Thursday 19 September 2013

Local interests
  
The original Supreme Court deadline of September 15 to hold the local bodies elections throughout the country has come and gone and still the provinces are holding out[1]. Punjab and Sindh, in particular, seem in no hurry to follow the constitution which stipulates[2] that local government elections should be held within 90 days of a general election. Now the Supreme Court – without giving a specific date – has ordered the government to hold the elections, and if they dither[3] unnecessarily then the court will set a date. Of late[4] the Election Commission seems to have moved[5] and has called a meeting of all the provinces at the end of this month to discuss the issue.

The PML-N has been the major impediment to holding local elections in Punjab. Since the PML-N already controls Punjab after sweeping the provincial elections, its elected members probably do not see much benefit in holding local polls and diluting[6] their personal power. There is also a slight chance that the PTI and the JI could form an alliance and make inroads[7] into the province. Either way, the constitutional requirement to hold the local bodies polls should not be held hostage to the whims[8] of politicians. This is where Supreme Court intervention is so welcome. It has shown flexibility in not setting a date that would unduly burden the Election Commission of Pakistan and give political parties scant[9] time to organise and campaign. But if the provincial governments continue to stall[10] for time the Supreme Court will be left with no choice but to set an arbitrary date.

(International The News, 18 September 2013)



[1] to resist
[2] to demand something
[3] to vacillate; hesitate about what to do because you are unable to decide
[4] recently
[5] to take action; to do sth; to act
[6] to weaken; to make sth weaker or less effective
[7] to start to have a direct and noticeable effect
[8] a sudden wish or idea, especially one that cannot be reasonably explained
[9] inadequate; not sufficient
[10] to delay; to use delaying tactics

Monday 16 September 2013

Merit of the Call to Prayer

The Prophet said, on him be peace: “On the Day of Resurrection, three people will find themselves on a ridge of black musk. They will have no reckoning to fear, nor any cause for alarm while human accounts are being settled. First, a man who recites the Qur’an to please God, Great and Glorious is He, and who leads the Prayer to people’s satisfaction. Second, a man who gives the Call to Prayer in a Mosque, inviting people to God, Great and Glorious is He, for the sake of His good pleasure. Third, a man who has a hard time making a living in this world, yet is not distracted from the work of the Hereafter.”

words and meanings

ridge
a long narrow hilltop

musk
a substance with a strong smell that is used in making some perfumes

reckoning
punishment or vengeance for wrongs committed

Sunday 15 September 2013

Lessons from Iraq, Libya loom large as diplomats ponder Syrian weapons probe
words
meanings
sentences/phrases

When Moammar Gaddafi renounced chemical weapons in 2003, the Libyan dictator surprised skeptics by moving quickly to eliminate his country’s toxic arsenal. He signed international treaties, built a disposal facility and allowed inspectors to oversee the destruction of tons of mustard gas.

But Gaddafi’s public break with weapons of mass destruction was not all that it seemed. Only after his death in 2011 did investigators learn that he had retained a large stash of chemical weapons. In a hillside bunker deep in Libya’s southeastern desert, Gaddafi had tucked away hundreds of battle-ready warheads loaded with deadly sulfur mustard.

(The Washington Post, 15 September 2013)
toxic
poisonous
toxic chemicals/ gases
arsenal
a collection of weapons such as guns and explosives
Britain’s nuclear arsenal
mustard gas
a poisonous gas that burns the skin
stash
a secret store
a stash of money
tuck away
put in a safe or secluded place
She kept his letters tucked away in a drawer.
warhead
destructive material carried by missile
nuclear warheads
sulfur 
a chemical element




Saturday 14 September 2013

Talks with the militants
words
meanings
usage

If the political leadership is reluctant to speak plainly to the TTP, it is also indulging in sophistry when speaking about them. The interior minister has trotted out an old canard with his suggestion that the fight against militancy was a result of Musharraf-era policies. That is nonsense. Musharraf-era policies certainly compounded the problem of militancy, but they did not give birth to it. There existed a significant militancy threat before Musharraf or drones, and there will continue to exist an even bigger one until the state is truthful, to itself and to the country.

(Dawn on 13 September 2013)
plainly
bluntly; frankly; using simple words to say sth in a direct and honest way
He told her plainly that he thought she was making a big mistake.
To put it plainly, he’s a crook.
sophistry
the use of clever but false arguments; dishonesty
trying to argue that I had benefited in any way from the disaster was pure sophistry
trot out
come up with something repeatedly
He trots out the same old excuses every time he’s late.
canard
a false report or piece of news
the old canard that LA is a cultural wasteland
compound
intensify; make something more extreme or intense by adding something to it
The problems were compounded by severe food shortages.


1. Fill in the blanks with suitable words. 1. p erformed 2. consummate 3. revered 4. irrevocably 5. legislation 6. professionals 7. p...