Bengali Refugees in Squalor in India; Bengali Refugees Living in Squalor in India

By SYDNEY H. SCHANBERGSpecial to The New York TimesNew York Times (1857-Current file). New York, N.Y.: May 22, 1971. pg. 1, 2 pgs

 

Document types:  

front_page

ISSN/ISBN:  

03624331

Text Word Count  

1492

Document URL:  

 

 

Abstract (Document Summary)

NEW DELHI, May 21 -- India's 1,350-mile border with East Pakistan is beginning to resemble a continuous and severely depressing gypsy camp.

 

India:; Three Million Links in A Chain Of Misery

-- SYDNEY H. SCHANBERGNew York Times (1857-Current file). New York, N.Y.: May 23, 1971. pg. E3, 1 pgs

 

Document types:  

editorial_article

Dateline:  

NEW DELHI

Section:  

THE WEEK REVIEW

ISSN/ISBN:  

03624331

Text Word Count  

866

Document URL:  

 

 

Abstract (Document Summary)

NEW DELHI -- The frightened refugees pouring into India from East Pakistan have posed for New Delhi a problem perhaps as serious as any it has faced since independence in 1947.

 

INDIA SEEKS HALT IN REFUGEE FLOW; Opens Campaigns for World Pressure on Pakistan

By SYDNEY H. SCHANBERGSpecial to The New York TimesNew York Times (1857-Current file). New York, N.Y.: May 23, 1971. pg. 11, 1 pgs

 

Document types:  

article

Dateline:  

NEW DELHI, May 22

ISSN/ISBN:  

03624331

Text Word Count  

752

Document URL:  

 

 

Abstract (Document Summary)

NEW DELHI, May 22 -- India has mounted a broad diplomatic and publicity campaign to try to mobilize world pressure on Pakistan to halt the refugee flow from East Pakistan.



Bhutto Urges Political Solution for East Pakistan

By MALCOLM W. BROWNESpecial to The New York TimesNew York Times (1857-Current file). New York, N.Y.: May 24, 1971. pg. 2, 1 pgs

 

Document types:  

article

ISSN/ISBN:  

03624331

Text Word Count  

373

Document URL:  

 

 

Abstract (Document Summary)

KARACHI, Pakistan, May 23 -- Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, leader of West Pakistan's majority party, warned today that Pakistan was in danger of disintegration unless a quick political solution was found for the crisis in East Pakistan.

 

Relief Is Not Enough

New York Times (1857-Current file). New York, N.Y.: May 24, 1971. pg. 30, 1 pgs

 

Document types:  

editorial_article

ISSN/ISBN:  

03624331

Text Word Count  

327

Document URL:  

 

 

Abstract (Document Summary)

The tidal wave of refugees from East Pakistan into India, which is reported nearing the three-million mark and growing by tens of thousands each day, presents humanitarian and political problems of staggering proportions to India and to the world.

 

Martial Pakistani Chief; Agha Mohammad Yahya

New York Times (1857-Current file). New York, N.Y.: May 25, 1971. pg. 8, 1 pgs

 

Document types:  

article

ISSN/ISBN:  

03624331

Text Word Count  

639

Document URL:  

 

 

Abstract (Document Summary)

President Agha Mohammad Yahya Khan seldom ventures out in public without a swagger stick tucked under his arm, even when wearing a business suit.



PAKISTANI STRIFE SAID TO CONTINUE; Despite Official Assertions, Reports Tell of Fighting

By SYDNEY H. SCHANBERGSpecial to The New York TimesNew York Times (1857-Current file). New York, N.Y.: May 25, 1971. pg. 10, 1 pgs

 

Document types:  

article

Dateline:  

NEW DELHI, May 24

ISSN/ISBN:  

03624331

Text Word Count  

554

Document URL:  

 

 

Abstract (Document Summary)

NEW DELHI, May 24 -- Despite official descriptions of normality in East Pakistan, guerrilla activity and the army crackdown continue, according to reports from the area.

 

YAHYA AGAIN SAYS AIM IS CIVIL RULE; Promises to Present Plan for 'Orderly Transfer'

By MALCOLM W. BROWNESpecial to The New York TimesNew York Times (1857-Current file). New York, N.Y.: May 25, 1971. pg. 9, 1 pgs

 

Document types:  

article

Dateline:  

KARACHI, Pakistan, May 24

ISSN/ISBN:  

03624331

Text Word Count  

787

Document URL:  

 

 

Abstract (Document Summary)

KARACHI, Pakistan, May 24 -- President Agha Mohammad Yahya Khan said today that he was determined to bring about "an orderly transfer of power" to a civilian government.



PAKISTANI'S ROLE PONDERED AT U.N.; Regime Asks His Removal From Rights Commission

By KATHLEEN TELTSCHSpecial to The New York TimesNew York Times (1857-Current file). New York, N.Y.: May 30, 1971. pg. 5, 1 pgs

 

Document types:  

article

Dateline:  

UNITED NATIONS, N. Y., May 28

ISSN/ISBN:  

03624331

Text Word Count  

531

Document URL:  

 

 

Abstract (Document Summary)

UNITED NATIONS, N. Y., May 28 -- The dispute between political factions in East and West Pakistan that erupted into bloody fighting in March has left a legal problem for the United Nations to unravel:

 

PAKISTANIS' TIES WITH U.S. SOURING; Diplomatic and Economic Relations Affected

By MALCOLM W. BROWNESpecial to The New York TimesNew York Times (1857-Current file). New York, N.Y.: May 30, 1971. pg. 4, 1 pgs

 

Document types:  

article

Dateline:  

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan, May 29

ISSN/ISBN:  

03624331

Text Word Count  

766

Document URL:  

 

 

Abstract (Document Summary)

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan, May 29 -- The troubles that have shaken Pakistan recently are being compounded by a general souring of life-giving economic and diplomatic relations with the United States.