Ethics Through Current Developments (15-11-2021)

  1. PM Modi Tasks Entire Council of Ministers To Suggest Governance Reforms READ MORE
  2. Constitutional Values in Danger Say Former Civil Servants READ MORE



Today’s Important Articles for Geography (15-11-2021)

  1. Explained: What COP26 achieved, didn’t READ MORE
  2. Net-zero commitment has been made. It must now be met READ MORE



Today’s Important Articles for Sociology (15-11-2021)

  1. Nearly 51 million internally displaced in 33 countries in the first half of 2021: UN READ MORE
  2. POCSO’s child-friendly policies are good in theory, but practically we need to do better READ MORE
  3. On the anxiety-driven pursuit of cultural purity READ MORE



Today’s Important Articles for Pub Ad (15-11-2021)

  1. PM Modi Tasks Entire Council of Ministers To Suggest Governance Reforms READ MORE
  2. In India, five people die in official custody every day. How does the law deal with these? READ MORE
  3. Constitutional Values in Danger Say Former Civil Servants READ MORE



WSDP Bulletin (15-11-2021)

(Newspapers, PIB and other important sources)

Prelim and Main

  1. Kaiser-i-Hind is Arunachal’s State butterfly: The insect with a 90-120 mm wingspan is found in the eastern Himalayas. READ MORE
  2. Tiger tourism in Nallamala Hills: Package includes cottage stay, educational tour, jungle safari, trek up to Umamaheshwaram Temple READ MORE
  3. In the den of marmots READ MORE
  4. The tongue of pearls: Mutribi al-Asamm Samarqandi’s ‘Conversations with Emperor Jahangir’ READ MORE

Main Exam    

GS Paper- 2

POLITY AND GOVERNANCE

  1. PM Modi Tasks Entire Council of Ministers To Suggest Governance Reforms READ MORE
  2. In India, five people die in official custody every day. How does the law deal with these? READ MORE
  3. Constitutional Values in Danger Say Former Civil Servants READ MORE

SOCIAL ISSUES AND SOCIAL JUSTICE

  1. Nearly 51 million internally displaced in 33 countries in the first half of 2021: UN READ MORE
  2. POCSO’s child-friendly policies are good in theory, but practically we need to do better READ MORE
  3. On the anxiety-driven pursuit of cultural purity READ MORE

INTERNATIONAL ISSUES

  1. Striding back into the Afghan theatre: Though challenging, it would be a mistake to consider that there is no space for India to operate in Afghanistan READ MORE
  2. Is the India-China conflict intractable? READ MORE
  3. AUKUS: A new Cold War against China READ MORE

GS Paper- 3

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

  1. India can contribute more to global growth READ MORE
  2. Message from MGNREGA: Low-skill manufacturing jobs needed to sustain economic growth READ MORE
  3. Opening govt bond market to retail investors is a good start. Challenge is making it a success READ MORE

ENVIRONMENT AND ECOLOGY  

  1. Explained: What COP26 achieved, didn’t READ MORE
  2. Net-zero commitment has been made. It must now be met READ MORE

SECURITY

  1. A lost cause: Despite severe losses, the Maoists refuseto acknowledge the futility of their cause READ MORE

GS Paper- 4

ETHICS EXAMPLES AND CASE STUDY

  1. PM Modi Tasks Entire Council of Ministers To Suggest Governance Reforms READ MORE
  2. Constitutional Values in Danger Say Former Civil Servants READ MORE

Questions for the MAIN exam

  1. How far do you agree with the view that the formation of AUKUS could harbinger a new cold war in the Asia-Pacific? Analyse your view.
  2. Critically analyse India’s three-decade journey under the new economic policy. Do you think the reforms are failing at the social front? Analyse your view.

QUOTATIONS AND CAPTIONS

  • Nothing is more expensive than a missed opportunity.
  • It must act continually in winning over the support of tribals in the region and retaining their faith in the liberal democratic institutions of the state.
  • Indian economic interests demand its presence in Afghanistan. There is no time to lose for this purpose. A heavy and long-term price will have to be paid otherwise.
  • From the anger against a Fabindia ad to the ban on cutting the cake at Kodava weddings, it is shrinking our social and cultural spaces.
  • The constraints to growth such as supply-side bottlenecks, financial inadequacies and macroeconomic volatility are waning.
  • Our foreign policy and diplomacy are showing signs of pedantry and resembling post-doctoral research work on international relations and the world order.
  • The AUKUS is a new war game. It is not just about making nuclear submarines in Australia. A New Cold War is coming up. It has already started.
  • India needs to create low-skill manufacturing jobs to be able to generate and sustain higher growth in the medium term.
  • The World Happiness Report which is brought out by the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network measures subjective wellbeing by relying on life evaluations, positive emotions and negative emotions.
  • What is at stake is no less than the life and liberty of the poor and the disadvantaged and the hard-won rights of the people of India under the Constitution.

50- WORD TALK

  • With not even 60% of the target 188 crore vaccine doses administered, there is a long way to go for the Covid-19 vaccination drive in India. However, with daily new cases coming down to the pre-second wave level in February, vaccine hesitancy and complacency appear to be the biggest challenges. At this juncture, the vaccination campaign in India can benefit from expert technical inputs & guidance and a robust operational strategy.

Things to Remember:

  • For prelims-related news try to understand the context of the news and relate with its concepts so that it will be easier for you to answer (or eliminate) from given options.
  • Whenever any international place will be in news, you should do map work (marking those areas in maps and also exploring other geographical locations nearby including mountains, rivers, etc. same applies to the national places.)
  • For economy-related news (banking, agriculture, etc.) you should focus on terms and how these are related to various economic aspects, for example, if inflation has been mentioned, try to relate with prevailing price rises, shortage of essential supplies, banking rates, etc.
  • For main exam-related topics, you should focus on the various dimensions of the given topic, the most important topics which occur frequently and are important from the main point of view will be covered in ED.
  • Try to use the given content in your answer. Regular use of this content will bring more enrichment to your writing.



IS INDIA A FAILING STATE? A COMPARISON WITH EMERGING ECONOMIES.

THE CONTEXT: India is facing a severe pandemic in its independence era. During the Second Wave of the covid-19 Pandemic, the situation has become more worsen. During this time many experts and other intellectuals claimed that India was completely failed to address the crisis that occurred by the Pandemic. Moreover, many experts believe that India is a failed state and it was totally failed to secure its citizen during that pandemic. In this article, we will analyse that Is India a failing state? Or Is India a really failed state?

HEALTH CRISIS DURING SECOND WAVE OF COVIS-19 PANDEMIC

  • The second wave in India was accelerated in March 2021 and in the last of April, it was on peak. During this time India saw the highest no. of cases in the World for many days.
  • At the starting of May India saw an average of more than 4,00,000 cases per day and more than 4000 deaths per day for a week.
  • The scenario created a deadly health crisis in India and there were many cases when people were struggling for basic health services even in Metro cities.
  • During the wave, India crosses 3 crores positive cases and 3 lakh deaths.
  • The positivity rate during the wave was more than 30 per cent at the starting of May 2021.
  • The crisis was more worsen in Rural areas.
  • There was news about floating dead bodies in Rivers and Buried on their Bank.
  • In conclusion, it can be said that it was the most deadly second wave in the world.

WHY DOES INDIA FAIL TO ADDRESS THE SECOND WAVE EFFECTIVELY?

There are mainly ten reasons for the dire situation:

  1. WARNINGS BY EXPERTS WENT UNHEEDED: Genome sequencing was not prioritised even after concerns were articulated about mutants causing a second wave.
  2. NOT AUGMENTING THE MEDICAL WORKFORCE: A dire shortage of health professionals has crippled India’s fight against Covid.
  3. THE VANISHING HOSPITAL BEDS: Across states, health infrastructure created during the first wave was dismantled under the delusion that the pandemic was over.
  4. FAILING THE CRUCIAL TEST: After expanding testing labs on a war footing in the first wave, the momentum was lost even before the second hit.
  5. GOING OFF TRACK: With states going lax on contact tracing and tracking of positive cases, the virus was left to spread unchecked
  6. THE BOOM IN BLACK MARKET FOR KEY DRUGS: The government’s failure to build up a stockpile of special drugs for covid treatment has left millions of Indians desperate
  7. GRAVE ERRORS IN OXYGEN SUPPLY: One of the biggest lessons for medical institutions from the first wave of the Covid-19 pandemic was that more than ventilators and ICU beds, what was essential was an adequate supply of oxygen in hospitals to treat critically ill patients. Nonetheless, when the second wave of the pandemic arrived earlier this year, India’s medical oxygen supply network collapsed.
  8. THE VACCINE COMPLACENCY: India’s vaccine rollout was abysmally slow, marred by official complacency and a lack of vision about its critical role in fighting return waves.
  9. A WAR ROOM THAT WORKS: The fight against Covid has lacked a nationwide technology solution to route help to the needy but there was clearly a lack of this step.
  10. THE ABSENT STATE: While the government failed to perform its duty and instead focused on political rewards. Despite the warning by the experts, govt. organized many events

The above explanation shows that the second wave in India was a total failure of health services, administration and in term of governance at the centre, state, district level.

IS INDIA A FAILED STATE? AN ANALYSIS

WHAT IS A FAILED STATE?

  • A failed state is one where the government is not in control. This is a simplistic explanation. In control of what? In control of the rule of law, the economy, security, stability and development.
  • India’s history as a formal democracy and its generally benign image around the world has hidden our fragility elsewhere. Everyone knows that the State in India is weak, and the government is unable to control the nation meaningfully across a variety of subjects. This is not new, and this was always the case.

Fragile Index (Previously called the Failed States Index) shows India is headed into a scary future

  • It categorises nation-states are being one of 11 categories in terms of risk and vulnerability in social cohesion, the economy and in the political space.
  • The nations that are classified as being successful and most likely to sustain their success are the Nordic countries of Finland, Norway, Denmark, Finland and Iceland, along with some others like Canada, New Zealand and Australia.
  • India is not in this category or the next one or even the one after that, which are sustainable or even stable.
  • It is in a category fifth from the bottom, which is classified as “Elevated Warning”. Our fellow category members are those like Colombia, Brazil, Israel, Algeria, Russia and Senegal.
  • There are 30 nations in this category, but only four of the 30 have declined since last year — Brazil, Colombia, Bolivia and India.
  • It says because of the current government’s “poorly thought out and implemented reforms, India’s economic growth has slowed, declining to its lowest nominal level since 1978.

Is India really failing?

India has improved steadily over the past 30 years. India’s progress on these fronts has been, in general, superior to other large Emerging Markets (EMs) and to India’s immediate neighbours. If we compare India with emerging markets (China, Russia, and Brazil) and neighbouring countries (Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, and Pakistan), we can easily assume that India has done very well in many fields..

Few comparisons are as follow (Source: United Nations Development Programme and World Bank database):

  1. Life Expectancy
  • Life expectancy at birth is the number of years a person is expected to survive. Exhibit 1 shows progress on this metric for India, large EMs and India’s neighbours.

  • In the chart above, the rate of growth in life expectancy can be seen between 6 sets of countries on average and India. It is evident that India’s rate of growth – in terms of the number of years lived – has been the highest – even above that of the EMs – over the last 30 years
  1. Infant mortality
  • Infant mortality per 1000 live births is the measure of the number of deaths at birth for every 1000 live births. It has long been seen as a reliable measure of the ability of a state to provide basic health services to its people. Exhibit 2 shows progress on this metric for India in comparison to its neighbours and other large EMs. Whilst India has performed better than its neighbours, the other large EMs have performed significantly better than India on this front.

  1. Average literacy rate
  • This metric measures the number of people who are literate (over 15 years of age) as a percentage of the total population. Exhibit 4 shows this metric over the years for India, its neighbours, and large EMs. India clearly surpassed its neighbours and large EMs in terms of the rate of growth in literacy rate over the past three decades.

  1. Average Human Development Index (HDI)
  • This metric is a mixture of three metrics – life expectancy, the standard of living at Gross National Income, and education in terms of expected and mean years of schooling. Exhibit 6 shows this composite index for India, India’s neighbours, and large EMs. The exhibit makes it amply clear that in terms of the rate of growth in HDI, India has beat both, its neighbours and large EMs over the last 30 years.

  1. Average GDP per capita (constant $ 2017 PPP)
  • This metric measures GDP per capita that is converted to international dollars using purchasing power parity rates. It measures the overall income for countries on an equal footing. Exhibit 7 shows this data for India, its neighbours, and large EMs. The conclusion is self-evident from the chart.

WHAT SHOULD BE DONE TO ADDRESS THE THIRD WAVE OR OTHER SECOND WAVE-LIKE SITUATIONS IN FUTURE?

  1. There is an urgent need to rapidly act to prevent transmission and mount crisis response and state-wise estimates are provided. Using a multi-model approach, with the worst-case scenario being considered for planning and strategy development.
  2. Adoption of a graded public health response for movement restriction and scaling it up guided by multi-indicator technical criteria.
  3. A state-level dashboard that captures indicators guiding the graded public health response might be developed to ensure better decision making and build citizen trust in restriction measures.
  4. A multi-component community-based intervention to remove barriers to access and promote mask usage consisting of the following components needs to be invested in and scaled up across India:
    1. Engaging community-based organisations to ensure availability of free surgical masks (free door-to-door distribution of surgical mask would be an appropriate strategy after the surge is over),
    2. Offering information on mask usage and disposal with videos on tab, brochure in local languages and other community-based platforms,
    3. Endorsement and advocacy by local community leaders – healthcare, social, political and cultural,
    4. Periodic in-person monitoring of mask usage including providing reminders and distribution in public spaces,
    5. Development of protocols for disposal of masks in a safe and environmentally friendly manner.
  5. Ensuring health system preparedness:
  6. Urgent investments to ensure the scaling up of a crisis health system (for both COVID and non-COVID needs) is required.
  7. Shortfalls in ventilator requirements, after purchase through routine supply chains and those received through aid, might be met by requesting support from organisations with the capacity to manufacture open source ventilators.
  8. There is an urgent need to support people with COVID-19 who can undergo home care safely and scale-up telemedicine provided by registered medical practitioners.
  9. Telemedicine facilities should be linked to transportation and hospital admission facilities such that severe patients can be optimally managed.
  10. The government needs to urgently develop and implement a fair, just and transparent triaging criterion for rational allocation of beds, oxygen, and other critical care resources in consultation with bioethicists. Evidence on different triaging strategies is presented in the form of an inventory.

CONCLUSION: Looking at the above analysis shows that it will not be fair to say that India is a failed or failing state. While India has lost a lot to COVID 19 in 2020 and 2021, one must not forget that it has achieved a lot in the last 7 decades.




DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS (NOVEMBER 14 & 15, 2021)

ART AND CULTURE

1. KARTARPUR CORRIDOR

THE CONTEXT: BJP leaders from Punjab, met PM and requested him to reopen the Kartarpur corridor before Gurpurab, which falls on November 19. The pilgrimage to the Kartarpur Sahib gurdwara was suspended in March 2020 because of the COVID-19 outbreak. 

ABOUT KARTARPUR CORRIDOR

  • Guru Nanak is the founder and first Guru of Sikhism.
  • He was born in 1469 at Talwandi Rai Bhoe near Lahore. The place is renamed later Nankana Sahib.
  • He undertook preaching tours, also called Udasis, to spread his message.
  • In the later years of his life, Guru Nanak settled down at the township of Kartarpur, on the banks of river Ravi in Punjab.
  • Kartarpur Corridor connects the Dera Baba Nanak Sahib Gurdwara in the India’s state of Punjab to the Gurdwara Darbar Sahib Kartarpur shrine in Narowal district of Pakistan’s Punjab province.
  • It runs across over Ravi River.
  • The Gurdwara Darbar Sahib was ordered by the Maharaja of Patiala between 1921-1929.
  • Guru Nanak died at the age of 70. He appointed Bhai Lena as his successor and renamed him, Guru Angad.

SOURCE: TH

 

INDIAN POLITY, GOVERNANCE AND SOCIAL JUSTICE

2. CITIZENS’ TELE-LAW MOBILE APP

THE CONTEXT: Union Minister of Law and Justice launched the Citizen’s Tele-Law Mobile App.

THE EXPLANATION:

  • Tele-Law: Reaching the Unreached e-interface platform was launched in 2017 by the Department of Justice, to strengthen the pre-litigation mechanism in the country.
  • This is operational in 51,434 Common Service Centres across 50,000 Gram Panchayats in 633 districts Tele-Law leverages technology (viz. tele-video conferencing facilities) to connect the beneficiary with the Panel Lawyer to seek legal advice and consultation for early redressal of their grievance.
  • Expanding its reach and ambit the Citizens’ Tele-Law Mobile App intends to widen the access to increased legal information and empowers the masses to identify their problem and choose from the appropriate forum of dispute redressal to claim their entitlements and rights by connecting the beneficiary directly to the Panel Lawyer or with the assistance of Para Legal Volunteers, Village Level entrepreneurs, in case of a beneficiary who are unable to read or write.
  • The consultation is available free of cost to those entitled to free legal aid under Section 12 of Legal Service Authority, whereas Others could avail at Rs 30/ per consultation.

SOURCE: PIB

 

ENVIRONMENT, GEOGRAPHY AND AGRICULTURE

3. KEY TAKEAWAYS OF COP26

THE CONTEXT:  The Glasgow climate meeting has ended with a pact weaker than many had hoped for. Among its successes, a global pledge to reduce methane emissions, and resolution of the carbon market deadlock.

ABOUT COP26

  • The Glasgow meeting was the 26th session of the Conference of Parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change or COP26. These meetings are held every year to construct a global response to climate change. Each of these meetings produces a set of decisions that are given different names. In the current case, this has been called the Glasgow Climate Pact.
  • Earlier, these meetings have also delivered two treaty-like international agreements, the Kyoto Protocol in 1997 and the Paris Agreement in 2015. While the Kyoto Protocol expired last year, the Paris Agreement is now the active instrument to fight climate change.
  • The main task for COP26 was to finalise the rules and procedures for the implementation of the Paris Agreement. Most of these rules had been finalized by 2018, but a few provisions, like the one relating to the creation of new carbon markets, had remained unresolved.
  • However, due to clear evidence of worsening of the climate crisis in the six years since the Paris Agreement was finalized, host country United Kingdom was keen to ensure that Glasgow, instead of becoming merely a “procedural” COP, was a turning point in enhancing climate actions. The effort was to push for an agreement that could put the world on a 1.5 degree Celsius pathway, instead of the 2 degree Celsius trajectory which is the main objective of the Paris Agreement.

WHAT WAS ACHIEVED?

  • Mitigation: The Glasgow agreement has emphasised that stronger action in the current decade was most critical to achieving the 1.5-degree target. Accordingly, it has:
    1. Asked countries to strengthen their 2030 climate action plans, or NDCs (nationally-determined contributions), by next year
    2. Established a work programme to urgently scale-up mitigation ambition and implementation
    3. Decided to convene an annual meeting of ministers to raise the ambition of 2030 climate actions
    4. Called for an annual synthesis report on what countries were doing
    5. Requested the UN Secretary-General to convene a meeting of world leaders in 2023 to the scale-up ambition of climate action
    6. Asked countries to make efforts to reduce the usage of coal as a source of fuel, and abolish “inefficient” subsidies on fossil fuels
    7. Has called for a phase-down of coal, and phase-out of fossil fuels. This is the first time that coal has been explicitly mentioned in any COP decision.
  • Adaptation: Most of the countries, especially the smaller and poorer ones, and the small island states, consider adaptation to be the most important component of climate action. These countries, due to their lower capacities, are already facing the worst impacts of climate change, and require immediate money, technology and capacity building for their adaptation activities. As such, the Glasgow Climate Pact has:
    1. Asked the developed countries to at least double the money being provided for adaptation by 2025 from the 2019 levels. In 2019, about $15 billion was made available for adaptation that was less than 20 per cent of the total climate finance flows. Developing countries have been demanding that at least half of all climate finance should be directed towards adaptation efforts.
    2. Created a two-year work programme to define a global goal on adaptation. Unlike mitigation efforts that bring global benefits, the benefits from adaptation are local or regional. There are no uniform global criteria against which adaptation targets can be set and measured.

Finance:  In 2009, developed countries had promised to mobilise at least $100 billion every year from 2020. This promise was reaffirmed during the Paris Agreement, which also asked the developed countries to scale up this amount from 2025. The 2020 deadline has long passed but the $100 billion promise has not been fulfilled. The developed nations have now said that they will arrange this amount by 2023.

ABOUT THE GLASGOW AGREEMENT

The deal aimed at staving off dangerous climate change has been struck at the COP26 summit in Glasgow. The pact has:

  1. Expressed “deep regrets” over the failure of the developed countries to deliver on their $100 billion promise. It has asked them to arrange this money urgently and every year till 2025.
  2. Initiated discussions on setting the new target for climate finance, beyond $100 billion for the post-2025 period.
  3. Ask the developed countries to provide transparent information about the money they plan to provide.
    • Loss and Damage: Thanks to a push from many nations, substantive discussions on loss and damage could take place in Glasgow. The final agreement, which has acknowledged the problem and dealt with the subject at substantial length, has only established a “dialogue” to discuss arrangements for the funding of such activities. This is being seen as a major let-down.
    • Carbon Markets: The Glasgow Pact has offered some reprieve to the developing nations. It has allowed these carbon credits to be used in meeting countries’ first NDC targets. These cannot be used for meeting targets in subsequent NDCs. That means, if a developed country wants to buy these credits to meet its own emission reduction targets, it can do so till 2025. Most countries have presented climate targets for 2025 in their first NDCs. The resolution of the deadlock over carbon markets represents one of the major successes of COP26.

PARALLEL PROCESSES

A lot of substantial action in Glasgow happened in parallel processes that were not a part of the official COP discussions. These do not form part of the final agreed outcome, but Glasgow can certainly claim credit for facilitating these actions.

  1. India announced a Panchamitra (a mixture of five elements) of climate actions. It raised the targets for two of its existing climate targets, announced two new ones, and also promised to turn net-zero by the year 2070. India’s new commitments created the maximum buzz on the first two days of the Glasgow meeting.
  2. Several other countries also announced enhanced climate actions. Brazil, for example, said it would advance its net-zero target year from 2060 to 2050. China promised to come out with a detailed roadmap for its commitment to let emissions peak in 2030, and also for its 2060 net-zero target. Israel announced a net-zero target for 2050.
  3. Over 100 countries pledged to reduce methane emissions by at least 30 per cent from present levels by 2030. Methane is a dangerous greenhouse gas, with a global warming potential nearly 80 times that of carbon dioxide over a 20-year time period. This pledge, if achieved, is estimated to avoid about 0.2 degrees Celsius temperature rise by the middle of the century. The methane pledge is being seen as one of the biggest successes at COP26.
  4. Another set of over 100 countries promised to arrest and reverse deforestation by 2030.
  5. Over 30 countries signed on to a declaration promising to work towards a transition to 100 per cent zero-emission cars by the year 2040, at least in the leading car markets of the world.

SOURCE: IE

4. KAISER-I-HIND

THE CONTEXT: Kaiser-i-Hind is Arunachal’s State butterfly.

THE EXPLANATION:

  • Kaiser-i-Hind (Teinopalpus imperialism) literally means Emperor of India. This butterfly with a 90-120 mm wingspan is found in six states along the eastern Himalayas at elevations from 6,000-10,000 feet in well-wooded terrain.
  • The butterfly also flutters in Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar, Laos, Vietnam and southern China.
  • Although the Kaiser-i-Hind is protected under Schedule II of Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972, it is hunted for supply to butterfly collectors.
  • The decision was taken by the State Cabinet meeting that was for the first time held outside State capital Itanagar at an unusual location — Pakke Tiger Reserve.
  • The Cabinet also adopted the Pakke Tiger Reserve 2047 declaration on climate change-resilient and responsive Arunachal Pradesh aimed at lowering emissions and sustainable development.

PROTECTED AREAS OF ARUNACHAL PRADESH

  • Two National Parks: Mauling NP and Namdapha NP
  • Three tiger reserves: Namdapha (Easternmost tiger reserve of India), Kamlang and Pakke (Pakhui) Tiger reserves.
  • One biosphere reserve: DehangDibang Biosphere reserve

SOURCE: TH               

 

5. TIGER TOURISM IN NALLAMALA HILLS

THE CONTEXT: The lush green hills of Nallamala are now open for tourists to explore and learn from, thanks to the ecotourism package announced by the Telangana Forest Department.

THE EXPLANATION:

  • Safari ride into the Amrabad Tiger Reserve will be part of the ‘Tiger Stay Package’ which is set to begin from November 17.
  • Youth from the local Chenchu tribe will accompany the tourists on the ride and explain the culture of the particularly vulnerable tribal group (PVTG), besides providing assistance in spotting the wild animals.
  • Amrabad tiger reserve in Telangana and Nagarjunsagar Srisailam tiger reserve in Andhra Pradesh are continuous protected areas located in two states.

SOURCE: TH               

INTERNAL SECURITY

7. MANIPUR AMBUSH

 THE CONTEXT: The People’s Liberation Army and the Manipur Naga People’s Front have jointly claimed responsibility for the ambush of an Assam Rifles convoy on Saturday (November 13) morning in Churachandpur district of Manipur, killing seven, including a Commanding officer, his wife and their five-year-old son. The ambush is one of the biggest in the state since the attack on the Dogra Rifles in 2015.

THE EXPLANATION:

  • Bahiang, where the attack has taken place, borders Myanmar but falls under the territorial jurisdiction of the Zomi Revolutionary Army, a powerful insurgent group in Churachandpur. The question that local insurgent leaders have been asking is, how the PLA could have operated in this area without ZRA permission and have pointed to ZRA’s security lapse.
  • Insurgent leaders have also pointed to the Myanmar coup as a reason for both the revival of insurgent activity as well as the choice of Churachandpur. The district neighbours Chin state in Myanmar where the political situation has been tenuous and there have been reports of human rights violations. An active People’s Defence Force, the armed wing of the National Unity Government, which claims to be Myanmar’s legitimate government, is believed to have pushed Indian insurgent groups towards the Indian border.
  • The PLA has been one of the most active groups in the past but has remained dormant over the past 5-6 years. Leaders in other groups have pointed out that even in social programmes organised by insurgent groups – such as anti-drug campaigns, anti-AFSPA and other such protests – have been shunned by the PLA. So, their sudden violent activity has caused surprise.
  • Unlike the tribal groups – such as the Naga NSCN-IM and NNPGs, or the 20 odd Kuki/Zomi groups which are in peace talks with the Indian government – the Meitei valley groups have to date not come to the table to discuss a solution with the Indian Government.
  • There are six main valley groups in Manipur – the UNLF, PLA, KCP, KYKL, PREPAK, MPLF – apart from numerous splinter groups from each. All the groups operate out of Myanmar and raise funds for operations and arms largely through extortion.
  • They use guerrilla tactics in their operations and the attacks on Indian security forces in the northeast are largely carried out by these groups.
  • Their activity over the years has dwindled, however, with recruitment having stalled on one hand, and Myanmar’s increasing cooperation with India in recent years, placing pressure on the groups

ABOUT THE PEOPLE’S LIBERATION ARMY (PLA)

  • The group was founded on September 25, 1978, under the leadership of N. Bisheshwar, after having broken away from its parent body, the United National Liberation Front. In 1979, the PLA’s political wing Revolutionary People’s Front (RPF) was set up.
  • Like the UNLF, and many other splinter groups that would follow, the PLA was fighting for the secession of Manipur from India. While the PLA called for Kuki and Naga insurgents to join their ranks, it remains to this day dominated by the Imphal valley-based Meitei Hindu insurgents.
  • Also, like other Meitei underground groups, in its initial years, PLA cadres were trained by the NSCN and held Marxist ideology.
  • Its political wing, the RPF campaigned against the use of drugs, and banned alcohol in the state, often using violent means to impose these bans.
  • Considered one of the strongest groups in Manipur, the PLA has been working out of Myanmar where they continue to have camps, like the other Meitei groups, and remain active with no ceasefire agreement with the Indian government and have so far not expressed any intention of peace talks with India.

SOURCE: IE                          

 

7. RUSSIA STARTS DELIVERY OF S-400 MISSILES

THE CONTEXT:   Russia has started delivery of the much-awaited S-400 missile system for deployment on schedule this year.

THE EXPLANATION:

  • India had bought the system for over US$ 5 billion in 2018, in a deal that became contentious amid a threat of sanctions from the US on countries engaging in defence deals with Russia.
  • There was no official word from the Indian side. The delivery of the weapons system was expected to begin before the end of this year. The delivery of parts has already begun through sea and air routes, sources said.
  • India had bought five units of the system in 2018 and had made the first tranche of the payment, $800 million, a year later.
  • The S-400 is among the most advanced air-defence systems in the world, with a range of around 400 km. It is capable of protecting its air defence bubble against rockets, missiles, cruise missiles and even aircraft.
  • The system is already available with China, which has deployed it along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in eastern Ladakh amid the 18-month military standoff.

SOURCE : TH

 

MISCELLANEOUS

8. BIMAL PATEL ELECTED TO INTERNATIONAL LAW COMMISSION

THE CONTEXT:  Professor Bimal Patel, vice-chancellor of the Rashtriya Raksha University and member of the National Security Advisory Board of India, has been elected to the International Law Commission for a five-year term, in a hard-fought election at the United Nations.

THE EXPLANATION:

  • Patel, 51, garnered 163 votes in the UN General Assembly out of 192 members present and voting, topping the Asia-Pacific group that included candidates from China, South Korea and Japan. He will serve a five-year term starting January 1, 2023.
  • In the Asia-Pacific group, there were 11 strong candidates vying for 8 seats, making the election hotly contested.
  • He has worked for 15 years at global organisations such as the United Nations of Youth and the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) at the Hague, Netherlands, according to his profile on the Rashtriya Raksha University website.

ABOUT INTERNATIONAL LAW COMMISSION

  • The International Law Commission was established by the General Assembly in 1947 to undertake the mandate of the Assembly to “initiate studies and make recommendations for the purpose of encouraging the progressive development of international law and its codification.”
  • The Statute of the International Law Commission provides that the Commission shall consist of 34 members who shall be persons of recognised competence in international law.

SOURCE: TheWire

 

THE PRELIMS PRACTICE QUESTIONS

Q1.  Select the odd one out of the following:

a) Namdapha tiger reserve

b) Orang tiger reserve

c) Kamlang  tiger reserve

d) Pakke Tiger reserve

ANSWER FOR NOVEMBER 13th, 2021 PRELIMS PRACTICE QUESTIONS

Q1. Answer: B

Explanation:

  • H-1B visas- For skilled workers, which are often used by the tech industry
  • L visas- For executives, managers and specialized workers being transferred within a company
  • H-2B visas- For seasonal workers
  • J visas- For cultural exchange, including interns, trainees, teachers, camp counsellors and people participating in a summer work travel program
  • H-4 visas – Family members who would accompany workers on H-1B visas



Day-82 | Daily MCQs | UPSC Prelims | ENVIRONMENT AND ECOLOGY

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