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  • Rohingya Conflict

    India-Myanmar relations

    The Foreign Secretary and Chief of the Army Staff have recently visited Myanmar reflected India’s multidimensional interests in the country.

    Try this question:

    Q.Myanmar is the key in linking South Asia to Southeast Asia and the eastern periphery becomes the focal point for New Delhi’s regional outreach. Analyse.

    India-Myanmar relations

    • There are two lines of thinking that drive India’s Myanmar policy: engagement with key political actors and balancing neighbours.
    • For Myanmar, the visit would be viewed as India’s support for its efforts in strengthening democratization amidst criticisms by rights groups over the credibility of its upcoming election.

    Non-interference in internal politics

    • The political logic that has shaped India’s Myanmar policy since the 1990s has been to support democratization driven from within the country.
    • This has allowed Delhi to engage with the military that played a key role in Myanmar’s political transition and is still an important political actor.
    • A key factor behind the military regime’s decision to open the country when it initiated reforms was, in part, to reduce dependence on China.

    India as an alternative

    • By engaging Myanmar, Delhi provides alternative options to Naypyidaw.
    • This driver in India’s Myanmar policy has perhaps gained greater salience in the rapidly changing regional geopolitics.

    Recent initiatives

    • Like in other neighbouring countries, India suffers from an image of being unable to get its act together in making its presence felt on the ground.
    • The inauguration of the liaison office of the Embassy of India in Naypyidaw (the capital) may seem a routine diplomatic activity.
    • However, establishing a permanent presence in the capital where only a few countries have set up such offices does matter.
    • Interestingly, China was the first country to establish a liaison office in Naypyidaw in 2017.
    • India has also proposed to build a petroleum refinery in Myanmar that would involve an investment of $6 billion.

    Strategic calculus

    • This is an indication of Myanmar’s growing significance in India’s strategic calculus.
    • It also shows India’s evolving competitive dynamic with China in the sector at a time when tensions between the two have intensified.
    • Another area of cooperation that has expanded involves the border areas.
    • Furthermore, the recent announcement that India was transferring a Kilo-class submarine to Myanmar demonstrates the depth of their cooperation in the maritime domain.

    The balancing act

    • For Delhi, the balancing act between Bangladesh and Myanmar remains one of the keys to its overall approach to the Rohingya issue.
    • Delhi has reiterated its support for “ensuring the safe, sustainable and speedy return of displaced persons” to Myanmar.
    • By positioning as playing an active role in facilitating the return of Rohingya refugees, India has made it clear that it supports Myanmar’s efforts and also understands Bangladesh’s burden.
    • For Delhi, engaging rather than criticizing is the most practical approach to finding a solution.

    Conclusion

    • For India, Myanmar is key in linking South Asia to Southeast Asia and the eastern periphery becomes the focal point for New Delhi’s regional outreach.
    • Delhi’s political engagement and diplomatic balancing seem to have worked so far in its ties with Myanmar.
    • Whether it has leveraged these advantages on the ground to the full is open to debate.
    • The aforementioned initiatives could be the beginning of change on the ground by establishing India’s presence in sectors where it ought to be more pronounced.
  • J&K – The issues around the state

    Outsiders can now buy land in Jammu and Kashmir

    People, as well as investors outside Jammu and Kashmir, can now purchase land in the Union Territory (UT) as the Centre has notified new land laws for the region.

    What is the new criterion?

    • Under the newly introduced J&K Development Act, the term “permanent resident of the State” as a criterion has been “omitted”, paving the way for investors outside J&K to invest in the UT.
    • Under the ‘transfer of land for the purpose of promotion of healthcare or education’, the government may now allow the transfer of land.
    • According to amendments made to “The Jammu & Kashmir Land Revenue Act, Samvat, 1996”, only agriculturists of J&K can purchase agricultural land.
    • No sale, gift, exchange, or mortgage of the land shall be valid in favour of a person who is not an agriculturist.
    • No land used for agriculture purposes shall be used for any non-agricultural purposes except with the permission of the district collector.
    • Under a new provision, an Army officer not below the rank of Corps Commander can declare an area as “Strategic Area” within a local area, only for direct operational and training requirements.

    Note: These laws do not apply to the UT of Ladakh. The Centre is likely to notify separate land laws for the UT of Ladakh soon.

    Criticisms of the move

    • Political parties have opposed the move citing the sale of the state.
    • With these new laws in place, tokenism of the domicile certificate has been done away with, as purchasing non-agricultural land has been made easier.
  • Terrorism and Challenges Related To It

    Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA)

    The Centre has designated 18 key operatives and leaders of extremists groups as individual terrorists under the recently-amended Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA).

    Try this question for mains:

    Q.“Anti-terror laws should not be used as a tool to silence the critics of the government.” Discuss in context to the recent amendments to the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA).

    About UAPA

    • The UAPA is aimed at effective prevention of unlawful activities associations in India.
    • Its main objective was to make powers available for dealing with activities directed against the integrity and sovereignty of India
    • It is an upgrade on the Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act TADA, which was allowed to lapse in 1995 and the Prevention of Terrorism Act (POTA) was repealed in 2004.
    • It was originally passed in 1967 under the then Congress government led by former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi.
    • Till 2004, “unlawful” activities referred to actions related to secession and cession of territory. Following the 2004 amendment, “terrorist act” was added to the list of offences.

    Recent amendments

    • The Centre had amended UAPA, 1967, in August 2019 to include the provision of designating an individual as a terrorist.
    • Before this amendment, only organisations could be designated as terrorist outfits.
  • International Space Agencies – Missions and Discoveries

    Water on the Moon

    The Moon has water at places where none had been detected before and has potentially more water than previously believed in regions where it was already understood to exist.

    Try this MCQ:

    Q.NASA’s VIPER mission sometimes seen in news is related to the study of-

    a)Moon

    b)Venus

    c)Sun

    d)None of these

    Water on the moon

    • In two separate studies in Nature Astronomy, scientists have reported findings with potentially huge implications for sustaining humans on the Moon in the future.
    • One study reports the detection of water on the Moon’s sunlit surface for the first time.
    • The other estimates that the Moon’s dark, shadowy regions, which potentially contain ice, are more widespread than thought.

    Why is the discovery of water important?

    • Apart from being a marker of potential life, water is a precious resource in deep space.
    • For astronauts landing on the Moon, water is necessary not only to sustain life but also for purposes such as generating rocket fuel.
    • NASA’s Artemis programme plans to send the first woman and the next man to the Moon in 2024 and hopes to establish a “sustainable human presence” there by the end of the decade.

    What was known about water on the Moon?

    • Previous Moon studies, including by the ISRO Chandrayaan-1 mission, have provided evidence for the existence of water.
    • In 2009, the Moon Mineralogy Mapper (M3) instrument aboard Chandrayaan-1 found water molecules in the Polar Regions.

    What is different in the new discovery?

    • This time, it is confirmed H20 molecules, discovered in Clavius Crater in the Moon’s southern hemisphere.
    • And it is the first time water has been detected on the sunlit side, showing it is not restricted to the shadowy regions.
    • SOFIA, which is a modified Boeing 747SP jetliner that flies at altitudes up to 45,000 feet, has an infrared camera that picked up the wavelength unique to water molecules.
    • The data showed water in concentrations of 100-412 parts per million trapped in 1 cubic metre of soil.

    How could the water have formed?

    • Space rocks carrying small amounts of water could have bombarded the Moon.
    • Alternatively, the Sun’s solar wind could have carried hydrogen, which then reacted with minerals in the lunar soil to create hydroxyl, which later transformed into water.
    • The sunlit surface retaining the water presents a puzzle since the Moon does not have a thick atmosphere.
    • One possibility is that the water gets trapped into tiny bead-like structures that were created in the soil by impacts from space rocks.
    • Alternatively, the water could be hidden between grains of lunar soil and sheltered from the sunlight, NASA said.

    So, how widespread is water on the Moon?

    • On the sunlit side, it is not yet known whether the water SOFIA found is easily accessible.
    • On the other hand, the hidden, shadowy pockets on the lunar surface called “cold traps” are spread across a combined 40,000 sq km, the other study has reported.
    • The cold traps have gone without sunlight for potentially billions of years. If they do contain ice, it means water is going to be more accessible than previously assumed.

    What next?

    • SOFIA will look for water in additional sunlit locations to learn more about how the water is produced, stored, and moved across the Moon.
    • Meanwhile, NASA’s Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover (VIPER) will carry out a mission to create the first water resource maps of the Moon.
  • Goods and Services Tax (GST)

    Natural gas to come under GST

    Officials have indicated that the government is considering bringing natural gas under the ambit of the GST regime.

    Try this question from CSP 2018:

    Q.Consider the following items:

    1. Cereal grains hulled
    2. Chicken eggs cooked
    3. Fish processed and canned
    4. Newspapers containing advertising material

    Which of the above items is/are exempt under GST (Goods and Services Tax)?

    (a) 1 only

    (b) 2 and 3 only

    (c) 1, 2 and 4 only

    (d) 1, 2, 3 and 4

    Why such demands?

    • Global energy MNCs have called on the government to bring natural gas under the GST regime.
    • Currently petrol, diesel, aviation turbine fuel, natural gas and crude oil fall outside India’s Goods and Services Tax (GST) regime.

    Why is it important to bring natural gas under the GST regime?

    • Bringing natural gas under the GST would lead to a reduction in the cascading impact of taxes on industries such as power and steel, which used natural gas as an input.
    • This would do away with the central excise duty and different value-added taxes imposed by states.
    • This would lead to an increase in the adoption of natural gas in line with the government’s stated goal to increase the share of natural gas in the country’s energy basket from 6.3% to 15%.

    Back2Basics: GST

    • GST launched in India on 1 July 2017 is a comprehensive indirect tax for the entire country.
    • It is charged at the time of supply and depends on the destination of consumption.
    • For instance, if a good is manufactured in state A but consumed in state B, then the revenue generated through GST collection is credited to the state of consumption (state B) and not to the state of production (state A).

    Must read:

    https://www.civilsdaily.com/goods-and-services-tax-2/

  • Foreign Policy Watch: India-Middle East

    New dimension to the bilateral engegement

    The article draws parallels in the past in India and China’s engagement with West Asia and contrasts it with the present approach adopted by China in dealing with the region.

    Strategic autonomy

    • According to a former Foreign Secretary of India, Vijay Gokhale, the ideation of ‘strategic autonomy’ is much different from the Nehruvian era thinking of ‘non-alignment’.
    • Speaking in January 2019, Mr. Gokhale said: “The alignment is issue based, and not ideological.”

    India’s engagement with West Asia

    • Pre-dating 2020, India’s outreach to West Asia sharpened since 2014.
    •  Oil-rich Gulf states looked at India as investment alternative away from the West to deepen their own strategic depth.
    • India also doubled down on its relations with the likes of Abu Dhabi and Riyadh, giving open economic and political preference to the larger Gulf region.
    • While engagements with Israel moved steadily forward, Iran lagged behind, constrained by U.S. sanctions, which in turn significantly slowed the pace of India-Iran engagements.

    China’s engagement with West Asia

    • China’s overtures have been steadily more adventurous as it realises two major shifts that have taken place in West Asia.
    • First, the thinking in the Gulf that the American security safety net is not absolute.
    • Second, the Gulf economies such as Saudi Arabia, even though trying to shift away from petro dollar, will still need growing markets to sell oil to in the coming decade as they reform their economic systems.
    • The obvious two markets here are China and India.

    Similarity in India and China’s approach to West Asia

    • Both India and China employed similar versions of ‘non-alignment’ thinking is in West Asia based on equitable engagement with the three poles of power in Saudi Arabia, Iran and Israel.
    • Both countries did it without getting involved into the region’s multi-layered conflicts and political fissures.
    • However, deteriorating U.S.-China ties, the COVID-19 pandemic that started in China, followed by the Ladakh crisis, is forcing a drastic change in the geopolitical playbooks of the two Asian giants, and, by association, global security architectures as well.

    Changing approach of China

    •  A report in September shone a light on a $400 billion, 25-year understanding between Iran and China, with Beijing taking advantage of abandonment of the Iran nuclear deal.
    • China is no longer happy with a passive role in West Asia, and through concepts such as “negative peace” and “peace through development”.
    • In concert with tools such as the Belt and Road Initiative, Beijing is now ready to offer an alternative model for “investment and influence”.
    •  It remains to be seen, however, how China balances itself between the poles of power while backing one so aggressively.

    Stability of the region and opportunity for India

    • From India’s perspective, the overt outreach to the Gulf and the ensuing announcements of multi-billion-dollar investments on Indian shores by entities from Saudi Arabia and the UAE is only New Delhi recognising the economic realities of the region. 
    • Despite entanglements in the Yemen war and general tensions between the Gulf states and Iran, the likes of Saudi Arabia, the UAE and so on have maintained relatively strong and stable economic progression.
    • Israel’s recent peace accords with the UAE and Bahrain add much further weight towards a more stable Gulf region — the caveats withstanding that the operationalisation of the accords is smooth and long-lasting.

    Consider the question “Despite turbulence in the region, India’s engagement with West Asia has always been characterised by non-alignment and ethos of equitable engagement. In light of this, elaborate on India’s approach to the region and region’s importance for India.”

    Conclusion

    While in the recent past, the Indo-Pacific, with the development of the Quad, has taken centre stage, other geographies such as West Asia have also started to showcase bolder examples of New Delhi and Beijing’s metamorphosing approaches towards the international arena.

  • Foreign Policy Watch: India-United States

    Incentives for furthering the India-US partnership are stronger than ever

    Changing geopolitical factors have accelerated further the deepening of India-US ties. The article analyses the current circumstances and evolution of the bilateral relations.

    Background against which 2+2 dialogue taking place

    • The 2+2 dialogue between India and the United States in Delhi this week marks an important moment in bilateral relations.
    • The 2+2 dialogue comes just three weeks after the foreign ministers of the Quad — or the Quadrilateral Security Framework — met in Tokyo.
    • It also takes place amidst a profound structural shift in great power politics as well as turbulence in the international economic order intensified by the coronavirus pandemic.
    • The dialogue follows India’s first-ever participation in a meeting of the exclusive Five Eyes grouping that facilitates intelligence-sharing among the US, Canada, UK, Australia and New Zealand.
    • A few days ago, Delhi announced the much-awaited expansion of the annual Malabar exercises to include Australia.

    Background of the past engagements

    • Signing the historic civil nuclear initiative ended India’s prolonged atomic isolation in the world laid the outline of a broader framework for security cooperation.
    • Due to the deep divisions within the national security establishment, the leadership and some political constraints faced by the government, the coalition broke up.
    •  The focus was on keeping visible distance from the US in the name of non-alignment, strategic autonomy, and the quest for a multipolar world.
    • The relationship survived those years, thanks to the US’s perseverance.

    3 Factors responsible for rapid progress in the US-India ties

    1) Chines aggression on northern border

    • The huge military crisis on the northern borders with China that is well into the sixth month is the first factor.
    • In the past, India avoided closer security ties with the US in deference to Beijing’s sensitivities.
    • In contrast, the government now has refused to pay heed to Chinese sensitivities over its policy on security cooperation with the US.

    2) Disruption caused by the corona pandemic

    • The coronavirus has sharpened the US debate on the dangers of excessive economic interdependence on China.
    • Meanwhile, India has begun to reduce its commercial ties to Beijing in response to the PLA’s Ladakh aggression.
    • This has created the conditions for a new conversation between India and the US on rearranging global supply chains away from China.
    • So, the Quad Plus conversations have drawn in Brazil, Israel, New Zealand, South Korea and Vietnam with a view to rearrange the global supply chain.

    3) Focus on critical technologies

    • Third factor is critical technologies like artificial intelligence that promise to transform most aspects of modern life — including security, political economy and social order.
    • Delhi and Washington are now focused on finding ways to collaborate on the critical technologies of the 21st century and work with their partners in setting new global rules for managing them.

    Conclusion

    As the regional and global order faces multiple transitions, the incentives for Delhi and Washington to sustain and advance India-US partnership are stronger than ever before and will continue into the next administration.

  • Judicial Reforms

    Live-streaming of Courts

    Attorney General of India has pushed for live-streaming court proceedings to make hearings accessible to all. But CJI sounded a cautionary note, saying it was susceptible to “abuses.”

    Why such demands?

    • In a first in India, the Gujarat High Court has begun live streaming of Court Proceedings on YouTube.
    • The issue of live-streaming came up as a Special Bench led by the CJI was taking stock of the virtual court system initiated soon after the pandemic lockdown.

    Live-streaming of Court

    • Justice Chandrachud was one of the three judges on the Bench that gave the verdict on live-streaming in September 2018.
    • In fact, he had noted in his separate opinion that live-streaming of proceedings would be the true realization of the “open court system.”
    • His suggestions were later adopted as guidelines in the September 2018 judgment.

    Why there should be live-streaming?

    • Improved accountability: Live-streaming of court proceedings would serve as an instrument for greater accountability and formed part of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973.
    • Living up the expectation of Constitution: Live Streaming of Court proceedings is manifested in public interest. Public interest has always been preserved through the Constitution article 19 and 21
    • Empowering the masses: It will enable the legal system to deliver on its promise of empowering the masses.
    • More transparency: It will encourage the principle of open court and reduce dependence on second-hand views. It will effectuate the public’s right to know. 
    • This would inspire confidence in the functioning of the judiciary as an institution and help maintain the respect that it deserved as a co-equal organ of the state.
    • Academic help: Live streaming may also be a help for academic purposes.

    Issues with live-courts

    The Parliamentary Standing Committee (PSC) of the Department of Personnel, Public Grievances and Law and Justice have tabled its report on the functioning of Virtual Courts and Digitization of Justice Delivery in Parliament.

    Following are the four key considerations and recommendations of the committee as far as mainstreaming of virtual courts is concerned:

    (1) The question of access:

    • A large number of litigants and advocates lack internet connectivity and requisite infrastructure and means to participate in virtual hearings and the process. This has serious implications.
    • The obvious one being that a large chunk of our citizenry is vulnerable to being excluded from the process of justice delivery owing to factors beyond their control.
    • The committee also opined that the judiciary considers solutions such as mobile video conferencing facilities to allow for meaningful participation from those living in remote geographies.

    (2) The degree of comfort:

    • A highly underrated but equally consequential factor is whether everyone, even if access to reliable internet connectivity is universal, is comfortable and well versed with the new tools and mediums of justice delivery.
    • Big, well-to-do law firms and advocates in urban areas would face no issues as compared to those participants in rural areas given the digital divide.

    (3) The idea of open courts itself:

    • Virtual courts allegedly threaten the constitutionality of Court proceedings and undermine the importance of Rule of law which forms a part of the basic structure of the Constitution.
    • Expressing concern over the opaqueness of such hearings, critics state that virtual courts are antithetical to the open court system given the limited access that they allow for.

    (4) The question of Privacy and Data Security:

    • This is where the report makes some interesting and innovative suggestions vital to the performance of any digital justice delivery mechanism.
    • It also took note of the fact that most virtual court proceedings in India currently take place using third-party software or platforms and a few of them have already been rejected earlier on grounds of being unsafe to use.
    • The committee noted how courts across the world have had instances of intrusion and data privacy or security concerns while adapting to an entirely virtual mode of conducting hearings.

    Still, digital records are necessary

    • Litigants depend on the information provided by lawyers about what has transpired during the course of hearings.
    • When the description of cases is accurate and comprehensive; it serves the course of open justice.
    • Again, if a report on a judicial hearing is inaccurate, it impedes the public’s right to know.

    Best examples

    • Internationally, constitutional court proceedings are recorded in some form or the other.
    • In Australia, proceedings are recorded and posted on the high court’s website.
    • Proceedings of the Supreme Courts of Brazil, Canada, England and Germany are broadcast live.
    • The Supreme Court of the US does not permit video recording, but oral arguments are recorded, transcribed, and available publicly.
    • And democracies aside, in China, court proceedings are live-streamed from trial courts up to the Supreme People’s Court of China.

    Significance of open-courts

    • India stands alone amongst leading constitutional democracies in not maintaining audio or video recordings or even a transcript of court proceedings.
    • Court hearings can be turning points in the life of a nation: ADM Jabalpur comes readily to mind. More recently, there is any number of cases where the Supreme Court’s judgments have changed citizens’ lives.
    • Ayodhya, Aadhaar, Section 377, Sabarimala, NRC and the triple talaq judgments are among them.

    Various moves for accessibility

    • Over the last few years, the Supreme Court has taken steps to make justice more accessible. The Court started providing vernacular translations of its judgments.
    • Non-accredited journalists were permitted to live-tweet court proceedings. During the lockdown, journalists have been permitted to view virtual court proceedings in real-time.

    Way forward

    • There should be live-streaming cases of constitutional and national importance as a pilot project, including Constitution Bench cases.
    • Matrimonial cases and those involving national security could be excluded.
    • There must be a reasonable time-delay (say 10 minutes) between the live court proceedings and the broadcast to ensure any information which ought not to be shown, as directed by the court, can be edited from being broadcast.
    • The judiciary must also employ a press officer to liaise with the media, and issue simultaneously one or two page summaries of its judgments to facilitate greater public understanding.
    • There has to be a greater reliance on written briefs and the significance accorded to them, time limits for oral arguments, and a greater emphasis on preparation in advance.
  • Zoonotic Diseases: Medical Sciences Involved & Preventive Measures

    Debate over Plasma Therapy’s efficacy

    Recently published findings on convalescent plasma therapy on Covid-19 patients have triggered a debate over its efficacy.

    Plasma Therapy

    • Plasma is the liquid part of the blood. Convalescent plasma, extracted from the blood of patients recovering from an infection, is a source of antibodies against the infection.
    • The therapy involves using their plasma to help others recover. For Covid-19, this has been one of the treatment options.
    • The donor would have to be a documented case of Covid-19 and healthy for 28 days since the last symptoms.

    How is it done?

    • The process to infuse plasma in a patient can be completed quickly.
    • It only requires standard blood collection practices, and extraction of plasma.
    • If whole blood is donated (350-450 ml), a blood fractionation process is used to separate the plasma.
    • Otherwise, a special machine called aphaeresis machine can be used to extract the plasma directly from the donor.
    • While blood is indeed extracted from the donor, the aphaeresis machine separates and extracts the plasma using a plasma kit, and the remaining blood components are returned into the donor’s body.

    WHO’s guidelines

    • WHO guidelines in 2014 mandate a donor’s permission before extracting plasma.
    • Plasma from only recovered patients must be taken, and donation must be done from people not infected with HIV, hepatitis, syphilis, or any infectious disease.
    • If whole blood is collected, the plasma is separated by sedimentation or centrifugation, then injected in the patient.
    • If plasma needs to be collected again from the same person, it must be done after 12 weeks of the first donation for males and 16 weeks for females, the WHO guidelines state.

    What has happened to spark the debate?

    • An ICMR study has found convalescent plasma was not associated with a reduction in progression to severe Covid-19 or all-cause mortality.
    • While the use of this therapy seemed to improve the resolution of shortness of breath and fatigue in patients with moderate Covid-19, this did not translate into a reduction in 28-day mortality or progression to severe disease.
    • Progression to severe disease or death at 28 days after enrolment occurred in 44 (19%) of the participants in the intervention arm as compared to 41 (18%) in the control arm.

    What happens if ICMR does remove the therapy from its guidelines?

    • The authorisation of convalescent plasma as a treatment for Covid-19 in India has led to questionable practices such as calls for donors on social media, and the sale of convalescent plasma on the black market.
    • The ICMR has been cautious because of the trial findings.
    • However, those guidelines are not necessarily binding and it is too early to dismiss convalescent plasma therapy. But there are other issues.
    • The therapy involves resource-intensive processes such as plasmapheresis, plasma storage, and measurement of neutralizing antibodies.

    Way ahead

    • This is a new virus, and around the world, the evidence is still emerging on the best therapeutic options.
    • Covid care is individualized care. Use of the right medication on the right patient does work.
    • Some of the therapies can be continued on compassionate grounds.
    • However, the potential harms of the non-immune components of convalescent plasma should be rigorously investigated.
    • Only donor plasma with detectable titers of neutralizing antibodies should be given to trial participants, to ensure that the potential for benefit exists for all intervention arm patients.

    Try this question:

    Q.What is convalescent plasma therapy? Discuss its efficacy and limitations for COVID-19 treatment.

  • Modern Indian History-Events and Personalities

    [pib] Architectural Heritage of Bundi

    A recent episode of the Ministry of Tourism’s Dekho Apna Desh Webinar series has focused on the architectural heritage of Bundi, Rajasthan.

    Try this PYQ:

    Q.With reference to Dhrupad, one of the major traditions of India that has been kept alive for centuries, which of the following statements are correct?

    1. Dhrupad originated and developed in the Rajput kingdoms during the Mughal period.
    2. Dhrupad is primarily a piece of devotional and spiritual music.
    3. Dhrupad Alap uses Sanskrit syllables from Mantras.

    Select the correct answer using the codes given below:

    (a) 1 and 2 only

    (b) 2 and 3 only

    (c) 1, 2 and 3

    (d) None of the above

    About Bundi

    • Bundi erstwhile capital of Hada Rajput province known as Hadauti located in south-eastern Rajasthan is one such place.
    • Bundi is also known as City of step walls, blue city and also as Chotti Kashi.
    • In ancient times, the area around Bundi was apparently inhabited by various local tribes, of which the Parihar Tribes, Meena was prominent.
    • Later the region was governed by Rao Deva, who took over Bundi from Jaita Meena in 1242, renaming the surrounding area as Haravati or Haroti.
    • For the next two centuries, the Hadas of Bundi were the vassals of the Sisodias of Mewar and ruled by the title of Rao until 1569, after Emperor Akbar.

    Important architecture

    • The City of Bundi grew outwards Taragarh hill. A small habitat developed at the foothills of the fort itself.
    • The location of the royal palace was on a steep slope overlooking the valley below, providing a view of the vast surrounding hinterland.
    • Garh Mahal became the focus and an imposing landmark on the skyline of Bundi was visible from the valley below. In the next 200 years, the entire cluster was built.
    • The best example of medieval Indian city exhibiting water harvesting methods adopted at settlement level as well as the finest examples of water architecture.
    • Location of Baoris and Kunds outside the walled city was also influenced by social considerations as access to baoris and kunds were located within the walled city was controlled.

    Architectural heritage of Bundi can be classified as:

    1) Garh (Fort): Taragarh

    2) Garh Mahal (Royal Palace)

    • Bhoj Mahal
    • Chattar Mahal
    • Ummed Mahal

    3) Baori (Step well)

    • Khoj Darwaja ki Baori
    • Bhawaldi Baori

    4) Kund (Stepped tank)

    • Dhabhai ji ka Kund
    • Nagar Kund & Sagar Kund
    • Rani Kund

    5) Sagar mahal (Lake Palace)

    • Moti Mahal
    • Sukh Mahal
    • Shikar Burj

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