www.Top100News.org - TOP 100 NEWS SITES
TOP 100 NEWS SITES
 Main  |  Add a Site  |  FREE Content for Your Web-site  |  Bookmark this site  |  Links  |  Webmaster 
Updated Sun, August 29, 2010.
201.www.interfax.ru147000
202.www.mainichi.co.jp145000
203.www.newsisfree.com144000
204.www.theage.com.au141000
205.iblnews.com139000
206.www.npr.org139000
207.www.turkishdailynews.com.tr137000
208.hotwired.goo.ne.jp137000
209.www.drudgereport.com135000
210.www.rtve.es134000
211.www.phillyburbs.com132000
212.www.ananova.com131000
213.www.tsr.ch131000
214.science.nasa.gov129000
215.www.independent.co.uk128000
216.www.hindustantimes.com127000
217.www.strategypage.com125000
218.www.zdnet.fr124000
219.www.mcall.com123000
220.www.deccanherald.com122000
221.www.thestranger.com122000
222.www.dailymail.co.uk121000
223.www.aftonbladet.se120000
224.www.ap.org117000
225.www.rai.it117000
226.www.breakingnews.ie117000
227.www.michaelmoore.com116000
228.www.reviewjournal.com115000
229.www.eldia.com.ar115000
230.www.kurier.at114000
231.www.tucsoncitizen.com113000
232.www.strana.ru111000
233.www.bloomberg.com109000
234.www.wsj.com109000
235.www.buffalonews.com107000
236.www.rbc.ru107000
237.www.washtimes.com106000
238.www.buzzflash.com106000
239.www.domain-b.com105000
240.www.yle.fi104000
241.www.antiwar.com102000
242.www.euronews.net102000
243.www.afp.com101000
244.www.letemps.ch101000
245.www.allheadlinenews.com99900
246.www.cnd.org99700
247.www.nieuws.nl98900
248.www.cna.com.tw98800
249.www.monde-diplomatique.fr98400
250.detnews.com96700
Pages:  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8 


Subscribe to RSS feed Subscribe to Feed Burner feed Add to Del.icio.us Add to Yahoo Add to Google Add to Reddit Add to Blink Add to Meneame Add to Fark Add to Newsvine

216. www.hindustantimes.com

Rating: 127000 points*
*amount mentions of word 'www.hindustantimes.com' on the other websites

www.hindustantimes.com

HindustanTimes.com - The name India trusts for news

Description: HindustanTimes.com ,India's most comprehensive vortal on politics, business, new economy, entertainment, fashion and lifestyle

Most popular searches: www.hindustanties.com, ht online, www.hindustatimes.com, www.hidustantimes.com, www.hndustantimes.com, wwwhindustantimes.com, www.hindusantimes.com, www.hindustantmes.com, www.hindutantimes.com, ww.hindustantimes.com, asian news, zee, indiatimes, new delhi, toi, India today, www.industantimes.com, www.hindustanimes.com, indian news, news india, latest Indian news, Online newspaper, www.hindstantimes.com, aaj tak, indya, www.hinustantimes.com, economic times, delhi newspaper, wwwhindustantimes.com, www.hindustantimes, indian newspaper, www.hindustntimes.com, rediff, daily newspaper, www.hindustantims.com, www.hindustantime.com, The hindu, www.hindustantimes.co, ww.hindustantimes.com, star tv, indian express, www.hindustantimescom, hindustan times, Online Indian newspaper, ndtv, www.hindustantimes.cm, www.hindustantimes.om, times of india

Google

© 2005-2010 www.Top100News.org
Israeli Plan for Homes Spurs Anger
Israel said it will build 693 new housing units in East Jerusalem, a decision that drew rebukes from the U.S., the EU and the Palestinians.
online.wsj.com
Threats to Afghan future, says UN
The top UN official in Afghanistan says "negative trends" threaten to make the country's situation unmanageable.
news.bbc.co.uk
Simon Cowell quits American Idol
American Idol judge Simon Cowell confirms he will leave at the end of the season, as he takes his show The X Factor to Fox.
news.bbc.co.uk
Globe nominees mix wild fantasy, harsh reality
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) -- Far-out fantasy and ripped-from-the-headlines reality are in the running at Sunday night's Golden Globes, Hollywood's first major film honors that will help sort out the Academy Awards picture....
hosted.ap.org
Churches panic over equality bill | Simon Sarmiento
Why are the churches fighting the government's equality bill so fiercely in the House of Lords?On Monday, peers will debate amendments to the Equality Bill affecting employment by religious organisations. In the run-up, a fierce campaign has been mounted by CARE, CCFON, the Lawyers' Christian Fellowship and the Christian Institute, and supported in substance if not in tone by the Roman Catholic bishops and the Church of England.Is this campaign just wanton scaremongering by religious extremists as a cover for retaining the right to irrational prejudice? Or is the government really trying to narrow existing law so as to curtail the exemptions from employment discrimination law to which religious organisations are entitled under the law? The government insists that it is doing nothing of the kind, merely "clarifying" the law, in the course of consolidating the myriad of existing anti-discrimination regulations into a single act of Parliament.Three Church of England bishops clearly disagree. In an unusual Saturday morning press release they said that the government "have produced no convincing case for change." But the bishops surely know that the UK government has a problem with the European Commission. When Parliament made the Employment Equality (Sexual Orientation) Regulations in 2003, an extra clause was added at the last minute which allows "a requirement related to sexual orientation" to be imposed when employment is "for the purposes of an organised religion". Neither of these phrases was defined any further. There was quite a fuss at the time, and speaking for the government, Lord Sainsbury then said: "When drafting Regulation 7(3), we had in mind a very narrow range of employment: ministers of religion, plus a small number of posts outside the clergy, including those who exist to promote and represent religion."Following a formal complaint filed in Brussels by the National Secular Society, EC officials have been discussing this clause with the UK government since August 2006. Last November they issued a "Reasoned Opinion" which "maintains that the wording used in Regulation 7(3) is too broad, going beyond the definition of a genuine occupational requirement allowed under the Directive". "The Directive contains a strict test which must be satisfied if a difference of treatment is to be considered non-discriminatory: there must be a genuine and determining occupational requirement, the objective must be legitimate and the requirement proportionate. No elements of this test appear in Regulation 7(3)."One government argument in response was that the 2004 judicial review in Amicus v Secretary of State for Trade and Industry, while rejecting the unions' argument that the regulations were ultra vires, created a formal legal precedent that the exemption must be interpreted extremely narrowly. Nevertheless an employment tribunal in 2007 allowed its application to a Diocesan Youth Officer, although John Reaney won his case against the Bishop of Hereford on other grounds. This decision, though never appealed and so not forming a legal precedent, gives succour to those who want to believe that the exemption is not so narrow. So there are some changes in the Bill, by which means the government hopes to satisfy the Commission. It has very recently proposed new wording for an explicit definition of "the purposes of organised religion". And the word " proportionate" now appears twice, in order to make explicit on the face of the bill that the European Directive has such a requirement (in plain language, you must not use a sledgehammer to crack a nut) which the courts are in any case required to observe. The bishops are supporting precisely the amendments that would remove these changes.The new definition expressly includes all "ministers of religion" and for the laity closely follows what Lord Sainsbury originally said. That is still unacceptable to both Anglican and Roman Catholic bishops, whose legal advisers are convinced the wording may somehow be interpreted by the courts in a narrower way than is possible at present. Both groups have stated that they strongly prefer there to be no definition at all in the Bill rather than the new one now offered, though they grant it is an improvement over an earlier draft. The Church of England bishops are however insistent that their own view is "that the current limited exemptions for organised religions are balanced and should not be further restricted."What they want is for candidates for "a small number of lay posts", or more exactly "certain senior lay posts that involve promoting and representing the religion" to be required "to demonstrate an ability to live a life consistent with the ethos of the religion". It's very difficult to see why the latest wording proposed by the government does not concede all that they require. ReligionAnglicanismCatholicismAtheismEqualityEquality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC)House of LordsSimon Sarmientoguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk