A Nobel push for peace in Colombia
In a long year of war and strife(संघर्ष ), it is a silver lining that the Nobel
Committee in Oslo was spoilt(बिगड़ा हुआ ) for choice in deciding upon the recipient
of the 2016 Peace Prize. A landmark nuclear deal
brought a peaceful closure to Iran’s purported(कथित) nuclear weapon ambitions
and paved(पक्का) the way for better relations between Tehran and the West,
making the key negotiators leading contenders for the Prize. The yeoman
efforts of the White Helmets of Syria,
a group of local volunteers in Aleppo and other parts of war-ravaged
Syria who help rescue people injured or stranded(फंसे) in bomb attacks in war
zones, merited recognition. But the ending of one of the longest-running civil wars was the achievement that got the highest recognition by the Committee. The Nobel Peace Prize for 2016 has been awarded to Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos after his government painstakingly concluded negotiations by signing an accord with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), winding down hostilities in a 52-year-old civil war.
The accord, signed on September 26, 2016, provided for the disbanding(छिन्न भीन्न करना)
of FARC militants and for the rebels to join the political process as a
routine political party, besides conceding(मानने) demands by FARC to address
inequities in Colombia’s rural areas through development programmes and
land distribution. FARC also agreed to dismantle(गिराना) drug production
facilities in areas in its control which had helped finance the war
against the Colombian government. This was a landmark accord that
provided an opportunity not just for peace but also for better prospects
in the war against drug production and trade in Colombia.
Merely a week after the accord, the government received a setback(बाधा) as its
attempt to get the accord ratified(पुष्टि की) through a referendum failed. About 50.23 per cent of the voters who turned out (the turnout was less than 40 per cent) voted against the peace agreement.
Both the government and FARC have ruled out a return to war despite
this setback, and even the advocates of the “no” vote, including former
President Álvaro Uribe, have sought fresh negotiations for what they
deem to be a better accord. The Nobel committee recognises that despite
the setback there is the need for a broad-based dialogue to further the
peace process. In doing so, it has provided Mr. Santos the persuasive(प्रेरक)
pulpit(मंच) he had lost following the referendum. The award should enable his
government to seek a renewed accord that does not militate against the
previous one and seals a durable peace. The Peace Prize is a testimonial
to the patience required to bring about closure to complex,
long-running conflicts. In this case at least, it is well-deserved.
1)Strife meaning is struggle, battle, discord, dispute.
2)Spoilt meaning is ruin, hurt, destroy,devastate.
3)Purported meaning is meaning, implication, objective.
4)Paved meaning is cover with asphalt ,concrete.
Pave the way meaning is मार्ग प्रशस्त करना
5)Stranded meaning is cut off or left behind.
6)Disbanding meaning is break up, destroy, disperse, demobilize.
7)Conceding meaning is accept, admit, acknowledge,allow.
8)Dismantle meaning is take apart, demolish, destroy.
9)Setback meaning is obstacle, impediment, hindrance, disappointment.
10)Ratified meaning is affirm, authorize, approve, confirm
11)Persuasive meaning is effective, influential, alluring,inspiring.
12)Pulpit meaning is a platform raised above the surrounding level to give prominence to the person on it, podium.
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