26 Sep 2019: UPSC Exam Comprehensive News Analysis

September 26th, 2019 CNA: Download PDF Here

TABLE OF CONTENTS

A.GS1 Related
B.GS2 Related
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
1. Narendra Modi pitches for India’s NSG entry
2. Impeachment inquiry against Trump begins
HEALTH
1. 60% girls in Delhi colleges anaemic
2. Drug regulators caution against ranitidine use
C.GS3 Related
ECONOMY
1. PM’s economic advisory council reconstituted
ENVIRONMENT AND ECOLOGY
1. New IPCC report warns of dire threat to oceans
D. GS4 Related
E. Editorials
SOCIAL ISSUES
1. Live-in Relationships
SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
1. Biotechnology sector- Different peas in different pods
F. Tidbits
1. India offers aid to Pacific island nations
G. Prelims Facts
1. Ajanta Caves
2. Kashmir’s famed saffron gets GI tag
3. Tribunal declares JKLF an unlawful association
4. Goal Keeper Award
5. Zero Budget Natural Farming
H. UPSC Prelims Practice Questions
I. UPSC Mains Practice Questions

A. GS1 Related

Nothing here for today!!!

B. GS2 Related

Category: INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS

1. Narendra Modi pitches for India’s NSG entry

Context:

At the Bloomberg Global Business Forum in New York, Prime Minister Narendra Modi made a pitch for India’s membership of the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG).

What is the Nuclear Suppliers Group  (NSG)?

  • Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) is a group of nuclear supplier countries that seek to prevent nuclear proliferation by controlling the export of materials, equipment, and technology that can be used to manufacture nuclear weapons.
  • NSG is a transnational body comprised of nuclear supplier countries that aims to control the proliferation of nuclear weapons by curbing the export of nuclear weapons development materials and related technology.
  • It ensures that the materials and technologies transferred to any nation are not diverted to developing nuclear weapons.
  • NSG consists of 48 members which include the five nuclear-weapon states US, UK, France, China, and Russia.
  • The guidelines of NSG are not binding.
  • Decisions, including on membership, are made unanimously by consensus.
  • It is said to have been created as a sequel to India’s first nuclear test conducted in 1974.

Why is India not a part of NSG?

  • The NSG controls most of the world’s nuclear trade.
  • While the U.S. and other countries support India’s entry into the NSG, China has opposed it saying India has not signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).
  • However, it is important to note that membership of NPT is not a condition for becoming a member of NSG. It is only a guiding principle to which consideration needs to be given.
  • Many other countries have also opposed India’s entry into NSG but New Delhi has been making constant efforts to blow away the resistance.
  • The opponents argue that granting it membership would further undermine efforts to prevent proliferation and it would also infuriate India’s rival Pakistan.

Why does India want to Join NSG?

  • India seeks to significantly expand its nuclear power generation and also enter the export market in the coming years.
  • Joining the NSG will give India better access to low-cost, clean nuclear energy important for its economic growth.
  • Following intense debates, that considered India’s Nuclear activities and appreciated its commitment to non-proliferation, India got an NSG waiver in 2008.
  • Although the 2008 NSG waiver to India does provide significant possibilities for India to engage in civilian nuclear trade with other countries (and indeed, India has entered into such agreements with several countries like Russia, France, UK, USA, Kazakhstan, Australia, and others), membership of the NSG will provide greater certainty and a legal foundation for India’s nuclear regime and thus greater confidence for those countries investing billions of dollars to set up ambitious nuclear power projects in India.
  • As India’s international political, economic, military and strategic profile and clout increases, India would like to move into the category of international rule-creating nations rather than stay in the ranks of rule-adhering nations.

2. Impeachment inquiry against Trump begins

Context:

The Speaker of the United States House of Representatives has announced that the House would begin a formal impeachment inquiry against President Donald Trump to hold him accountable for betrayal of his oath of office, betrayal of the national security and betrayal of the integrity of elections.

Details:

President under scanner

  • Trump is alleged to have tried to enlist a foreign country, Ukraine, on his side in a personal political battle with Joe Biden, the senior Democratic Party leader who was President Barack Obama’s vice-president from 2009 to 2017.
  • Biden is the frontrunner to be the Democratic party’s nominee against Trump in the presidential election of 2020.
  • In a telephone conversation two months ago, Trump is alleged to have pressured Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to open a corruption investigation in his country against Biden and his son Hunter Biden.
  • Before this call, the President issued a personal order to freeze more than $391 million of US aid to Ukraine.
  • The announcement by Pelosi greatly increases the possibility that Trump will become the fourth individual in the 230-year history of the American presidency to face removal from office by impeachment.
  • None of the previous three — Andrew Johnson (1865-69), Richard Nixon (1969-74) and Bill Clinton (1993-2001) — was removed as a result of impeachment.

What it means?

  • Impeachment is a provision that allows Congress to remove the President of the United States.
  • Under the US Constitution, the House of Representatives (Lower House) has the “the sole power of impeachment” while the Senate (Upper House) has “the sole power to try all impeachments”.
  • The Chief Justice of the US Supreme Court has the duty of presiding over impeachment trials in the Senate.

Grounds for impeachment

  • The President can be removed from office for “treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors”.
  • What constitutes these “high crimes” and “misdemeanors” (misdemeanors), however, is not clearly spelt out.
  • The New York Times explained that the expression “high crimes and misdemeanors” came out of the British common law tradition.
  • Essentially, it means an abuse of power by a high-level public official. This does not necessarily have to be a violation of an ordinary criminal statute.
  • Historically, in the US, it has encompassed corruption and other abuses, including trying to obstruct judicial proceedings.

Impeachment process:

Impeachment process

Category: HEALTH

1. 60% girls in Delhi colleges anaemic

Context:

According to an analysis of data collected from ongoing anaemia detection and awareness camps of the Delhi government, about 60% of female students in Delhi colleges are anaemic, well above the national average. The findings, are yet to be made public.

Anaemia:

  • Anaemia can cause weakness, breathlessness, lack of concentration and if the haemoglobin level falls quickly over a few days, it can even lead to cardiac failure.
  • Anaemia is a condition in which a person has a lower-than-normal number of red blood cells or quantity of haemoglobin, which reduces the capacity of their blood to carry oxygen and can lead to a number of health problems, and even death.
  • It is considered a severe public health problem if more than 40% of the population is diagnosed with anaemia.
  • Men with haemoglobin levels of less than 13.0 grams (g) per decilitre (dL) are considered anaemic, as per World Health Organization norms. Women with levels lower than 12.0 g/dL are considered anaemic if they are not pregnant. Among pregnant women, levels lower than 11.0 g/dL signal anaemia.

Concerns:

  • Anaemia in women and children has been a major problem in India for half a century.
  • According to National Family Health Survey-4, the national average of anaemia among women between 15 and 49 years is 53% and in Delhi it’s 54.3%.
  • While the national average came down from 55.3% to 53% between NFHS-3 and NFHS-4, it rose from 44.3% to 55.3% in Delhi.
  • Just over half (51%) of Indian women of reproductive age (15 to 49 years) are anaemic, according to the just-released Global Nutrition Report 2017.
  • Low haemoglobin levels lower productivity and cause illness and death, and thus impose an economic cost.
  • The loss of gross domestic product to anaemia was estimated at $22.64 billion (Rs 1.50 lakh crore) in 2016, more than three times the health budget for 2017-18.

Details:

  • Nutritional deficiency is by far the most common cause of anaemia worldwide.
  • Nearly half the cases of nutritional deficiency-related anaemia in India are caused by consuming too little iron.
  • Inadequate intake of the vitamins B9 (folate) and B12 is also a frequent cause.
  • The state programme officer of Delhi said that the distribution of IFA tablets would be extended to colleges.

Steps taken by the government:

  • The government is putting in place dedicated, preventive and promotive strategies to make India anaemia-free.
  • A flagship programme to address anaemia in women and children was introduced as far back as 1970, the National Anaemia Prophylaxis Programme, concentrated on distributing iron and folic acid tablets among two vulnerable population segments–pregnant women, and children aged 1 to 5 years.
  • In 1991, the flagship programme was renamed National Nutritional Anaemia Control Programme and made part of the National Child Survival and Safe Motherhood Programme, which attempts to cater to the overall needs of mothers and children pertaining to health and disease.
  • Yet more than half the targeted population remained anaemic in 2015.
  • Anaemia Mukt Bharat(AMB) was launched in the year 2018 as part of Intensified National Iron Plus Initiative (NIPI) Program for accelerating the annual rate of decline of anaemia from one to three percentage points.
  • The target groups for AMB are Children 6-59 months, 5-9 years, Adolescent Girls & Boys of 10-19 years, Women of Reproductive Age (15-49 years), Pregnant Women and Lactating Mothers.
  • Weekly Iron and Folic Acid Supplementation (WIFS) program includes supervised weekly ingestion of Iron Folic Acid (IFA) tablet.
  • To control worm infestation biannual deworming with Albendazole is provided.
  • Pradhan Mantri Surakshit Matritva Abhiyan (PMSMA) has been launched to focus on conducting special ANC check up on 9th of every month with the help of Medical officers/ OBGYN to detect and treat cases of anaemia.

Why Anaemia still persists?

  • Low political commitment is one of the major reasons. Anaemia has not been taken as seriously as we should have.
  • Interventions that look at possible means to enhance the dietary intake of iron such as food fortification in addition to iron and folic acid tablets have not been implemented.
  • The supplements failed to reach all the intended beneficiaries in adequate amounts, and not all beneficiaries who received the supplements actually ingested them.
  • Iron-folic acid supplements are meant to be distributed under the National Nutritional Anaemia Control Programme and the Weekly Iron and Folic Acid Supplementation (WIFAS) programme, an initiative introduced in 2013 to reduce adolescent anaemia, estimated to affect more than half of all adolescent girls and just under one in three adolescent boys.
  • Fewer than one in three pregnant women have access to iron and folic acid supplements, according to NFHS-IV, even after the percentage of women consuming these supplements during pregnancy doubled between 2005-06 and 2015-16, from 15% to 30%.

Way forward:

  • The programme as merely a preventive intervention given India’s high rates of malnutrition and maternal mortality. India has to continue to need an all-out effort against anaemia to prevent as well as manage it.
  • To better target anaemia prevention and treatment, a pan-India survey of 100,000 children and adolescents was conducted to check for vitamin B12 deficiency and worm infestation.
  • A parasitic infestation can cause malabsorption of essential nutrients, which, in turn, can cause anaemia, which is why de-worming tablets are also distributed under the existing iron and folic acid supplementation programmes.
  • To improve the coverage of the WIFAS programme for adolescents, there are plans to use the Mid-Day Meal programme software that requires schools to update the number of beneficiaries every week.
  • Efforts to improve supply to women have been on since the launch of the National Iron Plus programme in 2013, under which the government provides supplements to all women of reproductive age irrespective of their haemoglobin levels and pregnancy status, unlike earlier initiatives. What needs more emphasis is improved consumption.
  • Creating awareness is particularly vital because anaemia can go undetected until it becomes severe.
  • Greater awareness can boost community-wide demand for supplements, compelling wider distribution.

2. Drug regulators caution against ranitidine use

Context:

Indian doctors have advised patients to avoid over-the-counter (OTC) use of popular antacid ranitidine.

Concerns:

  • A US-based online pharmacy recently alerted regulators that its sample tests revealed the drug to contain some cancer-causing impurities beyond permissible levels.
  • Although leading regulators such as the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the European Medicines Agency (EMA) have not banned the drug, regulators have alerted public to be cautious and consult their doctors.
  • US (FDA) is testing for the presence of human carcinogen called NDMA, or N-Nitrosodimethylamine in Zantac and its generic forms.
    • NDMA is present as a contaminant in food, water, vegetables and meat also in very small amounts.
    • It has been classified by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC)as probably carcinogenic to humans.
    • It is an environmental contaminant found in water and foods.
    • The drug has been used very commonly for the treatment of acid peptic disorders.
  • Swiss drugmaker Novartis’s generic arm Sandoz has recalled the drug voluntarily.
  • Many leading drugmakers, including India’s Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories, have stopped sales until there is clarity.
  • The Indian drug regulator and the Indian Medical Association are yet to come up with a warning to public and manufacturers.

Ranitidine:

  • In India Ranitidine (some versions of Zantac is also known by the generic name ranitidine) is used for treating gastrointestinal disorders and discomfort. It is a commonly prescribed medicine for countering acidity and acid peptic disorders.
  • It has generally been considered safer than many other medicines.
  • It is on the World Health Organisation’s‘Model List of Essential Medicines’.

Details:

  • Various drugmakers such as Dr. Reddy’s, Sun Pharma, Cadila Pharma, GlaxoSmithKline, JB Chemicals and Zydus Cadila sell over 180 products based on ranitidine.
  • The Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation (CDSCO) has started the process of checking for any adverse reactions of the drug.
  • In July 2018, Valsartan, a drug that treats blood pressure and heart failure, faced a similar issue as some tests revealed that the drug had higher levels of cancer-causing impurities. This affected over 50 manufacturers, including Novartis, Cipla, Lupin and Torrent.

C. GS3 Related

Category: ECONOMY

1. PM’s economic advisory council reconstituted

Context:

The government has announced that it has reconstituted the Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council (EAC-PM) for a period of two years.

Details:

  • Government of India has reconstituted the Economic Advisory Council to the Prime Minister (EAC-PM) for a period of two years with effect from September 26, 2019.
  • Bibek Debroy and Shri Ratan P. Watal will continue to be the chairman and member secretary, respectively, of the reconstituted EAC-PM.
  • The release added that the EAC-PM would have two part-time members apart from the two full-time members.

What is Economic Advisory Council?

  • Economic Advisory Council is a non-constitutional and non-statutory, non-permanent and independent body.
  • It is constituted to provide sound policy advice in key areas such as reviving economic growth and creating enabling conditions for gainful employment.
  • The body comprises of economists of high repute and eminence.
  • The body is constituted to provide advice on economic issues to the government, specifically to the Prime Minister.
  • The advice of the EAC-PM would be either on reference from the PM or suo-motu.
  • It submits periodic reports to PM related to macroeconomic developments and issues which will have implications of the economic policy.

Category: ENVIRONMENT AND ECOLOGY

1. New IPCC report warns of dire threat to oceans

Context:

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) released a special report that underlines the dire changes taking place in oceans, glaciers and ice-deposits on land and sea.

Details:

  • The ‘Special Report on the Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate’ was prepared following an IPCC Panel decision in 2016 to prepare three Special Reports and follows the Special Reports on Global Warming of 1.5°C, and on Climate Change and Land (SRCCL).
    • The 5°C report was a key input used in negotiations at Katowice, Poland in 2018 for countries to commit themselves to capping global temperature rise to 1.5°C by the end of the century.
  • According to the summary of the report, over the 21st century, the ocean is projected to transition to unprecedented conditions with increased temperatures, further ocean acidification, marine heatwaves and more frequent extreme El Niño and La Niña events.
  • It summarises the disastrous impacts of warming based on current projections of global greenhouse gas emissions.
  • The report notes that the global ocean has warmed unabated since 1970 and has taken up more than 90% of the excess heat in the climate system.
  • Since 1993, the rate of ocean warming has more than doubled.
  • Marine heatwaves have very likely doubled in frequency since 1982 and are increasing in intensity.
  • The Southern Ocean accounted for 35%–43% of the total heat gain in the upper 2,000 m global ocean between 1970 and 2017, and its share increased to 45%–62% between 2005 and 2017.
  • A researcher at The Energy Resources Institute (TERI) School of Advanced Studies, said that major impact is in the Hindu Kush Himalayan Regions.
  • It was opined that floods will become more frequent and severe in the mountainous and downstream areas of the Indus, Ganges and Brahmaputra river basins, because of an increase in extreme precipitation events… the severity of flood events is expected to more than double towards the end of the century.

IPCC:

  • The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change is an intergovernmental body of the United Nations.
  • It is the apex referee for scientific evidence on the impact of global warming.

Read more about Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)

D. GS4 Related

Nothing here for today!!!

E. Editorials

Category: SOCIAL ISSUES

1. Live-in Relationships

Meaning

  • It involves continuous cohabitation between the partners without any responsibilities or obligations towards one another.
  • The Supreme Court in Indra Sarma vs. V.K.V. Sarma defined live-in relationships as- A domestic cohabitation between an adult unmarried male and an adult unmarried female.

Supreme Court on Live in relationships

The Supreme Court has, in several rulings, held that live-in-relationships are not illegal.

  • In Lata Singh v. State of UP (2006) it was observed that a live-in relationship between two consenting adults of heterosexual sex does not amount to any offence even though it may be perceived as immoral.
  • In the case of Khushboo v. Kanniammal & Anr (2010) it was held that living together is a right to life.
  • In Indra Sarma v. VKV Sarma (2013) the court observed, “Live-in or marriage like relationship is neither a crime nor a sin though socially unacceptable. The decision to marry or not to marry or to have a heterosexual relationship is intensely personal.”
  • In Shafin Jahan v. Asokan (2018), it held that the right to choose one’s life partner is an important facet of the right to life, and social approval of intimate personal decisions should not be the basis for recognising them.
  • In Navtej Johar v. Union of India (2018), it read down Section 377 of the IPC which criminalised consensual homosexual relationships.
  • At the same time Section 2(f) of the Domestic Violence (DV) Act, extends protection to women who are in “relationship in the nature of marriage” but all live-ins do not qualify as relationship in the nature of marriage.

Supreme Court had laid down some guidelines (not exhaustive but insightful) for testing under what circumstances, a live-in relationship will fall within the expression “relationship in the nature of marriage.”

  • The important factors for determination would be – a reasonable duration of period of relationship to be determined subjectively;
  • partners should have been in a shared household as defined under Section 2(s) of the DV Act;
  • there must be some pooling of resources and financial arrangements supporting each other,
  • sharing bank accounts, joint investments etc; having some sort of domestic arrangements like entrusting the responsibility of household chores on the woman;
  • having sexual relationship, not just for pleasure, but for emotional and intimate relationship, for procreation of children, so as to give emotional support, companionship and also material affection, caring etc; having children and sharing the responsibility for bringing up and supporting them;
  • holding out to the public and socializing with friends, relations and others, as if they are husband and wife; and
  • Sharing a common intention of parties as to what their relationship is to be and to involve, and as to their respective roles and responsibilities, primarily determines the nature of that relationship.

Protection for Women under such relationship

  • Women in relationships in the nature of marriage are entitled to protection and maintenance under the Domestic Violence Act, 2005.
  • But the relationships which fail to qualify the above-mentioned test will not be entitled to seek protection under the DV Act.

What constitutes illegality?

  • A live-in could be bigamous, adulterous, or involving some underage partner.
  • These relations are illegal entailing legal ramifications for the parties involved therein.

Why younger generation have altogether different expectations from relationships?

  • The parties enjoy the liberty to walk out of the relationship without legal hassles.
  • Live-ins offer an opportunity to check compatibility and know each other better before they take the plunge.
  • There may also be those who cohabit informally because they cannot formalise their relationships, such as inter-caste/religion opposite-sex couples who are barred from marrying by social norms, or same-sex couples, who are barred from marrying by law.

Context

  • Referring to women in live-in relationships, a Bench of the State Human Rights Commission of Rajasthan said that the “concubine” life of a woman cannot be termed a dignified life.

Concerns

  • This is patriarchy which prompts universities going forward to have more conservative curfews for female students.
  • In the name of protecting the women it indirectly says don’t challenge the patriarchal structures and institutions meant to keep the women in their place.
  • In stating that women in live-in relationships are ‘kept’ as concubines, it ignores the possibility that such relationships could be a viable alternative in cases where marriage is legally or socially prohibited.
    • It also assumes that marriage is, or ought to be, the only relationship through which women sexually associate with men.
  • At another level, by equating women who cohabit with concubines, it entrenches the patriarchal Madonna-whore dichotomy: Which means that women can either be good women who abide by the societal boundaries set for them, committed to relationship or bad women who dare transgress these boundaries.
  • Article 19 of the Constitution, which protects the right to freedom of speech and expression, includes the freedom to express one’s identity, sexual preferences, and love.
  • The right to life and personal liberty under Article 21 includes the right to privacy. The right to choose how to organise one’s personal intimacies is an important facet of the right to privacy and, therefore, outside the purview of the state. Demanding that the government seek to prohibit live-in relationships is therefore brazen contempt of the decisions of the apex court.
  • The language in the order will likely create a chilling effect, preventing vulnerable citizens, in need of legal protection, from seeking redress. The SHRC also demanded that governments run awareness campaigns against live-in relationships.

Conclusion

  • In light of Supreme Court Judgments, it is important to note that being in a live-in relationship is a valid choice which deserves the recognition and protection of law.
  • Illegality is different from immorality. People may regard live-in-relationships as immoral, but that is their own perception which cannot be allowed to influence anyone else’s personal decision.
  • Moral policing cannot be permitted, especially when the arrangement has the endorsement from the touchstone of fundamental rights.
  • The most important concomitants of any relationship are love, trust and mutual respect. The existence of these make any relationship blissful, irrespective of the societal sanction of marriage.

Category: SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

1. Biotechnology sector- Different peas in different pods

Introduction

  • India is among the first countries to set up a specialized agency for the development of research and human resources in the biotechnology sector.
  • After decades of development, it is imperative to ask: has the biotechnology sector lived up to its promise? More importantly, is the sector poised to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with, if not beat, the IT sector in creating jobs for the future?

The environment of IT and BT are different

  • Biotechnology research often requires access to laboratories with high-end scientific infrastructure, the supply of expensive chemicals and reagents with minimum shipping time between the supplier and the user, and a disciplined work culture and documentation practice due to regulatory and intellectual property filing requirement.
  • Additionally, unlike the products and solutions from the IT industry, biotechnology products and solutions often require ethical and regulatory clearance, making the process long, expensive and cumbersome.
  • As the nature of the work in the biotechnology sector is specialised, most jobs are filled with experienced and skilled scientists leaving the demand for young and inexperienced ones low.
  • In a global marketplace, having a large number of young professionals hungry to work at meagre wage coupled with the need of large corporations in the West to get work done cheaper created some of the large IT companies in India.
  • Therefore, unlike the IT sector, the biotechnology sector requires years of experience in the domain, access to labs with sophisticated instruments, sustained and long-term funding to innovate.

The future of biotechnology is bright in India. However, the sector is not going to displace the IT sector anytime soon in employment generation.

Impediments in the Biotechnology Sector

  • Modern biotechnological research is expensive. It requires a highly trained and skilled workforce and access to expensive instruments.
    • So far, most of the high-quality research output has come from a handful of institutions with better scientific infrastructure.
    • The rest, which forms the bulk of the research publications, is of mediocre quality. This is primarily due to a “publish or perish” culture that incentivises numbers over quality.
  • Over the years, the focus of research has slowly shifted from fundamental to applied research. Why has India not produced another Jagadish Chandra Bose or G.N. Ramachandran despite the biotechnology research budget growing several folds? The fruits of applied research will only come when we start investing in basic research without asking for quick returns.
  • Compared to the developed economies (the United States), biotechnology research in India is mainly funded by the public exchequer.
    • Unless the private sector starts supporting applied research and engages with academic institutions, the innovation in applied and translational biotechnology will be minimal.
    • While continuing and increasing the share of funding in basic research, the government should encourage and incentivise the private sector to invest substantially in applied research.

Advantage China

  • Unlike India, China has many more labs with the best of scientific infrastructure; each with more number of skilled human resources trained in regimental work culture and trained to practise rigorous documentation.
  • Chinese students and scientists outnumber Indians nearly 5:1 in most American universities in the life sciences/biology-related disciplines.
  • A booming economy and a higher science budget coupled with a flexible hiring system have made Chinese universities and research labs attract many overseas Chinese scientists.

Initiatives taken by the Indian Government

The government has been supporting biotech entrepreneurs.

  • Initiatives through the Biotechnology Industry Research Assistance Council (BIRAC) of the Department of Biotechnology to support the innovation ecosystems have resulted in an impressive outcome.
  • For example, the funding has helped startup companies make nearly 50 biotechnology-related products that are in the market today.

Moving beyond this, however, will require a different strategy and understanding of the mature biotech-led innovation and economy ecosystems.

What can the Govt do going forward?

  • Our government needs to make the process of hiring in our universities and national labs simpler and flexible, not necessarily provide more salary, to attract the bright overseas Indian scientists.
    • The government has been encouraging and promoting entrepreneurship, but the culture of institutions and scientists to be entrepreneurial will take time. This will require a flexible policy in the institutes to allow scientists incubate startup companies in their labs while retaining their positions
  • Second, the government should let scientists from research institutions and universities take unpaid leave to join the industry for a fixed period.
    • Similarly, the government should relax rules to appoint researchers from industry in faculty positions with the freedom to teach, participate, and take students.
    • This academia-industry linkage will do the much-required communication and understanding of the problems at both ends.
    • Without a sustained effort in encouraging and promoting science-driven innovation in our academic institutions, and a robust academia-industry collaboration, biotechnology-led innovation will not aid the nation’s economic growth.

Conclusion

  • Discoveries in biotechnology may help us solve some of the pressing societal issues of our time: cleaning our rivers, producing life-saving drugs, feeding our growing population with nutritious food and helping us clean the air we breathe. Therefore, it will be a mistake to look at the biotechnology sector through the lens of employment generation only.
  • The need for the use of artificial intelligence-based tools and applications of big data in biology will leverage India’s strength in IT and move biotech innovations faster to the marketplace.
  • Till then, India needs to do things patiently and work on the right side of the ethical and regulatory boundaries.

F. Tidbits

1. India offers aid to Pacific island nations

  • Prime Minister Narendra Modi has announced a $150 million line of credit to the group of Pacific island nations for undertaking solar, renewable energy and climate-related projects based on their requirement at the India-Pacific Islands Developing States (PSIDS) Leaders’ Meeting.
  • A total allocation of $12 million to the member states towards implementation of high-impact developmental project in the area of their choice was also announced.
  • India’s relationship with Pacific Island nations has deepened with the evolution of Act East Policy, resulting in the setting up of the action-oriented Forum for India—Pacific Island Cooperation (FIPIC).
  • The meeting deliberated on a wide range of issues, including:
    • Sharing of development experiences for the attainment of SDGs.
    • Enhancing cooperation in renewable energy.
    • Joining the newly launched Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure, capacity building, implementation of projects under the India-UN Development Partnership Fund and a road map for future India-PSIDS cooperation.

Forum for India—Pacific Island Cooperation (FIPIC):

  • Forum for India-Pacific Islands cooperation (FIPIC) is a multinational grouping developed in 2014 for cooperation between India and 14 Pacific Island nations.
  • It includes Cook Islands, Fiji, Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Nauru, Niue, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Tonga, Tuvalu and Vanuatu.

G. Prelims Facts

1. Ajanta Caves

  • AJANTA Caves are India’s greatest historical monument recognised by UNESCO as a world heritage site and is considered masterpieces of Buddhist religious art.
  • It is located in Aurangabad district, Maharashtra.
  • There are 29 caves in Ajanta.
  • 4 chaitya caves:
    • Cave nos. 10 and 9 belonging to 1st and 2nd centuries BC.
    • Cave nos. 19 and 26 belonging to the 5th century AD.
  • There are large chaitya-viharas also.
  • These caves are decorated with sculptures and paintings.
  • These are the only remaining example of 1st century BC and 5th century AD paintings.
  • Cave nos. 19 and 26:
    • Elaborately carved.
    • Façade decorated with the images of Buddha and Boddhisattva.
    • Apsidal vault-roof variety. Cave no. 26 – very big, interior hall carved with Buddha images; biggest image being Mahaparinibbana image.
  • Ajanta shrine images are big in size.
  • Chief patrons at Ajanta:
    • Varahadeva, a minister of the Vakataka king Harishena – cave no. 16
    • Upendragupta, local king and a feudatory of the Vakataka king – cave nos. 17 – 20.
    • Buddhabhadra – cave no. 26
    • Mathuradasa – cave no. 4
  • Paintings indicate many typological variations. Outward projections are seen from the 5th century onwards. Lines are well-defined and rhythmic. The figures are heavy much like the sculptures found in this region. The colours are limited.
  • The paintings show various skin colours like brown, yellowish-brown, greenish, yellow ochre, etc. indicating a multi-coloured populace.
  • The themes of the paintings are events from the Buddha’s life, Jatakas and Avadanas.
  • Padmapani and Vajrapani images are very common in the Ajanta caves. Some paintings cover the entire wall of the caves. Example: Simhala Avadana, Vidhurpundita Jataka and Mahajanaka Jataka.
  • In many paintings, events are grouped geographically. Famous example of painting from cave no.1 – Padmapani Boddhisattva.

2. Kashmir’s famed saffron gets GI tag

  • Kashmir’s famed saffron has been granted the Geographic Indication (GI) tag.
  • Saffron has several names-Zafran, Kesar, Kang, Kang Posh etc.
  • Historically, the cultivation of saffron started around three or four centuries back in Arabia and Spain. Thereafter, its cultivation spread as far as Iran, Sweden and India.
  • Now, saffron growing is a great commercial activity. In Indian agriculture, this activity is also known as “Golden Zest”.
  • India is a leading producer of premium and finest quality saffron in the world and Kashmiri saffron has been a recipient of the Great Taste Award, the world’s most coveted award for artisan and specialty food producers.

Read more about GI Tag.

3. Tribunal declares JKLF an unlawful association

  • An Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act Tribunal has said there is credible evidence to declare the Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF) an unlawful association and upheld the ban imposed by the Centre.
  • The JKLF, headed by separatist Yasin Malik, was banned by the Home Ministry on March 22, 2019.
  • The Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF) is a political organisation active in both Pakistan-administered and Indian-administered Kashmir.
  • It was founded by Amanullah Khan, with Maqbool Bhat also credited as a co-founder.

Click here to know more about Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Amendment Act, 2019 (UAPA)

4. Goal Keeper Award

  • Prime Minister Narendra Modi received the ‘Global Goalkeeper’ Award by Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, for Swachh Bharat Abhiyan, on 24 September 2019.
  • Started by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation in 2017, Goalkeepers is a catalyst for action towards 17 Global Goals for Sustainable Development.
  • ‘Goalkeepers’ brings leaders from all over the world together and works towards fighting inequality and ending poverty.

Read more about Swachh Bharat Abhiyaan

5. Zero Budget Natural Farming

Zero Budget Natural Farming (ZBNF) is a farming practice that believes in natural growth of crops without adding any fertilizers and pesticides or any other foreign elements. The word Zero Budget refers to the zero net cost of production of all crops (inter crops, border crops, multi crops)

Read more about Zero Budget Natural Farming.

H. Practice Questions for UPSC Prelims Exam

Q1. Consider the following statements:
  1. The Large Sky Area Multi-Object Fibre Spectroscopic Telescope(LAMOST) aims at conducting a 5-year spectroscopic survey of 10 million Milky Way stars.
  2. It is a Schmidt telescope operated by NASA.

Which of the given statement/s is/are correct?

a. 1 only
b. 2 only
c. Both 1 and 2
d. Neither 1 nor 2

See
Answer

Answer: a

Explanation:

The National Astronomical Observatories of Chinese Academy of Sciences (NAOC) was officially founded in April 2001 through the merger of observatories, stations and research center under Chinese Academy of Sciences. It is headquartered in Beijing. NAOC conducts cutting-edge astronomical studies, and operates major national facilities including The Large Sky Area Multi-Object Fiber Spectroscopy Telescope (LAMOST), the Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Telescope (FAST) etc. The Large Sky Area Multi-Object Fibre Spectroscopic Telescope (LAMOST), also known as the Guo Shoujing Telescope after the 13th-century Chinese astronomer, is a meridian reflecting Schmidt telescope, located in Xinglong Station, Hebei Province, China.

Q2. “Operation Megdhoot” refers to:

a. The code name of an operation of the Indian Armed Forces to capture the Siachen Glacier in the Kashmir region
b. The Cloud seeding operation undertaken by the government of Delhi to tackle the unprecedented smog choking it.
c. The code name of an operation where experimental solar-powered drone was used as atmospheric satellite, intended to act as relay stations for providing internet access to remote areas.
d. The initiative taken up by the Ministry of Culture to restore the literary works of Kalidasa.

See
Answer

Answer: a

Explanation:

Operation Meghdoot was a code-name for the Indian Armed Forces operation to capture the Siachen Glacier in the Kashmir region, precipitating the Siachen Conflict. It was launched on 13 April 1984. This military operation was the first assault launched in the highest battlefield in the world. The military action resulted in Indian troops gaining control of the entire Siachen Glacier.

Q3. Consider the following statements with respect to Co-operative banks:
  1. State Co-operative banks can seek refinance facility from RBI.
  2. Co-operative banks can open their branches in foreign countries.
  3. The administration and supervision of the co-operative banks completely fall under the purview of the state government.

Which of the given statement/s is/are correct?

a. 1 only
b. 1 and 3 only
c. 1 and 2 only
d. 3 only

See
Answer

Answer:  a

Explanation:

The supervision and administration of co-operative banks fall within the purview of both state governments and RBI. Banking Regulation Act, 1949 is partially applicable to co-operative banks. Thus RBI has partial control on co-operative banks. Co-operative banks cannot open their branches in foreign countries. Co-operative bank organisation has three-tier structures. State co-operative bank is the apex institution in the state.  Central or district co-operative banks work at the district level. Only state Co-operative banks can seek refinance facility from RBI.

Q4. Consider the following statements with respect to Insurance Regulatory Development
Authority of India:
  1. It is an autonomous, statutory body.
  2. IRDAI was established after the recommendations of the Malhotra Committee report of 1994.
  3. The members and the chairman of IRDAI are appointed by the Government of India.

Which of the given statement/s is/are correct?

a. 1 and 2 only
b. 1 and 3 only
c. 2 and 3 only
d. 1, 2 and 3

See
Answer

Answer: d

Explanation:

Insurance Regulatory Development Authority (IRDA) is a statutory body set up by the IRDA Act, 1999. It is an autonomous and apex body which has the responsibility to regulate and control the Insurance sector in India. Insurance Regulatory Development Authority (IRDA) was established after the recommendations of the Malhotra Committee report of 1994. The Government of India appoints the Chairman and other members of the Insurance Regulatory Development Authority (IRDA). It is headquartered in Hyderabad, Telangana.

I. UPSC Mains Practice Questions

  1. What do you understand by Zero Budget Natural Farming (ZBNF)? Comment on its role in helping India achieve its goal of doubling farmers’ income by 2022. (15 Marks, 250 Words)
  2. Why is India pushing for membership in the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG)? What are the impediments to India joining the group? (15 Marks, 250 Words)

Read previous CNA.

September 26th, 2019 CNA: Download PDF Here

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