THE HINDU Editorial Vocabulary - May 29, 2018 - Topic 1
Talk it over: the Centre's role in J&K
Home Minister Rajnath Singh’s statement offering talks
to the Hurriyat and Pakistan puts a seal on a
series of moves by the Centre that signal a softer Jammu and Kashmir policy
after two particularly violent years. His offer came a week into the Centre’s
suspension of operations, with the condition that terror must end. Just a day
earlier, Army Chief General Bipin Rawat had suggested the ‘cease-ops’ plan
could be extended. This in itself was significant, as he had earlier taken a
very tough line.
Last year, launching what he called “Operation All-Out”,
General Rawat had said the Army would look “helter-skelter” everywhere for
terrorists and anyone sympathising with them. Statistically, the hardline
policy saw successes, as more than 200 militants were killed in the period
after the death of Hizbul Mujahideen commander Burhan Wani in July 2016, which
had set off a wave of violence in the Valley. However, according to police
estimates, 230 more young men picked up the gun during that time, many of them
at funerals of militants. In fact, this became a cycle: as the level of
disaffection among the population continued to grow, locals would gather in
thousands at funerals, which became recruitment sites. In the past few months,
however, the Modi government appears to have taken stock of its J&K policy
and changed course rather dramatically. To begin with, the government
authorised an interlocutor to speak with “all sections of society”, and he
appears to have opened several conversations in the Valley, and nudged the
government to declare an amnesty for first-time stone-pelters. Next, the Centre
has taken care to back Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti on a wide range of
political issues, including replacing the Deputy Chief Minister, a post held by
a BJP legislator. The cease-operations order, that came days before Prime
Minister Narendra Modi’s speech in Srinagar, has also helped recast the
narrative, and given a pause to the seemingly unending cycle of violence,
funeral, encounters and recruitment.
More needs to be done, and
soon. To start with, the Centre must review actions by security forces that
unfairly stifle ordinary life, such as cordon-and-search operations,
restrictions on access to orchards during the fruit harvesting season, and
suspension of Internet services. Second, it must act to rebuild the ceasefire
on the border with Pakistan, and discuss the issue at a bilateral level. At the
same time, it must be alert to all attempts at subverting the cease-ops
initiative, which could come from Pakistan or from vested interests within
J&K. Finally, the government should get its message out on its vision for a
longer-term resolution to reverse alienation amid a polarised debate in
sections of the media on the value of the ceasefire, which adds to the sense of
anxiety in Kashmir. A window of opportunity has been created. The need now is
to move quickly and seize it.
Vocabulary
Particular: used to single out an individual member of a
specified group or class.
Example: The action seems to discriminate against a particular
group of companies
Synonyms: specific, certain, distinct, separate, discrete, definite, precise, single
Suspension: a mixture in which particles are dispersed
throughout the bulk of a fluid.
Example: A suspension of corn starch in peanut oil
Suggest: put forward for consideration.
Example: I suggest that we wait a day or two
Synonyms: propose, put
forward, recommend, advocate, advise, urge
Significant: sufficiently great or important to be worthy of
attention; noteworthy.
Example: A significant increase in sales
Synonyms: notable, noteworthy, worthy of
attention, remarkable, important
Estimate: an approximate calculation or judgment of the
value, number, quantity, or extent of something.
Example: At a rough estimate, our staff is recycling a quarter of
the paper used
Synonyms: rough
calculation, approximation, estimation, rough guess
Amnesty: an official pardon for people who have been
convicted of political offenses.
Example: An amnesty for political prisoners
Synonyms: pardon, pardoning, reprieve, grace, release, discharge
Access: a means of approaching or entering a place.
Example: The staircase gives access to the top floor
Synonyms: entrance, entry, way in, means of
entry, approach
Initiative: the ability to assess and initiate things
independently.
Example: Use your initiative, imagination, and common sense
Synonyms: self-motivation, resourcefulness, inventiveness, imagination
Alienation: the state or experience of being isolated from a
group or an activity to which one should belong or in which one should be
involved.
Example: Unemployment may generate a sense of political alienation
Anxiety: a feeling of worry, nervousness, or unease,
typically about an imminent event or something with an uncertain outcome.
Example: He felt a surge of anxiety
Synonyms: worry, concern, apprehension, apprehensiveness, uneasiness, unease