Friday, October 30, 2020

Comprehensive Current affairs 30 October 2020

Radio diagnosis Facilities.

Health Minister Harsh Vardhan digitally inaugurated the Radio diagnosis Facilities at All India Institute of Medical Sciences(AIIMS), Bathinda.

He also inaugurated the MBBS Student Hostel.

The setting up of new AIIMS at Bathinda will not only transform health education and training but will also address the shortfall of health care professionals in the region.

The new AIIMS will serve the dual purpose of providing super speciality health care to the population and also help to create a large pool of doctors and other health workers in this region.

The number of AIIMS has increased from 6 to 22, while another 75 existing institutions are planned for upgradation to provide quality tertiary healthcare services.

 

PM SVANidhi Scheme.

Modi lauded beneficiaries of the PM Street Vendors Atmanirbhar Nidhi (PM SVANidhi) Scheme, and also most of the beneficiaries were repaying their loans on time. So far, 24.76 lakh applications have been received, of which 12.37 lakh have been sanctioned, and over 5 lakh loans have been disbursed.

The Scheme was launched on June 1, 2020, by the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs for providing affordable Working Capital loans to street vendors to resume their livelihoods that have been affected due to Covid-19 lockdown.

By the Scheme, vendors can avail a working capital loan of up to Rs. 10,000, which is repayable in monthly instalments in the tenure of 1 year. The loans would be without collateral.

On timely/ early repayment of the loan, an interest subsidy @ 7% per annum will be credited to the bank accounts of beneficiaries through Direct Benefit Transfer on a quarterly basis. There will be no penalty on early repayment of the loan. The Scheme promotes digital transactions through cashback incentives up to an amount of Rs. 100 per month.

The scheme targets to benefit over 50 lakh street vendors. The duration of the Scheme is till March 2022.

The lending institutions under the Scheme include Scheduled Commercial Banks, Regional Rural Banks, Small Finance Banks, Cooperative Banks, NBFCs, Microfinance institutions and Self Help Group banks.

Japan aims to reach net-zero emissions by 2050.

Japan’s Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga has announced the country’s ambition to achieve net-zero greenhouse gas emissions and become carbon-neutral by 2050.

Yoshihide Suga - Responding to climate change is no longer a constraint on economic growth. Yoshihide Suga - Need to change our thinking to the view that taking assertive measures against climate change will lead to changes in industrial structure and the economy that will bring about great growth.

In addition to boosting research and development in these areas, the country will promote a digital society, placing heavier reliance on smart technologies in everyday life.

Japan, the world’s fifth-biggest emitter of carbon dioxide, has set admirable goals, some are dubious of the country’s ability to achieve its target by 2050, given since the nation’s heavy reliance on coal after the 2011 Fukushima Disaster led to the closure of many nuclear reactors.

The country’s new target of no greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 is in line with the European Union, which has also set its carbon-neutral target to 30 years.

Japan had previously pledged carbon neutrality “as soon as possible” in the second half of the century, instead of setting an explicit date, as its long-term climate strategy was to cut emissions by 80% by 2050 from 2010 levels.

According to the 2016 Japan Executive Summary, the country’s total greenhouse gas emissions in the fiscal year were 1,322 million tonnes of carbon dioxide, which marked a decrease of total emissions by 0.2% when compared to those of FY2015.

Indias outreach to Myanmar.

Indian Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla and Chief of the Army Staff Gen. Manoj Naravane visited Myanmar. The visit is because of the upcoming general elections in Myanmar, would be viewed as India’s support for Myanmar’s efforts in strengthening democratisation.

The support of India seems to be a continuation of India’s Myanmar policy since the 1990s which has been to support democratisation driven from within the country.

India took a balanced stand by its engagement with all the political players in the country, including the military that played a key role in Myanmar’s political transition and is still an important political actor.

India has followed a non-interference policy in the internal politics of Myanmar.

 

Significance:

India–Myanmar border makes a challenge to India’s security. Myanmar shares a land border with northeastern India, stretching some 1,624 kilometres and also a 725-km maritime boundary in the Bay of Bengal given the link between the porous border and organized crime and extremism in the region.

India – Myanmar border is highly porous, poorly guarded and located along a remote, underdeveloped, insurgency-prone region and proximate to an opium-producing area. The border is also vulnerable to the activities of insurgents and drugs and arms trafficker.

Myanmar is critical for the overall development of North-Eastern Indian states. Myanmar is strategically important to India as it is the only ASEAN country that shares a border with India. Myanmar is key in linking South Asia to Southeast Asia and helping enhance its regional outreach.

Myanmar is also an important member of the Bay of Bengal Initiative for Multi-Sectoral Technical and Economic Cooperation (BIMSTEC).

Vivad se Vishwas scheme.

The government has extended for the 3rd time the deadline for making payment without additional amount under the ‘Vivad Se Vishwas' by three months from December 31, 2020, to March 31 2021.

Vivad se Vishwas scheme was announced in the budget this fiscal to provide a mechanism for the resolution of pending Income Tax disputes.

As on November 30, 2019, about 4.83 lakh appeals pending at various levels involving tax arrears to the tune of about 9.32-lakh crore.

Under the Scheme, a taxpayer would be required to pay only the amount of the disputed taxes and will get a complete waiver of interest and penalty provided he pays by March 31, 2020. Those who avail this Scheme after March 31, 2020, will have to pay some additional amount. To provide more time to taxpayers to settle disputes, earlier the date for filing the declaration and making payment without additional amount was extended from March 31, 2020, to June 30, 2020. This date was again extended to December 31, 2020.

Base Year of CPI- Industrial Workers revised to 2016.

The Labour and Employment Ministry has revised the base year of the Consumer Price Index (CPI) for Industrial Workers (CPI-IW) from 2001 to 2016.

Why such a move?

• This revision reflects the changing consumption pattern, giving more weightage to spending on health, education, recreation and other miscellaneous expenses while reducing the weight of Food and Beverages.

What is the Consumer Price Index (CPI)?

• The CPI is a measure that examines the weighted average of prices of a basket of consumer goods and services, such as transportation, food, and medical care.

• It is calculated by taking price changes for each item in the predetermined basket of goods and averaging them. Changes in the CPI are used to assess price changes associated with the cost of living.

• The CPI is one of the most frequently used statistics for identifying periods of inflation or deflation.

• Essentially it attempts to quantify the aggregate price level in an economy and thus measure the purchasing power of a country’s Unit of Currency.

Types of CPI in India:

• CPI in India comprises multiple series classified based on different economic groups.

• There are four series, viz the CPI UNME (Urban Non-Manual Employee), CPI AL

(Agricultural Labourer), CPI RL (Rural Labourer) and CPI IW (Industrial Worker).

 

 

• While the CPI UNME series is published by the Central Statistical Organisation, the others are published by the Department of Labour.

• From February 2011 the CPI (UNME) released by CSO is replaced as CPI (urban), CPI (rural) and CPI (combined).

How it is Different from WPI?

• CPI is different from WPI, or Wholesale Price Index, which measures inflation at the wholesale level. While WPI keeps track of the wholesale price of goods, the CPI measures the average price that households pay for a basket of different goods and services.

• WPI measures and tracks the changes in the price of goods before they reach consumers; goods that are sold in bulk and traded between entities or businesses (rather than consumers).

• Even as the WPI is used as a key measure of inflation in some economies, the RBI no longer uses it for policy purposes, including setting repo rates.

• The central bank currently uses CPI or retail inflation as a key measure of inflation to set the monetary and credit policy.

Major components of WPI:

• Primary articles are a major component of WPI, further subdivided into Food Articles and Non-Food Articles.

Food Articles include items such as Cereals, Paddy, Wheat, Pulses, Vegetables, Fruits, Milk, Eggs, Meat & Fish, etc.

• Non-Food Articles include Oil Seeds, Minerals and Crude Petroleum

• The next major basket in WPI is Fuel & Power, which tracks price movements in Petrol, Diesel and LPG

• The biggest basket is Manufactured Goods. It spans across a variety of manufactured products such as Textiles, Apparels, Paper, Chemicals, Plastic, Cement, Metals, and more.

 

• Manufactured Goods basket also includes manufactured food products such as Sugar, Tobacco Products, Vegetable and Animal Oils, and Fats.

ISRO to launch earth observation satellite EOS-01 on 7 November.

This is the first launch by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) since the COVID-19 induced lockdown came into force in March.

India would launch its latest earth observation satellite EOS-01 and nine international customer spacecraft onboard its Polar rocket PSLV-C49 from the spaceport of Sriharikota in Andhra Pradesh on November 7.

ISRO Chairman K Sivan had said in June that ten space missions being prepared for launch this year have been 'disturbed' due to the lockdown.

EOS-01 is intended for applications in agriculture, forestry&disaster management support.

The launch is tentatively scheduled at 3.02 pm on November 7 subject to weather conditions from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre at Sriharikota.

The customer satellites are being launched under a commercial agreement with NewSpace India Limited (NSIL), Department of Space.

This will be the 51st mission of ISRO's workhorse Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle.

Given the strict COVID-19 pandemic norms in place at the launch centre, a gathering of media personnel there was not planned, and the viewing gallery will be closed.

However, the live telecast of the launch will be available on the ISRO website, Youtube, Facebook and Twitter channel.

In June, Sivan highlighted that ISRO would assess the impact of the lockdown on its missions.

Because of this (pandemic), everything got disturbed. We have to assess after the COVID-19 issue is resolved.

 

NS Kavaratti Inducted in Indian navy:

INS Kavaratti has recently been formally inducted into the Indian Navy at the Naval Dockyard in Eastern Naval Command (ENC), Visakhapatnam.

Highlights:

• It is named after the capital of the Lakshadweep group of islands.

• It is the last of the four indigenously built Anti-Submarine Warfare (ASW) stealth corvettes built under Project 28 (Kamorta class), by Garden Reach Shipbuilders and Engineers (GRSE), Kolkata.

• It is regarded as one of the most potent ASW stealth corvettes to have been constructed in India as it joins three other ships of the same class INS Kamorta, INS Kadmatt and INS Kiltan, at the ENC.

• Its induction is a game-changer in the eastern seaboard, especially with the Chinese submarines trying to increase their presence in the Indian Ocean.

• It is enhanced stealth features resulting in reduced Radar Cross Section (RCS) achieved by the superstructure along with optimally sloped surfaces.

• INS Kavaratti and INS Kiltan are the first two major warships in the country to have the unique feature of the superstructure made of carbon fibre composite material.

• It has high indigenous content with the state-of-the-art equipment and systems to fight in Nuclear, Biological and Chemical (NBC) warfare conditions.

• Some of the major equipment/ systems developed indigenously include Combat Management System, Torpedo Tube Launchers and Infra-Red Signature Suppression System, etc. The high level of indigenisation incorporated in the production accentuates the objectives of Atmanirbhar Bharat Initiative.

• It is the reincarnation of the erstwhile Arnala Class missile corvette of the same name, INS Kavaratti-P 80, a ship that played an important role in the liberation of Bangladesh in 1971.

 

Mains special

Describe the salient features of the new land laws in Jammu and Kashmir.

Context.

The changes in land laws in Jammu and Kashmir notified by the Centre on October 26 allow the purchase of land by those who are not permanent residents of the Union Territory, for the first time.

Only permanent residents could purchase land in the erstwhile State, which was reorganised as two UTs, Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh, in August 2019.

New Land Laws:

One of the arguments against the now nullified special status of Jammu and Kashmir was that the restrictions on land transfers hampered investments.

Jammu and Kashmir industrial policy had limited land holding of investors to designated enclaves.

The changes in land laws were logical steps to follow the end of the special status.

Some restrictions remain on the transfer of agricultural land for non¬-agricultural purposes, but this too can be cleared by the district collector.

The government has said the changes will encourage investment and advance peace and progress in Jammu and Kashmir.

The argument that these changes would help the people of the region might have been stronger if these were done in consultation with them.

The irony is that in all three regions — Jammu, Kashmir and Ladakh — there is strong opposition to opening the land market to non-residents. Political parties in Jammu and Kashmir too have opposed the changes.

Progress and development:

 

Free movement of people, and an integrated national market can advance development but India’s governance structure accommodates fears and concerns of local populations in this context in a measured manner.

• There are several States which have provisions to regulate ownership and transfer of land under Article 371 of the Constitution.

• The Centre is expected to announce new land laws for the UT of Ladakh before October 30, and it has promised to “safeguard interests of the people” regarding “all issues related to language, demography, ethnicity, land and jobs”.

Resentment by local population:

The Centre’s approach towards Jammu and Kashmir has been marked by a lack of trust, which has accentuated the alienation of large sections of the population.

Fears of deliberate demographic engineering have dominated politics in the Valley for long.

After the reorganisation of the State and the loss of its special status in 2019, the people of Jammu and Ladakh also turned nervous on this question. Desirable as it may be, there is no point forcing a particular path of development upon people.

The situation is precarious also because of the heavy hand of the state on political and civil society activities in Jammu and Kashmir.

The unilateralism that has come to define New Delhi’s dealings with Jammu and Kashmir is achieving little. There is no wisdom in pushing through measures aimed to promote investment when the end result is political volatility.

Conclusion:

The Centre’s policy towards Jammu and Kashmir must be buttressed by a robust political process that enables people’s participation and ensures stability with growth and development.

 

 

What are Deep Fakes?What are the catfish accounts?What can we do to protect yourself?

Context.

Disinformation and hoaxes have evolved from mere annoyance to high stake warfare for creating social discord, increasing polarization, and in some cases, influencing an election outcome.

Deepfakes are a new tool to spread computational propaganda and disinformation at scale and with speed. Access to commodity cloud computing, algorithms, and abundant data has created a perfect storm to democratise media creation and manipulation.

Deepfakes are the digital media (video, audio, and images) manipulated using Artificial Intelligence. This synthetic media content is referred to as deepfakes.

A cyber Frankenstein.

Synthetic media can create possibilities and opportunities for all people, regardless of who they are, where they are, and how they listen, speak, or communicate.

It can give people a voice, purpose, and ability to make an impact at scale and with. But as with any new innovative technology, it can be weaponised to inflict harm.

Deepfakes, hyper-¬realistic digital falsification, can inflict damage to individuals, institutions, businesses and democracy.

They make it possible to fabricatemedia - swap faces, lip¬syncing, and puppeteer — mostly without consent and bring threat to psychology, security, political stability, and business disruption.

Targeting women:

The very first use case of malicious use of a deep fake was seen in pornography, inflicting emotional, reputational, and in some cases, violence towards the individual.

 

Pornographic deepfakes can threaten, intimidate, and inflict psychological harm and reduce women to sexual objects.

Deep fake pornography exclusively targets women.

Deepfakes can depict a person indulging in antisocial behaviours and saying vile things.

Deepfakes can be deployed to extract money, confidential information, or exact favours from individuals.

Deepfakes can cause short¬ and long-term social harm and accelerate the already declining trust in news media.

Undermining democracy:

A deep fake can also aid in altering the democratic discourse and undermine trust in institutions and impair diplomacy.

False information about institutions, public policy, and politicians powered by a deepfake can be exploited to spin the story and manipulate belief.

A deep fake of a political candidate can sabotage their image and reputation.

Leaders can also use them to increase populism and consolidate power. Deepfakes can become a very effective tool to sow the seeds of polarisation, amplifying division in society, and suppressing dissent.

Another concern is a liar’s dividend – an undesirable truth is dismissed as deep fake or fake news.

Major solutions:

To defend the truth and secure freedom of expression, we need a multi-¬stakeholder and multi¬modal approach. Collaborative actions and collective techniques across legislative regulations, platform policies, technology intervention, and media literacy can provide effective and ethical countermeasures to mitigate the threat of malicious deepfakes.

 

Media literacy for consumers and journalists is the most effective tool to combat disinformation and deepfakes.

Media literacy efforts must be enhanced to cultivate a discerning public.

As consumers of media, we must have the ability to decipher, understand, translate, and use the information we encounter.

Even a short intervention with media understanding, learning the motivations and context, can lessen the damage.

Improving media literacy is a precursor to addressing the challenges presented by deepfakes.

Meaningful regulations with a collaborative discussion with the technology industry, civil society, and policymakers can facilitate disincentivising the creation and distribution of malicious deepfakes.

We also need easy¬to¬use and accessible technology solutions to detect deepfakes, authenticate media, and amplify authoritative sources.

Conclusion:

To counter the menace of deepfakes, we all must take the responsibility to be a critical consumer of media on the Internet, think and pause before we share on social media, and be part of the solution to this infodemic.

Thursday, October 29, 2020

Comprehensive Current affairs 29 October 2020

 CJI claims online court proceedings susceptible to abuse.

Attorney General of India K.K. Venugopal on Monday pushed for live-streaming court proceedings to make hearings accessible to all.

But Chief Justice of India Sharad A. Bobde, heading a three-judge Bench of the Supreme Court, sounded a cautionary note, saying it was susceptible to “abuses.”

He reminded the Supreme Court of its own judgment of September 2018 in favour of “opening up” the apex court through live-streaming. The order has remained unimplemented. Mr.Venugopal hinted that the pandemic offered a fresh opportunity.

Justice Chandrachud was one of the three judges on the Bench that gave the verdict on live-streaming in September 2018. In fact, he had noted in his separate opinion that live-streaming would be the true realisation of the “open court system.” Mr.Venugopal had assisted that Bench as amicus curiae. His suggestions were later adopted as guidelines in the 2018 judgment.

 

The issue of live-streaming came up as a Special Bench led by the CJI was taking stock of the virtual court system initiated after the lockdown. Justice Chandrachud, on the Bench along with Justice L. NageswaraRao, said each High Court could make rules for itself and trial courts under it for the virtual system. Uniform rules would prove difficult owing to the difference in connectivity and e-literacy.

Naidu launches Parampara series-2020.

India's Vice President Venkaiah Naidu today said that music and dance can provide relief from the anxiety caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Launching the virtual festival of ‘Parampara Series 2020-National Festival of Music and Dance’ organized by NatyaTarangini in partnership with the United Nations, he said that music and dance make lives more fulfilling by rejuvenating and energising.

He added that they bring harmony into lives and nourish inner spirit by dispelling gloom and despair.

He appreciated Natya Tarangini for organising the ‘Parampara Series’ continuously since past 23 years, and adopting innovative efforts to make it happen for the 24th year, even in difficult times like this.

Productive-Linked Incentive Scheme.

The Government is planned to extend the production-linked incentive (PLI) scheme to eight more sectors to boost Domestic Manufacturing.

Highlights:

• It is an outcome- and output-oriented scheme where incentives will be paid only if the manufacturers make the goods.

 

 

 

• It will give cash incentives for five to seven years and all the sunrise and important sectors are proposed to be covered in this. The sectors may be automobile, networking products, food processing, advanced chemistry and solar PV manufacturing.

• The Need for the scheme are

Sunrise sectors are promising sectors but they may need support in the initial stage.

Export base can be developed in sectors under PLI scheme.

There is a growing demand in the world for diversification in supply chains and India can become a major player.

• With the view to make India a manufacturing hub, the government launched the PLI scheme for mobile phones (electronic manufacturing) and it was extended to pharma products and medical equipment sectors.

• It is for Large Scale Electronics Manufacturing. It proposes a financial incentive to boost domestic manufacturing and attract large investments in the electronics value chain including electronic components and semiconductor packaging.

• The electronics manufacturing companies will get an incentive of 4 to 6% on incremental sales (over base year) of goods manufactured in India for a period of next 5 years.

• It shall only be applicable for target segments namely mobile phones and specified Electronic Components.

• The government estimates that with the PLI scheme, domestic value addition for mobile phones is expected to rise to 35-40% by 2025 from the current level of 20-25% and generate additional 8 lakh jobs, both direct and indirect.

 

 

 

UNSG welcomes Armenia-Azerbaijan ceasefire agreement.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres welcomed the joint statement yesterday by the United States, Armenia and Azerbaijan announcing that a previously reached humanitarian cease-fire agreement will take effect from today, said spokesperson of UN Secretary StephaneDujarric, in a statement in NewYork.

Guterres commended the facilitation efforts of the United States, with the support of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Minsk Group Co-Chairs.

The secretary-general expected the parties to abide by all their commitments and to work jointly together with the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs to take concrete steps toward a peaceful resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, said the statement.

Armenia and Azerbaijan have been at loggerheads over the mountainous region of Nagorno-Karabakh since 1988. Peace talks have been held since 1994 when a cease-fire was reached, but there have been sporadic minor clashes. A new round of armed conflict broke out along the contact line on September 27.

BRICS parliamentary forum meeting held.

LokSabha Speaker Om Birla today said that BRICS countries need to intensify their collective fight against terrorism which poses the biggest threat to humankind. Virtually addressing the meeting of the 6th BRICS Parliamentary Forum, Mr Birla said, as people’s representatives, parliamentarians can no longer be silent bystanders and they must unite to fight the challenges of terrorism and violent extremism.

He emphasized that the funding of all terrorist activities must be stopped immediately and the conditions that are conducive to the spread of terrorism and violent extremism need to be addressed and resolved at the earliest.

Mr Birla stressed that the Parliaments of BRICS countries must use international platforms to highlight their collective resolve to support all treaties and agreements that prevent terrorism.

 

The LokSabha Speaker mentioned that the COVID-19 pandemic has caused the tragic death of millions of people, severe economic challenges and disruption of everyday life. He added that if ever there was any greater need for international unity and cooperation then it is now.

Mr Birla said, despite their differences, BRICS countries share a common vision of a just and fair world, free of poverty, hunger and disease and where every human being is born equal in dignity.

He said, BRICS countries have to ensure that the outbreak of the pandemic does not jeopardize the progress towards achievement of the Agenda 2030 of Sustainable Development Goals and that they remain committed to work together to achieve the goals of Zero hunger, poverty eradication and an inclusive and just world.

RBI claims COVID to erode fiscal consolidation efforts of states.

The additional outgo to combat the impact of COVID-19 will significantly erode the fiscal consolidation achieved by the State governments in the past three years, the RBI said in a report on Tuesday.

• In its study of the State budgets of 2020-21,the RBI has dwelled on ‘COVID-19 and its Spatial Dimensions in India’ and said that Gross Fiscal Deficit (GFD) of the States would spiral during the current fiscal.

• Observing that the quality of spending and the credibility of State budgets will assume critical importance, it said, “The next few years are going to be challenging for the States. They have played an important role in the frontline of the defence against the pandemic. Going forward, they need to remain empowered to provide growth impulses to the Indian economy and build resilience against future pandemics as well.

• “Sustaining the recovery from the pandemic will reshape State finances, entailing boosting investment in health care systems and other social safety nets in line with the States’ demographic and co-morbidity profiles,” it added.

 

 

• States’ responses by delaying or cutting down expenditures, even wages and salaries, also need to be taken into account in the assessment of the pandemic’s effects on State finances.

7) .FinMin expects economy to bounce back as the fastest growing from next year.

The Indian economy may contract or stagnate this fiscal but it will bounce back to be among the fastest growing in the world next year, Finance Minister Sitharaman said.

••Demand revival and the government’s focus on infrastructure, agriculture and related sectors, along with support to sovereign funds and pension funds will drive economic growth, she said at the India Energy Forum by CERAweek. The highest level seen in manufacturing PMI since 2012 signalled revival, she said.

Sitharaman said demand for durable goods, agricultural equipment, tractors, vehicles are all going up in India. “The festival season has commenced in India, as a result of which I expect the demand to go up, and therefore be sustainable also,” she said.

Infrastructure spending is the government’s top priority, she said. The sector is attracting domestic and foreign funds, she added.

The finance minister said investment in efficient and clean energy was another focus area of the government. These included the country’s ambitious plan to expand clean energy generation, incentives to produce ethanol from stored grains and incentives to use biomass to produce energy.

Affordability of Nutritious Diets in Rural India.

According to a recently published paper, titled “Affordability of nutritious diets in rural India”, by an economist of the International Food Policy Research Institute, three out of four rural Indians cannot afford a Nutritious Diet.

Background:

• Economic Survey’s Thalinomics provided a rosier picture of meal costs.

 

 

• According to Thalinomics average worker in India’s organised manufacturing sector, the affordability of a plate of vegetarian food — comprising rice or roti, dal and sabzi — has improved 29% since 2006-07. For non-vegetarians, affordability has risen 18%.

• The Survey found that a worker who would have spent 70% of their daily wage on two vegetarian thalis a day for a household of five in 2006-07 would only have to spend 50% of their income for the meals in 2019-20

• This year, the most affordable meal was in Jharkhand, where two vegetarian thalis for a household of five required about 25% of a worker’s daily wage.

Current Study:

• Current study uses the wages of unskilled workers who make up a larger proportion of the population than industrial workers, and includes items such as dairy, fruit and dark green leafy vegetables that are essential as per India’s official dietary guidelines.

• The study used the latest available food price and wage information from the National Sample Survey’s 2011 Dataset.

Key Findings:

• The National Institute for Nutrition’s guidelines for a nutritionally adequate diet call for adult women to eat 330 gm of cereals and 75 gm of pulses a day, along with 300 gm of dairy, 100 gm of fruit, and 300 gm of vegetables, which should include at least 100 gm of dark green leafy vegetables. Selecting the cheapest options from actual Indian diets —wheat, rice, bajra, milk, curd, onions, radish, spinach, bananas — the study calculated that a day’s meals would cost ₹45 (or ₹51 for an adult man).

• Three out of four rural Indians cannot afford a nutritious diet. Even if they spent their entire income on food, almost two out of three of them would not have the money to pay for the cheapest possible diet that meets the requirements set by the government’s premier nutrition body.

 

 

• Even if they spent all their income on food, 63.3% of the rural population or more than 52 crore Indians would not be able to afford that nutritious meal.

• If they set aside just a third of their income for non-food expenses, 76% of rural Indians would not be able to afford the recommended diet. This does not even account for the meals of non-earning members of a household, such as children or older adults.

Importance of the Findings:

• The findings are significant in the light of the fact that India performs abysmally on many nutrition indicators even while the country claims to have achieved food security. Global Hunger Index showed that India has the world’s highest prevalence of child wasting, reflecting acute under nutrition.

• On indicators that simply measure calorie intake, India performs relatively better, but they do not account for the nutrition value of those calories.

• The observations made in the study go against the observations made in the recent Economic Survey. This year’s Economic Survey’s ‘Thalinomics’, had noted that the affordability of meals had increased in India.

Study finds Himalayan region to be tectonically active

The Himalayan or the Indus Suture Zone (ISZ) in the Ladakh region has been found to be tectonically active. Suture zone is the zone where the Indian and Asian Plates join each other. Until now, it was supposed to be a locked zone.

It has been observed that sedimentary beds are tilted and thrust broken. There is a remote fault zone in the suture zone which is tectonically active. The rivers at this zone are associated with uplifted terraces. The bedrock further shows brittle deformation at a shallower depths.

This region of the Indus Suture Zone (ISZ) was last active some 78000 — 58000 years back. However the recent Earthquake of 2010 near the village Upshi that occurred due to a thrust rupture.

 

The study also says that the Suture Zone of the Himalayas has been active in the recent years of the earth history.

This is thus one of the major reason for the frequent earthquakes in the northern India recently. Himalayas comprise of three thrusts- Main Central Thrust, Main Frontal Thrust and Main Boundary Thrust. The study says, Main Frontal Thrusts are locked and the overall deformation is occurring in the Main Frontal Thrust.

OSIRIS-REx Mission

NASA’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft has recently touched down on the surface of asteroid Bennu to collect rock and dust samples.

About OSIRIS-REx Mission:

• The OSIRIS-REx (Origins, Spectral Interpretation, Resource Identification, Security, Regolith Explorer) spacecraft was launched in 2016 for the journey to Bennu.

• It is the United States’ first asteroid sample return mission, aiming to collect and carry a pristine, unaltered sample from an asteroid back to earth for scientific study.

• It is essentially a seven-year-long voyage and will conclude when at least 60 grams of samples are delivered back to the Earth (in 2023).

• The mission promises to bring the largest amount of extraterrestrial material back to the Earth since the Apollo era.

• The spacecraft contains five instruments meant to explore Bennu including cameras, a spectrometer and a laser altimeter.

• The spacecraft’s robotic arm called the Touch-And-Go Sample Acquisition Mechanism (TAGSAM), made an attempt to “TAG” the asteroid at a sample site and collected a sample.

• The departure window for the mission will open up in 2021, after which it will take over two years to reach back to Earth.

 

About Asteroid Bennu:

• It is an ancient asteroid, currently more than 200 million miles from Earth.

• It offers scientists a window into the early solar system as it was first taking shape billions of years ago and tossing ingredients that could have helped seed life on Earth.

• It hasn’t undergone drastic changes since its formation over billions of years ago and therefore it contains chemicals and rocks dating back to the birth of the solar system. It is also relatively close to the Earth.

• It is known that this asteroid is a B-type asteroid, implying that it contains significant amounts of carbon and various other minerals.

• Because of its high carbon content, it reflects about 4% of the light that hits it, which is very low when compared with a planet like Venus, which reflects about 65% of the light that hits it. Earth reflects about 30%.

• Around 20-40% of Bennu’s interior is empty space and scientists believe that it was formed in the first 10 million years of the solar system’s formation, implying that it is roughly 4.5 billion years old.

Tuesday, October 27, 2020

Comprehensive Current affairs 27 October 2020

 Plea in supreme court challenging validity of minority religions. .

A plea has been filed in the Supreme Court, seeking a transfer of all pending petitions before various high courts challenging the validity of the Centre's 26-year-old notification declaring five communities -- Muslims, Christians, Sikhs, Buddhists and Parsees -- as minorities.

"Denial of minority rights to real minorities and arbitrary and irrational disbursement of minority benefits to majority infringes upon the fundamental right to the prohibition of discrimination on the grounds of religion, race, caste, sex or place of birth," the plea said.

In his petition, the petitioner said Hindus, who are a majority community according to national data, are a minority in several north-eastern states and in Jammu and Kashmir.

The definition of "minority", according to Article 29-30 of the Constitution, has left leakages in the hands of the State, which shall be misused and are being misused for political benefits, the petition said, adding that the minority status be granted to Hindus in states where the number of the community members has decreased.

The plea has sought the minority status for Hindus in six states and two Union territories, where the number of the community members has fallen according to census 2011.

"Their minority rights are being siphoned off illegally and arbitrarily to the majority population because neither the Centre nor the state governments have notified Hindus as a 'minority' under the National Commission for Minorities Act. Therefore, Hindus are being deprived of their basic rights," the plea has said.

CVC asks government organisations to bring in systemic improvements.

The Central Vigilance Commission (CVC) has asked all government organisations to identify and implement systemic improvements, an official statement said on Sunday. This is among the initiatives planned by the CVC during the vigilance awareness week that begins from Tuesday.

The Commission has also desired that all organisations focus on internal (housekeeping) activities which are to be taken up in campaign mode as part of the vigilance awareness week.

This includes improvement of internal processes, time bound disposal of work and systemic improvements leveraging technology, the statement issued by the personnel ministry said.

Indian International Science Festival 2020.

Recently, the 6th edition of the India International Science Festival (IISF) will be held virtually in 2020. The 5th edition was held in Kolkata in 2019.

Highlights:

• It is a festival to celebrate the achievements of India’s scientific and technological advancements with students, innovators, craftsmen, farmers, scientists and technocrats from India and abroad.

• It was launched in 2015 to promote Science and Technology and demonstrate how science could lead India towards a developed nation within a short span of time.

• It aim to engage the public with science and celebrate the joy of science and show the ways how science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) provide solutions to improve people's lives.

 • The Organising Agencies are Ministry of Science & Technology and Ministry of Earth Sciences in association with Vijnana Bharati (VIBHA) organise IISF every year.

• The Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) will spearhead the IISF 2020 with support of all other concerned ministries and departments. CSIR is funded by the Ministry of Science and Technology.

About Vijnana Bharati:

• Swadeshi Science Movement is started in Indian Institute of Science- Bengaluru by a few eminent scientists under the guidance of Prof. K I Vasu.

• This movement gradually gained momentum and emerged as an organization with national presence.

• It is decided to launch the Swadeshi Science Movement at all India Level and named it Vijnana Bharati.

• It’s one of the objectives is to motivate young scientists towards greater creativity and originality.

• It is headquartered in New Delhi.

Indigenous Software Solution for Vessel Traffic Services.

Minister of State for Shipping launches indigenous software solutions Vessel Traffic Services (VTS) and Vessels Traffic Monitoring Systems (VTMS).

VTS and VTMS:

• VTS and VTMS is a software which determines vessel positions, position of other traffic or meteorological hazard warnings and extensive management of traffic within a port or waterway.

• Vessel Traffic Services (VTS) contribute to the safety of life at sea, safety and efficiency of navigation and protection of the marine environment, adjacent shore areas, worksites and offshore installations from possible adverse effects of maritime traffic.

 • Vessels Traffic Management Systems are installed in some of the busiest waters in the world, and are making a valuable contribution to safer navigation, more efficient traffic flow, and protection of the environment.

• Traffic flow in busy approach routes, access channels, and harbours can be coordinated safely, in the best interest of port and its users.

• Incidents and emergency situations can be dealt with quickly.

• Data from traffic movements can be stored and used as reference information for port administration, port authorities, coastguards and search and Rescue Services.

• VTMS is mandatory under the IMO Convention SOLAS (Safety of Life at Sea).

• The VTMS traffic image is compiled and collected by means of advanced sensors such as radar, AIS, direction finding, CCTV and VHF or other co-operative systems and services.

• A modern VTMS integrates all of the information into a single operator working environment for ease of use and in order to allow for effective traffic organization and communication.

• Presently, India has approximately 15 VTS systems operational along the Indian Coast and there is no uniformity of VTS software as each system has its own VTS software.

• Development of the indigenous VTS software will reduce the expenditure of foreign exchange on this issue and also minimize the dependence on foreign support for VTS software. Accordingly, indigenous development of VTS software will benefit with respect to:

Saving of foreign exchange for various VTSs in India.

VTS Software can be provided to Indian trade-friendly nations viz. Maldives, Mauritius, Myanmar, Sri Lanka, Mauritius, Bangladesh and Gulf countries.

Will also minimize the cost for future upgradations of software.

Shall be easier to interconnect with MIS/ERP software of ports.

  The availability of Indian VTS software shall make Indian companies competitive commercially in Global Bids.

Indian International Science Festival 2020.

Sixth edition of the India International Science Festival (IISF) is going to be held virtually in 2020. The 5th edition was held in Kolkata in 2019.

Highlights:

• It is a festival to celebrate the achievements of India’s scientific and technological advancements with students, innovators, craftsmen, farmers, scientists and technocrats from India and abroad.

• It was launched in 2015 to promote Science and Technology and demonstrate how science could lead India towards a developed nation within a short span of time.

• It aim to engage the public with science and celebrate the joy of science and show the ways how science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) provide solutions to improve people's lives.

• The Organising Agencies are Ministry of Science & Technology and Ministry of Earth

Sciences in association with Vijnana Bharati (VIBHA) organise IISF every year.

• The Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) will spearhead the IISF 2020 with support of all other concerned ministries and departments. CSIR is funded by the Ministry of Science and Technology.

About Vijnana Bharati:

• Swadeshi Science Movement is started in Indian Institute of Science- Bengaluru by a few eminent scientists under the guidance of Prof. K I Vasu.

• This movement gradually gained momentum and emerged as an organization with national presence.

 • It is decided to launch the Swadeshi Science Movement at all India Level and named it Vijnana Bharati.

• It’s one of the objectives is to motivate young scientists towards greater creativity and originality.

• It is headquartered in New Delhi.

Bangladesh brings in no mask no service policy.

The Bangladesh government has decided that no service will be provided to people who don’t wear masks. The cabinet meeting Chaired by Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina decided that no one will be allowed to enter offices without the mask.

It decided that all offices must install notice boards saying ‘no mask, no service’ in order to control the spread of COVID 19 virus in the country.

Briefing media after the Cabinet meeting in Dhaka, the Cabinet Secretary KhandakerAnwarul Islam said, people at all public and private offices, social institutions, haat-bazars, shopping malls, other establishments, educational institutions, mosques or other places of worship throughout the country must use mask in view of the coronavirus pandemic.

Involving community leaders in the campaign to wear masks, the Cabinet Secretary said that the government has also talked to the Islamic scholars and religious leaders to publicise this at all mosques through the Imam.

U.S allies welcomes Israel-Sudan deal.

Sudan and Israel agreed on Friday to normalise relations, in a U.S.-brokered deal to end decades of hostility that was widely welcomed but stirred Palestinian anger.

The announcement makes Sudan, technically at war with Israel since its 1948 foundation, the third Arab country to forge diplomatic relations with the Jewish state in the last two months.

 “HUGE win today for the United States and for peace in the world,” U.S. President Donald Trump tweeted.Other U.S. allies, including Germany, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, welcomed the deal as a boost to stability in the West Asia.

Meanwhile, Palestinian leaders strongly condemned the deal, echoing their rejection of Israel’s normalisation accords with the UAE and Bahrain signed in Washington last month.

“The State of Palestine expressed today its condemnation and rejection of the deal to normalise ties with the Israeli occupation country which usurps Palestinian land,” president Mahmoud Abbas’s office said in a statement.

SEBI chairman sees positive recovery across capital markets.

Securities and Exchange Board of India Chairman Ajay Tyagi has said that recovery is being seen in capital markets, across the board.

Virtually addressing the CII Financial Markets Summit, Mr.Tyagisaid, not just large-caps and heavyweight stocks but midcap and smallcap stocks have recovered.

He said, the regulator’s timely decisions to contain volatility during the pandemic helped the markets, adding that the board will continue to remain vigilant to all eventualities.

The SEBI Chief further informed that more than 3.8 crore rupees have been raised in debt markets, a 25 per cent rise as compared to last year.

Mr.Tyagi added that almost 90 per cent of NSE stocks have yielded positive returns this year. He also dwelt upon making the corporate bond market more robust and strengthening the Investor Protection Fund.

Government imposes stock limit to check onion price rise.

The Government has said it has taken steps to moderate prices and availability of onion in the country. Briefing media in New Delhi, Consumer Affairs Secretary LeelaNandan said, a stock limit has been imposed on the onions with effect from today which is 25 Metric Tonnes for Wholesalers and 2 Metric Tonnes for Retailers for a period up to 31st December 2020.

She added, in order to moderate the price rise, the government took a pre-emptive step by announcing a ban on onion export on the 14th of last month so as to ensure availability to domestic consumers at reasonable rates, before the expected arrival of Kharif onion.

The Secretary said, the retail price rise has moderated to some extent, but recent reports of heavy rainfall in the onion growing districts of Maharashtra, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh have created concerns about damage to Kharif crop.

She said, the developments on the weather front have contributed to the sharp increase in onion prices. Ms Nandan said, to tide over the present situation, the government has stepped up disposal of onions through the built up buffer stock of one Lakh Metric Tonne from the Rabi onion-2020.

Scientists create superconductivity at room temperature. .

Starting from hydrogen sulphide, infamous for its rotten-egg smell, a group of researchers at University of Rochester, Intel corporation and University of Nevada in the U.S. have created a material that is superconducting at 15 degrees Celsius. That is, it shows zero resistance to the flow of electricity through it.

• Such a material would have hitherto unheard of applications from power supplies to quantum computers. The only caveat is that it needs ultrahigh pressure of about 2 million atmospheres to achieve this transition, putting off any thoughts of application to the future. The research, published in Nature, has sparked off animated discussions in the world of physics.

• In 2015, a breakthrough happened when a group led by M.I. Eremets managed to apply pressure on hydrogen sulphide and get a superconductor at 200 kelvin (minus 73 degrees Celsius). Prof. Baskaran adds, “It was followed by superconductivity in few more hydride superconductors. Until recently, the record holder was Lanthanum superhydride (LaH10). Its Tc is about 250 K, which is room temperatures in polar regions!”.

 • Commenting on the high pressure that was needed to create this material, Ranga P. Dias, from the University of Rochester and the corresponding author of the paper, says in an email to The Hindu that the pressure they needed was 267 Gigapascals, or 2.6 million atmospheres.

• They achieved this by squeezing a tiny volume of the substance between the jaws of a diamond anvil. “We have broken many diamonds. It’s very challenging to keep this material to very high pressure because of the hydrogen diffusion,” he reveals.

Focus on Mains Exam:

Clearance to Kaleshwaram project Given in Violation of law.

The National Green Tribunal (NGT) has held that environmental clearance (EC) to Kaleshwaram Lift Irrigation Project (KLIP) was granted ex post facto, after completion of substantial work, by the Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change (MoEFCC) “in violation of law”.

• It has observed that accountability needs to be fixed and remedial measures be taken. For that purpose, it has directed the MoEFCC to constitute a seven-member expert committee preferably out of expert appraisal committee (EAC) members with relevant sectorial expertise to go into the matter in light of the observations in the present case.

• In the judgment, the Principal Bench of NGT asked the Ministry to constitute the expert committee within a month and it may complete its exercise within six months thereafter shouldering the responsibility of monitoring the panel work to the Secretary of MOEFCC.

• The petitioner moved the NGT with a contention declare the EC granted to KLIP as invalid since substantial work was done by the State Government, project proponent, prior to filing application with the Ministry for clearance.

About the Project:

• The Kaleshwaram Lift Irrigation Scheme of Telangana is a multi-purpose irrigation project on the Godavari River in Kaleshwaram, Bhupalpally, Telangana.

 • The project starts at the confluence point of Pranahita River and Godavari River.

• Originally called Pranahita-Chevella project in erstwhile Andhra Pradesh, it was redesigned, extended and renamed as Kaleshwaram project in Telangana in 2014.

• It would bring drinking water and irrigation to the backward areas of Telangana.

• It will also help to restore the ground water level to its original state by the way of shifting from usage of groundwater for irrigation to usage of surface water.

• The project will also support Mission Kakatiya and Mission Bhagiratha schemes designed to provide drinking water to many villages and improve the capacities of tanks.

• Mission Kakatiya: It is a flagship programme launched by the Government of Telangana which aims at rejuvenation of water tanks and other water storage structures to provide assistance and help to the small and marginal farmers of the state.

• Mission Bhagiratha: It is a project for safe drinking water for every village and city household in Telangana State. It aims to provide piped water to 2.32 crore people in 20 lakh households in urban and 60 lakhs in rural areas of Telangana. The project will supply clean drinking water to all households in the state through water sourced from River Godavari and River Krishna.

Observations by NGT:

• Inspite of finding illegality in granting EC, it is neither possible nor desirable to undo what has happened, but accountability needs to be fixed and Remedial Measures Taken.

• The NGT Principal Bench suggested that the expert committee could assess the extent of damage caused in going ahead with the project without EC – the period from 2008 to 2017 — and identify the necessary Restoration Measures.

• Further, it could look into relief and rehabilitation measures adopted and required to be further adopted, examine effective implementation of environmental management plan (EMP) submitted by the project proponent as also compliance of EC conditions.

• Any affected party will be at liberty to make representation to the MoEFCC within three weeks along with suggestions and grievances, which may be taken into the account by the expert committee.

• It has further asked MoEFCC to consider measures to prevent recurrence of such violations where EC is sought ex post facto.

Way Forward:

• It is particularly required when the projects are multi-purpose and part of it requires EC, so that such requirement is not defeated on specious plea that the project was partly not covered by the schedule Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) Notification as has happened in the present case.

• Instead of confining consideration merely to documentary support, a mechanism is required to be evolved and followed whereby physical verification of material particulars can be undertaken, wherever necessary.

• In the matter of expansion of the project scope to draw 3 tmcft of water a day from the present 2 tmcft, the NGT observed that directions of the Centre are binding on the State unless challenged and set aside.

Hyderabad Floods.

Hyderabad was recently listed as the rainiest place in the country by Skymet, an independent weather forecasting agency, after it recorded 72.5mm of rainfall.

Rainfall this Month:

• The city has witnessed its third wettest day of October in the last 10 years - As per India Meteorological Department (IMD) data, Hyderabad witnessed 98.3mm rainfall on October 10, 2013 and 82.6mm on October 3, 2017.

 • The IMD data indicates that the city has been pounded with 356mm of rains in 18 days, which is four times higher than the normal rains.

What caused this Havoc?

• This was caused by a weather that formed in the Bay of Bengal, hit the east coast and moved westward, weakening on the way.

• Normally, cyclones lose steam upon making their landfall. This particular system, however, clocked a long east-west track cutting across Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, north-interior Karnataka and Maharashtra.

• All these states experienced above-normal rain during the recent monsoon season. As a result, the soil in these regions has retained significant moisture content.

• In addition, vertical wind shear — the result of a significant difference in wind speed between higher and lower atmospheric levels — helped the system maintain its intensity as a deep depression or a well-marked low Pressure area even on land.

But, why Floods occur in Hyderabad?

• Hyderabad is a System of Catchments.

The western edge is in the Godavari river basin.

To the east, it’s in the Krishna River basin.

Also, Hyderabad is in the Deccan region, which has a chaotic drainage pattern — water here does not flow in a single direction as the slope is in multiple directions.

What Efforts were made in the Past to Control Floods?

• In 1908, devastation caused by a cloud burst and the flooding claimed 15,000 lives and rendered 80,000 homeless.

 • Sir Visvesvaraya was commissioned to conduct a study and suggest measures to manage the impact of floods on the city. Following this:

Two reservoirs — Osmansagar and Himayatsagar — came up.

A modern system of drainage was also built.

What has not been Addressed?

• The city has been built on top of the agrarian imprint. Sensitive catchment areas have been illegally occupied.

• Roads have been Built, which are rigid boundaries, around the ‘fluid’ water bodies, without any buffer areas.

• Unchecked real Estate Growth.

What Needs to be done now?

• Take stock of the entire drainage system, not just the nalas.

• See the whole city as a catchment area and begin to clear critical areas of encroachments.

• For all this to be implemented, we need an executive and ‘ecological’ body like a “Lakes and Parks Authority”, can draw upon and coordinate the relevant parts of the functions at Hyderabad Metropolitan Development Authority (HMDA), Greater Hyderabad Municipal

Corporation (GHMC) and departments like revenue, irrigation, roads and buildings.

• Risk mapping of the areas of the city should be done to assess the vulnerability, related to urban floods, using GIS technology.

• Town Planning department of GHMC should regularly monitor the prohibited areas to Prevent Encroachments.

• Conserve and protect areas for Groundwater Recharge.

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