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Archives: News

  • Festivals, Dances, Theatre, Literature, Art in News

    1000 Years of Survival of Somnath Temple 

    Why in the News?

    The Prime Minister of India highlighted the thousand year survival of the Somnath Temple, marking 1,000 years since the 1026 CE attack by Mahmud of Ghazni.

    Somnath Temple

    • One of the 12 sacred Jyotirlingas of Lord Shiva
    • Revered across Hindu tradition
    • Known as the Eternal Shrine due to repeated destruction and reconstruction

    Location

    • Prabhas Patan, near Veraval, Saurashtra region of Gujarat
    • Located on the Arabian Sea coast
    • At the Triveni Sangam of Kapila, Hiran, and Saraswati rivers

    Historical Significance

    Ancient Origins

    • Mentioned in Shiva Purana
    • Evidence of worship since antiquity
    • Multiple reconstructions in pre medieval times

    1026 CE Event

    • Temple attacked and plundered by Mahmud of Ghazni
    • Considered a major historical rupture in Indian history

    Medieval Period

    • Rebuilt by rulers such as Kumarapala of the Chaulukya dynasty
    • Reconstructed under Chudasama kings
    • Destroyed again during Sultanate invasions

    Symbol of Resilience

    • Historical records indicate the temple was destroyed six times
    • Rebuilt after every destruction
    • Became a symbol of civilisational continuity and faith

    Architectural Features

    • Built in Chaulukya or Solanki style
    • Prominent shikhara and richly carved stone walls
    • Garbhagriha houses the Jyotirlinga
    • Famous inscription stating no landmass lies between Somnath and the South Pole, symbolising cosmic alignment

    Modern Reconstruction

    Post Independence Revival

    • Reconstruction initiated in 1947
    • Led by Vallabhbhai Patel as a civilisational responsibility
    • Designed by architect Prabhashankar Sompura using traditional methods

    Inauguration

    • Inaugurated on 11 May 1951
    • By Rajendra Prasad
    • Despite the political debates of the period

    Present Management

    • Managed by the Somnath Trust
    • Trust is chaired by the Prime Minister of India
    [2022] The Prime Minister recently inaugurated the new Circuit House near Somnath Temple at Veraval. Which of the following statements are correct regarding Somnath Temple? 

    1. Somnath Temple is one of the Jyotirlinga shrines. 

    2. A description of Somnath Temple was given by Al-Biruni

    3. Pran Pratishtha of Somnath Temple (installation of the present-day temple) was done by President S. Radhakrishnan. 

    Select the correct answer using the code given below: 

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

  • Solar Energy – JNNSM, Solar Cities, Solar Pumps, etc.

    India Inaugurates Global Standard Environmental and Solar Calibration Facilities  

    Why in the News?

    India has inaugurated the world’s second National Environmental Standard Laboratory and the world’s fifth National Primary Standard Facility for Solar Cell Calibration at CSIR National Physical Laboratory, New Delhi.

    National Environmental Standard Laboratory NESL

    • An apex national facility for testing, calibration and certification of air pollution monitoring instruments
    • Designed specifically for Indian climatic and environmental conditions

    Location

    • CSIR National Physical Laboratory, New Delhi

    Institutions Involved

    • Council of Scientific and Industrial Research
    • CSIR National Physical Laboratory

    Objectives

    • Establish India specific environmental measurement standards
    • Improve accuracy and reliability of air quality data
    • Support implementation of National Clean Air Programme

    Key Features

    • Calibration under Indian conditions such as temperature, humidity and dust load
    • Provides traceable and standardised pollution data
    • Supports regulators, startups, MSMEs and domestic manufacturers
    • Only UK and India currently have such national level facilities

    Significance

    • Strengthens pollution governance
    • Reduces dependence on foreign calibration labs
    • Improves credibility of air quality monitoring across India

    National Primary Standard Facility for Solar Cell Calibration

    • A high precision metrology facility for calibration of solar cells
    • Ensures globally comparable photovoltaic measurements

    Location

    • CSIR National Physical Laboratory, New Delhi

    Key Features

    • Uses Laser based Differential Spectral Responsivity system
    • Achieves world leading uncertainty of 0.35 percent (k=2)
    • Developed in collaboration with Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt
    • Only the fifth such facility worldwide

    Importance

    • Supports solar manufacturing and R and D
    • Enhances trust in Indian photovoltaic performance data
    • Boosts renewable energy transition and exports

     Significance

    • Positions India as a global leader in environmental and energy metrology
    • Strengthens Make in India and Atmanirbhar Bharat
    • Supports climate action, clean energy goals and evidence based policymaking

    Prelims Pointers

    • NESL is linked to air pollution monitoring
    • Solar calibration facility ensures international PV measurement standards
    • CSIR NPL is India’s national metrology institute
    • Only five countries globally have national primary solar calibration facilities
    [2014] With reference to technology for solar power production, consider the following statements: 

    1. ‘Photovoltaics’ is a technology that generates electricity by direct conversion of light into electricity, while ‘Solar Thermal’ is a technology that utilizes the Sun’s rays to generate heat which is further used in electricity generation process. 

    2. Photovoltaics generates Alternating Current (AC), while Solar Thermal generates Direct Current (DC). 

    3. India has manufacturing base for Solar Thermal technology, but not for photovoltaics. 

    Which of the statements given above is/are correct? 

    (a) 1 only (b) 2 and 3 only (c) 1, 2 and 3 only (d) None of the above

  • Foreign Policy Watch: India-United States

    Greenland Sovereignty and US Interest 

    Why in the News?

    Greenland, an autonomous territory of Denmark, has rejected renewed remarks by Donald Trump on taking over the island. Greenland’s Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen stated that citizens should not fear an imminent American annexation, while European powers reaffirmed support for Greenland’s sovereignty.

    Political Status of Greenland

    • World’s largest island
    • Population around 57,000
    • Autonomous territory within the Kingdom of Denmark
    • Controls internal affairs, while defence and foreign policy remain with Denmark
    • Not an independent NATO member, but covered under Denmark’s NATO membership

    Strategic Importance of Greenland

    • Located between Europe and North America
    • Critical for US ballistic missile defence systems
    • Part of the Arctic region, gaining importance due to climate change
    • Rich in critical minerals and rare earth elements
    • Important for reducing dependence on Chinese mineral supply chains

    International Law Angle

    • Territorial sovereignty is a core principle of international law
    • Annexation of another territory without consent violates UN principles
    • NATO is based on collective defence, not internal coercion

    Prelims Pointers

    • Greenland is not an independent country
    • Defence of Greenland is linked to Denmark’s NATO membership
    • Arctic geopolitics is driven by security, minerals, and climate change
    • Public opinion in Greenland strongly opposes US annexation
    [2014] Consider the following countries: 

    1. Denmark 

    2. Japan 

    3. Russian Federation 

    4. United Kingdom 

    5. United States of America 

    Which of the above are the members of the ‘Arctic Council’? 

    (a) 1, 2 and 3 only (b) 2, 3 and 4 only (c) 1, 4 and 5 only (d) 1, 3 and 5 only

  • Foreign Policy Watch: United Nations

    Global Environment Facility Approves New UNEP Projects  

    Why in the News?

    The Global Environment Facility approved US$52.8 million for four new projects led by the United Nations Environment Programme at its 70th Council meeting.

    About Global Environment Facility

    • A multilateral environmental financing mechanism
    • Provides grants and blended finance to developing countries and economies in transition
    • Supports projects that deliver global environmental benefits

    Establishment

    • Established in 1991
    • Created ahead of the 1992 Rio Earth Summit

    Objectives

    • Support country driven projects with global environmental benefits
    • Integrate action on climate change, biodiversity, land degradation, oceans, chemicals and pollution
    • Strengthen environmental governance while promoting sustainable development

    Conventions for Which GEF Serves as Financial Mechanism

    • Convention on Biological Diversity
    • United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
    • United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification
    • Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants
    • Minamata Convention on Mercury
    • Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction Agreement

    Significance

    • Largest source of multilateral biodiversity funding globally
    • More than US$26 billion provided in grants
    • Over US$153 billion mobilised in co financing
    • Active in more than 160 countries
    • Contributes to environmental protection along with livelihood improvement

    Prelims Pointers

    • GEF predates the Rio Earth Summit
    • Serves as a financial mechanism for multiple multilateral environmental agreements
    • Works closely with UN agencies including UNEP
    • Focuses on projects with global environmental benefits
    [2014] With reference to ‘Global Environment Facility’, which of the following statements is/are correct? 

    (a) It serves as financial mechanism for ‘Convention on Biological Diversity’ and ‘United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change’

    (b) It undertakes scientific research on environmental issues at global level

    (c) It is an agency under OECD to facilitate the transfer of technology and funds to underdeveloped countries with specific aim to protect their environment

    (d) Both (a) and (b)

  • Foreign Policy Watch: India-United States

    [6th January 2026] The Hindu OpED: The parallel track that keeps U.S.-India ties going

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2020] What is the significance of Indo- US defence deals over Indo-Russian defence deals? Discuss with reference to stability in the Indo- Pacific region.

    Linkage: The article explains how India-U.S. ties are sustained through defence frameworks, interoperability agreements, and technology cooperation despite political volatility. This directly aligns with UPSC’s focus on Indo-US defence cooperation as a pillar of Indo-Pacific stability beyond transactional diplomacy.

    Mentor’s Comment

    India-U.S. relations in 2025 face political strains from global realignments, trade frictions, and shifting great-power equations. However, this article highlights a crucial but under-discussed dimension: the parallel institutional track that sustains bilateral ties despite diplomatic or political turbulence. For UPSC aspirants, this article offers insight into how institutional resilience, defence frameworks, and bureaucratic continuity stabilize strategic partnerships in an uncertain global order.

    Why in the News

    Despite the postponement of the Quad Leaders’ Summit hosted by India in 2025 and visible geopolitical stressors, such as renewed U.S.-China engagement and India’s strained relations with Pakistan, the India-U.S. partnership continues to deepen. This contrast between political volatility and institutional continuity is significant. Defence agreements, logistics frameworks, technology cooperation, and infrastructure initiatives have not only expanded but accelerated. The signing of a decade-long Defence Framework Agreement (2025) and the conduct of 24 India-Pacific ports engagements in one year underscore the scale and durability of cooperation, making this a critical case study in resilient diplomacy.

    Introduction

    India-U.S. relations have historically oscillated with political leadership and global alignments. The post-2008 period marked a structural shift, embedding cooperation within institutional, defence, and technological frameworks. In 2025, even as political optics suggest strain, the relationship advances through parallel institutional mechanisms that insulate strategic cooperation from short-term disruptions.

    How have political headwinds tested India-U.S. relations in 2025?

    1. Geopolitical Strain: Quad Leaders’ Summit postponement reflects regional uncertainty and diplomatic caution.
    2. China Factor: Renewed U.S.-China engagement alters India’s strategic calculus and perceptions of a “G-2” dynamic.
    3. Trade Frictions: Persistent U.S. tariff pressures on Indian exports highlight unresolved economic tensions.
    4. Regional Instability: India’s conflictual ties with Pakistan continue to complicate South Asian security equations.

    Why does institutional cooperation continue despite political volatility?

    1. Institutional Engagement: Accelerated bureaucratic and military coordination offsets leadership-level uncertainties.
    2. Foreign Ministers’ Dialogue (July 2025): Expanded cooperation across maritime security, humanitarian assistance, and counter-terrorism.
    3. Quad Counterterrorism Working Group: Demonstrated operational relevance beyond diplomatic symbolism.
    4. Policy Continuity: Bureaucratic frameworks ensure momentum independent of electoral or diplomatic cycles.

    How does defence cooperation form the backbone of bilateral ties?

    1. Civil Nuclear Legacy (2008): Established trust and enabled subsequent defence and technology agreements.
    2. Defence Framework Agreement (2025-2035): Enhances joint planning, coordination, and regional security alignment.
    3. Foundational Agreements:
      1. LEMOA (2016): Enables reciprocal logistics access.
      2. COMCASA (2018): Secures communication interoperability.
      3. BECA (2020): Facilitates geospatial intelligence sharing.
    4. Defence Trade Expansion: HAL’s $1-billion GE-414 engine deal reflects deepening industrial cooperation.

    What role do military exercises and interoperability play?

    1. Joint Exercises: Yudh Abhyas, Tiger Claw, and Malabar strengthen operational trust.
    2. Interoperability: Enhances coordinated responses in the Indo-Pacific.
    3. Information Sharing: Improves maritime domain awareness and regional stability.
    4. Supply Chain Security: Defence Supply Arrangement (2024) ensures logistics resilience.

    How is technology and infrastructure cooperation expanding the partnership?

    1. Technological Integration: Agreements emphasize defence, digital, and critical technology collaboration.
    2. NISAR Satellite (2025): Joint disaster resilience, agricultural monitoring, and infrastructure planning.
    3. Ports of the Future Conference (Mumbai, 2025):
      1. 24 Indo-Pacific Ports: Enhances resilient, secure port infrastructure.
      2. Logistics and Supply Chains: Supports regional connectivity and crisis preparedness.
    4. Ministerial Coordination: Joint leadership by India’s Ports Ministry and the U.S. State Department.

    What limits and challenges remain within this institutional framework?

    1. Political Volatility: Diplomatic disagreements can slow high-level momentum.
    2. Trade Disputes: Transactional pressures persist despite strategic convergence.
    3. Trust Maintenance: Requires continuous engagement to prevent erosion during crises.
    4. Strategic Divergence: Differing threat perceptions vis-à-vis China remain.

    Conclusion

    India-U.S. relations in 2025 demonstrate that institutional depth can compensate for political uncertainty. Defence, technology, and infrastructure cooperation operate as parallel stabilising tracks, ensuring continuity in an evolving geopolitical landscape. Sustained engagement within these frameworks will determine the partnership’s long-term strategic effectiveness.

  • ISRO Missions and Discoveries

    What remote-sensing reveals about plants, forests and minerals from space

    Why in the News

    Remote sensing technologies are gaining prominence as satellites increasingly replace ground-based exploration in tracking forest health, groundwater depletion, pollution, and subsurface minerals. The article highlights how spectral imaging, gravity measurement, and magnetic field analysis allow detection of resources even without direct surface indicators such as seepage or excavation. 

    Introduction

    Remote sensing enables observation, measurement, and mapping of Earth’s surface and subsurface without physical contact. Satellites and drones detect reflected and emitted electromagnetic radiation across visible and invisible wavelengths. Each material, vegetation, water, rock, or mineral, exhibits a distinct spectral signature, allowing identification of composition, health, and location from space.

    How does remote sensing “see” beyond human vision?

    1. Electromagnetic Spectrum Use: Extends observation beyond visible light to infrared and ultraviolet bands, capturing information inaccessible to the human eye.
    2. Spectral Signatures: Enables identification of materials based on unique reflection and absorption patterns, similar to fingerprints.
    3. Sensor-Based Detection: Facilitates differentiation between healthy vegetation, stressed plants, water bodies, and rock types.

    How are plants and forests monitored from space?

    1. Chlorophyll Reflectance: Indicates plant health through high near-infrared reflection and low red-light absorption.
    2. Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI): Quantifies vegetation health using spectral data; identifies stress, disease, or drought.
    3. Forest Biomass Estimation: Supports measurement of forest weight and carbon storage, critical for climate change mitigation.
    4. Crop Stress Detection: Identifies nitrogen deficiency, disease, or pest stress before visible symptoms appear.

    How do satellites distinguish water from land and pollution?

    1. Normalized Difference Water Index (NDWI): Separates water bodies from land using visible and infrared reflectance.
    2. Modified NDWI (MNDWI): Improves accuracy by distinguishing water from shadows and built-up areas.
    3. Algal Bloom Detection: Tracks harmful algal blooms through specific spectral patterns.
    4. Pollution Monitoring: Enables identification of contaminated or stressed water bodies.

    How are underground minerals detected without digging?

    1. Surface Mineral Indicators: Identifies copper, gold, and lithium through surface spectral clues caused by geological uplift.
    2. Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR): Penetrates cloud cover and storms to map terrain and flooding.
    3. Thermal and Reflectance Imaging: Detects exposed rock layers and folded geological structures.
    4. Spectral Mineral Mapping: Distinguishes limestone, granite, and sedimentary formations.

    How do satellites locate oil and gas without surface seepage?

    1. Geological Trap Identification: Detects anticlines and dome-shaped rock structures likely to trap hydrocarbons.
    2. Thermal Emission Sensors: Capture variations in exposed rock layers using instruments such as ASTER.
    3. Vegetation Stress Signals: Identifies chemical seepage affecting soil and plant colour.
    4. Magnetic Field Mapping: Differentiates sedimentary basins from basement rock, indicating oil-bearing potential.

    How is groundwater tracked from space?

    1. Gravity Measurement: Uses changes in Earth’s gravitational pull caused by water mass variations.
    2. Satellite Distance Variation: Detects groundwater loss through minute changes in satellite spacing.
    3. GRACE Mission Application: Demonstrated alarming groundwater depletion in North India due to irrigation.
    4. Aquifer Monitoring: Enables large-scale assessment without drilling wells.

    What limits do satellites face?

    1. Cloud Obstruction: Optical sensors cannot penetrate dense cloud cover.
    2. Indirect Detection: Subsurface resources inferred through geological proxies, not direct imaging.
    3. Resolution Constraints: Requires ground validation for precise extraction decisions.

    Why is remote sensing critical for sustainable resource management?

    1. Reduced Environmental Damage: Minimises invasive exploration and drilling.
    2. Efficient Resource Targeting: Narrows drilling and mining zones, reducing cost and risk.
    3. Conservation Planning: Prevents over-extraction beyond natural replenishment rates.
    4. Policy Support: Informs land-use planning, climate adaptation, and disaster management.

    Conclusion

    Remote sensing has redefined how humans observe, evaluate, and manage Earth’s resources. By translating invisible electromagnetic signals into actionable intelligence, satellites enable sustainable exploration, early environmental warning, and informed policymaking. As ecological pressures intensify, remote sensing will remain central to balancing development with conservation.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2025] How can Artificial Intelligence (AI) and drones be effectively used along with GIS and RS techniques in locational and area planning? 

    Linkage: The question links settlement geography and regional planning with modern spatial tools, reflecting UPSC’s shift towards applied geography and evidence-based planning in GS-I. Integration of GIS, Remote Sensing, drones and AI strengthens urban-rural planning, disaster-prone area zoning and land-use decisions, core themes of Human and Economic Geography.

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

    Indian aviation safety, its dangerous credibility deficit

    Why in the News?

    Indian aviation safety has come under scrutiny following the AI-171 crash (June 2025) and the subsequent handling of its investigation. The article highlights a sharp contrast between India’s stated compliance with International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) norms and actual investigative practices.

    Introduction

    India is a signatory to the Chicago Convention and follows ICAO Annex 13, which mandates transparent, independent, and timely aircraft accident investigations. However, recent aviation incidents reveal a widening gap between formal compliance and institutional practice. The handling of the AI-171 crash reflects structural weaknesses in investigation autonomy, regulatory enforcement, and safety oversight, undermining public confidence and international credibility.

    What triggered concerns about India’s aviation safety credibility?

    1. AI-171 Crash (June 12, 2025): Aircraft crashed shortly after take-off from Ahmedabad; 242 passengers onboard, only one survivor, 19 deaths on the ground.
    2. Immediate Institutional Response: Cockpit Voice Recorder (CVR) and Digital Flight Data Recorder (DFDR) recovered within days, yet findings delayed.
    3. Contrast with Norms: ICAO requires timely disclosure and independent investigation; delays contradict this principle.
    4. Pattern Recognition: This incident can be linked with earlier aviation safety lapses, indicating a systemic issue rather than an aberration.

    How does the investigation process reveal institutional weaknesses?

    1. Delayed Preliminary Report: Released one month later, despite early data recovery.
    2. Flight Control Anomalies: Report acknowledged engine power loss and control switches moving to “cut-off” within seconds.
    3. Pilot Testimony Ignored: Cockpit voice recordings indicated the pilot denied manually cutting fuel.
    4. Opaque Disclosure: Only selective information released; full datasets not shared with public or independent bodies.

    Why is exclusion of international investigators a serious concern?

    1. NTSB Role Marginalised: Despite early participation, the US National Transportation Safety Board limited to technical assistance.
    2. Breakdown in Trust: Reported friction between Indian authorities and international experts.
    3. Global Best Practice: Major aviation investigations rely on multi-national expert participation to ensure neutrality.
    4. Credibility Impact: Isolationism weakens confidence in findings and raises suspicion of narrative control.

    What does the article reveal about regulatory failure and enforcement gaps?

    1. Repeated Safety Violations: India recorded three fatal aviation accidents in 15 years, including Mangalore (2010) and Kozhikode (2020).
    2. Unimplemented Recommendations: Court of Inquiry findings and ICAO standards not fully enforced.
    3. DGCA Dilution: Aviation regulations modified under airline pressure, weakening oversight.
    4. IndiGo Example: Rapid expansion despite unresolved safety concerns highlighted regulatory accommodation.

    How does digital opacity worsen aviation safety accountability?

    1. Encrypted Communication Systems: Airlines using WhatsApp-based safety apps restrict audit trails.
    2. Data Access Control: Safety data accessible only to company and regulator, excluding public scrutiny.
    3. Delayed Emergency Directives: DGCA issued Emergency Airworthiness Directive months after earlier crashes.
    4. Outcome: Reduced traceability, weakened whistleblower protection, and compromised safety culture.

    Why is India’s approach diplomatically and strategically damaging?

    1. ICAO Standing: India’s credibility as a compliant aviation state weakened.
    2. Soft Power Impact: Aviation safety failures affect India’s reputation as a reliable global transport hub.
    3. Precedent Risk: Normalisation of opaque investigations threatens long-term passenger safety.

    Conclusion

    India’s aviation safety challenge is not rooted in absence of laws or expertise, but in erosion of investigative credibility, regulatory accommodation, and transparency deficits. Restoring trust requires institutional independence, international cooperation, and strict adherence to ICAO norms. Without these, aviation safety risks becoming procedurally compliant but substantively compromised.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2024] What is the need for expanding the regional air connectivity in India? In this context, discuss the government’s UDAN Scheme and its achievements.

    Linkage: The expansion of regional air connectivity under the UDAN Scheme strengthens GS Paper III (Infrastructure-Airports) by promoting balanced regional development and economic integration. However, as highlighted by recent aviation safety concerns, rapid airport expansion must be accompanied by robust regulatory oversight and safety governance, linking infrastructure growth with institutional accountability.

  • Capital Markets: Challenges and Developments

    RBI Announces ₹1 Trillion OMO Purchase

    Why in the News?

    The Reserve Bank of India announced a ₹1 trillion Open Market Operation purchase along with a 5 billion dollar rupee swap to inject durable liquidity into the banking system amid rupee weakness beyond 90 per dollar and foreign capital outflows.

    What is an Open Market Operation Purchase

    • An OMO purchase is when the RBI buys government securities from banks and financial institutions
    • Objective is to inject durable and long term liquidity into the financial system
    • Leads to an increase in bank reserves and eases short term interest rates

    Purpose of OMO Purchases

    • Inject durable liquidity into the banking system
    • Improve monetary policy transmission so lending rates align with repo rate changes
    • Stabilise money market rates such as the Weighted Average Call Rate
    • Support financial stability during periods of currency and capital flow stress

    Significance of the Recent OMO

    • Offsets rupee liquidity drain caused by foreign portfolio outflows
    • Supports monetary transmission during external sector stress
    • Prevents sharp spikes in government bond yields
    • Strengthens lending capacity of banks for businesses and households

    Prelims Pointers

    • OMO is a quantitative monetary policy tool
    • OMO purchase injects liquidity while OMO sale absorbs liquidity
    • Operation Twist reshapes the yield curve
    • Durable liquidity differs from short term tools like repo and reverse repo
    [2013] In the context of Indian economy, ‘Open Market Operations’ refers to 

    (a) borrowing by scheduled banks from the RBI 

    (b) lending by commercial banks to industry and trade 

    (c) purchase and sale of government securities by the RBI 

    (d) None of the above

  • Historical and Archaeological Findings in News

    India Hosts 20th Session of UNESCO ICH Committee  

    Why in the News?

    India is hosting the 20th Session of UNESCO’s Intergovernmental Committee for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage at the Red Fort.

    About the Intergovernmental Committee for Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage

    • A statutory body of UNESCO
    • Established under the Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage
    • Responsible for promoting, supervising and implementing safeguarding of intangible cultural heritage worldwide

    India and Intangible Cultural Heritage

    • India currently has 15 elements inscribed on UNESCO’s Representative List
    • Hosting the session reflects India’s growing role in global cultural diplomacy

    About Intangible Cultural Heritage

    • Refers to living traditions and cultural expressions passed through generations
    • Includes performing arts, rituals, festivals, crafts, oral traditions and social practices
    • Emphasises community participation and transmission rather than physical monuments

    Prelims Pointers

    • ICH focuses on living heritage not tangible monuments
    • The Intergovernmental Committee has 24 members
    • No consecutive terms allowed for Committee membership
    • Red Fort is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and ceremonial venue
    [2024] Which one of the following was the latest inclusion in the Intangible Cultural Heritage List of UNESCO? 

    (a) Chhau dance 

    (b) Durga Puja 

    (c) Garba dance 

    (d) Kumbh Mela

  • Foreign Policy Watch: India-ASEAN

    Exercise Harimau Shakti 2025  

    Why in the News?

    India and Malaysia have commenced the 5th edition of Exercise Harimau Shakti at the Mahajan Field Firing Range in Rajasthan.

    What is Exercise Harimau Shakti

    • A bilateral military training exercise between the Indian Army and the Royal Malaysian Army
    • Aims to strengthen coordination in counter insurgency and peacekeeping operations

    Significance

    • Enhances interoperability between Indian and Malaysian forces
    • Strengthens bilateral defence cooperation and military diplomacy
    • Improves preparedness for United Nations peacekeeping missions
    • Supports safer and more coordinated ground operations in complex environments

    Prelims Pointers

    • Exercise Harimau Shakti is a bilateral army level exercise
    • Focuses on counter insurgency and UN peacekeeping scenarios
    • Conducted on Indian soil for the 2025 edition
    • Involves sub conventional warfare training
    [2024] Joint Military Exercises Question (Excerpted from): Which of the following statements about ‘Exercise Mitra Shakti-2023’ are correct? 

    1. This was a joint military exercise between India and Bangladesh

    2. It commenced in Aundh (Pune)

    3. Joint response during counter-terrorism operations was a goal of this operation

    4. Indian Air Force was a part of this exercise

    Select the answer using the code given below: 

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

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