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GS Paper: GS3

  • Ekam AI and Project SAMBHAV

    Why in the News?

    During Vijay Diwas celebrations, the Indian Army showcased indigenous defence technologies including Ekam AI and Project SAMBHAV, highlighting progress in defence indigenisation and secure digital capabilities.

    About Ekam AI

    Fully indigenous and secure Artificial Intelligence platform
    • Designed for sensitive and classified environments
    • No dependence on foreign software or external cloud systems

    Key Features of Ekam AI

    Data analysis, document management and decision support
    User friendly AI accessible across all personnel levels
    • No requirement of specialised technical expertise
    • Ensures data security and digital sovereignty

    Significance of Ekam AI

    • Strengthens national data sovereignty
    • Reduces strategic dependence on foreign AI platforms
    • Builds trusted national digital infrastructure

    About Project SAMBHAV

    Portable satellite based communication system
    • Developed by the Indian Army
    • Provides mobile connectivity in remote, border and disaster affected areas

    Key Features of Project SAMBHAV

    Rapid deployment capability
    • Functions in network denied areas
    • Supports military operations and civilian disaster response

    Significance of Project SAMBHAV

    • Enhances communication resilience
    • Strengthens national disaster management infrastructure
    • Demonstrates dual use defence technology

    What is Vijay Diwas

    • Observed annually on 16 December
    • Commemorates India’s victory in the 1971 India Pakistan War
    • Led to the liberation of Bangladesh

    Consider the following statements: (2023)

    1. Ballistic missiles are jet-propelled at sub-sonic speeds throughout their fights, while cruise missiles are rocket-powered only in the initial phase of flight. 

    2. Agni-V is a medium-range supersonic cruise missile, while BrahMos is a solid-fu-elled intercontinental ballistic missile. 

    Which of the statements given above is/ are correct? 

    (a) 1 only (b) 2 only (c) Both 1 and 2 (d) Neither 1 nor 2

  • The future of governance in post-Maoist India

    Introduction

    The Maoist movement in India emerged and expanded not merely as an armed insurgency but as a response to prolonged governance failure in Fifth Schedule areas. Administrative neglect, weak service delivery, erosion of tribal self-governance, and systematic alienation from land and forests created conditions for parallel Maoist authority structures. While security operations have weakened Maoist violence, the deeper governance paradoxes of the Fifth Schedule administration remain unresolved, threatening durable peace and democratic legitimacy.

    Why in the News

    The article gains relevance as India enters a post-Maoist phase in several Fifth Schedule districts following sustained security operations. While insurgent violence has declined sharply since the peak of the 1990s and early 2000s, governance outcomes in these regions remain weak. Planning Commission’s Expert Group (2008) recorded that regions with abundant natural resources were reduced to “penury due to state neglect and poor governance.” Despite constitutional safeguards, tribal areas continue to face under-representation, diluted self-rule, and extractive development. The contrast between declining insurgency and persistent governance failure marks a critical inflection point in India’s internal security and federal governance trajectory.

    Evolution of Maoism as a Governance Phenomenon

    1. Administrative Neglect: Enabled Maoist penetration by leaving large governance vacuums in health, education, policing, and justice delivery.
    2. Parallel Authority Structures: Maoists provided dispute resolution, welfare access, food rations, and swift justice through kangaroo courts.
    3. Political Mobilisation: Insurgency functioned as a vehicle for tribal assertion against state institutions perceived as extractive.

    Constitutional Vision of the Fifth Schedule

    1. Protective Framework: Designed as a socio-political contract recognising distinct tribal histories and vulnerabilities.
    2. Institutional Architecture: Tribal Advisory Councils, Governor’s special powers, and restrictions on land alienation.
    3. Developmental Autonomy: Emphasised governance aligned with tribal customs, livelihoods, and cultural preservation.

    Structural Failures in Fifth Schedule Governance

    1. Under-Representation of Adivasis: Locals largely excluded from bureaucracy, policing, and revenue administration.
    2. Administrative Alienation: Officials lacked cultural familiarity and sensitivity to tribal social structures.
    3. Weak Institutional Capacity: Fifth Schedule provisions remained procedural rather than transformative.

    Land, Forests, and the Crisis of Resource Governance

    1. Land Alienation: Millions dispossessed despite constitutional safeguards and land acquisition laws.
    2. Revenue Administration Abuse: Land acquisition and forest governance emerged as the most violated provisions.
    3. Extractive Development Model: Mineral-rich regions experienced development without local benefit-sharing.

    Failure of Decentralised Self-Governance Mechanisms

    1. PESA Dilution: Panchayat Extension to Scheduled Areas Act remained poorly implemented and routinely violated.
    2. Gram Sabha Marginalisation: Consent provisions ignored in mining, land acquisition, and forest diversion.
    3. State Resistance: Amendments and administrative practices diluted original intent of self-rule.

    Contradictions in Rights-Based Legislation

    1. Forest Rights Act (FRA): Provided legal protection but faced bureaucratic resistance and weak enforcement.
    2. CAF Act, 2016: Prioritised compensatory afforestation over livelihood and habitation rights.
    3. Legal Dilution: Judicial and executive interventions weakened protective intent of tribal legislation.

    Governance Improvements and Their Limits

    1. Service Delivery Gains: Improved access to roads, telecom, welfare schemes, and digital payments.
    2. Digital Governance: Cash transfers and e-governance reduced some leakages.
    3. Persistent Institutional Weakness: Education, policing, health, judiciary, and revenue administration remain inadequate.

    Post-Maoist Governance Challenge

    1. Leadership Vacuum: Absence of credible tribal leadership in governance institutions.
    2. Performance Deficit: Panchayats in Fifth Schedule areas underperform compared to Sixth Schedule autonomous councils.
    3. Trust Deficit: Continued alienation risks ideological re-radicalisation despite reduced violence.

    Way Forward

    1. Fifth Schedule Reorientation: Ensures faithful implementation of constitutional safeguards by operationalising the Governor’s special responsibilities, strengthening Tribal Advisory Councils, and limiting routine administrative overrides.
    2. PESA-Centred Decentralisation: Restores primacy of Gram Sabhas in land acquisition, mining approvals, forest governance, and welfare delivery to re-establish democratic legitimacy at the grassroots.
    3. Rights-Based Resource Governance: Enforces Forest Rights Act provisions in letter and spirit, integrates livelihood security with conservation, and curbs extractive practices that marginalise tribal communities.
    4. Administrative Inclusion: Expands recruitment, posting, and capacity-building of local tribal personnel in policing, revenue administration, and service delivery institutions.
    5. Development-Security Convergence: Aligns security operations with civil administration through coordinated district.

    Conclusion

    The retreat of Maoist violence in large parts of India marks a significant security achievement, but it does not signify the resolution of the deeper governance crisis that gave rise to Left Wing Extremism. Persistent administrative under-representation of adivasis, dilution of Fifth Schedule protections, weak implementation of PESA and forest rights, and extractive resource governance continue to erode state legitimacy in these regions. Without restoring genuine tribal self-governance, strengthening local institutions, and aligning development with constitutional intent, the post-Maoist phase risks becoming a period of fragile stability rather than durable peace. Sustainable normalcy in Fifth Schedule areas ultimately depends on governance reform, not security dominance alone.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2020] What are the determinants of left-wing extremism in Eastern part of India? What strategy should the Government of India, civil administration and security forces adopt to counter the threat in the affected areas? 

    Linkage: This question directly falls under GS Paper III (Internal Security), particularly the syllabus areas of Left Wing Extremism (LWE), role of governance deficits in internal security, and coordinated civil-security responses. It tests the ability to link development, governance, and security, a recurring UPSC demand.

  • Climate change, deforestation worsened impact of SE Asia cyclones

    Introduction

    Rising global temperatures, deforestation, and rapid urbanisation have significantly intensified the flood impacts of tropical cyclones across Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Indonesia, and Thailand. Recent cyclones such as Dithawru and Senyar produced rainfall and flooding far exceeding historical norms, marking a shift from cyclical monsoon flooding to extreme, compound climate disasters.

    Why in the News

    A new attribution study by the World Weather Attribution (WWA) group establishes that climate change, land-use change, and urban expansion together amplified cyclone-induced floods in Southeast Asia to unprecedented levels. Cyclone Senyar made landfall in Indonesia and Malaysia on November 26-27, while Dithawru struck Sri Lanka earlier in November, causing extensive damage and over 1,600 deaths. The study highlights rainfall intensities rising up to 160% in Sri Lanka and 50% in Malaysia compared to pre-industrial baselines, underscoring a structural climate shift rather than isolated weather anomalies.

    Escalating Cyclone Rainfall in a Warming Climate

    1. Global Temperature Rise: Increases atmospheric moisture-holding capacity as temperatures have risen by 1.3°C since the mid-1800s.
    2. Moisture Amplification: Each 1°C rise enables the atmosphere to hold 7% more moisture, intensifying rainfall.
    3. Cyclone Energy Supply: Elevated sea surface temperatures in the North Indian Ocean provided additional latent heat for cyclone formation.
    4. Rainfall Extremes: Five-day rainfall events in Sri Lanka intensified by 160%, while extreme rainfall in Malaysia increased by 50%.

    Sea Surface Temperature Anomalies and Storm Intensification

    1. Above-Normal SSTs: Sea surface temperatures during Cyclone Senyar were 0.2°C higher than the 1991-2020 average.
    2. Storm Development: Warmer oceans increased evaporation rates, strengthening storm systems and prolonging rainfall duration.
    3. Frequency Shift: The study identifies a rise in extreme rainfall frequency rather than mere intensity spikes.

    Deforestation as a Flood Multiplier

    1. Forest Cover Decline: Sri Lanka lost 90% of forest cover between 1900 and 2020.
    2. Hydrological Impact: Reduced infiltration and increased surface runoff amplified landslides and flash floods.
    3. Human Impact: Rainfall-induced landslides in Sri Lanka caused over 600 deaths.
    4. Indonesia Case: Nearly 25% of old-growth forests on palm oil plantations were cleared between 1991 and 2020, reducing natural flood buffers.

    Rapid Urbanisation and Exposure Expansion

    1. Population Exposure: Rising numbers of people reside in high-intensity flood-risk zones across Sri Lanka and Indonesia.
    2. Infrastructure Stress: Roads, railways, and cropland expansion increased surface sealing and runoff velocity.
    3. Flood Pathways: Inadequate drainage and altered land gradients intensified urban flooding during Cyclone Senyar.

    Flood Impacts Beyond Rainfall

    1. Economic Losses: Sustained economic losses estimated between $6-7 billion, equivalent to 3-5% of GDP in affected regions.
    2. Agricultural Damage: More than 137,000 acres of agricultural land damaged due to floods and infrastructure failures.
    3. Secondary Hazards: Flooding triggered dam breaches, canal destruction, and landslides, compounding disaster severity.

    Attribution Science and Policy Significance

    1. Event Attribution: Confirms climate change as a decisive factor in amplifying rainfall and flood impacts.
    2. Shift in Disaster Pattern: Floods no longer limited to monsoon cycles but increasingly driven by short-duration extreme events.
    3. Policy Gap: Highlights inadequate land-use planning and ecosystem protection in climate adaptation strategies.

    Conclusion

    The study establishes that cyclone disasters in Southeast Asia are no longer episodic weather events but outcomes of sustained climate warming, ecological degradation, and unplanned urban growth. Addressing future flood risks requires integrating climate mitigation, forest conservation, and land-use planning into disaster governance frameworks.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2023] The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has predicted a global sea level rise of about one metre by AD 2100. What would be its impact in India and the other countries in the Indian Ocean region? 

    Linkage: The article reinforces IPCC projections by showing how warming oceans and climate change amplify coastal flooding risks in the Indian Ocean region. Sea-level rise acts as a risk multiplier, intensifying cyclone impacts, floods, and ecosystem loss in India and neighbouring countries.

  • Bioenergy Capacity Addition in India 

     Why in the News?

    The Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) reported major additions in biomass, waste-to-energy and biogas capacity over the last 10 years.
    • Data shared in Lok Sabha on 17 December 2025

    Key Achievements in the Last 10 Years

    Biomass power capacity added: 2,361 MW
    Waste to Energy capacity added: 227.56 MWe
    Biogas plants installed: 2.88 lakh plus plants

    National Bioenergy Programme (NBP)

    • Implemented by MNRE
    Phase I notified on 02 November 2022
    • Time period: 2022 23 to 2025 26
    • Budget outlay: ₹998 crore
    • Supports biogas, biomass, bio CNG and waste to energy projects

    Earlier Bioenergy Schemes

    National Biogas and Manure Management Programme (NBMMP)
    New National Biogas and Organic Manure Programme (NNBOMP)
    Biomass power and bagasse cogeneration scheme
    Energy from urban, industrial and agricultural waste programme

    Prelims Pointers

    • Bioenergy falls under renewable energy
    • MNRE is the nodal ministry
    • Bio CNG is part of SATAT (Sustainable Alternative Towards Affordable Transportation) initiative linkage
    • Waste to energy supports urban waste management
    Consider the following statements about ‘PM Surya Ghar Muft Bijli Yojana’: (2025)

    I. It targets installation of one crore solar rooftop panels in the residential sector. 

    II. The Ministry of New and Renewable Energy aims to impart training on installation, operation, maintenance and repairs of solar rooftop systems at grassroot levels. 

    III. It aims to create more than three lakhs skilled manpower through fresh skilling and up-skilling, under scheme component of capacity building. 

    Which of the statements given above are correct? 

    (a) I and II only (b) I and III only (c) II and III only (d) I, II and III

  • Gestational Diabetes Mellitus (GDM) 

    Why in the News?

    • A large multi-city study highlights the high prevalence of early GDM in Indian women
    • Early GDM linked with higher future diabetes risk

    What is GDM?

    Gestational Diabetes Mellitus is glucose intolerance first diagnosed during pregnancy
    • Affects about 14 percent of pregnancies worldwide

    Types of GDM

    Early GDM (EGDM): Diagnosed before 20 weeks of pregnancy
    Late GDM (LGDM): Diagnosed between 24 to 28 weeks

    STRiDE Study

    • Conducted at 7 antenatal clinics
    • Sample size: over 3000 pregnant women
    • Locations: Chennai, Hyderabad, Puducherry
    • Published in Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice

    Key Findings

    Early GDM prevalence: 21.5 percent
    Late GDM prevalence: 19.5 percent
    • Early GDM affects about 1 in 5 pregnant women

    A company marketing food product advertises that its items do not contain trans-fats. What does this campaign signify to the customers? (2011)

    1. The food products are not made out of hydrogenated oils. 

    2. The food products are not made out of animal fats/oils. 

    3. The oils used are not likely to damage the cardiovascular health of the consumers. 

    Select the correct answer using the code given below: 

    (a) 1 only (b) 2 and 3 only (c) 1 and 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3

  • Kerala’s Butterfly Diversity 

    Why in the News?

    A new monograph published in ENTOMON journal affirms that Kerala hosts the highest butterfly diversity among Indian States along the Western Ghats.

    Source of Study

    • Title: The Butterflies (Lepidoptera, Rhopalocera) of Kerala: Status and Distribution
    • Journal: ENTOMON, open access quarterly journal
    • Published by: Association for Advancement of Entomology
    • Lead researcher: Kalesh Sadasivan

    Key Findings

    • Kerala records 328 butterfly species.
    • Includes 41 species endemic to the Western Ghats.
    • Western Ghats as a whole support 337 butterfly species, most of which are found in Kerala.

    Butterfly Families in Kerala

    Nymphalidae: 97 species, Lycaenidae: 96 species, Hesperiidae: 82 species and Other families: Papilionidae, Pieridae, Riodinidae

    Migratory Species

    36 migratory butterfly species documented. Highlights Kerala as a key migratory corridor for seasonal butterfly movement.

    • Conservation Status
    • 22 species from Kerala listed in the IUCN Red List.
    • Most are Least Concern.
    • 2 species classified as Near Threatened.

    Legal Protection in India

    • 70 butterfly species protected under the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972
    • 4 species under Schedule I. Majority under Schedule II.

    Larval Host Plant Diversity

    • Over 1,800 larval feeding records documented.
    • Includes 350 plus new field observations.
    • Covers nearly 800 plant species.
    • One of the largest region specific host plant compilations in India.
    Due to some reasons, if there is a huge fall in the population of species of butterflies, what could be its likely consequence/consequences? (2017)

    1. Pollination of some plants could be adversely affected. 

    2. There could be a drastic increase in the fungal infections of some cultivated plants. 

    3. It could lead to a fall in the population of some species of wasps, spiders and birds. 

    Select the correct answer using the code given below: 

    (a) 1 only (b) 2 and 3 only (c) 1 and 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3

  • India Post’s DHRUVA Framework

    Why in the News?

    Department of Posts has proposed the Digital Hub for Reference and Unique Virtual Address (DHRUVA) as a Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI), supported by a draft amendment to the Post Office Act, 2023.

    What is DHRUVA?

    DHRUVA stands for Digital Hub for Reference and Unique Virtual Address. It aims to standardise and digitally share physical addresses through virtual labels similar to email IDs.

    Nature

    Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) similar to Aadhaar and UPI. Based on consent based address sharing.

    Key Components

    • Digital Label: Proxy address like name@dhruva instead of full physical address.
    • DIGIPIN: 10 digit alphanumeric geo coded location pin developed by India Post.
    • Coverage: Every 12 square metre area in India has a unique DIGIPIN.

    Institutional Ecosystem

    • Address Service Providers: Generate virtual address labels.
    • Address Validation Agencies: Authenticate address information.
    • Address Information Agents: Manage user consent and sharing.
    • Governing Entity: NPCI like body to oversee the framework.

    How It Works

    • User authorises sharing of the virtual address label.
    • Platform receives descriptive address and geo coded DIGIPIN.
    • Ensures controlled access to address data.

    Major Use Cases

    • Logistics and delivery services.
    • E commerce platforms and gig economy platforms.
    • Consent based data sharing of addresses.
    • Seamless address updates during relocation.
    • Service discovery for doorstep services.

    Importance

    • Improves last mile delivery, especially in rural areas.
    • Reduces errors from incomplete or informal addresses.
    • Enhances user control over personal address data.

    Concerns and Criticism

    • Relies on personal data and user consent, unlike structure based address systems used globally.
    • May create incomplete datasets for urban planning if consent is denied.
    • Needs clear legislative backing.

    Associated Initiative

    • DIGIPIN: Open sourced, location coordinate based addressing system by India Post.

    Relevant Law

    • Post Office Act, 2023 and its proposed amendment.

    Prelims Pointers

    • DHRUVA proposed by Department of Posts.
    • DIGIPIN is location based, not a traditional PIN code.
    • DHRUVA links addresses to individuals, not surveyed structures.
    • Consent framework is the core feature.
    Consider the following: (2022)

    1. Aarogya Setu 

    2. CoWIN 

    3. DigiLocker 

    4. DIKSHA 

    Which of the above are built on top of open-source digital platforms? 

    (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 2, 3 and 4 only (c) 1, 3 and 4 only (d) 1, 2, 3 and 4

  • Does India need to upgrade its biosecurity measures

    Introduction

    Biosecurity refers to institutional and regulatory measures designed to prevent the intentional misuse of biological agents, toxins, or technologies. Unlike biosafety, which focuses on preventing accidental release of pathogens, biosecurity addresses deliberate threats to human, animal, and agricultural health. The expansion of biotechnology has increased human control over biological systems, simultaneously raising the risk of malicious exploitation and necessitating upgraded governance mechanisms.

    Understanding Biosecurity in the Indian Context

    1. Conceptual Scope: Ensures prevention, detection, and response to intentional misuse of biological agents across laboratories, agriculture, and public health systems.
    2. Differentiation from Biosafety: Addresses deliberate misuse rather than accidental pathogen release.
    3. Sectoral Coverage: Extends protection beyond human health to livestock, crops, and supply chains.

    Evolution of Global Biosecurity Norms

    1. Biological Weapons Convention (1975): Prohibits development, use, and stockpiling of biological weapons and mandates destruction of existing arsenals.
    2. Normative Significance: Establishes the first global legal framework banning an entire category of weapons of mass destruction.
    3. Implementation Gap: Lacks a verification mechanism, increasing reliance on national biosecurity systems.

    Drivers of Biosecurity Risks in India

    1. Geographical Exposure: Facilitates cross-border transmission of pathogens due to porous borders and ecological diversity.
    2. Agrarian Dependence: Increases vulnerability of food systems to agro-terrorism and livestock disease outbreaks.
    3. Population Density: Amplifies impact of biological incidents on public health infrastructure.
    4. Non-State Actor Threats: Highlights risks from terror groups, illustrated by reported Ricin toxin preparation cases.

    Role of Emerging Biotechnologies

    1. Dual-Use Nature: Enables legitimate research while lowering entry barriers for malicious experimentation.
    2. Technological Diffusion: Expands access to genetic manipulation tools beyond state laboratories.
    3. Risk Amplification: Increases probability of low-cost, high-impact biological incidents.

    India’s Existing Biosecurity Architecture

    1. Department of Biotechnology: Oversees research governance and laboratory safety frameworks.
    2. National Centre for Disease Control: Manages disease surveillance and outbreak response systems.
    3. Department of Animal Husbandry and Dairying: Monitors livestock biosecurity and transboundary diseases.
    4. Plant Quarantine Organisation of India: Regulates agricultural imports and exports to prevent pest and pathogen entry.
    5. Legal Frameworks:
      1. Environment (Protection) Act, 1986: Regulates hazardous microorganisms and GMOs.
      2. WMD and Delivery Systems Act, 2005: Criminalises unlawful biological weapons activities.

    Institutional and Legal Gaps Highlighted

    1. Fragmented Governance: Dispersed responsibilities across multiple ministries without unified coordination.
    2. Surveillance Asymmetry: Strong outbreak response but weaker preventive intelligence mechanisms.
    3. Non-State Actor Focus: Limited emphasis on bio-terrorism preparedness compared to conventional security threats.

    Conclusion

    India’s internal security landscape is being reshaped by the convergence of emerging technologies, porous borders, and the growing role of non-state actors. While the country has built sectoral capacities in health, agriculture, and research governance, the absence of an integrated biosecurity framework leaves critical gaps in prevention and early detection. Strengthening biosecurity is therefore not only a public health or scientific necessity but a core internal security imperative, requiring coordinated regulation, intelligence integration, and sustained institutional preparedness.

  • BlueBird 6 Satellite and LVM 3

    Why in the News?

    The Indian Space Research Organisation ISRO is scheduled to launch the BlueBird 6 satellite, developed by US based AST SpaceMobile, on 21 December 2025 using India’s heavy lift rocket LVM 3.

    About BlueBird 6 Satellite

    Developer: AST SpaceMobile USA
    Purpose: Provides direct to device internet connectivity, enabling normal mobile phones to access broadband without dependence on ground based cell towers
    Weight: Around 6.5 tonnes, making it among the heaviest commercial satellites launched by ISRO
    Orbit: Low Earth Orbit LEO
    Technology: Equipped with one of the largest phased array antennas ever deployed in space, covering nearly 2,400 square feet
    • Capable of direct communication with standard smartphones
    Significance: Enhances global mobile broadband connectivity, particularly in remote and rural regions
    Strategic importance: Strengthens Indo US space cooperation and expands commercial space launch collaboration
    Future impact: Helps bridge the digital divide by providing internet access in regions without cellular infrastructure

    About LVM 3

    • Full name: Launch Vehicle Mark 3
    • Also called GSLV Mk III or Bahubali
    • India’s heavy lift launch vehicle developed by ISRO
    • Designed for large satellite launches and human spaceflight missions

    With reference to India’s satellite launch vehicles, Consider the following statements: (2018)

    1. PSLVs launch the satellites useful for Earth resources monitoring whereas GSLVs are designed mainly to launch communication satellites. 

    2. Satellites launched by PSLV appear to remain permanently fixed in the same position in the sky, as viewed from a particular location on Earth. 

    3. GSLV Mk III is a four-stage launch vehicle with the first and third stages using solid rocket motors, and the second and fourth stages using liquid rocket engines. 

    Which of the statements given above is/ are correct? 

    (a) 1 only (b) 2 and 3 (c) 1 and 2 (d) 3 only

  • Wildlife Smuggling at Kempegowda International Airport (KIA)

    Why in the News?

    Customs officials at Kempegowda International Airport, Bengaluru, intercepted a wildlife smuggling attempt involving endangered primates brought from Bangkok.

    Key Details

    • Two red shanked douc monkeys were recovered from a passenger arriving on flight TG 325 from Bangkok.
    • The animals were concealed inside check in baggage.
    • The passenger was arrested under provisions of the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 and the Customs Act, 1962.
    • The rescued primates were handed over to animal welfare authorities for rehabilitation.
    • Further investigation is ongoing.

    About Red Shanked Douc Monkey

    • Scientific name: Pygathrix nemaeus
    • Habitat: Tropical forests of Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia
    • IUCN Status: Critically Endangered
    • Listed under CITES Appendix I
    • Known for distinctive red lower limbs and colourful facial markings

    Legal and International Framework

    • Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 provides legal protection to endangered species in India.
    • CITES regulates international trade in endangered species of wild fauna and flora.
    • Appendix I species face the strictest trade restrictions.

    Prelims Pointers

    • Airports are major transit points for wildlife trafficking.
    • Smuggling of CITES listed species is a serious international offence.
    • India is a signatory to CITES and enforces it through domestic laws.
    • Wildlife trafficking is among the top illegal trades globally after drugs and arms.
    In India, if a species of tortoise is declared protected under Schedule I of the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972, what does it imply? (2017)

    (a) It enjoys the same level of protection as the tiger. 

    (b) It no longer exists in the wild, a few individuals are under captive protection; and how it is impossible to prevent its extinction. 

    (c) It is endemic to a particular region of India. 

    (d) Both (b) and (c) stated above are correct in this context.