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Indian Army Updates

Issues with Agnipath Scheme

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Agnipath Scheme

Mains level: Issues with Agnipath Scheme

Massive protests are occurring against the Agnipath scheme all across the nation.

What is the Agnipath Scheme?

  • This will be the only form of recruitment of soldiers into the three defence services from now.
  • The scheme aims at strengthening national security and for providing an opportunity to the youth to serve in the armed forces.
  • Recruits under the scheme will be known as ‘Agniveers’.
  • After completing the four-year service, they can apply for regular employment in the armed forces.
  • They may be given priority over others for various jobs in other government departments.
  • The move is expected to decrease the average age profile of armed forces personnel from the current 32 to 24-26 years over a period of time.

Why are aspirants protesting?

  • Contractualisation of armed forces: The foundation of this scheme is a four-year contract.
  • Jobs for the majority: States such as Bihar, Jammu & Kashmir, Punjab, Himachal Pradesh, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand and Rajasthan, are where the bulk of the Army recruitment takes place.
  • Perks and benefits: Many of these people value job stability, which includes retirement benefits and pensions over competitive salaries.
  • Uncertainty after end of commission: Most of them will be forced to leave the job within four years, which doesn’t fit into their hopes and aspirations.
  • Casualization of Training: It reportedly takes two to three years to train a member of the army, but as a part of the Agnipath, soldiers will only be trained for six months.
  • Threats to national security: Defence analysts have allegedly pointed out that the Russian soldiers who were trained for a limited amount of time before they went to war have performed disastrously.
  • Conflicts of interest: Apprehensions have been voiced against how the new recruits will be adjusted in the existing system under which most of the Army units are region, caste or class based.

Reasons behind aspirants’ frustration

  • Unemployment: Analysts always cite the crunch of gazetted officers in the Armed forces and there has been no recruitment for the last two years.
  • Pandemic impact: Many aspirants lost their chance to join the Armed forces as they are now overage.’
  • Unanticipated reforms: In guise of a push for “major defence policy reform”, the scheme is a fuss.

What is the official explanation?

  • Once retired, aspirants will be free to pursue other careers, with several departments and governments.
  • Aspirants will get preference, educational credits, skill certificates, to help them rehabilitate in other fields.
  • Those wishing to be entrepreneurs will get a financial package and bank loans and those wishing to study further will be given 12 class equivalent certificate.
  • For job-seekers, the government has already said they will get priority in the Central Armed Police Forces.

Way forward

  • The modalities of how this will happen are still being worked out.
  • But one thing is very clear, poorly crafted schemes are on the rise.
  • For making any scheme a success, pre-legislative consultation and discussion in the public domain is a must.

 

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Economic Indicators and Various Reports On It- GDP, FD, EODB, WIR etc

India better placed to avoid Risks of Stagflation: RBI

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Stagflation

Mains level: Read the attached story

India’s economy is better placed than many other countries to avoid the risk of potential stagflation worldwide, said the Reserve Bank of India Deputy Governor.

Why in news?

  • Stagflation remains a risk to the US economy, and there are similarities between the situation in the 1970s and today, a/c to World Bank.
  • Surging prices for oil and food are pushing up the cost of living, and business executives are voicing concerns about the outlook for the economy.

What is Stagflation?

  • Stagflation is a stagnant growth and persistently high inflation. It, thus, describes a rather rare and curious condition of an economy.
  • Iain Macleod, a Conservative Party MP in the United Kingdom, is known to have coined the phrase during his speech on the UK economy in November 1965.

What happens in Stagflation?

  • Typically, rising inflation happens when an economy is booming — people are earning lots of money, demanding lots of goods and services and as a result, prices keep going up.
  • When the demand is down and the economy is in the doldrums, by the reverse logic, prices tend to stagnate (or even fall).
  • But stagflation is a condition where an economy experiences the worst of both worlds — the growth rate is largely stagnant (along with rising unemployment) and inflation is not only high but persistently so.

Possible reasons behind

  • Volatility due to war: Global economic conditions continued to deteriorate as commodity prices and financial market volatility have led to heightened uncertainty.
  • Monetary tightening: In advanced economies, the war against inflation would entail significant monetary tightening, complicating the growth-inflation outlook.
  • Global slowdown: Emerging market economies grapple with the global trade slowdown, capital outflows and imported inflation.

Why is it so unpopular?

  • The combination of slow growth and inflation is unusual, because inflation typically rises and falls with the pace of growth.
  • The high inflation leaves less scope for policymakers to address growth shortfalls with lower interest rates and higher public spending.

Back2Basics: Inflation and its impact

  • Depression: It is Economic depression is a sustained, long-term downturn in economic
  • Deflation: It is the general fall in the price level over a period of time.
  • Disinflation: It is the fall in the rate of inflation or a slower rate of inflation. Example: a fall in the inflation rate from 8% to 6%.
  • Reflation: It is the act of stimulating the economy by increasing the money supply or by reducing taxes, seeking to bring the economy back up to the long-term trend, following a dip in the business cycle. It is the opposite of disinflation.
  • Skewflation: It is the skewed rise in the price of some items while remaining item prices remain the same. E.g. Seasonal rise in the price of onions.
  • Stagflation: The situation of rising prices along with falling growth and employment, is called stagflation. Inflation is accompanied by an economic recession.

 

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

Theri Desert in Tamil Nadu

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Theri Desert in Tamil Nadu

Mains level: Desertification of land and preventive measures

Most of us may not know the small desert situated in the state of Tamil Nadu. It consists of red sand dunes and is confined to the Thoothukudi district.

Theri Desert

  • The red dunes are called theri in Tamil.
  • They consist of sediments dating back to the Quaternary Period and are made of marine deposits.
  • They have very low water and nutrient retention capacity.
  • The dunes are susceptible to aerodynamic lift.
  • This is the push that lets something move up. It is the force that is the opposite of weight.

Mineral composition of Theris

  • The analysis of the red sand dunes reveal the presence of heavy and light minerals.
  • These include Ilmenite, Magnetit, Rutile, Garnet, Zircon, Diopside, Tourmaline, Hematite, Goethite, Kyanite, Quartz, Feldspar, Biotite.
  • The iron-rich heavy minerals like ilmenite, magnetite, garnet, hypersthene and rutile present in the soil had undergone leaching by surface water.
  • They were then oxidised because of the favourable semi-arid climatic conditions.

How did they form?

  • Theris appear as gentle, undulating terrain.
  • The lithology of the area shows that the area might have been a paleo (ancient) coast in the past.
  • The presence of limestone in many places indicates marine transgression.
  • The present-day theris might have been formed by the confinement of beach sand locally, after regression of the sea.
  • When high velocity winds from the Western Ghats blew east, they induced migration of sand grains and accumulation of dunes.

Another story of their formation

  • Another view is that these are geological formations that appeared in a period of a few hundred years.
  • The red sand is brought from the surface of a broad belt of red loam in the plains of the Nanguneri region (about 57 kilometres) by south west monsoon winds during May-September.
  • The winds after draining the moisture behind the Mahendragiri hill and the Aralvaimozhi gap of the Western Ghats become dry and strike the plains in the foothills, where vegetation is sparse.
  • Deforestation and the absence of vegetative cover in the Aralvaimozhi gap and the Nanguneri plains are considered to be the major causes of wind erosion.

 

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Coronavirus – Disease, Medical Sciences Involved & Preventive Measures

What is Black Death?

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Black Death

Mains level: NA

In a study published in the Science journal, researchers have claimed that the bubonic plague was originated in modern day northern Kyrgyzstan around 1338-1339 – nearly 7-8 years before it ravaged large parts of the world.

What is Black Death?

  • The term Black Death refers to the bubonic plague that spread across Western Asia, Northern Africa, Middle East and Europe in 1346-53.
  • Most scholars agree that the Black Death, which killed millions, was caused by bacterium Yersinia pestis and was spread by fleas that were carried by rodent hosts.
  • The microorganism Y. pestis spread to human populations, who at some point transmitted it to others either through the vector of a human flea or directly through the respiratory system.

Why this plague was called the Black Death?

  • It is commonly believed that the term Black Death gets its name from the black marks that appeared on some of the plague victims’ bodies.
  • In the 14th century, the epidemic was referred to as the ‘great pestilence’ or ‘great death’, due to the demographic havoc that it caused.
  • The world black also carried a dark, gloomy emotional tone, due to the sheer amount of deaths generated by the plague.

Why is the new discovery significant?

  • The geographical origin point of the plague has been debated for centuries.
  • Some historians have argued that the plague originated in China, and spread across Europe by Italian merchants who first entered the continent in trading caravans through Crimea.
  • Another story argues that Mongol army hurled plague-infested bodies into the city during the siege of Caffa (Crimea) and led to the spread of the disease.

 

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Death Penalty Abolition Debate

Procedural gaps in death penalty sentencing

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not much

Mains level: Paper 2- Plugging the gaps in death penalty sentencing

Context

In a judgment delivered last month, the Supreme Court, in Manoj & others v. State of MP, embarked on a significant attempt to reform the administration of the death penalty.

Background: Crisis in the death penalty sentencing

  • There has long been a judicial crisis in death penalty sentencing on account of unprincipled sentencing, arbitrariness and worrying levels of subjectivity.
  • The crisis has been acknowledged by the Supreme Court, the Law Commission of India, research scholars and civil society groups.
  • Crime-centric nature: Death penalty sentencing has been, by and large, crime-centric.
  • This approach goes against the requirements imposed on sentencing judges by the Supreme Court in Bachan Singh (1980).

The framework laid down in the Bachan Singh case

  • Take into account factors relating to crime and the accused: This framework made it binding for the sentencing judges to take into account factors relating to both the crime and accused and assign them appropriate weight.
  • Judges couldn’t decide to impose the death penalty only on the basis of the crime.
  • The background of the accused, the personal circumstances, mental health and age were considerations a sentencing judge had to account for.
  • Judges were required to weigh “mitigating” and “aggravating” factors to ascertain if a case was fit for the death sentence and also determine if the option of life imprisonment was “unquestionably foreclosed”.

Why there is a crisis in death penalty sentencing?

  • The four decades since Bachan Singh have shown us that this framework has been followed more in breach.
  • There is utter confusion across all levels of the judiciary on the requirements of the framework laid down in the Bachan Singh case and its implementation.
  • Nature of crime a dominant consideration: An important reason for the breakdown is that factors relating to the crime — the nature of the crime and its brutality — are often dominant considerations, and there is barely any consideration of mitigating factors.
  • Little discussion on mitigating factors: There has been very little discussion on bringing the socioeconomic profile of death row prisoners as a mitigating factor into the courtroom.

Significance of the SC judgment in Manoj & others v. State of MP

  • Efforts to plug the gap: The judgement identifies the lacuna as an explicit concern, states the consequences that flow from such a vital gap, and suggests measures to plug it.
  • Recognising reformation: A striking part of the judgment is its commitment to recognising reformation as integral to the Indian criminal justice system, especially death penalty sentencing.
  • Procedural threshold: The judgment is clear that certain procedural thresholds must be met for sentencing to be fair and explicitly rejects (once again) the idea that death sentences can be determined solely on crime-based considerations.
  • The verdict recognises that aspects of the accused’s life, both pre-offence and post-offence in prison, are relevant.
  • As practical steps in this process, the judgment asks courts to call for reports from the probation officer as well as prison and independent mental health experts.
  • Right of the accused to present mitigating factors: The right of the accused to present mitigating factors and rebut the state, if necessary, is also recognised.
  • Psychological and philosophical aspect taken into account: There is now overwhelming evidence from psychology that criminality cannot just be reduced to terrible decisions by individuals in the exercise of their free will.
  • All our actions are a result of a complex web of biological, psychological, and social factors and that understanding has a very significant bearing on discussions on criminality and punishment.

Challenges

  • Implementation issue: Apart from this issue of implementation, even if detailed and high-quality sentencing information is to come into our courtrooms, a bigger challenge awaits.
  • The judicial treatment of sentencing information is a Pandora’s box that will inevitably have to be opened.
  • Requirement for normative basis: The Supreme Court will have to provide a rigorous normative basis for consideration of these factors.
  • In the absence of such foundations, death penalty sentencing will continue to be unprincipled and sentencing judges are not going to understand the need for this wide range of sentencing information.

Conclusion

The significance of last month’s judgment, authored by Justice Ravindra Bhat, is that it takes this problem head-on. It identifies the lacuna as an explicit concern, states the consequences that flow from such a vital gap, and suggests measures to plug it.

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Foreign Policy Watch: India-Iran

India-Iran Relations

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: INSTC

Mains level: Paper 2- India-Iran relations

Context

Iran’s Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian’s three-day visit to India, last week, was the first ministerial-level visit from Iran since Ebrahim Raisi assumed the Iranian presidency in August last year.

Chabahar Port - A Rethink is Needed | Vivekananda International Foundation

Background

  • Bilateral relations between India and Iran span millennia marked by meaningful interactions.
  • Both countries shared borders until 1947 and share several common features in their language, culture and traditions.
  • The diplomatic links were established on 15th March 1950, when both countries signed a Treaty of Friendship and Perpetual Peace.
  • However, Iran’s joining of Baghdad pact in 1954 and the Cold War politics prevented both countries from having closer relations until the 1990s.
  • Islamic Revolution of 1979, hostage of US diplomats, Iran-Iraq War and Tehran’s support for Hezbollah and Hamas among others resulted in a range of political and economic sanctions, leading to Iran being isolated at a global level
  • In the 1990s, both countries’ interests converged around energy, Central Asia and security, mostly around the Pakistan-Afghan region.
  • This resulted in the signing of ‘The Delhi Declaration’, which provided the vision of the countries’ defence and strategic partnership and “Tehran Declaration”, which set forth the areas of possible cooperation

India-Iran relations: A shared vision for equitable, pluralistic and co-operative international order

  • The “Tehran Declaration” signed during former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s visit to Iran affirmed the shared vision of the two countries for an “equitable, pluralistic and co-operative international order”.
  • It recognised then Iranian President Mohammad Khatami’s vision of a “dialogue among civilisations” as a paradigm of international relations based on principles of tolerance, pluralism and respect for diversity.
  • Advancing the standing in global order: Two decades later, as India strengthens new partnerships within its regional vision centred on the Indo-Pacific, both countries remain driven by the goals of advancing their standing at the regional and global level.
  • Both are keen to project themselves as independent strategic actors determined to play a role in shaping a new multipolar order in their shared Eurasian neighbourhood and also at the global level.

Why does India need Iran?

  • Energy security: Conventionally, for energy security
  • Iran is amongst India’s top oil suppliers
  • Strategic importance: Since the 1990s, Iran’s importance has become ‘strategic’
  • Security reasons: Iran’s cooperation is critical for India’s security given that
  • Pak supports terrorism in India
  • Influence in Afghanistan: India’s influence in Afghanistan is marginal.
  • Countering Pakistan: India needs Iran to moderate Pak’s influence in West Asia
  • Iran is a leader in the Muslim world.
  • Access to Afghanistan and Central Asia

Significance of Iran for India

  • Geopolitical logic in relations: The sanctions imposed by the US on Iran after it withdrew from the nuclear deal in 2018 may have virtually destroyed India-Iran trade, especially India’s energy imports from Iran, but the geopolitical logic underpinning relations between the two countries remains firm.
  • Land bridge to Central Asia and Eurasia: Iran has sought to leverage its crossroad geographical location straddling the Persian Gulf and the Caspian Sea, India has come to see it as its land bridge to Central Asia and Eurasia.
  • INSTC: Despite the difficulties posed by decades of American sanctions, Iran has, along with India, Russia and a few other countries in the Eurasian region, continued to work on the multi-modal International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC).
  • During Raisi’s visit to Moscow, the two sides had pledged to redouble their efforts to build the railway line between Iran’s Caspian port of Rasht and Astara on the Iran-Azerbaijan border.
  • Alternative Caspian Sea Route: The activation of an alternative Caspian Sea route speaks volumes about the positive outlook of Iran, India and Russia on this corridor despite a variety of geopolitical challenges.
  • Iran’s Chabahar port, where India is developing two berths that it will lease for commercial operations for 10 years, is also a story of perseverance in the ties between the two countries.

Irritants in Indo-Iran ties

  • India’s relations with Saudi Arabia, US and Israel:  Growing Saudi-India-US-Israel relations have irked Iran.
  • In retaliation, Iran, for the first time, has linked the plight of Muslims in Gaza, Yemen, and Bahrain, with those in Kashmir
  • Iran-Pak-China ties: Warming Iran-Pak-China ties have annoyed India.
  • Sluggish Chabahar port development: Slow Chabahar port development has annoyed Iran.
  • China-Iran strategic partnership:
    • An economic and security partnership deal between Iran and China was recently made public, creating a global alarm, especially for India and the US.
    • The foundation for this deal was laid during Chinese President Xi Jinping’s visit to Iran in 2016
    • The draft agreement involves Chinese investments worth $400 billion into the Iranian economy over 25 years.
    • Of this, $280 billion will be allocated for the oil and gas sector and the remaining funding will be for other core sectors like banking, telecommunications, ports and railways.
    • In return, China would get a steady supply of Iranian oil at a heavily discounted rate during the same period.
    • This deal creates a win-win situation for both countries.
    • It lifts Iran’s sanction-hit economy and helps China set a firm foothold in the Middle East.

US sanctions:

  • Iran’s aim to develop nuclear weapons has come under strong criticism from Trump Administration since the beginning.
  • Thus, the US has withdrawn from the Iran nuclear deal in 2018 after it was signed in 2015 and imposed unilateral sanctions on Iran.
  • The US’ sanctions and aggressive policies have created a situation of economic and geostrategic uncertainty.
  • Indian investors are wary of having businesses in Iran for the fear of the US.
  • Also, India deviated from the policy of not abiding by unilateral sanctions by ceasing to purchase Iranian oil.
  • Due to this, Iran did not back India’s bid to mobilise international support against Beijing’s aggression in the Ladakh.

Other issues:

  • Iran is against India’s decision to abrogate Article 370 and 35A.
  • It has called on India and Pakistan to show restraint and prevent the killing of innocent Kashmiris, revealing possible close ties between Pakistan and Iran.
  • Iran also voiced against “extremist Hindus and their parties” during the 2020 Delhi riots.
  • Apart from these issues, Iran also sidelined India’s ONGC from exploration rights at its Farzad B Gas field, stating that it will engage the company at a later date.

Way forward

  • As India is treading a fine line in balancing relations with the US, China and Iran while striving to augment its political influence in West Asia, embracing one country over the other is not an option for India.
  • Therefore, a multilateral foreign policy is a way forward.
  • India must retain its involvement in the Chabahar port development because of the geostrategic significance.
  • In the immediate term, India should improve its multi-alignment credentials to absorb investments into the port projects from the public and private sector, boost maritime cooperation among littoral countries to enhance the transit of goods, and foster regional partnership for the Chabahar port development.
  • Based on the mutual geostrategic and energy interests, India could collaborate with Japan under the Asia-Africa Growth Corridor.
  • Japan’s participation would enhance the multilateral characteristics of the transit hub in the region, unlike the China-owned Gwadar port. This will further enhance multilateral investments to solidify regional economic partnerships that enable the sustainability of the port.
  • Also, India needs to evolve a better strategy on Iran beyond waiting to see how the US may react, beyond having to issue a clarification in response to Iran’s sudden provocations and beyond allowing voids of partnerships that China may fill.
  • In order to do so, India must create a new alliance of countries having similar geostrategic interests, which are also facing issues with US’ unrealistic and aggressive foreign policy strategy and China’s expansionistic policies.

Conclusion

While the revival of the nuclear deal could give a fillip to India’s economic ties with Iran, India’s interests in continental Asia will be served well by heeding to the calls for developing a long-term roadmap for bilateral relations.

 

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