Note4Students
From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :
Prelims level: Articles related to contempt of court
Mains level: Paper 2-Contempt of court
The concept of contempt of court has been in the news recently. This article analyses the issue and draws on the approach adopted by the British judiciary.
Issues with the concept of contempt
- The concept of contempt is a centuries-old British law abolished in 2013.
- At the time the British Law Commission said that one of the intentions for contempt of court was to hide judicial corruption.
- The concept, therefore, clashed with the need for transparency but also freedom of speech.
Let’s look into some comment’s from judges
- In1968, a British judge, had this to say of the Law of Contempt “We will not use it to suppress those who speak against us. We do not fear criticism, nor do we resent it. For there is something far more important at stake. It is no less than freedom of speech itself. “
- In a 2008 lecture by Justice Markandey Katju noted that “The test to determine whether an act amounts to contempt of court or not is this: Does it make the functioning of judges impossible or extremely difficult? If it does not, then it does not amount to contempt of court even if it’s harsh criticism”.
Way forward
- Whilst justice is important, judges must not take themselves too seriously.
- Even if their amour propre is offended, it does not mean the institution has been questioned or justice brought into disrepute.
- Judges deliver justice, they do not embody it.
- They should never forget their Court is supreme because it’s final not because it’s infallible.
- When they lapse they can be criticised, but of course, politely and fairly.
Conclusion
Indian Supreme Court hopefully pay attention to this aspect while delivering the judgement on the contempt cases.
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Note4Students
From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :
Prelims level: Not much
Mains level: Paper 3- Demand problem and ways to deal with it
The focus of this article is on the behavioural changes in the consumer post Covid. It also suggest the ways to deal with these changes.
Context
- The consumer during and post-COVID is showing remarkable flexibility, bringing about a paradigm shift in her consumption pattern.
Issue of generating demand
- Some state governments are busy demanding the opening up of the economy.
- However, the issue is that the economy does not merely need opening up, but it requires urgent generation of basic demand.
- That is why consumer behaviour needs to be closely watched.
- Since the lockdown, the priorities of consumers have seen a drastic shift.
Factors to consider to increase demand
- 1) The decrease in the purchasing power to buy products needs to be addressed.
- The government must look at ways like a reduction in taxes which will help the common man.
- 2) The current scenario has also made all of us go back to the basic needs.
- Luxury products hold little value. But renting will increase.
- 3) The emphasis will be on saving for a rainy day, whether in the case of banks or households
- 4) Aviation, tourism and hospitality sectors have been hit and continue to remain so even after the restrictions are lifted.
- 5) e-commerce has shown exponential growth and will continue to do so.
- 6) With “Vocal for Local” gaining momentum, there’s a huge increase in local apps, local kirana stores, local artisans and brands.
- 7) Schools and colleges have taken a hit as e-learning and online courses are being preferred.
- 8) The entertainment industry has been drastically hit. The media and entertainment industry needs to pay heed to this and curate content accordingly.
- 9) With a lot of people laying emphasis on their health and immunity, there’s been a substantial rise in the consumption of organic, ayurvedic, and immunity-boosting products.
- Apart from the obvious products, financial and medical insurance will play an important role.
- 10) Real estate will suffer as no long-term, high investment purchases will be favoured, but renting will increase.
Role of the government
- 1) People need to be provided with their daily needs — basic essentials such as food, water, housing, and electricity.
- The government is already taking care of that, but money also needs to be given.
- 2) Jobs need to be provided through development of infrastructure projects.
- 3) Farmers need to have insurance for their crops and the infrastructure to sell at the right price.
- 4) Migrant workers with their livelihoods being disrupted are looking for support,and many are focusing on agriculture as a means of income.
Way forward
- The government should focus on generating demand for products, and create jobs by improving infrastructure.
- The government must incentivise spending by offering tax benefits on the amount spent.
- Government must forget about fiscal prudence this year.
- Consumers in rural areas are buying more than before.Companies should focus on tapping the rural demand
Consider the question “Demand has been the driver of India’s growth. But the pandemic has dampened it with devastating effect. Agaist this backdrop suggest the measures to be taken by the government to revive the demand.”
Conclusion
With focus on these emerging trends and changing behaviour of the consumers, the government must take steps to bring the economy fast on the tracks.
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Note4Students
From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :
Prelims level: Immunity certificates/ passports
Mains level: Ethical/Health concerns involved in issuing immunity passports
There is a growing debate for a rethink on “immunity passport” to be handed out to those who have recovered from COVID-19 for the purpose of travel or work without restrictions of quarantine.
Try this question form mains:
Q.Discuss various ethical issues evolved during the outbreaks of pandemics (of the scale of COVID-19).
Immunity Passports
- They are the recovery or release certificate or a document attesting that its bearer is immune to a contagious disease.
- The concept has drawn much attention during the COVID-19 pandemic as a potential way to contain the pandemic and permit faster economic recovery.
- The can be used as a legal document granted by a testing authority following a serology test demonstrating that the bearer has antibodies making them immune to a disease.
What is the ongoing debate?
- Experts argue that if reinfections were a significant problem, by now, there would have been hundreds or at least thousands of cases of reinfections at the global level.
- Till such time effective vaccines become available people who have recovered from COVID-19 should be permitted to travel without restrictions.
A case for consideration
- Immune protection after infection/disease is always much more robust than most vaccines, and definitely than most COVID-19 vaccines in development.
- Some of the vaccines undergoing clinical trials are mostly directed at a single or a couple of proteins (spike) of the virus.
- But vaccines under trial that use the inactivated coronaviruses would expose the immune system to a whole range of viral proteins, much like natural infection and can produce immune responses.
- However, it is not known if people who have experienced asymptomatic infection would show robust immune responses like those who have recovered from moderate or severe disease.
Ethical issues involved
- Issuing ‘immunity certificates’ to people who have recovered can be an ethical minefield.
- Doctors do not generally prefer immunity to be induced by natural infection compared with vaccines. It seems logical, but there are multiple challenges.
- There might be long-term health complications in those who had COVID-19, whereas the vaccine will have minimal or no adverse health consequences.
- There is a danger that similar arguments will be made for other vaccine-preventable diseases for which we have a universal immunisation programme.
There is also a public health risk of issuing immunity certificates:
- People whose livelihood has have been affected would be encouraged to adopt risky behaviour so as to get infected rather than taking precautions to stay protected from the virus.
- This would lead to a sharp increase in cases across the country with huge numbers requiring hospitalization.
- Such a situation would lead to testing capabilities getting overwhelmed, crumbling of the health-care systems and increased deaths.
Threats over malpractices:
- Immunity certification will include a system for identification and monitoring, thus compromising privacy.
- Other contentious issues would be profiteering by private labs performing tests, and the menace of fake certificates which we have already seen in some Indian states.
- In the end, an immunity passport will further divide the society with different ‘haves’ and ‘have-nots’.
Way forward
- We need to look at COVID-19 with a sense of balance and not hysteria.
- Terms such as immunity passports may not have relevance as we do not know anything about specific kinds of immune responses and the duration of protection in people.
- There is currently not enough evidence about the effectiveness of antibody-mediated immunity to guarantee the accuracy of an ‘immunity passport’ or ‘risk-free certificate’.
- The permission to travel or work should be decided on a case by case basis, according to the principles of ethics while dealing with a pandemic.
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Note4Students
From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :
Prelims level: Quit India Movement
Mains level: India's freedom struggle
On August 8, 78 years ago, Mahatma Gandhi gave the call for British colonizers to “Quit India” and for the Indians to “do or die” to make this happen.
Try this PYQ:
Q.With reference to the Indian freedom struggle, consider the following events:
- Mutiny in Royal Indian Navy
- Quit India Movement launched
- Second Round Table Conference
What is the correct chronological sequence of the above events?(CSP 2017)
(a) 1-2-3
(b) 2-1-3
(c) 3-2-1
(d) 3-1-2
What led to the events of August 1942?
- While factors leading to such a movement had been building up, matters came to a head with the failure of the Cripps Mission.
- World War II was raging, and a beleaguered British needed the cooperation of their colonial subjects in India.
- To this end, in March 1942, a mission led by Sir Stafford Cripps arrived in India to meet leaders of the Congress and the Muslim League.
- The idea was to secure India’s whole-hearted support in the war, in return for self-governance.
- However, despite the promise of “the earliest possible realization of self-government in India”, the offer Cripps made was of dominion status, and not freedom.
A final blow
- The failures of the Cripps Mission made Mahatma Gandhi realize that freedom would be had only by fighting tooth and nail for it.
- Though initially reluctant to launch a movement that could hamper Britain’s efforts to defeat Fascist forces in the World War, Congress eventually decided to launch a mass civil disobedience.
- At the Working Committee meeting in Wardha in July 1942, it was decided the time had come for the movement to move into an active phase.
The Gowalia Tank address and Gandhiji’s arrest
- On August 8, Gandhiji addressed the people from Mumbai’s Gowalia Tank maidan with the ‘Do or Die’ mantra.
- By August 9, Gandhi and all other senior Congress leaders had been jailed.
- He was kept at the Aga Khan Palace in Pune, and later in the Yerawada jail.
- It was during this time that Kasturba Gandhi died at the Aga Khan Palace.
The slogan ‘Quit India’
- While Gandhi gave the clarion call of Quit India, the slogan was coined by Yusuf Meherally, a socialist and trade unionist who also served as Mayor of Mumbai.
- A few years ago, in 1928, it was Meherally who had coined the slogan “Simon Go Back”.
Outcome: A people’s movement
- The arrest of the leaders, however, failed to deter the masses. With no one to give directions, people took the movement into their own hands.
- In Bombay, Poona and Ahmedabad, lakhs of people clashed with the police on August 9. On August 10, protests erupted in Delhi, UP and Bihar.
- There were strikes, demonstrations and people’s marches in defiance of prohibitory orders in Kanpur, Patna, Varanasi, and Allahabad.
- The protests spread rapidly into smaller towns and villages.
- Till mid-September, police stations, courts, post offices and other symbols of government authority were attacked.
- Railway tracks were blocked, students went on strike in schools and colleges across India, and distributed illegal nationalist literature.
- Mill and factory workers in Bombay, Ahmedabad, Poona, Ahmednagar, and Jamshedpur stayed away for weeks.
- In some places, the protests were violent, with bridges blown up, telegraph wires cut, and railway lines taken apart.
Outcome
- The Quit India movement was violently suppressed by the British – people were shot, lathi-charged, villages burnt and enormous fines imposed.
- In the five months up to December 1942, an estimated 60,000 people had been thrown in jail.
Significance
- Soon after, Gandhi and almost the entire top Congress leadership was arrested and thus began a truly people-led movement in our freedom struggle.
- Eventually dispersed violently by the British, it left behind a clear message that the British would have to leave India, and no other solution would be acceptable to its masses.
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Note4Students
From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :
Prelims level: Confucius Institutes
Mains level: India-China diplomatic spat since border skirmishes
- The Ministry of Education (previously HRD) had sent a letter to several institutions seeking information about the activities of their Confucius Institutes (CIs) and Chinese language training centres.
- This has brought the spotlight to China’s CI programme, a key pillar of Beijing’s global soft power effort, and raised questions about the future of India-China cooperation in the education space.
Try this question for mains:
Q.“It cannot be business as usual with China after the border clash.” Critically comment.
What are the Confucius Institutes (CI)?
- Starting with a CI in Seoul in 2004, China’s National Office for Teaching Chinese as a Foreign Language (NOCFL) known as Hanban establishes CI.
- China has established 550 CIs and 1,172 Confucius Classrooms (CCs) housed in foreign institutions, in 162 countries.
- As the Hanban explains on its website, following the experience of the British Council, Alliance Française and Germany’s Goethe-Institut, China began “establishing non-profit public institutions which aim to promote Chinese language and culture in foreign countries”.
What is the presence of CIs in India?
- India is reviewing the presence of CIs in seven universities, in addition to 54 MoUs on inter-school cooperation involving China, which is not connected to the CI programme.
How have CIs been viewed around the world?
- The CI arrangement has generated debate in the West, where some universities have closed the institutes amid concern over the influence of the Chinese government and it’s funding on host institutions.
- Closures of some CIs have been reported in the United States, Denmark, the Netherlands, Belgium, France and Sweden.
- While the closures in the West have made news, these cases still represent a minority. Faced with this backlash, China is now rebranding the programme.
- Most of the 550 CIs and more than 1,000 CCs around the world are still active, with a presence spanning Africa, Central Asia, Latin America, and across Asia.
What does it mean for India-China relations?
- CIs and CCs had already been in India for more than 10 years.
- Even prior to the border skirmishes, Indian authorities had viewed the CI arrangement somewhat warily.
- Along with the new move to review CIs, Mandarin has been dropped from the list of foreign languages that can be taught in schools in the new National Education Policy.
Not a perfect move
- Recent moves by India shows that it cannot be business as usual with China after the border clash.
- However, India’s long-term objectives are not clear.
- De-emphasizing learning Mandarin is neither likely to impact China’s stance on the border nor help India in developing the expertise and resources it needs in dealing with China.
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Note4Students
From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :
Prelims level: BSISO
Mains level: Indian monsoon and its prediction
Researchers at the Indian National Centre for Ocean Information Services (INCOIS), Hyderabad have reportedly found a way to better forecast the Boreal Summer Intra-Seasonal Oscillation (BSISO).
Try this PYQ:
Q.With reference to ‘Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD)’ sometimes mentioned in the news while forecasting Indian monsoon, which of the following statements is/are correct? (CSP 2017)
- IOD phenomenon is characterized by a difference in sea surface temperature between tropical Western Indian Ocean and tropical Eastern Pacific Ocean.
- An IOD phenomenon can influence an El Nino’s impact on the monsoon.
Select the correct answer using the code given below:
(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both 1 and 2
(d) Neither 1 nor 2
What is BSISO?
- The BSISO of the Asian summer monsoon (ASM) is one of the most prominent sources of short-term climate variability in the global monsoon system.
- It is the movement of convection (heat) from the Indian Ocean to the western Pacific Ocean roughly every 10-50 days during the monsoon (June-September).
- Compared with the related Madden-Julian Oscillation (MJO) it is more complex in nature, with prominent northward propagation and variability extending much further from the equator.
- It represents the monsoon’s ‘active’ and ‘break’ periods, in which weeks of heavy rainfall give way to brilliant sunshine before starting all over again.
- The active phase also enhances monsoon winds and hence the surface waves.
Why predict BSISO behaviour?
- Some phases of boreal summer intraseasonal oscillation or BSISO induce high wave activity in the north Indian Ocean and the Arabian Sea, the researchers claimed.
- Wave forecast advisories based on the BSISO would be more useful for efficient coastal and marine management.
- This finding has a great significance in developing seasonal and climate forecast service for waves and coastal erosion for India.
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Note4Students
From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :
Prelims level: NA
Mains level: India-Pakistan border disputes
Recently Pakistani PM announced a new political map of Pakistan.
Do you think that the recent launch of new political maps depicting Indian territories by Pakistan would make any difference on the international community’s stance on Kashmir?
A chain reaction
- With this, Pakistan became the third country to launch a new political map after India and Nepal did the same.
- India had reiterated its territorial claims in J&K, and Ladakh with the new map; this triggered a reaction from Nepal which contested Indian claims in the Kalapani region of Pithoragarh district.
What are the features of the new map?
- The new political map of Pakistan has claimed the entire region of Jammu and Kashmir stretching all the way to the edge of Ladakh.
- The map also claims Junagarh and Manavadar, a former princely State and territory, respectively that are part of present-day Gujarat.
- Pakistan also claimed the entire territory and water bodies that fall in the Sir Creek region in the westernmost part of India.
Defiance of old agreements
- The territorial claims of Pakistan are, however, of a far greater extent and challenge many of the past understandings and treaties.
- This clearly runs counter to the Simla Agreement which treated Kashmir as a bilateral matter.
- It leaves out a claim line at the eastern end of J&K indicating Pakistan’s willingness to make China a third party in the Kashmir issue.
How different is it from previous ones?
- A similar map has been part of school textbooks of Pakistan for many years which highlights the territorial aspiration of Pakistan over the northern part of the subcontinent.
- The document also maintains bits of reality on the ground as it shows the Line of Control in Kashmir in a red-dotted line.
- The map may be used to provide legal cover for some of Islamabad’s territorial ambitions, especially in Kashmir and Sir Creek.
A Cartographical warfare
- The map is likely to lead to changes in Pakistan’s position on territorial disputes with India.
- By demanding the entire J&K region, Pak is changing the main features of its Kashmir discourse as it includes the Jammu region prominently.
- The inclusion of Junagarh and Manavadar opens fundamental issues of territorial sovereignty of India.
- Manavadar, a princely territory, joined India on February 15, 1948, and Indian troops marched into Junagarh in September that year incorporating it into Indian Territory.
- By normalizing Islamabad’s claims over these former princely territories, Pakistan is most likely to assert its rights over the former princely State of Hyderabad as well.
What does Pakistan plan to gain by this exercise?
- Sir Creek is a collection of water bodies that extend from the Arabian Sea deep inside the territory of Kutch and is rich in biodiversity and mangrove forests.
- India’s position on Sir Creek is based on the Kutch arbitration case of 1966-69.
- The new map can be used to reassert Pakistan’s claims regarding the Rann which it had lost in the arbitration conducted in Geneva.
- India’s position regarding Sir Creek is based on the fact that the arbitration had granted the entire Rann and its marshy areas to India while leaving the solid land across the Rann to Pakistan.
- By demanding the demarcation to shift towards the eastern bank, Pakistan appears to be going back also on the spirit of the Rann of Kutch arbitration where the overwhelming evidence of maps supported India’s claims.
Are there any claims on its western borders?
- The map is silent about territorial claims in the west and northwest of Pakistan.
- It indicates Islamabad’s acceptance of the Durand Line as the border with Afghanistan.
- The reality on the ground, however, shows problems that continue to haunt Pakistan on that front as well where law and order have been difficult to maintain because of free movement of armed fighters.
- A deadly clash between Afghan civilians and Pakistani troops near its Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province is a usual discourse.
- The resultant situation has placed Afghan and Pakistani troops in a confrontational position.
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Note4Students
From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :
Prelims level: AIF
Mains level: Economic stimulus for Agri sector
PM has launched a new financing scheme under the ₹1 lakh crore AIF.
Note the following things about AIF:
1) It is a Central Sector Scheme
2) Duration of the scheme
3)Target beneficiaries
Agriculture Infrastructure Fund (AIF)
- It is a Central Sector Scheme meant for setting up storage and processing facilities, which will help farmers, get higher prices for their crops.
- It will support farmers, PACS, FPOs, Agri-entrepreneurs, etc. in building community farming assets and post-harvest agriculture infrastructure.
- These assets will enable farmers to get greater value for their produce as they will be able to store and sell at higher prices, reduce wastage and increase processing and value addition.
What exactly is the AIF?
- The AIF is a medium – long term debt financing facility for investment in viable projects for post-harvest management infrastructure and community farming assets through interest subvention and credit guarantee.
- The duration of the scheme shall be from FY2020 to FY2029 (10 years).
- Under the scheme, Rs. 1 Lakh Crore will be provided by banks and financial institutions as loans with interest subvention of 3% per annum.
- It will provide credit guarantee coverage under Credit Guarantee Fund Trust for Micro and Small Enterprises (CGTMSE) for loans up to Rs. 2 Crore.
Target beneficiaries
The beneficiaries will include farmers:
- PACS, Marketing Cooperative Societies, FPOs, SHGs, Joint Liability Groups (JLG), Multipurpose Cooperative Societies, Agri-entrepreneurs, Startups, and Central/State agency or Local Body sponsored Public-Private Partnership Projects
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Note4Students
From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :
Prelims level: E-Sanjeevani
Mains level: Telemedicine and its effectiveness
1.5 lakh teleconsultations were recently completed on the “eSanjeevani” and “eSanjeevani OPD” tele-medicine.
Why Telemedicine?
Telemedicine can increase the efficiency of care delivery, reduce expenses of caring for patients or transporting to another location, and can even keep patients out of the hospital.
E-Sanjeevani Platform
- E-Sanjeevani is a platform-independent, browser-based application facilitating both doctor-to-doctor and patient-to-doctor tele-consultations.
- It provides the ease of accessing the health records at the comforts of one’s home.
- The application is based on invite-system which restricts it to the actual beneficiaries of the application.
- It has a user-friendly interface which facilitates both tech-savvy and novice doctors/users in the rural and urban environment to access the application.
- This eSanjeevani platform has enabled two types of telemedicine services viz. Doctor-to-Doctor (eSanjeevani) and Patient-to-Doctor (eSanjeevani OPD) Tele-consultations.
- The former is being implemented under the Ayushman Bharat Health and Wellness Centre (AB-HWCs) programme.
Services included:
The telemedicine platform hosts speciality OPDs which include:
- Gynaecology, Psychiatry, Dermatology, ENT, Ophthalmology, antiretroviral therapy (ART) for the AIDS/HIV patients, Non-Communicable Disease (NCD) etc
With inputs from:
https://www.cdac.in/index.aspx?id=hi_pr_eSanjeevani
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