
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Gochi
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Username: Gochi

Post Number: 14903
Registered: 07-2004
Posted From: 162.136.192.1
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 1:02 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

correste
G to the O to the O to the C, C to the H to the H to the I ,GOCHI thats what u say...
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Venu
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Username: Venu

Post Number: 6989
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 67.84.172.208
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 1:01 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

"anthenduku..asalu appudeppudo last year china pesident kooda seppadugaa...indialo unna adedho state china map lo soopinchukuntunnaranta..aa state indiaki chendinadhi aa pesidentki appatidaaka theleedanta"

ARUNACHAL PRADESH yemo!! Pichhi munda kodukulu CHINA vallu!!
Ye Desamegina Yendu Kaalidina Pogadara Mee Thalli Bhoomi Bharathi Ni!!
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Freak
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Username: Freak

Post Number: 4252
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 84.167.148.191
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 12:59 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

Islam is growing faster numerically than any of the other major world religions... A survey estimates that it is growing at about 2.9% annually, as opposed to 2.3% per year global population growth. This is attributed either to the higher birth rates in many Islamic countries (six out of the top-ten countries in the world with the highest birth rates have a Muslim majority [1]) and/or high rates of conversion to Islam.
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Venu
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Username: Venu

Post Number: 6988
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 67.84.172.208
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 12:59 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

Until 1962 defense spending was deliberately limited. In the wake of the war with China, defense spending rose from 2.1 percent of the gross national product (GNP--see Glossary) in fiscal year (FY--see Glossary) 1962 to 4.5 percent in FY 1964. In FY 1994, defense spending was slightly less than 5 percent of gross domestic product (GDP--see Glossary). In terms of dollars, FY 1994 total defense services expenditures were projected at US$7.2 billion (but are likely to have been close to US$7.8 billion). Proportionately, based on figures provided by the government, 48.4 percent of expenditures were for the army, 15.7 percent for the air force, 5.9 percent for the navy, and 30 percent for capital outlays for defense services and defense ordnance factories.
Ye Desamegina Yendu Kaalidina Pogadara Mee Thalli Bhoomi Bharathi Ni!!
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Freak
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Username: Freak

Post Number: 4251
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 84.167.148.191
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 12:57 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

India is also home to the third largest population of Muslims in the world
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Gochi
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Username: Gochi

Post Number: 14901
Registered: 07-2004
Posted From: 162.136.192.1
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 12:56 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

"Chapta Mukku nayallu tata teestharu!! "

itta ellvollu kooda chapta mukku vaalley maama....northeastlo vallandaroo attane untaaru...vaadu nijangaa seppaadu...vaallaki china ellatam saana maamolanta..

anthenduku..asalu appudeppudo last year china pesident kooda seppadugaa...indialo unna adedho state china map lo soopinchukuntunnaranta..aa state indiaki chendinadhi aa pesidentki appatidaaka theleedanta
G to the O to the O to the C, C to the H to the H to the I ,GOCHI thats what u say...
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Freak
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Username: Freak

Post Number: 4250
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 84.167.148.191
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 12:53 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

By 2030, India is expected to surpass China as the world's most populous nation, estimated at 1.6 billion.
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Venu
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Username: Venu

Post Number: 6986
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 67.84.172.208
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 12:53 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

"maa priend okadu sepinadaani prakaaram vaallu roju china ellosthaaranta market ki ellalante...aa border asalu secured kaadanta"


Sinthakaya, atta seppi Hemanth lanti amayakulni namminchi pampevu, Chapta Mukku nayallu tata teestharu!! Asale manamante mukkula dakaa kopam naa kodukula ki!!
Ye Desamegina Yendu Kaalidina Pogadara Mee Thalli Bhoomi Bharathi Ni!!
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Deyyam
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Username: Deyyam

Post Number: 2243
Registered: 06-2004
Posted From: 155.226.255.42
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 12:51 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

>>china ellosthaaranta market ki ellalante...


Bhoot hoon main.
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Venu
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Username: Venu

Post Number: 6985
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 67.84.172.208
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 12:51 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

* The country's rivers are classified as Himalayan, peninsular, coastal, and inland-drainage basin rivers. Himalayan rivers are snow fed and maintain a high to medium rate of flow throughout the year. The heavy annual average rainfall levels in the Himalayan catchment areas further add to their rates of flow.

* The Ganga River basin, India's largest, includes approximately 25 percent of the nation's area; it is bounded by the Himalayas in the north and the Vindhya Range to the south. The Ganga has its source in the glaciers of the Greater Himalayas, which form the frontier between India and Tibet in northwestern Uttar Pradesh. Many Indians believe that the legendary source of the Ganga, and several other important Asian rivers, lies in the sacred Mapam Yumco Lake (known to the Indians as Manasarowar Lake) of western Tibet located approximately 75 kilometers northeast of the India-China-Nepal tripoint.

* The Brahmaputra has the greatest volume of water of all the rivers in India because of heavy annual rainfall levels in its catchment basin. At Dibrugarh the annual rainfall averages 2,800 millimeters, and at Shillong it averages 2,430 millimeters. Rising in Tibet, the Brahmaputra flows south into Arunachal Pradesh after breaking through the Great Himalayan Range and dropping rapidly in elevation. It continues to fall through gorges impassable by man in Arunachal Pradesh until finally entering the Assam Valley where it meanders westward on its way to joining the Ganga in Bangladesh.

* The Mahanadi, rising in the state of Madhya Pradesh, is an important river in the state of Orissa. In the upper drainage basin of the Mahanadi, which is centered on the Chhattisgarh Plain, periodic droughts contrast with the situation in the delta region where floods may damage the crops in what is known as the rice bowl of Orissa. Hirakud Dam, constructed in the middle reaches of the Mahanadi, has helped in alleviating these adverse effects by creating a reservoir.

* The source of the Godavari is northeast of Bombay (Mumbai in the local Marathi language) in the state of Maharashtra, and the river follows a southeasterly course for 1,400 kilometers to its mouth on the Andhra Pradesh coast. The Godavari River basin area is second in size only to the Ganga; its delta on the east coast is also one of the country's main rice-growing areas. It is known as the "Ganga of the South," but its discharge, despite the large catchment area, is moderate because of the medium levels of annual rainfall, for example, about 700 millimeters at Nasik and 1,000 millimeters at Nizamabad.

* The Krishna rises in the Western Ghats and flows east into the Bay of Bengal. It has a poor flow because of low levels of rainfall in its catchment area--660 millimeters annually at Pune. Despite its low discharge, the Krishna is the third longest river in India.

* The source of the Kaveri is in the state of Karnataka, and the river flows southeastward. The waters of the river have been a source of irrigation since antiquity; in the early 1990s, an estimated 95 percent of the Kaveri was diverted for agricultural use before emptying into the Bay of Bengal. The delta of the Kaveri is so mature that the main river has almost lost its link with the sea, as the Kollidam, the distributary of the Kaveri, bears most of the flow.

* The Narmada and the Tapti are the only major rivers that flow into the Arabian Sea. The Narmada rises in Madhya Pradesh and crosses the state, passing swiftly through a narrow valley between the Vindhya Range and spurs of the Satpura Range. It flows into the Gulf of Khambhat (or Cambay). The shorter Tapti follows a generally parallel course, between eighty kilometers and 160 kilometers to the south of the Narmada, flowing through the states of Maharashtra and Gujarat on its way into the Gulf of Khambhat.

Ye Desamegina Yendu Kaalidina Pogadara Mee Thalli Bhoomi Bharathi Ni!!
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Gochi
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Username: Gochi

Post Number: 14898
Registered: 07-2004
Posted From: 162.136.192.1
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 12:49 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

maa priend okadu sepinadaani prakaaram vaallu roju china ellosthaaranta market ki ellalante...aa border asalu secured kaadanta
G to the O to the O to the C, C to the H to the H to the I ,GOCHI thats what u say...
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Venu
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Username: Venu

Post Number: 6984
Registered: 03-2004
Posted From: 67.84.172.208
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 - 12:47 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IP

*India has 7,000 kilometers of seacoast.

* India shares 14,000 kilometers of land frontier with six nations: Pakistan, China, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, and Burma.

* In 1992 India completed fencing most of the 547-kilometer-long section of the boundary between the Indian state of Punjab and the Pakistani province of Punjab. This measure was undertaken because of the continuing unrest in the region caused by both ethnic and religious disputes among the local Indian population and infiltrators from both sides of the frontier.

* India has 2,000-kilometer-long border with China in eastern, central, and western sections. There are continuing tensions with China on border related issues.

Ye Desamegina Yendu Kaalidina Pogadara Mee Thalli Bhoomi Bharathi Ni!!