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  • [Prelims Spotlight]Important Summits, Conventions and Declarations (Part 1)

    1.RAMSAR Convention on Wetlands

    Brief Intro

    • The Convention was adopted in the Iranian city of Ramsar in 1971 and came into force in 1975 after UNESCO, the Convention’s depositary received the instruments of accession from the countries.
    • The RAMSAR Secretariat is based at the headquarters of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) in Gland, Switzerland.
    • World Wetlands Day is celebrated on February 2nd.

    Key Objectives-

    • An intergovernmental treaty that provides the framework for national action and international cooperation for the conservation and wise use of wetlands and their resources.

    Year-1971

    Place – Ramasar

    Key Terms-The Montreux Record – a register of wetland sites on the List of Wetlands of International Importance where changes in ecological character are of concern. It is maintained as part of the Ramsar List.

    India specific – India currently has 27 sites designated as Wetlands of International Importance (Ramsar Sites).

    2.The World Heritage Convention

    Brief Intro

    The Convention recognizes the way in which people interact with nature, and the fundamental need to preserve the balance between the two.

    Key Objectives-

    The Convention defines the kind of natural or cultural sites which can be considered for inscription on the World Heritage List under UNESCO

    Year-1972

    3.Stockholm Conference

    Brief Intro

    Stockholm Declaration contains 26 principles. These principles provide the basis of an International Policy for the Protection and improvement of the environment.

    Key Point-The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) has been established by the UNGA in pursuance of the Stockholm Conference.

    Year-1972

    4.CITES

    Brief Intro

    To ensure that international trade in specimens of wild animals and plants does not threaten the survival of the species in the wild, and it accords varying degrees of protection to more than 35,000 species of animals and plants.

    Key Objectives-

    • It is a multilateral treaty drafted as a result of a resolution adopted in 1963 at a meeting of members of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).
    • Although CITES is legally binding on the Parties – in other words they have to implement the Convention – it does not take the place of national laws.

    India Specific –

    The Government of India signed the Convention in July 1976, which was ratified in October 1976

    5.Convention on Supplementary Compensation for Nuclear Damage (CSC)

    Brief Intro

    Seeks to establish a uniform global legal regime for compensation to victims in the unlikely event of a nuclear accident. It was adopted on 12 September 1997. It can enter into force after ratification by at least 5 countries having minimum of 400,000 units of installed nuclear capacity.

    Key Objectives-

    • It provides a uniform framework for channelling liability and providing speedy compensation after the nuclear accident.
    • Seeks to encourage regional and global co-operation to promote a higher level of nuclear safety in accordance with the principles of international partnership and solidarity.
    • All states are free to participate in it regardless of their presence of nuclear installations on their territories or involvement in existing nuclear liability conventions.
    • It has been framed in consistent with the principles of Vienna Convention on Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage (1963) and the Paris Convention on Third Party Liability in the Field of Nuclear Energy (1960).

    India Specific –

    India has ratified Convention on Supplementary Compensation for Nuclear Damage (CSC), 1997 which sets parameters on a nuclear operator’s financial liability..

    6.Nuclear security summit

    Brief Intro

    The Nuclear Security Summit (NSS) is a world summit, aimed at preventing nuclear terrorism around the globe. The first summit was held in Washington, D.C., United States, on April 12–13, 2010. The second summit was held in Seoul, South Korea, in 2012. The third summit was held in The Hague, Netherlands, on March 24–25, 2014. The fourth summit was held in Washington, D.C. on March 31–April 1, 2016.

    Key Objectives-

    Aimed at preventing nuclear terrorism around the globe.

    India specific-

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi attended the NSS 2016 in Washington

    7.Ashgabat Agreement

    Brief Intro

    Ashgabat Agreement, is an international transport and transit corridor facilitating transportation of goods between Central Asia and the Persian Gulf.

    Key Objectives-

    • The transit agreement provides for a transit corridor across Central Asia and the Middle East through the continuous landmass between Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan and Iran before reaching the Persian Gulf and into Oman.
    • The objective of this agreement is to enhance connectivity within Eurasian region and synchronize it with other transport corridors within that region including the International North–South Transport Corridor (INSTC).

    8.The Conference on Interaction and Confidence-Building Measures in Asia (CICA)

    Brief Intro

    The Conference on Interaction and Confidence-Building Measures in Asia (CICA) is an inter-governmental forum for enhancing cooperation towards promoting peace, security and stability in Asia.

    Key Objectives-

    It is a forum based on the recognition that there is close link between peace, security and stability in Asia and in the rest of the world.enhancing cooperation towards promoting peace, security and stability in Asia.

    India Specific-

    India is a member of CICA

    9.Beijing declaration

    Brief Intro

    The Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action (BPfA) is an international declaration of women’s rights set up at the UN’s landmark Fourth World Conference on Women, held in Beijing in 1995.

    Key Objectives-

    • The BPfA covers 12 key critical matters of concern and areas for action including women and poverty, violence against women and access to power and decision- making.
    • It was supported by 189 countries, including the UK, at the 1995 World Conference.gender equality and the empowerment of all women, everywhere.1995.
    • It was the outcome of The Fourth World Conference on Women: Action for Equality, Development and Peace convened by UN.

    12.The World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (WHO FCTC)

    Brief Intro

    The World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (WHO FCTC) is a treaty adopted by the 56th World Health Assembly held in Geneva,Switzerland on 21 May 2003.

    Key Objectives-

    • It became the first World Health Organization treaty adopted under article 19 of the WHO constitution.To protect present and future generations from the devastating health, social, environmental and economic consequences of tobacco consumption and exposure to tobacco smoke” by enacting a set of universal standards stating the dangers of tobacco and limiting its use in all forms worldwide.
    • The FCTC established two principal bodies to oversee the functioning of the treaty: the Conference of the parties and the permanent Secretariat. In addition, there are over 50 different intergovernmental and nongovernmental organizations who are official observers to the Conference of the Parties.

    India Specific-

    India has hosted 7th Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (WHO FCTC).

    10.G-7

    Brief Intro

    • The Group of Seven (G7) is an informal bloc of industrialized democracies—Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States—that meets annually to discuss issues such as global economic governance, international security, and energy policy.
    • Russia belonged to the forum from 1998 through 2014—then the Group of Eight (G8)—but was suspended after its annexation of Crimea in March of that year.

    11.G-20

    Brief Intro– It was started in 1999 as a meeting of Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors in the aftermath of the Southeast Asian (Tiger economies) financial crisis.

    Key Objectives-

    • The Group of Twenty (G20) is the premier forum for its members’ international economic cooperation and decision-making.
    • It is deliberating forum for the governments and central bank governors from 20 major economies on economic issues and other important development challenges.
    • In 2008, the first G20 Leaders’ Summit was held in Washington DC, US. The group had played a key role in responding to the global financial crisis. It comprises total 19 countries plus the European Union (EU), representing 85% of global GDP, 80% of international trade, 65% of world’s population. Its members include Australia, Argentina, Brazil, Canada, China, India, France, Germany, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, South Korea, Mexico, Saudi Arabia, Russia, Turkey, South Africa, UK, US and EU. 4.The 2016 summit was held in Hangzhou China.
    • It was established for studying, reviewing, and promoting high-level discussion of policy issues pertaining to the promotion of international financial stability.

    India Specific-

    India is a founding member of G-20

    12.International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture

    Brief Intro

    It is a comprehensive international agreement in harmony with the Convention on Biological Diversity, which aims at guaranteeing food security through the conservation, exchange and sustainable use of the world’s plant genetic resources for food and agriculture (PGRFA), as well as the fair and equitable benefit sharing arising from its use.

    Key Objectives-

    It also recognises Farmers’ Rights, subject to national laws to

    a) the protection of traditional knowledge relevant to plant genetic resources for food and agriculture;

    b) the right to equitably participate in sharing benefits arising from the utilisation of plant genetic resources for food and agriculture;

    c) the right to participate in making decisions, at the national level, on matters related to the conservation and sustainable use of plant genetic resources for food and agriculture.

    It is a comprehensive international agreement in harmony with the Convention on Biological Diversity.

    India Specific-

    India has signed the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture.

    13.Marrakesh treaty

    Brief Intro

    • The treaty requires signatories to introduce national law provisions that facilitates the availability of published works in formats like Braille that are accessible to the blind and allow their exchange across borders by organizations working for the visually impaired.

    Key Objectives-

    • The pact will help import of accessible format copies from the member countries by the Indian authorized entities such as educational institutions, libraries and other institutions working for the welfare of the visually impaired.
    • The treaty will also ease translation of imported accessible format copies and export of accessible format copies in Indian languages.To create a set of mandatory limitations and exceptions for the benefit of the blind, visually impaired and otherwise print disabled (VIPs).

    14.London Declaration

    Brief Intro

    • The London Declaration on Neglected Tropical Diseases is a collaborative disease eradication programme launched on 30 January 2012 in London.
    • It was inspired by the World Health Organization 2020 roadmap to eradicate or negate transmission for neglected tropical diseases.Officials from WHO, the World Bank, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the world’s 13 leading pharmaceutical companies, and government representatives from US, UK, United Arab Emirate, Bangladesh, Brazil, Mozambique and Tanzania participated in a joint meeting at the Royal College of Physicians to launch this project.

    15.Declaration of Montreal

    Brief Intro

    The Declaration of Montreal on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Human Rights is a document adopted in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, on July 29, 2006, by the International Conference on LGBT Human Rights which formed part of the first World Outgames.

    Key Objectives-

    • The Declaration outlines a number of rights and freedoms pertaining to LGBT and intersex people that it is proposed be universally guaranteed.
    • It encompasses all aspects of human rights, from the guarantee of fundamental freedoms to the prevention of discrimination against LGBT people in healthcare, education and immigration.
    • The Declaration also addresses various issues that impinge on the global promotion of LGBT rights and intersex human rights.

    16. Istanbul Convention

    Brief Intro

    • The Istanbul Convention is the first legally-binding instrument which “creates a comprehensive legal framework and approach to combat violence against women” and is focussed on preventing domestic violence, protecting victims and prosecuting accused offenders. The convention aims at prevention of violence, victim protection and “to end with the impunity of perpetrators.
    • The Council of Europe.Only European countries have signed this convention.

    17.vienna convention on diplomatic relations

    Brief Intro

    It is a treaty that came into force in 1964 2.It lays out the rules and regulations for diplomatic relations between countries as well as the various privileges that diplomats and diplomatic missions enjoy.

    Key Objectives-

    • One of these privileges is legal immunity for diplomats so that they don’t have to face prosecution as per their host country’s laws.
    • The Vienna Convention classifies diplomats according to their posting in the embassy, consular or international organisations such as the UN. A nation has only one embassy per foreign country, usually in the capital, but may have multiple consulate offices, generally in locations where many of its citizens live or visit.
    • Diplomats posted in an embassy get immunity, along with his or her family members. While diplomats posted in consulates too get immunity, they can be prosecuted in case of serious crimes, that is, when a warrant is issued.
    • Besides, their families don’t share that immunity.It has been ratified by 187 countries, including India.

    18.Jaipur Summit

    Brief Intro

    • The Forum for India–Pacific Islands Cooperation (FIPIC) was launched during Hon’ble Prime Minister, Mr. Narendra Modi’s visit to Fiji in November 2014.
    • FIPIC includes 14 of the island countries – Cook Islands, Fiji, Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Nauru, Niue, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Tonga, Tuvalu, and Vanuatu.
    • The second summit of the Forum for India Pacific Cooperation (FIPIC-2) in Jaipur on 21-22 August 2015 has made significant progress in strengthening India’s engagement with the 14 Pacific Island countries. Increase Cooperation Between India and 14 Pacific Countries.

    Key Objectives-

    • Though these countries are relatively small in land area and distant from India, many have large exclusive economic zones (EEZs), and offer promising possibilities for fruitful cooperation.
    • India’s focus has largely been on the Indian Ocean where it has sought to play a major role and protect its strategic and commercial interests. The FIPIC initiative marks a serious effort to expand India’s engagement in the Pacific region.
    • At this moment, total annual trade of about $300 million between the Indian and Pacific Island countries, where as exports are around $200 million and imports are around $100 million.

    19.NPT

    Brief Intro

    The NPT is a landmark international treaty whose objective is to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons and weapons technology, to promote cooperation in the peaceful uses of nuclear energy and to further the goal of achieving nuclear disarmament and general and complete disarmament.

    Key Objectives-

    • The Treaty represents the only binding commitment in a multilateral treaty to the goal of disarmament by the nuclear-weapon States. Opened for signature in 1968, the Treaty entered into force in 1970.
    • To prevent the spread of nuclear weapons and weapons technology, to promote cooperation in the peaceful uses of nuclear energy, and to further the goal of achieving nuclear disarmament and general and complete disarmament.

    India Specific-

    India has not signed the treaty as India argues that the NPT creates a club of “nuclear haves” and a larger group of “nuclear have-nots” by restricting the legal possession of nuclear weapons to those states that tested them before 1967, but the treaty never explains on what ethical grounds such a distinction is valid.

    20.CTBT

    Brief Intro

    • The Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) is a multilateral treaty that bans all nuclear explosions, for both civilian and military purposes, in all environments.
    • It was adopted by the United Nations General Assembly on 10 September 1996 but has not entered into force as eight specific states have not ratified the treaty. Nuclear weapon free
    • The treaty thus awaits signature and ratification from India, Pakistan, and North Korea and in addition requires the United States, China, Israel, Iran and Egypt (which have already signed) to formally ratify it.

    India Specific-

    Even though it is yet to sign the CTBT, India has supported the treaty’s basic principle of banning nuclear explosions by declaring a unilateral moratorium on nuclear testing. India’s expressed support to the essential requirement of the treaty makes it a de facto member of the CTBT.

     

  • Interview transcript – Shubham Soni

    Board – Manoj Soni

    Background- Punjab, civil engineering, Anthropology
    Hobbies- Squash, Bhangra, Rubik’s cube

    Chairman

    – Are you comfortable in talking about census? What is census? Who does it? – – When started? How is the exercise done?
    – Have u read the latest census?
    – What are the key takeaways?
    – U r missing imp point about youth.
    – Demographic dividend?
    – Is situation of skilling up to mark?
    – Make in India, Digital India. What will they do if we don’t have skills?
    – 3 things that u have learnt from 2015 to 2018 during prep time?
    – Were these things not there in u before?

    M1

    – Women are only proxies. Ur experience of reservation in PRIs? What needs to be done?
    – Drug problem in Punjab. Reasons, 2 most important steps that I’ll take after becoming DM of your dist. Since u r from Punjab. Which all regions were partitioned?
    – Only Bengal and Punjab? No other region in NE?
    – Was Burma partitioned from British India?

    M2

    – Why so many graduates unemployable?
    – What needs to be done?
    – D/B civil in IITD, DTU and any other state university?

    M3

    – why different colours on squash ball?
    – Name world class squash players of subcontinent.
    – Govt spending so much on IITs thinking that they need engineers. Don’t u think u’ll waste resources of govt by coming in civil services?
    – How will u use ur knowledge of engg. in indian postal services?
    – U have learnt only analysis in IIT?
    – So u think that it is right to come to civil services from IIT?
    – Radcliffe line? Macmohan line? Is macmohan line accepted? On what principle was it drawn?
    – Where all face-offs bw India and China?
    – Should we stop trading with China?
    – Any country where people voluntarily not buying products of another country?
    – Not heard of Japan and US?
    – Why Japan could rebuild it’s infrastructure after WW2?
    – Why India is not doing even having huge resources? Compare with Japan? Use ur analytical bent of mind.
    – Why Japanese so skilled?

    M4

    – Are new IITs and IIMs diluting the brand name of old IITs and IIMs?
    – Why so less skilled personnel in India?
    – What needs to be done?
    – Should we impose some restrictions on freedom of speech and expression? 1-2 follow up questions
    – Should we ban social media?
    – But There is so much misuse of social media. Shouldn’t we ban social media?
    – What can be done to reduce the misuse of social media?

    Chairman

    – If you are very senior bureaucrat and govt made a policy which u think is not good. That policy is against ur convictions and u think that policy is also against public interest and national interest.
    – Will u implement that policy?
    -Your interview is over. Thankyou

  • [Video Analysis + Top 10 Ranks] 01 April 2019 | Prelims Daily with Rakesh Sir

    Dear students,

    Here’s a link to the Prelims Daily Quiz Analysis Video. Watch this after you have attempted that day’s Prelims Daily questions [on this link]

    https://youtu.be/yesQjuomcIg

    The full playlist is available here [click2watch]

    [WpProQuiz_toplist 12]


    We need your comments, likes, and shares on these videos. The aim of this series is to help you revise news via questions. PLEASE spread the videos.

    What’s wrong with the student’s study habits?

    Only 5% of our students who read news attempt PD. This beats the purpose of reading the news. Even those 5% who attempt PD are unable to get the most out of the initiative. They are either guessing or doing the tests just as a routing activity without engaging in it.

    What’s CD doing to maximize your efforts?

    Now, we have moved one step further with the launch of analysis videos of Prelims Daily (PD). These videos will reveal the critical nitty-gritty surrounding every PD question. It is an unfortunate reality that no single question can be framed to cover all the possible angles.

    The analysis videos will plug this hitherto inevitable gap, thereby making your preparation more methodical, holistic and foolproof. Nothing can be more valuable than experience, and that is precisely what the PD initiative and the analysis videos offer. These will be valuable for both newcomers and senior players in the field.

    PS: We want to be 100% certain that the time and energy spent on making these videos is helping you in your UPSC Prelims preparation. So, pls click on the videos, like, share and comment and let us know your thoughts

  • [Prelims Spotlight] Missiles

    Missiles

    Missiles in news recently

    1.QRSAM

    • This missile has been developed to replace the ‘Akash’ missile defence system and has 360-degree coverage, light weight, high mobility and shorter second reaction time as compared to ‘Akash’.
    • It also uses solid fuel propellant and has a stated range of strike range of 25-30 km with capability of hitting multiple targets.
    • It is capable of hitting the low flying objects.
    • It successfully demonstrated the robust Control, Aerodynamics, Propulsion, Structural performance and high manoeuvering capabilities thus proving the design configuration.

    2.MRSAM

    1. The new missile system is developed by India’s Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) in partnership with Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI).
    2. The MRSAM provides the armed forces with air defense capability against a variety of aerial threats at medium ranges.
    3. IAI will reportedly supply India with 2,000 missiles capable of intercepting enemy aircraft and missiles within a 70-kilometer range.
    4. The proposed MRSAM, to replace the old Pechora missiles.

    3.Agni –I

    1. Agni-I is a short-range ballistic missile developed by DRDO of India under the Integrated Guided Missile Development Program.
    2. It is sleek single-stage missile, powered by solid propellants developed after the Kargil War to fill the gap between 250 km range of Prithvi-II and 2,500 km range of Agni-II.
    3. Agni-I was developed by advanced systems laboratory, the premier missile development laboratory of the DRDO.
    4. Weighing 12 tonnes, the 15-metre-long Agni-I, which can carry payloads up to 1000 kg, has already been inducted into the Indian Army.

    4.Astra Missile

    1. Astra is an all weather beyond-visual-range air-to-air missile developed by the Defence Research and Development Organisation, India.
    2. It is the first air-to-air missile developed by India.
    3. Astra is designed to be capable of engaging targets at varying range and altitudes allowing for engagement of both short-range targets at a distance of 20 km (12 mi) and long-range targets up to a distance of 80 km (50 mi).
    4. Astra has been integrated with Indian Air Force’s Sukhoi Su-30MKI and will be integrated with Dassault Mirage 2000 and Mikoyan MiG-29 in the future.

    5.Prahar Missile

    1. Prahar (“Strike”) is an Indian solid-fuel road-mobile tactical ballistic missile developed by DRDO.
    2. Prahar is expected to replace the Prithvi-I short-range ballistic missile in Indian service.
    3. It is a quick-reaction, all-weather, all-terrain, highly accurate battlefield support tactical weapon system.
    4. The missile fills the short-range tactical battlefield missile role as required by the Indian Army to take out strategic and tactical targets.
    5. ‘Prahar’ is a contemporary weapon system capable of carrying multiple types of warheads and neutralizing a wide variety of targets.

    6.Advanced Area Defence (AAD)

    1. AAD is an anti-ballistic missile designed to intercept incoming ballistic missiles in the endo-atmosphere at an altitude of 30 km (19 mi)
    2. AAD is a single-stage, solid-fuelled missile.
    3. Guidance is provided by an inertial navigation system.

    7.BrahMos

    1. BrahMos is a joint collaboration between India and Russia and is capable of being launched from land, sea, sub-sea and air against the surface and sea-based targets
    2. It has a strike range of around 290 km and is described as the world’s fastest supersonic cruise missile.
    3. The range of the supersonic missile was initially capped at 290 km as per the obligations of the Missile Technology Control Regime

    8.Dhanush

    1. The indigenously upgraded artillery gun Dhanush has successfully completed final user trials and is ready for induction into the Army
    2. Dhanush is an upgraded version of the Swedish Bofors gun procured by India in the mid-1980s.

    Important Missiles

    1.Surface-to-surface Missiles

    1.Agni-I

    • Medium-range ballistic missile
    • Range – 700-1250 km
    • Speed- Mach 7.5

    2.Agni-II

    • Intermediate-range ballistic missile
    • Range –2,000–3,000 km
    • Speed- Mach 12

    3.Agni-III

    • Intermediate-range ballistic missile
    • Range –3,500 km – 5,000 km
    • Speed – 5–6 km/s

    4.Agni-IV

    • Intermediate-range ballistic missile
    • Range –3,000 – 4,000 km
    • Speed- Mach 7

    5.Agni-V

    • Intercontinental ballistic missile
    • Range – 5000 – 8000 Km
    • Speed- Mach 24

    6.Prithvi I

    • Short-Range Ballistic Missile
    • Range – 150 km

    7.Prithvi II

    • Short-Range Ballistic Missile
    • Range –350 km

    8.Dhanush

    • Short-Range Ballistic Missile
    • Range –350 – 600 km

    9.Shaurya

    • Medium-Range Ballistic Missile
    • Range –750 to 1,900 km

    10.Prahaar

    • Short-Range Ballistic Missile
    • Range –150 km

    2.Cruise Missiles

    1.BrahMos

    • Supersonic cruise missile
    • Range –290 km
    • Speed- Mach 2.8 to 3 Speed- Mach

    2.BrahMos II

    • Hypersonic cruise missile
    • Range –300km
    • Speed- Mach 7

    3.Nirbhay

    • Subsonic cruise missile
    • Range –1,000 -1500 km
    • Speed– Mach 0.8

    3.Anti-Tank Missile

    1.Amogha

    • Anti-Tank Guided Missile
    • Range – 2.8 km

     

    2.Nag

    • Anti-Tank Guided Missile
    • Range – 4km
    • 230 m/s

    3.Helina

    • Anti-Tank Guided Missile
    • Range – 7-8km

    4.Defence Missile

    1.Prithvi Air Defence

    • Exo-atmospheric Anti-ballistic missile
    • Altitude- 80km
    • Speed- Mach 5+

    2.Prithvi Defence Vehicle

    • Exo-atmospheric Anti-ballistic missile
    • Altitude- 30km
    • Speed- Mach 4.5

    3.Advanced Air Defence

    • Endoatmospheric Anti-ballistic missile
    • Altitude- 30km

    5.Surface-To-Air Missiles

    1.Trishul

    • Short-Range surface to air missile
    • Range – 9 km

     

    2.Akash Missile

    • Medium-range surface-to-air missile
    • Range – 30-35km
    • Speed- Mach 2.5 to 3.5

    3.Barak 8

    • Long-Range surface to air Missile
    • Range – 100 km
    • Speed- Mach 2

    6.Air-to-air missiles

    1.MICA

    • Air-to-Air Missiles

     

    2.Astra Missile

    • Air-to-Air Missiles
    • Range – 80-110 km
    • Speed- Mach 4.5 +

    3.Novator K-100

    • Medium Range air-to-air missile
    • Range – 300–400 km
    • Speed- Mach 3.3

     

     

  • Interview transcript – Amit Punde

    Board : Bassi Sir

    Date of interview 27th February
    Background: B-Tech Production
    Hobbies: reading, trekking, travelling

    Chairman

    – so u r a production engg. What is mechatronix?
    – Applications?
    – As a shopfloor manager, what are your priorities?
    – Who will benefit with the increased efficiency?

    M1

    – He talked some 2 points about efficiency and then questions abt trekking.
    – Where do you trek recently?
    – Some discussion on Youth Hostel trek at Manali.
    – If anything happened where you could not complete the trek? I gave example of Alang fort.

    M2

    – Iran president visit to India and the message India gave through this in the light of various sanctions imposed by US?
    – Why farmers suicide in Maharashtra?
    – Dose present budget provisions would impact positively?
    – Maharashtra Karnataka boundary issue?
    – What can be done?

    M3

    – Role of Pune in 1857 war.?
    – What about other maratha sardars?
    – Rani of zansi and her relation to Pune.?
    – Love hate relationship of Pune with Rajneesh (Osho) in 1970s?
    – China’s policy in South Asia.?
    – Is china aggressive towards India?
    – Why China aggressive towards India.?
    – What do you think whether China become superpower?
    – Plus points of China and USA to become superpower?
    – US relations with South America states?
    – Impact of lower sex ratio?
    – After Nirbhaya case, what change do u find in Indian Society?

    M4

    – Indo Japan relations.? What are Japan’s interests in India?
    – In the present scenario what is the probability that India will win a war against Pakistan ? (He wanted answer in a mathematical probability range from 0 to 1)
    – Where is Tista river?
    – What is the issue?
    – What are the immediate benefits and to whom?

    Thank you.

  • [Prelims Spotlight] Acts and Schemes related to Women

    Schemes & Acts (Women)

    1.NIRBHAYA FUND

    Salient Features

    • Nirbhaya Fund is an Indian rupee 10 billion corpus announced by Government of India in its 2013 Union Budget.
    • According to the then Finance Minister P. Chidambaram, this fund is expected to support initiatives by the government and NGOs working towards protecting the dignity and ensuring the safety of women in India.
    • Nodal Ministry-Ministry of Women & Child.

    2.ICDS

    Salient Features

    • To prevent and reduce young child under-nutrition (% underweight children 0- 3 years) by 10 percentage points.
    • Enhance early development and learning outcomes in all children 0-6 years of age.
    • Improve care and nutrition of girls and women andreduce anaemia prevalence in young children, girls and women by one fifth by the end of 12th five year plan.
    • It is a centrally sponsored scheme.
    • The engagement of the anganwadi worker and helper from the same village.
    • It is a universal and self-selecting scheme i.e. anyone can visit to the Aanganwadi centre and
    • enroll these services.
    • Package of six services i.e.
      1.  SNP – supplementary nutrition programme
      2.  Pre-school education
      3. Health and nutrition education,
      4. Immunization,
      5. Health check up and
      6. Referral services to the beneficiaries
    • AEC-cum-crèche, AWC-cum counselor.
    • Nodal Ministry – Ministry of Women & Child

    3.Mahila Police Volunteer

    Salient Features

    • It envisages creation of a link between the police authorities and the local communities in villages through police volunteers who will be women specially trained for this purpose.
    • Under this scheme it is expected to have at least one such volunteer in every village whose primary job will be to keep an eye on situations where women in the village are harassed or their rights and entitlements are denied or their development is prevented.
    • Nodal Ministry – Joint initiative b/w Min. of WCD and Home Min. Ministry of Women & Child and Home Ministry.

    4.UJJAWALA Yojana

    Salient Features

    • Comprehensive scheme for prevention of trafficking and rescue, rehabilitation and reintegration of victims of trafficking and commercial sexual exploitation.
    • Nodal Ministry – Ministry of Women & Child.

    5.One Stop centre scheme

    Salient Features

    • To provide integrated support and assistance to women affected by violence, both in private and public spaces under one roof.
    • To facilitate immediate, emergency and non-emergency access to a range of … support under one roof to fight against any forms of violence against women 1.These centres will provide immediate access to a range of services including medical, legal, psychological and counselling support to the victims.
    • The OSC will support all women including girls below 18 years of age affected by violence ,also for girls below 18 years of age, institutions and authorities established under Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, 2000 and the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act, 2012 will be linked with the OSC.
    • In addition to this, a single uniform number –181 will provide 24-hour emergency response to all women affected by violence, through referral (linking with appropriate authorities such as Police, OSC or hospital); funding thru’ Nirbhaya fund.
    • Nodal Ministry – Ministry of Women & Child

    6.Swadhar Grehs

    Salient Features

    • Homes for relief and rehabilitation of women in difficult circumstances including survivors of rape/assault etc.
    • Provision for food clothing, counselling. training, clinical and legal aid.
    • Nodal Ministry – Ministry of Women & Child.

    7.She-Box

    Salient Features

    • Online complaint Management System for women working in both public and private organizations to ensure effective implementation of the Sexual Harassment of Women at workplace Act.
    • Nodal Ministry – Ministry of Women & Child.

    8.Universalization of Women Helpline

    Salient Features-

    • A Women Helpline (state level toll free number such as 181) would be made universal for providing an immediate and 24 hour emergency response to women affected by violence including rescue (where necessary), information, first point contact counseling and referral (linking with appropriate authority such as police, One Stop Centre, hospital) services to any woman in distress across the country.
    • Nodal Ministry – Ministry of Women & Child

    9.Mission for Protection and Empowerment for Women

    Salient Features

    • To achieve holistic empowerment of women through convergence of schemes/programmes of different Ministries/Department of Government of India as well as State Governments.
    • It aimed at improving the declining Child Sex Ratio; ensuring survival. & protection
    • of the girl child; ensuring her education, and empowering her to fulfill her potential.s a social sector welfare schemes for care, protection and development of
    • Women.
    • It will provide an interface for rural women to approach the government for availing their entitlements and for empowering them through training and capacity building.
    • Nodal Ministry – Ministry of Women & Child

    10.Mahila Shakti Kendra

    Salient Features

    • Mahila Shakti Kendras will converge all Govt. Schemes for women at National, State, District and Block level
    • Skill Development, Employment, Digital Literacy, Health and Nutrition.
    • Through this scheme, government plans to reach 115 most backward districts in the country with 920 Mahila Shakti Kendra.
    • Nodal Ministry – Ministry of Women & Child

    11.Sabla

    Salient Features

    • Enable the adolescent girls for self development and empowerment
    • Improve their nutrition and health status.
    • Promote awareness about health, hygiene, nutrition, adolescent reproductive and sexual health (ARSH) and family and child care.
    • To educate, skill and make them ready for life’s challenges.
    • Nutrition provision
    • Iron and folic acid (IFA) supplementation
    • Health check-up and referral services
    • Nutrition & health education (NHE)
    • Counseling/guidance on family welfare, ARSH, child care practices and home management.
    • Upgrade home-based skills, life skills and integrate with the national skill development program (NSDP) for vocational skills.
    • Mainstream out of school adolescent girls into formal/non formal education.
    • Provide information/guidance about existing public services such as PHC, CHC, post office, bank, police station, etc.
    • Nodal Ministry – Ministry of Women & Child

    12.Mahila Kisan Sashaktikaran Pariyojana-

    Salient Features

    • Empower women in agriculture by making systematic investments to enhance their participation and productivity,
    • Create and sustain agriculture based livelihoods of rural women.-a sub component of the Deendayal Antodaya Yojana-NRLM (DAY-NRLM)
    • Under the Pariyojana, projects are conceived in such a manner that the skill base of the women in agriculture is enhanced to enable them to pursue their livelihoods on a sustainable basis.
    • Under MKSP sustainable agriculture, 58 projects from 14 States have been sanctioned which will benefit 24.5 lakhs Mahila Kisans during the period.
    • Nodal Ministry – Ministry of Rural Development.

    13.Beti Bachao Beti Padhao

    Salient Features

    • Prevent Female infanticide
    • Ensure Every Girl Child is Protected
    • Ensure every Girl Child is educated
    • Enforcement of PC & PNDT Act, nation-wide awareness and advocacy campaign and multi-sectoral action in select 100 districts (low on Child Sex Ratio) in the first phase.
    • Under this scheme there is a strong emphasis on mindset change through training, sensitization, awareness raising and community mobilization on ground.
    • Nodal Ministry – It is a tri-ministerial effort of Ministries of Women and Child Development, Health & Family Welfare and Human Resource Development.

    14. Sukanya samriddhi yojana

    Salient features

    • (Minor) bank account for girl child below the age of 10.
    • She can withdraw 50% of the money after reaching age of 18 e.g. for higher education. 18 years deadline will also help preventing child-marriages.
    • For initial account opening, minimum deposit Rs.250 required.
    • Later, any amount in multiple of 100 can be deposited, but maximum Rs. 1.5 lakh per year.
    • Interest rate: 9.1% compounded annually.
    • Nodal Ministry – Ministry of Women & Child

    15. Pocso-e Box

    Salient Features

    • POCSO e-box is a unique endeavour by NCPCR for receiving online complaint of Child Sexual Abuse directly from the victim.
    • Through a well defined procedure complaints are directly followed up by a team which counsels the victim, providing further guidance for required legal action. Through a short animation film embedded in the e-box it assures the victim not to feel bad, helpless or confused as it’s not her fault. With the e-box, it is easy to register complaint through a step-by-step guided process.
    • Nodal Ministry – The Ministry of Women & Child

    16.NARI

    Salient Features

    • Due to scattered information on various women centric schemes/legislations there is a lack of awareness among people regarding the same.
    • To address this problem government launched NARI portal as a single window access to information and services.
    • Nodal Ministry – Ministry of Electronics & Information Technology

    17. E-samvaad Portal

    Salient Features

    • It is a platform for NGOs and civil society to interact with the Ministry of Women and Child Development (MWCD) by providing their feedback, suggestions, put up grievances, share best practices etc.
    • This will help in formulation of effective policies and measures for welfare of women and children.
    • Nodal Ministry – Ministry of Women & Child

    18. Stree swabhiman

    Salient Features

    • It aims to create a sustainable model for providing adolescent girls and women an access to affordable sanitary products in rural areas.
    • Under this project, sanitary napkin micro manufacturing units (semi-automatic and manual process
    • production unit) are being set up at CSCs across India, particularly those operated by women entrepreneurs.
    • The product will be sold under local brand name and marketed by village level entrepreneurs.
    • Each facility will employ 8-10 women and educate women of their society to overcome this social taboo.
    • It also has a menstrual hygiene related awareness generation component and is also expected reduc dropped out rates in girls on reaching puberty.Ministry of
    • Nodal Ministry – Electronics and Information technology (MeITY).

    19.PROGRAM TO TRAIN ELECTED WOMEN REPRESENTATIVES OF PANCHAYATI RAJ INSTITUTIONS

    Salient Features

    • The program aimed at capacity building of EWRs is being organized by National Institute of Public Cooperation and Child Development (NIPCCD) of the MoWCD.
    • It is the first ever initiative which will train approximately twenty thousand EWRs covering nearly 50 EWRs from each district (by March, 2018) who will go out and administer the villages professionally.
    • It will help in creating model villages, ensure their effective participation in governance process and help preparing women as political leaders of the future.
    • Nodal Ministry – Ministry of women and Child.

    20.Support to Training and Employment

    Salient Features

    • Programme for Women (STEP)
    • To provide competencies and skill that enable women to become self-employed/entrepreneurs.
    • The scheme is intended to benefit women who are in the age group of 16 years and above across the country.
    • Nodal Ministry – Ministry of women and Child

    21.Rashtriya Mahila Kosh

    Salient Features

    • RMK is a national credit fund for women under the aegis of the Ministry of Women and Child Development.
    • It was established in 1993 for socio-economic empowerment of women.
    • It aims to provide financial services with backward and forward linkages for women in the unorganized sector through Intermediary Micro Finance Organizations (IMOs) and Women Self Help Groups (SHGs) and to augment their capacities through multi-pronged efforts.
    • RMK also extends micro-credit to the women in the informal sector through a client friendly, without collateral and in a hassle-free manner for income generation activities.
    • Nodal Ministry – Ministry of women and child

    22.The Personal Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2018

    Objectives

    • It seeks to amend five Acts. These are: (i) the Divorce Act, 1869, (ii) the Dissolution of Muslim Marriage Act, 1939, (iii) the Special Marriage Act, 1954, (iv) the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955, and (v) the Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956.

    Key Features

    • These Acts contain provisions related to marriage, divorce, and separation of Hindu and Muslim couples. Each of these Acts prescribe leprosy as a ground for seeking divorce or separation from the spouse.
    • The Bill seeks to remove this as a ground for divorce or separation.

    Nodal Ministry-Ministr of  Law and Justice

    23.The Criminal Law (Amendment) Bill, 2018

    Objectives

    • The Bill amends the IPC, 1860 to increase the minimum punishment for rape of women from seven years to ten years.

    Key Features

    • The Bill amends the IPC, 1860 to increase the punishment for rape of girls. However, punishment for rape of boys has remained unchanged. This has resulted in greater difference in the quantum of punishment for rape of minor boys and girls.
    • The Bill imposes death penalty for rape of girls below the age of 12 years. There are differing views on death penalty for rape. Some argue that death penalty has a deterrence effect on the crime and therefore helps prevent it. Others argue that death penalty would be disproportionate punishment for rape.

    Nodal Ministry-Ministry of Law and Justice

     

  • Interview transcript – Mangesh

    Board: Dr P.K. Joshi

    Background: IIT BHU (Varanasi), Computer Science.

    Chairman

    – How many marks did you get in Maths Class XII?
    – Which force has you been allocated?
    – Why SSB?
    – When we have BSF as a border guarding force, why need SSB?
    – Suppose you are posted as a DM in a village school and asked to address students of Class VIII-XII, what would you speak about for promoting Maths which students don’t like?

    Maths Question 1

    Maths Question 2, 2(a)

    M1

    – Munger is famous for? (Came as a shocker for me because I am from Saharsa, Bihar)
    – Do you do Yoga?
    – What is the status of women in Bihar? Do you think women has been empowered in your state?
    – What is accountable governance?
    – How to ensure government accountability?

    M2

    – What was the project you worked upon in Samsung? Two follow up questions
    – What is the state of R&D in India?
    – What is the need of high end R&D when our basic skill needs are unmet?

    M3

    – Should we go for making strong laws to provide security to women?
    – Are laws against Dowry enough? Why are they being misused? What are recent changes in Dowry law?
    – Situational Question: Your domestic help comes to you and complains to you about her drunkard husband who comes from work and beats her under the influence of alcohol. What would be your step of action?

    M4

    – What was the earlier name of BHU?
    – Who founded it?
    – Who gave the money?
    – Who founded AMU and when?
    – Don’t you think that the British sowed the seeds of division by helping the setup of a Hindu University and a Muslim university?
    – Why is Varanasi named so?
    – Why is IIT BHU not doing too good? (Asked in Hindi)
    – What is Kashi famous?
    – What is 3rd Industrial Revolution, 2nd IR and 1st IR.

     

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