Thursday, November 19, 2020

Comprehensive Current affairs 19 November 2020

 Expansion of Dehradun airport. airport.

Environmental activists and local residents in Uttarakhand are opposing the cutting of trees for a project to expand Dehradun’s Jolly Grant airport. Political parties too, have jumped into the controversy.

• The Union Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change has asked the state government to explore the possibility of acquiring a different patch of land for the expansion, so that the trees could be spared.

• Of the 9,745 trees that are proposed to be cut, 3,405 are khair, 2,444 are sheesham, 1,234 teak, 1,121 kanju, 549 jhingan, and 120 are gulmohar. A government official argued that the majority of these trees do not have very thick trunks.

What is the project to expand the airport?

The Uttarakhand Civil Aviation Development Authority has proposed the expansion of Jolly Grant airport in Dehradun with the aim of upgrading it to meet international standards.

The project components include development of the airport and the parking area, building a new ATC tower, and more than doubling the length of the runway from the existing 1.7 km to 3.5 km.

It is proposed to take over 87 hectares of forest land in Doiwala village in Dehradun district, and another 17.41 hectares of non-forest land for the project.

For the runway, the airport area is proposed to be expanded by 885 metres in the direction of Doiwala, and 2,030 metres towards Rishikesh.

The forest area earmarked for the expansion is in the Thano range, a prominent tourism destination where local people run a number of homestays.

Reason behind the protest:

Social activists and local residents from the Thano forest range and nearby areas of Dehradun, Rishikesh and Haridwar assembled outside the airport and staged a protest against the proposal to cut 9,745 trees in the affected area.

Invoking the famous Chipko movement which began in Uttarakhand in the 1970s, they tied “raksha sutras” around the trees to express their concern for the environment, and to demand the conservation of green cover.

They trended the agitation and streamed it live on social media to garner mass support.

Birsa Munda Jayanti ..

Indian PM Modi paid tributes to tribal leader Birsa Munda on his birth anniversary on Sunday and said his contribution to the freedom movement and social harmony will always inspire the countrymen.

About:

Birsa Munda (15 November 1875 – 9 June 1900) was an Indian tribal freedom fighter, religious leader, and folk hero who belonged to the Munda tribe.

He spearheaded a tribal religious millenarian movement that arose in the Bengal Presidency (now Jharkhand) in the late 19th century, during the British Raj, thereby making him an important figure in the history of the Indian independence movement.

The revolt mainly concentrated in the Munda belt of Khunti, Tamar, Sarwada and Bandgaon.

His portrait hangs in the Indian Parliament Museum. He is the only tribal leader to have been so honored

International Day for Tolerance

November 16 is celebrated as International Day for Tolerance.

In 1996, the UN General Assembly adopted Resolution 51/95(link is external) proclaiming 16 November as International Day for Tolerance.

“Tolerance is respect, acceptance and appreciation of the rich diversity of our world’s cultures, our forms of expression and ways of being human.” UNESCO's 1995 Declaration of Principles on Tolerance.

The UNESCO-Madanjeet Singh Prize for the Promotion of Tolerance and Non-Violence rewards significant activities in the scientific, artistic, cultural or communication fields aimed at the promotion of a spirit of tolerance and non-violence.

The International Day for Tolerance supports the notion that education is a key factor in preventing intolerance across the human race.

On this day, we are encouraged to educate and learn how to practice solidarity between ethnic, social and cultural groups.

 India opting out of RCEP.

Fifteen countries solidified their participation in the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP).

Even as India opted to stay out after walking out of discussions last year, the new trading bloc has made it clear that the door will remain open for India to return to the negotiating table.

What is RCEP?

Described as the “largest” regional trading agreement to this day, RCEP was originally being negotiated between 16 countries — ASEAN members and countries with which they have free trade agreements (FTAs), namely Australia, China, Korea, Japan, New Zealand and India.

The purpose of RCEP was to make it easier for products and services of each of these countries to be available across this region. Negotiations to chart out this deal had been on since 2013, and India was expected to be a signatory until its decision last November.

Why did India walk out?

On November 4, 2019, India decided to exit discussions over “significant outstanding issues”.

According to a government official, India had been “consistently” raising “fundamental issues” and concerns throughout the negotiations and was prompted to take this stand as they had not been resolved by the deadline to commit to signing the deal.

Its decision was to safeguard the interests of industries like agriculture and dairy and to give an advantage to the country’s services sector.

According to officials, the current structure of RCEP still does not address these issues and concerns.

 International Financial Services Centres Authority (Banking) Regulations, 2020

IFSC Authority approves the International Financial Services Centres Authority (Banking) Regulations, 2020.

Background:

• Banking constitutes one of the major focus areas of IFSC and is expected to drive and facilitate the other constituent operations in the IFSC in due course.

• A self-contained regulation laying down the major principles of banking operations at IFSCs is thus an important step in the IFSC reaching its desired potential.

• India is trying to promote IFSC, situated at the Gujarat International Finance Tech (GIFT) City, as an alternative for investors, after Hong Kong’s ability to function as a global financial centre came under a cloud after China tightened its grip on the city.

• IFSCA, which was set up in April 2020, is working to provide an efficient and facilitative regulatory system comparable with the best jurisdictions in the world, to develop IFSC in India as a preferred global hub for International Financial Services Salient features of the Banking Regulations are:

• Laying down the requirements for setting up IFSC Banking Units (IBUs).

• Permitting persons resident outside India (having net worth not less than USD 1 Million) to open foreign currency accounts in any freely convertible currency at IFSC Banking Units

(IBUs).

• Permitting persons resident in India (having net worth not less than USD 1 Million) to open foreign currency accounts in any freely convertible currency at IFSC Banking Units

(IBUs) to undertake any permissible current account or capital account transaction or any combination thereof under the Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS) of the Reserve Bank of India.

• Laying down the permissible activities of IBUs including credit enhancement, credit insurance, and sale, purchase of portfolios, engage in factoring and forfaiting of export receivables and undertake equipment leasing, including Aircraft Leasing.

• Permitting the Authority to determine the Business that a Banking Unit may be permitted to conduct in INR with persons resident in India and persons resident outside India, subject to settlement of the financial transaction in relation to such business in freely Convertible Foreign Currency.

Thirty Meter Telescope Project.

Recently, the Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT) project being installed at Maunakea in Hawaii has been developed by close collaboration between the 2020 Physics Nobel Laureate Prof. Andrea Ghez and Indian astronomers.

Highlights:

• It is an international partnership between the USA, Canada, Japan, China, and India.

• It will allow deeper exploration into space and observe cosmic objects with unprecedented sensitivity.

• The Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) Project. The Indian scientists contributed in several aspects such as designing algorithms for analysis of signals from gravitational waves, estimating energy and power radiated from black holes etc.

• Now LIGO-India is a planned advanced gravitational-wave observatory to be located in India as part of the worldwide network.

• CERN Project: India became a full Associate Member of world’s largest particle Physics laboratory CERN in 2017, thereby getting full access to data generated there.

• The contribution of Indian scientists there is mainly in building the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) and construction of two significant CERN experiments, CMS and ALICE.

 • Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research (FAIR) is coming up at Darmstadt, Germany for studying the building blocks of matter and the evolution of the Universe.

• It is a sophisticated accelerator complex that will use the high energy and ion beams to mimic the condition inside the core of the stars and early phase of the universe.

• The role of Indian scientists would be to build NUSTAR (Nuclear Structure, Astrophysics and Reactions), CBM (Compressed Baryonic Matter) and PANDA (Antiproton Annihilation at Darmstadt).

• India has joined nine other countries to build the world's largest and most sophisticated radio telescope called Square Kilometre Array (SKA).

• The core of the telescope will be based in Karoo desert in South Africa. Since the total detection area of the receiver dishes would exceed 1 square kilometer, it is called Square Kilometre Array.

• The International-Thermonuclear- Experimental-Reactor (ITER) is focused around creating an environment mimicking the Sun in laboratory conditions using nuclear fusion.

• India’s Scientists and Institutions such as Institute for Plasma Research, Ahmedabad are playing an Important role in this.

Pincer catalytic system

A research team of IIT Guwahati has formulated efficient “pincer” catalytic systems that transform biomass wastes into valuable chemicals.

About:

Tiny amounts of these “pincer catalysts” repeatedly convert large amounts of industrial waste such as glycerol into lactic acid and hydrogen.

Official sources said that such catalysts also efficiently convert bioethanol, a low-energy density fuel, into high-energy density butanol.

The conversion of valuable intermediates such as glycerol and ethanol, produced during the processing of biomass, into industrially useful chemicals has elicited much interest worldwide.

Sripped Bubble-Nest Frog.

Recently, scientists has reported a new genus of treefrog from the Andaman Islands called Striped Bubble-Nest Frog.

• Its Biological name is Rohanixalus vittatus. The new genus ‘Rohanixalus’ is named after Sri Lankan taxonomist Rohan Pethiyagoda.

• The Striped Bubble-nest frog belongs to the genus of the Old World treefrog family Rhacophoridae.

• It is the first report of a tree frog species from the Andaman Islands.

• It has a Small and slender body (2-3 cm long).

• A pair of contrastingly coloured lateral lines on either side of the body. Minute brown speckles scattered throughout the upper body.

• The Light green-coloured eggs laid in arboreal bubble-nests. Arboreal means living in trees or related trees. They are also known as Asian Glass Frog or see through frogs.

• While the general background coloration of most glass frogs is primarily lime green, the abdominal skin of some members of this family is translucent (allowing light to pass through). The Internal Viscera, including the heart, liver, and gastrointestinal tract, are visible through this Translucent skin, hence the Common Name.

 Focus on mains:

Forest Rights Claims of Tribals Rejected.

Nearly 1,200 Tribals in Hunsur taluk of Mysuru district stare at an uncertain future, as their review petition for recognition of their claims over forest land under the Scheduled Tribes and Other Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act, 2006, was rejected by the Local Authorities.

About the News:

• On February 13, 2019 the Supreme Court ordered the eviction of lakhs belonging to the Scheduled Tribes (STs) and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (OTFDs) categories across 16 States, whose claim as forest-dwellers has been rejected under the FRA.

• On February 28, 2019, the court stayed its order and decided to examine whether due process was followed by the gram sabhas and the States under the FRA before the claims were rejected.

About Forest Rights Act (FRA):

• The act was passed in December 2006. It deals with the rights of forest-dwelling communities over land and other resources. The Act grants legal recognition to the rights of traditional forest dwelling communities, partially correcting the injustice caused by the Forest Laws.

Rights under the Act:

• Title rights – Ownership to land that is being farmed by tribals or forest dwellers subject to a maximum of 4 hectares; ownership is only for land that is actually being cultivated by the concerned family, meaning that no new lands are granted.

• Use rights – to minor forest produce (also including ownership), to grazing areas, to pastoralist routes, etc.

• Relief and development rights – to rehabilitation in case of illegal eviction or forced displacement; and to basic amenities, subject to restrictions for Forest Protection.

 • Forest management rights – to protect forests and Wildlife.

Eligibility:

• Eligibility to get rights under the Act is confined to those who “primarily reside in forests” and who depend on forests and forest land for a livelihood. Further, either the claimant must be a member of the Scheduled Tribes scheduled in that area or must have been residing in the forest for 75 years.

Process of Recognition of Rights:

• The Act provides that the gram sabhas, or village assembly, will initially pass a resolution recommending whose rights to which resources should be recognised.

• This resolution is then screened and approved at the level of the sub-division (or taluk) and subsequently at the district level.

• The screening committees consist of three government officials (Forest, Revenue and Tribal Welfare departments) and three elected members of the local body at that level.

These committees also hear Appeals.

What is the concern?

• Nearly 1,200 applications from Hunsur had been rejected and the applicants received a communique stating that they had failed to furnish evidence to substantiate the claims of their stay inside the forest.

• The FRA was enacted 13 years ago to recognise the rights of the Tribals over the forests apart from community rights over common property resources.

• But instead of taking steps to correct a historical injustice, the authorities have discarded their application without application of the mind.

 • In a country where maintaining records of evidence and documents are recent phenomena, expecting tribals to provide records, to substantiate claims that they lived inside the forest before their eviction in 1972, was ridiculous and was in contravention of the concept of Natural Justice.

Mega Trade Bloc RCEP takes off.

The Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), a mega trade bloc comprising 15 countries led by China that came into existence recently, and said India would have to write expressing “intention” to join the organisation to restart negotiation for Membership.

The newly formed organisation has laid down the path for restarting discussion that had failed to admit India earlier and said “new” developments would be taken into consideration when India re-applied.

• The mega trade bloc is a landmark trade initiative which is expected to boost commerce among the member-countries spread across the Asia-Pacific region.

What is RCEP?

• RCEP is a free trade deal involving the 10 countries of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean), Australia, China, South Korea, Japan, as well as New Zealand.

• The pact aims to cover the trade in goods and services, as well as investment, intellectual property and dispute resolution.

• The purpose of the deal is to create an “integrated market” spanning all 16 countries. This means that it would be easier for the products and services of each of these countries to be available across the entire region.

• The countries involved account for almost half of the world’s population, over a quarter of world exports, and make up around 30% of the global Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

 Why did India opt out of RCEP earlier?

• Trade Deficit: In financial year 2019, India registered a trade deficit with 11 out of the 16 RCEP countries. India’s trade deficit with RCEP countries stood at $105 billion, out of

• Which China alone accounted for $52 billion. At present, India ships 20 percent of all its exports to the RCEP countries and receives 35 percent of all imports from them. China is the ringmaster of this export-import circuit.

• Inadequate protection against surges in imports: There is concern about the dumping of cheaper goods such as dairy and farm products, and electronic items, especially from China. The RCEP deal format required India to abolish tariffs on more than 70% of goods from China, Australia and New Zealand, and nearly 90% goods from Japan, South Korea and ASEAN. This would have made imports to India, cheaper.

• Demand of Market Access: India has also not received any credible assurances on its demand for more market access and its concerns over non-tariff barriers. RCEP participants like China are known to have used non-tariff barriers in the past to prevent India from growing its exports to the country.

• Country of Origin: Its concerns on a “possible circumvention” of rules of origin (the criteria used to determine the national source of a product) were also not addressed.

Current provisions in the deal reportedly do not prevent countries from routing, through other countries, products on which India would maintain higher tariffs. This is anticipated to allow countries like China to pump in more products.

• Concerns of using base year before 2014: India had sought to safeguard the interests of its domestic industry through measures like seeking a 2014 base year for tariff reductions instead of 2013, when negotiations on RCEP began. As it has raised import duties on several products between 2014 and 2019.

 • Past Experience: The NITI Aayog, in 2017, had published a report that pointed out that free trade agreements have not worked well for India.

• Concerns in Agricultural Sector: RCEP will permanently bring down import duties on most agricultural commodities to zero which will lead to countries looking to dump their agricultural produce in India which would lead to a drastic drop in prices. Spices, chiefly pepper and cardamom and coconut would face dumping from the South Asian spice majors. Sri Lanka is already giving a tough time to Indian spice growers.

• Plantation products like rubber: Vietnam and Indonesia have very cheap rubber to export.

• Dairy Sector: New Zealand is the second largest exporter of milk and milk products. New Zealand’s milk producers are more efficient than India’s small producers. Both Australia and New Zealand are waiting for free access to India for their dairy products.

Services trade: India has “long pushed for other countries to allow greater movement of labour and services” in return for opening up its own market. Any agreement on trade in goods without simultaneous agreement on services trade and investment will only harm India’s interests. The ITA was established through a Ministerial Declaration on Trade in Information Technology Products which was concluded on 13 December 1996 at the WTO Singapore Ministerial Conference.

What is the Present Concern?

• Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressed the ASEAN Summit recently and highlighted the necessity for peace and stability in the region but maintained silence regarding RCEP, indicating India’s difficulty in welcoming the China-backed grouping.

• India’s ties with China in recent months have been disturbed by the military tension in eastern Ladakh along the LAC. In the meantime, India has also held maritime exercise with Japan, Australia, and United States for the “Quad” that was interpreted as an anti-China move.

• However, these moves did not influence Japanese and Australian plans regarding RCEP.

Experts are interpreting the beginning of RCEP as a major development that will help China and trade in Asia-Pacific region in the post-COVID-19 scenario.

Leverage for China:

• The agreement means a lot for China, as it will give it access to Japanese and South Korean markets in a big way, as the three countries have not yet agreed on their FTA.

• The fact this happened, despite the pandemic, is certainly leverage for China, and shows the idea of decoupling from China is not a substantive issue in a Regional Sense.

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