Govt unlikely
Panchang ~ Manmohan Singh ~ Sonia Gandhi ~ Stock Markets ~ Gossip
Home / India News / 2008 / March 2008 / March 11, 2008
UPA Govt unlikely to fall over Indo-US nuke deal: Yechury
Sitaram Yechury

Left to withdraw support to UPA says Raja

Left parties will take final decision on support to government on Monday

CPM accuses UPA govt of hiding facts on Indo-US nuke deal

CPI (M) says PMs insistence to reach IAEA responsible for political crisis

More on Sitaram Yechury

Top News

Karnataka High Court orders Ramoji Rao to appear in Ballari Court

Parrots throng a temple in Indore to eat sorgam

Baloch prefer Balochistans sovereignty than Paks, says Bugtis grandson

Love, art and music are all that matter to Peaches Geldof

Chidambaran says government to speed up reforms

Cheshire council gives Flintoff permission to build four million pound mansion

Tiny fossils take Antarctic Dry Valleys origin back to 14 million years

One cheese sandwich as fatty as 5 five pieces of deep-fried chicken!

UPA Govt unlikely to fall over Indo-US nuke deal: Yechury

Senior member of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) politburo, Sitaram Yechury, today said that the UPA Government at the Centre is unlikely to fall over differences on the India-US civil nuclear deal.

Agartala, Mar 11 : Senior member of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) politburo, Sitaram Yechury, today said that the UPA Government at the Centre is unlikely to fall over differences on the India-US civil nuclear deal.

"We do not want to destabilise the government, but simply wanted to stop the nuclear deal with the US" he added.

Yechury was on a two-day visit to participate in a rally to celebrate the landmark victory of the Left Front in the Tripura Assembly poll in.

He said the UPA-Left committee on the Indo-US nuclear deal will meet in New Delhi on March 17 in the face of an ultimatum by the Left parties to withdraw support if the Government goes ahead with the Indo-US nuke deal.

"Whether the Government goes in for early elections is for them to decide," Yechury said.

The CPI-M-led Left Front pulled off an emphatic victory, winning 49 seats in the 60-member legislature while the main opposition the Congress secured only 10 seats and its poll partner Indigenous Nationalist Party of Tripura, bagged only one seat.

ANI

July 24, 2008

July 23, 2008

July 22, 2008

July 21, 2008

July 20, 2008

July 19, 2008