The Hindu Editorial Vocabulary– June 17, 2021; Day 84
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Today we have collated the 10 tricky words/phrases/terms from the editorial on bail for student activists. Go through these words and see how many did you know already. Check their usage as well. This will surely help you to understand the sense the tricky words have conveyed in the editorial.

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Difficult Word/ PhraseContextual Sense
Indictment a formal charge or accusation of a serious crime
Embargo an official ban on trade or other commercial activity with a particular country
Languish suffer from being forced to remain in an unpleasant place or situation
Impediment a hindrance or obstruction in doing something
Rope in to force or persuade someone to join a group or become involved in something
Rubric a set of instructions or rules
Foment instigate or stir up (an undesirable or violent sentiment or course of action)
Prima facie on the first impression
Onerous (of a task, duty, or responsibility) involving an amount of effort and difficulty that is oppressively burdensome
Invincibility the quality of being too powerful to be defeated or overcome
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Terrorising dissent: On bail for student activists

HC bail orders are an indictment (a formal charge or accusation of a serious crime) of attempt to portray Delhi protests as terrorist acts

Caught between a statutory bar on grant of regular bail and a judicial embargo (an official ban on trade or other commercial activity with a particular country) on any close examination of available evidence at the bail stage, those arrested under the country’s main anti-terror law have been languishing (suffer from being forced to remain in an unpleasant place or situation) in jails without trial for extended periods. The Delhi High Court orders granting bail to three student activists jailed for over a year for their alleged role in the February 2020 riots in Delhi represent a clear-headed effort to get around such impediments (a hindrance or obstruction in doing something). Sound in legal reasoning and interpretation, the judgments of Justice Siddharth Mridul and Justice Anup Jairam Bhambhani have made a salient distinction between those accused of offences against the country’s integrity and security on the one hand, and protesters or dissenters roped in (to force or persuade someone to join a group or become involved in something) unjustifiably under the rubric (a set of instructions or rules) of ‘terrorism’ on the other. The Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act has been invoked by the Delhi Police against activists and others who were among those organising the protests against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, on the claim that they had also fomented (instigate or stir up (an undesirable or violent sentiment or course of action)) the riots. Under Section 43D(5), there is a legal bar on granting bail if the court is of the opinion that there are reasonable grounds to believe that the accusation against those held is prima facie (on the first impression) true. Adding to this onerous ((of a task, duty, or responsibility) involving an amount of effort and difficulty that is oppressively burdensome) burden on the accused to demonstrate to the court that the accusation is untrue is a 2019 Supreme Court judgment that bars a detailed analysis of the evidence at the bail stage and rules that bail can be denied on “the broad probabilities” of the case.

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The High Court has ruled that the bail court can look at the available evidence to satisfy itself about the prima facie truth of the case. In other words, there is no statutory invincibility to the prosecution case merely because the UAPA has been invoked. It has found that none of the three — Asif Iqbal Tanha, Natasha Narwal and Devangana Kalita — was specifically or particularly accused of any ‘terrorist act’, ‘funding of a terrorist act’ or an act amounting to a conspiracy to commit a terrorist act or something preparatory to it. Once the UAPA charges were not seen to be true, it was open to the court to admit them to regular bail until conclusion of the trial. Further, with 740 witnesses cited, there is no scope for early conclusion of the trial. Riots are matters concerning public order, and not the security of the state. The court’s observation that the state, in its anxiety to suppress dissent, has blurred the line between the constitutionally guaranteed right to protest and “terrorist activity”, is a stern indictment of the establishment. The Delhi Police has gone to the Supreme Court on appeal against the verdict, possibly in the fear that the ruling may foil its design to paint protesters as ‘terrorists’. If the High Court’s approach to grant of bail is upheld, it would help secure the liberty of other dissenters held under the UAPA elsewhere without sufficient basis.

Hope you got to know some new words/phrases which will definitely be useful in the English section of upcoming competitive exams. Wishing you all the best in your preparation!

Want to improve your vocabulary further? Download the Lists of Word-Meanings of Previous Months here.

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