Trắc nghiệm Reading tiếng Anh lớp 11 Unit 5 Being Part Of ASEAN gồm các câu hỏi trắc nghiệm tiếng Anh 11 khác nhau do Kho Tri Thức Số biên soạn và đăng tải, hỗ trợ học sinh trong quá trình học tập lớp 11 đạt kết quả cao.
Đề ôn tập kỹ năng đọc (Reading) tiếng Anh Unit 5 có đáp án dưới đây được biên tập xoay quanh chủ đề bài học Being Part Of ASEAN (Trở thành thành viên của ASEAN) giúp các em học sinh lớp 11 rèn luyện kỹ năng làm bài thi hiệu quả cũng như tích lũy thêm nhiều Từ vựng - Ngữ pháp tiếng Anh theo chủ đề bài học Unit 5 tiếng Anh lớp 11.
When Malaysia takes the ASEAN chair next year, it will face a huge challenge. Too few of us know enough about this grouping we call the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. We do not know what it means to be a part of ASEAN and why it is important to us. At the same time, pressure is mounting to reinvent ASEAN to make it more people-centric and less government-centric. The Heat speaks to Global Movement of Moderates CEO Saifuddin Abdullah on why ASEAN should mean more to us than just acronyms.
ASEAN people do not feel like they are a part of the community of Southeast Asian nations. This statement, backed up by survey findings, is pretty bizarre, and extremely hurtful too, considering that ASEAN is 47 years old today. "Interview 10 persons on the street and you would perhaps get only one of them who knows about ASEAN,” says Datuk Saifuddin Abdullah. This CEO of Global Movement of Moderates (GMM) is not running down ASEAN; he's confronting the truth as it impacts the project he has been entrusted with. Here's more, in 2012, the ASEAN Secretariat conducted a survey that showed only 34% of Malaysians had heard of the ASEAN community. This compares with 96% of Laotians. Malaysia chairs ASEAN next year, and GMM is a member of the national steering committee organising the ASEAN People's Forum (APF), a platform designed to bridge the gap between governments and civil society. Never heard of it? You're forgiven.
The APF actually started off life in the 1990s, except it was called the ASEAN People's Assembly (APA). It was held back to back with the ASEAN Summit, which is held twice a year. The APA is the forum where 10 leaders of government engage with 10 leaders of civil society in a half-hour meeting. "It was going well until one year when the chairman decided not to hold the APA, so it was discontinued until 2005 when Malaysia took the chairmanship of ASEAN again and founded the ASEAN People's Forum (APF)," Saifuddin explains. In a perfect world, forums such as the APF or its predecessor APA would have worked perfectly to bridge the gap between government and civil society.
However, as Saifuddin points out, Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) often do not see eye to eye with their governments. For instance this year, Myanmar is chair of ASEAN and in the APF, three member nations - including Malaysia - decided not to recognise the CSO leaders chosen as representatives so the APF did not take place. “This is where the GMM wants to play a role in ensuring that this situation does not arise again," Saifuddin says.
Question 1: According to the passage, in 1990s, APF was called ____.
The word “acronyms” in paragraph 1 probably means ____.
The phrase "backed up" in paragraph 2 has similar meaning to ____.
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