Content :
Kaziranga’s First Grassland Bird Survey Reveals High Avian Diversity
Dowry Deaths in India: High Incidence, Slow Investigations, Rare Convictions
SC Flags Misuse of Free Speech on Social Media, Calls for Regulatory Balance
Denmark’s Copyright-Based Approach to Combat Deepfakes
Environment Ministry’s New SO₂ Emission Framework for Thermal Plants Defended
India Loses ₹7,000 Crore to Cyber Frauds in 5 Months: Cross-Border Scams Under Scanner
Famous for its rhinos, Kaziranga records high diversity of grassland birds in survey
Context & Significance
A first-of-its-kind survey in Kaziranga National Park and Tiger Reserve (KNPTR) (Assam) has recorded 43 species of grassland-dependent birds.
Conducted between March 18 and May 25, 2025, it marks a milestone in the documentation of avifaunal diversity in the Brahmaputra floodplains.
This is important for grassland ecosystem conservation, which remains under-researched in India compared to forests and wetlands.
Relevance : GS 3(Environment and Ecology)
About Kaziranga National Park
Feature
Detail
Location
Assam, Brahmaputra floodplains
Total Area
1,174 sq. km
UNESCO World Heritage Site
Yes, since 1985
Habitat Type
Mix of wet grasslands, forests, and wetlands
Known for
One-horned rhinoceros, tigers, elephants, and now, grassland birds
Key Findings from the Survey
Species Category
Example(s)
Critically Endangered
Bengal florican
Endangered
Finn’s weaver (locally: Tukura Chorai), confirmed breeding
Vulnerable (6 species)
Marsh babbler, Swamp francolin, Jerdon’s babbler, Bristled grassbird, etc.
Others
Total of 43 species documented across 3 divisions of Kaziranga
Innovative Methodology Used
Passive Acoustic Monitoring
Use of passive acoustic recorders for:
Non-invasive, continuous monitoring
Detecting shy, cryptic, or nocturnal birds
Coverage of inaccessible or high-risk areas
Significantly improved the depth and accuracy of avifaunal detection.
Why Grasslands Matter
Wet grasslands, like those in Kaziranga, are ecologically rich but poorly studied.
These ecosystems support unique, endemic, and endangered species.
Serve as breeding grounds, foraging zones, and indicator habitats of environmental health.
Comparative Significance
Kaziranga’s grassland bird diversity is now comparable to dry grasslands of Gujarat and Rajasthan, known for species like:
Great Indian Bustard (critically endangered)
Lesser florican
Highlights importance of wet grasslands in conservation discourse, which often emphasizes forests and dry grasslands.
Policy & Conservation Implications
1. Need for Ecosystem-Specific Surveys
Wet grasslands are under-surveyed across India.
Targeted studies like this can guide species-specific conservation plans.
2. Grassland Management
Presence of Finn’s weaver breeding suggests healthy grassland ecology.
Conservation of such indicator species is critical to ecosystem stability.
3. Integration with Tiger Reserves
Emphasizes multi-species management in Protected Areas (PA)—not just megafauna like rhinos or tigers.
Enhances landscape-level conservation under CAMPA, Project Tiger, and Biodiversity Action Plans.
Challenges & Way Forward
Issue
Suggestion
Grasslands misclassified as ‘wastelands’
Reclassify and protect under eco-sensitive zones
Limited research outside flagship fauna
Expand surveys to birds, insects, amphibians
Human pressure & encroachment
Balance tourism, local livelihoods, and habitat protection
Climate vulnerability
Long-term monitoring using tools like acoustic sensors + AI
Dowry deaths in India: Long investigations, rare convictions
Context
Despite being legally banned, dowry practices and related violence persist across India. A spate of recent cases — involving torture, suicides, and murders — underlines the systemic failures in prevention, investigation, and prosecution.
Relevance : GS 2(Social Issues)
Key Data: Dowry Deaths in India (2017–2022)
Indicator
Value/Insight
Avg. Dowry Deaths Reported/Year
~7,000 (NCRB data, likely under-reported)
Charge-Sheeted Cases/Year
~4,500 (rest delayed or closed for lack of evidence)
Pending Investigation Cases (2022)
~3,000, of which 67% pending >6 months
Delay in Charge-Sheet Filing (2022)
70% filed after >2 months of investigation
Cases Sent for Trial/Year
~6,500
Convictions/Year
~100 (⟶ conviction rate < 2%)
States with Highest Incidence
UP, Bihar, Jharkhand, MP, Odisha, WB, Haryana, Rajasthan
City with Most Cases (2017–22)
Delhi (30%), followed by Kanpur, Bengaluru, Lucknow
Key Insights
1. Dowry Violence Is Rampant and Under-reported
The 7,000 annual cases represent only the tip of the iceberg — social stigma, family pressure, and fear of reprisal prevent reporting.
Cultural normalization of dowry demands continues, especially in patriarchal setups.
2. Investigations Are Slow and Incomplete
Nearly half of the reported cases are not charge-sheeted.
Delays in charge-sheeting (70% take >2 months) weaken the case and reduce chances of conviction.
3. Convictions Are Rare
Less than 2% conviction rate despite FIRs and trial initiation.
Acquittals, withdrawals, and plea bargains are common due to weak evidence, societal compromise, or prolonged legal processes.
4. Geographic Concentration
80% of dowry deaths are concentrated in 9 states, largely in the Hindi heartland and eastern India.
Delhi alone accounts for 30% of dowry death cases among cities—reflecting both high reporting and severity.
Legal & Institutional Framework
Law/Provision
Relevance
Section 304B, IPC
Punishes dowry death (within 7 years of marriage)
Section 498A, IPC
Cruelty by husband/in-laws for dowry
Dowry Prohibition Act, 1961
Prohibits giving/taking dowry
CrPC Sections 174 & 176
Mandate inquest/investigation into unnatural deaths of married women
NCRB Data
Captures only police-reported cases; no mechanism for socio-cultural reporting
Challenges
1. Delayed Justice
Investigation lags and evidence tampering compromise trials.
Lack of forensic support and insensitive police response further aggravate the problem.
2. Social Pressures & Normalisation
Silencing of victims due to family honour, fear, or economic dependence.
Many families withdraw or settle cases informally, undermining justice.
3. Misuse vs Genuine Cases Debate
Concerns over misuse of Section 498A IPC have led to dilution in enforcement.
Judicial caution often overrides the urgency in genuine dowry harassment cases.
4. No Survivor-Centric Framework
Lack of psychological, legal, and financial support for survivors and families.
No centralised tracking of dowry cases from FIR to conviction.
Policy Recommendations
Domain
Suggestions
Criminal Justice Reform
Fast-track dowry death cases; monitor time-bound charge-sheeting
Police & Forensics
Capacity-building in gender-sensitive investigation, forensic tools
Social Reform
Mass awareness campaigns; involve community leaders & youth groups
Survivor Support
Legal aid, rehabilitation funds, and safe shelter mechanisms
Data Transparency
Create a real-time national dowry case dashboard for monitoring
Abuse of right to free speech increasing on social media, says SC
Context
The Supreme Court has flagged the increasing misuse of free speech on social media, especially when it incites division, hate, or undermines dignity. The Court called for a framework of regulation, not censorship, to balance constitutional rights with social responsibility.
Relevance : GS 2(Fundamental Rights, Fake Speech, Misinformation)
Constitutional & Legal Context
Provision / Case
Relevance
Article 19(1)(a)
Guarantees freedom of speech and expression
Article 19(2)
Allows reasonable restrictions for interests like public order, morality, etc.
IT Act, Section 66A (struck down)
Declared unconstitutional in Shreya Singhal v. Union of India (2015)
IPC Sections 153A, 295A, 505
Punish speech that promotes enmity, religious insult, or false alarms
Supreme Court’s Observations (July 2025)
Free speech is being weaponized—particularly online—to fuel communalism, defame individuals, or erode public trust.
Social media magnifies harm due to its viral nature and low accountability.
The Court clarified: “We are not calling for censorship, but for self-restraint and regulatory balance.”
Why the Concern Over Social Media Speech?
1. Unchecked Virality
Harmful or hateful content spreads rapidly—amplifying misinformation and communal tensions.
Algorithms favour sensational content, not responsible speech.
2. Weak Platform Accountability
No uniform grievance redressal.
Platforms often delay taking down harmful content unless legally compelled.
3. Fragmented Legal Response
Multiple FIRs across states for the same post—leads to harassment, forum shopping, and misuse of law.
4. Polarising Content
Politically or religiously divisive speech increases during elections, riots, or crises.
Example: Communal trolling, deepfakes, disinformation campaigns.
Challenges in Regulation
Challenge
Details
Balancing Free Speech vs. Regulation
Overregulation may lead to suppression of dissent or creativity
Jurisdictional Conflicts
Same post may invite FIRs in multiple states
Platform Non-Compliance
Tech giants are governed by foreign laws and may resist Indian rules
Ambiguity in ‘Harmful Speech’
Difficult to define ‘hate’, ‘offensive’, or ‘divisive’ speech uniformly
Lack of Digital Literacy
Many users unknowingly spread false or hurtful content
Policy & Institutional Framework
Initiative
Status & Gaps
IT Rules, 2021
Mandate content takedown, grievance officers, traceability.
Digital India Act (Drafted)
Aims to replace IT Act, 2000 — but still under consultation.
Social Media Grievance Appellate Committee (GAC)
Redressal mechanism lacks user awareness and enforcement teeth
Judicial Guidelines (proposed)
SC hinted at laying down uniform procedural safeguards
Way Forward
Priority Area
Suggestions
Regulatory Clarity
Finalise and implement Digital India Act with free speech safeguards
Self-Regulation & Platform Ethics
Mandate code of ethics, transparency in moderation algorithms
Judicial Framework
SC to evolve guidelines on multi-state FIRs, content responsibility
Digital Literacy Campaigns
Public education on legal rights and responsible online behavior
Stronger Civil Society Role
NGOs, fact-checkers, and user groups to build counter-narratives
How Denmark Plans to Use Copyright Law to Protect Against Deepfakes
Context
Denmark has proposed a new legal approach to combat the spread of deepfakes—synthetic media generated using AI—by extending copyright protections to individuals’ facial features, voice, and appearance, even if the manipulated media is not originally theirs.
Relevance : GS 2(International Relations , Social Issues)
Why This Matters
Deepfakes are becoming more realistic and easier to create, posing serious risks to privacy, consent, democracy, and digital trust.
India and many countries lack a specific legal framework to address deepfakes.
Key Features of Denmark’s Proposal
Provision
Description
Copyright-like Protection
Individuals will get exclusive rights over their facial data, voice, etc., like authors have over their works.
Criminalisation of Realistic Imitations
Deepfakes mimicking a real person’s appearance/voice without consent will be illegal, even if not defamatory.
Consent-Based Usage
Platforms must obtain explicit permission from individuals before sharing their likeness.
Platform Liability
Social media platforms will face penalties for non-removal of deepfake content.
Caveats & Limitations
Limitation
Explanation
Scope Limited to Denmark
Enforcement outside Danish jurisdiction will be difficult.
Freedom of Expression Risks
Risk of overblocking content; critics warn of unintended curbs on satire or art.
Exemptions for News/Parody
The bill doesn’t fully clarify if satire, journalism, or AI-generated art is protected.
Global Relevance
India’s Gap: India has no standalone law to regulate deepfakes. IT Rules 2021 address harmful content but don’t define deepfakes explicitly.
Comparative Insight:
EU AI Act: Classifies deepfakes as high-risk AI.
US: Various state laws penalize deepfakes in elections or pornography.
China: Requires labelling of all AI-generated media.
Environment Ministry defends revised framework for thermal plants to meet SO₂ emission norms
Context
On July 11, 2025, the Union Environment Ministry issued a revised framework to regulate sulphur dioxide (SO₂) emissions from thermal power plants. It has exempted many older coal-based plants from retrofitting Flue Gas Desulphurisation (FGD) devices and staggered deadlines for compliance based on location-based categorisation.
Relevance : GS 3(Environment and Ecology)
Scientific & Technical Basis
SO₂: Harmful gas emitted during coal combustion; causes acid rain and respiratory illnesses.
Also contributes to secondary pollutants like particulate matter.
Ministry claims:
Framework is evidence-based, informed by:
Ambient SO₂ studies from 7 cities.
Inputs from CPCB, NEERI, and IITs.
Scientific analysis across 537 thermal power plants (TPPs).
Key Elements of the New Framework
Category
Description
Deadline/Exemption
A
Within 10 km of Delhi-NCR or cities >1 million population
Compliance by Dec 2027
B
Within 10 km of polluted cities (non-attainment)
Compliance case-by-case, based on expert review
C
Located outside polluted zones
Fully exempted from SO₂ retrofitting, must meet stack height norms
Plants retiring before Dec 2030 are also exempted, subject to ₹0.40/unit compensation if they continue operating beyond that date.
Cost Implications
Retrofitting FGD systems across 537 plants estimated to cost ₹2.54 lakh crore.
Issues & Criticism
Concerns
Explanation
“Regulatory dilution”
Environmental groups fear that exemptions weaken pollution control and delay India’s clean energy transition.
Health implications
SO₂ is linked to asthma, bronchitis, and cardiovascular issues. Exemptions may worsen local air quality.
Delayed action
India committed to SO₂ norms in 2015, but deadlines have been repeatedly extended.
Equity concern
Populations near Category B/C plants may still face localized pollution, yet plants may escape full compliance.
Concept Check
Term
Meaning
FGD (Flue Gas Desulphurisation)
A technology to remove SO₂ from exhaust flue gases of fossil-fuel power plants.
Non-attainment cities
Cities that consistently violate National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS).
Stack height norms
Chimneys must be tall enough to disperse pollutants and reduce ground-level concentration.
Conclusion
The revised SO₂ compliance framework reflects a balancing act between health, environment, and economic costs. While phased deadlines reduce retrofitting burdens, critics warn of potential dilution of environmental safeguards.
Indians lost ₹7,000 crore to cyber frauds (Jan–May 2025)
Context
According to the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA), Indians lost over ₹7,000 crore to cyber frauds in the first 5 months of 2025. More than 50% of this loss is linked to cross-border scams originating in Southeast Asia (especially Cambodia), with deep links to human trafficking and organised cybercrime.
Relevance : GS 3 ( Cyber Security, Internal Security, Governance)
Key Data
Month
Amount Lost (₹ crore)
January
1,992
February
951
March
1,000
April
731
May
999
Total
~7,000 crore
Source: Citizen Financial Cyber Fraud Reporting and Management System (CFRMS) under Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre (I4C)
Key Issues Identified
1. Transnational Nature of Cybercrime
Scams operated from high-security compounds in Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Vietnam, Thailand.
Controlled by Chinese-linked operators.
At least 53 scam centres identified (45 in Cambodia alone).
2. Human Trafficking Angle
Thousands of Indians trafficked and forced to work in scam operations.
Workers recruited via agents under the promise of overseas tech jobs.
3. Types of Scams
Investment scams, digital arrest scams, and task-based scams (e.g., fake stock trading apps, online tasks-for-money cons).
4. Recruitment Hubs in India
State
Number of Agents
Maharashtra
58
Tamil Nadu
51
Jammu & Kashmir
46
Uttar Pradesh
41
Delhi
38
Trafficking route: India → Dubai → China → Cambodia/Vietnam/Thailand.
Other direct routes: Delhi/Lucknow/Jaipur/Kolkata/Kerala to SEA nations.
Institutional Response
Inter-Ministerial Panel formed by the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA).
CBI FIRs filed against SIM card sellers aiding ghost identities.
Collaboration with Cambodian officials, who sought exact GPS coordinates of scam centres for enforcement action.
Governance Gaps
Sector
Identified Issues
Telecom
Ghost SIM cards issued via fraud
Banking
Lax KYC enables mule accounts
Immigration
Trafficking routes exploit visa gaps
Conclusion
The ₹7,000 crore cyber fraud loss highlights India’s growing vulnerability to transnational digital crime networks. Urgent legal, diplomatic, and technological coordination is needed to plug recruitment, financial, and cyber loopholes.