![Tsunami fallout](/files/images/20060131/14-map.jpg)
Tsunami fallout
Army firing range draws tribal wrath in Nicobar Islands
Recipe for a livable planet: achieving net zero emissions in the agrifood system »
Disasters often help science researchers to understand natural phenomenon closely, and the Asian tsunami is no different.
"Why shouldn't salt-making be classed as agriculture?' asks R Potharaju. "Both require land, water and sunshine, and are subject to vagaries of nature,' he reasons. Potharaju is convenor of the
Blunder tourism: Six months after the tsunami disaster, the inhabitants of Arugam Bay on Sri Lanka's east coast are protesting a government move ostensibly aimed at creating a safety buffer zone
14/07/2005
The tsunami is a chance to rebuild self reliance and governance of the Nicobar Islands. <font class='UCASE'>suresh babu</font> returns from the islands to tell <font class='UCASE'>nitin sethi</font> how
Post Tsunami Sri Lanka traverses the snag infested path to disaster management
Amongst the tsunami affected in Nagapattinam, Tamil Nadu
Justice prevails: The Supreme Court on March 15, 2005, ruled that states will have to allot alternative cultivable land to even those people who have been affected temporarily by the Sardar Sarovar