May 2021
M T W T F S S
 12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
31  

Child Rights – POSCO, Child Labour Laws, NAPC, etc.

Lend a helping hand to children the right way

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, 2015.

Mains level: Paper 2- Dealing with orphaned children

The article highlights the need to be aware of the legal provisions while helping a orphan child.

Helping orphaned children

  • Social media is flooded with requests to adopt children who have lost their parents in the pandemic.
  • However, before handing over an orphan child to any agency, family or person, it is important to be aware of the laws.
  • If an orphan child is kept by someone without lawful authority, he or she may land themselves in trouble.
  • According to the Hindu Minority and Guardianship Act, 1956, the father, and in his absence the mother, is the natural guardian.
  • Not even a close relative can look after the child without authorisation.

What are the options to help

  • First option is any individual who finds an orphan child or even any child who needs care and protection under the circumstances, should immediately call the toll free Childline number 1098.
  • It is an emergency phone outreach service managed by the Women and Child Development department’s nodal agency, the Childline India Foundation.
  • The second option is to intimate the district protection officer concerned whose contact details can be found on the National Tracking System for Missing and Vulnerable Children portal.
  • The third alternative is to approach the nearest police station or its child welfare police officer who is specially trained to exclusively deal with children.
  •  jOne can always dial the Emergency Response Support System (ERSS) which is a pan-India single number (112) based emergency response system for citizens in emergencies and seek the necessary help.
  • The non-reporting of such children is also a punishable offence under the Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, 2015 (JJA).

Procedure after a child reaches outreach agency

  • Once an orphan child is recovered by the outreach agency, it is the duty of the said agency to produce the child within 24 hours before the Child Welfare Committee (CWC) of the district.
  • The CWC, after an inquiry, decides whether to send the child to a children’s home or a fit facility or fit person.
  • If the child is below six years, he or she shall be placed in a specialised adoption agency.
  • The State thus takes care of all such children who are in need of care and protection, till they turn 18 years.
  • In Sampurna Behrua vs Union of India (2018), the Supreme Court of India directed States and Union Territories to ensure that all child care institutions are registered.

Procedure for adoption

  • Once a child is declared legally free for adoption by the CWC, adoption can be done either by Indian prospective adoptive parents or non-resident Indians or foreigners, in that order.
  • Another important feature of the JJA is that it is secular in nature and simple in procedure.
  • While the Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956 is religion specific but also relatively cumbersome in procedure.
  • Second, the procedure of adoption is totally transparent and its progress can be monitored from the portal of the statutory body, the Central Adoption Resource Authority.

Directives to the police

  • The Supreme Court in Bachpan Bachao Andolan vs Union of India directed all Directors General of Police, in May 2013, to register a first information report as a case of trafficking or abduction in every case of a missing child.
  • At least one police officer not below the rank of assistant sub-inspector in each police station is mandatorily required to undergo training to deal with children in conflict with the law and in need of care and protection.
  • They are not required to wear a uniform and need to be child-friendly.
  • Similarly, each district is supposed to have its special juvenile police unit, headed by an officer not below the rank of a Deputy Superintendent of Police.
  • The Supreme Court in Re: Exploitation of children in Orphanages in the State of Tamil Nadu (2017) inter alia, specifically asked the National Police Academy, Hyderabad and police training academies in every State to prepare training courses on the JJA and provide regular training to police officers in terms of sensitisation.
  • The National Commission for Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR) recently wrote to the Chief Secretaries of all States and Union Territories on the issue of children orphaned due to COVID-19.

Conclusion

Following the Covid surge and subsequent increase in request for adoption of children, the laws and procedure for the protection of children must be noted.

Get an IAS/IPS ranker as your 1: 1 personal mentor for UPSC 2024

Attend Now

Native Indian turtles face U.S. slider threat across Northeast

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Red-eared slider

Mains level: Paper 3- Native Indian turtles face threat from red-eared slider

About red-eared slider

  • The red-eared slider (Trachemys scripta elegans) derives its name from red stripes around the part where its ears would be and from its ability to slide quickly off any surface into the water.
  • Native to the U.S. and northern Mexico, this turtle is an extremely popular pet due to its small size, easy maintenance, and relatively low cost.

Reports about threat

  • Between August 2018 and June 2019, a team of herpetologists from NGO Help Earth published the finding in ‘Reptiles & Amphibians’, journal of the U.S.-based International Reptile Conservation Foundation in August 2020.
  • But the alarm was raised experts from Mizoram University’s Department of Zoology published another report in the same journal in April this year.

How is it a threat?

  • They grow fast and virtually leaves nothing for the native species to eat.
  •  People who keep it as pets become sensitive about turtle conservation but endanger the local ecosystem, probably unknowingly, by releasing them in natural water bodies after they outgrow an aquarium, tank or pool at home.
  • Much like the Burmese python that went to the U.S. as a pet to damage the South Florida Everglades ecosystem, the red-eared slider has already affected States such as Karnataka and Gujarat, where it has been found in 33 natural water bodies.
  • Preventing this invasive species from overtaking the Brahmaputra and other river ecosystems in the Northeast is crucial because the Northeast is home to more than 72% of the turtle and tortoise species in the country, all of them very rare.

Way forward

  • Although the red-eared slider is traded legally, the time has come for the government to come up with regulations against keeping invasive as pets.
  • There is a need to create awareness among pet traders for maintaining a database of red-eared slider buyers.
  • They can be contacted to hand over the turtles to the repository insulated from any wetland or natural water body.

Get an IAS/IPS ranker as your 1: 1 personal mentor for UPSC 2024

Attend Now

Israel’s Iron Dome rocket defence system

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Iron Dome

Mains level: Paper 3- Iron Dome rocket defence system

Context

  • Amid the Israel-Palestine conflict, the night sky over Israel has been ablaze with interceptor missiles from Iron Dome shooting down the incoming rockets in the sky.

What is Iron Dome?

  • Iron Dome is a multi-mission system capable of intercepting rockets, artillery, mortars and Precision Guided Munitions as well as aircraft, helicopters and Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) over short ranges of up to 70 km.
  • It is an all-weather system and can engage multiple targets simultaneously and can be deployed over land and sea.
  • Iron Dome is jointly manufactured by Rafael Advanced Systems and has been in service with Israeli Air Force since 2011.
  • The radar system was developed by Elta.

Working of Iron Dome

  • An Iron Dome battery consists of a battle management control unit, a detection and tracking radar and a firing unit of three vertical launchers, with 20 interceptor missiles each.
  • The interceptor missile uses a proximity fuse to detonate the target warhead in the air.
  • One of the system’s important advantages is its ability to identify the anticipated point of impact of the threatening rocket, to calculate whether it will fall in a built-up area or not, and to decide on this basis whether or not to engage it.
  • This prevents unnecessary interception of rockets that will fall in open areas and thus not cause damage, the paper states.
  • The system has intercepted thousands of rockets so far and, according to Rafael Advanced Systems, its success rate is over 90%.

Limitations of the system

  • The system can see limitations when it is overwhelmed with a barrage of projectiles.
  • The system has a ‘saturation point’.
  • It is capable of engaging a certain number of targets at the same time, and no more.
  • One of the possible limitations is the system’s inability to cope with very short range threats as estimates put the Iron Dome’s minimum interception range at 5-7 kilometres.

 

Get an IAS/IPS ranker as your 1: 1 personal mentor for UPSC 2024

Attend Now

Parliament – Sessions, Procedures, Motions, Committees etc

No virtual meets of standing committees

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Standing Committees and their functions

Mains level: Paper 2- No virtual meetings of Standing Committees

Confidential nature of meeting not possible in virtual meetings

  • Days after the Leader of Opposition in Rajya Sabha wrote to Chairman to allow virtual meetings of parliamentary standing committees, the Rajya Sabha Secretariat has turned down his plea.
  • Requests to allow virtual meetings of the standing committees were turned down last year as well by Rajya Sabha Chairman and Lok Sabha Speaker.
  • The request was turned down on grounds that virtual meetings would violate the confidential nature of such meetings and that any change to the norms require approval by Parliament.

Matter referred to Committee on Rules

  • The letter by the Rajya Sabha Secretariat points out that the Chairman and Speaker had decided last year, during the first wave of the pandemic, to refer the issue of allowing virtual meetings of parliamentary panels to the Committee on Rules in both Houses.
  • The Committee on Rules, however, did not take up the matter for discussion since Committees started physical meetings as the lockdown restrictions gradually eased in the second half of last year.

Get an IAS/IPS ranker as your 1: 1 personal mentor for UPSC 2024

Attend Now

JOIN THE COMMUNITY

Join us across Social Media platforms.

💥Mentorship New Batch Launch
💥Mentorship New Batch Launch