THE HINDU Editorial Vocabulary- September 14, 2017- Topic 2
Cambodian slide
The crackdown in Cambodia is
taking the form of criminalisation of the opposition and the media by Prime
Minister Hun Sen ahead of the 2018 national elections. This slide into
political regression is particularly troubling, as the country is still recovering
from the memory of the genocide at the hands of the Khmer Rouge in the 1970s.
Cambodia has enjoyed relative prosperity in recent years thanks to the boom in
garment exports and tourism;
it can ill-afford political unrest. Its democracy
too is a work in progress, and while the long-ruling Hun Sen has never been an
ideal democrat, in recent years his autocratic tendencies have become
increasingly more pronounced. The detention earlier this month of Kem
Sokha, leader of the Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP), on charges of
treason, was accompanied by circumstances that led to the closure of an
independent newspaper. In July, the government promulgated a law that enables
the banning of political parties with connections to criminal convicts. Mr. Hun
Sen, a former commander of the Khmer Rouge, whose lengthy rule since 1985 is
often compared to the tenure of other dictators, is anxious to tighten his grip
on the levers of power. Recently he declared his intent to carry on for another
two terms. But it was the CNRP that made significant gains in the local body
elections this June, even as the ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) retained
a majority of seats.
In his campaign during that
election, Mr. Hun Sen barely concealed the instincts of a ruthless dictator
when he openly threatened civil war in the event of the CPP losing the
elections. Earlier, under its veteran leader Sam Rainsy, who is in self-imposed
exile, the CNRP had challenged Mr. Hun Sen’s 2013 re-election and extracted
major concessions at the end of a protracted political crisis. The allusion in
the latest treason charge is to Mr. Kem Sokha’s comments before an Australian
audience some years ago, pointing to the level of desperation in the ruling
dispensation. The current political turmoil in Cambodia reflects an ongoing
shift in international influence in the decades following the genocide. The
U.S. had been closely involved in the restoration of democratic stability in
the country, and the Cambodian turnaround is one of the United Nations’ great success
stories. But recent years have seen a dramatic rise in Beijing’s bilateral and
regional engagement with Phnom Penh, which under Mr. Hun Sen is using the great
power rivalry to evade accountability by his regime. Cambodia’s cancellation of
the annual joint military exercises with the U.S. this year coincided with the
first such engagement with China, underscoring the extent of the changing
dynamics of big power diplomacy in Southeast Asia. The ‘America First’ approach
under President Donald Trump is not likely to alter this trend. It is left to
the international community to keep a sustained focus on Cambodia, and
underline how precariously placed the Cambodian recovery still is.
Vocabulary
Regression: a return to a former
or less developed state.
Example: Will regression afflict the
developing countries as aging weakens the industrial world?
Genocide: the deliberate killing
of a large group of people, especially those of a particular ethnic group or
nation.
Example: The answer to how people or
states convince themselves to commit murder or genocide is complex.
Synonyms: mass
homicide, massacre, annihilation, extermination, elimination
Prosperity: the state of being
prosperous.
Example: A long period of prosperity
Synonyms: success, profitability, affluence, wealth, opulence, luxury
Garment: an item of clothing.
Example: Junior clothing offers a
wallop of trendy style but the garments are cut small for a junior figure.
Synonyms: item of
clothing, article of clothing, getup, clothes
Autocratic: relating to a ruler
who has absolute power.
Example: The constitutional reforms
threatened his autocratic power
Detention: the action of
detaining someone or the state of being detained in official custody,
especially as a political prisoner.
Example: One of the effects of police
detention is isolation from friends and family
Synonyms: custody, imprisonment, confinement, incarceration, internment
Treason: the crime of betraying
one's country, especially by attempting to kill the sovereign or overthrow the
government.
Example: They were convicted of
treason
Synonyms: treachery, disloyalty, betrayal, faithlessness, sedition, subversion
Anxious: wanting something very
much, typically with a feeling of unease.
Example: The company was anxious to
avoid any trouble
Synonyms: eager, keen, desirous, impatient
Intent: resolved or determined
to do something.
Example: The administration was
intent on achieving greater efficiency
Synonyms: bent on, set
on, insistent on, hell-bent on, committed to
Extract: remove or take out,
especially by effort or force.
Example: The decayed tooth will have
to be extracted
Synonyms: take out, draw
out, pull out, remove, withdraw, free, release
Turmoil: a state of great
disturbance, confusion, or uncertainty.
Example: The country was in turmoil
Synonyms: confusion, upheaval, turbulence, tumult, disorder, disturbance
Extent: the area covered by
something.
Example: An enclosure ten acres in
extent
Synonyms: area, size, expanse, length, proportions, dimensions
Precarious: dependent on chance;
uncertain.
Example: She made a precarious living
by writing
Synonyms: uncertain, insecure, unpredictable, risky, parlous, hazardous