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  • [24th March 2026] The Hindu OpED: A decade of building India’s TB Championship movement

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2020] COVID-19 pandemic has caused unprecedented devastation worldwide. However, technological advancements are being availed readily to win over the crisis. Give an account of how technology was sought to aid management to the pandemic.Linkage: This PYQ tests application of technology in public health crises, focusing on diagnostics, digital tools, and governance outcomes in disease management. The same COVID-driven technological shift (AI, rapid diagnostics, decentralisation) is now being institutionalised in TB control to address early detection gaps and improve accessibility.

    Mentor’s Comment

    India’s fight against tuberculosis (TB) is entering a decisive phase. On the occasion of World TB Day (March 24), the focus has shifted from treatment expansion to a more critical bottleneck, early and accurate diagnosis.

    What is TB Diagnosis?

    Tuberculosis (TB) diagnosis involves identifying TB bacteria through sputum tests (smear microscopy, culture, or rapid molecular tests like GeneXpert), chest X-rays, and TB infection tests (skin test or IGRA blood test). Active TB, which causes symptoms like cough and fever, requires sputum analysis, while latent TB is detected by immune response tests

    Why is TB diagnosis emerging as the central challenge in India’s TB elimination strategy?

    1. High Burden Reality: India contributes the largest share of global TB cases, making early detection a critical bottleneck.
    2. Diagnostic Delay: Delays in diagnosis increase transmission, worsen outcomes, and raise mortality.
    3. Asymptomatic Prevalence: National TB Survey shows ~50% of TB cases are asymptomatic, making symptom-based screening insufficient.
    4. Low Sensitivity Tools: Traditional sputum smear microscopy fails to detect drug resistance and has low sensitivity.

    How has the TB diagnostic landscape evolved in the last decade?

    1. Technological Transition: Shift from sputum smear microscopy,  molecular diagnostics (CBNAAT, TrueNat).
    2. Indigenous Innovation: TrueNat (2020) enabled decentralized molecular testing at primary care level.
    3. AI Integration: AI-enabled portable chest X-rays allow rapid screening and interpretation.
    4. Programmatic Expansion: NTEP deployed hundreds of portable X-ray machines under community screening drives.
    5. Non-Sputum Methods: Use of tongue swabs and alternative samples improves accessibility for vulnerable populations.

    What structural gaps continue to limit the effectiveness of TB diagnostics?

    1. Access Inequality: Limited availability of molecular testing in rural and hard-to-reach areas.
    2. Human Resource Constraints: Dependence on trained radiologists and technicians restricts scaling.
    3. Turnaround Delays: Delayed reporting reduces treatment initiation efficiency.
    4. Pediatric TB Challenge: Children often lack sputum; diagnosis remains difficult due to low bacillary load.
    5. Extra-Pulmonary TB (EPTB): Accounts for ~25% of TB burden; diagnosis remains complex and expensive.

    Why is a comprehensive diagnostic toolbox necessary for TB elimination?

    1. Diverse Disease Manifestation: TB presents in multiple forms (pulmonary, extra-pulmonary, asymptomatic).
    2. Population Diversity: Requires tools adaptable for children, elderly, and immunocompromised individuals.
    3. Drug Resistance Detection: Molecular tools enable early identification of resistant strains.
    4. Precision Targeting: AI and biomarkers help identify high-risk individuals for preventive therapy (TPT).

    What role do innovation and research play in strengthening TB diagnostics?

    1. Evidence-Based Procurement: Technologies evaluated by ICMR before scale-up.
    2. Cost-Effectiveness Focus: Need for affordable and scalable diagnostic tools.
    3. Biomarker Development: Enables prediction of disease progression and targeted interventions.
    4. AI-Based Solutions: Portable ultrasound and AI-driven screening tools under development.
    5. Real-World Validation: Need for field-based studies to assess performance in low-resource settings.

    How do community-led initiatives like TB Champions strengthen the TB response?

    1. Peer Advocacy: TB survivors act as communicators, reducing stigma and improving awareness.
    2. Behavioural Change: Community engagement improves treatment adherence and early reporting.
    3. The National Tuberculosis Elimination Programme (NTEP) Integration: Survivor-led model formally adopted under National TB Elimination Programme.
    4. Social Inclusion: Targets vulnerable groups, urban poor, tribal populations, socially marginalized.
    5. Anti-Stigma Impact: Increased confidence among patients; improved care-seeking behaviour. 

    Conclusion

    India’s TB elimination strategy is increasingly dependent on diagnostic transformation rather than treatment expansion. While technological innovation and community participation have improved detection capacity, systemic gaps in accessibility, inclusivity, and real-world implementation persist. A comprehensive, evidence-based, and decentralized diagnostic ecosystem is essential to accelerate progress toward TB elimination.

  • On the independence of EC

    Why in the News?

    The independence of Election Commission of India as an issue has resurfaced following allegations of large-scale irregularities in electoral rolls, particularly during the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) exercise in Bihar, where nearly 65 lakh voters were reportedly deleted. The Opposition has moved a resolution seeking removal of the Chief Election Commissioner (CEC), marking a rare and politically significant development. The controversy also follows the enactment of the Chief Election Commissioner and Other Election Commissioners (Appointment, Conditions of Service and Term of Office) Act, 2023, which altered the appointment process after the Supreme Court’s intervention in Anoop Baranwal v. Union of India (2023).

    Does Article 324 Provide Adequate Constitutional Safeguards for Electoral Autonomy?

    1. Constitutional Mandate: The Election Commission of India derives authority from Article 324 of the Constitution, which vests in it the superintendence, direction, and control of elections to Parliament, State Legislatures, and the offices of President and Vice-President. Ensures centralized electoral authority insulated from executive interference.
    2. Security of Tenure: CEC removal follows procedure identical to Supreme Court judges under Article 124(4). Ensures high threshold for removal.
    3. Protection of Conditions of Service: Service conditions cannot be varied to disadvantage after appointment. Prevents executive pressure.
    4. Institutional Permanence: Establishes ECI as a constitutional body, not a statutory authority. Strengthens structural autonomy.

    How Has the 2023 Appointment Law Altered the Balance Between Executive and Institutional Independence?

    1. Legislative Intervention: The Chief Election Commissioner and Other Election Commissioners (Appointment, Conditions of Service and Term of Office) Act, 2023, replaced earlier executive practice. Regulates appointment and removal.
    2. Selection Committee Composition: Includes Prime Minister, Union Minister, and Leader of Opposition. Excludes Chief Justice of India (as mandated temporarily in Anoop Baranwal judgment).
    3. Judicial Background: Supreme Court in Anoop Baranwal v. Union of India (2023) directed inclusion of CJI until Parliament enacted a law. Strengthened interim institutional balance.
    4. Subsequent Change: Parliament removed CJI from the selection panel. Raises concerns regarding executive dominance.
    5. Institutional Impact: Alters equilibrium between executive participation and perceived neutrality.

    Do Allegations Regarding Electoral Roll Revisions Indicate Structural Weaknesses in Electoral Administration?

    1. Special Intensive Revision (SIR): Conducted to update voter rolls. Ensures accuracy and elimination of duplication.
    2. Reported Deletions: Approximately 65 lakh voters allegedly deleted in Bihar during SIR exercise. Raises questions regarding procedural safeguards.
    3. Democratic Significance: Article 326 guarantees universal adult franchise. Voter deletion directly affects representational legitimacy.
    4. Administrative Transparency: Requires verification, notice, and opportunity to respond. Ensures natural justice.
    5. Institutional Credibility: Large-scale deletion without adequate communication undermines public trust.

    What Is the Constitutional Procedure for Removal of the CEC and Other Commissioners?

    1. CEC Removal: Follows impeachment-like process under Article 324(5) read with Article 124(4). Requires special majority in Parliament.
    2. Other Commissioners: Removable on recommendation of CEC. Ensures hierarchical internal protection.
    3. Judges Inquiry Act, 1968 Framework: Provides investigative procedure in cases of misbehaviour or incapacity.
    4. Parliamentary Safeguard: High voting threshold prevents arbitrary removal.
    5. Accountability Mechanism: Balances independence with constitutional responsibility.

    Does Political Contestation Around the ECI Undermine Democratic Legitimacy?

    1. Bipartisan Respect: Constitutional bodies require cross-party legitimacy. Strengthens democratic culture.
    2. Opposition’s Motion: Indicates political dissatisfaction. Signals institutional strain.
    3. Majoritarian Context: Removal unlikely without sufficient parliamentary majority. Demonstrates structural protection.
    4. Rule of Law Principle: Ensures allegations are examined within a constitutional framework.
    5. Public Confidence: Perceived politicisation reduces electoral credibility.

    How Does the Doctrine of Basic Structure Protect the Election Commission?

    1. Basic Structure Doctrine: Free and fair elections form part of the basic structure (Indira Gandhi v. Raj Narain, 1975).
    2. Judicial Review: Courts can intervene if legislative action undermines electoral fairness.
    3. Constitutional Morality: Requires institutions to operate beyond partisan interests.
    4. Separation of Powers: Prevents concentration of electoral authority under executive control.

    Conclusion

    The constitutional architecture provides significant safeguards for the Election Commission’s independence. However, institutional credibility depends not only on legal protections but also on transparent processes, bipartisan trust, and adherence to constitutional morality. Ensuring free and fair elections remains foundational to India’s democratic order.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2018] In the light of recent controversy regarding the use of Electronic Voting Machine (EVM), what are the challenges before the Election Commission of India to ensure the trustworthiness of elections in India?

    Linkage: It tests institutional accountability and public trust in elections, aligning with concerns over electoral roll revision and legitimacy.

  • Centre unveils policy to tackle terror threats

    Why in the News?

    The Union Home Ministry has unveiled India’s first National Counter Terrorism Policy and Strategy (PRAHAAR). The policy seeks to criminalise all terrorist acts, disrupt terror financing, deny logistical support, and strengthen coordination across Central and State agencies. The policy marks a structural shift from reactive counter-terror responses to an integrated, ecosystem-based national security framework covering land, air, water, cyber, and financial domains. The move assumes significance amid rising cross-border terrorism, drone-enabled attacks, and digital radicalisation.

    What is the rationale behind this policy?

    1. The move follows the April 22, 2025 Pahalgam terror incident, which exposed vulnerabilities in intelligence coordination and emerging drone misuse. 
    2. Previously, counter-terror responses were largely reactive and dispersed across agencies without a single doctrinal framework. 
    3. The policy is significant because it integrates prevention, detection, prosecution, and financial disruption under one strategy, covering both state and non-state actors. 
    4. It also formally recognises technological threats such as encrypted platforms, cryptocurrency, and dark web logistics, marking a shift from traditional cross-border terror focus to hybrid and networked terror ecosystems.

    What is the doctrinal architecture of PRAHAAR: Pillar-wise Breakdown

    1. P-Prevention of Terror Attacks; Focus: Intelligence-led, proactive neutralisation. It includes
      1. Intelligence Primacy: Intelligence-guided counter-terror approach; threat neutralisation before execution.
      2. MAC & JTFI Framework: Real-time intelligence aggregation through Multi Agency Centre (MAC) and Joint Task Force on Intelligence under IB.
      3. OGW Disruption: Systematic dismantling of Over Ground Worker logistics and recruitment networks.
      4. Cyber Disruption: Targeting online propaganda, recruitment modules, encrypted communication misuse.
      5. Critical Infrastructure Security: Protection of power, railways, aviation, ports, defence, space, atomic energy sectors.
      6. Border Surveillance: Technological tools deployed across land, air and maritime frontiers.
      7. Core Shift: From reactive policing to preventive security architecture.
    2. R-Responses (Swift & Proportionate); Focus: Layered operational response model. It includes:
      1. Local Police as First Responder: Federal structure respected; decentralised operational response.
      2. State ATS & Special Counter terrorism (CT) Units: Specialised anti-terror forces in vulnerable States.
      3. NSG as National Nodal Force: National Security Guard for major attacks and capacity building.
      4. SOP-Based Coordination: Standard Operating Procedures for apex-level coordination via MHA.
      5. CAPF Deployment: Central Armed Police Forces assisting States in counter-terror operations.
      6. High Conviction Emphasis: NIA-led investigations ensuring deterrence through prosecution.
      7. Core Shift: Structured escalation matrix for response.
    3. A-Aggregating Internal Capacities; Focus: Whole-of-Government synergy. It includes:
      1. Modernisation Mandate: Continuous upgradation of weapons, surveillance tools, training modules.
      2. Standardisation Across States: Uniform anti-terror structures, investigation methodologies.
      3. BPR&D Role: Training and best practice dissemination for State Police & CAPFs.
      4. NSG Urban Combat Training: Specialised combat readiness for metropolitan threats.
      5. Resource Gap Identification: Institutional capacity audit and correction
      6. Core Shift: Elimination of silo-based security functioning.
    4. H-Human Rights & Rule of Law Based Processes; Focus: Constitutional legitimacy. It includes:
      1. Legal Framework Anchoring: The Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA), 1967, as principal law; supported by BNS 2023, BNSS 2023, BSA 2023, PMLA 2002, Arms Act 1959, Explosives Act 1908.
      2. Judicial Oversight: Multi-tier judicial review up to the Supreme Court.
      3. Human Rights Act 1993: Protection against rights violations.
      4. International Commitments: Adherence to Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) 1948 and International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR).
      5. Due Process Safeguards: Appeals and legal redressal mechanisms ensured.
      6. Core Shift: Security operations embedded within constitutional democracy.
    5. A-Attenuating Conditions Conducive to Terrorism; Focus: Addressing root drivers. It includes:
      1. Graded De-radicalisation: Calibrated intervention based on degree of radicalisation.
      2. Community Engagement: Involvement of religious leaders, NGOs, moderate preachers.
      3. Prison Monitoring: Preventing indoctrination within correctional facilities.
      4. Youth Engagement: Constructive programs to prevent extremist recruitment.
      5. Socio-Economic Interventions: Addressing poverty, unemployment, housing and education gaps.
      6. Women & Youth Empowerment Schemes: Scholarships and loan support to reduce vulnerability.
      7. Core Shift: Terrorism treated as socio-psychological and developmental challenge, not merely law-and-order issue.
    6. A-Aligning & Shaping International Efforts; Focus: Transnational cooperation. It includes:
      1. Mutual Legal Assistance Treaties (MLATs) & Extradition Treaties: Legal cooperation for evidence sharing and fugitive return.
      2. Joint Working Groups (JWG): Bilateral intelligence engagement platforms.
      3. UN Designation Support: Pursuit of global terrorist listings.
      4. Agency-to-Agency Cooperation: Intelligence sharing with foreign counterparts.
      5. Global ICT Misuse Countering: Addressing terrorist exploitation of digital ecosystems.
      6. Core Shift: Counter-terror extended beyond national jurisdiction.
    7. R-Recovery & Resilience (Whole-of-Society Approach); Focus: Post-attack stabilisation. It includes:
      1. Public-Private Partnership: Private sector participation in recovery.
      2. Civil Administration Leadership: Reconstruction and restoration.
      3. Psychological Rehabilitation: Doctors, psychologists, civil society involvement.
      4. Community Reintegration: Social healing and confidence rebuilding.
      5. Preventive Reinforcement: Strengthened security measures post-incident.
      6. Core Shift: From counter-terror to societal resilience model.

    How Does the Policy Restructure India’s Counter-Terror Governance Framework?

    1. National Framework Institutionalisation: Establishes India’s first unified counter-terror doctrine integrating Centre-State coordination.
    2. Ecosystem Approach: Targets not only terrorists but also financiers, handlers, recruiters, and facilitators.
    3. Multi-Domain Coverage: Addresses threats across land, air, water, cyber, and financial systems.
    4. Inter-Agency Coordination: Strengthens operational synergy among intelligence, enforcement, and financial monitoring agencies.
    5. Legal Backing: Aims to criminalise all forms of terrorist support infrastructure.

    How Does the Policy Address Cross-Border and State-Sponsored Terrorism?

    1. Recognition of Proxy Warfare: Identifies state and non-state actors targeting India through terrorism.
    2. Cross-Border Networks: Acknowledges foreign handlers coordinating logistics and recruitment.
    3. Global Jihadist Linkages: Notes influence of outfits such as Al-Qaeda and IS in inciting lone-wolf or cell-based violence.
    4. Punjab & J&K Linkages: Recognises drone-based smuggling of arms and narcotics across borders.
    5. Transnational Cooperation: Emphasises international collaboration to counter financing and safe havens.

    How Does the Policy Respond to Emerging Technological Threats?

    1. Drone Regulation: Identifies misuse of drones for smuggling arms and reconnaissance.
    2. Encrypted Platforms: Flags encrypted messaging apps as tools for coordination.
    3. Cryptocurrency Monitoring: Recognises dark web and crypto wallets as terror-financing channels.
    4. Cyber Radicalisation: Targets online propaganda and recruitment networks.
    5. Digital Forensics: Strengthens use of technical intelligence in disruption operations.

    How Does the Policy Strengthen Preventive and Pre-Emptive Mechanisms?

    1. Pre-Emptive Intelligence: Enhances predictive threat assessment models.
    2. Community Engagement: Involves civil society and religious leaders to counter radicalisation.
    3. Youth De-Radicalisation: Focuses on preventing extremist recruitment among youth.
    4. Capacity Building: Improves training of state police forces in counter-terror techniques.
    5. Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and high-yield Explosives (CBRNE) Preparedness: Recognises risks of Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and Explosive materials.

    How Does the Policy Reinforce Institutional Accountability and Federal Balance?

    1. Central-State Synergy: Promotes coordinated response while respecting federal structure.
    2. Role of NIA: Strengthens investigative mandate of the National Investigation Agency in major terror cases.
    3. Legal Standardisation: Ensures uniform procedures across states.
    4. Process Standardisation: Encourages similar and synergistic response frameworks.
    5. Parliamentary Oversight Potential: Opens scope for legislative scrutiny of implementation effectiveness.

    What Are the Regulatory and Legal Implications of the Policy?

    1. Criminalisation Framework: Broadens scope to include logistical and financial support.
    2. Financial Disruption: Targets funding channels through financial intelligence units.
    3. Safe Haven Denial: Focuses on dismantling recruitment and shelter networks.
    4. Surveillance Expansion: Raises concerns on balancing security with privacy rights under Article 21.
    5. Counter-Terror Cell Coordination: Enhances role of specialised Counter Terrorism Cells.

    Conclusion

    The National Counter Terrorism Policy marks a transition from fragmented counter-terror responses to a structured, ecosystem-based security doctrine. Its effectiveness will depend on inter-agency coordination, federal cooperation, technological capability, and safeguards against misuse. Institutional balance between national security and civil liberties remains central to sustainable implementation.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2023] Give out the major sources of terror funding in India and the efforts being made to curtail these sources. In the light of this, also discuss the aim and objective of the ‘No Money for Terror (NMFT)’ Conference recently held at New Delhi in November 2022.

    Linkage: This question directly maps to GS Paper 3 (Internal Security), particularly terror financing, money laundering, and transnational security cooperation. It links with India’s PRAHAAR doctrine and NMFT initiative, highlighting the financial disruption pillar of counter-terror strategy and global coordination against terror funding networks.

  • Smog-Eating Photocatalytic Coating

    Why in the News

    • The Delhi Government and IIT Madras are collaborating to study smog eating photocatalytic coatings on roads to reduce urban air pollution.

    What is Smog-Eating Photocatalytic Coating

    • A special coating applied on roads and buildings
    • Designed to neutralize harmful pollutants in the air
    • Targets:
      • Nitrogen dioxide (NOâ‚‚)
      • Volatile hydrocarbons
      • Other toxic gases

    Compound Used

    Titanium Dioxide (TiOâ‚‚)

    • Most commonly used material
    • Advantages:
      • Low cost
      • Chemically stable
      • Durable
      • Compatible with construction materials

    Working Mechanism

    Photocatalysis Process

    • Sunlight activates Titanium dioxide
    • Chemical reactions break down pollutants
    • Converts harmful gases into:
      • Less toxic substances
      • Harmless compounds

    Result:

    • Cleaner air
    • Reduced smog levels
    • Environmental cleaning

    Applications

    • Roads, Buildings, Pavements, Flyovers, and Public infrastructure

    Benefits

    • Reduces urban air pollution
    • Passive pollution control
    • Low maintenance
    • Cost effective
    • Sustainable technology
    [2013] Photochemical smog is a resultant of the reaction among: (a) NO 2 ​ , O 3 ​ and peroxyacetyl nitrate (PAN) in the presence of sunlight (b) CO 2 ​ , O 2 ​ , and peroxyacetyl nitrate in the presence of sunlight (c) CO, CO 2 ​ , and NO 2 ​ at low temperature (d) high concentration of NO 2 ​ , O 3 ​ and CO in the evening
  • Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS)

    Why in the News

    Recently, the Prime Minister of India chaired a Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS) meeting to review the global situation amid the West Asia conflict and assess mitigation measures across sectors.

    About the Cabinet Committee on Security

    • Highest decision making body on national security (Executive Body) 
    • Headed by Prime Minister of India
    • Deals with:
      • Defence policy
      • National security
      • Strategic affairs
      • Intelligence matters

    History

    • First formed in 1947 after Independence
    • Created due to emerging national security challenges
    • Initial members included:
      • Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru
      • Home Minister Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel
      • Defence Minister Baldev Singh
    • After 1999 Kargil War
      • CCS evolved into formal high powered structure
      • Became apex national security decision body
    [2014] Which of the following is/are the function/functions of the Cabinet Secretariat? 1 Preparation of agenda for Cabinet Meetings. 2 Secretariat assistance to Cabinet Committees. 3 Allocation of financial resources to the Ministries. Select the correct answer using the code given below: (a) 1 only (b) 2 and 3 only (c) 1 and 2 only (d) 1, 2 and 3
  • FlDepth: New ISRO Tool to Measure Flood Depth from Space

    Why in the News

    Researchers at the National Remote Sensing Centre have developed FlDepth, a new GIS based tool that measures floodwater depth from space in near real time.

    What is FlDepth

    • A satellite based flood depth estimation tool
    • Developed by ISRO National Remote Sensing Centre
    • Converts 2D satellite flood images into 3D flood depth maps
    • Helps in disaster response and flood management
    [2019] For the measurement/estimation of which of the following are satellite images/remote sensing data used? 
    1 Chlorophyll content in the vegetation of a specific location 
    2 Greenhouse gas emissions from rice paddies of a specific location 
    3 Land surface temperatures of a specific location 
    Select the correct answer using the code given below: (a) 1 only (b) 2 and 3 only (c) 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3
  • IVRI Produces Sahiwal Calves Using Advanced Reproductive Technology

    Why in the News

    The Indian Veterinary Research Institute successfully produced Sahiwal breed calves using advanced Assisted Reproductive Technologies, marking a major breakthrough in genetic improvement of indigenous cattle.

    Key Highlights

    • Institute: ICAR–Indian Veterinary Research Institute (IVRI), Izatnagar, Bareilly
    • Breed: Sahiwal indigenous cattle
    • Technology used:
      • Ovum Pick Up (OPU)
      • In-Vitro Fertilisation (IVF)
      • Embryo Transfer (ET)
    • Five healthy Sahiwal calves born within five days starting 28 February 2026

    What is OPU-IVF-ET Technology

    • Ovum Pick-Up (OPU): Ultrasound-guided collection of eggs from elite female animals
    • In-Vitro Fertilisation (IVF): Fertilisation in laboratory using selected superior semen
    • Embryo Transfer (ET): Developed embryos transferred to surrogate mothers
      • Enables rapid multiplication of superior genetics

    Why the Sahiwal Breed is Important

    • Indigenous dairy breed
    • Heat tolerant
    • Disease resistant
    • Suitable for tropical climates
    • High milk productivity among native breeds
    [2017] What is the application of Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer Technology? (a) Production of biolarvicides (b) Manufacture of biodegradable plastics (c) Reproductive cloning of animals (d) Production of organisms free of diseases
  • UNEP Report: Waste Prevention Key to Safe Disposal of Unused Medicines

    Why in News

    A new report by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) highlights waste prevention as the most effective strategy for the safe disposal of unused medicines, citing risks to environmental and public health.

    Why Improper Disposal is a Concern

    Improper disposal of medicines leads to:

    • Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR)
    • Endocrine disruption
    • Toxicity risks
    • Water, soil and air pollution
    • Accidental poisoning

    Unused and expired antimicrobials are particularly linked to AMR pollution.

    UNEP Four Pillar Framework

    The UNEP report proposes a Four-Pillar Approach:

    1. Prevention at source
    2. Medicine take-back systems
    3. Legal and policy frameworks
    4. Awareness and outreach programmes

    Unused Medicine in India 

    • Households discard up to 70% of purchased medicines, with common methods including throwing them in dustbins (over 80% in studies), contributing to environmental contamination and antimicrobial resistance
    • The Central Drugs Standard Control Organization (CDSCO) has issued formal guidelines to address this waste and the resulting environmental hazards.
    • Guidelines for:
    • Collection
    • Storage
    • Transportation
    • Disposal of expired medicines
    • 17 drugs placed under Flush List for safe disposal
    [2019] Which of the following are the reasons for the occurrence of multi-drug resistance in microbial pathogens in India? 
    1 Genetic predisposition of some people 
    2 Taking incorrect doses of antibiotics to cure diseases 
    3 Using antibiotics in livestock farming 
    4 Multiple chronic diseases in some people 
    Select the correct answer using the code given below: (a) 1 and 2 (b) 2 and 3 only (c) 1, 3 and 4 (d) 2, 3 and 4
  • Corporate Laws Amendment Bill 2026 Sent to Joint Parliamentary Committee

    Why in News

    The Lok Sabha introduced the Corporate Laws Amendment Bill 2026 and referred it to a Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) for detailed examination.

    Key Objectives of the Bill

    • Promote ease of doing business
    • Improve ease of living for corporates
    • Decriminalise minor offences
    • Rationalise penalties
    • Streamline regulatory procedures

    Laws Proposed to be Amended

    • Companies Act, 2013
    • Limited Liability Partnership Act, 2008

    Major Proposed Changes

    • Shift minor procedural violations from criminal offences to monetary penalties
    • Simplify compliance requirements
    • Address gaps identified by Company Law Committee (2022)

    CSR Controversy

    • Opposition raised concerns about dilution of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) norms
    • Current rule: Companies must spend 2% of net profits on CSR
    • Government clarification:
      • Only net profit calculation criteria being amended
      • CSR requirement remains unchanged

    Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC)

    • The Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) is not a constitutional body. 
    • It is an ad-hoc (temporary) body established by Parliament through a motion passed in both houses, or by the Speaker/Chairman of both houses, to examine specific bills or investigate urgent matters, not established directly by the Constitution.
    [2024] With reference to Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) rules in India, consider the following statements: 
    1 CSR rules specify that expenditures that benefit the company directly or its employees will not be considered as CSR activities. 
    2 CSR rules do not specify minimum spending on CSR activities. 
    Select the correct answer using the code given below: 
    (a) 1 only (b) 2 only (c) Both 1 and 2 (d) Neither 1 nor 2
  • Centre Considers 2011 Census-Based Delimitation to Implement Women’s Quota

    Why in the News

    The Union Government is considering a delimitation exercise based on the 2011 Census to implement the Women’s Reservation Act, 2023 before the 2029 Lok Sabha elections.

    Key Proposals

    • Lok Sabha seats likely to increase from 543 to 816
    • 273 seats proposed to be reserved for women
    • State Assembly seats may also be expanded
    • Amendment Bill may be introduced in:
      • Ongoing Budget Session, or
      • Special Session of Parliament

    Reason for the Move

    • Women’s Reservation Act, 2023 requires:
      • Census
      • Delimitation
      • Then implementation of 33% quota
    • 2021 Census delayed due to COVID-19
    • Without amendment, implementation could be delayed beyond 2030
    • Government aims to implement quota before 2029 elections

    Concerns of States

    • Southern States worried about loss of representation
    • Government proposal:
      • Maintain existing proportion of seats
      • Around 50% increase in seats across all States
      • Pro-rata distribution to avoid regional imbalance

    Constitutional Background

    • Article 82: Delimitation after first Census post-2026
    • Proposed amendment:
      • Use 2011 Census data
      • Avoid waiting for latest Census completion 
    [2024] Consider the following statements regarding ‘Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam’: 1 Provisions will come into effect from the 18th Lok Sabha. 2 This will be in force for 15 years after becoming an Act. 3 There are provisions for the reservation of seats for Scheduled Castes Women within the quota reserved for the Scheduled Castes. Select the correct answer using the code given below: (a) 1, 2 and 3 (b) 1 and 2 only (c) 2 and 3 only (d) 1 and 3 only

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