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  • Surrogacy in India

    Fine-tuning the Surrogacy Bill

    Context

    • In a recent report, a Select Committee of Parliament has recommended that the contentious clause limiting surrogacy only to “close relatives” to be removed from the Surrogacy (Regulation) Bill, 2019.
    • These recommendations aim to make the benefits of modern technology more easily available to infertile couples.
    • A look at the genesis of the Bill, its provisions and why the current report could signal some progressive amendments in the Bill:

    What are the provisions of the Surrogacy (Regulation) Bill?

    • The Surrogacy Bill proposes to allow altruistic ethical surrogacy to intend infertile Indian married couples in the age groups 23-50 years (women) and 26-55 years (men).
    • It was first mooted in 2016 in the wake of repeated reports of exploitation of women who were confined to hostels, not provided adequate post-pregnancy medical care and paid a pittance.
    • The couple should have been legally married for at least five years and should be Indian citizens.
    • They cannot have a surviving child, either biological or adopted, except when they have a child who is mentally or physically challenged or suffers from a life-threatening disorder with no permanent cure.
    • It requires surrogacy clinics to be registered, and national and state surrogacy boards to be formed.
    • It makes commercial surrogacy, and abandoning or disowning a surrogate child punishable by imprisonment up to 10 years and a fine up to Rs 10 lakh.

    What changes has the Select Committee suggested?

    • The Select Committee recommended that the “close relatives” clause should be removed, and any “willing” woman should be allowed to become a surrogate mothe.
    • It has strongly backed the ban on commercial surrogacy.
    • It has also recommended that divorced and widowed women aged between 35 and 45 years should be able to be a single commissioning parent.
    • It has emphasised the need for a five-year waiting period for childless married couples could be waived if there is a medical certificate that shows that they cannot possibly conceive.
    • It has recommended that persons of Indian origin should be allowed to avail surrogacy services.
    • It has not, however, recommended expanding the definition of commissioning parent to include singles, either men or women.
    • It also recommended that the ART Bill (which deals with assisted reproductive technologies) should be brought before the Surrogacy bill so that all the highly technical and medical aspects could be properly addressed.

    What is the ART Bill?

    • The Assisted Reproductive Technology (Regulation) Bill has been in the making since 2008.
    • It aims to regulate the field through registration of all IVF clinics and sperm banks, segregation of ART clinics and gamete banks etc.
    • It also requires national and state boards to be established for the purpose of regulation of the fertility market.
    • The Select Committee report says: “Surrogacy is a part and parcel of ART and hence the Surrogacy Bill should come into force only after the enactment of ART Bill.
    • Bringing Surrogacy Bill before the ART will be irrelevant and also create duplication of Boards.
    • The Standing Committee on Health and Family Welfare, too has “strongly recommended” to the government that the two Bills should be brought together and not in isolation.

    How big is India’s surrogacy market?

    • Estimations by the ICMR put it around 2,000-odd babies per year through commercial surrogacy — when a woman is paid an agreed sum for renting her womb.
    • CII figures say surrogacy is a $2.3-billion industry fed by a lack of regulations and poverty.

    What happened the last time the Bill was scrutinized by a parliamentary panel?

    • The Bill was earlier scrutinized by the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Health and Family Welfare.
    • That committee had recommended that compensation should be the norm and the word “altruistic” should be replaced with “compensated”.
    • Couples — including those in live-in relationships — should be allowed to choose surrogates from both within and outside the family. Altruistic surrogacy, it observed, is tantamount to exploitation.
    • The “close relative” condition is open to misuse in a patriarchal setup, the committee had observed.
    • Given the patriarchal familial structure and power equations within families, not every member of a family has the ability to resist a demand that she be a surrogate for another family member.
    • A close relative of the intending couple may be forced to become a surrogate which might become even more exploitative than commercial surrogacy.
    • These recommendations were not accepted by the government.
  • International Space Agencies – Missions and Discoveries

    Solar Orbiter (SolO) Probe

     

    Yesterday, the Solar Orbiter, a collaborative mission between the European Space Agency and NASA to study the Sun, took off from Cape Canaveral in Florida.

    What is the Solar Orbiter?

    • Carrying four in situ instruments and six remote-sensing imagers, the Solar Orbiter (called SolO) will face the sun at approximately 42 million kilometres from its surface.
    • Before SolO, all solar imaging instruments have been within the ecliptic plane, in which all planets orbit and which is aligned with the sun’s equator.
    • The new spacecraft will use the gravity of Venus and Earth to swing itself out of the ecliptic plane, passing inside the orbit of Mercury, and will be able to get a bird’s eye view of the sun’s poles for the first time.

    Objectives of the mission

    • The Orbiter will take pictures using telescopes through a heat shield that is partly made of baked animal bones, to help it withstand temperatures of up to 600 degree Celsius.
    • By understanding the behaviour of the sun, the Orbiter aims to provide information on how the former would affect technology such as satellites, navigation systems, power grids, and telecommunication services.
    • The Orbiter will help scientists understand the sun’s dynamic behaviour, and solve mysteries such as the sunspot cycle, or why the star spews out high velocity charged particles through the solar system.
    • With more data on the global magnetic field of the star, scientists would be able to forecast space weather events.

    Earlier missions

    • In 1990, NASA and ESA had sent the Ulysses mission, which also passed over the sun’s poles but at much farther distances, and did not carry a camera.
  • Wildlife Conservation Efforts

    [pib] 13th COP of the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS)

     

    The 13th Conference of Parties (COP) of the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS) is going to be hosted by India at Gandhinagar in Gujarat.

    13th COP of CMS

    • The theme of CMS COP13 in India is, “Migratory species connect the planet and we welcome them home.
    • The CMS COP 13 logo is inspired by ‘Kolam’, a traditional artform from southern India.
    • In the logo of CMS COP-13, Kolam art form is used to depict key migratory species in India like Amur falcon, humpback whale and marine turtles.
    • The mascot for CMS COP13, “Gibi – The Great Indian Bustard” is a critically endangered species which has been accorded the highest protection status under the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972.

    About CMS

    • CMS is an international treaty concluded under aegis of UN Environment Programme (UNEP), concerned with conservation of wildlife and habitats on a global scale.
    • It is commonly abbreviated as Convention on Migratory Species (CMS) or the Bonn Convention.
    • It aims to conserve terrestrial, marine and avian migratory species throughout their range.
    • It was signed in 1979 in Bonn (hence the name), Germany and entered into force in 1983.
    • Its headquarters are in Bonn, Germany.
    • CMS is only global and UN-based intergovernmental organization established exclusively for conservation and management of terrestrial, aquatic and avian migratory species throughout their range.

    Prospects for India

    • As the host, India shall be designated the President for the next three years.
    • India is Signatory to the CMS since 1983.
    • India has been taking necessary actions to protect and conserve migratory marine species.
    • Seven species that include Dugong, Whale Shark, Marine Turtle (two species), have been identified for preparation of Conservation and Recovery Action Plan.

    Other facts

    • The Indian sub-continent is also part of the major bird flyway network, i.e, the Central Asian Flyway (CAF) that covers areas between the Arctic and Indian Oceans, and covers at least 279 populations of 182 migratory water bird species, including 29 globally threatened species.
    • India is home to several migratory species of wildlife including snow leopard, Amur falcons, bar headed Geese, black necked cranes, marine turtles, dugongs, humpbacked whales, etc.
    • It has signed non legally binding MOU with CMS on the conservation and management of Siberian Cranes (1998), Marine Turtles (2007), Dugongs (2008) and Raptors (2016).
  • Festivals, Dances, Theatre, Literature, Art in News

    [pib] National List of Intangible Cultural Heritage

    Sangeet Natak Akademi (SNA) is preparing the National List of Intangible Cultural Heritage.

    National List of Intangible Cultural Heritage

    • SNA is an autonomous organization under the Ministry of Culture is the nodal agency for the Scheme for ‘Safeguarding the Intangible Cultural Heritage and Diverse Cultural Traditions of India’.
    • As of now, SNA is collaborating with Zonal Cultural Centers of Ministry, collating and preparing a list of ICH elements for National List of Intangible Cultural Heritage.
    • List of ICH elements is being compiled and at least 100 elements will be documented by March, 2020 and the aim is to document at least 20 new elements in ICH list every year.
    • Along with this establishment of an ‘Indian Institute for Culture’ is at conceptual stage and a mission called National Culture Mapping portal is being conceptualized for aggregating art forms and artists. It is in pilot phase.
  • River Interlinking

    [pib] Godavari and Cauvery River Linking Project

     

    The draft Detailed Project Report (DPR) of the Godavari and Cauvery River Linking Project has been completed by National Water Development Agency (NWDA).

    Godavari– Cauvery Link Project

    • The project consists of 3 links viz., Godavari (Inchampalli/Janampet) – Krishna (Nagarjunasagar), Krishna (Nagarjunasagar) – Pennar (Somasila) and Pennar (Somasila) – Cauvery (Grand Anicut).
    • This proposal to link Godavari, which is prone to flooding, and Krishna, which doesn’t have enough water, has been around for several decades.
    • While river-interlinking for the purposes of navigation as an idea was mooted by the British in India, in 1972, engineer and Union Minister KL Rao proposed the linking of Godavari and Krishna for irrigation.
    • The decades-old proposal finally took shape in the 2000s, and in 2016, the Andhra government linked the two rivers with the Pattiseema-Polavaram Lift Irrigation project, in Andhra’s West Godavari district.
  • Indian Army Updates

    [pib] Exercise AJEYA WARRIOR-2020

    Fifth edition of Joint Military Exercise AJEYA WARRIOR-2020 between India and United Kingdom will be conducted at Salisbury Plains, United Kingdom.

    Ex. AJEYA WARRIOR

    • Exercise AJEYA WARRIOR with United Kingdom is an important exercise in terms of the security challenges faced by both the nations in the realm of changing facets of global terrorism.
    • The exercise will comprise of 120 soldiers each from Indian and United Kingdom Army who would be sharing their experiences gained during conduct of various counter insurgency and counter terrorist operations in the past.
    • The aim of this exercise is to conduct company level joint training with emphasis on counter terrorists operation in Urban and Semi Urban areas.
    • The exercise is conducted alternatively in United Kingdom and India.
  • Trade Sector Updates – Falling Exports, TIES, MEIS, Foreign Trade Policy, etc.

    India’s rerun of its protectionist folly mars the liberalization era

    Context

    The latest budget’s import tariff hikes signal that a three-decade commitment to trade openness has been all but abandoned.

    Detrimental effects of protectionism

    • In brief, both economic theory and a vast weight of evidence point to the detrimental effects of protectionism. These are-
      • Fostering inefficiency: Far from jump-starting the domestic industry, tariffs, quotas and other trade restrictions foster inefficiency among domestic firms that survive only because of
      • And do not become more productive under it, as the government’s threat to withdraw the protection is never credible.
      • The consumer is the ultimate loser: Meanwhile, upstream industries suffer higher than necessary input costs.
      • Consumers of final goods end up footing the bill.
      • Governments earn some tariff revenue, but never enough to warrant the distortion costs to the economy.
    • Tariff inversion: The tariff “spikes” cause greater distortion than a revenue-equivalent uniform tariff, and may lead to the problem of tariff “inversion”.
      • What is tariff inversion? A situation in which intermediate goods are taxed more heavily than final goods, thus paradoxically further disadvantaging, rather than aiding, domestic producers of final goods.
    • Rent-seeking by domestic industries: Tariffs worsens rent-seeking by domestic industries-
      • Protectionism increases lobbying: A force which would be muted in a world where tariffs are locked at a uniform level by statute, and, as a result, industries individually have less of an incentive to lobby for tariffs that are to be applied economy-wide rather than only for their own benefit.
      • Economists Arvind Panagariya and Dani Rodrik had formalized this intuition many years ago, and it matches both common sense and observation.
      • The apparently random list of sectors that would benefit from tariff increases in the recent budget-strongly suggests the possibility of rent-seeking behaviour.

    Conclusion

    Ample experience of import substitution in economies across the emerging world and over many decades, including in India until 1991, attest to the fact that protectionism, especially abetted by rent-seeking behaviour, is like a rabbit-hole: once inside, one keeps going deeper and deeper, and egress is difficult at best.

  • Mother and Child Health – Immunization Program, BPBB, PMJSY, PMMSY, etc.

    Seeking a more progressive abortion law

    Context

    The Medical Termination of Pregnancy Bill doesn’t do enough to secure women’s choices and interests.

    Deaths due to unsafe abortion and previous attempts to legislate

    • Deaths due to unsafe abortions: Recent reports have shown that more than 10 women die every day due to unsafe abortions in India.
      • And backward abortion laws only contribute to women seeking illegal and unsafe options.
    • The Cabinet has recently approved the Medical Termination of Pregnancy (Amendment) Bill, 2020 (MTP Bill, 2020) which will soon be tabled in Parliament.
      • It seeks to amend the Medical Termination of Pregnancy Act, 1971 (MTP Act) and follows the MTP Bills of 2014, 2017 and 2018, all of which previously lapsed in Parliament.

    Provisions of the current law

    • Foetus-age based division: The MTP Act divides its regulatory framework for allowing abortions into categories, according to the gestational age of the foetus.
      • Up to 12 weeks: Under Section 3, for foetuses that are aged up to 12 weeks-
      • Only one medical practitioner’s opinion is required to the effect that the continuance of the pregnancy would pose a risk to the life of the mother or cause grave injury to her physical or mental health.
      • Or there is a substantial risk that if the child is born, it would suffer from such physical or mental abnormalities as to be seriously handicapped.
      • Between 12 weeks and 20 weeks: But if the foetus is aged between 12 weeks and 20 weeks-
      • At least two medical practitioners’ opinions conforming to either of the two conditions are required.
      • What beyond 20 weeks? Beyond 20 weeks, termination may be carried out where it is necessary to save the life of the pregnant woman.
    • Definition of grave injury: The MTP Act also specifies that ‘grave injury’ may be explained as
      • The anguish caused by a pregnancy arising out of rape, or the anguish caused by an unwanted pregnancy arising out of the failure of a contraceptive used by a married woman or her husband.

    What are the issues with the current law?

    • Several issues arise from the current framework under the MTP Act.
    • First-Lac of autonomy of women: At all stages of the pregnancy, the healthcare providers, rather than the women seeking an abortion, have the final say on whether the abortion can be carried out.
      • It is true that factors such as failure of contraceptives or grave injury are not required to be proved under the MTP Act.
      • However, to get the pregnancy terminated solely based on her will, the woman may be compelled to lie or plead with the doctor.
      • Thus, at present, pregnant women lack autonomy in making the decision to terminate their pregnancy and have to bear additional mental stress, as well as the financial burden of getting a doctor’s approval.
      • On request abortion in 67 countries: Indian’s law is unlike the abortion laws in 67 countries, including Iceland, France, Canada, South Africa and Uruguay, where a woman can get an abortion ‘on request’ with or without a specific gestational limit (which is usually 12 weeks).
    • Second-Prejudice against unmarried women: The MTP Act embodies a clear prejudice against unmarried women.
      • According to ‘Explanation 2’ provided under Section 3(2) of the Act, where a pregnancy occurs due to failure of any birth control device or method used by any “married woman or her husband”, the anguish caused is presumed to constitute a “grave injury” to the mental health of the pregnant woman.
      • While the applicability of this provision to unmarried women is contested, there is always the danger of a more restrictive interpretation, especially when the final decision rests with the doctor and not the woman herself.
    • Third-Restriction of 20 weeks’ limit: Due to advancements in science, foetal abnormalities can now be detected even after 20 weeks.
      • Danger to mother’s life only condition after 20 weeks: The MTP Act presently allows abortion post 20 weeks only where it is necessary to save the life of the mother.
      • Problem with this restriction: The above restriction means that even if a substantial foetal abnormality is detected and the mother doesn’t want to bear life-long caregiving responsibilities and the mental agony associated with it, the law gives her no recourse unless there is a prospect of her death.

    What does the bill fail to address?

    • While the MTP Bill, 2020, is a step in the right direction, it still fails to address most of the problems with the MTP
    • First, it doesn’t allow abortion on request at any point after the pregnancy.
    • Second, it doesn’t take a step towards removing the prejudice against unmarried women by amending the relevant provision.
    • And finally, it enhances the gestational limit for legal abortion from 20 to 24 weeks only for specific categories of women such as survivors of rape, victims of incest, and minors.
      • This means that a woman who does not fall into these categories would not be able to seek an abortion beyond 20 weeks, even if she suffers from a grave physical or mental injury due to the pregnancy.

    What are the provisions for the case of foetal abnormality in the bill?

    • Limit irrelevant if the foetal abnormality is diagnosed by the Medical Board: The Bill does make the upper gestational limit irrelevant in procuring an abortion if there are substantial foetal abnormalities diagnosed by the Medical Board.
      • This means that even if there is no threat to the mother’s life, she would be able to procure an abortion as soon as a substantial foetal abnormality comes to light.
      • While this is an important step and would have in the past helped many women who fought long battles in Court without recourse.
      • Rules against unnecessary delays: It is crucial that this provision is accompanied by appropriate rules for the Medical Boards that guard against unnecessary delays, which only increase the risks associated with a late abortion.

    Conclusion

    • Recognition of women’s right: The Supreme Court has recognised women’s right to make reproductive choices and their decision to abort as a dimension of their personal liberty (in  X v. Union of India,2017) and as falling within the realm of the fundamental right to privacy (in K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India, 2017). Yet, current abortion laws fail to allow the exercise of this right.
    • The bill does not do enough: While it is hoped that MTP Bill, 2020 will not lapse in Parliament like its predecessors, it is evident that it does not do enough to secure women’s interests, and there is still a long road ahead for progressive abortion laws.

     

     

     

  • Important Judgements In News

    Victim justice is two steps forward, one step back

    Context

    The recent judgment in Rekha Murarka vs The State Of West Bengal, the SC has held that the victims’ private counsel cannot orally examine or cross-examine the witnesses.

    Place of the victim in the present criminal justice system

    • Removed from the proceedings: Under our criminal justice system, victims find themselves removed from the proceedings.
      • Their identities are reduced to being mere witnesses.
      • The harm they suffer is reduced to being aggravating or mitigating factors at the time of sentencing.
      • Stage props in a larger scheme: With the state appropriating their victimisation, the actual victims become mere stage props in a larger scheme.
    • Need of The victim-centric notion of justice-Law Commission suggestion: In 1996, the 154th Law Commission Report suggested a paradigm shift in India’s criminal justice system towards a victim-centric notion of justice.
      • Partial acceptance: The Code of Criminal Procedure (Amendment) Act, 2009 partially accepted the Law Commission suggestion and granted some rights to the victims of crime.
      • The Act introduced victims’ right to a private counsel under Section 24(8).
      • Move toward victim’s participation: The Code of Criminal Procedure already allowed for pleaders engaged by private persons to submit written arguments with the permission of the court under Sections 301(2) and 302 allowed a person to conduct the prosecution with permission of the court.
      • These sections were read together to partially secure the victims’ right to participation.

    Steps take  towards securing justice for victims

    • Right to legal assistance to victims of sexual assault: In the case of Delhi Domestic Working Women’s Forum v. Union of India (1994), the SC called for the extension of the right to legal assistance to victims of sexual assault at the pre-trial stages.
    • The SC opinion over asymmetry in rights of victims and the accused: In Mallikarjun Kodagali (Dead) … vs The State Of Karnataka (2018), the Court accepted that under the criminal justice system, the rights of the accused far outweigh the rights of the victim.
    • Introduction of victim impact statement right to appeal against the adverse order: The Supreme Court not only called for the introduction of a victim impact statement in order to guarantee the participation of the victim in the trial proceedings.
      • The SC also reinstated the victims’ right to appeal against an adverse order.

    Provisions on the international level for the victim’s participation

    • Despite these advances, the scheme of victim participation remains far removed from the ideals embedded in the Declaration of Basic Principles of Justice for Victims of Crime and Abuse of Power; India is a signatory.
      • What does the declaration require? It requires that the views and concerns of victims should be allowed and considered at all appropriate stages without prejudice to the accused.
    • Need to increase the victims’ advocate’s role: Presently, the victims’ advocate has an extremely limited role to play wherein he “assists” the prosecutor rather than represent the interests of the victim before the court.
      • The only substantial opportunity provided to a private counsel is after the closing of evidence when written arguments may be submitted to the court only after seeking the permission of the court.
    • Contrast with ICC: In contrast, the International Criminal Court (ICC) provides for victim participation at the stage of-
      • First, a challenge to the jurisdiction of the ICC.
      • Second, framing of charges.
      • Third, opening and closing statements.
      • Fourth, making a written submission wherever the personal interests of the victims are affected.
      • And finally, for presenting witnesses to give evidence on issues relating to the personal interests of the victims.

    What the SC judgement means

    • Missed opportunity: The Supreme Court in Rekha Murarkahas missed the opportunity to forward the jurisprudence on victim justice and rectify the lacunae in our laws.
      • Instead, the judgment goes against the jurisprudential current specified above.
      • Indeed, the victim’s right to participation cannot be secured by restricting the rights of the accused.
    • Why the victim’s advocate is not allowed the right to participate in the SC’s opinion: According to the judgment, a victim’s advocate cannot be allowed the right to participate because-
      • First- Insistence by the victim’s counsel to examine a witness deliberately left out by the prosecution may weaken the prosecution’s case;
      • Second– The trial will derogate into a “vindictive battle” between the victim’s counsel and the accused.
      • Third- A lack of experience on the part of the victim’s counsel may lead to lapses.
    • The problem in the SC ruling: The judgment further assumes that prosecutions effectively take the victim’s needs into account.
      • SC ignored why the need for private counsel arise: The judgement ignores the fact that the need for a private counsel arises precisely because intentional or unintentional prosecutorial lapses directly lead to injustice to the victims.
      • The court expects the victim’s counsel to make the prosecutor aware of any aspects that have not been addressed in the examination of witnesses or the arguments advanced by the public prosecutor.
      • In the process, it assumes that the prosecutor will address such lapses.

    Conclusion

    Under the role currently envisaged in our criminal justice system, the public prosecutor cannot sufficiently take into account the interests, needs and requirements of the victims. The cause of victim justice would be greatly served if the Supreme Court decided to revisit its reasoning and assumptions to appropriately amend this provision in light of the above.

     

     

  • Judicial Reforms

    Explained: What is Mandamus?

    • The Supreme Court has ruled that reservation in the matter of promotions in public posts is not a fundamental right, and a state cannot be compelled to offer the quota if it chooses not to.
    • It ruled that there  is no fundamental right which inheres in an individual to claim reservation in promotions.
    • Hence no mandamus can be issued by the court directing state governments to provide reservations,” the bench of Justices L Nageswara Rao and Hemant Gupta said.

    What is ‘Mandamus’?

    • Mandamus is among the “prerogative writs” in English common law — meaning the extraordinary writs or orders granted by the Sovereign when ordinary legal remedies are inadequate.
    • These are habeas corpus, mandamus, prohibition, certiorari, and quo warranto.
    • In India, the Supreme Court can issue prerogative writs under Article 32 of the Constitution, and the High Courts under Article 226.
    • Mandamus literally means ‘we command’. When issued to a person or body, the writ of mandamus demands some activity on their part.
    • It orders the person or body to perform a public or quasi-public duty, which they have refused to perform, and where no other adequate legal remedy exists to enforce the performance of that duty.

    When is it used?

    • The writ cannot be issued unless the legal duty is of public nature, and to whose performance the applicant of the writ has a legal right.
    • The remedy is of a discretionary nature — a court can refuse to grant it when an alternative remedy exists.
    • However, for enforcing fundamental rights, the alternative remedy argument does not hold as much weight, since it is the duty of the Supreme Court and the High Courts to enforce fundamental rights.
    • When a public officer or government does an act that violates the fundamental right of a person, the court would issue a writ of mandamus against such authorities so that the person’s rights are not infringed.
    • The writ can also be issued against inferior courts or other judicial bodies when they have refused to exercise their jurisdiction and perform their duty.

    Limitations

    • Under Article 361, mandamus cannot be granted against the President or Governor of a State, “for the exercise and performance of the powers and duties of his office or for any act done or purporting to be done by him in the exercise and performance of those powers and duties”.
    • The writ also cannot be issued against a private individual or body, except where the State is in collusion with the private party for contravening a provision of the Constitution or a statute.

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