THE HINDU Editorial Vocabulary - September 21, 2018 - Topic 1
The Supreme Court’s intervention following
the arrest of five prominent activists by
the Pune police last month has been truly extraordinary and raises the bar for
protection of personal liberty. The court has granted them the rare relief of
remaining in house arrest while it examines the charges against them. It has
reserved its decision in the case and now must decide on one of the following
courses. They are: to allow the police in Maharashtra to pursue its
investigation against the activists for allegedly being members of the outlawed
Communist Party of India (Maoist) and joining a conspiracy against the
government, to set them at liberty on the ground that this is a trumped-up
case, to order a probe by an independent team.
The story so far has thrown up a
legal tussle between the Centre’s contention that it is probing a terrorist conspiracy
involving Maoist insurgents and their urban supporters and the counter-argument
that this is a thinly disguised crackdown on political dissent. The
petitioners, led by historian Romila Thapar, have questioned the motivation for
the police raids on the residences of these activists and a few others in a
coordinated operation across several States. They want those arrested to be
released and demand an independent investigation. The Maharashtra and Union
governments have sought to defend the arrest and prosecution, contending that
the case is based on incriminating evidence seized during the probe and has
nothing to do with the ideology or the political views of those under
investigation.
In entertaining this petition, the Supreme Court
has set the stage for an examination of some fundamental questions at the
intersection of criminal procedure and constitutional law. The procedural
question is whether in a criminal matter the court can entertain a petition
under Article 32 of the Constitution, under which the Supreme Court enforces
fundamental rights, for which the accused are expected to seek their remedy
under the Code of Criminal Procedure. The substantive question is whether the
court should intervene when the liberty of citizens and their right to dissent
are sought to be denied by arbitrary police action. Observations that “dissent
is the safety valve of democracy” and “personal liberty cannot be sacrificed at
the altar of conjecture” indicate the court’s thinking. It is against this
backdrop that the Bench has decided to examine the case diary to see whether
the charges have some basis. The government may have reason to worry about a
precedent being set, whereby every accused can rush to the Supreme Court
immediately on arrest. At the same time, one cannot wish away the peculiar
circumstances in which a case relating to violence at a Dalit commemoration
dramatically morphed into a Maoist plot. Further, it is unusual, and even
suspicious, that one city’s police is investigating a crime that supposedly
spans several States and involves purchase of arms and providing strategic
inputs to armed rebellion, instead of handing it over to a national agency.
Vocabulary
Intervention: the
action or process of intervening.
Example: They
are plants that grow naturally without human intervention
Prominent: projecting
from something.
Example: A
man with big, prominent eyes like a lobster's
Synonyms: protuberant, protruding, projecting, standing
out, sticking out
Outlawed: make
illegal.
Example: Maryland
outlawed cheap small-caliber pistols
Synonyms: ban, bar, prohibit, forbid, veto, make
illegal, proscribe, interdict
Conspiracy: a
secret plan by a group to do something unlawful or harmful.
Example: A
conspiracy to destroy the government
Synonyms: plot, scheme, plan, machination, ploy, trick, ruse, subterfuge
Tussle: engage
in a vigorous struggle or scuffle.
Example: The
demonstrators tussled with police
Synonyms: scuffle, fight, struggle, brawl, grapple, wrestle, clash
Disguise: a
means of altering one's appearance or concealing one's identity.
Example: His
bizarre disguise drew stares from fellow shoppers
Contending: assert
something as a position in an argument.
Example: He
contends that the judge was wrong
Synonyms: assert, maintain, hold, claim, argue, insist, state, declare
Arbitrary: based
on random choice or personal whim, rather than any reason or system.
Example: His
mealtimes were entirely arbitrary
Synonyms: capricious, whimsical, random, chance, unpredictable, casual, wanton
Precedent: an
earlier event or action that is regarded as an example or guide to be
considered in subsequent similar circumstances.
Example: There
are substantial precedents for using interactive media in training
Synonyms: model, exemplar, example, pattern, prior
instance/example
Suspicious: having
or showing a cautious distrust of someone or something.
Example: He
was suspicious of her motives
Synonyms: doubtful, unsure, dubious, wary, chary, skeptical, distrustful
