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Foreign Policy Watch: India-Maldives

Greater Male Connectivity Project

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Maldives and its location

Mains level: Read the attached story

Maldives has announced the signing of a $500-million infrastructure project for the construction of the Greater Malé Connectivity Project (GMCP) with India.

Greater Malé Connectivity Project

  • This infrastructure project, the largest-ever by India in the Maldives, involves the construction of a 6.74-km-long bridge and causeway link.
  • It will connect the Maldives capital Malé with the neighbouring islands of Villingli, Gulhifalhu and Thilafushi.
  • The seeds of the project were planted during the External Affairs Minister’s visit to Malé in September 2019.
  • The GMCP is not only the biggest project India is doing in the Maldives but also the biggest infrastructure project in the Maldives overall.

Significance of the Project

  • This project is significant because it facilitates inter-island connectivity in the country
  • Transport is a major challenge for residents who have to take boats or seaplanes to distant islands.
  • It becomes even more difficult during the monsoons when the seas are rough.
  • This bridge that would connect Malé with the three neighboring islands would ease the process.

The Chinese-made 1.39 km-long Sinamalé Bridge connects Malé with the islands of Hulhulé and Hulhumalé and this project, four tiles longer, would link the other three islands.

Why it is needed?

  • Male is one of the most densely populated cities in the world.
  • Close to 40% of the entire population of the Maldives lives in Malé, which has an area of approximately 8.30 square kilometres.
  • It is very congested and land is a major issue.

Why these islands?

  • On the island of Gulhifalhu, a port, is at present being built under the Indian line of credit.
  • Located some 6 kilometers from Malé, since 2016, the island has been promoted as a strategic location for manufacturing, warehousing and distribution facilities due to its proximity to the capital city.
  • Located 7 km from the capital, the artificial island of Thilafushi was created and designated as a landfill in the early 1990s, to receive garbage created mostly in Malé.
  • The Maldives has plans of expanding industrial work on Thilafushi, making this bridge’s connectivity to the capital indispensable for the transport of employees and other services.

Why did Male opt for India’s offer?

  • After a five-year grace period, the interest rate is 1.75% and the Maldives has to repay it over a 20-year period.
  • India’s loans are less expensive and more transparent, unlike China’s.
  • The Maldives hasn’t really been clear about how much debt it owes to China.

Importance of Maldives for India

  • Geo-strategic importance: Maldives, a Toll Gate in the Indian Ocean. Located in the southern and northern parts of this island chain lies the two important sea lanes of communication (SLOCs).
  • Trade: These SLOCs are critical for maritime trade flow between the Gulf of Aden and Gulf of Hormuz in West Asia and the Strait of Malacca in Southeast Asia. Nearly 50% of India’s external trade and 80% of its energy imports transit these SLOCs in the Arabian Sea.
  • Important SAARC member: Besides, Maldives is a member of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) and the South Asia Subregional Economic Cooperation (SASEC).
  • People To People Contact: There is a significant population of Maldivian students in India. They are aided by a liberal visa-free regime extended by India. There is also medical tourism.
  • Economic Cooperation: Tourism is the mainstay of the Maldivian economy. The country is now a major tourist destination for some Indians and a job destination for others.

What hinders India in Male?

  • Unstable governments: India’s major concern has been the impact of political instability in the neighbourhood on its security and development.
  • Religious extremism: In the past decade or so, the number of Maldivians drawn towards terrorist groups like the Islamic State (IS) and Pakistan-based madrassas and jihadist groups has been increasing.
  • Affinity with China: China’s strategic footprint in India’s neighbourhood has increased. The Maldives has emerged as an important ‘pearl’ in China’s “String of Pearls” construct in South Asia. It has also started using the China card to bargain with India.

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Civil Aviation Sector – CA Policy 2016, UDAN, Open Skies, etc.

Liberalized Drone Rules, 2021

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not much

Mains level: Draft Drone Rules, 2021

The central government has notified the Drone Rules 2021, a much more liberalised regime for unmanned aircraft systems than what existed previously.

Key features of Drone Rules 2021

These rules are built on a premise of trust, self-certification and non-intrusive monitoring. The policy is designed to usher in an era of super-normal growth while balancing safety and security considerations.

  • Several approvals abolished: Unique authorisation number, unique prototype identification number, certificate of manufacturing and airworthiness, certificate of conformance, certificate of maintenance, import clearance, acceptance of existing drones, operator permit, authorisation of R&D organisation, student remote pilot licence, remote pilot instructor authorisation, drone port authorisation etc.
  • Number of forms reduced: from 25 to 5.
  • Types of fees: reduced from 72 to 4.
  • Quantum of fee: reduced to nominal levels and delinked with size of drone. For instance, the fee for a remote pilot license fee has been reduced from INR 3000 (for large drone) to INR 100 for all categories of drones; and is valid for 10 years.
  • Digital sky platform: It shall be developed as a user-friendly single-window system. There will be minimal human interface and most permissions will be self-generated.
  • Interactive airspace map: with green, yellow and red zones shall be displayed on the digital sky platform within 30 days of publication of these rules.
  • No permission required in green zones: Green zone means the airspace upto a vertical distance of 400 feet or 120 metre that has not been designated as a red zone or yellow zone in the airspace map; and the airspace upto a vertical distance of 200 feet or 60 metre above the area located between a lateral distance of 8 and 12 kilometre from the perimeter of an operational airport.
  • De-licensing: No remote pilot licence required for micro drones (for non-commercial use) and nano drones. No requirement for security clearance before issuance of any registration or licence. Nano and model drones (made for research or recreation purposes) are exempt from type certification.
  • Foreign ownership: No restriction on foreign ownership in Indian drone companies.
  • Import: Import of drones to be regulated by DGFT. Requirement of import clearance from DGCA abolished.
  • Size of drones: Coverage of drones under Drone Rules, 2021 increased from 300 kg to 500 kg. This will cover drone taxis also.
  • Testing of drones: for issuance of Type Certificate to be carried out by Quality Council of India or authorised testing entities.
  • UID: Manufacturers and importers may generate their drones’ unique identification number on the digital sky platform through the self-certification route. Drones present in India on or before 30 Nov 2021 will be issued a unique identification number through the digital sky platform provided, they have a DAN, a GST-paid invoice and are part of the list of DGCA-approved drones.
  • Penalties: Maximum penalty for violations reduced to INR 1 lakh.
  • Permission: Safety and security features like ‘No permission – no takeoff’ (NPNT), real-time tracking beacon, geo-fencing etc. to be notified in future. A six-month lead time will be provided to the industry for compliance.
  • Drone corridors: will be developed for cargo deliveries.
  • Drone promotion council: to be set up by Government with participation from academia, startups and other stakeholders to facilitate a growth-oriented regulatory regime.

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Gravitational Wave Observations

[pib] Merging of three Supermassive Black Holes

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Supermassive Black Holes

Mains level: Gravitational waves observation

Indian researchers have discovered three supermassive black holes from three galaxies merging together to form a triple active galactic nucleus, a compact region at the centre of a newly discovered galaxy that has a much-higher-than-normal luminosity.

What are Supermassive black holes?

  • A supermassive black hole is the largest type of black hole, with mass on the order of millions to billions of times the mass of the Sun.
  • Black holes are a class of astronomical objects that have undergone gravitational collapse, leaving behind spheroidal regions of space from which nothing can escape, not even light.
  • They are difficult to detect because they do not emit any light. But they can reveal their presence by interacting with their surroundings.

Active galactic nuclei (AGN) from such black holes

  • When the dust and gas from the surroundings fall onto a supermassive black hole, some of the mass is swallowed by the black hole, but some of it is converted into energy.
  • This is emitted back as electromagnetic radiation that makes the black hole appear very luminous.
  • They are called active galactic nuclei (AGN) and release huge amounts of ionized particles and energy into the galaxy and its environment.
  • Both of these ultimately contribute to the growth of the medium around the galaxy and ultimately the evolution of the galaxy itself.

How does merger of black holes occur?

  • A major factor impacting galaxy evolution is galaxy interactions, which happen when galaxies move close by each other and exert tremendous gravitational forces on each other.
  • During such galaxy interactions, the respective supermassive black holes can get near each other.
  • The dual black holes start consuming gas from their surroundings and become dual AGN.

What happens when galaxies collide?

  • If two galaxies collide, their black hole will also come closer by transferring the kinetic energy to the surrounding gas.
  • The distance between the blackholes decreases with time until the separation is around a parsec (3.26 light-years).
  • The two black holes are then unable to lose any further kinetic energy in order to get even closer and merge.
  • This is known as the final parsec problem.

Here comes the third black hole

  • Many AGN pairs have been detected in the past, but triple AGN are extremely rare, and only a handful has been detected before using X-ray observations.
  • The presence of a third black hole can solve this problem.
  • The dual merging blackholes can transfer their energy to the third blackhole and merge with each other.

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Wetland Conservation

Places in news: Sambhar Lake

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Sambhar Lake

Mains level: Not Much

The world-famous Sambhar Salt Lake in Rajasthan is constantly shrinking with the degradation of soil and water quality and a decline in the population of migratory birds.

Sambhar Lake

  • The lake, situated 80 km south-west of Jaipur, is the country’s largest inland saline water body which attracts thousands of migratory birds every year.
  • The death of more than 20,000 birds belonging to about 10 species which migrate annually to the lake had made international headlines in 2019.
  • The lake receives water from six rivers: Mantha, Rupangarh, Khari, Khandela, Medtha and Samod.
  • Sambhar has been designated as a Ramsar site because the wetland is a key wintering area for tens of thousands of pink flamingos and other birds that migrate from northern Asia and Siberia.

Threats: Illegal mining

  • 30% of the Sambhar Lake’s area had been lost to mining and other activities, including the illegal salt pan encroachments.
  • It has also threatened the livelihoods of local people who have always lived in harmony with the lake and its ecology.

Try answering this:

Which one of the following is an artificial lake? (CSP 2014)

(a) Kodaikanal (Tamil Nadu)

(b) Kolleru (Andhra Pradesh)

(c) Nainital (Uttarakhand)

(d) Renuka (Himachal Pradesh)

Post your answers here.

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RBI Notifications

A way of diluting credit discipline

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not much

Mains level: Paper 3- Current account opening restriction to deal with the NPA issue

Context

Some bank borrowers have gone to court demanding that it quash the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) circular dated August 6, 2020 on opening current accounts.

Background

  • Current accounts with non-lending banks are an important channel for diversion.
  • Diversion of funds is a major reason for large non-performing assets (NPAs).
  • Internal diversion is for non-priority purposes and funds can also be diverted to other firms, owned or controlled by the same group, friends or relatives.
  • To prevent this, the RBI mandates a No-Objection Certificate (NOC) from lending banks before opening such accounts.
  • Banks should verify with CRILC, the RBI credit database, and inform lenders. Banks should also obtain a NOC from the drawee bank when an account is opened through cheques.
  • Widespread non-compliance with mandated safeguards forced the RBI to bar non-lending banks from opening current accounts for large borrowers.
  • Thus, if borrowing is through a cash credit or overdraft account, no bank can open a current account.

What are the current regulations?

  • If a borrower has no cash credit or overdraft account, a current account can be opened subject to restrictions.
  • If the bank’s exposure is less than 10% of total borrowings, debits to the account can only be for transfers to accounts with a designated bank.
  • If total borrowing is ₹50 crore or more, there should be an escrow mechanism managed by one bank which alone can open a current account.
  • Other lending banks can open ‘collection accounts’ from which funds will be periodically transferred to the escrow account.
  • If the borrowing is between ₹5 crore and ₹50 crore, lending banks can open current accounts.
  • Non-lending banks can open collection accounts.
  • If borrowing is below ₹5 crore, even non-lending banks can open current accounts.
  • The working capital credit should be bifurcated into loan and cash credit components at individual bank levels.

Issues with regulations

  • If a borrower has an overdraft, how can there not be a current account?
  • An overdraft is the right to overdraw in a current account up to a limit.
  • The second issue is that the circular forecloses such operational flexibility.
  • Third, why should a bank with low exposure transfer funds to another bank when it can use it to adjust other dues with it?
  • Fourth, share in borrowing is not static. Crossing the threshold both ways could happen often.
  • Fifth, there is a mismatch between what a borrower needs and the regulations allow.
  • Support of non-lending banks through current accounts in other banks is required for large accounts.
  • Sixth, transactions in an active current account enables a bank to monitor a borrower’s account, however small.
  • The lack of such control was why large development financial institutions of yesteryear built up huge NPAs.
  • Seventh, the regulation mandates splitting working capital into loan and cash credit components across all banks.
  • Such a one-size-fits-all regulation does not factor in the purpose of the different facilities.
  • A large company might avail itself of loans in Mumbai, but require current accounts with another bank in Assam where it might have a factory.
  • Lack of flexibility: Rules are not flexible, do not provide for unforeseen circumstances, and can be easily circumvented.
  • Use more generic terms: Regulation needs to use more generic terms. Terms such as Working Capital Term Loan might mean different things in different banks.
  • Diversion of fund is risk better dealt by banks: Is it not better to leave management of exceptional risks such as diversion of funds to the banks?
  • The cost of regulation: the costs of regulation be justified by the benefits.

Conclusion

When regulation ignores market practices, it lacks legitimacy, a construct from neo-institutionalist literature. When legitimacy is wanting, compliance suffers.

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Food Procurement and Distribution – PDS & NFSA, Shanta Kumar Committee, FCI restructuring, Buffer stock, etc.

Mandatory rice fortification policy should be re-examined

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Food fortification

Mains level: Paper 3- food fortification to deal with anaemia

Context

To deal with the high prevalence of anaemia, the government has been pursuing the policy of food fortification with iron. This policy needs a rethink.

Rice-fortification policy

  • There are high levels of anaemia in India, affecting women and children equally.
  • This is despite the corrective measures like mandatory supplementation of iron tablets through Anaemia Mukt Bharat programme of pharmaceutical iron supplementation.
  • To deal with the issue, the government has decided on compulsory rice fortification in safety-net feeding programmes like the ICDS, PDS and school mid-day meals.
  • This was announced by the Prime Minister in his recent Independence Day address to the nation.
  • The mandatory rice fortification programme is being piloted in some districts already.
  • Food fortification is considered attractive as it requires no behavioural modification by the beneficiary.

Why iron fortification policy needs re-examination?

1) Over-estimation of anaemia burden

  • High WHO cutoff for Hg levels: WHO haemoglobin cut-offs are used to diagnose anaemia in India.
  • There is a growing global consensus that these may be too high.
  • A recent Lancet paper suggested a lower haemoglobin cut-off level to diagnose anaemia in Indian children.
  • Using this will actually reduce the anaemia burden by two-thirds.
  • Capillary Vs venous blood sample: Haemoglobin level can be falsely low when a capillary blood sample (taken by finger-prick) is used for measurement, instead of the more reliable venous blood sample (taken with a syringe from an arm vein). The anaemia burden in India is estimated from capillary blood, which inflates the anaemia burden substantially.
  • If the recommended venous blood sample is used, it would halve this burden.
  • There is, thus, a significant overestimation of anaemia burden.

2) Other nutrients and protein intake

  • A MoHFW national survey (Comprehensive National Nutrition Survey) of Indian children showed that iron deficiency was related to less than half the anaemia cases.
  • Many other nutrients and adequate protein intake are also important, for which a good diverse diet is required.

3) Iron requirement over-estimated

  • The idea for iron fortification comes from the premise that a normal Indian diet cannot possibly meet an individual’s daily iron requirement.
  • This is wrong thinking, and is based on older iron requirements (as per National Institute of Nutrition [NIN] 2010), which were much too high.
  • The latest corrected iron requirements (NIN 2020) are 30-40 per cent lower.
  • The iron density of the Indian vegetarian diet, about 9 mg/1000 kCal, can thus meet most requirements.

4) Challenges in rice fortification

  • Rice fortification is very complex.
  • It requires a fortified rice “kernel” or grain that is composed of rice flour paste, along with the required concentration of micronutrients and binders, extruded into a grain that exactly matches the shape of the rice it is intended to fortify.
  • The problem lies in making “matching” kernels for each rice cultivar that is distributed in the food safety-net programmes from year to year and state to state.
  • If it does not match, the instinct of a home cook will be to pick out and discard the odd grains, thereby defeating the purpose of fortification.

Risks involved

  • Ingesting fortified salt (two teaspoons, 10 g/day) or rice (quarter kilo/day) will deliver an additional 10 mg iron/day each to the diet.
  • When the iron intake exceeds 40 mg/day, the risk of toxicity goes up.
  • The unabsorbed iron that remains in the gut can wreak havoc among the beneficial bacteria in the large intestine.
  • Iron causes oxidative stress, and more seriously, is implicated in diabetes and cancer risk. Men will also be more at risk.

Way forward

  • We just need to absorb the existing dietary iron better and complement this with all the other nutrients that are required, by eating a diverse diet (with fruits and vegetables, for example), and improving our environment.
  • Indeed, it is well-known that the benefits derived from the nutrients in whole foods are greater than the sum of their parts.

 Conclusion

We need to rethink our reductionist strategies if we are to deliver food and nutrition security to our people.

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Agricultural Sector and Marketing Reforms – eNAM, Model APMC Act, Eco Survey Reco, etc.

The dangers of India’s palm oil push

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: National Mission on Oilseeds and Oil Palm

Mains level: Paper 3- Oil palm cultivation in India

Context

On August 15, Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced a support of Rs 11,000 crore to incentivise oil palm production.

National Mission on Edible Oils and Oil Palm (NMEO-OP)

  • Under NMEO-OP, the government intends to bring an additional 6.5 lakh hectares under oil palm cultivation.
  • The agro-business industry has said the move will help its growth and reduce the country’s dependence on palm oil imports, especially from Indonesia and Malaysia.
  • Indonesia has emerged as a significant palm oil hub in the last decade and has overtaken Malaysia.
  • The two countries produce 80 per cent of global oil palm.
  • Indonesia exports more than 80 per cent of its production.

Reducing the import dependence

  • India imported 18.41 million tonnes of vegetable oil in 2018.
  • The National Mission on Oilseeds and Oil Palm are part of the government’s efforts to reduce the dependence on vegetable oil production.
  • The Yellow Revolution of the 1990s led to a rise in oilseeds production.
  • Though there has been a continuous increase in the production of diverse oilseeds — groundnut, rapeseed and mustard, soybean — that has not matched the increasing demand.
  • Most of these oilseeds are grown in rain-fed agriculture areas of Gujarat, Andhra Pradesh, Haryana, Karnataka, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Tamil Nadu and Uttar Pradesh.

Issues with oil palm cultivation in India

  • Impact on biodiversity: Studies on agrarian change in Southeast Asia have shown that increasing oil palm plantations is a major reason for the region’s declining biodiversity. 
  • The Northeast is recognised as the home of around 850 bird species, it is also home to citrus fruits, it is rich in medicinal plants and harbours rare plants and herbs.
  • Above all, it has 51 types of forests.
  • Studies conducted by the government have also highlighted the Northeast’s rich biodiversity.
  • The palm oil policy could destroy this richness of the region.
  • To preserve the environment and biodiversity, Indonesia and Sri Lanka have already started putting restrictions on palm tree plantation.
  • Water pollution: Along with adversely impacting the country’s biodiversity, it has led to increasing water pollution.
  • Climate change: The decreasing forest cover has significant implications with respect to increasing carbon emission levels and contributing to climate change.
  • Against the notion of self-reliance: Such initiatives are also against the notion of community self-reliance:
  • The initial state support for such a crop results in a major and quick shift in the existing cropping pattern that are not always in sync with the agro-ecological conditions and food requirements of the region.
  • Against commitment to sustainable agriculture: The policy also contradicts the government’s commitments under the National Mission for Sustainable Agriculture.
  • The mission aims at “Making agriculture more productive, sustainable, remunerative and climate resilient by promoting location specific integrated/composite farming systems.”
  • The palm oil mission, instead, aims at achieving complete transformation of the farming system of Northeast India.
  • Studies also show that in case of variations in global palm oil prices, households dependent on palm oil cultivation become vulnerable.

Consider the question “India depend on import for its vegetable oil requirements to a larger extent. What are the steps taken by the government to reduce the dependence? Can oil palm cultivation in India be a solution?”

Conclusion

Similar environmental and political outcomes cannot be ruled out in India. Apart from the possible hazardous impacts in Northeast India, such trends could have negative implications on farmer incomes, health, and food security in other parts of the country in the long run.

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Climate Change Impact on India and World – International Reports, Key Observations, etc.

India &Arctic ocean

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Arctic Council

Mains level: Geopolitics of the Arctic

It is tempting to view the current geopolitics of the Arctic through the lenses of the ‘great power competition’ and inevitable conflict of interests.

Current geopolitical scenario in the Arctic: US-Russia Spat

  • It is mainly viewed as the growing tensions between North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) allies and Russia.
  • By the end of the Cold War, the geopolitical tensions and security concerns in the Arctic were almost forgotten.
  • The perceived ‘harmony’ was broken in 2007, when the Russian explorers planted their flag on the seabed 4,200m (13,779ft) below the North Pole to articulate Moscow’s claims in the Arctic.
  • This move was certainly viewed as provocative by other Arctic State.
  • The regional tension increased after the Russia-Ukraine conflict in 2014.
  • Consequently, relations between the U.S. and Russia reached their lowest point again.

Note: Five Arctic littoral states — Canada, Denmark (Greenland), Norway, Russia and the USA (Alaska) — and three other Arctic nations — Finland, Sweden and Iceland — form the Arctic Council (estd. 1996).

Try mapping them.

Caution: India became an Observer in the Arctic Council for the first time in 2013. And, India isn’t a full-time observer.

China’s vested interests in Arctic

  • China, for example, with its self-proclaimed status of a ‘near Arctic state’, has been actively engaged in various projects across the region.
  • The importance of the Arctic region for China mostly stems from its energy security issues and the need to diversify shipping lanes.

Why China focuses on Arctic?

  • Transport routes from China to Europe through the Arctic are not only much shorter but also free from the challenges associated with the Malacca Strait and South China Sea.
  • In the latter case, China will continue facing a backlash from many Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) members, supported by US forces and Quad.

Impact of Climate change on Arctic

  • The Arctic is warming nearly twice as fast as the rest of the planet with consecutive record-breaking warm years since 2014.
  • The Arctic is likely to begin experiencing ice-free summers within the next decade, with summers likely to be completely free of sea ice by mid-century.

Conclusion

  • Given the significance of the region, the Arctic will continue to draw increased attention.
  • Hence, countries should refrain from mutual provocations, excessive militarisation, and quid pro quo tactics.
  • All Arctic actors should have a long-term vision and strategic goals as compared to immediate short-term gains.
  • Instead of creating a potential battleground that is reminiscent of the Cold War, the parties concerned should utilise their expertise and create the required synergy to achieve shared goals.
  • Climate change and its dramatic consequences must be a catalyst for Arctic cooperation.

Back2Basics: Arctic Council

  • It is an advisory body that promotes cooperation among member nations and indigenous groups as per the Ottawa Declaration of 1996.
  • Its focus is on sustainable development and environmental protection of the Arctic.
  • The Arctic Council consists of the eight Arctic States: Canada, the Kingdom of Denmark (including Greenland and the Faroe Islands), Finland, Iceland, Norway, Russia, Sweden and the United States.
  • In 2013, six Observers joined the Arctic Council, including China, Japan, India, Italy, South Korea, and Singapore, bringing their total number to 13.

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Global Geological And Climatic Events

Hawaii’s Kilauea Volcano

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Volanic eruptions in news

Mains level: Volcanic landforms

Geologists have detected a swarm of earthquakes at Hawaii’s Kilauea volcano, though it was not erupting.

Kilauea Volcano

  • Kilauea is about 200 miles south of Honolulu, on the Big Island of Hawaii.
  • It is one of the world’s most active volcanoes, having erupted 34 times since 1952. In Hawaiian tradition, Kilauea is home to the volcano goddess Pele.
  • From 1983 to 2018, it erupted almost continuously, in some cases sending streams of lava that covered farms and homes.
  • At the end of this decades-long eruption, Kilauea spewed lava from vents in a residential neighborhood on its eastern flank and destroyed more than 700 homes.
  • In December, Kilauea erupted at the crater, creating a lake with enough lava to fill 10 Hoover dams. That eruption ended in May.

Do not skip answering this PYQ:

Consider the following statements:

  1. The Barren Island volcano is an active volcano located in the Indian Territory.
  2. Barren Island lies about 140 km east of Great Nicobar.
  3. The last time the Barren Island volcano erupted was in 1991 and it has remained inactive since then.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct? (CSP 2014)

(a) 1 only

(b) 2 and 3 only

(c) 3 only

(d) 1 and 3 only

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Back2Basics: Volcanic Landforms

  • Note the intrinsic and extrinsic types of volcanic landforms

  • A volcano has 3 main characteristics
  1. Cone shaped mountain
  2. Formed by rock or ash thrown from the inside of the earth
  3. At times, opening or depression at top
  • The three main types of volcanos are:

  1. Cinder cone Volcano: The cinder cones are small volcanoes with steep sides. Even though they are small, these are the ones you probably hear about.  They are very explosive and made of ash and rock.  Most of the cinder cones are small and less than 500 meters high.  A famous cinder cone is Sunset Crater Volcano in Arizona.
  2. Shield Volcanoes: A shield is a low and broad volcano that usually has a very wide crater (a dent in the Earth’s surface). It is formed from thin layers of lava after consistent low-grade eruptions.  The largest volcano in the world is a shield volcano.  It is located in Hawaii.
  3. Composite volcanoes: They are the tallest type of volcano. They look very impressive but do usually have quiet and slow lava flows.  They sometimes have small eruptions that cause ash and rock to go flying.  One of the most famous volcanoes in the world is a composite volcano.  It is Mount Fuji in Japan.

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Modern Indian History-Events and Personalities

Making of the Modern City of Kolkata

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Kolkata City

Mains level: Urban development of colonial period

A 2003 judgment by the Calcutta High Court generates discussion of the city’s age, its date of founding, and Job Charnock, whom many credits for having “found” the city of Calcutta.

Calcutta: Who founded the city?

Nobody.

  • A place then called Kalikatah was an important religious centre due to the existence of the Kali temple in the adjacent village of Kalighat.
  • The first literary reference to the site is found in Bipradas Pipilai’s magnum opus Manasa Mangala which dates back to 1495.
  • Abul Fazl’s Ain-I-Akbari dating 1596 also mentions the place.
  • The Sabarna Roy Choudhury family was granted the Jagirdari of Kalikatah by Emperor Jehangir in 1608.

Who was Job Charnock?

  • Job Charnock (1630–1693) was an English administrator with the East India Company.
  • He was once regarded as the founder of the city of Kolkata (formerly Calcutta).
  • However, this view is challenged, and in 2003 the Calcutta High Court declared that he ought not to be regarded as the founder.
  • Charnock was entrusted with procuring the Company’s saltpetre and appointed to the centre of the trade, Patna in Bihar in1659.

Beginning of Urbanization

  • The establishment of the Government House in 1767 and the Lottery Commission in 1817 were the other important developments in the city’s history that gave its urban landscape more defined contours.
  • This commission was entirely responsible for the setting up of the city’s roads, streets and lanes.
  • Some markers of urban settlements include planned roads, water supply and transport.
  • The establishment of these in the early 19th century was responsible for making Calcutta the great city that it eventually became.

Significance of Kolkata

One of the most significant developments that gave the city a semblance of urban formation occurred in 1756 when the Nawab of Bengal Siraj ud-Daulah lay siege to Calcutta.

  • This was in retaliation for the British East India Company engaging in unauthorized development of the structure that is now known as Fort William.
  • The East India Company was defeated in a decisive battle, making them realise the vulnerability of the fort.
  • Post 1757 the fort was remade and fortified with enhanced protection, the construction was exceptionally well done.
  • It was really this attack on Fort William, a bastion of the British and other Europeans living there, that changed the map of Calcutta.
  • The Europeans who used to primarily lived inside the fort—the European merchants, the administrators etc—started moving out.
  • They knew that if there was an attack, there was infrastructure to save them. That was European Calcutta, what we call ‘White Town’.

Hey! We won’t let you move away without answering this PYQ:

Wellesley established the Fort William College at Calcutta because (CSP 2020):

(a) He was asked by the board of directors at London to do so

(b) He wanted to revive interest in oriental learning in India

(c) He wanted to provide William Carey and his associates with employment

(d) He wanted to train British civilians for administrative purposes in India.

 

Post your answers here:

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Swachh Bharat Mission

SUJALAM Campaign

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: SUJALAM Campaign

Mains level: Not Much

The Ministry of Jal Shakti began ‘SUJALAM’, a ‘100 days campaign’ to create more and more ODF Plus villages by undertaking wastewater management at the village level.

SUJALAM Campaign

The key activities that will be organized in the villages under this campaign include:

  • Organizing Community consultations, Khuli Baithaks and Gram Sabha meetings to analyze the current situation
  • Pass resolution to maintain ODF sustainability and achieve a needed number of soak pits to manage the greywater
  • Develop a 100 days’ plan to undertake sustainability and soak pit construction-related activities
  • Construct a requisite number of soak pits
  • Retrofit toilets where needed through IEC and community mobilization and
  • Ensure all newly emerging Households in the village have access to toilets

Objectives of the campaign

  • The effort of the campaign would be directed towards achieving the ODF plus status for villages across the country in an accelerated manner in a short time.
  • The campaign will not only build desired infrastructure soak pit for management of greywater in villages but will also aid in sustainable management of water bodies.
  • The disposal of wastewater and clogging of water bodies in the villages or on the outskirts of the villages remain one of the major problems.
  • The Campaign would help in the management of the wastewater and in turn, would help to revive the water bodies.

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Foreign Policy Watch: India-Afghanistan

The legal challenges in recognising the Taliban

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not much

Mains level: Paper 2- International recognition of a government

Context

The Taliban’s takeover of Afghanistan has triggered a new debate in international law on the issue of recognising an entity that claims to be the new government of a state.

Legal challenge of recognising a government

  • Questions of recognition do not arise when the change of government within a state occurs when political power is transferred through legal means.
  • However, things are different when the change of government happens through extra-legal methods like ousting the sitting government using unconstitutional means.
  • China and Russia, two of the five permanent United Nations Security Council members, have seemingly shown readiness to recognise a Taliban-led government.
  • Whereas countries like Canada have opposed it.
  • Recognition of governments under international law is vital for several reasons.
  • Recognition of government Vs. Recognition of State: Malcolm Shaw, the international lawyer, writes, “a change in government, however, accomplished, does not affect the identity of the State itself.”
  • Thus, in the current debate, the issue is not about the recognition of Afghanistan, whose legal personality remains intact it’s about the recognition of government.

Two doctrines in Internation laws for recognising a government

1) Effectiveness

  • According to this principle, to recognise a government means to determine whether it effectively controls the state it claims to govern.
  • Under this doctrine, it is immaterial how the new government occupied office.
  • Since there is hardly any doubt that the Taliban now effectively controls Afghanistan, as per this test, it would be recognised as Afghanistan’s government for international law and thus, international relations.

2) Democratic legitimacy

  •  According to this doctrine, recognition of a government also depends on whether it is the legitimate representative of the people it claims to govern.
  • The end of the Cold War, the subsequent spread of democracy in the world, and the growing demand for universal respect for human rights gave an impetus to this doctrine in the last three decades.
  • This doctrine has led many countries to bestow de jure recognition (legal recognition) on governments in exile in place of governments exercising effective control.
  • Two recent examples include recognition by some states of Yemen’s government in exile since 2015.
  • Second, the Nicolás Maduro government in Venezuela is not recognised by several countries due to the alleged lack of democratic legitimacy.
  • The Taliban regime, despite exercising effective control over Afghanistan, lacks democratic legitimacy.
  • Thus, it would fail to be recognised as the legitimate representative of Afghanistan if the doctrine of democratic legitimacy is applied.
  • Nevertheless, there is no binding legal obligation on countries to withhold recognition citing democratic legitimacy.
  • Thus, if Russia and China were to formally recognise the Taliban regime due to its effective control of Afghanistan, it would be consistent with international law.

Way forward for India

  • India will have to find a way to engage with the Taliban given India’s huge investments in Afghanistan and stakes in the South Asian region.
  • India should adopt a clear policy that it will deal with the Taliban simply because it is the de facto government, not because it is a legitimate one.
  • This principle should be followed for bilateral relations and also for multilateral dealings such as within the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation.

Consider the question “What are the doctrines in international law in recognising the government of State? What should be India’s course of action in dealing with the Taliban in Afghanistan?” 

Conclusion

Given the Taliban’s brutal past, India is within its right to withhold de jure recognition of the Taliban regime. However, India has to devise a policy to deal with the Taliban as a de facto government.

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Right To Privacy

The National Automated Facial Recognition System

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not much

Mains level: Paper 2- Issues with automated facial recognition system

Context

On June 23, 2021, the Joint Committee examining the Personal Data Protection Bill (2019) was granted a fifth extension by Parliament. While the Government has been simultaneously exploring the potential of facial recognition technology.

Automatic Facial Recognition in India

  • To empower the Indian police with information technology, India approved implementation of the National Automated Facial Recognition System (NAFRS).
  • On its implementation, it will function as a national-level search platform that will use facial recognition technology.
  • It will help to facilitate investigation of crime or for identifying a person of interest regardless of face mask, makeup, plastic surgery, beard or hair extension.

Issues with AFR technology

  • Intrusive in nature: The technology is absolutely intrusive, for the purposes of ‘verification’ or ‘identification’, the system compares the faceprint generated with a large existing database of faceprints typically available to law enforcement agencies.
  • Accuracy and bias: Though the accuracy of facial recognition has improved over the years due to modern machine-learning algorithms, the risk of error and bias still exists.
  • With the element of error and bias, facial recognition can result in profiling of some overrepresented groups (such as Dalits and minorities) in the criminal justice system.
  • Privacy: As NAFRS will collect, process, and store sensitive private information: facial biometrics for long periods; if not permanently — it will impact the right to privacy.
  • Accordingly, it is crucial to examine whether its implementation is arbitrary and thus unconstitutional, i.e., is it ‘legitimate’, ‘proportionate to its need’ and ‘least restrictive’?
  • The Supreme Court, in the K.S. Puttaswamy judgment provided a three-fold requirement to safeguard against any arbitrary state action.
  • Unfortunately, NAFRS fails each one of these tests.
  • Any encroachment on the right to privacy requires the existence of ‘law’ (to satisfy legality of action); there must exist a ‘need’, in terms of a ‘legitimate state interest’; and, the measure adopted must be ‘proportionate’ and it should be ‘least intrusive.’
  • Lack of law: It does not stem from any statutory enactment (such as the DNA Technology (Use and Application) Regulation Bill 2018 proposed to identify offenders or an executive order of the Central Government.
  • Rather, it was merely approved by the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs in 2009.
  • Fails proportionality test: Even if we assume that there exists a need for NAFRS to tackle modern day crimes, this measure is grossly disproportionate.
  • For NAFRS to achieve the objective of ‘crime prevention’ or ‘identification’ will require the system to track people on a mass scale — avoiding a CCTV in a public place is difficult — resulting in everyone becoming a subject of surveillance: a disproportionate measure.
  • Impact on civil liberties: As anonymity is key to functioning of a liberal democracy, unregulated use of facial recognition technology will dis-incentivise independent journalism or the right to assemble peaceably without arms, or any other form of civic society activism.
  • Due to its adverse impact on civil liberties, some countries have been cautious with the use of facial recognition technology.
  • In the United States, the Facial Recognition and Biometric Technology Moratorium Act of 2020 was introduced in the Senate to prohibit biometric surveillance without statutory authorisation.
  • Similarly, privacy watchdogs in the European Union have called for a ban on facial recognition.

Way forward

  • Statutory basis: NAFRS should have statutory authorisation, and guidelines for deployment.
  • Data protection law: In the interest of civil liberties it is important to impose a moratorium on the use of facial recognition technology till we enact a strong and meaningful data protection law.

Consider the question “What are the issues associated with the deployment of NAFRS? Suggest the way forward.”

Conclusion

In sum, even if facial recognition technology is needed to tackle modern-day criminality in India, without accountability and oversight, facial recognition technology has strong potential for misuse and abuse.

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Minority Issues – SC, ST, Dalits, OBC, Reservations, etc.

Economic criterion not sole basis for Creamy Layer: Supreme Court

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Indira Sawhney Case

Mains level: Creamy Layer Issue

The basis of exclusion of ‘creamy layer’ cannot be merely economic, a Supreme Court Bench has observed in their judgment, while referring to the court’s Indra Sawhney verdict of 1992.

What was the case?

  • The court was hearing a petition challenging some notifications by the Haryana government sub-classifying backward classes solely on economic basis while fixing the criteria for creamy layer.
  • The notifications said children of persons having “gross annual income” of up to ₹3 lakh annually would get the benefit of reservation in services and admission in educational institutions.
  • The remaining quota would go to those from backward families, which earn between₹3 lakh and ₹6 lakh per annum.
  • The sections earning over ₹6 lakh annually were considered as ‘creamy layer’ under Section 5 of the 2016 Act.
  • The apex court held that the Haryana’s notifications have violated the law declared in the Indra Sawhney judgment by identifying creamy layer only on the basis of income.

Defying Indra Sawhney Verdict (1992)

  • The case had declared that ‘creamy layer’ in a backward community should be excluded from reservation so that the more deserving were able to come up.
  • Explaining this verdict, court said that such persons were to be treated as ‘creamy layer’ without any further inquiry.

Who else would be excluded from such reservation?

  • Likewise, people with sufficient income who were in a position to provide employment to others should also be taken to have reached a higher social status and therefore, should be treated as outside the backward class.
  • Similarly, persons from backward classes who had higher agricultural holdings or were receiving income from properties, beyond a prescribed limit, do not deserve the benefit of reservation.

Key takeaways from the Judgement

  • The Supreme Court has held that the government cannot deny reservation to a person belonging to a backward community solely on the ground that he or she is rich.
  • Social advancement, higher employment in government services, etc, played an equal role in deciding whether such a person belonged to the creamy layer and could be denied quota benefits.
  • The court had illustrated that ‘creamy layer’ would include persons from backward classes who occupied posts in higher services like IAS, IPS, and All India Services.
  • These persons had reached a higher level of social advancement and economic status,and therefore, were not entitled to be treated as backward.

What is the Creamy Layer?

  • Creamy Layer is a concept that sets a threshold within which OBC reservation benefits are applicable.
  • While there is a 27% quota for OBCs in government jobs and higher educational institutions, those falling within the “creamy layer” cannot get the benefits of this quota.

Basis of Creamy Layer

  • It is based on the recommendation of the Second Backward Classes Commission (Mandal Commission).
  • The government in 1990 had notified 27% reservation for Socially and Educationally Backward Classes (SEBCs) in vacancies in civil posts and services that are to be filled on direct recruitment.
  • After this was challenged, the Supreme Court in the Indira Sawhney case (1992) upheld 27% reservation for OBCs, subject to exclusion of the creamy layer.

How is it determined?

  • Following the order in Indra Sawhney, an expert committee headed by Justice (retired) R N Prasad was constituted for fixing the criteria for determining the creamy layer.
  • In 1993, the Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT) listed out various categories of people of certain rank/status/income whose children cannot avail the benefit of OBC reservation.
  1. For those not in government, the current threshold is an income of Rs 8 lakh per year.
  2. For children of government employees, the threshold is based on their parents’ rank and not income.
  3. For instance, an individual is considered to fall within the creamy layer if either of his or her parents is in a constitutional post; if either parent has been directly recruited in Group-A; or if both parents are in Group-B services.
  4. If the parents enter Group-A through promotion before the age of 40, their children will be in the creamy layer.
  5. Children of a Colonel or higher-ranked officer in the Army, and children of officers of similar ranks in the Navy and Air Force, too, come under the creamy layer.
  6. Income from salaries or agricultural land is not clubbed while determining the creamy layer (2004).

Back2Basics: Indira Sawhney Case

In the famous Mandal case (Indra Sawhney Case, 1992), the scope and extent of Article 16(4), which provides for reservation of jobs in favor of backward classes, has been examined thoroughly by the Supreme Court.

  • Though the Court has rejected the additional reservation of 10% for poorer sections of higher castes, it upheld the constitutional validity of a 27% reservation for the OBCs with certain conditions.
  • The advanced sections among the OBCs (the creamy layer) should be excluded from the list of beneficiaries of reservation.
  • No reservation in promotions; reservation should be confined to initial appointments only. Any existing reservation in promotions can continue for five years only (i.e., up to 1997).
  • The total reserved quota should not exceed 50% except in some extraordinary situations. This rule should be applied every year.
  • The ‘carry forward rule’ in case of unfilled (backlog) vacancies is valid. But it should not violate the 50% rule.

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Parliament – Sessions, Procedures, Motions, Committees etc

Arresting a Cabinet Minister

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Immunities of ministers

Mains level: Parliamentary privileges

The Maharashtra Police has arrested the Union Minister for MSMEs for allegedly making derogatory remarks against the CM.

Procedure to arrest a Cabinet Minister

  • If Parliament is not in session, a cabinet minister can be arrested by a law enforcement agency in case of a criminal case registered against him.
  • As per Section 22 A of the Rules of Procedures and Conduct of Business of the Rajya Sabha, the Police, Judge, or Magistrate would, however, have to intimate the Chairman of the Rajya Sabha about the reason for the arrest, the place of detention or imprisonment in an appropriate form.

What is the procedure to be followed by the Chairman of the Rajya Sabha in case of an arrest?

  • The Chairman is expected to inform the Council if it is sitting about the arrest.
  • If the council is not sitting, he/she is expected to publish it in the bulletin for the information of the members.

What about the privileges of the Rajya Sabha members vis-a-vis arrests?

  • As per the main privileges of Parliament, in civil cases, they have freedom from arrest during the continuance of the House and 40 days before its commencement and 40 days after its conclusion, as per section 135 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
  • The privilege of freedom from arrest does not extend to criminal offences or cases of detention under preventive detention.

Can a person be arrested from the precincts of the House?

  • No arrest, whether of a member or of a stranger, can be made within the precincts of the House without the prior permission of the Chairman/Speaker and that too in accordance with the procedure laid down by the Home Ministry in this regard.
  • Similarly, no legal process, civil or criminal, can be served within the precincts of the House without obtaining the prior permission of the Chairman/Speaker whether the House is in session or not.

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Back2Basics: Parliamentary Privileges

  • Article 105 and Article 194 grant privileges or advantages to the members of the parliament so that they can perform their duties or can function properly without any hindrances.
  • Such privileges are granted as they are needed for democratic functioning.
  • These powers, privileges, and immunities should be defined by the law from time to time.
  • These privileges are considered special provisions and have an overriding effect in conflict.

Freedom from being arrested

  • The member of parliament cannot be arrested 40 days before and 40 days after the session of the house.
  • If in any case a member of Parliament is arrested within this period, the concerned person should be released in order to attend the session freely.

Right to exclude strangers from its proceedings and hold secret sessions 

  • The object of including this right was to exclude any chances of daunting or threatening any of the members.
  • The strangers may attempt to interrupt the sessions.

Right to prohibit the publication of its reporters and proceedings 

  • The right has been granted to remove or delete any part of the proceedings that took place in the house.

Right to regulate internal proceedings

  • The House has the right to regulate its own internal proceedings and also has the right to call for the session of the Legislative assembly.
  • But it does not have any authority in interrupting the proceedings by directing the speaker of the assembly.

Right to punish members or outsiders for contempt

  • This right has been given to every house of the Parliament.
  • If any of its members or maybe non-members commit contempt or breach any of the privileges given to him/her, the houses may punish the person.
  • The houses have the right to punish any person for any contempt made against the houses in the present or in the past. 

Article 105(3) and Article 194(3) states that the parliament should from time to time define the laws or pass the laws on the powers, privileges and immunities of the members of the parliament and members of the legislative assembly.

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Festivals, Dances, Theatre, Literature, Art in News

Saroop of the Sikh Holy Book

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Sri Guru Granth Sahib

Mains level: Not Much

A union minister has received one of the Saroops of the holy Guru Granth Sahib flown in from Afghanistan.

What is Saroop?

  • Saroop is a physical copy of Sri Guru Granth Sahib, also called Bir in Punjabi.
  • Every Bir has 1,430 pages, which are referred to as Ang. The verses on every page remain the same.
  • The Sikhs consider the Saroop of Guru Granth Sahib a living guru and treat it with utmost respect.
  • They believe that all the 10 Gurus were the same spirit in different bodies, and the Guru Granth Sahib is their eternal physical and spiritual form.

Compilation of Sri Guru Granth Sahib

  • It was the fifth Sikh master, Guru Arjan Dev, who compiled the first Bir of the Guru Granth Sahib in 1604, and installed it at the Golden Temple in Amritsar.
  • Later, the tenth Sikh master, Guru Gobind Singh, added verses penned by the ninth master, his father Guru Tegh Bahadur, and compiled the Bir for the second and last time.
  • It was in 1708 that Guru Gobind Singh declared the Guru Granth Sahib the living Guru of the Sikhs.
  • Guru Granth Sahib is a compendium of hymns written by six Sikh gurus,15 saints, including Bhagat Kabir, Bhagat Ravidas, Sheikh Farid and Bhagat Namdev, 11 Bhatts (balladeers) and four Sikhs.
  • The verses are composed in 31 ragas.

What does the act of carrying the saroop on one’s head signify?

  • The installation and transportation of Guru Granth Sahib is governed by a strict code of conduct called rehat maryada.
  • As a mark of respect, the Bir of the Guru Granth Sahib is carried on the head, and the person walks barefoot.
  • Whenever a devout sees the Bir of Guru Granth Sahib passing by, s/he removes her shoes and bows.
  • A ceremonial whisk is waved high over the Guru Granth Sahib either on the move or while reading from it.
  • Gurdwaras have a separate resting place for the Saroop, called ‘Sukh Asan Sthan’ or ‘Sachkhand’ where the Guru rests at night.
  • This takes place at the end of the day when the holy book is ceremoniously shut and rested. In the morning, the saroop is again installed in a ceremony called ‘prakash’.
  • Many tourists specially come to watch the prakash and sukha asan ceremony of the Guru Granth Sahib at the Golden Temple.

Where are copies of the Guru Granth Sahib published?

  • There was a tradition among Punjabis, both Sikhs and Hindus, to copy the Guru Granth Sahib by hand and produce multiple copies.
  • The Udasi and Nirmla sects also played a role in making handwritten copies of the Birs until the British introduced the printing press.
  • Nowadays, the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC) has the sole rights to publish the Birs of the Guru Granth Sahib, and this is done at Amritsar.

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Try answering this PYQ:

Consider the following Bhakti Saints:

  1. Dadu Dayal
  2. Guru Nanak
  3. Tyagaraja

Who among the above was/were preaching when the Lodi dynasty fell and Babur took over? (CSP 2018)

(a) 1 and 3

(b) 2 only

(c) 2 and 3

(d) 1 and 2

 

Post your answers here:

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Air Pollution

[pib] Transport Initiative for Asia (TIA) Project

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Transport Initiative for Asia

Mains level: Not Much

NITI Aayog and World Resources Institute (WRI), India, jointly launched the ‘Forum for Decarbonizing Transport’ in India as part of the NDC-Transport Initiative for Asia (NDC-TIA).

Transport Initiative for Asia

  • The NDC Transport Initiative for Asia (TIA 2020-2023) is a joint programme that will engage China, India, and Vietnam in promoting a comprehensive approach to decarbonizing transport in their respective countries.
  • The project is part of the International Climate Initiative (IKI).
  • NITI Aayog is the implementing partner for the India component of the project.
  • The project aims at bringing down the peak level of GHG emissions (transport sector) in Asia (in line with a well below 2-degree pathway), resulting in problems like congestion and air pollution.

Why need such initiative?

  • India has a massive and diverse transport sector, which is also the third most CO2 emitting sector.
  • Data suggests that within the transport sector, road transport contributes to more than 90% of the total CO2 emissions.
  • The NDC-TIA India component focuses on developing a coherent strategy of effective policies and the formation of a multi-stakeholder platform for decarbonizing transport in the country.

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Labour, Jobs and Employment – Harmonization of labour laws, gender gap, unemployment, etc.

[pib] E-Shram Portal:  National Database on Unorganized Workers (NDUW)

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: E-Shram Portal

Mains level: Welfare of the unorganized workers

The Union Ministry of Labour & Employment will launch the e-Shram portal – National Database on Unorganized Workers (NDUW).

What is the E-Shram Portal?

  • The government aims to register 38 crore unorganized workers, such as construction labourers, migrant workforce, street vendors and domestic workers, among others.
  • The workers will be issued an e-Shram card containing a 12-digit unique number, which, going ahead, will help in including them in social security schemes.
  • The government had earlier missed deadlines for creating the database, inviting criticism from the Supreme Court.

How will the registration for workers happen on the portal?

  • The registration of workers on the portal will be coordinated by the Labour Ministry, state governments, trade unions and CSCs.
  • Awareness campaigns would be planned across the country to enable nationwide registration of workers.
  • Following the launch of the portal, workers from the unorganized sector can begin their registration from the same day.
  • A national toll free number — 14434 — will also be launched to assist and address the queries of workers seeking registration on the portal.
  • A worker can register on the portal using his/her Aadhaar card number and bank account details, apart from filling other necessary details like date of birth, home town, mobile number and social category.

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Tiger Conservation Efforts – Project Tiger, etc.

Places in news: Corbett Tiger Reserve

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Jim Corbett NP, NTCA

Mains level: Tiger Conservation

The Delhi High Court has asked the National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) to consider as a representation a petition to stop the alleged illegal construction of bridges and walls within the tiger breeding habitat of the Corbett Tiger Reserve.

Jim Corbett National Park

  • Jim Corbett NP is the oldest national park in India and was established in 1936 as Hailey National Park to protect the endangered Bengal tiger.
  • It is located in Nainital district and Pauri Garhwal district of Uttarakhand and was named after hunter and naturalist Jim Corbett.
  • The park was the first to come under the Project Tiger initiative.
  • It has sub-Himalayan belt geographical and ecological characteristics.
  • Dense moist deciduous forest mainly consists of sal, haldu, peepal, rohini and mango trees.
  • Forest covers almost 73% of the park, while 10% of the area consists of grasslands.

Try answering this PYQ:

Among the following Tiger Reserves, which one has the largest area under “Critical Tiger Habitat” ? (CSP 2020)

(a) Corbett

(b) Ranthambore

(c) Nagarjunasagar- Srisailam

(d) Sunderbans

 

Post your answers here:


Back2Basics: National Tiger Conservation Authority

  • The NTCA was established in December 2005, following a recommendation of the Tiger Task Force, constituted by the Prime Minister of India.
  • The Wildlife Protection Act of 1972 was amended in 2006 to provide for constituting NTCA responsible for the implementation of the Project Tiger plan to protect endangered tigers.
  • It works for the reorganized management of Project Tiger and the many Tiger Reserves in India.
  • A program for protection called, ‘Tiger Protection Program’ (popularly known as Project Tiger) was started in 1973, by the GOI in co-operation with WWF.

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Health Sector – UHC, National Health Policy, Family Planning, Health Insurance, etc.

Why India needs an NHS-like healthcare model

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: India's expenditure on health

Mains level: Paper 2- India needs NHS like healthcare model

Context

Even after the pandemic, the Indian government continues to budget less than 1 per cent of GDP for healthcare, one of the lowest in the world.

About NHS

  • Every year, Britain’s legendary health network National Health Service (NHS) cures 15 million patients with chronic ailments, at a fraction of the cost spent by the US.
  • The NHS funded by direct taxes is also the fifth largest employer in the world, after McDonalds and Walmart.
  • One of every 20 British workers is employed as a doctor, nurse, catering and technical personnel.

Public healthcare in India

  • Even after the pandemic, the Indian government continues to budget less than 1 per cent of GDP for healthcare, one of the lowest in the world.
  • In contrast, China invests around 3 per cent, Britain 7 per cent and the United States 17 per cent of GDP.
  • So, 62 per cent of health expenses in India are paid for by patients themselves
  • This is one of the main reasons for families falling into poverty especially during the pandemic.
  • In India, hospitals are beleaguered with absentee staff.
  • As per a Niti Aayog database, in the worst state of Bihar in 2017-18, positions for 60 per cent of midwives, 50 per cent of staff nurses, 34 per cent of medical officers and 60 per cent of specialist doctors were vacant.
  • Those on the job, despite being handsomely paid, are chronically overworked.

Conclusion

In the 21st century, not much has improved in India’s public hospitals. Still, in India doctors are often equated with gods. What India needs in NHS like healthcare model.

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