THE HINDU Editorial Vocabulary - July 31, 2018 - Topic 2
The outcome had been ensured long before Cambodia went to the polls on
Sunday, with Prime Minister Hun Sen ensuring his return by keeping key
Opposition leaders out of the fray and muzzling the media. The next morning, a
spokesperson for his Cambodian People’s Party was smugly claiming it had won
all 125 parliamentary seats, renewing its mandate for another five years.
Despite official estimates of turnout in excess of 80%, the CPP’s victory is
hollow. Mr. Hun Sen, who has been at the helm since 1985, left nothing to
chance to see that his party was effectively uncontested.
Voters were
threatened with punishment if they responded to calls for an election boycott.
A number of dummy parties joined what international observers called a sham
election. Since Cambodia’s first free elections in 1993, the CPP’s single-party
dominance had been largely enabled by a fragmented Opposition. But things
changed before the 2013 elections with the merger of two big Opposition parties
to form the Cambodia National Rescue Party. The CNRP came within striking
distance of the ruling party in those polls, and its impressive showing in the
June 2017 polls to local bodies underscored its potential further. Within
months, the courts ordered its dissolution on allegations of a plot to overthrow
the regime. Its leader, Kem Sokha, was arrested on treason charges; several
CNRP veterans are in exile. The closure of a reputed newspaper last year
exposed official intolerance of media freedom. Some voluntary organisations
have been forced to wind up because of a perceived western bias.
The climate of fear and intimidation has drawn
criticism from regional and global rights groups. New York-based Human Rights
Watch recently released an investigation on Mr. Hun Sen’s inner circle, made up
mostly of top security personnel linked to the brutal Khmer Rouge massacres of
the 1970s. Closer home, ASEAN has traditionally been averse to commenting on
the internal affairs of member-countries. Meanwhile, the massive Chinese
investments in infrastructure projects in Cambodia come with no overt political strings attached, and Mr. Hun
Sen continues to capitalise on his close ties with Beijing to counter domestic
and overseas criticism of his human rights record. The U.S. House of
Representatives last week approved legislation to sanction top Cambodian
officials implicated in the violation of the rule of law. The measure will be
taken up by the Senate soon. Whether Mr. Hun Sen will adopt a more conciliatory
approach in his new term is a matter of speculation. But Cambodians clearly
need some respite, as they struggle to rebuild their nation after the
widespread destruction during the genocide under the Khmer Rouge and the civil
war that followed.
Vocabulary
Outcome: the
way a thing turns out; a consequence.
Example: It
is the outcome of the vote that counts
Synonyms: result, end
result, consequence, net result, upshot, aftereffect
Muzzling: put
a muzzle on an animal.
Example: She
should have muzzled her dog,’ Mr Millard said.
Mandate: an
official order or commission to do something.
Example: A
mandate to seek the release of political prisoners
Synonyms: instruction, directive, decree, command, order, injunction
Uncontested: not
contested.
Example: These
claims have not gone uncontested
Dominance: power
and influence over others.
Example: The
worldwide dominance of Hollywood
Synonyms: supremacy, superiority, ascendancy, preeminence, predominance
Allegation: a
claim or assertion that someone has done something illegal or wrong, typically
one made without proof.
Example: He
made allegations of corruption against the administration
Synonyms: claim, assertion, charge, accusation, declaration, statement, contention
Regime: a
system or planned way of doing things, especially one imposed from above.
Example: Detention
centers with a very tough physical regime
Synonyms: system, arrangement, order, pattern, method, procedure, routine
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, mutiny
Meanwhile: in
the intervening period of time.
Example: Julie
has meanwhile found herself another dancing partner
Synonyms: for
now, for the moment, for the present, for the time
being, meantime
Criticism: the
analysis and judgment of the merits and faults of a literary or artistic work.
Example: Alternative
methods of criticism supported by well-developed literary theories
Synonyms: evaluation, assessment, appraisal, analysis, judgment, commentary
Speculation: the
forming of a theory or conjecture without firm evidence.
Example: There
has been widespread speculation that he plans to quit
Widespread: found
or distributed over a large area or number of people.
Example: There
was widespread support for the war
Synonyms: general, extensive, universal, common, global, worldwide, international
