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Royal Enfield to shift to BS-III norm-compliant platform
Bike maker Royal Enfield, a part of Eicher Motors, today said it will shift entire production to a new engine platform from April this year to make products compliant to stricter emission norms "Bharat Stage III".

Tata Motors net at Rs 400 crore
Robust festive demand and new launches helped the country’s largest automotive company, Tata Motors, to swing to a third-quarter net profit of Rs 400 crore. The company had made a net loss of Rs 263 crore in the three months ending December 2008.

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Letters: Blame it on NREGS
At last, there is an official admission that there is double-digit inflation in food articles, even according to the Wholesale Price Index. Till about a few weeks ago, this was downplayed on the ground that the total index showed a low inflation level; there was even a fear about deflation setting in! There was a standard, perhaps funny, explanation that the high inflation rate was due to the low base effect. One hears this nonsensical explanation only in India. One would not find it in any article on the subject in an internationally-recognised professional journal. This is an arithmetical and not an economic or technical explanation of the problem.
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India to verify China stand on dam

India said the Chinese government had assured it no dam on the Brahmaputra was proposed - India asks China to stop projects in PoK - Back to the USSR: MEA culpa - CBI preparing Letters Rogatory in Satyam case - Arrest Anderson: Court tells CBI - "Govt taking steps to avoid delay in issuance of passports" - Progress at a Sensex ends up 35pts Tone measured, India asserted the ‘trust but verify’ principle in relation to China when it said the Chinese government had assured it that no dam was proposed but in the light of news reports, it would “ascertain” if there was any change in China’s position. Explaining the background, a Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) spokesman said the Brahmaputra flowed for about 1625 kilometres inside the Tibet Autonomous Region of the People’s Republic of China and for a further 918 kilometres inside India. Keeping in mind that the river is an economic resource for the development of the local communities in the two countries, India and China agreed in November 2006 to establish an expert level mechanism to discuss trans-border river issues in an institutional way. “Three meetings have been held so far,” the sposkesman added. During these meetings, both sides had discussed reports about the construction of a large scale dam or diversion project on the Brahmaputra. The Indian side has conveyed that such a project may have a significant impact on the socio-economic condition of people living downstream. India has also expressed the hope that China will not undertake such a large-scale project or divert the waters of the Brahmaputra. China has categorically denied there was any plan to build any such large-scale diversion project on the river. “We are looking into the said newspaper report to ascertain whether there are recent developments that suggest any change in the position conveyed to us by the government of China,” the MEA spokesman said.


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