October 2024
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Coronavirus – Disease, Medical Sciences Involved & Preventive Measures

ICMR drops Plasma Therapy for COVID-19

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Convalescent Plasma Therapy

Mains level: Not Much

The use of convalescent plasma has been dropped from the recommended treatment guidelines for COVID-19, according to an advisory from the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR).

Q.What is convalescent plasma therapy and what are the issues involved in its adoption?

Convalescent Plasma Therapy

  • The therapy seeks to make use of the antibodies developed in the recovered patient against the coronavirus.
  • The whole blood or plasma from such people is taken, and the plasma is then injected into critically ill patients so that the antibodies are transferred and boost their fight against the virus.
  • A COVID-19 patient usually develops primary immunity against the virus in 10-14 days.
  • Therefore, if the plasma is injected at an early stage, it can possibly help fight the virus and prevent severe illness.

How often has it been used in the past?

  • This therapy is no new wonder. It has been used several times.
  • The US used plasma of recovered patients to treat patients of Spanish flu (1918-1920).
  • In 2014, the WHO released guidelines to treat Ebola patients with convalescent whole blood and plasma.
  • In 2015, plasma was used for treating MERS patients.

How is it done?

  • The process to infuse plasma in a patient can be completed quickly.
  • It only requires standard blood collection practices and extraction of plasma.
  • If whole blood is donated (350-450 ml), a blood fractionation process is used to separate the plasma.
  • Otherwise, a special machine called aphaeresis machine can be used to extract the plasma directly from the donor.
  • While blood is indeed extracted from the donor, the aphaeresis machine separates and extracts the plasma using a plasma kit, and the remaining blood components are returned into the donor’s body.

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Climate Change Impact on India and World – International Reports, Key Observations, etc.

Places in news: Leang Sakapao Caves

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Leang Sakapao Caves

Mains level: Not Much

Researchers have reported that Pleistocene-era rock paintings dating back to 45,000-20,000 years ago in cave sites in southern Sulawesi, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi, are weathering at an alarming rate.

Have you ever found the mention of ‘Altamira Caves’ in your NCERTs?

Leang Sakapao Caves

  • This cave art of Sulawesi is much older than the prehistoric cave art of Europe.
  • The artwork in the area includes what is believed to be the world’s oldest hand stencil (almost 40,000 years ago), created by pressing the hand on a cave wall and spraying wet red-mulberry pigments over it.
  • A nearby cave features the world’s oldest depiction of an animal, a warty pig painted on the wall 45,500 years ago.

Impact of climate change

  • The artwork made with pigments was decaying due to a process known as haloclasty, which is triggered by the growth of salt crystals due to repeated changes in temperature and humidity.
  • This is caused by alternating wet and dry weather in the region.
  • Indonesia has also experienced several natural disasters in recent years, which have quickened the process of deterioration.

Note:

Mark all islands of the Indonesian Archipelago in your Atlas.

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Foreign Policy Watch: India-Iran

Farzad B Gas Field

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Farzad B Gas Field

Mains level: Not Much

Iran gave the Farzad B gas field to a domestic gas producer in a setback move to India.

Farzad B Gas Field

  • Farzad-B is an off-shore natural gas field 20 kilometres off Farsi Island in Iran.
  • The gas field was discovered in 2008 by a consortium of three Indian companies, led by the state-owned ONGC Videsh with a 40% stake; the other companies were Indian Oil Corporation (40%) and Oil India (20%).

Deal soured after US sanctions

  • Negotiations between the consortium and the National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) to develop the gas field stalled due to secondary sanctions against Iran by the US and the European Union in the early 2010s.
  • Following the lifting of sanctions after the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action was signed in July 2015 the consortium was close to an agreement to invest $US5 billion to develop the gas field.
  • After the United States withdrawal from the JCPOA in May 2018, and the reinstatement of U.S. sanctions against Iran, the negotiations between the consortium and NIOC broke down.

Consider the question “Balancing the contrasts has been the basis of India’s relations with Iran. Comment.”

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Civil Services Reforms

Article 311 of the Indian Constitution

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Article 311 of the Indian Constitution

Mains level: Read the attached story

A suspended Maharashtra police officer was dismissed from service by Mumbai Police Commissioner under Article 311 (2) (b) of the Indian Constitution without a departmental enquiry.

What is Article 311?

  • Article 311 says that no government employee either of an all India service or a state government shall be dismissed or removed by an authority subordinate to the owner that appointed him/her.
  • Section 2 of the article says that no civil servant shall be dismissed or removed or reduced in rank except after an inquiry in which s/he has been informed of the charges and given a reasonable opportunity of being heard in respect of those charges.

Various safeguards under Art. 311

  • Article 311 is meant to act as a safeguard for civil servants that give them a chance to respond to the charges in an enquiry so that he/she is not arbitrarily dismissed from service.
  • The article also provides exceptions to these safeguards under subclause 2 provision b.
  • It states “when an authority empowered to dismiss or remove a person or to reduce him in rank is satisfied that for some reason, to be recorded by that authority in writing, it is not reasonably practicable to hold such enquiry”.

What is the process of a departmental enquiry?

  • In a departmental enquiry, after an enquiry officer is appointed, the civil servant is given a formal chargesheet of the charges.
  • The civil servant can represent himself/herself or choose to have a lawyer.
  • Witnesses can be called during the departmental enquiry following which the enquiry officer can prepare a report and submit it to the government for further action.

Are there other exceptions where a person can be dismissed without departmental enquiry?

  • As per Article 311 subclause 2 provision a, if a government employee is convicted in a criminal case, he can be dismissed without DE.
  • Apart from this, under 311 (2) (c), a government employee can be dismissed when the President or the Governor, as the case may be, is satisfied in the interest of the security of the state.

Can the dismissal under section 311 (2) be challenged by the government employee?

  • Yes, the government employee dismissed under these provisions can approach either tribunal like the state administrative tribunal or the Central Administrative Tribunal (CAT) or the Courts.

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Global Geological And Climatic Events

Cyclone Tauktae

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Tropical cyclones

Mains level: Frequent landfalls of tropical cyclones in India

Cyclone Tauktae (pronounced Tau-Te), classified as a very severe cyclonic storm (VSCS) and developed in the Arabian Sea, is wreaking havoc all across the Indian Coast.

Don’t you think?

 In recent years, strong cyclones have been developing in the Arabian Sea more frequently than earlier.

Cyclone Tauktae

  • Tauktae is a currently active and strengthening tropical cyclone threatening the state of Gujarat in India and impacting the states Karnataka, Goa and Maharashtra.
  • It is the fourth cyclone in consecutive years to have developed in the Arabian Sea, that too in the pre-monsoon period (April to June).
  • All these cyclones since 2018 have been categorised as either ‘Severe Cyclone’ or above.
  • Once Tauktae makes its landfall, three of these will have hit either the Gujarat or Maharashtra coast.
  • After Cyclone Mekanu in 2018, which struck Oman, Cyclone Vayu in 2019 struck Gujarat, followed by Cyclone Nisarga in 2020 that struck Maharashtra.

What is aiding such rapid intensification?

  • Any tropical cyclone requires energy to stay alive.
  • This energy is typically obtained from the warm water and humid air over the tropical ocean.
  • Currently, seawater up to depths of 50 metres has been very warm, supplying ample energy to enable the intensification of Cyclone Tauktae.
  • The more the heat released through condensation of water vapour, the steeper the drop in pressure.
  • A low-pressure system undergoes multiple stages of intensification to form cyclones.

Not a rare phenomenon

  • Typically, tropical cyclones in the North Indian Ocean region (the Bay of Bengal and the Arabian Sea) develop during the pre-monsoon and post-monsoon (October to December) periods.
  • May-June and October-November are known to produce cyclones of severe intensity that affect the Indian coasts.

Is the Arabian Sea becoming cyclone-friendly?

  • Annually, five cyclones on average form in the Bay of Bengal and the Arabian Sea combined.
  • Of these, four developments in the Bay of Bengal, which is warmer than the Arabian Sea.
  • In the Arabian Sea, cyclones typically develop over the Lakshadweep area and largely traverse westwards, or away from India’s west coast.
  • However, in recent years, meteorologists have observed that the Arabian Sea, too, has been warming. This is a phenomenon associated with global warming.

Back2Basics: Tropical Cyclone

  • A tropical cyclone is a rapidly rotating storm system characterized by a low-pressure centre, a closed low-level atmospheric circulation, strong winds, and a spiral arrangement of thunderstorms that produce heavy rains.
  • Depending on its location and strength, a tropical cyclone is referred to by different names, including hurricane, typhoon, tropical storm, cyclonic storm, tropical depression, or simply cyclone.
  • A hurricane is a tropical cyclone that occurs in the Atlantic Ocean and the northeastern Pacific Ocean, and a typhoon occurs in the northwestern Pacific Ocean.
  • In the south Pacific or the Indian Ocean, comparable storms are referred to simply as “tropical cyclones” or “severe cyclonic storms”.

Also read:

[Burning Issue] Tropical Cyclones and India

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International Space Agencies – Missions and Discoveries

Tianwen-1 lands successfully on Mars

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Tianwen 1 and various Mars missions

Mains level: Mars mission worldwide and their success

China landed a spacecraft on Mars carrying its first Mars rover in a big boost to its space ambitions.

UPSC may ask an MCQ asking: Which of the following is/are the space missions related to Mars? It may throw up 4-5 options (which we all get confused at after few months) like Cassini , InSight , Messanger, Voyager etc.

Tianwen-1 Mission

  • The mission is named after the ancient Chinese poem ‘Questions to Heaven’, the Tianwen-1.
  • It is an all-in-one orbiter; lander and rover will search the Martian surface for water, ice, investigate soil characteristics, and study the atmosphere, among completing other objectives.
  • It will be the first to place ground-penetrating radar on the Martian surface, which will be able to study local geology, as well as rock, ice, and dirt distribution.
  • The lander descended successfully onto the surface of the red planet carrying a rover named Zhurong, named after a god of fire for a planet known in Chinese as the planet of fire.
  • Only the Soviet Union and the United States had previously carried out a successful landing on Mars.

Back2Basics: Various missions on Mars

  • The USSR in 1971 became the first country to carry out a Mars landing– its ‘Mars 3’ lander being able to transmit data for 20 seconds from the Martian surface before failing.
  • The country made it’s second and Mars landing two years later in 1973.
  • The second country to reach Mars’s surface, the US, holds the record for the most number of Mars landings.
  • Since 1976, it has achieved 8 successful Mars landings, the latest being the ‘InSight’ in 2019 (launched in 2018).
  • India and the European Space Agency have been able to place their spacecraft in Mars’s orbit.
  • India’s Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM) or ‘Mangalyaan’ was able to do so in September 2014, almost a year after its launch from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Andhra Pradesh.
  • The Chinese mission now is expected to take off around the same time when NASA is launching its own Mars mission– the ambitious ‘Perseverance’ which aims to collect Martian samples and bring them back.

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Coronavirus – Disease, Medical Sciences Involved & Preventive Measures

Mucormycosis infection in COVID-19 patients

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Mucormycosis

Mains level: Post covid hazards

Hospitals across the country have started to report a number of cases of Mucormycosis, an invasive fungal infection affecting patients who have recently recovered from COVID-19.

What is Mucormycosis?

  • Mucormycosis is an aggressive and invasive fungal infection caused by a group of moulds called micromycetes.
  • It can affect various organs but is currently manifesting as invasive rhino-orbito-cerebral disease, crawling through the sinus and working its way to the brain, affecting the ear, nose, throat, and mouth.
  • While it is not contagious, it can cause a lot of damage internally and can be fatal if not detected early.
  • It is an old disease; perhaps new and concerning is the sudden increase in the invasive form of the sinus variant, which involves the orbit, and at times the brain, leading to blindness, stroke or death.

What causes the disease?

  • Diabetes mellitus is the most common underlying cause, followed by haematological malignancies and solid-organ transplants.
  • Diabetes mellitus was reported in 54% to 76% of cases, according to a report.
  • What seems to be triggering Mucormycosis in patients post COVID-19 is indiscriminate use of a high dose of steroids in COVID-19 patients, sometimes even in minimally symptomatic patients.
  • This leads to spikes in the sugar level among diabetics, which, in turn, renders them vulnerable.

Symptoms

  • The symptoms to watch out for are a stuffy nose, bloody, blackish, or brown discharge from the nose etc.
  • Other symptoms include blackish discolouration of the skin, swelling or numbness around the cheek, one-sided facial pain, toothache or jaw pain, drooping of the eyelids or eyelid swelling, double vision, redness of eyes, and sudden decrease in vision.

Treatment

  • The mainline of treatment is an anti-fungal drug called amphotericin B, which is given over an extended period of time under the strict observation of a physician.
  • Rational use of steroids is necessary, and constant monitoring of sugar levels and resorting to insulin use to control these levels if required is essential.
  • Surgery to remove the fungus growth might also be warranted.

Preventive measures

  • It is important to keep blood sugar levels under control and ensure that appropriate calibration of oral drugs or insulin is done from time to time.
  • Further, recognising the symptoms and seeking treatment early if there are two or three symptoms at a time is key.
  • Like most illnesses, if detected early, Mucormycosis can be cured.

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Coronavirus – Disease, Medical Sciences Involved & Preventive Measures

2-DG: DRDO’s new oral drug for Covid-19

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: 2DG

Mains level: COVID-19 Treatment

Defence Minister has released the first batch of the indigenously developed anti-Covid-19 drug, 2-deoxy-D-glucose or ‘2-DG’.

What is the news?

  • The Drugs Controller General of India (DCGI) had cleared the formulation on May 1 for emergency use as an adjunct therapy in moderate to severe Covid-19 patients.

What is 2-DG?

  • 2-DG has been developed by the Institute of Nuclear Medicine and Allied Sciences (INMAS), New Delhi, a lab of the DRDO in collaboration with Hyderabad-based pharma company Dr Reddy’s Laboratories (DRL).
  • The 2-DG anti-Covid drug is expected to reduce dependence on medical oxygen in Covid-19 infected patients.
  • The pseudo glucose molecule in the drug stops the virus in the tracts.
  • Hence, it has been prescribed for Coronavirus infected patients requiring critical medical oxygen.

How does it work?

  • Clinical trial data show that the molecule helps in faster recovery of patients hospitalized with Covid-19, and reduces their dependence on supplemental oxygen.
  • The drug accumulates in virus-infected cells, and prevents the growth of the virus by stopping viral synthesis and energy production.
  • Its selective accumulation in virally-infected cells makes this drug unique.

Advantages

  • 2-DG being a generic molecule and an analogue of glucose, it can be easily produced and made available in large quantities.
  • The drug is available in powder form in a sachet, and can be taken orally after dissolving in water.

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Women empowerment issues – Jobs,Reservation and education

Socio-Economic Impact of Pandemic on Women

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not much

Mains level: Paper 2- Disproportionate burden of pandemic on women

The article highlights the disproportionate impact of the pandemic on women and suggests measures to soften the impact.

Widening gender employment gap

  • Even prior to 2020, the gender employment gap was large.
  • Only 18% of working-age women were employed as compared to 75% of men.
  • Reasons include a lack of good jobs, restrictive social norms, and the burden of household work.
  • The nationwide lockdown hit women much harder than men.
  • Data from the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy Pvt. Ltd. show that 61% of male workers were unaffected during the lockdown while only 19% of women experienced this kind of security.
  • Men who did lose work were able to regain it, even if it was at the cost of increased precarity or lower earnings, because they had the option of moving into fallback employment arrangements.
  • Even as new entrants to the workforce, women workers had poorer options compared to men.
  • Women were more likely to enter as daily wage workers while men found avenues for self-employment.
  •  So, not only did women enter into more precarious work, it was also likely to be at very low earnings compared to men.

Growing domestic work

  • With schools closed and almost everyone limited to the confines of their homes, household responsibilities increased for women.
  • The India Working Survey 2020 found that among employed men, the number of hours spent on paid work remained more or less unchanged after the pandemic.
  • But for women, the number of hours spent in domestic work increased manifold.
  • This increase in hours came without any accompanying relief in the hours spent on paid work.

Way forward

  • The following measures are needed now:
  • The National Employment Policy, currently in the works, should systematically address the constraints around the participation of the women’s workforce.
  • Expansion of the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) and the introduction of an urban employment guarantee targeted to women as soon as the most severe forms of mobility restrictions are lifted.
  • There is a need for coordinated efforts by States to facilitate the employment of women while also addressing immediate needs through the setting up of community kitchens, the opening of schools and anganwadi centres, and engagement with self-help groups for the production of personal protective equipment kits.
  • Further, a COVID-19 hardship allowance of at least ₹5,000 per month for six months should be announced for 2.5 million accredited social health activists and Anganwadi workers, most of whom are women.
  • The pandemic has shown the necessity of adequate public investment in social infrastructure.
  • The time is right to imagine a bold universal basic services programme that not only fills existing vacancies in the social sector but also expands public investments in health, education, child and elderly care, and so on, to be prepared for future shocks.

Consider the question “Examine the impact of the pandemic on women. Suggest the measures to mitigate the impact.”

Conclusion

As the country meets the challenge of the second wave of the pandemic, it is crucial to learn lessons from the first wave to chart the policy path ahead.

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RBI should return to its dharma of taming inflation

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Inflation

Mains level: Paper 3- Role of RBI in taming inflation

The article highlights the need for the RBI to focus on inflation instead of pursuing elusive growth.

Is inflation at a level to be concerned about?

  • Due to the devastation caused by the pandemic, MPC kept its stance to ‘look through’ the sustained rise in prices through much of last year.
  • The release of the consumer-price inflation number for April 2021 (4.3%) might seem to validate their decision.
  • But there are many reasons why the MPC should be concerned.
  • To start with, the April print carries little validity since the base for comparison (April 2020) has been rubbished by RBI in the past on the grounds that it relates to the first month of the lockdown.

Inflation comes down but after causing devastation

  • Through a combination of the base effect (high level of inflation in the previous comparable period), belated but inevitable monetary policy action and a fall in demand that more than offsets the disruption in supply, inflation will come down.
  • However, before inflation comes down, it brings untold misery to the public at large.
  •  In a country where close to 20% of the population lives below the poverty line and food is a major item of their consumption basket, any rise in inflation, especially food inflation, hurts the poor disproportionately.
  • Add to that the distress caused by job losses on account of the pandemic, and this time round, the pain is likely to be magnified many times over.

What is causing inflation?

  • Monetary policy acts with long and indeterminate lags.
  • Far from spurring credit offtake through low interest rates excess liquidity has spilled over into price pressures in India.
  • Wholesale price inflation at 7.4% (March 2021) was the highest in 8 years, while it would be naïve to take any solace from the latest consumer price index number.
  • The RBI needs to be appreciated for doing its bit to keep the wheels of our economy moving during the pandemic.
  • However, its failure to shift gear in the face of mounting evidence of inflation cannot be neglected.
  • When inflation was breaching the upper end of RBI’s target band for months on end, the message should have been clear.

US recovery and its impact on Indian economy

  • Globally, commodity prices are already on the rise.
  • Not without reason, it would seem, as borne out by 12 May’s inflation print of 4.2%, America’s highest in 12 years
  • Part of the reason is the excessive easing of US monetary and fiscal policies.
  • Rising US inflation has huge implications for countries like India that are at the receiving end of US policies.
  • As the US economy recovers, the dollar strengthens and US interest rates rise, the rupee is bound to weaken in response, adding to inflationary pressures here.

Consider the question “What are the factors stoking inflation in the pandemic? How far the monetary policies pursued by the central bank is responsible for it?”

Conclusion

When the MPC meets next in early June, it must re-order its priorities. Instead of chasing elusive growth, it must revert to its swadharma, own dharma, and focus instead on inflation.

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Alternative Dispute Resolution Mechanism – NCA, Lok Adalats, etc.

It is time to set up a National Tribunals Commission

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Tribunals

Mains level: Paper 2- Need for the National Tribunals Commissions

Context

  • The Centre has abolished several appellate tribunals and authorities and transferred their jurisdiction to other existing judicial bodies through the Tribunals Reforms (Rationalisation and Conditions of Service) Ordinance 2021.

Issues with the abolitions of tribunals

  • The Ordinance has met with sharp criticism for not bypassing the usual legislative process.
  • Several tribunals such as the Film Certification Appellate Tribunal were abolished without any stakeholder consultation. 
  • Despite the Supreme Court’s direction in Rojer Mathew v. South Indian Bank (2019), no judicial impact assessment was conducted prior to abolishing the tribunals through this Ordinance.
  • While the Ordinance has incorporated the suggestions made in Madras Bar Association v. Union of India (2020) on the composition of a search-cum-selection committee.
  • But it has disregarded the court’s direction in Madras Bar Association v. Union of India (2020) for fixing a five-year term.

No NCT constituted

  • Further, the Centre is yet to constitute a National Tribunals Commission (NTC), an independent umbrella body to supervise the functioning of tribunals, appointment of and disciplinary proceedings against members, and to take care of administrative and infrastructural needs of the tribunals.
  • The idea of an NTC was first mooted in L. Chandra Kumar v. Union of India (1997).
  • Developing an independent oversight body for accountable governance requires a legal framework that protects its independence and impartiality.
  • Therefore, the NTC must be established vide a constitutional amendment or be backed by a statute that guarantees it functional, operational and financial independence.
  • As the Finance Ministry has been vested with the responsibility for tribunals until the NTC is constituted, it should come up with a transition plan. 

Advantages of NTC

  • The NTC would ideally take on some duties relating to administration and oversight.
  • It could set performance standards for the efficiency of tribunals and their own administrative processes.
  • It could function as an independent recruitment body to develop and operationalise the procedure for disciplinary proceedings and appointment of tribunal members.
  • Giving the NTC the authority to set members’ salaries, allowances, and other service conditions, subject to regulations, would help maintain tribunals’ independence.

Consider the question “What are the issues with Tribunals Reforms (Rationalisation and Conditions of Service) Ordinance 2021? How the constitution of the National Tribunals Commission would help to improve the role played by tribunals?” 

Conclusion

The way to reform the tribunal system is to look at solutions from a systemic perspective supported by evidence. Establishing the NTC will definitely entail a radical restructuring of the present tribunals system.

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Child Rights – POSCO, Child Labour Laws, NAPC, etc.

Lend a helping hand to children the right way

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, 2015.

Mains level: Paper 2- Dealing with orphaned children

The article highlights the need to be aware of the legal provisions while helping a orphan child.

Helping orphaned children

  • Social media is flooded with requests to adopt children who have lost their parents in the pandemic.
  • However, before handing over an orphan child to any agency, family or person, it is important to be aware of the laws.
  • If an orphan child is kept by someone without lawful authority, he or she may land themselves in trouble.
  • According to the Hindu Minority and Guardianship Act, 1956, the father, and in his absence the mother, is the natural guardian.
  • Not even a close relative can look after the child without authorisation.

What are the options to help

  • First option is any individual who finds an orphan child or even any child who needs care and protection under the circumstances, should immediately call the toll free Childline number 1098.
  • It is an emergency phone outreach service managed by the Women and Child Development department’s nodal agency, the Childline India Foundation.
  • The second option is to intimate the district protection officer concerned whose contact details can be found on the National Tracking System for Missing and Vulnerable Children portal.
  • The third alternative is to approach the nearest police station or its child welfare police officer who is specially trained to exclusively deal with children.
  •  jOne can always dial the Emergency Response Support System (ERSS) which is a pan-India single number (112) based emergency response system for citizens in emergencies and seek the necessary help.
  • The non-reporting of such children is also a punishable offence under the Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, 2015 (JJA).

Procedure after a child reaches outreach agency

  • Once an orphan child is recovered by the outreach agency, it is the duty of the said agency to produce the child within 24 hours before the Child Welfare Committee (CWC) of the district.
  • The CWC, after an inquiry, decides whether to send the child to a children’s home or a fit facility or fit person.
  • If the child is below six years, he or she shall be placed in a specialised adoption agency.
  • The State thus takes care of all such children who are in need of care and protection, till they turn 18 years.
  • In Sampurna Behrua vs Union of India (2018), the Supreme Court of India directed States and Union Territories to ensure that all child care institutions are registered.

Procedure for adoption

  • Once a child is declared legally free for adoption by the CWC, adoption can be done either by Indian prospective adoptive parents or non-resident Indians or foreigners, in that order.
  • Another important feature of the JJA is that it is secular in nature and simple in procedure.
  • While the Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956 is religion specific but also relatively cumbersome in procedure.
  • Second, the procedure of adoption is totally transparent and its progress can be monitored from the portal of the statutory body, the Central Adoption Resource Authority.

Directives to the police

  • The Supreme Court in Bachpan Bachao Andolan vs Union of India directed all Directors General of Police, in May 2013, to register a first information report as a case of trafficking or abduction in every case of a missing child.
  • At least one police officer not below the rank of assistant sub-inspector in each police station is mandatorily required to undergo training to deal with children in conflict with the law and in need of care and protection.
  • They are not required to wear a uniform and need to be child-friendly.
  • Similarly, each district is supposed to have its special juvenile police unit, headed by an officer not below the rank of a Deputy Superintendent of Police.
  • The Supreme Court in Re: Exploitation of children in Orphanages in the State of Tamil Nadu (2017) inter alia, specifically asked the National Police Academy, Hyderabad and police training academies in every State to prepare training courses on the JJA and provide regular training to police officers in terms of sensitisation.
  • The National Commission for Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR) recently wrote to the Chief Secretaries of all States and Union Territories on the issue of children orphaned due to COVID-19.

Conclusion

Following the Covid surge and subsequent increase in request for adoption of children, the laws and procedure for the protection of children must be noted.

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Native Indian turtles face U.S. slider threat across Northeast

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Red-eared slider

Mains level: Paper 3- Native Indian turtles face threat from red-eared slider

About red-eared slider

  • The red-eared slider (Trachemys scripta elegans) derives its name from red stripes around the part where its ears would be and from its ability to slide quickly off any surface into the water.
  • Native to the U.S. and northern Mexico, this turtle is an extremely popular pet due to its small size, easy maintenance, and relatively low cost.

Reports about threat

  • Between August 2018 and June 2019, a team of herpetologists from NGO Help Earth published the finding in ‘Reptiles & Amphibians’, journal of the U.S.-based International Reptile Conservation Foundation in August 2020.
  • But the alarm was raised experts from Mizoram University’s Department of Zoology published another report in the same journal in April this year.

How is it a threat?

  • They grow fast and virtually leaves nothing for the native species to eat.
  •  People who keep it as pets become sensitive about turtle conservation but endanger the local ecosystem, probably unknowingly, by releasing them in natural water bodies after they outgrow an aquarium, tank or pool at home.
  • Much like the Burmese python that went to the U.S. as a pet to damage the South Florida Everglades ecosystem, the red-eared slider has already affected States such as Karnataka and Gujarat, where it has been found in 33 natural water bodies.
  • Preventing this invasive species from overtaking the Brahmaputra and other river ecosystems in the Northeast is crucial because the Northeast is home to more than 72% of the turtle and tortoise species in the country, all of them very rare.

Way forward

  • Although the red-eared slider is traded legally, the time has come for the government to come up with regulations against keeping invasive as pets.
  • There is a need to create awareness among pet traders for maintaining a database of red-eared slider buyers.
  • They can be contacted to hand over the turtles to the repository insulated from any wetland or natural water body.

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Israel’s Iron Dome rocket defence system

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Iron Dome

Mains level: Paper 3- Iron Dome rocket defence system

Context

  • Amid the Israel-Palestine conflict, the night sky over Israel has been ablaze with interceptor missiles from Iron Dome shooting down the incoming rockets in the sky.

What is Iron Dome?

  • Iron Dome is a multi-mission system capable of intercepting rockets, artillery, mortars and Precision Guided Munitions as well as aircraft, helicopters and Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) over short ranges of up to 70 km.
  • It is an all-weather system and can engage multiple targets simultaneously and can be deployed over land and sea.
  • Iron Dome is jointly manufactured by Rafael Advanced Systems and has been in service with Israeli Air Force since 2011.
  • The radar system was developed by Elta.

Working of Iron Dome

  • An Iron Dome battery consists of a battle management control unit, a detection and tracking radar and a firing unit of three vertical launchers, with 20 interceptor missiles each.
  • The interceptor missile uses a proximity fuse to detonate the target warhead in the air.
  • One of the system’s important advantages is its ability to identify the anticipated point of impact of the threatening rocket, to calculate whether it will fall in a built-up area or not, and to decide on this basis whether or not to engage it.
  • This prevents unnecessary interception of rockets that will fall in open areas and thus not cause damage, the paper states.
  • The system has intercepted thousands of rockets so far and, according to Rafael Advanced Systems, its success rate is over 90%.

Limitations of the system

  • The system can see limitations when it is overwhelmed with a barrage of projectiles.
  • The system has a ‘saturation point’.
  • It is capable of engaging a certain number of targets at the same time, and no more.
  • One of the possible limitations is the system’s inability to cope with very short range threats as estimates put the Iron Dome’s minimum interception range at 5-7 kilometres.

 

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Parliament – Sessions, Procedures, Motions, Committees etc

No virtual meets of standing committees

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Standing Committees and their functions

Mains level: Paper 2- No virtual meetings of Standing Committees

Confidential nature of meeting not possible in virtual meetings

  • Days after the Leader of Opposition in Rajya Sabha wrote to Chairman to allow virtual meetings of parliamentary standing committees, the Rajya Sabha Secretariat has turned down his plea.
  • Requests to allow virtual meetings of the standing committees were turned down last year as well by Rajya Sabha Chairman and Lok Sabha Speaker.
  • The request was turned down on grounds that virtual meetings would violate the confidential nature of such meetings and that any change to the norms require approval by Parliament.

Matter referred to Committee on Rules

  • The letter by the Rajya Sabha Secretariat points out that the Chairman and Speaker had decided last year, during the first wave of the pandemic, to refer the issue of allowing virtual meetings of parliamentary panels to the Committee on Rules in both Houses.
  • The Committee on Rules, however, did not take up the matter for discussion since Committees started physical meetings as the lockdown restrictions gradually eased in the second half of last year.

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Medical Education Governance in India

NITI Aayog’s proposal of allowing private entities to take over district hospitals

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not much

Mains level: Paper 2- Reforming medical education in India

The article highlights the issue of shortage of doctors in India and issues with the involvement of private sector in it.

Government approach

  • Market-oriented approach towards medical education: NITI Aayog’s proposal of allowing private entities to take over district hospitals for converting them into teaching hospitals with at least 150 MBBS seats.

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The world cannot ignore the Palestinian question

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Al-Aqsa Mosque

Mains level: Paper 2- Israel-Palestine conflict

The article discusses the types of response the recent violence in the Israel-Palestine conflict would invoke across the world and also explains the perils of ignoring the conflict.

Three types of responses

  • The deadly riots in Israel and the war in Gaza, is likely to evoke three kinds of responses: The indifferent, the imperial, the humanitarian.

1) Moral indifference

  •  Instead of becoming the symbol of the unfinished tasks of decolonisation, and a human rights catastrophe, the Palestinian question is now mostly an occasion to vent cynicism.
  • The moral questions the oppression of Palestinians poses is avoided by claiming that in this conflict we can assigning rights and wrongs equally to both sides.
  • There is the spectacle of civilians on both sides living in terror.
  • There is the fanaticism of the right-wing in Israel and there is the fanaticism of Hamas and Fatah.
  • Blaming both sides also whitewashes the fact that there is a monumental injustice to the Palestinians at the heart of the problem.

2) The imperial response

  • The events leading up to the recent clashes at the Al-Aqsa Mosque can be seen as part of a long pattern of pushing out Palestinians from territory Israel wants to claim.
  • American administration has not been able to significantly roll back this project of pushing the Palestinians out.
  • Palestine will once again be the site where the Biden administration’s liberal internationalism will face challenge.

3) Humanitarian response

  • This third response is to dig beneath the politics and find bridges in shared humanity and suffering.
  • This is also the tack of the peace movements that use culture and a history of shared suffering to build bridges.
  •  They emphasise that dispossession and exile is something both communities share; they, of all the people, should be able to understand each other.
  •  Humanity and culture, even when deeply internalised, collapse quickly when subject to fear.
  • And they always fall short of acknowledging the core issue at stake: Political equality between two peoples.

Geopolitical implications of conflict

  • The violence of Israel will beget more terrorist violence of Hamas and Fatah, with every world power from Russia to Iran influencing the chaos.
  • Israel needs to be reminded of the blowback of imperial politics: The ultimate consequence of trying to dominate a people is that you end up destroying the moral legitimacy of your own claims.
  • No amount of military capacity can compensate for the images of lynching, rioting, and provocations that we have seen this week.

Conclusion

We continually risk conflict if the Palestinian question is simply treated as an object of geo-political opportunism, not as a question of basic dignity and justice.

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Remittance received by India remain unaffected by pandemic

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Remittances received by India

Mains level: Paper 3- Remittances received by India bucks pandemic effect

What the World Bank report says

  • India received over USD 83 billion in remittances in 2020, according to a World Bank report.
  • In 2019, India had received USD 83.3 billion in remittances.
  • The report said India’s remittances fell by just 0.2 per cent in 2020.
  • Much of the decline was due to a 17 per cent drop in remittances from the United Arab Emirates, which offset resilient flows from the United States and other host countries.
  • The World Bank, in its latest Migration and Development Brief, said despite COVID-19, remittance flows remained resilient in 2020.

Trend analysis

  • China, which received USD 59.5 billion in remittances in 2020 against USD 68.3 billion the previous year, is a distant second.
  • India and China are followed by Mexico (USD42.8 billion), the Philippines (USD34.9 billion), Egypt (USD29.6 billion), Pakistan (USD26 billion), France (USD24.4 billion) and Bangladesh (USD21 billion).
  • Remittance outflow was the maximum from the United States (USD68 billion), followed by UAE (USD43 billion), Saudi Arabia (USD34.5 billion), Switzerland (USD27.9 billion), Germany (USD22 billion), and China (USD18 billion).
  • The relatively strong performance of remittance flows during the COVID-19 crisis has also highlighted the importance of timely availability of data.
  • Given its growing significance as a source of external financing for low- and middle-income countries, there is a need for better collection of data on remittances, in terms of frequency, timely reporting, and granularity by corridor and channel.

B2BASICS

Remittances

  • Remittances are usually understood as financial or in-kind transfers made by migrants to friends and relatives back in communities of origin.
  • These are basically sum of two main components – Personal Transfers in cash or in kind between resident and non-resident households and Compensation of Employees, which refers to the income of workers who work in another country for a limited period of time.
  • Remittances help in stimulating economic development in recipient countries, but this can also make such countries over-reliant on them.

Remittance and the Indian Economy

Benefits

  • Increased inward remittance is a boon for the economy at both macro and micro levels.
  • At the macro level, remittances contribute to maintaining stable foreign reserves.
  • Remittances help Indian Rupee hold its value against the US dollar and forms a significant part of the GDP.
  • On a micro level, remittances have shown a positive impact on healthcare, entrepreneurship, education, and overall economic development of the recipient families.

Issues

An increase in outward remittances however, raises an alarm. It causes the rupee to weaken against the dollar, which in return impacts the businesses exposed to foreign exchange, and the economy overall.

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Judicial Reforms

App to view live proceedings of SC launched for media persons

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not much

Mains level: Paper 2- App to watch live proceedings of the Supreme Court

App to view virtual proceedings

  • Chief Justice of India launched a mobile app that would allow media persons to view the Supreme Court’s virtual proceedings live on their mobile phones.
  • The role of the media assumes importance in the process of disseminating information.
  • Justice A.M. Khanwilkar said the facility, which is now temporary, could be made permanent in the future depending on the operational issues.

‘Indicative Notes’ on the SC website

  • The CJI also launched a new feature in the Supreme Court’s official website called ‘Indicative Notes’.
  • This feature is aimed at providing concise summaries of landmark judgments in an easy-to-understand format.
  • This will serve as a useful resource for media persons and the general public who wish to be better informed about the rulings of the court.

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Citizenship and Related Issues

Issues with MHA notification for OCI

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Difference between OCI and NRI

Mains level: Paper 2- Issues faced by OCI

About notification

  • The Home Ministry’s March 4 order that required professional Overseas Citizens of India (OCIs), such as journalists, engineers and researchers, to notify the Ministry about their activities in India.
  • The notification said that OCIs shall be required to obtain a “special permission or a special permit” from the competent authority or the Foreigners Regional Registration Office (FRRO) or the Indian mission “to undertake research, missionary or Tabligh or mountaineering or journalistic activities or internship in any foreign diplomatic missions
  • The Ministry issued a gazette notification that OCI cardholders could claim “only NRI (Non-Resident Indian) quota seats” in educational institutions.

Issues with the notification

  • This will place undue burden on scientific, pharmaceutical, medical, biotechnology and other research fields.
  • Even if an OCI student has secured a high rank in an exam like NEET, several institutions of repute do not have NRI seats.
  • The exorbitantly high fees under the NRI quota cannot be afforded by many OCIs as they live and work in India.
  • India-domiciled OCI students are deprived of domicile status both in India [country of residence] as well as the country of their citizenship.
  • The notification equates India-domiciled OCIs with a foreigner.

About OCIs

  • OCIs are of Indian origin but hold foreign passports.
  • India does not allow dual citizenship but provides certain benefits under Section 7B(I) of the Citizenship Act, 1955 to the OCIs.
  • So far, 37.72 lakh OCI Cards are said to have been issued.

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