Content
SC expresses ‘grave concern’ over rising digital arrest scams
Nashik unit open; HAL can roll out 24 Tejas jets a year
Rotavirus vaccine effective against gastroenteritis in children: study
Curb on use of ‘ORS’ term brings to light a doctor’s 8-year battle
WMO: Record rise in global CO2 concentrations
Where springs once sang, silence now echoes across the Eastern Himalayas
SC expresses ‘grave concern’ over rising digital arrest scams
Why in News ?
What happened: Supreme Court (SC) took suo motu cognisance of rising digital arrest scams.
Trigger: A septuagenarian couple from Ambala, Haryana, lost ₹1.5 crore to conmen impersonating CBI, Enforcement Directorate, and judicial officers.
SC’s stance: Described it as a matter of “grave concern”; emphasized coordinated national action.
Entities involved for response: Union Government, Haryana Government, and CBI.
Relevance:
GS-2: Governance – Cybercrime management, Inter-agency coordination, Supreme Court suo motu interventions.
GS-3: Science & Technology – Cyber fraud trends, Digital financial crimes, Use of technology in scams.
GS-4: Ethics – Public awareness, Protection of vulnerable citizens, Responsibility of institutions.
Understanding Digital Arrest Scams
Definition: Cyber frauds where criminals impersonate law enforcement, judiciary, or government officials.
Modus Operandi:
Sending fake court orders, warrants, or summons digitally (email, WhatsApp, SMS).
Threatening immediate arrest or legal action to extort money.
Using forged documents from multiple judicial or investigative agencies to increase authenticity.
Victims targeted: Often elderly or less tech-savvy individuals.
Financial impact: Losses can range from lakhs to crores of rupees per victim.
Scope and Magnitude
Nationwide concern: SC noted this is not a solitary instance; reported across multiple states.
Digital crime trends in India:
Cybercrime complaints reported to National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal (NCRP): ~ 5.5 lakh in 2024 (all categories).
Financial frauds and impersonation cases are growing at ~20–25% per year.
Elderly and urban professionals are high-risk targets due to perceived wealth.
Technology exploitation: Fraudsters increasingly use deepfakes, official seals, and realistic document templates.
Legal & Institutional Framework
Existing laws applicable:
IPC Sections 420, 467, 468, 471 – cheating, forgery, and fraud.
Information Technology Act 2000 – cyber fraud, identity theft, digital impersonation.
Investigating agencies:
CBI: Handles large-scale interstate scams.
State Cyber Cells: Investigate local digital frauds.
Enforcement Directorate: Investigates if money laundering or cross-border transfer involved.
Challenges:
Jurisdictional issues across states.
Difficulty in tracking digital transactions and fraudsters.
Lack of awareness among victims.
Supreme Court’s Observations & Implications
Key observations:
Fabrication of multiple judicial documents to dupe victims.
Fraud is a well-organized criminal enterprise, not isolated incidents.
Calls for pan-India stern action to uncover and prevent such scams.
Implications:
Likely directives to Union & State Governments to issue public advisories.
Possible strengthening of cybercrime cells and coordination between central and state agencies.
Courts may consider fast-tracking cybercrime cases.
Preventive & Citizen Measures
Awareness campaigns: Government advisories on digital impersonation scams.
Verification: Always verify court notices with official portals or through local police.
Reporting: Register complaints via NCRP, local police, or CBI helplines.
Technology safeguards: Use official apps and secure banking channels, avoid sharing OTPs or banking credentials.
Data / Facts to Highlight
₹1.5 crore lost by the Ambala couple – SC cited as illustrative case.
Cybercrime complaints in India: ~5.5 lakh in 2024 (uptrend).
Financial frauds growing 20–25% per year.
Elderly victims increasingly targeted.
Nashik unit open; HAL can roll out 24 Tejas jets a year
Why in News ?
Event: Defence Minister Rajnath Singh inaugurated:
Third production line of Light Combat Aircraft Tejas Mk1A.
Second production line of HTT–40 trainer aircraft at HAL Nashik facility.
Significance: Flagged off first LCA Mk1A produced at Nashik, symbolizing India’s growing self-reliance in defence manufacturing.
Context: Part of ongoing defence sector transformation under PM Modi since 2014, emphasizing Make in India and indigenisation.
Relevance:
GS-2: Governance – Defence policy implementation, Make in India, Public sector reforms.
GS-3: Economy – Defence manufacturing, Employment generation, Strategic industrial capacity.
GS-3: Science & Technology – Indigenous aircraft production, Technological self-reliance, Aerospace innovations.
Basics
LCA Tejas Mk1A:
Indigenous lightweight multirole fighter aircraft.
Upgraded version of LCA Mk1; includes advanced avionics, radar, EW capabilities.
Current Nashik line capacity: 8 aircraft/year, total HAL capacity with three lines: 24 aircraft/year.
HTT-40:
Indigenous basic trainer aircraft for IAF pilot training.
Second production line at Nashik complements first line in Bengaluru.
HAL (Hindustan Aeronautics Limited): Backbone of India’s defence manufacturing ecosystem, integrating government, industry, and academia.
Defence Manufacturing Transformation (2014–Present)
Import vs domestic production:
2014: India imported 65–70% of military hardware.
Present: ~65% domestically manufactured. Goal: 100% self-reliance.
Policy reforms:
Encouraged private sector participation.
Focus on planning, advanced technology, and innovation to reduce strategic vulnerabilities.
Operational proof:
HAL integrated BrahMos missile on Su-30 aircraft during Operation Sindoor, ensuring timely destruction of terrorist hideouts.
Demonstrates India’s design, production, and deployment capabilities.
HAL Production & Expansion
Production lines in India:
LCA Mk1A: First two lines in Bengaluru; third in Nashik.
HTT-40: First line in Bengaluru; second in Nashik.
Capacity & expansion:
Current Nashik line: 8 aircraft/year; total LCA Mk1A capacity: 24 aircraft/year.
Planned expansion in 2 years: up to 10 aircraft/year at Nashik with additional assembly jig line, tooling, and pre-installation check facilities.
Economic impact:
Creation of ~1,000 jobs in Nashik.
Development of 40+ industry partners in Maharashtra, Gujarat, and Madhya Pradesh.
Strategic Significance
Reduces import dependence on fighter jets, missiles, engines, and electronic warfare systems.
Strengthens national security and operational readiness of Indian Air Force.
Enhances Make in India initiative credibility in high-tech defence manufacturing.
Demonstrates synergy among government, HAL, private industry, and academia.
Key Data / Facts
LCA Mk1A production capacity: 24 aircraft/year (with three lines).
Nashik line: 8 aircraft/year, expansion to 10/year planned.
Jobs created: ~1,000; 40+ industry partners developed.
India’s domestic defence manufacturing: ~65% currently, up from <35% in 2014.
HAL key achievements: BrahMos integration on Su-30 during Operation Sindoor.
Rotavirus vaccine effective against gastroenteritis in children: study
Why in News ?
Event: Publication of a multi–centre observational study on the effectiveness of India’s indigenous Rotavac vaccine under the Universal Immunisation Programme (UIP) 2016–2020.
Source: Study led by Gagandeep Kang, Nayana P. Nair, and Samarasimha N. Reddy; published in Nature Medicine.
Context: Evaluates real-world impact of Rotavac, India’s first indigenous oral rotavirus vaccine.
Relevance:
GS-2: Governance – Universal Immunisation Programme, Public health policy, Evidence-based decision-making.
GS-3: Economy – Domestic vaccine production, Atmanirbhar Bharat in healthcare, Cost-effective health interventions.
GS-1: Society – Reduction in child mortality, Strengthening societal health outcomes.
Basics
Rotavirus: Major cause of severe gastroenteritis and diarrhoealdeaths in children under 5.
Global burden: ~128,500 deaths annually in India among under-five children.
Rotavac vaccine:
Oral, indigenous, developed by Bharat Biotech in collaboration with DBT, Indian govt., and international partners.
Administration schedule: 6, 10, and 14 weeks of age under UIP.
Publicly available and free to all eligible children under UIP.
Study Design & Coverage
Type: Observational, multi-centre, real-world effectiveness study.
Timeframe: 2016–2020, covering introduction of Rotavac in UIP.
Scope:
31 hospitals across 9 Indian states.
Compared proportion of paediatric rotavirus hospitalisations before and after vaccine introduction.
Objective: Assess real-world vaccine effectiveness outside controlled clinical trials.
Key Findings
Overall effectiveness:54% reduction in rotavirus-based gastroenteritis among vaccinated children.
Comparable to phase 3 clinical trial efficacy (54%), confirming effectiveness in routine conditions.
Age-specific impact:
Effectiveness sustained in first two years of life, when disease burden is highest.
Hospitalisation impact:
Significant decline in rotavirus hospitalisations across study sites.
Broader implication: Confirms indigenous vaccines can be effective in real-world settings, not just clinical trials.
Strategic & Operational Significance
Indigenous development: Reduces reliance on foreign vaccines; aligns with Atmanirbhar Bharat in healthcare.
Evidence-based policy:
Provides data for scaling up Rotavac coverage and planning future vaccination campaigns.
Global relevance: Adds India’s experience to rotavirus vaccine effectiveness in low- and middle-income countries.
Key Data / Facts
Vaccine efficacy: 54% (both in trial and real-world).
UIP introduction: 2016.
Hospitals studied: 31 across 9 states.
Burden: 128,500 under-five deaths annually from rotavirus in India.
Administration schedule: 6, 10, 14 weeks.
Curb on use of ‘ORS’ term brings to light a doctor’s 8-year battle
Why in News ?
Event: FSSAI issued an order banning all beverages from using the term ‘ORS’ in their trademarked names.
Background: Earlier, companies were allowed to use the term with disclaimers, which misled consumers.
Trigger: Misuse of ORS branding led to children becoming critically dehydrated despite caregivers administering “store–bought ORS” products.
Champion: Hyderabad paediatrician Dr Sivarangini Santhosh led an eight-year advocacy to prevent misuse of the ORS term.
Relevance:
GS-2: Governance – Regulatory oversight by FSSAI, Consumer protection, Long-term advocacy in health policy.
GS-3: Economy – Preventing economic burden from hospitalisations, Ensuring safe medical consumption.
GS-1: Society – Child health protection, Public awareness on correct ORS usage.
GS-4: Ethics – Ethical responsibility in medical communication and product labelling.
Understanding ORS
Definition: Oral Rehydration Solution (ORS) is a medical solution containing precise ratios of glucose, sodium chloride, and potassium chloride.
Purpose: Rehydrates patients by facilitating water absorption in the gut; prevents death from diarrhoea.
Global significance: ORS is a landmark medical discovery by Dr Dilip Mahalanabis, saving millions of lives worldwide.
Child mortality context in India:
13% of deaths in children under five are due to diarrhoea.
Improper ORS use or substitutes can worsen dehydration and diarrhoea.
Problem with Flavoured/Packaged ‘ORS’ Products
Entered market over the last decade without adhering to correct sugar-salt ratios.
Excess sugar can draw water out of the gut, worsening diarrhoea.
Even with disclaimers, branding misleads caregivers, leading to critical dehydration.
Case examples:
Children in Hyderabad and Madhya Pradesh became critically ill after consuming such beverages.
Regulatory Journey
Initial confusion: ORS products are medical; assumed regulated by CDSCO (drug regulator).
Correct authority: FSSAI (food regulator).
Timeline:
April 2022: FSSAI restricted ORS use with some limitations.
Later reversed to allow ORS in names with disclaimers.
October 2025: FSSAI finally bans use of ORS in beverage names.
Advocacy:
Dr Santhosh approached Telangana High Court, Health Minister, Prime Minister, and medical associations.
Faced opposition from industry and social isolation.
Health & Scientific Significance
ORS works by osmosis: glucose and electrolytes pull water into the body, rehydrating effectively.
Improper substitutes can:
Increase severity of diarrhoea.
Cause hospitalisations and deaths.
Highlights the importance of correct labelling and public awareness of medical products.
Key Facts & Data
ORS prevents 13% of under-five deaths from diarrhoea in India.
Misbranded ORS-like drinks caused critical dehydration and hospitalisations.
Advocacy duration: 8 years by Dr Sivarangini Santhosh.
Regulatory outcome: FSSAI bans the term ‘ORS’ in beverage names.
Scientific fact: Proper ORS contains fixed glucose, sodium chloride, potassium chloride ratios; deviations can worsen dehydration.
WMO: Record rise in global CO2 concentrations
Why in News ?
Event: World Meteorological Organization (WMO) released data showing a record rise in global CO2 concentrations between 2022 and 2024.
Key highlights:
Global average CO2: 423.1 ppm in 2024, up 2.9 ppm from 2023.
Increase since 1990: +51.4 ppm.
Global temperature: 2024 was the warmest year on record, 1.55°C above pre-industrial levels.
First time the 1.5°C annual average threshold was crossed, a key climate benchmark.
Relevance:
GS-3: Environment – Climate change trends, GHG emissions, Global warming, Renewable energy imperatives.
GS-2: Governance – International climate governance, Policy responses, Multilateral coordination (UNFCCC, WMO).
GS-1: Society – Impact on livelihoods, Migration, and human security.
Understanding CO2 and Greenhouse Gases ?
CO2 as a greenhouse gas (GHG):
Primary driver of climate change, contributing ~66% of global warming since pre-industrial times.
Sources:
Natural: respiration, decomposition, wildfires, ocean releases, volcanic eruptions.
Anthropogenic: fossil fuel burning, industry, land-use change.
Natural sinks (forests, oceans) absorb roughly half of human CO2 emissions.
Other GHGs:
Methane (CH4): 16% of warming; increased to 1,942 ppb in 2024. Lifetime ~12 years.
Nitrous oxide (N2O): 6% of warming; increased to 338 ppb in 2024. Lifetime 100–120 years.
Trends and Record Increase
Long-term trend: CO2 has never declined in last 40 years; annual average increase: 0.8 ppm/year since 1957.
Acceleration:
1960s: 0.8 ppm/year.
2011–2020: 2.4 ppm/year.
2023–2024: record jump of 3.5 ppm/year, unprecedented.
Relative to pre-industrial levels (278.3 ppm): Current CO2 152% higher.
Causes Behind Record Rise
Anthropogenic emissions: Continued fossil fuel burning.
Natural feedbacks reducing CO2 absorption:
Oceans: reduced solubility due to higher temperatures.
Forests and land sinks: extreme droughts, wildfires, deforestation reduced CO2 uptake.
Exceptional events: Large-scale forest fires in 2024 added extra emissions.
Feedback loops: Higher temperatures → less CO2 absorption → more warming → more emissions.
Global Temperature Context
2024: Warmest year recorded, 1.55°C above pre-industrial levels.
Significance: Breaching 1.5°C threshold increases risks of:
Irreversible climate impacts (sea-level rise, ice melt).
Extreme weather events (heatwaves, floods, droughts).
GHG contribution:
CO2: ~75% of warming in last decade.
CH4: shorter-term impact but potent GHG.
N2O: long-term atmospheric persistence.
Implications and Challenges
Rapid CO2 accumulation signals failure to slow emissions meaningfully despite global efforts.
Climate feedbacks exacerbate warming: higher CO2 → reduced absorption → higher temperatures → more CO2 release.
Urgency for action: Need enhanced mitigation, renewable energy adoption, forest protection, and global cooperation.
Key Data / Facts
Parameter
2024 Value
Trend / Notes
CO2 concentration
423.1 ppm
+2.9 ppm from 2023, +51.4 ppm since 1990
Global temp above pre-industrial
1.55°C
First annual average >1.5°C
Methane (CH4)
1,942 ppb
+8 ppb from 2023; avg 10.6 ppb/year last decade
Nitrous oxide (N2O)
338 ppb
+1 ppb from 2023; avg 1.07 ppb/year last decade
CO2 contribution to warming
~66% since pre-industrial; ~75% in last decade
Primary driver of climate change
Where springs once sang, silence now echoes across the Eastern Himalayas
Why in News ?
Event: Report highlighting the drying of Himalayan springs and its impact on livelihoods, women, and local culture in Darjeeling Hills.
Source: Field reportage and research by Kabindra Sharma, IUCN India Fellow, supported by NITI Aayog data.
Context: Nearly 50% of springs in the Indian Himalayan Region (IHR) are drying up, threatening water security, agriculture, and traditional lifestyles.
Relevance:
GS-1: Society – Livelihoods, Gendered burden, Cultural impacts of water scarcity.
GS-2: Governance – Water security policy, Spring revival initiatives, Climate-resilient local governance.
GS-3: Environment – Hydrology, Deforestation, Ecosystem services, Agriculture dependency.
Understanding Himalayan Springs ?
Definition: Springs are natural groundwater outlets, providing freshwater for drinking, irrigation, and livestock.
Significance:
Source of water for 200 million people across ecologically fragile mountain systems in India (Himalayas, Western/Eastern Ghats, Aravallis).
Sustain agriculture, livestock, and local livelihoods.
Cultural and social importance; tied to traditional practices and local knowledge.
Historical self-reliance: Villages like Kolbong Khasmahal were once self-sufficient in vegetables and milk, relying on local water sources.
Causes of Drying Springs
Climate shifts: Changing rainfall patterns, unpredictable monsoons, and prolonged dry periods.
Deforestation & unsustainable land-use: Reduced soil water retention, increased runoff, and diminished aquifer recharge.
Anthropogenic neglect: Limited recognition in national water governance frameworks prior to 2018; National Water Policies of 1987, 2002, 2012 made no mention of springs.
Local impacts: Excessive withdrawal, lack of spring recharge practices, and encroachment.
Socio-Economic Impacts
Water access burden on women:
Average of 2 hours/day spent fetching water from distant springs.
Physical strain, health risks, and impact on household management.
Livelihood loss:
Decline in local vegetable production and dairy products like churpi.
Dependence on imported vegetables and packaged milk from towns like Dhupguri and Maynaguri.
Migration: Youth move to cities due to declining local economic opportunities.
Pandemic effect: Returning migrants found parched lands and dry springs, compounding livelihood challenges.
Environmental and Ecological Implications
Water stress: Springs drying → reduced soil moisture → declining crop productivity.
Forest degradation: Feedback loop with deforestation and drought further reduces natural recharge of springs.
Biodiversity: Reduced water availability affects flora, fauna, and livestock dependent on spring-fed ecosystems.
Ecological crisis: Combined hydrological, agricultural, and biodiversity loss threatens the Himalayan ecosystem.
Policy & Governance Context
NITI Aayog 2018 Report: First formal acknowledgment of spring degradation; launched Inventory and Revival of Springs for Water Security in the Himalayas.
Gap in policy: Prior national water policies ignored mountain spring systems, reflecting institutional neglect.
Regional water governance: Ongoing initiatives by SaciWATERs and IUCN India focus on climate resilience, water management, and revival of springs.
Cultural and Human Security Implications
Springs are intertwined with traditions, local knowledge, and community identity.
Drying springs are a non-traditional security threat:
Threat to livelihoods and food security.
Gendered burden on women’s labor and time.
Potential migration and social disruption.
Key Facts / Data
Parameter
Value / Observation
Himalayan springs dried
~50% of total springs in IHR
People dependent on spring water
~200 million across India
Daily water fetching time (women)
~2 hours/day in Darjeeling villages
Economic shift
From locally produced vegetables/milk to imported vegetables and packaged milk
Recognition in policy
NITI Aayog 2018 report on Inventory & Revival of Springs