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  • What is Meningitis?

    The World Health Organization (WHO) has launched the first-ever global strategy to defeat meningitis, a debilitating disease that kills hundreds of thousands of people each year.

    What is Meningitis?

    • Meningitis is an inflammation of the meninges, the membranes that cover the brain and spinal cord.
    • People of any age can get meningitis.

    What Causes Meningitis?

    • Most cases are caused by bacteria or viruses, but some can be due to certain medicines or illnesses.
    • Meningitis is usually caused by a viral infection but can also be bacterial or fungal.
    • Both kinds of meningitis spread like most other common infections do — someone who’s infected touches, kisses, or coughs or sneezes on someone who isn’t infected.
    • Bacterial meningitis is rare, but is usually serious and can be life-threatening if not treated right away.
    • Viral meningitis (also called aseptic meningitis) is more common than bacterial meningitis and usually less serious.
    • Many of the viruses that cause meningitis are common, such as those that cause colds, diarrhea, cold sores, and the flu.

    What Are the Signs & Symptoms of Meningitis?

    • Meningitis symptoms vary, depending on the person’s age and the cause of the infection.
    • The first symptoms can come on quickly or start several days after someone has had a cold, diarrhea, vomiting, or other signs of an infection.

    Common symptoms include:

    • fever
    • lack of energy
    • irritability
    • headache
    • sensitivity to light
    • stiff neck
    • skin rash

    Treatment

    • Several vaccines protect against meningitis, including meningococcal, Haemophilus influenzae type b and pneumococcal vaccines.
    • If dealt with quickly, meningitis can be treated successfully.

     

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  • Places in news: Zojila Tunnel

    Union Minister for Road Transport and Highways has inspected the work on Zojila and Z Morh tunnels.

    Zojila Tunnel

    • The Zojila is set to be Asia’s longest bi-directional tunnel.
    • It will connect Srinagar, Dras, Kargil and Leh via a tunnel through the famous Zojila Pass.
    • Located at more than 11,500 feet above sea level, the all-weather Zojila tunnel will be 14.15 km long and ensure road connectivity even during winters.
    • It will make the travel on the 434-km Srinagar-Kargil-Leh Section of NH-1 free from avalanches, enhance safety and reduce the travel time from more than 3 hours to just 15 minutes.
    • The speed limit inside the tunnel is likely to be the same as in the Atal tunnel – 80 kmph.

    Z-Morh tunnel

    • The Z-Morh tunnel — being developed at Sonmarg — will provide it all-weather connectivity with Srinagar allowing it to remain open to tourists all year round.
    • It is likely to be ready by December 2023 and is being developed at a cost of ₹2,378 crore.

    Significance of these tunnels

    • The project holds strategic significance as Zojila Pass is situated at an altitude of 11,578 feet on the Srinagar-Kargil-Leh National Highway and remains closed during winters due to heavy snowfall.
    • At present, it is one of the most dangerous stretches in the world to drive a vehicle and this project is also geo-strategically sensitive.

     

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    Back2Basics: Major Passes in India

     

  • How did our Toppers pick the right study material? What did they study to get RANKS, and how?

    How did our Toppers pick the right study material? What did they study to get RANKS, and how?

    Do you know the one area where UPSC aspirants lose a lot of time and waste a lot of their efforts? It’s finding the right study material to begin their preparation. There are literally thousands of books available in the market and most students end up buying a lot of books without realizing that most of them are not useful.

    In fact, an analysis of the last ten years’ papers has revealed that around 50% of the effort in cracking the exam lies in the strategy. And if you know how to pick the right study material from the start, your chances of cracking the exam increases by 50%.

    The biggest problem new aspirants face is deciding what to study and what not to study. This wastes their time, and the syllabus starts piling up. So, what can you do to identify the right material as you start your preparation? We have spoken with over 400 rankers from the last 2 years to create the most effective and suitable study material.

    In fact, with our strategy, 25 Civilsdaily students had ranks in top 100 and 78+ students secured ranks in 2020. So, how did they pick the right material and what did they study?

    • History – Students often buy and read multiple books like Bipin Chandra, Grover, Sumit Sarkar, Chattopadhyay, etc. But if History is not your optional subject, you really do not need to read each of these books. You need to be highly selective and use the most important source that can help you get marks in the exam. A quick review of the previous year’s question papers would give you an idea about the kinds of question that come from History. Eliminate the idea of reading everything, read only the books that matter.
    • Geography – While NCERTs are a must read for any UPSC aspirant, there are specific books like G.C. Leong, Savindra Singh, Majid Hussain, etc. For example, there are many technical chapters in Savindra Singh like isostasy, drainage patterns, etc. Are they important? No! Should you spend time on them? No. Limit your study material but read the selected ones in detail. Instead, you can simply speak to our mentors and reduce your reading material to only the most important chapters.
    • Art and culture – UPSC asks a lot of questions from Art and Culture but there is no one book that is completely helpful. Often, UPSC asks some questions that you may not find in most of the popular books. For example, if you are reading Nitin Singhania, you do not have to read the chapters on Cinema and Circus. You do not have to read every chapter in every book!
    • Current affairs – Yes, it is important to read the newspaper but how do you identify what to read in a newspaper? Is everything important? No! Should you make a note of everything that comes in the newspaper? No! Try to identify only those topics that will fetch you marks, everything else will waste your time.
    • Environment – Most students read Shankar IAS for environment. But the questions from environment often have Current Affairs element in them. So, while you should read the basic concepts from this book, you will have to tie it with Current Affairs to score.
    • .Science and Tech – Science and tech has a huge syllabus. It contains everything from Biology to Sattelites. But can you read and remember everything? Is it important to know the names of all the human bones? No! It may be important to know India’s space program but do you need to know every sattelite’s details? No! You have to learn to differentiate what is important and what isn’t.
    • Economics – 15 questions were asked from Economics in Prelims 2020. But Economics cannot be completed by reading one book. These questions can only be solved by reading the basic concepts and tying them with current affairs. There is no book that does this perfectly. What will you do? It is best to speak with mentors who know which areas to focus on to get maximum marks. They can help reduce your workload to very specific reading points.
    • Government schemes and plans – You have less than a year to prepare for the exam, can you afford to read all the Yojana, Kurukshetra, etc. before the exam? Should you spend so much time reading topics that may or may not come in the exam? No! Only focused study fetches you marks.

    This is an exam of elimination. You can only succeed when you know which study material to eliminate and which to pick. Otherwise, you will have a library of books that are completely useless for your preparation. All your time, money, and efforts will be wasted and you will start feeling overwhelmed by the syllabus.

    Remember: Smart work is needed to clear the exam. It’s better to read a particular book many times rather than reading multiple books without revision.

    After speaking with over 400 rankers from the last 2 years, our mentors have created the most suitable study material that is selective and highly effective. Speak with our mentors. They will tell you exactly which books and which chapters to read. Don’t waste time, read only the focused material.

    Our students secured top ranks in UPSC 2020 [25 in top 100] with a smart strategy, connect with us now to learn how to pick the right study materials for your exam.

  • [SansadTV Archive] AUKUS – Geopolitical Impact

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    Recently a new trilateral security partnership was announced between Australia, the UK, and the USA. This has created ripples in the India-Pacific Region.

    France is smarting from the humiliation at being blindsided by the AUKUS pact that it says was drawn behind its back and is furious at being “stabbed in the back”.

    AUKUS: A Backgrounder

    • This new partnership is known as AUKUS and the major highlight of this arrangement is the sharing of US nuclear submarine technology with Australia.
    • The first major initiative of AUKUS would be to deliver a nuclear-powered submarine fleet for Australia thereby giving it a nuclear heft in the Pacific where China has been particularly aggressive.
    • Apart from this AUKUS will also involve the sharing of cyber capabilities and other undersea technologies.
    • This alliance is considered to be most significant security arrangement between these three nations.

    Ripples created by AUKUS

    (A) US shift of focus

    • AUKUS is both an acknowledgment of and a concession to the loss of US strategic primacy.  
    • It gives justification for the hasty withdrawal from Afghanistan — to be able to better focus on the strategic rivalry and trade competition with China.

    (B) Resentment in the EU and France

    • The deal has complicated the relations between France and Australia, and also France and the US. France is upset as it has been kept out of the loop.
    • France has even ordered the recall of its ambassadors to Washington and Canberra.  

    (C) Chinese offensive reception

    • China, expectedly, has strongly criticised AUKUS and the submarine deal as promoting instability and stoking an arms race.

    (D) Confusion among the SE nations

    • The new great power contestation might actually generate much room for the Southeast Asian states to manoeuvre, as they are wooed simultaneously by China, AUKUS, and the Quad.
    • They realise that AUKUS is a challenge to the hallowed notion of “ASEAN centrality”, a totemic rhetorical device which seeks to have others acknowledge its relevance.

    Why is France offended?

    • France takes its role as an Indo-Pacific power seriously in a region.
    • One must know that France has 12 time zones. The areas in French Polynesia in the Pacific Ocean are mainly responsible for this.
    • It maintains four naval bases, stations around 7,000 soldiers and has 1.5 million citizens in island territories such as New Caledonia and French Polynesia.
    • France’s anger also stems from the realization that NATO is now a defunct organization in absence of the glue, USSR, that held it together.
    • It is finding it difficult to deal with America’s clear shifting of focus from NATO to Indo-Pacific.

    Why such an alliance?

    (A) Deteriorating China-AU relations

    • Tensions have been high between Australia and an increasingly assertive China, its largest trade partner.
    • Australia banned Chinese telecom giant Huawei in 2108 and its PM called for an investigation into the origins of COVID-19 last year.
    • China retaliated by imposing tariffs on or capping Australian exports.

    (B) US act of counterbalancing

    • China has nuclear-powered submarines, as well as submarines that can launch nuclear missiles.
    • The three signatories to the AUKUS deal have made it clear though, that their aim is not to arm the new subs with nuclear weapons.

    (C) Bringing Australia at the centrestage of Indo-Pacific

    • In the context of the AUKUS agreement, nuclear-powered submarines will give the Royal Australian Navy the capability to go into the South China Sea.
    • This is primarily because a nuclear-powered submarine gives a navy the capability to reach far out into the ocean and launch attacks.
    • A nuclear-powered submarine offers long distances dives, at a higher speed, without being detected gives a nation the ability to protect its interests far from its shores.

    Exactly, How?

    • To go from a diesel-electric fleet to a nuclear fleet is thus a change of strategy, not just of propulsion.
    • It provides a way to project power from the shipping lanes which feed the all-important Malacca Strait to the waters off Taiwan.
    • Add on the capacity to launch much longer-range missiles—a submarine could deliver missiles to China’s mainland while sitting to the east of the Philippines—and the country has a greatly expanded offensive capacity.

    AU: Another US Base

    • If Australia’s strategic stance is changed by the deal, so is America’s.
    • Since the second world war the US has projected power across the region called as an archipelago of empire.
    • There are the island bases from Hawaii in the east to Guam, Okinawa in Japan and, in the Indian Ocean, Diego Garcia, leased from Britain without the consent of its natives.
    • In Australia, America has now, in effect, a beefed-up continent-sized base for its own operations as well as a reinvigorated ally.

    Outcomes of AUKUS

    (A) Offensive front against China

    • There is no gainsaying the fact that rapid accretion in China’s economic and military capacities, but more particularly its belligerence, has led to a tectonic shift in regional security paradigms.
    • Several countries have been obliged to review their defence preparedness in response to China’s rising military power and its adverse impact on regional stability.

    (B) India as a bridge in Anglosphere

    • The transatlantic fissure has also pointed to something inconceivable—that India could emerge as a potential bridge between different parts of the West.
    • Our PM was on the phone with French President Emmanuel Macron reaffirming India’s strong commitment to the Indo-Pacific partnership with France.
    • India’s solidarity with France at a difficult moment is rooted in New Delhi’s conviction that preserving the West’s unity is critical in shaping the strategic future of the Indo-Pacific.

    (C) Exposed Chinese double standards

    • China has the world’s fastest-growing fleet of sub-surface combatants.
    • This includes the Type 093 Shang-class nuclear-powered attack submarine (SSN) and the Type 094 nuclear-powered Jin-class ballistic missile submarine (SSBN).
    • Its nuclear submarines are on the prowl in the Indo-Pacific.
    • Yet, China denies Australia and others the sovereign right to decide on their defence requirements.

    Implications on QUAD

    • Not superseding: This alliance does not and will not supersede or outrank existing arrangements in the Indo-Pacific region such as the Quad, which the US and Australia form with India and Japan, and ASEAN.
    • Complimentary to QUAD: AUKUS will complement these groups and others.

    Opportunities for India

    While the Quad and Washington’s Indo-Pacific pivot generate much interest and anxiety, it is easy to forget that the two ideas are, in essence, about India.

    • India’s role has enhanced: Balancing China is the challenge confronting the United States, and Washington has recognized that India is an indispensable part of the answer.
    • Just another alliance: New Delhi has no reason to complain if Australia, Britain, and the United States raise the military capabilities of their coalition. The submarine deal is an undiluted example of strategic defence collaboration.
    • Intimidating China: The introduction of nuclear-powered submarine through AUKUS has a complicating impact on the Chinese maritime calculus. Anything that maintains a balance of power in the region is desirable.
    • Focusing inside on land border: AUKUS also leaves India with a less of a headache in securing its maritime flank from Chinese aggression and New Delhi may focus more fully on the threat emanating from the land border with China.

    Creating affinity with France (the Submarine giant)

    • In fact, instead of constricting India, AUKUS has opened a window of strategic opportunity and a chance for New Delhi to deepen its partnership with France provided it plays the cards well.
    • India and France are strongly committed to making the Indo-Pacific an area of cooperation and shared values.

    Way forward

    • The setback ‘down under’ may spur France to focus afresh on partners such as India.
    • India must strike a balance between continuing imports and implementing the all-important Atmanirbhar Bharat in defence manufacturing.
    • France should take AUKUS as a business deal.
    • Its momentary reaction at the cancellation of the contract by Australia should soon subside.
    • As a major Indo-Pacific power, France is an important part of the regional security calculus.
  • Streak Daily Compilation of Questions & Videos – Sep 28, 2021

    Maintaining consistency is one of the biggest issues faced by IAS Aspirants. Streak’s initiative is to help Aspirants in their day-to-day preparation. You can follow the monthly, weekly, and daily timetables and continue this streak until you find yourself on the final list.

    Please register for Streak Initiative (free) through this link:- https://www.civilsdaily.com/course/streak-daily-initiative/

    You will get following study material:-

    1. Questions (PDF).
    2. RSTV/Yojana monthly notes (PDF).
    3. Burning issue (PDF).
    4. Subject specific (PDF).
    5. Mentor’s phone call for support & encouragement.

    _____________________________________________

    UPSC PRELIMS-2021 || Current Affairs Based Most Probable Questions on History – by Sukanya Rana

    Q1) Consider the following statements with respect to Bir Chilarai

    1. He is a renowned warrior and general of the Koch royal dynasty of Assam.

    2. He is the son of Maharaja Viswa Singha, the founder of Kuch royal dynasty and younger brother of King Nara Narayan of the Kamata Kingdom.

    Which of the statement(s) given above is/are correct?

    a. 1 only

    b. 2 only

    c. Both 1 and 2

    d. Neither 1 nor 2

    Q2)  Which of the following statements are correct with respect to King Krishnadevaraya

    1. He was a shaivite and followed the teachings of Nayanmars.

    2. He wrote Amuktamalyada, which tells the story of the Tamil poet-saint Andal

    3. Recently found inscriptions records his demise in Saka 1451, lunar eclipse, which corresponds to 1529 AD. 

    Select the correct answer using the codes given below:

    a. 1 and 2 only

    b. 1 and 3 only

    c. 2 and 3 only

    d. 1, 2 and 3

    Q3) Arrange the following organisations in chronological order of their formation.

    1. East India Association

    2. Indian League

    3. Madras Mahajan Sabha

    4. Poona Sarvajanik Sabha

    a. 4-3-1-2

    b. 3-2-4-1

    c. 2-3-4-1

    d. 1-4-2-3

    Q4) Consider the following statements in context to the Indian National Congress (INC).

    1. It was founded in Bombay in December 1885.

    2. All sessions of INC were held within India except the 1892 session.

    3. The President belonged to a region other than where the Congress session was being held.

    Select the correct code from the codes given below.

    a. 1 and 2 only

    b. 2 and 3 only

    c. 1 and 3 only

    d. All the above

  • PM-KUSUM

    Context

    The Union Minister of Power, New and Renewable Energy recently reviewed the progress of the PM-KUSUM scheme and reaffirmed the government’s commitment to accelerating solar pump adoption.

    Background

    • It was launched in 2019.
    • PM-KUSUM aims to help farmers access reliable day-time solar power for irrigation, reduce power subsidies, and decarbonise agriculture.
    • PM-KUSUM provides farmers with incentives to install solar power pumps and plants in their fields.
    • Three deployment models: Pumps come in three models: off-grid solar pumps solarised agricultural feeders, or grid-connected pumps.
    • Off-grid pumps have been the most popular, but the nearly 2,80,000 systems deployed fall far short of the scheme’s target of two million by 2022.
    • The other two models are also worth scaling up for they allow farmers to earn additional income by selling solar power to discoms, and discoms to procure cheap power close to centres of consumption.

    Challenges

    • Awareness challenge: Barriers to adoption include limited awareness about solar pumps.
    • Upfront contribution: The other barrier includes farmers’ inability to pay their upfront contribution.
    • Limited progress on two models: Progress on the other two models has been rather poor due to regulatory, financial, operational and technical challenges.

    Suggestions

    • Extend the scheme’s timelines: Most Indian discoms have a surplus of contracted generation capacity and are wary of procuring more power in the short term.
    • Extending PM-KUSUM’s timelines beyond 2022 would allow discoms to align the scheme with their power purchase planning.
    • Level playing field: Discoms often find utility-scale solar cheaper than distributed solar (under the scheme) due to the latter’s higher costs and the loss of locational advantage due to waived inter-State transmission system (ISTS) charges.
    • To tackle the bias against distributed solar, we need to address counter-party risks and grid-unavailability risks at distribution substations, standardise tariff determination to reflect the higher costs of distributed power plants, and do away with the waiver of ISTS charges for solar plants.
    • Streamline regulation: We need to streamline land regulations through inter-departmental coordination.
    •  States should constitute steering committees comprising members from all relevant departments for this purpose.
    • Financing farmers contribution:  There is a need to support innovative solutions for financing farmers’ contributions.
    • Many farmers struggle to pay 30-40% of upfront costs in compliance with scheme requirements.
    • To ease the financial burden on farmers, we need out-of-the-box solutions.
    • Grid-connected solar pumps: Current obstacles to their adoption include concerns about their economic viability in the presence of high farm subsidies and farmers’ potential unwillingness to feed in surplus power when selling water or irrigating extra land are more attractive prospects.
    • Further, the grid-connected model requires pumps to be metered and billed for accounting purposes but suffers from a lack of trust between farmers and discoms.
    • Adopting solutions like smart meters and smart transformers and engaging with farmers can build trust and address some operational challenges.

    Conclusion

    These measures, combined with other agriculture schemes and complemented by intensive awareness campaigns, could give a much-needed boost to PM-KUSUM.

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  • 28th Sept 2021| Current Affairs Test 10

    [WpProQuiz 796]


    [WpProQuiz_toplist 792]

  • Why I chose IFS over IAS? || Vaibhav Rawat, UPSC 2020 AIR 25 || UNHERD: Civilsdaily’s Topper Talk Series || Link inside

    Why I chose IFS over IAS? || Vaibhav Rawat, UPSC 2020 AIR 25 || UNHERD: Civilsdaily’s Topper Talk Series || Link inside

    Talk to Vaibhav’s UPSC Mentors- https://bit.ly/Free_One_to_One_Mentorship

    Vaibhav cracked Mains in the first attempt but only barely! With very few marks in GS, he joined Civilsdaily’s Mentorship Program for 2020 for his second attempt and the results were clear – he secured 25th rank in UPSC 2020. Vaibhav is an IT BHU graduate, school cricket captain, 7th ranker in All India Science Olympiad, a former employee at Samsung R&D and current Rank Holder for UPSC 2020.

    Guys, let’s hear more from Vaibhav himself and try to learn what a common aspirant learns in this quest to cross the threshold.

    Heartiest congratulations to Vaibhav Rawat

    AIR 25

    UPSC Civil Services 2020

  • Important Regional Organizations and Blocs

    28th Sept 2021

     

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    1.ASEAN ( Association of South-East Asian Nations)

    • It is a political and economic organisation of 10 South-East Asian nations
    • Formed in 1967
    • Founding members: Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand
    • HQ: Jakarta, Indonesia

    Current members are:
    1. Indonesia
    2. Malaysia
    3. Philippines
    4. Singapore
    5. Thailand
    6. Brunei
    7. Cambodia
    8. Laos
    9. Myanmar (Burma)
    10. Vietnam

    AiM:

    • Accelerating economic growth, social progress, and socio-cultural evolution among its members, Protection of regional stability
    • Providing a mechanism for member countries to resolve differences peacefully
    • ‘The ASEAN Way’ means : Doctrine that the member countries will largely mind their own business when it comes to internal matters of member countries
    • ASEAN Plus Three: Was created to improve existing ties with the China, Japan and South Korea.
    • If the ASEAN nations were a single country, their combined economy would rank the 7th largest in the world

    India:

    • Has and FTA with ASEAN (operational since 2010)

    2.APEC (Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation)

    • It is a regional economic forum of 21 Pacific Rim countries
    • Established in 1989
    • HQ: Singapore
    • APEC’s 21 members aim to promote free trade throughout the Asia- Pacific region.
    • APEC account for about half the world’s trade and almost 60% of global trade
    • · It established in response to the growing interdependence of Asia-Pacific economies and the advent of regional trade blocs in other parts of the world
    • To fears that highly industrialized Japan (a member of G8 ) would come to dominate economic activity in the Asia-Pacific region
    • To establish new markets for agricultural products and raw materials beyond Europe
    • India has requested membership in APEC, and received initial support from the United States, Japan, Australia and Papua New Guinea. Officials have decided not to allow India to join for various reasons, considering that India does not border the Pacific Ocean, which all current members do. However, India was invited to be an observer for the first time in November 2011.

    3. BBIN ( Bangladesh, Bhutan, India and Nepal)

    • It is a sub-regional architecture of these four countries.
    • Aims to formulate, implement and review quadrilateral agreements across areas such as water resources management, connectivity of power, transport, and infrastructure.

    4. BCIM Bangladesh-China-Inida-Myanmar

    • Aim:  greater integration of trade and investment between the four countries
    • BCIM economic corridor is an initiative conceptualised for significant gains through sub-regional economic co-operation with BCIM
    • The multi-modal corridor will be the first expressway between India and China and will pass through Myanmar and Bangladesh
    • BCIM evolved from ‘Kunming Initiative’


    5.BIMSTEC ( Bay of Bengal Initiative for Multi-Sectoral Technical and Economic Cooperation)

    ·

    • It is an international organisation involving a group of countries in South Asia and South East Asia. Established in 1997 in Bangkok. Bangladesh, India, Sri Lanka, and Thailand were founding members. Now it has seven members.
      Headquarters is in Dhaka, Bangladesh

    Present members :
    1.  Bangladesh
    2.  India
    3.  Myanmar
    4.  Sri Lanka
    5.  Thailand
    6.  Bhutan
    7.  Nepal

    • The main objective of BIMSTEC is technological and economic cooperation among south Asian and south-east Asian countries along the coast of the Bay of Bengal. Commerce, investment, technology, tourism, human resource development, agriculture, fisheries, transport and communication, textiles, leather etc. have been included in it
    • BIMSTEC uses the alphabetical order for chairmanship

    6.BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa )

    • Originally the first four were grouped as “BRIC” (or “the BRICs”), before the induction of South Africa in 2010.
    • The BRICS members are all leading developing or newly industrialized countries, but they are distinguished by their large, sometimes fast-growing economies and significant influence on regional affairs; all five are G-20 members.
    • The five BRICS countries represent half of the world population; all five members are in the top 25 of the world by population.
    • The New Development Bank (NDB), formerly referred to as the BRICS Development Bank, is a multilateral development bank established by the BRICS states.
    • The bank is headquartered in Shanghai, China. The first regional office of the NDB will be opened in Johannesburg, South Africa.

    7. G4

    • Members : India, Brazil, Germany and Japan
      All members support each other’s bids for permanent seats on the United Nations Security Council
    • Each of these four countries have figured among the elected non-permanent members of the council since the UN’s establishment.
    • Their economic and political influence has grown significantly in the last decades, reaching a scope comparable to the permanent members (P5)
    • G4 campaigns for U.N. Reforms, including more representation for developing countries, both in the permanent and non-permanent categories, in the UNSC

    8.IBSA (for India-Brazil-South Africa )

    • All are Developing Democracies.
    • The forum provides the three countries with a platform to engage in discussions for cooperation in the field of agriculture, trade, culture, and defence among others.
    • IBSA was formalised and launched through the adopti on of the “Brasilia Declaration.
    • Brasilia Declaration (2003) : Approved urgent need for reforms in the United Nations, especially the Security Council.

    9. G7

    • The Group of 7 (G7) is a group consisting of Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States.
    • The European Union is also represented within the G7.
    • These countries are the seven major advanced economies as reported by the International Monetary Fund.
    • G7 countries represent more than 64% of the net global wealth
      common denominator among members is the economy and long-term political motives

    10.The Indian Ocean Rim Association (IORA)

    • The Indian Ocean Rim Association (IORA), formerly known as the Indian Ocean Rim Initiative and Indian Ocean Rim Association for Regional Cooperation (IOR-ARC), is an international organisation consisting of coastal states bordering the Indian Ocean.
    • The IORA is a regional forum, tripartite in nature, bringing together representatives of Government, Business and Academia, for promoting co-operation and closer interaction among them.
    • It is based on the principles of Open Regionalism for strengthening Economic Cooperation particularly on Trade Facilitation and Investment, Promotion as well as Social Development of the region. The Coordinating Secretariat of IORA is located at Ebene, Mauritius.
    • 21 member states : South Africa, Mozambique, Tanzania, Kenya, Madagascar, Comoros, Mauritius,
      Seychelles, Iran, Oman, UAE, Yemen, India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore, Thailand, Australia and Somalia.
    • Maldives, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Myanmar are not members
    • The organisation was first established as Indian Ocean Rim Initiative in Mauritius on March 1995 and formally launched in 1997 by the conclusion of a multilateral treaty known as the Charter of the Indian Ocean Rim Association for Regional Co-operation.

    11.The Mekong-Ganga Cooperation

    • The Mekong-Ganga Cooperation (MGC) is an initiative by six countries – India and five ASEAN countries, namely, Cambodia, Lao PDR, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam for cooperation in tourism, culture, education, as well as transport and communications.
    • It was launched in 2000 at Vientiane, Lao PDR.

    12.Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP)

    • The Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) is an ambitious, comprehensive, and high-standard trade and investment agreement being negotiated between the United States and the European Union (EU).
    • TTIP will help unlock opportunity for American families, workers, businesses, farmers and ranchers through increased access to European markets for Made-in-America goods and services. This will help to promote U.S. international competitiveness, jobs and growth.
    • Its main three broad areas are:
      • market access;
      • specific regulation; and
      • broader rules and principle s and modes of co-operation

    13.Shanghai Cooperation Organisation

    • The Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO), or Shanghai Pact, is a Eurasian political, economic, and military organisation which was founded in 2001 in Shanghai by the leaders of China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan.
    • These countries, except for Uzbekistan had been members of the Shanghai Five, founded in 1996; after the inclusion of Uzbekistan in 2001, the members renamed the organisation. On July 10, 2015, the SCO decided to admit India and Pakistan as full members.

    14.SAARC

    • The South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) is the regional international organization and geopolitical union of nations in South Asia. Its member states include.

    Afghanistan,

    Bhutan

    Pakistan,

    Bangladesh,

    India,

    Nepal,

    Maldives,

    Pakistan

    Sri Lanka.

    • SAARC comprises 3% of the world’s area, 21% of the world's population and 3.8% of the global economy. SAARC was founded in Dhaka, Bangladesh on 8th December, 1985.
    • Its secretariat is based in Kathmandu Nepal. The organization promotes development of economic and regional integration.
    • It launched the South Asian free trade area in 2006. SAARC maintains permanent diplomatic relations at the United Nations as an observer and has developed links with multilateral entities, including the European Union.

    15.OECD

    • The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) is an intergovernmental economic organization with 35 member countries, founded in 1960 to stimulate economic progress and world trade.
    • The mission of the OECD is to promote policies that will improve the economic and social well-being of people around the world.
    • It is a forum of countries describing themselves as committed to democracy and the market economy, providing a platform to compare policy experiences, seeking answers to common problems, identify good practices and coordinate domestic and international policies of its members.
    • Most OECD members are high-income economies with a very high Human Development Index (HDI) and are regarded as developed countries.
    • The OECD headquarter at Paris, France. The OECD is funded by contributions from member states.

    LIST OF  MEMBER COUNTRIES

    Australia

    Austria

    Belgium

    Canada

    Chile

    Czech Republic

    Denmark

    Estonia

    Finland

    France

    Germany

    Greece

    Hungary

    Iceland

    Ireland

    Israel

    Italy

    Japan

    Korea

    Latvia

    Luxembourg

    Mexico

    Netherlands

    New Zealand

    Norway

    Poland

    Portugal

    Slovak Republic

    Slovenia

    Spain

    Sweden

    Switzerland

    Turkey

    United Kingdom

    United States

    16.G20

    • The G20 or Group of Twenty is an international forum for the governments and central bank governors from 20 major economies.
    • It was founded in 1999 with the aim of studying, reviewing, and promoting high-level discussion of policy issues pertaining to the promotion of international financial stability.
    • It seeks to address issues that go beyond the responsibilities of any one organization. The G20 heads of government or heads of state have periodically conferred at summits since their initial meeting in 2008, and the group also hosts separate meetings of finance ministers and central bank governors.
    • The G20 membership comprises a mix of the world’s largest advanced and emerging economies, representing about two-thirds of the world’s population, 85 per cent of global gross domestic product and over 75 per cent of global trade.
    • The work of G20 members is supported by several international organisations that provide policy advice. The G20 also regularly engages with non-government sectors. Engagement groups from business (B20), civil society (C20), labour (L20), think tanks (T20) and youth (Y20) are holding major events during the year, the outcomes of which will contribute to the deliberations of G20 leaders.
    • The heads of the G20 nations met semi-annually at G20 summits between 2009 and 2010.
    • Since the November 2011 Cannes summit, all G20 summits have been held annually.

    17.OPEC

    • Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) is an intergovernmental organization of 13 nations, founded in 1960 in Baghdad by the first five members (Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Venezuela), and headquartered since 1965 in Vienna.
    • Countries accounted for an estimated 42 % of global oil production and 73 % of the world’s oil reserves, giving OPEC a major influence on global oil prices that were previously determined by American-dominated multinational oil companies.
    • Two-thirds of OPEC’s oil production and reserves are in its six Middle Eastern countries that surround the oil-rich Persian Gulf.
    • The formation of OPEC marked a turning point toward national sovereignty over natural resources, and OPEC decisions have come to play a prominent role in the global oil market and international relations.

    18.TPP

    • The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), or the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA), is a trade agreement between Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, the United States (until January 23, 2017) and Vietnam.
    • The finalized proposal was signed on 4 February 2016 in Auckland, New Zealand, concluding seven years of negotiations.
    • It currently cannot be ratified due to U.S. withdrawal from the agreement on 23 January 2017. The former Obama administration claimed that the agreement aimed to "promote economic growth; support the creation and retention of jobs; enhance innovation, productivity and competitiveness; raise living standards; reduce poverty in the signatories; countries; and promote transparency, good governance, and enhanced labour and environmental protections.
    • The TPP contains measures to lower both non-tariff and tariff barriers to trade, and establish an investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS)  mechanism.

    19.RCEP

    Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) is a proposed free trade agreement (FTA) between the ten member states of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)

     Brunei

     Cambodia

     Indonesia

     Laos

     Malaysia

     Myanmar

     Philippines

     Singapore

     Thailand

     Vietnam and the six states with which ASEAN has existing free trade agreements:

    (Australia, China, India, Japan, South Korea and New Zealand).

    RCEP negotiations were formally launched in November 2012 at the ASEAN Summit in Cambodia. The agreement is scheduled to be finalized by the end of 2017. RCEP is viewed as an alternative to the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), a proposed trade agreement which includes several Asian and American nations but excludes China and India.

    20. Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG)

    • Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) is a multinational body concerned with reducing nuclear proliferation by controlling the export and re-transfer of materials that may be applicable to nuclear weapon development and by improving safeguards and protection on existing materials.
    • The NSG was set up in 1974 as a reaction to India’s nuclear tests to stop what it called the  misuse of nuclear material meant for peaceful purposes.
    • Currently, it has 48 members and works by consensus.
    • In 2008, the NSG participating governments agreed to grant India a “clean waiver” from its  existing rules, which forbid nuclear trade with a country which has not signed the Nuclear Non-ProliferationTreaty (NPT).

    Background:

    • India sought membership of the NSG in 2008, but its application hasn’t been decided on,  primarily because signing the NPT or other nuclear moratoriums on testing is a pre-requisite.
    • The NSG works under the principle of unanimity and even one country’s vote against India will scuttle its bid.
    • However, India has received a special waiver to conduct nuclear trade with all nuclear exporters.
    • India, Pakistan, Israel and South Sudan are among the four UN member states which have not signed the NPT, the international pact aimed at preventing the spread of nuclear weapons.

    21. Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR):

    • It was established in April 1987 by G-7 countries – USA, UK, France, Germany, Canada, Italy, and Japan, to check the spread of unmanned delivery systems capable of carrying nuclear weapons of above 500kg for more than 300km.
    • In 1992, it was extended for all types of weapons of mass destruction.
    • Now, it has 35 full members including India and 4 “non-adherent members” – Israel, Macedonia, Romania, Slovakia.
    • China is not a member of this regime but it had verbally pledged to adhere to its original guidelines but not to the subsequent additions.
    • It is not a legally-binding treaty. Hence, no punitive measures could be taken against non-compliance to the guidelines of the regime.
    • It is a multilateral, consensus–based grouping of 35 member countries who are voluntarily committed to the non-proliferation of missiles capable of carrying chemical, biological and nuclear weapons of mass destruction (WMDs).
    • It controls the export of the technologies and materials involved in ballistic missile systems and unmanned aerial vehicles particularly capable of carrying nuclear warheads of above 500kg  payload for more than 300 km.
    • This is a non–treaty association of member countries with certain guidelines about the information sharing, national control laws and export policies for missile systems and a rule-based regulation mechanism to limit the transfer of such critical technologies of these missile systems.

    22. Australia Group

    • The Australia Group (AG) is an informal forum of countries which, through the harmonisation of export controls, seeks to ensure that exports do not contribute to the development of chemical  or biological weapons.
    • Coordination of national export control measures assists Australia Group participants to fulfil their obligations under the Chemical Weapons Convention and the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention to the fullest extent possible.
    • This is achieved by members through the harmonisation of export controls like using licensing measures.
    • It was established in the background of use of chemical weapons (in the form of nerve agents and sulphur mustard) by Iraq in the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s.
    • Members: 42 countries + European Union
    • All member countries are members of the Biological and Toxins Weapons Convention (BTWC) and Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC)

    23. WASSENAAR ARRANGEMENT

    • The Wassenaar Arrangement was established to contribute to regional and international security and stability by promoting transparency and greater responsibility in transfers of conventional arms and dual-use goods and technologies, thus preventing destabilizing accumulations.
    • It was established in 1996 in Wassenaar, the Netherlands, which is near The Hague.
    • Members: 42 member states.
    • All permanent members of UN Security Council except China are its members.
    • Participating States seek, through their national policies, to ensure that transfers of these items do not contribute to the development or enhancement of military capabilities which undermine these goals, and are not diverted to support such capabilities.

    24. International Organization for Migration (IOM)

    • As of September 2016, it became a related organization of the United Nations.
      Its headquarters is in Geneva, Switzerland.
    • IOM is the leading inter-governmental organization in the field of migration and works closely with governmental, intergovernmental and non-governmental partners.
    • With 169 member states, a further 8 states holding observer status and offices in over 100 countries,IOM is dedicated to promoting humane and orderly migration for the benefit of all.
    • It does so by providing services and advice to governments and migrants.
      India is a member of IOM.
    • IOM works to help ensure the orderly and humane management of migration, to promote international cooperation on migration issues, to assist in the search for practical solutions to migration problems and to provide humanitarian assistance to migrants in need, including
      refugees and internally displaced people.
    • IOM works in the four broad areas of migration management:
      Migration and development.
      Facilitating migration.
      Regulating migration.
      Forced migration.

    25. International Economic Association (IEA)

    • The IEA was founded in 1950 as a Non-Governmental Organization, at the instigation of the Social Sciences Department of UNESCO.
    • It has since its creation maintained information and consultative relations with UNESCO and is since 1973 a federated member of the International Social Science Council.
    • Its aim has been to promote personal contacts and mutual understanding among economists in different parts of the world through the organization of scientific meetings, through common research programs and by means of publications of an international character on problems of current importance.
    • The IEA is governed by a Council, composed of representatives of all Member Associations as well as a limited number of co-opted members.
    • The Council meets triennially when it reviews the general policy of the Association and elects the President and other Officers and members of the Executive Committee for a three-year term of office.
    • Amongst the past presidents of IEA were the Nobel Laureates Robert Solow, Amartya Sen and Joseph Stiglitz.

    26. INDIA-BRAZIL-SOUTH AFRICA (IBSA)

    • Established in June 2003, INDIA-BRAZIL-SOUTH AFRICA (IBSA) is a coordinating mechanism amongst three emerging countries, three multi-ethnic and multicultural democracies, which are
      determined to:
       Contribute to the construction of a new international architecture.
       Bring their voice together on global issues.
       Deepen their ties in various areas.
       It brings together three large democracies and major economies from three different continents namely, Africa, Asia and South America that represents three important poles for galvanizing South-  South cooperation.
    • IBSA also opens itself to concrete projects of cooperation and partnership with less developed countries.
    • The establishment of IBSA was formalized by the Brasilia Declaration of 6 June 2003.

    27. International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN)

    • ICAN, a coalition of hundreds of non-governmental organisations (NGOs), was launched in 20017 and is based in Geneva, Switzerland.
    • ICAN seeks to shift the disarmament debate to focus on the humanitarian threat posed by nuclear weapons, drawing attention to their unique destructive capacity, their catastrophic health and environmental consequences, their indiscriminate targeting, the debilitating impact
      of a detonation on medical infrastructure and relief measures, and the long-lasting effects of radiation on the surrounding area.
    • In September 2006, the International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War, itself awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1985, adopted a proposal at its biennial congress in Helsinki, Finland, to launch ICAN globally.

    28. International Energy Forum (IEF)

    • IEF is the largest inter-governmental organisation in the field of oil and gas comprising 72 member countries, accounting for 90% of global supply and demand of the oil and gas.
    • Members include developing, developed, OPEC, Non-OPEC and G20 countries.
    • 18 of the G20 countries are members of IEF.
    • India is also a member of the forum.
    • The IEF is promoted by a permanent Secretariat based in the Diplomatic Quarter of Riyadh, Saudi.

    29. International Energy Agency (IEA)

    • Founded in 1974, the IEA was initially designed to help countries co-ordinate a collective response to major disruptions in the supply of oil, such as the crisis of 1973/4.
    • Members: Presently it has 30 member countries. India is the associate member of IAE.
    • Headquarters (Secretariat): Paris, France.
    • Publications: World Energy Outlook report.
    • The four main areas of IEA focus are:
    1. Energy Security: Promoting diversity, efficiency, flexibility and reliability for all fuels and  energy sources;
    2. Economic Development: Supporting free markets to foster economic growth and eliminate energy poverty;
    3. Environmental Awareness: Analyzing policy options to offset the impact of energy production and use on the environment, especially for tackling climate change and air pollution; and
    4. Engagement Worldwide: Working closely with partner countries, especially major emerging economies, to find solutions to shared energy and environmental concerns.

    30. Financial Action Task Force (FATF):

    • The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) was set up in 1989 by the western G7 countries, with headquarters in Paris.
    • The objectives are to set standards and promote effective implementation of legal, regulatory and operational measures for combating money laundering, terrorist financing and other related threats to the integrity of the international financial system.
    • It is therefore a ―policy-making body‖ which works to generate the necessary political will to bring about national legislative and regulatory reforms in these areas.
    • It is empowered to curtail financing of UN-designated terrorist groups.
      It can publicly sensor countries that are not abiding by it’s norms.
    • FATF has 37 members that include all 5 permanent members of the Security Council, and other countries with economic influence.
    • Two regional organisations, the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) and the European Commission (EC) are also its members.
    • Saudi Arabia and Israel are observer countries (partial membership).
      India became a full member in 2010.

    What are Regional Trading Blocs?

    A regional trading bloc (RTB) is a co-operative union or group of countries within a specific geographical boundary. RTB protects its member nations within that region from imports from the non-members. Trading blocs are a special type of economic integration. There are four types of trading blocs −

    Preferential Trade Area − Preferential Trade Areas (PTAs), the first step towards making a full-fledged RTB, exist when countries of a particular geographical region agree to decrease or eliminate tariffs on selected goods and services imported from other members of the area.

    Free Trade Area − Free Trade Areas (FTAs) are like PTAs but in FTAs, the participating countries agree to remove or reduce barriers to trade on all goods coming from the participating members.

    Customs Union − A customs union has no tariff barriers between members, plus they agree to a common (unified) external tariff against non-members. Effectively, the members are allowed to negotiate as a single bloc with third parties, including other trading blocs, or with the WTO.

    Common Market − A ‘common market’ is an exclusive economic integration. The member countries trade freely all types of economic resources – not just tangible goods. All barriers to trade in goods, services, capital, and labour are removed in common markets. In addition to tariffs, non-tariff barriers are also diminished or removed in common markets.


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  • Illicit Proliferation of networks of N-weapons

    India has underlined the need for the international community to pay closer attention to the “illicit proliferation” of networks of nuclear weapons, their delivery systems, components and relevant technologies.

    Key takeaways from India’s remarks

    • India’s remarks appeared to be a veiled reference to China and its “all-weather ally” Pakistan.
    • China’s nuclear cooperation with Pakistan was in contravention with the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG).
    • Several concerns have been raised over the export of nuclear materials to Islamabad by Beijing and that they are in violation of international norms and established procedures.

    Do you know?

    India has played a leading role in global efforts towards nuclear disarmament and was the first country to call for a ban on nuclear testing in 1954 and a non-discriminatory treaty on the non-proliferation of nuclear weapons, as distinct from non-dissemination, in 1965. Its no-first-use doctrine is a worldwide appreciated strategy.

    Issues in Nuclear Disarmament

    • Notion of Nuclear ‘Haves’ and ‘Have-Nots’: The proponents of disarmaments are themselves nuclear armed countries thus creating a nuclear monopoly.
    • Concept of Peaceful Nuclear Explosion (PNE): conducted for non-military purposes such as mining.

    India’s commitment for de-nuclearization

    India has always batted for a universal commitment and an agreed global and non-discriminatory multilateral framework.

    • It has outlined a working paper on Nuclear Disarmament submitted to the UN General Assembly in 2006.
    • India participated in the Nuclear Security Summit process and has regularly participated in the International Conferences on Nuclear Security organised by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
    • India is also a member of the Nuclear Security Contact Group (but has signed off the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT)).
    • India has expressed its readiness to support the commencement of negotiations on a Fissile Material Cut-off Treaty (FMCT).
    • India couldn’t join the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) due to several concerns raised by India.
    • India has piloted an annual UNGA Resolution on “Measures to Prevent Terrorists from Acquiring Weapons of Mass Destruction” since 2002, which is adopted by consensus.

    Why didn’t India join NPT?

    • India is one of the only five countries that either did not sign the NPT or signed but withdrew, thus becoming part of a list that includes Pakistan, Israel, North Korea, and South Sudan.
    • India always considered the NPT as discriminatory and had refused to sign it.
    • India maintains that they are selectively applicable to the non-nuclear powers and legitimised the monopoly of the five nuclear weapons powers.

    Way forward

    • India has actively supported and contributed to the strengthening of the global nuclear security architecture.
    • There is a need for the international community to pay closer attention to the illicit proliferation of networks of nuclear weapons, their delivery systems, components and relevant technologies.
    • India hopes that the international community will continue to work towards realising our collective aspiration for a nuclear weapon-free world.

     

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    Back2Basics:

    Nuclear Security Contact Group

    • The NSCG was established in 2016.
    • The NSCG or “Contact Group” has been established with the aim of facilitating cooperation and sustaining engagement on nuclear security after the conclusion of the Nuclear Security Summit process.
    • The Contact Group is tasked with:
    1. Convening annually on the margins of the General Conference of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), and, as may be useful, in connection with other related meetings
    2. Discussing a broad range of nuclear security-related issues, including identifying emerging trends that may require more focused attention

    Nuclear Suppliers Group

    • NSG is a group of nuclear supplier countries that seeks to contribute to the non-proliferation of nuclear weapons through the implementation of guidelines for nuclear exports and nuclear-related exports.
    • The NSG was set up as a response to India’s nuclear tests conducted in 1974.
    • The aim of the NSG is to ensure that nuclear trade for peaceful purposes does not contribute to the proliferation of nuclear weapons.

    Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty

    • CTBT was negotiated at the Conference on Disarmament in Geneva and adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in 1996.
    • The Treaty intends to ban all nuclear explosions – everywhere, by everyone.
    • It was opened for signature in 1996 and since then 182 countries have signed the Treaty, most recently Ghana has ratified the treaty in 2011.

    Fissile material cut-off treaty

    • FMCT is a proposed international agreement that would prohibit the production of the two main components of nuclear weapons: highly-enriched uranium (HEU) and plutonium.
    • Discussions on this subject have taken place at the UN Conference on Disarmament (CD), a body of 65 member nations established as the sole multilateral negotiating forum on disarmament.
    • The CD operates by consensus and is often stagnant, impeding progress on an FMCT.
    • Those nations that joined the nuclear NPT as non-weapon states are already prohibited from producing or acquiring fissile material for weapons.
    • An FMCT would provide new restrictions for the five recognized nuclear weapon states (NWS—United States, Russia, United Kingdom, France, and China), and for the four nations that are not NPT members (Israel, India, Pakistan, and North Korea).

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