oolwidth:300px !important;content left_tool_1display: inline;float: left;margin-right: 15px;width:180px !important; View Full Image Reuters Khushwant Singh, India's best known columnist, speaks to Reuters duringan interview in New Delhi. His friends call him the grand old man ofIndian literature, while critics dismiss him as just dirty old man. 3) "I Shall Not Hear the Nightingale": This novel published in 1959 is set during the British rule. It is about a magistrate who is loyal to Britishers. However, he is left in a dilemma after the arrest of his nationalistic son, who believes in driving out the Britishers with guns.4) "Truth,Nike Free Run 2 AU, Love and a Little Malice": It is an autobiography and not a novel, but he describes the fall of events in his life in such an authentic manner that it makes a good read.5) "Why I Supported the Emergency": It is a collection of essays on India&039;s Emergency and was published in 2004, when he turned 89. The book edited by Sheela Reddy is thought provoking and bold in every sense,Nike Free 5.0 Mens AU, as he exposed the pros and cons of the time.Khushwant Singh also wrote books like "Delhi", "Khushwant Singh on Women,Nike Free 5.0 Womens AU, Love and Lust", "The Company of Women," and several others. Close (Photo: Reuters / ) Khushwant Singh, India's best known columnist, speaks to Reuters duringan interview in New Delhi. His friends call him the grand old man ofIndian literature,Nike Free 5.0 Anti-Fur AU, while critics dismiss him as just dirty old man.
A United Nations report has warned that climate change will force millions of people to relocate triggering famine, inciting conflict and losing trillions of dollars-worth of economic gains. .ads_rectangle_img_content_left background-color: FFFFFF;font-size: 1px;line-height: 1px;margin: 0;padding: 0;content left_toolwidth:300px !important;content left_tool_1display: inline;float: left;margin-right: 15px;width:180px !important; The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) will finalize the draft of the UN report within the month.A copy of the report has been provided to Britain&039;s The Independent. The draft said hundreds of millions of the population will be displaced due to coastal flooding and loss of land as sea levels continue to rise.The "irreversible" damage due to climate change will cause economic shocks and severe poverty may lead to mass migration. The risk of violence may increase from protests triggered by international or civil conflicts.Prof. Lesley Hughes from Macquarie University and the report&039;s lead author had declined to comment on the details but noted scientists believe that climate was shifting since the system was "very different" from what it was 30 or 40 years ago. Greenland&039;s ice sheet is rapidly melting and no longer stable. According to a new study, the rise in sea levels w