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PIB Summaries 07 October 2025

Content Leprosy in India: The Road to a Disease-Free Future ICG conducts 10th NATPOLREX-X & 27th NOSDCP off Chennai Coast Leprosy in India: The Road to a Disease-Free Future Why in News ? As of March 2025, India has sustained leprosy elimination status nationally with 31 States and 638 districts achieving prevalence rate <1/10,000 population. Leprosy prevalence dropped from 57.2 (1981) to 0.57 (2025) per 10,000 population — a 99% reduction. Child cases reduced from 9.04% (2014–15) to 4.68% (2024–25) — key indicator of interrupted transmission. India’s National Strategic Plan (NSP) and Roadmap for Leprosy 2023–27 aims for zero indigenous cases by 2030. Relevance GS-2 (Health & Social Justice): NLEP, NHM integration, anti-discrimination, digital trackin (Nikusth 2.0), WHO alignment. GS-3 (Science & Tech): Vaccine research, AMR surveillance, ICT-based monitoring. GS-1 (Society): Stigma reduction, social inclusion, awareness campaigns. What is Leprosy ? Causative agent: Mycobacterium leprae (chronic bacterial infection). Transmission: Respiratory droplets during prolonged contact with untreated patients. Organs affected: Skin, peripheral nerves, eyes, upper respiratory tract. Types: Paucibacillary (PB): Few bacilli, mild infection. Multibacillary (MB): High bacilli density, severe infection. Symptoms: Discoloured skin patches, loss of sensation, non-healing ulcers, deformities in limbs and face. Treatment: Multi-Drug Therapy (MDT) introduced in 1983: Rifampicin, Clofazimine, and Dapsone — provided free by WHO. Prevents disability if diagnosed early. Evolution of India’s Leprosy Programme Phase I: Control (1955–1982) National Leprosy Control Programme (NLCP, 1955): Focus on Survey, Education, and Treatment (SET). Relied on dapsone monotherapy, provided through domiciliary care. 1970s: Became a centrally sponsored scheme during Fourth FYP. Strengthened NGO participation; house-to-house surveys and community education initiated. Prevalence in 1951: 38.1/10,000 (13.74 lakh cases). Phase II: Eradication (1983–2004) National Leprosy Eradication Programme (NLEP, 1983): Integration of MDT (endorsed by WHO, 1982). Shift from control to eradication approach. Impact: Prevalence reduced from 57.2 (1981) → 2.4 (2004) per 10,000. Grade II deformities declined from 20% (1981) → 1.5% (2004). World Bank projects (1993–2004): Funded community participation and IEC innovations. Focus on women, tribals, urban poor. 2005: India achieved elimination as a public health problem nationally (<1/10,000 prevalence). Phase III: Sustaining Elimination (2005–Present) Core Strategies under NLEP Free diagnosis and MDT for all cases. Post-Exposure Prophylaxis (PEP): Single dose rifampicin (SDR) for contacts of leprosy patients. Early Case Detection Campaigns (ECDC): Leprosy Case Detection Campaign (LCDC) – Door-to-door surveys. Focused Leprosy Campaigns – Targeted surveillance in affected clusters. ABSULS – ASHA-Based Surveillance for Leprosy Suspects (grassroots detection). Disability Prevention and Medical Rehabilitation (DPMR): Distribution of MCR footwear, Self-care kits, aids and appliances, ₹12,000 compensation for reconstructive surgery-related wage loss. Community Awareness: Sparsh Leprosy Awareness Campaign on Anti-Leprosy Day. Digitalization: Nikusth 2.0 (2023): ICT-based portal for patient tracking and drug logistics. Anti-Discrimination Drive: States encouraged to repeal discriminatory laws against leprosy. Institutional and Legal Strengthening Integration with NHM: Centrally sponsored scheme under National Health Mission. Inclusion in national health platforms: Screening integrated with Ayushman Bharat (30+ years), RBSK, and RKSK. AMR Surveillance: National Anti-Microbial Resistance Surveillance for Leprosy launched in 2023. Mental Health Integration: National Framework for Integration of Mental Health Services for Leprosy Patients (2023). Revised Treatment Regimen (2025): Triple-drug therapy standardized for both PB & MB cases. Focus on PVTGs: Nikusth 2.0 tagging for PVTGs across 17 States under PM-JANMAN. Quantitative Outcomes (As of 2025) Indicator 2014–15 2024–25 % Change Prevalence rate (per 10,000) 0.69 0.57 ↓17% New case detection rate (per 100,000) 9.73 7.0 ↓28% Child cases among new detections 9.04% 4.68% ↓48% Grade II disability rate (per million) 4.68 1.88 ↓60% PEP coverage 71% (2019–20) 92% (2024–25) ↑21% LCDC cases detected (FY 2024–25) — 27,428 —   Top endemic states: Chhattisgarh (1.80), Jharkhand (1.46), Odisha (1.37), Maharashtra (1.12). Lowest prevalence: Meghalaya (0.03), Manipur (0.05), J&K (0.07). National Strategic Plan & Roadmap (2023–2027) Aligned with: WHO Global Leprosy Strategy 2021–2030 & WHO NTD Roadmap 2021–2030. Goal: Interrupt transmission by 2027 and achieve zero indigenous cases by 2030. Strategic Pillars: Accelerated case detection (targeted approach). Intensified surveillance and digitalization (Nikusth 2.0). Chemoprophylaxis for all contacts. Vaccine introduction (under evaluation). Anti-microbial resistance & adverse drug monitoring. Post-treatment surveillance & integrated rehabilitation. Behavioural change communication (BCC) to eliminate stigma. Repeal discriminatory laws. Multi-disease service integration and retention of leprosy expertise. International Cooperation WHO: Free MDT drug supply, technical guidance, evaluation, and training. Supported MLECs, COMBI (Bihar), and surveillance. World Bank: Funded community-oriented projects (1993–2004). ILEP, GPZL, Sasakawa Health Foundation, ALERT India, Schieffelin Institute, Hind Kusht Nivaran Sangh: Strengthened IEC, rehabilitation, and advocacy against stigma. Global Recognition: WHO dropped India (2006) from the list of non-eliminated countries. India featured in The Global Appeal annually since 2006. Key Challenges Residual endemic pockets in Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Maharashtra, Odisha. Persistent social stigma and legal discrimination in some states. Post-COVID disruption to active case detection and surveillance. Need for new diagnostics and vaccine development. Underreporting due to stigma and private sector data gaps. Way Forward Whole-of-government and whole-of-society approach integrating NHM, AYUSH, and social justice mechanisms. Sustain early detection through ASHA and digital surveillance tools. Enhance rehab and mental health support for affected persons. Focus on zero child cases for five consecutive years as proof of interrupted transmission. Policy integration: NLEP to merge with broader Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs) platform. Continued international partnerships for research and innovation. Conclusion India’s leprosy control is a global public health success, reflecting: 99% drop in prevalence (1981–2025). 98% decline in patients under treatment. From stigma to integration: India’s journey aligns medical success with social justice. However, elimination ≠ eradication — vigilance must continue. With political will, digital innovation (Nikusth 2.0), community participation, and global collaboration, India is poised to achieve zero transmission by 2030, marking a historic humanitarian milestone in global disease elimination. ICG conducts 10th NATPOLREX-X & 27th NOSDCP off Chennai Coast Why in News Indian Coast Guard (ICG) conducted 10th National Level Pollution Response Exercise (NATPOLREX-X) and 27th National Oil Spill Disaster Contingency Plan (NOSDCP) meeting off Chennai coast on October 5–6, 2025. 40 foreign observers from 32 countries and 105 national delegates participated. Aimed to test and strengthen national preparedness and inter-agency coordination for marine oil spill response. Relevance GS-3 (Environment & Disaster Management): Marine pollution control, NOSDCP framework, coastal resilience, SDG-14, Blue Economy. GS-2 (Governance & IR): Inter-agency coordination, institutional roles (ICG, ministries), international maritime cooperation. Background & Institutional Context Indian Coast Guard (ICG) is the Central Coordinating Authority for oil spill response since March 1986. NOSDCP (National Oil Spill Disaster Contingency Plan): Drafted by ICG and approved in 1993. Provides a national framework for preparedness and response to oil spills. Supported by four Pollution Response (PR) Centres: Mumbai, Chennai, Port Blair, Vadinar (Gujarat). NATPOLREX is a biennial flagship exercise under NOSDCP. Tests operational readiness, equipment efficacy, and joint coordination among agencies. Objectives of NATPOLREX-X Assess national capability to detect, contain, and clean up oil spills. Evaluate coordination between ICG, central ministries, coastal states, and ports. Validate communication, logistics, and decision-making protocols. Strengthen international collaboration and knowledge sharing in marine environmental protection. Key Highlights of NATPOLREX-X (2025 Edition) First-ever shoreline clean-up drill at Marina Beach, Chennai. Conducted by Greater Chennai Corporation, Tamil Nadu Pollution Control Board, State Disaster Management Authority, Police, and other state agencies. ICG Asset Deployment: Pollution Control Vessels (PCVs) Offshore Patrol Vessels (OPVs) Fast Patrol Vessels (FPVs) Chetak helicopters and Dornier aircraft for aerial surveillance and dispersant spraying. Supervision: Exercise overseen by DG Paramesh Sivamani, Director General, ICG & Chairperson, NOSDCP. Reviewed response coordination, operational efficiency, and inter-agency synergy. Technical Sessions – Contemporary Focus Areas Nurdle Spills and their Environmental Impact: Microplastic pollution from plastic pellets. Case Studies on Hazardous & Noxious Substances (HNS). Post-Spill Monitoring & Environmental Impact Assessments (EIA). Shoreline Cleanup Lessons from MV MSC ELSA 3 Incident. Provided a platform for scientists, policymakers, and experts to exchange best practices and recovery strategies. National and International Participation Attended by: Central ministries, Coastal State Governments, Major Ports, Oil Handling Agencies, Maritime Organizations, and Foreign Observers. 32 countries represented — enhancing global cooperation in marine spill management. Reinforced India’s regional leadership role in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR) for maritime environmental protection. Strategic and Policy Significance India imports over 75% of its crude oil by sea → oil spill preparedness is strategically critical. Exercise enhances energy security resilience and environmental safety. Aligns with PM Modi’s Aatmanirbhar Bharat vision: Showcased indigenous pollution response technology and Make in India maritime assets. Encouraged self-reliance in environmental response systems. Broader Environmental and Governance Linkages Supports Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 14 – Life Below Water. Integrates with Blue Economy framework through marine pollution control. Promotes inter-agency collaboration among: ICG, MoEFCC, MoPNG, Shipping Ministry, and Coastal States. Enhances marine biodiversity protection and resilience of coastal ecosystems. Outcome and Way Forward Validated the multi-layered pollution response mechanism of the ICG. Improved response coordination protocols across agencies and ports. Strengthened international engagement for capacity building in the Indian Ocean Region. Will feed into updating the NOSDCP 2026–2030 roadmap, incorporating: New technologies (AI-based surveillance, satellite mapping). Local community participation in shoreline response. Conclusion NATPOLREX-X (2025) marks a milestone in India’s marine environmental governance. Reinforces India’s commitment to clean oceans, climate resilience, and maritime sustainability. Positions ICG as a regional hub for pollution response expertise under the broader Indo-Pacific cooperation framework.

Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 07 October 2025

Content Calling out the criticism of the Indian judiciary Ensure compliance Calling out the criticism of the Indian judiciary Why in News Sanjeev Sanyal, member of the Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council, recently claimed that India’s judicial system is the single biggest hurdle to achieving Viksit Bharat within 25 years. This sparked debate on whether judicial inefficiency or governmental failures actually impede India’s development. Relevance: GS 2: Polity & GovernanceStructure, Organization, and Functioning of the JudiciarySeparation of Powers between various organs Practice Question : Judicial delay is often a symptom of deeper governance and legislative inefficiencies rather than a cause. Critically examine this statement in light of recent debates over the judiciary’s role in India’s development. (250 words) Core Issue A growing narrative is blaming courts for slowing economic progress. Such oversimplified criticism ignores deeper governance and legislative failures. Problems with the Claim Misinformed criticism: Courts are portrayed as lazy and over-vacationed — misleading and factually incorrect. False attribution: Delays stem from systemic weaknesses, not solely judicial inefficiency. Judiciary mirrors governance failure: Courts reflect the broader administrative and legislative shortcomings of the State. Structural Realities of the Judiciary Workload: Judges handle 50–100 cases daily; preparation, drafting, and research continue beyond court hours. Vacations: Used to write reserved judgments; vacation benches function throughout. Vacancies: Severe shortage of judges compounds case pendency — among the highest in the world. Legislative and Executive Failures Feeding Delays Poorly drafted laws:Vague, inconsistent, and optics-driven legislation creates confusion and litigation. Example: Section 12A, Commercial Courts Act (2015) — mandatory pre-suit mediation, a parliamentary, not judicial creation. Excessive government litigation: Government = India’s largest litigant. Ministries and tax authorities appeal routine orders up to the Supreme Court. Public servants and pensioners forced to litigate for basic entitlements. The “99-to-1 Problem”: Laws overdesigned to prevent misuse by a few — a legislative flaw, not a judicial one. Illustrations of Flawed Lawmaking Criminal Law Reforms 2023: Cosmetic renaming of IPC/CrPC/Evidence Act to Sanhitas without true structural reform. New Income-Tax Act (2025): Claimed “simplification” adds greater complexity; replacing ‘notwithstanding’ with ‘irrespective’ increases ambiguity — old problems in new form. The Lower Judiciary Crisis Real delays and inefficiencies occur in district and subordinate courts, where most citizens interact with justice. Infrastructure outdated, vacancies high, digital systems uneven — chronic bottlenecks persist. Broader Constitutional Context Courts’ role: Serve as checks on executive and legislative excess, not mere instruments of “speedy governance.” Democracy vs. Development: Judicial independence and due process are essential pillars of real development. Way Forward Judicial reform must focus on: Filling vacancies swiftly. Modernising court infrastructure and digital systems. Curbing government litigation through pre-screening and accountability. Improving legislative drafting for clarity and precision. Shift from blame narrative to systemic accountability and institutional reform. Takeaway India’s judiciary is imperfect but indispensable. The true hurdles to Viksit Bharat lie in bad lawmaking, bureaucratic inertia, and unrestrained government litigation, not the courts. Real reform begins with governance, not judicial scapegoating. Data and Facts Case Pendency and Workload Supreme Court: 80,963 cases pending as of March 2025; reached 88,047 in August 2025, showing a net increase. High Courts: 62,46,095 cases pending. District & Subordinate Courts: 4,67,69,935 cases pending. District/Subordinate Courts Output: Over 32 crore orders/judgments issued; 4.6 crore cases still pending nationwide (mid-2025). Judges and Vacancies Total Judges: About 21,000 (≈15 judges per million population). Law Commission Recommendation: 50 judges per million. Vacancies: High Courts: 33% District Courts: 21% Workload and Diversity High Caseload per Judge: Uttar Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh, and Kerala district courts report 4,000+ cases per judge. Women in Judiciary: District Courts: 38% judges are women. Police Force: 8% of officers are women, but 78% of police stations have Women Help Desks. Judicial Infrastructure Court Halls: Increased to 22,062 (2025) from 15,818 (2014). Residential Units: Expanded substantially for judicial officers. Indicates significant investment in infrastructure under e-Courts and modernization initiatives. Speed and Efficiency Supreme Court: Disposal rate fluctuates with working days and case priorities. Fast Track Courts: 725 operational, including 392 exclusive POCSO courts. 3.34 lakh+ cases disposed of (2025). Focus on vulnerable groups and gender-based crimes. Ensure compliance Context and Background Aatmanirbhar Bharat aims to make India self-reliant across key sectors, including pharmaceutical manufacturing, a global strength for India. However, recurring incidents of substandard drug quality, especially cough syrups, threaten India’s credibility as the “pharmacy of the world.” Relevance: GS 2: Governance, Health, and Policy Implementation GS 3: Science & Technology, Economy, and Public HealthHealth Sector ReformsRegulatory Mechanisms in Pharmaceutical Sector Practice Question : “Aatmanirbhar Bharat cannot be achieved by manufacturing alone; it demands uncompromising quality assurance.” Discuss with reference to India’s pharmaceutical sector. (250 words) Recent Trigger Union Health Ministry has sought strict compliance with revised Schedule M norms under the Drugs and Cosmetics Rules. This came after the Tamil Nadu Drugs Control Department found Diethylene Glycol (DEG) above permissible limits in Coldrif cough syrup. The syrup was linked to the deaths of at least 14 children in Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh. Investigation Findings DEG detected in one batch by Tamil Nadu authorities despite the Health Ministry initially ruling it out in other samples. The manufacturing facility violated several Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP) and Good Laboratory Practices (GLP). The contamination occurred due to use of non-pharmacopoeial grade propylene glycol, leading to DEG and ethylene glycol contamination — both nephrotoxic (kidney-damaging) substances. CDSCO recommended cancellation of the company’s manufacturing licence. A doctor who prescribed the syrup to many deceased children was arrested. Larger Structural Concerns India’s drug regulation and quality control systems remain reactive, not preventive. Lax enforcement, weak inter-State coordination, and infrequent inspections enable recurring quality lapses. Regulatory authorities often act only after fatalities occur, not when early warning signs emerge. Existing Frameworks India already has a Good Laboratory Practices (GLP) and Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP) framework. Schedule M (revised) sets stringent production, hygiene, and record-keeping norms for all pharmaceutical manufacturers. However, implementation and enforcement remain inconsistent across States. Editorial’s Core Argument India must adopt a zero-tolerance policy for substandard drugs. “Hawk-like monitoring” and regular surprise inspections of manufacturing facilities are essential. Enforcement should be strict and continuous, not incident-driven. Every violation, irrespective of scale, must attract swift punitive action to create deterrence. Broader Implications Incidents of poor-quality drugs tarnish India’s global image as a trusted pharma exporter. Such lapses threaten public health, international trade credibility, and domestic confidence in healthcare systems. A robust quality control and regulatory mechanism is integral to achieving Aatmanirbhar Bharat and export competitiveness. Way Forward Institutional reforms: Strengthen the CDSCO and State-level drug regulators through manpower, training, and funding. Transparent inspections: Mandate real-time publication of inspection and test results. Strict penal action: Revoke licences, prosecute offenders, and ensure criminal liability for negligent manufacturers. Technology-enabled monitoring: Implement digital traceability systems for raw materials and drug batches. Public accountability: Ensure citizen reporting mechanisms for adverse drug reactions or suspected poor-quality drugs. Key Takeaway Self-reliance without safety undermines credibility. To truly achieve Aatmanirbhar Bharat, India must match manufacturing capacity with uncompromising quality control. Preventive vigilance, not post-crisis action, must define India’s pharmaceutical regulatory ethos.

Daily Current Affairs

Current Affairs 07 October 2025

Content Crimes against Children Surge in Assam, Rajasthan, and Kerala Securities Transaction Tax (STT) Challenge: Analysis Medicine Nobel for Scientists Who Demystified the Immune System MGNREGA Norms Tweaked for Water Projects Scientific Research in Resource-Constrained Settings: Challenges and Adaptations Why the Immune System Doesn’t Attack the Body Crimes against children surge in Assam, Rajasthan, and Kerala Why in News The National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) 2023 data shows a sharp rise in crimes against children in Assam, Rajasthan, and Kerala. The increase is significant compared to the national average rise of 25%, prompting policy, media, and governance attention. The trends highlight issues in child protection, legal enforcement, and reporting mechanisms. Relevance : GS-2 (Governance & Social Justice): Child protection policies and mechanisms Legal reforms like POCSO Act, Prohibition of Child Marriage Act Role of state machinery in prevention, rescue, and rehabilitation GS-3 (Social Issues & Internal Security): Trends in crimes against children Reporting mechanisms and classification of offences Targeted interventions for vulnerable groups Overall National Trend National increase in crimes against children (2018–2023): 25%. Focus States: Assam, Kerala, Rajasthan — all exceeding the national average. State Average Cases (2018–2022) Cases in 2023 % Increase Assam 5,100 10,000 ~100% Kerala 2,800 5,900 106% Rajasthan 6,200 10,500 70% State-wise Drivers of the Rise Assam Main Cause: Crackdown on child marriage. Data: Cases under the Prohibition of Child Marriage Act, 2006: 2020–2022: ~150 cases/year 2023: 5,267 cases Share of child marriage cases in total crimes against children: 52% (2023) vs 3–4% previously. Insight: Rise reflects active enforcement, not necessarily a spike in incidence. Rajasthan Drivers: Reclassification under POCSO Act, 2012 Shifted from IPC Section 376 (rape) to POCSO provisions. Cases under Sections 4 & 6 of POCSO read with IPC Section 376: 3 → 3,500+ cases (2022–2023). Indicates more accurate classification, alongside a real increase in offences. Kidnapping and abduction: Cases under child kidnapping/abduction provisions rose sharply. Share in total crimes against children: >54% (2023). Kerala Drivers: POCSO cases surge due to improved classification and reporting. Increase reflects both better detection and possibly a genuine rise in offences. Broader Observations Reporting vs Incidence: Higher numbers may partly reflect improved reporting and classification rather than purely higher crime rates. POCSO Act 2012 Impact: Enhanced legal focus on child sexual offences. Uniform classification helps in policy formulation and tracking. Policy Implication: States need better child protection mechanisms, rapid response teams, and awareness programs. NCRB data aids in targeted interventions and resource allocation. Key Takeaways Assam, Kerala, and Rajasthan are high-alert states for child protection interventions. Legal reforms like POCSO Act implementation improve classification, monitoring, and enforcement. Policy focus should balance prevention, rescue, rehabilitation, and reporting mechanisms. Data-driven approach is crucial to distinguish between reporting artefacts and real increase in crimes. Securities Transaction Tax (STT) Challenge Why in News The Supreme Court of India has issued notices on a plea challenging the constitutional validity of the Securities Transaction Tax (STT). The petitioner claims STT violates fundamental rights, particularly: Article 14: Right to equality Article 19(1)(g): Right to trade or profession Article 21: Right to live with dignity The case has drawn attention because it could impact stock market regulation, direct taxation, and financial market participants. Relevance GS-2 (Polity & Governance): Constitutional rights: Article 14, 19(1)(g), 21 Role of judiciary in reviewing legislative competence GS-3 (Economy & Finance): Taxation policy and financial market regulation Double taxation, equity and efficiency in taxation Basics of STT Introduction: STT was introduced in 2004 under the Finance Act. Purpose: To curb tax evasion in securities markets. Applied on transactions on listed stock exchanges. Nature of Tax: Levied on all securities transactions, including buying and selling shares, derivatives, and equity mutual funds. Charged irrespective of profit or loss, unlike income tax which is applied on net profit. Key Claims in the Petition Double Taxation: STT is levied even when capital gains tax is paid on the profit from the same transaction. Example: If a trader earns ₹1 lakh profit: Capital Gains Tax (CGT) applies STT is additionally charged, increasing the effective tax burden. Punitive Nature: Tax is applied even on loss-making trades, unlike most Indian taxes which are profit-linked. Viewed as deterrent to free trade. Violation of Fundamental Rights: The petitioner argues STT infringes the right to earn a livelihood and equal treatment under law. No refund or adjustment mechanism like TDS in salaried income exists for STT. Legal Context Current Framework: STT is mandated under Finance Act, 2004, applied to: Equity shares Derivatives Equity-oriented mutual funds Collected at the time of transaction, automatically deducted by brokers. Comparative Mechanism: TDS (Tax Deducted at Source) for salaried individuals can be adjusted/refunded annually. STT has no such provision, making it unique and potentially punitive. Broader Implications Financial Market Impact: If SC strikes down or modifies STT, it could reduce compliance burden for traders. Potentially increase trading volume and liquidity in stock markets. Government Revenue: STT revenue in FY 2023-24: ~₹9,500 crore (approximate, from Union Budget data). Challenging STT could affect direct tax revenue from securities transactions. Policy Debate: Balances tax collection efficiency vs fundamental rights. Raises questions on design of financial market taxation in India. Medicine Nobel for scientists who demystified the immune system Why in News The 2025 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded to Shimon Sakaguchi (Japan), Mary Brunkow, and Fred Ramsdell (USA). Recognition is for discoveries related to the human immune system, particularly regulatory T cells (Tregs) and peripheral immune tolerance. Significance: Findings have paved the way for novel therapies in cancer, autoimmune diseases, and organ transplantation. Relevance GS-3 (Science & Technology): Advances in immunology and biotechnology Implications for healthcare, personalized medicine, and public health GS-2/3 (Ethics & Innovation): Research ethics, translational research, and equitable access to advanced therapies Human Immune System Components: B cells: Produce antibodies to neutralize pathogens. T cells: Mediate cellular immunity; can kill infected cells or regulate immune response. Neutrophils & Macrophages: Innate immune cells; engulf pathogens. Function: Identify and eliminate foreign antigens while maintaining tolerance to self-cells. Tolerance: Prevents immune system from attacking body’s own tissues. Two types: Central tolerance: Elimination of self-reactive T cells in thymus. Peripheral tolerance: Mechanisms outside the thymus, ensuring immune cells do not attack self-cells in circulation. Key Discoveries by the Laureates Shimon Sakaguchi (1995): Identified a previously unknown class of regulatory T cells (Tregs) in mice. Showed these cells suppress autoimmunity by controlling other T cells. Introduced the concept of peripheral immune tolerance beyond central tolerance. Mary Brunkow & Fred Ramsdell (2001): Discovered that mutations in the Foxp3 gene cause severe autoimmune disease (IPEX syndrome) in humans. Demonstrated the mechanistic link between Foxp3 and Tregs, establishing Tregs as the immune system’s “security guards.” Mechanism of Peripheral Immune Tolerance Regulatory T Cells (Tregs): Express Foxp3 gene. Monitor and regulate other immune cells to prevent self-reactivity. Deficiency or mutation leads to autoimmune disorders, where the body attacks its own tissues. Impact on Disease: Cancer: Manipulating Tregs can boost anti-tumor immunity. Autoimmune Diseases: Treg-targeted therapies reduce abnormal immune attacks (e.g., Type 1 diabetes, IPEX). Transplantation: Enhances graft acceptance by controlling immune rejection. Clinical & Research Significance Peripheral Tolerance: Launched a new field of research. Medical Applications: Novel immunotherapies for cancer (checkpoint inhibitors, CAR-T). Treatments for autoimmune diseases (immune modulation via Tregs). Organ transplantation: Reduces rejection risk. Ongoing Research: Several therapies targeting Tregs are in clinical trials. Broader Scientific Context Previously, immune tolerance was thought to occur only through central tolerance (elimination in thymus). Discoveries reveal multi-layered immune regulation, highlighting: Complexity of immune system Need for balance between immunity against pathogens and self-tolerance Showcases how basic research can translate into therapeutic breakthroughs. Numbers & Facts Foxp3 mutations: Cause IPEX syndrome, a rare but life-threatening autoimmune disorder. Treg discovery timeline: 1995: Sakaguchi identifies Tregs in mice 2001: Brunkow & Ramsdell link Foxp3 mutations to autoimmune disease Clinical trials: Multiple Treg-based therapies underway globally for autoimmunity, cancer, and transplantation. MGNREGA Norms Tweaked for Water Projects Why in News The Ministry of Rural Development (MoRD) revised the Schedule-I norms of MGNREGA to increase allocation and spending on water conservation, water harvesting, and water-related rural works. Objective: Address groundwater depletion and promote productive assets, aligning MGNREGA with climate resilience and agriculture sustainability. Relevance GS-3 (Economy & Rural Development): MGNREGA implementation, rural employment, and resource allocation. Water conservation and sustainable agriculture linkages. GS-3 (Environment & Ecology): Groundwater depletion, water security, and climate-resilient infrastructure. GS-2 (Governance): Policy reforms, targeted fund allocation, and state-level planning under a central scheme. What is MGNREGA? Full form: Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act, 2005. Purpose: Provide at least 100 days of guaranteed wage employment per rural household annually. Scope: Rural works under employment guarantee are funded by the Central Government. Work types: infrastructure creation, water conservation, land development, afforestation, etc. Key provision: Minimum wage payment for 100 days per household, with priority to the poorest and most vulnerable. What Changed in the Norms? Previous rules: Funds could be spent flexibly across sectors; water-related works had a maximum 30–35% allocation. New rules: Minimum 60% of MGNREGA funds at the district/block level must go to water conservation, water harvesting, and water-related works. Other works (productive assets, agriculture-related, and livelihood-focused) will compete for the remaining allocation. Reason for change: To create productive assets that directly support agriculture and rural income. Responds to Prime Minister’s directive emphasizing water security. Classification of Blocks Blocks categorized based on groundwater extraction: Semi-critical: groundwater depletion moderate; some intervention needed. Critical: severe depletion; urgent intervention needed. Over-exploited: excessive extraction; recharge and conservation critical. Funding priority: Blocks with over-exploited or critical status get the majority of MGNREGA allocations. Objective: replenish groundwater and improve agricultural productivity. Financial Implications Allocation: About ₹35,000 crore earmarked for water-related works under MGNREGA. State-wise impact: Priority to states with over-exploited or critical blocks. Example: Rajasthan (214 blocks), Punjab (115), Tamil Nadu (106), Haryana (88), Uttar Pradesh (59). Rationale Behind the Move Groundwater depletion: Over 70% of blocks in over-exploited or critical zones face declining water tables. Agriculture support: Water conservation critical for irrigation, crop resilience, and rural livelihoods. Climate resilience: Addresses rainfall variability and drought-prone areas. Prime Minister’s push: Aligns MGNREGA with productive asset creation, beyond mere wage employment. Strategic and Policy Implications MGNREGA as a multi-purpose tool: Provides employment Builds climate-resilient infrastructure Supports water security and agriculture productivity Monitoring and implementation: Focus on district/block-level planning Ensures targeted interventions in critical areas Expected outcome: Improve groundwater recharge Ensure sustainable agriculture and livelihoods Reduce rural migration due to water scarcity Scientific Research in Resource-Constrained Settings: Challenges and Adaptations Why in News Highlighted at the Student Conference on Conservation Science (Bengaluru, September 2025) by Dr. Sammy Wambua, conservation genomics scientist from Pwani University, Kenya. Focus: How researchers in the Global South, including India and Kenya, navigate bureaucratic, financial, and technological obstacles. Relevance: Highlights systemic issues in Indian scientific research and points toward South-South collaboration and innovative solutions. Relevance GS-3 (Science & Technology): Challenges in scientific research infrastructure, technology adoption, and funding. Role of innovation and collaboration in overcoming systemic barriers. GS-2/3 (Governance & Policy): Regulatory bottlenecks and procurement rules in government-funded research institutions. Importance of policy reform and accountability. Context of Scientific Research in the Global South Scientific research in developing countries faces structural barriers: Bureaucratic red tape Limited funding Expensive and rapidly evolving equipment Yet, researchers continue work through innovation, improvisation, and collaborations. Indian and African scientists face similar challenges, making comparative learning relevant. Bureaucratic Challenges Multiple overlapping policies and opaque approval processes stall research. Oral directives can override written rules; official communication often silent or delayed. Example: Wildlife permits in India: delays of up to 8 months, even when legally allowed. DNA sequencing procurement in public universities: cycles often exceed six months, leading to obsolete equipment. Dr. Wambua advocates that government offices should function like service counters: transparent, clear, and proactive. Funding Constraints Postgraduate scholarships and project funding often delayed or denied. Indian context: Fellowships disbursed months late, forcing students into teaching or personal loans. Workarounds: Partner with NGOs or conservation organizations to link research outcomes with capacity building. Ensure research budgets cover student fees and stipends. Technological Limitations Equipment such as DNA sequencers are expensive (tens of lakhs INR) and quickly become outdated. Workarounds: Ship samples to labs abroad for processing using state-of-the-art facilities. Leverage international collaborations to access cutting-edge technology. Collaborative Solutions Frameworks of Collaboration: Provisional agreements allow work to start while formal MoUs are processed. International collaborations: Essential to bridge funding and technology gaps. Facilitate knowledge transfer and capacity building. South-South collaboration emphasis: Pooling resources among African and Asian countries can align research priorities and avoid isolated, ineffective efforts. Indian Context and Jugaad Procurement rules: “Lowest price” norms create challenges for specialized reagents. Recent reforms: direct purchase limit increased from ₹1 lakh → ₹2 lakh; VCs can approve tenders up to ₹200 crore. Jugaad culture: Scientists develop quick fixes to overcome bureaucratic hurdles, e.g., sitting in offices, improvising timelines. Publication metrics: 2014–2023: Indian agricultural scientists coauthored ~2,100 papers with US institutions → 33,000+ citations. Shows international collaboration boosts visibility and impact. Lessons and Recommendations Transparency and responsiveness: Governments should provide real-time updates on permits, approvals, and funding. Flexible procurement: Simplify processes for specialized equipment and reagents. Collaborative networks: Encourage cross-border research frameworks (South-South and North-South). Pool resources and share facilities to mitigate technology and funding constraints. Innovation and resilience: Researchers can sustain work using creative problem-solving, persistence, and networking. Broader Implications Ensures equitable science by enabling researchers from resource-constrained settings to contribute globally. Addresses systemic gaps in Indian scientific ecosystem: bureaucracy, funding delays, and outdated rules. Highlights need for policy reforms in research funding, procurement, and international collaboration. Why the Immune System Doesn’t Attack the Body Basics of the Immune System The immune system defends the body against pathogens like viruses, bacteria, and harmful molecules. Key players: T cells, a type of white blood cell, coordinate immune responses and destroy infected cells. Problem: How does the immune system avoid attacking the body’s own healthy cells? This is called immune tolerance. Relevance GS-3 (Science & Technology): Advances in immunology and biotechnology Implications for healthcare, personalized medicine, and public health GS-2/3 (Ethics & Innovation): Research ethics, translational research, and equitable access to advanced therapies The Discovery By the 1980s, scientists hypothesized the existence of a special type of T cell that prevents the immune system from attacking itself. These were later identified as regulatory T cells (Tregs), also known as “police” T cells. Function of Tregs: Suppress overactive immune responses. Maintain tolerance to self-antigens. Prevent autoimmune diseases (conditions where the body attacks itself). Key Experiments Shimon Sakaguchi’s study (1995): Surgically removed the thymus (T cell maturation site) in newborn mice. Result: Mice developed autoimmune conditions unless Tregs were present. Conclusion: Thymus is crucial for producing regulatory T cells; without them, self-attack occurs. Later experiments identified FOXP3 gene as essential for Treg development. Mutations in FOXP3 → autoimmune conditions like IPEX syndrome in humans and Scurfy mice in animals. Contributions of Researchers Shimon Sakaguchi (Japan): Discovered Tregs and their role in immune tolerance. Coined the term “police T cells.” Mary F. Brunkow & Frederick J. Ramsdell (USA): Identified the FOXP3 gene controlling Treg development. Linked genetic mutations to autoimmune diseases in humans. Significance of Regulatory T Cells Autoimmunity: Prevents the immune system from attacking organs and tissues. Cancer therapy: Some therapies target Tregs to enhance immune attacks on tumors. Understanding Tregs helps balance immune activation and suppression. Drug development: Potential to create therapies for autoimmune diseases by modulating Treg activity. Gene therapy: FOXP3 gene research enables interventions in rare immune disorders. Why This Is in the News 2025 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine awarded to Sakaguchi, Brunkow, and Ramsdell. Recognises the decades-long work in immune tolerance and regulatory T cell biology. Implications for: Understanding autoimmune diseases. Development of immunotherapies for cancer. Potential future therapies to balance immune overactivity. Highlights the integration of genetics, immunology, and therapeutic innovation. Bottom Line Regulatory T cells are the body’s internal “police”, ensuring that immune responses target invaders but not healthy cells. Discovery of these cells and their genetic control mechanisms has transformed: Basic immunology. Clinical management of autoimmune conditions. Precision medicine approaches in cancer therapy.

Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 06 October 2025

Content PKVY: Nurturing Organic Farming in India People’s Plan Campaign: Strengthening Grassroot Governance, Fostering Inclusive Growth PKVY: Nurturing Organic Farming in India The Paramparagat Krishi Vikas Yojana (PKVY), launched in 2015, is India’s flagship organic farming scheme aimed at promoting sustainable agriculture, enhancing soil health, and empowering farmers through eco-friendly practices. Basic Overview Full Form: Paramparagat Krishi Vikas Yojana (PKVY) Launch Year: 2015 Implementing Ministry: Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers Welfare Objective: Promote organic farming through cluster-based models to improve soil fertility, reduce chemical inputs, and enhance farmer incomes. Coverage (2015–2025): ₹2,265.86 crore released (as of Jan 2025) 15 lakh hectares under organic cultivation 52,289 clusters formed 25.30 lakh farmer beneficiaries Relevance : GS III – Environment & Agriculture: Promotes sustainable, chemical-free farming; enhances soil fertility and biodiversity; aligns with India’s organic and natural farming goals . Aligns with SDG-2 (Zero Hunger) and SDG-12 (Responsible Consumption and Production); supports climate-resilient and eco-friendly agriculture. GS II – Governance: Implements farmer-centric, DBT-based support system ensuring transparency and accountability in scheme execution. GS III – Economy & Inclusive Growth: Empowers small and marginal farmers through cluster-based farming, organic certification, and direct market linkages; boosts rural incomes and entrepreneurship. Core Objectives Promote eco-friendly and chemical-free farming. Enhance soil health and conserve natural resources. Lower input costs and improve farm incomes. Provide safe, premium-quality food to consumers. Encourage farmer collectives for production, processing, and certification. Build entrepreneurship through direct market linkages. Cluster-Based Farming Model Farmers are grouped into clusters of 20 hectares each. Ensures uniform standards and resource-sharing. Reduces cost of cultivation and drives collective learning. Facilitates training on organic inputs, crop diversity, and soil rejuvenation. Financial Assistance Structure (per hectare for 3 years) ₹15,000 for on-farm & off-farm organic inputs (DBT) ₹4,500 for marketing, packaging & branding ₹3,000 for certification & residue testing ₹9,000 for training & capacity building Total: ₹31,500 per hectare for 3 years Implementation Framework All small and marginal farmers with landholding up to 2 hectares are eligible. Farmers approach Regional Councils for enrolment and certification. Annual Action Plans (AAPs) prepared by Councils and approved by the Ministry. Fund flow: Central Govt → State Govt → Regional Councils → Farmers (via DBT). Ensures accountability, transparency, and timely financial assistance. Organic Certification Systems 1. National Programme for Organic Production (NPOP) Third-party certification under Ministry of Commerce & Industry. Globally recognized; enables access to export markets. Covers production, processing, and trading supply chains. 2. Participatory Guarantee System (PGS-India) Farmer-led, community-based certification. Mutual verification & peer inspection. Focused on domestic markets and low-cost certification for smallholders. 3. Large Area Certification (LAC) Introduced in 2020–21. Targets regions with no prior use of chemicals (tribal belts, islands). Fast-tracks certification—reduces conversion time from 2–3 years to a few months. Accelerates income generation and market entry for farmers. Digital Ecosystem: Jaivik Kheti Portal Online platform to connect farmers, buyers, and suppliers of organic produce. Enables direct farmer-to-consumer transactions. As of Dec 2024: 6.23 lakh farmers registered 19,016 local groups 89 input suppliers 8,676 buyers Achievements (2015–2025) ₹2,265.86 crore disbursed under PKVY; ₹205.46 crore in FY 2024–25 under RKVY. 15 lakh hectares under organic farming; 52,289 clusters established. 25.30 lakh farmers benefitted. 1.26 lakh hectares continued under PKVY (2023–24); 1.98 lakh hectares new area under conversion (2024–25). Success Stories : 50,279 ha in Dantewada (Chhattisgarh) and 4,000 ha in West Bengal. Car Nicobar & Nancowry Islands: 14,491 ha certified. Lakshadweep: Entire 2,700 ha cultivable land certified. Sikkim: 60,000 ha fully organic; world’s first 100% organic state. Ladakh proposal: 5,000 ha supported with ₹11.475 lakh. 9,268 Farmer Producer Organizations (FPOs) formed under related schemes. Socio-Economic and Environmental Impact Strengthened rural livelihoods and income security. Promoted soil resilience, water conservation, and biodiversity. Enhanced consumer awareness of safe, organic food. Integrated digital platforms for traceability and e-commerce. Supported Atmanirbhar Bharat and climate-resilient agriculture goals. Conclusion PKVY has evolved from a pilot organic cluster initiative into a nationwide sustainable farming ecosystem. By combining traditional wisdom, modern certification, and digital linkages, it has empowered farmers, improved ecological balance, and positioned India as a global leader in organic agriculture. Expansion through LAC and integration with the National Mission on Natural Farming strengthens the pathway toward a self-reliant, environmentally sustainable rural economy. People’s Plan Campaign: Strengthening Grassroot Governance, Fostering Inclusive Growth Basics Full Name: People’s Plan Campaign (PPC) Launch Year: 2018 Theme: “Sabki Yojana, Sabka Vikas” Objective: Annual preparation of participatory Panchayat Development Plans (PDPs) at village, block, and district levels. Coverage: Applies to Gram Panchayats, Block Panchayats, and District Panchayats across all States and UTs. Scale: Over 18.13 lakh PDPs prepared from FY 2019–20 to FY 2025–26. Relevance : GS II – Polity & Governance: Strengthens grassroots democracy via participatory planning under the 73rd Amendment; institutionalizes decentralized governance at Panchayat level. GS II – Social Justice: Ensures inclusion of women, SHGs, and marginalized groups in decision-making through Gram Sabhas and participatory planning. GS II – Governance & e-Governance: Promotes transparency and accountability through digital tools like eGramSwaraj, Meri Panchayat App, and Panchayat NIRNAY. Constitutional & Institutional Background Constitutional Basis: 73rd Constitutional Amendment Act, 1992 institutionalized the three-tier Panchayati Raj system. Article 243G empowers Panchayats to prepare plans for economic development and social justice. Linked to Eleventh Schedule subjects (29 functions such as agriculture, rural roads, drinking water, health, education). Importance: Gram Panchayats are the closest governance tier to citizens, addressing basic service delivery, marginalized communities, and conflict resolution. Gram Panchayat Development Plan (GPDP) Definition: A plan prepared annually by Gram Panchayats for economic development & social justice. Nature: Comprehensive, participatory, transparent, and aligned with community needs & available resources. Hierarchy: GPDP – Gram Panchayat Development Plan. BPDP – Block Panchayat Development Plan. DPDP – District Panchayat Development Plan. Covers all 29 subjects of Eleventh Schedule, aligned with SDGs through nine thematic groupings. Linked with other community-driven plans like Village Prosperity and Resilience Plans (VPRPs) prepared by SHGs. People’s Plan Campaign — Core Features Launch Date: 2 October 2018. Purpose: Strengthen people’s participation in local planning. Process: Structured Gram Sabha meetings with presentations from frontline workers. Inclusion of women, SHGs, community-based organizations, elected representatives, and officials. Convergence of central/state schemes through Panchayat plans. Integration: Incorporates: Localization of Sustainable Development Goals (LSDGs) in PDPs. Village Prosperity and Resilience Plans (VPRPs) by SHGs. Gender-responsive governance participation by Women Elected Representatives (WERs). PPC 2025–26 Special Focus Launch: 2 October 2025 across all States/UTs. Preparatory Measures: Training of facilitators, appointment of nodal officers, finalization of Gram Sabha schedules, public information displays. Virtual consultations with States, UTs, SIRD&PRs. Digital Tools: eGramSwaraj platform for plan preparation & review. Meri Panchayat App & Panchayat NIRNAY for progress tracking. SabhaSaar for improving deliberations. Guiding Index: Panchayat Advancement Index (PAI) for grading and guiding planning quality. Key Focus Areas in 2025–26: Review unfinished projects, particularly with unspent Central Finance Commission grants. Strengthen Own Source Revenue (OSR). Tribal empowerment through the Adi Karmayogi Abhiyaan. Achievements (2019–2025) Total PDPs Uploaded: 18.13 lakh. Breakdown: 17.73 lakh GPDPs. 35,755 BPDPs. 3,469 DPDPs. Impact: Enhanced participatory governance, increased transparency, improved service delivery alignment with SDGs, and stronger local ownership of development. Conclusion The People’s Plan Campaign has evolved into a mission-mode grassroots planning exercise that strengthens the democratic process, promotes participatory development, and builds institutional capacity at the Panchayat level. Its alignment with SDGs, integration of digital tools, and focus on inclusivity make it a cornerstone initiative for achieving Viksit Bharat through empowered, accountable, and transparent local governance.

Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 06 October 2025

Content Treat employment as a national priority India’s direction for disaster resilience Treat employment as a national priority Context and Background Demographic Advantage India is the world’s most populous and one of the youngest nations. By 2050, India’s average age will still be below 40. Over next 25 years, India will add 133 million working-age people (15–64 years) — ~18% of total global workforce increase. However, window of demographic dividend is short — expected to peak around 2043. Core Concern: Job creation not keeping pace with population growth. The challenge is not just quantity but quality and inclusivity of employment. Relevance : GS II – Governance & Social Justice: Policy formulation for employment and livelihoods Centre-State coordination and institutional governance (Empowered Group of Secretaries, District Planning Committees) Gender and regional inclusion in policy design GS III – Economy & Labour: Employment as a driver of inclusive growth and economic resilience Formalisation of informal sector, MSME support, gig economy regulation Urban employment schemes and skill–industry linkages Practice Question : India’s demographic dividend will remain unrealised unless employment creation becomes a national mission. Critically analyse the need for an Integrated National Employment Policy in this context.(250 Words) Why Employment is Central to Growth Equity & Inclusion: Quality jobs reduce poverty, bridge regional/social disparities, and ensure inclusive growth. Economic Resilience: In a consumption-driven economy, higher employment → broader consumption → stable and accelerated GDP growth. Social Stability: Employment ensures dignity, curbs unrest, and reduces dependence on welfare transfers. Structural Issues in India’s Employment Landscape A. Lack of Unified Framework Despite multiple initiatives (Skill India, PMKVY, MGNREGA, NCS, etc.), India lacks a National Employment Policy (NEP) that aligns: Labour market supply (skills, education) Demand (sectoral growth, private investment) Social security and mobility systems B. Labour Market Dualities Formal sector < 20% of total workforce; rest in informal/unorganised sector. Large urban–rural and gender gaps persist. Employability crisis: Many graduates remain jobless due to curriculum–industry mismatch. C. Fragmented Governance Employment responsibilities spread across ministries (Labour, Skill Development, MSME, Rural Development, etc.), causing policy dilution and lack of accountability. The Editorial’s Core Proposal: Integrated National Employment Policy (INEP) Key Features Proposed: Integration and Coordination Consolidate all existing employment and livelihood schemes. Coordination among Centre, States, and industry stakeholders. Governance by an Empowered Group of Secretaries; District Planning Committees for local implementation. Time-bound Goals & Sector Targeting Define measurable outcomes (e.g., jobs per sector/year). Identify high-employment-potential sectors and align trade, industrial, and education policies. Tackle Labour Market Frictions Address regional disparities, gender barriers, skill mismatches. Promote labour mobility through a “One India” Employment Mobility Framework. Technology Integration Update skilling and curricula for AI, robotics, digital platforms, and Industry 4.0. Data and Evidence-Based Policy Establish real-time employment data systems to track labour trends and policy impact. Dedicated task force to improve data quality, timeliness, and coverage of informal sectors. Sectoral Priorities for Job Creation A. Labour-Intensive Sectors Textiles, Tourism, Agro-processing, Real Estate, Healthcare — absorb low-to-mid-skilled labour. Require ease of doing business reforms, credit access, export incentives, and logistics improvements. B. MSME Sector Employs ~25 crore people. Needs integrated support: Finance + Technology + Skilling + Market access. Encourage cluster-based industrialisation and digital adoption. C. Gig and Platform Economy Current size: 80 lakh–1.8 crore workers; projected to reach 9 crore by 2030. Spread to Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities. Requires: National Gig Economy Policy Centralised worker registry for easy onboarding, work history, and social security Fair contracts, safety norms, grievance redress mechanisms D. Urban Employment Proposes an Urban Employment Guarantee Scheme (UEGS) in pilot cities — similar to MGNREGA, to reduce urban distress. E. Women’s Labour Force Participation Strategies: Employment Linked Incentives (ELI) for companies hiring women. Formalisation of Anganwadi/ASHA workers. Investment in childcare & eldercare infrastructure. Social campaigns to counter patriarchal work restrictions. Institutional and Policy Reforms Needed Implement Four Labour Codes (Wages, Industrial Relations, Social Security, Occupational Safety): With clear transition support to businesses. Simplify compliance, reduce litigation, and formalise jobs. Strengthen Skill–Industry Linkages Make college curricula employment-oriented; promote dual apprenticeship models. Align Skill India and PMKVY 4.0 with emerging sectors (EVs, semiconductors, renewables, digital services). Promote Regional Balance Focus on 100 most underdeveloped districts for targeted employment missions. Incentivise BPOs, remote work centres, and rural internships to decentralise opportunities. Infrastructure for Workforce Affordable housing near industrial zones. Transport connectivity for labour mobility. Digital public infrastructure for job-matching and benefits delivery. Need for Better Employment Data Present data (e.g., PLFS, CMIE) suffer from lag and under-coverage of informal sector. Suggestion: Create National Employment Data System under NSSO/NSO. Use real-time data from EPFO, e-Shram, NCS platforms. Improve granularity — by district, gender, and occupation. Strategic Linkage: Viksit Bharat 2047 & CII Vision CII’s “Policies for a Competitive India” Report: Employment generation is a pillar of competitiveness and inclusive growth. Integrated employment policy aligns with India’s vision of “Viksit Bharat @2047.” Critical Appraisal Strengths: Holistic — covers demand, supply, and institutional aspects. Integrates technology, gender, and regional balance. Pragmatic — focuses on both formal and gig sectors. Limitations: Implementation depends heavily on Centre–State coordination and bureaucratic capacity. Labour codes still face political resistance and compliance costs for MSMEs. Urban employment guarantee pilot could face fiscal sustainability issues. Does not address agricultural underemployment comprehensively. India’s direction for disaster resilience Context and Overview India is a vast, multi-hazard country, prone to: Heatwaves and extreme temperatures Cyclones and floods Landslides and glacial lake outburst floods Forest fires and urban waterlogging Governance Framework: Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA): Overall coordination and implementation National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA): Policy, planning, and capacity building Guiding Principle: Prime Minister’s Ten Point Agenda on Disaster Risk Reduction (2016) DRR in India is multi-phase: Pre-disaster: Preparedness, capacity building, mitigation Post-disaster: Response, reconstruction Relevance GS II – Governance & Disaster Management: Institutional roles of MHA, NDMA, State authorities Multi-level disaster governance (Centre–State, inter-ministerial committees) Pre-disaster and post-disaster planning GS III – Environment & Disaster Management: Climate resilience, extreme weather events, and nature-based solutions (NbS) Early warning systems, urban flood mitigation, glacial lake monitoring Finance-linked DRR (15th Finance Commission allocation) Practice Question: “India’s disaster management strategy has evolved from reactive relief to proactive risk reduction.” Analyse the role of pre-disaster mitigation, community capacity building, and technology integration in building resilience against multi-hazard risks. How can India’s international cooperation enhance its disaster preparedness and response? (250 Words) Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR) Financing 15th Finance Commission (2021–26): ₹2.28 lakh crore allocated for DRR over five years (~$30 billion). Allocation Split: Pre-disaster (30%): Preparedness & capacity building: 10% Mitigation: 20% Post-disaster (70%): Response: 40% Reconstruction: 30% Significance: Shifts focus from reactive relief to proactive risk reduction, leveraging technology and local capacities. Pre-Disaster Initiatives A. Preparedness & Capacity Building Fire Safety Modernisation: ₹5,000 crore allocated. Volunteer Networks: Apda Mitra and Yuva Apda Mitra: 2.5 lakh volunteers each. Training & Research: National Institute of Disaster Management (NIDM): 36-stream standard disaster management course. Geo-spatial labs and faculty-led, action-oriented research. B. Mitigation (20% of Pre-Disaster Funds) Innovative projects (~₹10,000 crore approved) focus on: Nature-based solutions for climate and disaster resilience Slope stabilization using bio-engineering Urban flood mitigation through green spaces and waterbody rejuvenation Glacial lake monitoring with remote sensing and automated weather stations Forest fire management via fuel evacuation and break lines Precursor Programme: National Cyclone Mitigation Programme (2011–22, ₹5,000 crore) reduced coastal vulnerability with: 7-day early warning systems Cyclone shelters and embankments Post-Disaster Measures Reconstruction packages approved (~₹5,000 crore) in States: Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh, Sikkim, Assam, Kerala Scientific damage assessments conducted for extreme rainfall events. Budget-to-Project Pipeline: Centre-State and inter-ministerial appraisal committees Ensures proper use of funds and accountability Key Infrastructure and Technology Early Warning Systems: Multi-media Common Alerting Protocol delivers hazard alerts in local languages Automated weather stations, glacial lake monitoring, and flood early warnings Community Capacity Building: 327-member network of universities NDRF Academy, National Fire Service College, NIDM for training public servants Mock exercises, school safety programs, hazard awareness campaigns Nature-Based Solutions: Restoration of beels along Brahmaputra Urban green spaces and waterbody revitalization Slope stabilization and bio-engineering International Coordination India leads and participates in DRR globally: Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure (CDRI) Engagements in G20, SCO, BIMSTEC, IORA Exchanges knowledge and implements innovative, sustainable DRR solutions. Strategic Approach and Highlights Multi-Faceted Approach: Pre- and post-disaster, mitigation, preparedness, capacity building, and reconstruction. Nature-Based Solutions (NbS): Long-term climate adaptation, ecosystem restoration, hazard risk reduction. Community & Institutional Strengthening: Volunteer mobilisation, training, and research Panchayat-level integration for local DRR mainstreaming Technology Integration: Remote sensing, early warning systems, geospatial monitoring, digital alert platforms Financing Innovation: Dedicated Finance Commission allocation ensures structured risk management, moving away from ad hoc post-disaster debt funding. Achievements and Impact Mitigation Projects: ₹10,000 crore in 1 year; focus on nature-based solutions. Reconstruction Packages: ₹5,000 crore approved for five states. Capacity Building: Large-scale volunteer networks and NIDM programs institutionalised. Coastal Cyclone Resilience: Reduced casualties via shelters and early warning systems. Urban & Rural Preparedness: Waterbody rejuvenation, green space development, slope stabilization, forest fire prevention. Key Takeaways India is moving from reactive disaster response to proactive, integrated DRR. Finance Commission-led DRR funding ensures structured, risk-informed budgeting. Prevention, mitigation, preparedness, and capacity building are now core components of national disaster strategy. Community, technology, and nature-based solutions are central to risk reduction. International cooperation positions India as a global leader in DRR policy and practice.

Daily Current Affairs

Current Affairs 06 October 2025

Content Why ADR is Crucial for India’s Courts How AI is Transforming Teaching and Learning in Indian Classrooms Philippines Pioneers Coral Larvae Cryobank to Protect Threatened Reefs Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) in India Sir Creek Dispute Between India and Pakistan Darjeeling Disaster 2025 Why is ADR crucial for India’s courts? Context and Background Recent Developments: Law and Justice Minister Arjun Ram Meghwal reaffirmed India’s commitment to legal reforms rooted in civilisational ethos, citing the Panch Parmeshwar doctrine (collective consensus in dispute resolution). Emphasis on global cooperation to strengthen ADR mechanisms. Current Challenges in India’s Justice System: Pending cases: 4.57 crore overall; Supreme Court: 81,768; High Courts: ~62.9 lakh. Vacancy rates: High Courts 33%, district courts 21%. Judicial workloads: Over 4,000 cases per judge in UP, Himachal Pradesh, Kerala. Delays in case disposal, inter-State disparities, and accountability gaps undermine access to justice. Relevance GS II – Polity & Governance: Constitutional provisions: Article 39A, Sixth Schedule of CPC. Legal reforms, access to justice, rule of law, accountability. GS II & III – Governance & Economy: Court efficiency impacts business and commerce. ADR reduces litigation costs, fostering economic growth. Constitutional and Legal Basis of ADR Article 39A, Constitution of India: Mandates the State to provide free legal aid and ensure equal justice. Forms the foundation for pre-litigation dispute resolution mechanisms. Legal Provisions Governing ADR: Section 89, Civil Procedure Code (CPC), 1908: Courts can refer cases to arbitration, conciliation, mediation, or Lok Adalat. Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 & 2021 Amendment: Civil and compoundable criminal disputes can be resolved via binding awards. Indian Arbitration Council established to oversee arbitration. Maximum dispute resolution period: 180 days. Parties dissatisfied can exit after two mediation sessions. Lok Adalats: Governed by Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987; inspired by Article 39A. Variants: Permanent Lok Adalat, National Lok Adalat, e-Lok Adalat. Features: Decisions are final; no appeal, as disputes are resolved pre-litigation. Emphasis on socially inclusive, accessible, and language-appropriate dispute resolution. Rationale for Strengthening ADR Reduce Court Pendency: Pre-litigation mediation prevents inflow into regular courts. Ensures faster disposal of cases, particularly in high-backlog States (Andhra Pradesh, UP, Bihar). Increase Access and Equity: ADR is cost-effective and socially inclusive, reducing barriers for marginalized communities. Supports constitutional mandate of equal justice. Promote Social Harmony: Mediation encourages dialogue, consensus-building, and reconciliation. Protects social relationships while resolving disputes. Enhance Accountability: Real-time data through National Judicial Data Grid (NJDG) improves monitoring of case pendency and judicial performance. Mechanisms of ADR Arbitration: Parties submit disputes to a neutral arbitrator; award is legally binding. Speedy resolution; maximum period capped at 180 days. Mediation & Conciliation: Voluntary exchange of views under neutral facilitation. Focus on social norms aligned with constitutional values (D.Y. Chandrachud). Lok Adalats: Resolve disputes before litigation. Include e-Lok Adalats for wider accessibility. Decisions are final and enforceable, minimizing litigation fatigue. Challenges in the Justice System High Case Pendency: 4.57 crore cases; backlog >10 years in many High Courts and subordinate courts. Judicial Vacancies: Over 30% in High Courts; delays exacerbate access to justice issues. Inter-State Disparities: States like UP, Andhra Pradesh, and Bihar lag significantly. Infrastructure Gaps: Court infrastructure and digitization uneven across States. Public Awareness: ADR mechanisms underutilized due to lack of awareness. Strategic Importance and Reforms Needed Integrate ADR in Judicial Policy: Mandatory pre-litigation mediation for civil and commercial disputes. Expand Lok Adalats and e-Lok Adalats for rural and urban populations. Institutional Strengthening: Empower Indian Arbitration Council and legal aid bodies. Real-time monitoring via NJDG and data analytics. Capacity Building: Train mediators, conciliators, and judicial officers in ADR principles. Promote ADR as part of legal education and civil awareness campaigns. Global Cooperation: Learn best practices from international ADR systems. Encourage cross-border arbitration for commercial disputes. How is AI transforming teaching and learning practices in Indian classrooms? Why It’s in the News OpenAI’s First Office in India: ChatGPT (U.S.-based) opened its first Indian office in 2025. AI Collaborations & Investments: NVIDIA partnered with Reliance Industries in 2023 for AI computing. Global tech giants like Google and Microsoft have invested in AI manufacturing, marketing, and research in India. India AI Mission: Aims to create a trusted, inclusive AI ecosystem. Focus on Centres of Excellence (CoE), AI compute capacity, skills development, and future applications. Relevance GS III – Science & Technology: AI as an emerging technology; India’s role in AI innovation and global collaborations. Public-private partnerships (OpenAI, NVIDIA, Reliance, Google, Microsoft). GS II – Governance: Policy initiatives: India AI Mission, Centres of Excellence. Digital inclusion and equitable access to technology in education. GS I & II – Social Issues & Education: Ethical, cultural, and philosophical implications of AI in pedagogy. Bridging the digital divide and enhancing teacher-student interaction. Basics of AI Integration in Education Tech-Savvy Teachers: About 70% of Indian school teachers are comfortable using digital tools and AI. AI is used to design pedagogy, curricula, and assessment tools. Digital Divide: NSS report indicates disparity not just in access, but in quality of use and meaningful engagement. Inclusion is measured by effective participation, not mere internet use. Opportunities of AI in Education Enhanced Pedagogy: Supports personalized learning, adaptive assessments, and interactive content. Can improve digital literacy and tech skills for both teachers and students. AI Infrastructure & Training: Centres of Excellence (CoE) aim to provide cloud-based tools for education. Training for teachers can enhance ethical understanding and critical evaluation of AI tools. Large-Scale Socio-Economic Impact: AI has potential for transformative, inclusive education. Application Development Initiatives can create context-sensitive AI solutions for classrooms. Challenges and Risks Philosophical Concerns: Pedagogy emphasizes humanistic dialogue, empathy, trust, and emancipatory learning. Over-reliance on AI risks reducing education to information accumulation, ignoring critical thinking and creativity. Ethical Issues: Teachers: AI often used to meet technical requirements rather than enhance dialogue. Students: Use of ChatGPT in exams has led CBSE to issue advisories against unfair AI use. Risks digital inequity if AI is implemented without attention to social, ethical, and cultural contexts. Superficial Use of Technology: Use of audio-visuals or apps is misconstrued as pedagogic innovation. True pedagogic smartness requires transformative teaching and meaningful integration of AI. Recommendations for Ethical AI Integration Teacher Training: In-service programs to develop critical, ethical, and context-sensitive AI literacy. Encourage independence, creativity, and imagination for both teachers and students. Curricular Integration: AI should complement humanistic pedagogy, not replace it. Design AI tools that support social equality and minimize digital inequities. Policy and Mission Alignment: India AI Mission pillars: AI Compute Capacity: Infrastructure to support AI education. Skills Development: Equip teachers for tech-savvy, meaningful AI integration. Future Application Development: AI solutions for large-scale socio-economic transformation. Ensure ethical, social, and political anchorage in AI educational policies. Philippines pioneers coral larvae cryobank to protect threatened reefs Why It’s in the News First Coral Larvae Cryobank in Southeast Asia: The Philippines is setting up a cryobank to preserve coral larvae. Part of a regional initiative linking research institutions across the Coral Triangle (Philippines, Taiwan, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand). Objective: Protect genetic diversity of corals threatened by climate change, pollution, and destructive fishing. Support research and reef restoration in one of the world’s richest marine ecosystems. Relevance GS III – Environment & Biodiversity: Coral Triangle conservation, coral bleaching, climate change impact, and marine biodiversity. GS II – Governance & International Cooperation: Regional collaboration between Southeast Asian nations for biodiversity conservation. Role of research institutions and government-backed platforms in marine conservation. Coral Triangle and Its Importance Geography & Biodiversity: Covers 5.7 million sq. km across tropical waters of Indonesia, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, Philippines, Solomon Islands, Timor-Leste. Known as the “Amazon of the Seas”; richest marine ecosystem globally. Hosts >75% of the world’s coral species, 1/3 of reef fish, vast mangrove forests, and 6 of 7 marine turtle species. Sustains food security and livelihoods for >120 million people. Threats: Climate change, ocean warming, and coral bleaching. Destructive fishing practices, pollution, and habitat loss. Potential loss of 70–90% of live coral cover by 2050 without limiting warming to 1.5°C. Coral Larvae Cryopreservation: Process & Science Cryobanks: Freeze coral larvae at –196°C in liquid nitrogen (vitrification). Larvae enter a glass-like state, avoiding ice crystal formation that can damage cells. Thawed using lasers, then rehydrated in seawater for revival. Species Focus: Start with model species like Pocillopora, Acropora, and Galaxsia. Technique ensures all coral species, not just endangered ones, can be preserved. Cryopreservation as Genetic Insurance: Protects coral genetic diversity and Symbiodiniaceae (algae living in corals). Allows future reef restoration and research, potentially mitigating biodiversity loss. Regional & Collaborative Significance Regional Collaboration: Cryobanks across Southeast Asia aim to share expertise and facilities. Supported by Coral Research & Development Accelerator Platform and Marine Environment & Resources Foundation. Capacity Building: Guidance from experts like Dr. Chiahsin Lin (Taiwan) and Preeyanuch Thongpoo (Thailand). Focus on developing coral husbandry protocols, larval collection, and cryopreservation methods. Community Involvement: Coral-dependent communities often lack awareness of reef value. Conservation requires active participation to address tourism, waste, and destructive fishing. Scientific and Conservation Relevance Climate Adaptation: Provides resilience against ocean warming and habitat degradation. Helps maintain marine biodiversity and ecological balance. Research Benefits: Cryobanks serve as a living seed bank for experimentation and restoration. Ensures long-term preservation of coral genetic material. Long-Term Warning: Without proactive measures, cryobanks may become repositories for extinct coral species. Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) in India Why It’s in News The Indian government is opening up Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) for private sector participation. Companies like Reliance Industries, Tata Power, and Adani Power have expressed interest in developing SMR-based projects. This comes amid legislative and regulatory tweaks to facilitate private investment in nuclear energy. The initiative is aimed at boosting India’s nuclear manufacturing ecosystem, ensuring energy security, and reducing reliance on conventional fossil fuels. Relevance : GS II – Governance & Policy: Regulatory frameworks for private sector participation in strategic sectors, legislative reforms enabling nuclear investment, and international cooperation in nuclear technology. GS III – Energy & Infrastructure: Nuclear energy policy, SMR deployment, integration with renewables, and energy security through low-carbon electricity. GS III – Environment & Climate Change: Contribution of SMRs to low-carbon energy, reduction of fossil fuel dependence, and alignment with climate goals. GS III – Science & Technology: Advanced nuclear reactor technologies (PHWR, LWR, SMR), R&D initiatives, and pilot projects in collaboration with domestic and international institutions. SMRs and Nuclear Power in India Small Modular Reactors (SMRs): Nuclear reactors with capacity ≤300 MW per unit. Modular and scalable; can be deployed in industrial clusters or remote areas. Offer lower upfront capital costs compared to large reactors and provide flexible electricity generation. Advantages of SMRs: Compact and modular design allows faster construction. Can tap energy-intensive industries like steel, aluminium, and cement. Provide reliable, low-carbon, and clean electricity, complementing renewables. Can be deployed near industrial hubs or off-grid areas to address local power deficits. Indian Nuclear Context: Traditionally dominated by public sector units: Nuclear Power Corporation of India Ltd (NPCIL), Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC), and heavy water reactors. Conventional reactors are large, expensive, and time-consuming to set up. SMRs present an alternative pathway for domestic nuclear expansion, leveraging private sector efficiencies. Key Players in India Private Sector: Reliance Industries Ltd. Tata Power Adani Power Public Sector/Research Support: BARC (Bhabha Atomic Research Centre) – developing SMR prototypes. NPCIL – overseeing regulatory and safety frameworks. International Technology Partnerships: India is engaging with US, Russia, and other advanced nuclear technology countries. Policy & Legislative Developments Current legal hurdles: Private companies previously could not operate nuclear plants, as NPCIL had exclusive rights. Liability, safety, and regulatory frameworks limited private participation. Planned legislative tweaks: Allow private companies to construct, own, and operate SMRs under NPCIL supervision. Ensure safety, liability, and regulatory compliance while granting operational freedom. Provide legal certainty for long-term SMR investment and technology deployment. Technical & Operational Aspects Technology: SMRs can utilize pressurised heavy water reactors (PHWRs), light-water reactors, or advanced nuclear designs. Can be installed in smaller footprints, suited for industrial clusters and remote regions. Deployment Timeline: NPCIL’s SMR pilot projects already operational in China and other countries serve as models for India. Government expects private sector to speed up commercialization of SMRs domestically. Complement to Renewables: SMRs provide baseload power, addressing intermittency of solar and wind energy. Strategic & Economic Implications Energy Security: Reduces dependence on imported fossil fuels and large-scale centralized energy projects. Enhances regional power availability for industrial growth. Economic & Industrial Boost: SMRs can power energy-intensive industries like steel, aluminium, and cement. Private sector participation can catalyze domestic manufacturing of reactors, fuel, and components. Global Positioning: Helps India establish leadership in next-generation nuclear technology. Opportunity for technology exports and international partnerships. Environmental Impact: Promotes low-carbon electricity, aligning with India’s climate goals. Challenges Technology Readiness: Many SMR designs are still under testing or demonstration worldwide. India must adapt foreign designs or develop indigenous models. Regulatory & Liability Issues: Ensuring safety, waste management, and emergency preparedness for private operators is critical. Legal frameworks must balance risk management with investment incentives. Public Acceptance & Awareness: Nuclear energy faces public skepticism due to safety and waste concerns. Community engagement is needed for smooth deployment. Key Takeaways SMRs represent a transformative opportunity for India’s nuclear energy landscape. Private sector involvement is expected to accelerate deployment, reduce costs, and expand industrial applications. Legislative and policy tweaks are crucial for operational and legal clarity. SMRs will complement renewable energy, support climate targets, and enhance energy security. Regional and global collaboration will boost India’s technological and strategic positioning in nuclear energy. Sir Creek Dispute between India and Pakistan Why It’s in News Recent statements by India’s Defence Minister emphasized a “symmetrical response” to any threats near Sir Creek, highlighting heightened security concerns. Reports indicate increased surveillance, military presence, and infrastructure upgrades by both India and Pakistan in the region. The long-standing unresolved border dispute continues to affect bilateral relations, maritime boundary negotiations, and the livelihoods of coastal fishing communities. The dispute is emblematic of broader India-Pakistan tensions and remains a recurring point in policy and security discussions. Relevance GS II – International Relations & Polity: India-Pakistan border disputes, maritime law, diplomacy, and bilateral security. GS III – Security & Geography: Strategic maritime locations, naval operations, and border infrastructure. Basics of the Sir Creek Dispute Location: Marshy estuary in the Rann of Kutch, separating Gujarat (India) from Sindh (Pakistan). Nature: Tidal, fluctuating estuary; its course changes seasonally due to sedimentation and soil erosion, complicating demarcation. Strategic Significance: Proximity to Karachi, a critical Pakistani economic and military hub. Essential for coastal surveillance, naval operations, and offshore security. Potential access to offshore oil, gas, and other maritime resources. Implications for Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) and continental shelf claims. Overview Geopolitical Relevance: Boundary disagreement affects maritime rights and economic zones in the Arabian Sea. India asserts the eastern bank as the boundary; Pakistan claims the creek’s midline. Historical Background: Dispute traces back to colonial-era maps and ambiguous agreements. Partition-era arbitration attempts failed due to inconsistent documentation and natural shifts in the creek. Economic Impact: Rich fishing grounds and potential hydrocarbon resources. Fishermen frequently arrested by both sides due to unclear demarcation, affecting livelihoods. Security Dimension: Regular patrols, surveillance posts, and infrastructure developments by both nations. Strategic control of Sir Creek ensures dominance over adjoining maritime corridors. Diplomatic Engagement: Multiple rounds of talks under Joint Working Groups; agreements remain elusive. Reflects persistent difficulties in broader India-Pakistan boundary resolution mechanisms. Legal and Environmental Challenges: Shifting terrain complicates physical demarcation and treaty enforcement. International law (UNCLOS) implications for maritime boundaries and resource entitlements. Environmental sensitivity of the Rann ecosystem demands careful management of development or military activity. Conclusion Sir Creek remains a critical flashpoint in India-Pakistan relations due to overlapping strategic, economic, and diplomatic stakes. The dispute affects national security, maritime boundary clarity, and livelihoods of local fishing communities, keeping it consistently relevant in policy, security, and current affairs discourse. Resolution requires a balanced approach combining diplomacy, security preparedness, legal clarity, and environmental stewardship. Darjeeling Disaster 2025 Why is Darjeeling in News Darjeeling witnessed heavy rainfall starting 3 October 2025, exceeding IMD warnings, leading to: Massive landslides and floods Destruction of Dudhipa bridge (Balason river), cutting off connectivity between Siliguri and Mirik Disruption of national and state highways Loss of human lives and property Highlights climate vulnerability of the region and raises questions about disaster preparedness and sustainable development. Relevance GS III – Environment & Ecology: Climate change-induced disasters, landslide and flood vulnerability, Himalayan ecosystem fragility, and biodiversity loss. GS III – Disaster Management & Risk Reduction: Early warning systems, municipal/panchayat preparedness, Glacial Lake Outburst Flood (GLOF) mitigation, and capacity-building for rescue and relief operations. Geography and Vulnerability Darjeeling, known as the “Queen of Hills”, is a fragile mountainous region in the Eastern Himalayas. Key vulnerabilities: Steep slopes prone to landslides Unpredictable rivers and streams (Jhoras) that can erode settlements High rainfall variability due to climate change (intense downpours in short periods) Historical disasters: Landslides: 1899, 1950, 1968, 1975, 1980, 1981, 2011, 2015 1968 floods: ~1000 human casualties Cloudbursts in Teesta Valley (1902–1978): 9 occurrences Key Causes of Current Disaster Climate Change Altered rainfall patterns: concentrated, intense, intermittent rainfall (“murkhua dharsyi” and “smooth sislanyay jhar” locally) Increased unpredictability of rivers, leading to sudden flooding and erosion Unsustainable Development Unchecked construction of hydro-power projects, highways, railways, townships Infrastructure often built without proper geo-hazard assessment Encroachment on fragile slopes, increasing landslide risks Population Pressure Influx from plains and neighboring countries Expansion of land/property demand over decades Institutional Failures Weak disaster management frameworks at municipal/panchayat levels Lack of funds, manpower, technology, and skills Inefficient waste management aggravates disaster risks Water crisis remains unresolved post-GLOF events Historical Neglect Despite past disasters, proactive mitigation, planning, and early-warning systems are limited LandSlide Atlas of India (ISRO): Darjeeling ranked 35th most exposed among 147 districts Consequences Human and Social Deaths, injuries, displacement Flooded habitations and disrupted basic services Economic Damage to tea cultivation, tourism, medicinal plant cultivation Destruction of transport infrastructure affecting trade and livelihoods Loss of revenue in foreign exchange earnings from hill products and tourism Environmental Degradation of slopes and river basins Loss of biodiversity Altered hydrological flows and increased sedimentation downstream National Security Implications Fragile Eastern Himalayan border areas exposed to climate-induced risks Impact on regional cooperation with Bhutan, Nepal, Myanmar Necessitates disaster-resilient infrastructure to protect strategic and economic interests Comparative Reference Glacial Lake Outburst Flood (GLOF) in Sikkim, Oct 2023 Destroyed 1200 MW Chungthang Hydro Project Damages over ₹25,000 crore (~6% of Sikkim GDP) Demonstrates the catastrophic potential of Himalayan water bodies Action Needed Disaster Preparedness Strengthen municipal and panchayat disaster response Build early-warning systems for rainfall, landslides, floods Sustainable Development Enforce land-use planning, regulate hydro-power, roads, and townships Promote eco-sensitive construction Institutional Strengthening Capacity-building in rescue, relief, and mitigation Establish dedicated funds for climate disasters (e.g., Teesta River Flood Insurance Fund) Integrate climate change studies with planning Community Awareness Educate locals on risk management and evacuation protocols Support NGOs like Save the Hills for awareness campaigns Regional Cooperation Work with neighboring Himalayan states and countries to manage transboundary river hazards Key Takeaways Darjeeling is a climate hotspot and highly vulnerable to natural disasters. Anthropogenic factors (unsustainable development, population pressure) exacerbate natural hazards. Institutional failure is a critical concern, threatening both local livelihoods and national interests. Urgent need for comprehensive disaster management, sustainable planning, and climate adaptation strategies.

Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 03 October 2025

Content: International Day of Non-Violence International Day of Non-Violence Context Date & Dual Significance: October 2 – Gandhi Jayanti (India) + International Day of Non-Violence (UN, since 2007). UN Resolution (2007): Adopted by UNGA with support of 140+ countries, establishing non-violence as a universal principle. Symbolism: Tribute to Gandhi’s philosophy of Ahimsa (non-violence) and Satya (truth). Relevance : GS I (History & Culture): Gandhi’s philosophy of Ahimsa and Satyagraha; global influence on MLK, Mandela; legacy in India’s freedom struggle. GS II (Polity & Governance): UN resolution (2007) → international recognition; relevance of non-violence in diplomacy, conflict resolution, multilateralism; Gandhian principles in governance schemes (Swachh Bharat, SHGs, MGNREGA). Historical Roots Gandhi’s South Africa Experience (1893): Discrimination at Pietermaritzburg station → birth of Satyagraha (truth + insistence). First Satyagraha (1906): Against Asiatic Registration Act in South Africa. India Movements: Non-Cooperation Movement (1920–22). Civil Disobedience / Dandi March (1930). Quit India Movement (1942). Global Influence: Inspired Martin Luther King Jr. (US civil rights), Nelson Mandela (anti-apartheid), Václav Havel (Czech democratic transition). UN & International Observance UN Headquarters: Secretary-General messages highlight relevance amid wars & conflicts. Ahimsa Lectures (since 2015): UNESCO & MGIEP initiative. 5th Lecture (2022): “Education for Human Flourishing”, used hologram of Gandhi. Global Celebrations: Belgium, Spain, US, Serbia, Switzerland, Thailand, Kazakhstan, Netherlands etc. G20 Tribute (2023): World leaders at Rajghat, New Delhi → symbolic endorsement of Gandhi’s ideals in diplomacy. Campaigns Inspired by Gandhi: Swachh Bharat Abhiyan (Cleanliness). Khadi revival (self-reliance). SHG empowerment (grassroots economics). Mahatma Gandhi NREGA (dignified rural work). PM Janjatiya Unnat Gram Abhiyan (tribal advancement). Data & Achievements (Gandhian Philosophy in Action) Swachh Bharat Mission: 12 crore toilets, 5.6 lakh ODF+ villages, 3 lakh child deaths averted. SHGs (NRLM): ₹11 lakh crore loans disbursed, 10 crore women mobilised. SVAMITVA Scheme: 65 lakh property cards, 3.2 lakh villages surveyed. Khadi & Village Industries: FY 2025 – ₹1.7 lakh crore sales, employment for 1.94 crore people. MGNREGA: 106.77 crore person-days generated (FY 2025-26, till July). PM JUGA (2024): ₹79,156 crore outlay, benefits 5 crore tribal citizens. Global Relevance of Gandhi Today Conflict Resolution: Alternative to violent conflict/terrorism. UN SDGs Alignment: Gandhi’s work prefigured SDGs – sanitation, gender equality, hunger reduction, education. Soft Power Tool: Gandhi as a global icon strengthens India’s moral leadership. Climate Change: Simplicity, self-reliance, sustainability resonate with environmental justice. Implications National + Global Fusion: Gandhi Jayanti internalises Indian memory, UN recognition globalises it. Relevance in Diplomacy: Used as symbolic backdrop in multilateral forums (e.g., G20). Non-Violence as Strategy: Seen as moral force > military power. Challenges: World faces wars, terrorism, sectarianism – Gandhi’s vision often invoked, but unevenly practiced. India’s Narrative: By linking modern flagship schemes with Gandhian ideals, India projects continuity between legacy and present governance. Conclusion The International Day of Non-Violence is not just commemoration but a living framework. Gandhi’s principles continue to shape policy, diplomacy, and people’s movements worldwide. The day serves as a national homage and global call to action: for peace, justice, compassion, and sustainable development.

Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 03 October 2025

Content The battlefield, change and the Indian armed forces Changing the frame The battlefield, change and the Indian armed forces Context of Changing Warfare New nature of conflict: Wars are shifting towards multi-domain (land, air, sea, cyber, space, information). Key technologies shaping battlefield: Artificial Intelligence (AI) Automation and drones Cheap precision weapons Implication: Lower cost of force application but higher risks of escalation and operational vulnerabilities. India’s challenge: Facing a potential two-front threat (China + Pakistan), requiring faster adaptation in doctrine, structure, and technology. Relevance : GS 2 (Governance, IR & Security): Defence reforms, civil–military relations, national security strategy. GS 3 (Security, Technology, Defence): Multi-domain warfare, AI/drones, defence tech, jointness challenges, indigenisation. Practice Question : Examine the key reforms and structural changes in the Indian Armed Forces aimed at enhancing jointness and multi-domain operational capability. What challenges remain in translating these reforms into operational effectiveness?(250 words) Institutional & Structural Reforms From ‘coordination’ to ‘command’: Earlier: Loose coordination among services, limited jointness. Now: Move towards Integrated Theatre Commands. ISO Act & Rules, 2025: Empower commanders of joint organisations with disciplinary and administrative authority. Tri-service agencies: Created under HQ IDS for cyber, space, and special operations. PM Modi’s push: Declared “Year of Reforms – Transformation for the Future” at Combined Commanders Conference (2025). New Force Structures & Doctrines Integrated Battle Groups (IBGs): Modular, all-arms brigades (“Rudra”, “Bhairav”) deployable within 12–48 hours. Joint Doctrine of Indian Armed Forces (2017) and Army’s Land Warfare Doctrine (2018): Laid foundation for synergy. Amphibious Operations Doctrine (2025): First framework integrating maritime-air-land forces for littoral warfare. Ran Samvad (2025): Tri-service seminar stressing “future hybrid warriors” (tech-savvy, info warriors). Technology & Capability Upgrades MQ-9B drones: Persistent ISR + precision strikes across land and sea. Rafale-M order (Navy): Boosts carrier aviation, maritime strike, and fleet air defence. Pralay missile trials (2025): Strengthens land-based theatre fires, quasi-ballistic missile with 150–500 km range. Akashteer C2 system: AI-enabled automated command for Army air defence, linked with Air Force’s IACCS. Carrier-centred maritime posture: Navy developing a 15-year road map for air, subsurface, and unmanned systems. Key Challenges Slow pace of integration: A decade after prioritisation, joint PME only now being institutionalised. Cultural resistance: Service silos, career incentives, and inter-service rivalries remain. Jointness: Large-scale tri-service mobilisation yet to be tested (e.g., Operation Sindoor was mainly aerial). Data & interoperability gaps: Lack of common standards, secure networks, and shared operational picture. Logistics & sustainment issues: Different procurement cycles and spares chains across services. Comparisons China: Already has fully functional Integrated Theatre Commands for years, with tested joint doctrines. India: Must design indigenously, not blindly copy Chinese or Western models. Western militaries: Use common data architecture, integrated PME, and tested joint logistics — areas where India lags. Strategic Implications Deterrence: New precision and ISR assets raise costs for adversaries on both fronts. Operational tempo: Without integrated C2, India risks slower decision cycles (OODA loop disadvantage). Escalation management: Faster precision-strike capabilities compress political decision timelines. Industrial base: Heavy reliance on foreign platforms underscores urgency of defence–industry–university fusion. Way Forward Pilot Theatre Commands: Start with limited mandates, evaluate performance metrics (mobilisation time, ISR sharing, logistics uptime). Common Data Framework: Enforce tri-service standards for ISR, targeting, and C2. Joint PME overhaul: Train “technologist-commanders” with mandatory tri-service and tech tracks. Civil-Military Fusion: DRDO, DPSUs, private industry, and universities to be embedded in rapid prototyping cycles. Annual Joint Stress Tests: Simulate cyber denial, logistics disruption, and multi-domain joint fires. Scorecard accountability: Publish measurable KPIs (deployment timelines, ISR integration %, PME graduates, procurement interoperability). Conclusion India has initiated serious reforms (ISO Rules, IBGs, PME, modern procurement) but jointness is still structural, not yet operational. Success depends on speed of implementation, cultural acceptance, and embedding technology into doctrine and PME. Without accelerated integration, India risks expensive but siloed capabilities rather than a truly adaptive, multi-domain military. Disclaimer : The views and opinions expressed here are based on the original article published in THE HINDU and do not reflect the official stance of Legacy IAS Academy. This content is provided solely for Academic purposes. Changing the frame Context of the Issue India’s 2025 monsoon: 8% above normal (87 cm long-period average). Agricultural impact: Kharif sown area ↑ 15 lakh hectares → 1,110 lakh hectares. Rice cultivation ↑ 8.45 lakh hectares (438 vs 430 lakh ha last year). Pulses, coarse cereals, oilseeds also showed similar gains. Reservoirs: Storage at 163 BCM (vs 157.8 BCM in 2024) → better water availability. Problem: Excessive rainfall led to floods, landslides, erosion, siltation, and urban inundation, especially in Himachal, J&K, and Punjab. Relevance GS 1 (Geography): Monsoon variability, extreme rainfall, floods/landslides. GS 2 (Governance, Social Issues): Disaster governance, Centre–State preparedness gaps, policy framing bias. GS 3 (Environment, Disaster Management): Flood management, IMD forecasting integration, urban resilience, climate adaptation. Practice Question : In India, droughts are seen as emergencies demanding action, while floods are often dismissed as natural occurrences. Critically analyse this asymmetry in disaster preparedness and suggest measures to reframe excess rainfall as a predictable and mitigable calamity.(250 words) Regional Rainfall Distribution Northwest India: +27% above average. Central India: +15% above average. South Peninsula: +10% above average. Localized extremes: Cloudburst-like events reported — though technically, only one verified (Tamil Nadu). Framing challenge: Media/officials loosely label any deluge as “cloudburst,” skewing public understanding. The Framing Problem Droughts: Seen as emergencies needing war footing response. Excess rains: Viewed as “bounty” or natural blessing — despite being equally destructive. IMD forecasts: Consistently warned of “above normal” monsoon since April 2025. When forecasts match → celebrated as forecasting success. But → inadequate preparedness for floods goes underplayed. Terminology impact: Words like cloudburst → rare, unavoidable disasters. Words like normal rainfall → convey inevitability, masking potential damage. Key Challenges Identified Preparedness bias: Government machinery prioritises drought over flood-readiness. Infrastructure gaps: Poor urban drainage, weak embankments, inadequate flood-control structures. Land degradation: Siltation, erosion, landslides → long-term ecological harm. Communication gaps: Misuse of meteorological terms leads to poor public awareness. Accountability gap: Treating excess rainfall as “natural” rather than as a risk to be mitigated. Strategic Implications Food security: Gains in sowing could be negated if floods destroy standing crops. Economic losses: Agriculture, rural livelihoods, and infrastructure face recurrent damage. Urban resilience: Flooded cities highlight vulnerability to climate extremes. Climate change factor: Intensification of extreme rainfall events linked to warming atmosphere. What Needs to Change ? Shift in mindset: Stop framing excess rainfall as natural munificence; treat it as a calamity risk. Use forecasts as triggers for preparedness, not just as meteorological achievements. Government responsibility: Failure to prepare for floods must be seen as abdication of duty. Forecast integration: Embed IMD projections into: Urban drainage planning Reservoir management protocols Crop advisories and crop insurance planning Disaster relief mobilisation Way Forward Forecast-based action: Convert IMD’s “above-normal” predictions into district-level flood contingency plans. Urban flood mitigation: Modern drainage, rainwater harvesting, flood zoning. Reservoir operation protocols: Dynamic water release based on real-time rainfall forecasts. Stronger communication: Public education on rainfall risks; avoid misuse of “cloudburst.” Integrated disaster management: Treat excess rainfall like droughts — requiring proactive mobilisation, not reactive relief. Climate adaptation: Invest in long-term watershed management, embankment reinforcement, and resilient cropping patterns. Bottom Line India’s forecasting ability is improving, but the framing and governance response remain outdated. Droughts evoke urgency; floods are downplayed as natural gifts — this asymmetry leaves India underprepared. Reframing excess rainfall as a predictable, mitigable calamity is essential to protect lives, livelihoods, and infrastructure.

Daily Current Affairs

Current Affairs 03 October 2025

Content Flying Rivers Environmental Surveillance Farmer Suicides in India E-Waste & Health Hazards Safeguarding India’s Digital Economy Accidental Deaths & Natural Hazards Snow Leopard Survey in Himachal Pradesh Flying Rivers Context Why in News: Deforestation in the southern Amazon is weakening the “flying rivers,” threatening regional rainfall, agriculture, and ecosystem stability. Definition: Streams of water vapor carried by air currents, originating from the Amazon rainforest and moving westwards. Mechanism: Moisture evaporates from the Atlantic Ocean. Trade winds push this moist air inland across the Amazon. Trees act like pumps: absorb water through roots → release moisture via transpiration → amplify rainfall inland. This cycle transfers vast amounts of water thousands of kilometers across South America, particularly to the Andes and beyond. Coined: The term was introduced in 2006 by Brazilian climate scientist Carlos Nobre and colleagues. Relevance GS Paper 1 (Geography): Climate systems, rainfall cycles, forest ecosystems. GS Paper 3 (Environment, Disaster Management): Deforestation, climate resilience, carbon sinks, tipping points. Why Flying Rivers Matter Rainfall Dependency: Southern Brazil, Peru, Bolivia, and even agricultural regions in Argentina depend on this transported rainfall. Amazon’s Role: Acts as a continental-scale climate regulator. Prevents regions from extreme droughts by redistributing water. Global Climate Stability: Amazon is a carbon sink, storing billions of tons of CO₂. If destabilized → worsens global warming. Indigenous & Local Communities: Depend on stable rainfall cycles for farming, fishing, and water security. Threats to Flying Rivers Deforestation: Tree loss reduces transpiration → weaker water vapor transport. Southern Amazon (Peru, northern Bolivia, Brazil’s Cerrado borderlands) most affected. Forest Fires: Intensify water cycle disruption. Degradation: Not just clear-cutting, but selective logging also weakens moisture recycling. Tipping Point Risk: Scientists warn the Amazon may shift to a savanna ecosystem (drier, grassland-like). Consequences: biodiversity collapse + carbon release. Implications Regional: Agriculture in Brazil, Peru, and Bolivia threatened by irregular rainfall. Increased risk of drought in southern Amazon, Pampas, and even hydropower-reliant regions. Global: Amazon loses its function as a CO₂ sink → accelerates global climate change. Weather instability far beyond South America (teleconnections in global atmospheric circulation). Socio-political: Indigenous communities face livelihood collapse. Water security crises may trigger migration and conflicts. Scientific Findings & Warnings Matt Finer (MAAP – Monitoring of the Andean Amazon Project): Identified hotspots in southern Peru & northern Bolivia. Warns conservation must go beyond land — protect atmospheric flows. Carlos Nobre: Advocates zero deforestation immediately. Calls for restoration of at least 0.5 million sq. km of degraded forest. Research Trend: Shift from looking at land alone → viewing atmosphere-forest interaction as one ecosystem. Solutions Suggested Zero Deforestation Policy: No tolerance for logging, fires, and land degradation. Large-scale Forest Restoration: Half a million sq. km minimum to stabilize cycles. New Conservation Categories: Not just land parks but “atmospheric conservation areas” to protect flying rivers. International Cooperation: Amazon is not just regional → it’s a global climate commons. Requires regional alliances (Brazil, Peru, Bolivia, Colombia) + global financing (climate funds, carbon credits). Broader Lessons for India & World Forests as Climate Pumps: Reinforces importance of Western Ghats, Himalayas in India’s monsoon dynamics. Tipping Points: Once reached, irreversible ecosystem change (rainforest → savanna) will occur. Governance: Shows limits of conventional conservation — need eco-hydrological approaches that safeguard water-atmosphere systems. SDGs Link: Directly impacts SDG-6 (water), SDG-13 (climate), SDG-15 (life on land). Environmental Surveillance Context Why in News: India’s expansion of environmental pathogen monitoring (wastewater, soil, audio signals) for early detection of infectious diseases and variants. Definition: Monitoring pathogens (viruses, bacteria, parasites) in environmental samples like sewage, soil, hospital effluents, or even audio signatures (cough recordings). Purpose: Detect hidden circulation of infectious agents in a community before clinical cases surge. Approach: Complements traditional clinical surveillance by capturing infections from both symptomatic and asymptomatic individuals. Relevance GS Paper 2 (Health, Governance): Public health systems, disease surveillance, pandemic preparedness. GS Paper 3 (Science & Tech, Environment): Environmental sampling technologies, data science, epidemiology. Why Environmental Surveillance is Important Early Warning System: Pathogen levels in wastewater rise days to weeks before clinical cases peak. Captures Asymptomatic Carriers: Traditional surveillance misses those not tested or with mild symptoms. Real-time Tracking: Enables daily/weekly updates of community infection burden. Variant Detection: Genome sequencing of pathogens in wastewater reveals emerging mutations or new variants (COVID-19 example). Cost-Effective: One sewage sample can represent thousands of people — far cheaper than mass clinical testing. Programmatic Integration: Helps allocate hospital beds, medicines, vaccines, and public health resources in advance. How Wastewater Sampling Works Sources of Samples: Sewage treatment plants Hospital effluents Public toilets, railway stations, airplanes Process: Rigorous collection protocols → lab analysis → PCR tests or sequencing → pathogen load quantified. Pathogens Monitored: Viruses (COVID-19, Polio, Influenza, Hepatitis A/E, Rotavirus), bacteria (Cholera, Typhoid), parasites (hookworm, roundworm). Indian Experience & ICMR’s Initiative Polio Surveillance: First wastewater program in Mumbai, 2001, crucial in polio eradication. COVID-19: Environmental monitoring was initiated in five Indian cities; continued post-pandemic for variant tracking. ICMR 2025 Plan: Surveillance for 10 viruses (includes avian influenza, polio, COVID-19, hepatitis, etc.) Across 50 cities, with standardised protocols. Current Gaps: Limited data sharing across institutions. Lack of national template/framework for surveillance. Mostly project-driven, not integrated into national health surveillance systems. Global Practices & Lessons 40+ years of use: Wastewater-based epidemiology used worldwide for measles, cholera, and polio. COVID-19: Countries like Netherlands, USA, and Australia ran nationwide wastewater monitoring networks to anticipate case surges. Global Health Security: Helps detect imported pathogens (airplane wastewater sampling for SARS-CoV-2). Emerging Frontiers in Environmental Surveillance Audio Surveillance: Using cough recordings in public spaces + AI/ML to predict prevalence of respiratory diseases. Soil & River Sampling: For parasitic infections, AMR (antimicrobial resistance), and zoonotic spillovers. Metagenomics: Identifies novel pathogens from environmental samples before outbreaks occur. Challenges for India Technical: Standardised protocols for collection, storage, sequencing. Institutional: Need a national wastewater surveillance framework, not scattered projects. Data Integration: Must link environmental data with Integrated Disease Surveillance Programme (IDSP). Funding & Capacity: Sustained investments needed; avoid short-lived project cycles. Privacy & Ethics: Must ensure aggregate data use; no targeting of specific communities. Way Forward Develop National Wastewater Surveillance System (NWSS): On the lines of US CDC’s program. Integrate into IDSP & Health Grid: Combine environmental and clinical surveillance. Open Data Protocols: Standard templates across states/institutions. Expand to Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) Tracking: Major emerging health threat. International Collaboration: Share methods and results with WHO’s Global Environmental Surveillance Network. Farmer Suicides in India NCRB Findings (2023) Why in News: NCRB 2023 data shows persistent agrarian distress with over 10,000 farm-related suicides, concentrated in Maharashtra, Karnataka, and Andhra Pradesh. Total suicides in India: 1,71,418 From farming sector: 10,786 (≈6.3% of total suicides) Farmers/Cultivators: 4,690 (≈43%) Agricultural labourers: 6,096 (≈57%) Gender breakdown: Farmers: 4,553 male, 137 female Agricultural workers: 5,433 male, 663 female State-wise burden: Maharashtra: 38.5% (highest) Karnataka: 22.5% Andhra Pradesh: 8.6% Madhya Pradesh: 7.2% Tamil Nadu: 5.9% States like Bihar, West Bengal, Odisha, Jharkhand, Himachal, North-East (except Assam) → reported zero farm suicides. Relevance GS Paper 1 (Society): Agrarian distress, social consequences of suicides. GS Paper 2 (Governance, Welfare): Policy gaps in MSP, credit, trade, welfare schemes. GS Paper 3 (Economy, Agriculture): Farm economics, cotton crisis, climate change impacts. Historical Trends & Continuity Farmer suicides have been a persistent crisis since the mid-1990s (post-liberalisation period). NCRB data shows >10,000 farm suicides annually in 2021, 2022, 2023. Concentration in cotton and soybean belts → Vidarbha, Marathwada (Maharashtra), northern Karnataka, Telangana, parts of Andhra Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh. Pattern reflects a regional agrarian distress, not uniformly spread across India. Underlying Causes of Farmer Suicides Economic Distress: High input costs (seeds, fertilisers, pesticides, energy). Low and unstable output prices (esp. cotton, soybean). Indebtedness to private moneylenders and microfinance agencies. Policy-Linked Issues: MSP coverage inadequate, procurement limited to rice/wheat → non-MSP crops vulnerable. Waiver of cotton import duty (11%) seen as worsening distress by making Indian cotton less competitive. Trade treaties (FTAs, tariff reductions) viewed as threats to domestic farmers. Environmental Stress: Rainfall variability, drought-prone regions like Marathwada. Climate change intensifies crop failure risk. Social Factors: Debt traps, family obligations, lack of social safety nets. Limited mental health outreach in rural areas. Labour Vulnerability: Agricultural workers face irregular wages, seasonal unemployment, no land ownership, and weaker bargaining power. Structural Dimensions Cotton Crisis: Bt cotton adoption raised costs (seeds, pesticide dependence). Global cotton price fluctuations hurt smallholders. Soybean Belts: Price volatility in global edible oil markets. Competition from cheaper imports. Dual Crisis: Cultivators trapped by debt + labourers trapped in underemployment. State-specific variations: Maharashtra = “epicentre” → Vidarbha/Marathwada termed “farmer graveyards”. Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh face similar rainfed agriculture risks. Political-Economic Criticism Farmer unions (AIKS, others) argue: Union govt. “failed to grasp systemic agrarian crisis”. Policies like import duty cuts on cotton benefit foreign producers (esp. U.S.) while harming Indian farmers. Trade liberalisation (FTAs) → “tariff terrorism” → domestic farm sector undermined. NCRB data itself questioned by farmer leaders (argue undercounting, non-inclusion of landless workers, exclusion of attempted suicides). Possible Solutions & Way Forward Policy & Economic Measures: Expand MSP coverage to non-rice/wheat crops (esp. cotton, soybean, pulses). Strengthen procurement in distress-hit regions. Crop insurance (PMFBY) → needs better implementation and faster claim settlement. Regulate input costs (Bt seeds, fertiliser subsidies). Debt Relief & Credit Reform: Address dependency on private moneylenders. Strengthen rural cooperative credit and Kisan Credit Card outreach. Structural Diversification: Encourage crop diversification, allied activities (livestock, dairy, horticulture). Promote value-addition and agro-processing to buffer market shocks. Social & Mental Health Support: Tele-MANAS (14416) helpline is a start → but rural mental health infrastructure must expand. Community-based counselling and awareness campaigns needed. Long-Term Measures: Rural employment schemes (MGNREGA, PM-KUSUM) to reduce sole dependence on crop income. Resilient agriculture via water management, climate-resilient seeds, watershed development. Cost of convenience: health hazards as a side effect of using digital tools Basics Why in News: India generated 2.2 million tonnes of e-waste in 2025, with informal recycling hubs causing severe health and environmental hazards. Definition: E-waste = discarded electronic products (mobiles, laptops, TVs, circuit boards, batteries, cables, etc.). It is the fastest-growing solid waste stream globally. India’s Position (2025): Generated 2.2 million tonnes of e-waste (3rd largest after China & USA). Growth of 150% since 2017–18 (0.71 MT). At current pace, volumes may double by 2030. Relevance GS3 (Environment & Health): Pollution, Waste management, Urban sustainability. GS2 (Governance & Policy): Implementation challenges of E-waste Rules, federal role in regulation. Current Status in India Geography: Urban epicentres → 60% of e-waste from 65 cities. Hotspots: Seelampur & Mustafabad (Delhi), Moradabad (UP), Bhiwandi (Maharashtra). Recycling ecosystem: 322 formal recycling units with 2.2 MT capacity exist. But >50% e-waste is handled informally by kabadiwalas, scrap dealers, and home-based workshops. Methods used informally: manual dismantling, acid leaching, open burning, unsafe dumping. Toxins released: Heavy metals → lead, cadmium, mercury, chromium. POPs → dioxins, furans, brominated flame retardants. PM2.5/PM10 from burning wires. Air quality impact: Seelampur’s PM2.5 > 300 μg/m³, ~12× WHO safe limit (25 μg/m³). Health Hazards Respiratory illnesses Inhalation of fine particles → chronic bronchitis, asthma, wheezing, chest tightness. 2025 Indian study: 76–80% informal workers showed chronic respiratory symptoms. Neurological & Developmental damage Lead & mercury exposure → cognitive decline, reduced IQ, behavioral issues, endocrine disruption. Children at highest risk → exposure via soil, dust, contaminated water. WHO: millions of children globally exposed to unsafe lead due to e-waste. Skin & Eye Disorders Direct handling of CRTs, acids, metals → rashes, burns, dermatitis, eye irritation. Some clusters report up to 100% prevalence of skin problems among recyclers. Reproductive & Genetic impacts Increased miscarriages & preterm births in contaminated areas. DNA damage, oxidative stress, immune system alterations in children. Syndemic effects Health impacts worsen when combined with poverty, malnutrition, unsafe housing, lack of healthcare. Creates overlapping disease burden among urban poor. Policy Framework E-Waste Management Rules, 2022: Strengthened Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR). Mandatory registration of dismantlers/recyclers. Incentives for formal recycling. Gaps: Weak enforcement → only 43% of e-waste formally processed (2023–24). Informal sector dominates. EPR credit price caps → legal disputes with manufacturers. Global Context China (Guiyu): major informal hub with severe pollution & child health crises. West Africa (Benin, Ghana): high respiratory illnesses among informal workers. US & EU: focus on advanced recycling tech + export bans on e-waste to developing countries. Way Forward Formalisation of informal sector Integrate kabadiwalas → skill training, PPE, social security. Provide safe infrastructure & access to healthcare. Regulatory Strengthening Empower Pollution Control Boards. Digital tracking of e-waste. Mandatory audits & penalties for non-compliance. Health Interventions Medical surveillance, regular camps in hotspots. Long-term studies on children’s health. Technology & Innovation Invest in low-cost, decentralised recycling technologies. R&D for eco-friendly dismantling methods. Public Awareness & Education School-level inclusion of e-waste education. Mass campaigns to encourage responsible disposal. How to safeguard India’s digital economy ? Basics Why in News: Rising cybercrime targeting UPI, digital banking, and e-commerce, exposing weaknesses in institutional preparedness and consumer protection. India’s digital leap: Driven by affordable internet, UPI-based digital banking, e-commerce, and digital governance. Impact: Enhanced inclusion, convenience, and growth in financial and social services. Problem: Parallel rise of cybercrime, exploiting system loopholes and human psychology. Relevance GS2 (Governance, Security): Institutional capacity, citizen trust, regulatory reforms. GS3 (Science & Tech, Internal Security): Cybercrime, AI/ML applications in governance. Nature of Cybercrime in India Techniques used: Phishing (fake links/emails to steal data). OTP/UPI frauds (victims unknowingly authorise transfers). Loan scams & job scams (targeting vulnerable groups). Identity theft (misuse of Aadhaar, PAN, bank details). Remote access scams (malicious apps give criminals control of devices). Digital arrests (impersonation of police/customs, fake warrants, psychological coercion). Key Feature: Relies less on hacking skills, more on social engineering (fear, urgency, trust, greed). Vulnerable Groups Elderly → often digitally illiterate but with savings. Rural populations → low awareness, weak cyber literacy. Job seekers & loan applicants → easily lured by fake offers. Even educated urban users → break down under psychological pressure. Case Illustrations Retired banker (78 yrs): lost ₹23 crore across 21 transactions. Lawmaker’s wife: lost ₹14 lakh but recovered due to swift action. Lesson: Delay = irreversible loss, Swift reporting = possible recovery. Institutional Gaps Banks: Limit themselves to advisories. Weak KYC → mule accounts thrive. Fail to detect unusual patterns (multi-crore debits unchecked). Customer data leaks widely. Cyber police: Understaffed, under-skilled, under-equipped. Poor use of the 24-hour golden window. Victims trapped in delays → criminals escape. Systemic apathy: Thousands of daily cases; many unreported due to stigma & lack of trust. Evolving Nature of Fraud Earlier → ATM skimming, small-scale theft. Now → organised, large-scale, tech-enabled, cross-border. Fraud patterns: Abnormally large transfers vs normal profile. Multiple high-value debits in short intervals. Sudden inflows into dormant/fake KYC accounts (mule accounts). Quick layering → money dispersed across small banks, recovery blocked. Possible Interventions AI/ML-based monitoring: Personalised transaction profiles → detect deviations. Anomaly detection for mule accounts & abnormal activity. Temporary holds on suspicious transactions. Cross-institutional cooperation: Real-time fraud intelligence sharing between banks, telecoms, and cyber police. Immediate alerts across the financial ecosystem. Empowering Cyber Police: AI-driven real-time detection tools. 24×7 response teams within the golden 24-hour window. Global data-sharing & cross-border cooperation. Strengthening Banks: Plug KYC loopholes. Blockchain for secure data & tamper-proof records. Proactive, not advisory-only, approach. The Way Forward Shift from reactive complaint-handling → proactive prevention. Adopt protection-first framework: citizen safety & digital trust as foundation of financial stability. Swift compensation to victims (RBI mandate) → restore trust. Tech solutions (AI, ML, Blockchain) exist → what is missing is institutional will & accountability. Accidental Deaths & Natural Hazards Basics Why in News: NCRB 2023 report highlights deaths from natural causes (lightning, heat stroke, floods), showing rising vulnerability due to climate change. Source: NCRB’s 2023 report on Accidental Deaths and Suicides in India. Deaths due to forces of nature: 6,444. Major natural causes: Lightning strikes → 2,560 deaths (39.7%). Heat stroke → 804 deaths (12.5%). Floods, cold exposure, landslides, torrential rains → remaining share. Relevance GS1 (Geography) → Natural disasters, climate patterns (lightning, floods, heatwaves). GS2 (Governance, Welfare) → Public health preparedness, NDMA role, inter-state coordination. GS3 (Disaster Management, Environment) → Impact of climate change on mortality. Other Key Fatalities (2023) Snake bites: 10,144 deaths (major killer among natural/animal causes). Animal attacks: 1,739 deaths (1,172 due to animal attacks, 567 due to snakebite misclassification within this category). Insect/other bites: Also included in natural causes fatalities. Regional Distribution States with highest deaths due to forces of nature: Madhya Pradesh – 397 deaths. Bihar – 345. Odisha – 294. Uttar Pradesh – 287. Jharkhand – 194. Specific observations: Odisha → 1,351 deaths from lightning alone (highest for one state). Telangana → 82% of natural deaths due to heat stroke. Himachal, Mizoram, Arunachal, Meghalaya → highest proportion of landslide-related deaths. Demographic Insights Age group most affected: 30–45 years → 34.8%. 45–60 years → 28.8%. Cause-specific: Lightning victims → 63.6% of total natural deaths. Heat stroke → highest concentration in Telangana. Urban–Rural Patterns Urban centres: Amritsar → highest overall exposure-related deaths (211 total; 196 due to heat). Other high-burden cities → Ludhiana (50), Dhanbad (11). Rural areas: disproportionately affected due to dependence on agriculture and outdoor work. Comparisons & Trends Snake bites (10,144) kill far more than all “forces of nature” combined (6,444). Lightning deaths remain the single largest killer in the “natural forces” category. Heatwave deaths are rising with climate change, especially in central and southern India. NCRB notes under-reporting in states with weaker health and disaster surveillance. Policy & Governance Implications Disaster Preparedness: Strengthen heatwave action plans (early warnings, public cooling shelters). Lightning protection measures (lightning arresters, awareness campaigns for farmers and outdoor workers). Snakebite management → stock antidotes, rural health infrastructure. Urban planning: Heat island mitigation (green cover, water bodies). Rural safety: Training for farmers, construction workers, outdoor labour. Snow Leopard Survey in Himachal Pradesh Basics Why in News: Latest survey (2024) shows snow leopard population in Himachal Pradesh increased from 51 to 83, reflecting conservation success. Species: Snow Leopard (Panthera uncia), apex predator, “indicator species” for high-altitude ecosystems. Location: Himachal Pradesh’s high-altitude habitats (Spiti, Kinnaur, Lahaul, Greater Himalayan & Pin Valley National Parks). Survey Findings: Population increased from 51 (2021) → 83 (2024) (excluding cubs). First comprehensive survey (2018–2021) → second survey completed in 2024. Relevance GS1 (Geography) → Himalayan ecosystems & biodiversity. GS2 (Governance) → Role of state in conservation, cooperative federalism in wildlife management. GS3 (Environment) → Wildlife conservation, climate change impact on fragile ecosystems. Survey Methodology Conducted by Himachal Forest Department + Nature Conservation Foundation (NCF). Techniques Used: 271 camera traps set up across 26,000 sq. km habitat. Use of spatially explicit capture-recapture methods. Identified 44 unique individuals from 262 confirmed detections. Coordinated field efforts ensured reliable results → addresses criticism of past underestimation. Regional Distribution Highest Density: Spiti Valley (core snow leopard landscape). Other strongholds: Kinnaur, Lahaul, Greater Himalayan NP, Pin Valley NP. Additional detections in Kibber Wildlife Sanctuary, Chandratal Sanctuary, Tundah Sanctuary, Kugti Sanctuary, Sechut Sanctuary, Asrang Wildlife Sanctuary. District-level: Upper Kinnaur & Tabo reported highest concentrations. Population Insights Estimated range: 67–103 individuals (with 83 as mean estimate). Density: 0.16 to 0.53 snow leopards per 100 sq. km, comparable with global snow leopard densities in Central Asia. Encouraging trend → indicates stable and possibly recovering population. Conservation Significance Himachal Pradesh → first state in India to complete a scientific snow leopard population estimate. Snow leopard = umbrella species → conservation ensures survival of associated high-altitude biodiversity. Linked with India’s SECURE Himalaya Project (UNDP + MoEFCC + GEF). Survey strengthens India’s international commitments under the Global Snow Leopard and Ecosystem Protection Program (GSLEP, 2013). Challenges Highlighted Habitat fragility: Infrastructure projects (roads, dams, tourism). Human-wildlife conflict: Attacks on livestock → retaliatory killings. Climate change: Shrinking snowline alters prey base (Bharal, ibex). Poaching & illegal wildlife trade: Although reduced, remains a threat. Policy & Governance Implications Wildlife Week 2024 highlight → scientific conservation success. Supports India’s efforts to align biodiversity conservation with SDG 15 (Life on Land). Need for: Expansion of community-based conservation (eco-tourism, compensation for livestock losses). Strengthened monitoring & technology use (drones, AI for camera trap analysis). Cross-border collaboration (snow leopards span India–China–Nepal–Bhutan–Pakistan). Value Addition Scientific Name: Panthera uncia (formerly Uncia uncia), apex predator of the Himalayas. IUCN Status: Vulnerable (IUCN Red List, 2023), population declining globally due to habitat loss and poaching. Global Range: High-altitude regions of 12 countries – India, Nepal, Bhutan, China, Mongolia, Russia, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan. Indian Distribution: Found in five states – Himachal Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, Uttarakhand, Sikkim, and Arunachal Pradesh. Habitat Preference: Alpine and subalpine zones (3,000–5,500 m), rocky cliffs, and steep terrain with sparse vegetation. Diet: Carnivore; preys on bharal (blue sheep), ibex, marmots, pikas, domestic livestock (in conflict zones). Adaptations: Thick fur, wide paws for snow traction, long tail for balance and warmth, camouflaged coat for rocky terrain. Reproduction: Breeding season Feb–Mar, gestation ~90–100 days, litter size 1–5 cubs; cubs remain with mother ~18–22 months. Threats: Poaching (for fur and bones), retaliatory killings due to livestock predation, climate change shrinking alpine habitat, mining/road construction. Conservation Efforts:Project Snow Leopard (MoEFCC, India) – community-based conservation.Global Snow Leopard & Ecosystem Protection Program (GSLEP, 2013) – 12 range countries collaborate.Protected areas: Hemis NP (J&K), Khangchendzonga NP (Sikkim), Pin Valley NP (HP), Great Himalayan NP (HP).

Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 30 September 2025

Content India’s Dairy Sector Sacred Stages: Traditional Ritual Theatres of India India’s Dairy Sector Basics India’s global position: No. 1 in milk production; contributes ~25% of global supply. Economic weight: Dairy is India’s largest agri-product, ~5% of GDP; supports 8 crore+ farmers. Growth: Milk output rose 63.56% in a decade (146.3 MT in 2014–15 → 239.3 MT in 2023–24). Per capita supply: 471 g/day (2023–24), 48% rise in 10 years; global average = 322 g/day. Artificial insemination (AI): 565.55 lakh AIs done in 2024–25. Relevance GS-3 (Economy, Agriculture & Food Security): Rural livelihoods, Agri-value chains, Livestock productivity, White Revolution 2.0, Nutritional security. GS-2 (Governance & Social Justice): Cooperative models, Women empowerment, Inclusive growth, Policy implementation (Rashtriya Gokul Mission, NDDB). Nutrition Dimension Milk = near-complete food: proteins, vitamins, minerals, lactose, milk fat. Critical for children’s growth, bone health, and nutrition security. Contributes to reducing malnutrition and undernutrition across all age groups. Socio-Economic Dimension Touches 8 crore+ rural households; majority are small & marginal farmers. Women’s participation: ~70% of dairy workforce; 35% active in cooperatives. 48,000+ women-led cooperatives; 16 fully women-run MPOs under NDDB Dairy Services. Income diversification: steady cash flow compared to seasonal agriculture. Growth in Animal Resources Bovine population: 303.76 million (cattle, buffalo, mithun, yak). Productivity growth: +27.39% (2014–2022), highest globally (vs global avg. 13.97%). Supporting livestock: goats (148.88M), sheep (74.26M). Key schemes: Rashtriya Gokul Mission (RGM), Livestock Health Disease Control Programme (LHDCP), Mobile Veterinary Units (MVUs). Integration of Ayurveda & Ethno-Veterinary Medicine (EVM) for sustainable livestock health and tackling antibiotic resistance. Cooperative Network 22 milk federations, 241 district unions, 28 marketing dairies, 25 MPOs. Coverage: 2.35 lakh villages; 1.72 crore members. Model: Farmer-owned, decentralized collection, assured market. Recognition: Shreeja MPO (women-led) won International Dairy Federation’s Dairy Innovation Award. Historical Journey 1965: NDDB established at Anand, Gujarat. 1970: Operation Flood launched (Verghese Kurien’s leadership) → India turned from milk-deficient to world’s largest producer. 1987: NDDB declared Institution of National Importance by Parliament. Key Initiatives Rashtriya Gokul Mission (RGM) Launched 2014, revised 2025 (allocation ₹3400 crore for 2021–26). Focus: indigenous breeds, semen stations, AI expansion, breed improvement (sex-sorted semen). Result: Milk production up 63.56% in 10 years; productivity up 26.34%. Artificial Insemination & Breeding 33% bovines covered under AI (vs 70% still natural service). NAIP: 9.16 crore animals covered, 14.12 crore AIs, 5.54 crore farmers benefited. 22 IVF labs set up; 10.32 million sex-sorted semen doses produced. MAITRIs: 38,736 technicians trained, delivering AI at farmers’ doorsteps. Progeny testing: 3747 bulls tested (2021–24); 132 breed multiplication farms sanctioned. Future Vision – White Revolution 2.0 (2024–29) Goal: Strengthen cooperatives, women empowerment, job creation, sustainability. Milk procurement target: 1007 lakh kg/day by 2028–29. 75,000 new Dairy Cooperative Societies to be formed; 46,422 existing societies to be strengthened. Sustainability push through 3 new Multi-State Cooperative Societies (MSCS): Cattle feed, mineral mixtures, technical inputs. Organic manure, biogas, circular economy (cow dung & agri-waste utilization). Management of hides, bones, horns of fallen animals. Overview Nutrition Security: Dairy addresses protein-energy malnutrition, micronutrient deficiency, complements mid-day meals & ICDS. Income Security: Daily cash flow + women’s participation → stabilizes rural economy. Inclusivity: 70% women workforce makes it one of the most gender-inclusive sectors. Sustainability: Integration of Ayurveda, EVM, organic manure, biogas aligns with SDGs 2 (Zero Hunger), 5 (Gender Equality), 12 (Responsible Consumption), 13 (Climate Action). Challenges: Low AI coverage (only 33%). Climate vulnerability (fodder stress, water scarcity). Need for higher cold-chain and processing capacity. Market volatility & dominance of unorganized sector. Opportunities: Dairy exports (value-added products like cheese, whey, ghee). Agri-tech & digital solutions in dairy value chain. Rural employment multiplier effect (8 crore households). White Revolution 2.0 can replicate Operation Flood’s transformative scale with sustainability focus. Conclusion India’s dairy sector has evolved from a subsistence activity to a global leader, ensuring both nutrition security and rural income stability. Women-led cooperatives, scientific breeding, and sustainability initiatives are shaping White Revolution 2.0 as a driver of inclusive rural transformation. With productivity gains, value addition, and climate-smart practices, India can consolidate its role as the dairy hub of the world. Sacred Stages: Traditional Ritual Theatres of India Basics Ritual Theatre: A form of performance combining sacred ritual and dramatic expression, rooted in temples, festivals, and collective memory. Core Features: Acting, singing, dance, music, narration, puppetry/pantomime. Beyond entertainment → cultural, ethical, spiritual functions. UNESCO Recognition: Classified as Intangible Cultural Heritage (ICH) for their role in identity, continuity, and social cohesion. ICH in India: 15 elements inscribed in UNESCO list; ritual theatres inscribed include Kutiyattam, Mudiyettu, Ramman, Ramlila. Relevance GS-1 (Art & Culture): Indian theatre traditions, UNESCO’s Intangible Cultural Heritage, role of community in cultural preservation. GS-2 (Governance): Role of institutions (Sangeet Natak Akademi, UNESCO collaboration), cultural policy, safeguarding heritage. GS-3 (Economy, Tourism, Social Development): Cultural industries, heritage-based tourism, livelihood generation through traditional arts. UNESCO’s Framework of ICH Five domains under the Convention for Safeguarding ICH: Oral Traditions & Expressions (including language). Performing Arts. Social Practices, Rituals & Festive Events. Knowledge & Practices Concerning Nature & the Universe. Traditional Craftsmanship. Key Ritual Theatres of India 1. Kutiyattam (Kerala) 2000-year-old Sanskrit theatre tradition blending classical + local elements. Features: Abhinaya (eye-hand expressions), long training (10–15 years), performances up to 40 days. Sacred space: Kuttampalams (temple theatres). Themes: Mythology, Sanskrit dramas. Community role: Patronage around temples, ritual audiences. UNESCO ICH: Inscribed in 2008. 2. Mudiyettu (Kerala) Ritual dance-drama depicting Kali vs Darika. Performed annually in Bhagavati Kavus post-harvest. Rituals: Purification, drawing of kalam (image of goddess). Entire village participation: cross-caste roles (mask-making, costumes, performers). Transmission: Oral apprenticeship. Fusion: Dance, music, visual arts, masks. 3. Ramman (Uttarakhand) Annual festival (April) in Saloor-Dungra villages for deity Bhumiyal Devta. Features: Ramayana recitations, masked dances, local legends, ritual theatre. Sacred space: Temple courtyard. Instruments: Dhol, Damau, Manjira, Jhanjhar, Bhankora. Strong caste/community-based role division; collective funding. Transmission: Oral, apprenticeship. 4. Ramlila (North India) Dramatic enactment of the Ramcharitmanas by Tulsidas. Major during Dussehra (Ayodhya, Ramnagar, Varanasi, Vrindavan, etc.). Duration: 10–12 days (Ramnagar version = 1 month). Performed in temple grounds/public squares. Amateur actors from community → values of dharma, bhakti, social cohesion. Thematic Commonalities Divine Storytelling: Mythological epics (Ramayana, Kali legends, Sanskrit dramas). Sacred Space: Temple halls, courtyards, ritual precincts. Community Participation: Collective labour, caste-based roles, village patronage. Transmission of Knowledge: Oral, guru-shishya parampara, long apprenticeships. Fusion of Art Forms: Drama, music, dance, ritual, masks, puppetry, visual arts. Institutional Role – Sangeet Natak Akademi Established: 1953; apex body for performing arts. Functions: Documentation & Archiving (audio-visuals, manuscripts, national archive). Training (guru-shishya programs, workshops, capacity building). Awards (SNA Awards, Fellowships, Ustad Bismillah Khan Yuva Puraskar). Research & Publications (books, journals, monographs). Festivals (National Theatre Festival, Dance Festivals). Collaboration with UNESCO & States (ICH nominations, state funding). Support to Artistes (stipends, grants, costume/training aid). Overview Cultural Identity: Rooted in communities, reinforcing shared memory & ethics. Social Cohesion: Collective participation across caste, class, gender. Heritage Conservation: UNESCO + state efforts safeguard ICH against decline. Challenges: Declining patronage, urban migration, commercialization, high costs of costumes/training. Opportunities: Linking ICH with tourism (cultural circuits). Using digital platforms for wider archiving & outreach. Strengthening community-driven preservation. Expanding ICH education in schools/HEIs for intergenerational transfer. Conclusion Ritual theatres like Kutiyattam, Mudiyettu, Ramman, and Ramlila are living embodiments of India’s sacred traditions, not static relics. They serve as bridges between the divine and the everyday, sustaining continuity through community effort and ritual practice. Preserving them ensures not only cultural pride but also India’s contribution to global heritage safeguarding.