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Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 19 November 2025

Content YUVA AI for ALL National Water Awards YUVA AI for ALL Why in News? MeitY launched ‘YUVA AI for ALL’ under the IndiaAI Mission. Aims to empower 1 crore citizens with foundational AI skills through a free, 4.5-hour national course. Available on FutureSkills Prime, iGOT Karmayogi, and other ed-tech platforms with official GoI certification. Relevance GS2 (Governance) Advances digital skilling under MeitY & IndiaAI Mission. Strengthens inclusive access to government-led digital learning platforms. GS2 (Policy & Social Sector) Implements national AI and digital literacy strategies (IndiaAI Mission, PMGDISHA, NDLM). Reduces digital divide through mass-scale AI awareness. GS3 (Science & Technology) Builds foundational AI literacy and responsible AI practices. Supports India’s AI ecosystem and alignment with global AI ethics norms. What is YUVA AI for ALL? A free, introductory AI literacy course for all Indians—students, professionals, and beginners. Duration: 4.5 hours, self-paced, modular structure (6 modules). Developed by Jaspreet Bindra, AI expert and author. Focus: ethical, responsible, inclusive AI aligned with India’s socio-digital context. Core Features Open to all: No prerequisites, 100% free, multilingual potential. Certification: Government of India certificate on completion. Platform availability: FutureSkills Prime, iGOT Karmayogi, other ed-tech portals. Practical orientation: Real-world Indian examples, simple explanations. Course Structure – Key Learning Outcomes Foundations of AI: Meaning, technologies, how AI works. AI in daily life: Education, creativity, workplace transformation. Responsible AI: Ethical use, safety, biases, data practices. Use cases from India: Agriculture, healthcare, governance, fintech, climate. Future opportunities: Skills, jobs, emerging AI ecosystems. Strategic Significance 1. Digital Inclusion Bridges AI awareness gap across urban–rural, socioeconomic, and generational lines. Helps democratize access to emerging technologies. 2. Workforce Preparedness Supports India’s skilling targets under IndiaAI Mission, Skill India, and Digital India. Aligns with global trends where basic AI literacy is a workplace essential. 3. Ethical AI Ecosystem Strengthens India’s push for trusted, responsible AI in line with global norms (UNESCO AI Ethics, OECD AI principles). 4. AI Nation-Building Fits into India’s strategic roadmap to become an AI-powered economy. Supports development of a base-level AI-fluent population, essential for innovation and digital governance. Policy & Governance Context Linked to IndiaAI Mission (₹10,300 crore) focused on compute infrastructure, datasets, innovation, skilling. Complements NDLM, PMGDISHA, and digital literacy initiatives targeting mass skilling. Helps operationalize National Strategy for AI (NITI Aayog) recommendations: awareness, skilling, responsible AI. Impact Pathways Education: Institutions can integrate course into curriculums. Employability: Basic AI literacy enhances job-readiness across sectors. Industry partnerships: Ed-tech, academia, and corporates can co-brand and scale the course. Public sector: Supports capacity-building under the National Programme for Civil Services Capacity Building (Mission Karmayogi). Comparative Note Similar to Finland’s “Elements of AI” mass literacy program but tailored with India-specific use cases. Addresses India’s unique scale challenges—1.4B population, digital divide, multilingual needs. Prelims Pointers Initiative under MeitY and IndiaAI Mission. Duration: 4.5 hours, 6 modules, free certification. Target: 1 crore AI-literate citizens. Platforms: FutureSkills Prime, iGOT Karmayogi. Focus: ethical, responsible, inclusive AI. National Water Awards Why in News? PIB  announced the 6th National Water Awards (NWA) and 1st Jal Sanchay Jan Bhagidari (JSJB) Awards. 46 winners across 10 categories honoured for water conservation excellence (NWA 2024 cycle). Maharashtra ranked 1st among states in NWA; Telangana ranked 1st in JSJB Awards. Highlights India’s shift toward community-driven, decentralized, and sustainable water management. Relevance GS1 (Geography) Directly linked to water scarcity, groundwater depletion, watershed restoration. GS2 (Governance) Strengthens participatory water governance and cooperative federalism. Highlights best practices under Jal Shakti Abhiyan, PMKSY, Atal Bhujal Yojana. GS2 (Social Justice) Enhances equitable access to water and promotes community involvement. What Are the National Water Awards? Instituted: 2018 by the Department of Water Resources, Ministry of Jal Shakti. Purpose: Recognize excellence in water conservation, water management, innovation, and community participation. Frequency: Annual. Stakeholders: Individuals, NGOs, institutions, industry, rural/urban local bodies, states. Objectives of the NWA Promote water-use efficiency, sustainable practices, and awareness building. Encourage behavioural change towards conservation at individual and institutional levels. Strengthen national vision of Jal Samridh Bharat (water-secure India). Create replicable best practices and foster cross-learning among states and communities. 6th National Water Awards (2024 Cycle) 751 applications received; 46 winners chosen across 10 categories. Best State Category Rankings: 1st: Maharashtra 2nd: Gujarat 3rd: Haryana Categories include: Best State, Best District, Best NGO, Best Industry, Best Water User Association, Best Urban Local Body, Best Institution, Best Researcher, etc. Winner selection reflects emphasis on innovation, scalability, community participation, sustainable water practice. Significance of the Awards 1. Strengthen National Water Governance Complements initiatives like Jal Shakti Abhiyan, PMKSY, Jal Jeevan Mission, Atal Bhujal Yojana. Reinforces multi-stakeholder engagement in water management. 2. Public Awareness & Behaviour Change Encourages citizens to view water as a shared resource, not an infinite commodity. Generates momentum around rainwater harvesting, groundwater recharge, efficient irrigation, urban water sustainability. 3. Recognition of Local Innovations Spotlights grassroots solutions, indigenous knowledge, and local community leadership. Supports mainstreaming of scalable models. 4. Encourages Data-Driven Water Management Promotes GIS, IoT, community monitoring, water budgeting, and efficient water accounting. Jal Sanchay Jan Bhagidari (JSJB) Awards – Basics Launched: 2024 under Jal Shakti Abhiyan: Catch the Rain (JSA: CTR). Purpose: Honour community-driven water conservation and groundwater recharge efforts. Scale: 100 awards across states, districts, municipal bodies, NGOs, industry, philanthropists, and officials. Achievement: Construction of 35 lakh groundwater recharge structures, exceeding targets. JSJB Best Performing State/UT (2025) 1st: Telangana 2nd: Chhattisgarh 3rd: Rajasthan Key National Water Conservation Initiatives  1. Jal Shakti Abhiyan: Catch the Rain (2021– ) Motto: “Catch the Rain, Where it Falls, When it Falls.” Focus: Rainwater harvesting, desilting, water-body rejuvenation, afforestation, check dams, recharge pits. Strong community participation model. 2. Atal Bhujal Yojana (2019– ) Community-led groundwater management in 8203 Gram Panchayats across 7 states. 81,000 structures constructed/renovated; 9 lakh hectares brought under efficient practices. One of India’s largest WB-supported groundwater programs. 3. Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchayee Yojana (PMKSY) Aim: Har Khet Ko Pani, More Crop Per Drop. Promotes: Micro-irrigation, integrated water-source management, watershed development. Reduces agricultural water stress. 4. AMRUT 2.0 Targets universal tap-water coverage in all statutory towns. 3568 water-supply projects, worth ₹1.14 lakh crore, sanctioned. 181 lakh new tap connections approved. Urban focus on sustainability, sewage, septage, and smart water systems. 5. Jal Jeevan Mission (2019– ) Rural tap-water mission; 12.50 crore households connected. Focus on eco-friendly water solutions: greywater management, rainwater harvesting, groundwater recharge. Strategic Importance for India Addresses water scarcity, climate vulnerability, groundwater depletion, and urban water stress. Ensures water security for agriculture (80% water use), rural households, and urban centres. Supports SDGs: SDG 6 (Clean Water), SDG 11 (Sustainable Cities), SDG 13 (Climate Action). Strengthens India’s long-term hydro-resilience and climate adaptation strategy. Analytical Note Awards reflect shift from top-down to community-centric water governance. Reinforces a model based on Jan Bhagidari + Technology + Local innovation. Pushes states to compete and collaborate on sustainable water futures. Acts as a policy nudging tool promoting best practices and accountability.

Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 19 November 2025

Content Unpacking the global ‘happiness’ rankings Excessive dependence Language of security needs upgrade, beyond OTP  Unpacking the global ‘happiness’ rankings  Why in News? World Happiness Report (WHR) 2025 places Finland at Rank 1 for the 8th consecutive year. India ranks 118 (score: 4.389/10) and averages 124 over the years. Pakistan ranks 109, despite economic instability and repeated IMF bailouts. Raises questions on the nature, validity and perception-driven basis of “happiness”. Relevance GS1 (Society) Links to social cohesion, community bonds, family structures, loneliness, and wellbeing. Explains shifts in Indian social capital due to urbanisation and digital lifestyles. GS2 (Governance & Social Justice) Highlights governance quality, institutional trust, welfare states, corruption perception. Shows role of public service delivery in influencing subjective wellbeing. Practice Question “India’s low ranking in global happiness indices reflects a deficit of trust, not a deficit of wellbeing.” Discuss.(250 Words) What is the World Happiness Report? Published by Wellbeing Research Centre, Oxford University. Uses Gallup World Poll’s Cantril Ladder: People rate their lives on a scale of 0 (worst) to 10 (best). Combines six variables: GDP per capita Social support Healthy life expectancy Freedom to make life choices Generosity Perception of corruption Strong emphasis on perceptions, not objective indicators. Why Nordic Countries Lead Consistently ? High institutional trust; lost-wallet-return probability is high. Low corruption, strong welfare states, universal healthcare, social equality. High social cohesion + reliable public services → stable well-being. Low inequality of opportunity; egalitarian norms. High taxes convert into visible public goods; trust-tax feedback loop strengthens satisfaction. Why India Scores Low Despite High Growth ? 1. Aspiration–Satisfaction Paradox Rising incomes → rising expectations; dissatisfaction reflects ambition, not misery. Democracies with vibrant media amplify public criticism → lower perceived satisfaction. Similar trend in the U.S., which fell to Rank 24 despite wealth. 2. Perception-Based Metrics Subjective impressions of freedom, corruption and trust can lower national score. Frequent public debates on governance, pollution, inequality → higher negative perceptions. 3. Structural Social Changes Shrinking joint families, urban isolation, digital addiction → weakening social capital. Migration and gig work reduce community bonds that earlier provided emotional buffers. 4. WEIRD Bias in Methodology Report reflects Western norms: Individualistic societies emphasise institutional trust. India’s strength—family/community trust—undervalued and unmeasured. India’s Fluctuating Rank (2012–2025) Best phase (2022): Post-COVID recovery, PM-GKY, welfare expansions. Worst phase (2012): Corruption scandals, growth slowdown. Data shows little correlation between fiscal growth and happiness scores. Core Issue for India: Social Trust Deficit Institutional Trust Uneven governance, bureaucratic delays, service quality inconsistencies reduce trust. Transparent, predictable public services (ration cards, ticketing, pensions) remain patchy. Informal Trust Families and villages act as safety nets. COVID-19 migration showed strong community cohesion. But these networks are invisible to global indices. Psychological and Behavioural Overview Report admits: belief in community kindness predicts happiness more than income. Nearly 19% of young adults globally report “no one to rely on”. India faces similar relational deficits due to urbanisation + digital lifestyles. Political and Methodological Concerns Many global indices (including WHR) criticised for transparency and Western biases. 2022 study (Sanjeev Sanyal & Aakanksha Arora) highlighted: Reliance on small pools of Western experts. Penalising democracies for openness; rewarding states with suppressed dissent. Happiness rankings risk mistaking conformity for contentment. India’s Evolving Approach to Wellbeing Mental health becoming a governance priority. Initiatives: Tele-MANAS (national mental health helpline). Workplace wellness programmes. Inclusion and emotional resilience campaigns. Signals shift toward human-centric development. What India Needs to Do ? 1. Rebuild Social Capital Community spaces, libraries, shared meals, cultural events. Promote inter-generational bonding; reduce loneliness. Larger household size and community kindness strongly correlate with happiness. 2. Strengthen Institutional Trust Simplified, digital-first citizen–state interactions. Transparent service delivery: PDS, healthcare, railways, grievance redress. Consistency in rules → predictability → trust. 3. Make Mental Health an Economic Priority WHO: $1 investment in mental health → $4 productivity return. Integrate counselling in schools, workplaces and primary health centres. Recognise psychological wellbeing as economic infrastructure. Conclusion India’s low rank reflects restlessness, not unhappiness. High aspirations, accountability, and demands for better services are signs of a maturing democracy. “Unfinished, ambitious, striving” India may appear less satisfied—but is progressing toward a deeper idea of happiness. Excessive dependence Why in News? India recorded a historic goods trade deficit in October 2025: $41.68 billion, rising from $32.15 billion in September. Triggered by U.S. tariff shock (50% levy since August) + a surge in gold and silver imports. Raises concerns over overdependence on the U.S. and a possible structural shift in India’s trade portfolio. Relevance GS2 (Governance & International Relations) India–U.S. trade architecture, tariff vulnerabilities, strategic balancing with Russia. Dependence on single markets as a structural governance challenge. GS3 (Economy – External Sector) Trade deficit, BoP stress, rupee depreciation, import–export dynamics. Bullion imports, intermediate goods dependence, manufacturing depth issues. Practice Question   “India’s October 2025 trade deficit is a warning against single-market dependence. Analyse the structural vulnerabilities it exposes.”(250 Words) What is Goods Trade Deficit? Occurs when imports > exports (merchandise only; excludes services). Persistent deficits → pressure on forex reserves, currency depreciation, external vulnerability. India typically covers merchandise deficit through: Strong services exports (IT, BPM). Remittances. Foreign capital flows. Key Data Highlights Exports: Fell 11.8% YoY → $34.38 bn (from $38.98 bn, Oct 2024). Imports: Surged sharply due to bullion inflows and intermediate goods demand. Gold imports: Nearly tripled (vs Oct 2024). Silver imports: Rose 5x. Rupee: Depreciated from ₹85.6/$ (April) → ₹88.4/$ (October). U.S. market: Exports to U.S. fell 9% YoY. Labour-intensive sectors worst hit. Why the Deficit Rose So Sharply? U.S. Tariff Shock (50% duty) Imposed in Aug 2025; U.S. is India’s largest single export market since 2018–19. Hit sectors like: Engineering goods (↓16.71%) RMG and apparel (↓12.88%) Man-made yarn (↓11.75%) Cotton yarn/handlooms (↓13.31%) Bullion Surge as Hedge Gold and silver inflows indicate: Hedging against global + domestic uncertainty. Rupee depreciation encouraging bullion buying. FPI outflow in September deepened anxiety. Higher Use of Imported Intermediates Firms sourcing cheaper imported inputs to remain export-competitive. Points to weak domestic manufacturing depth. HS-wise breakdown (once released) will confirm the shift. Impact on India–U.S. Trade Dynamics Heavy dependence on U.S. → amplified vulnerability. India shifting: Russian imports ↓27.73% (oil correction, geopolitical balancing). U.S. imports ↑13.89% (signalling alignment + reducing trade imbalance concerns). Pressure increasing for: Early India–U.S. Bilateral Trade Agreement. Rollback of tariffs. Government & RBI Response Export Promotion Scheme: ₹25,060 crore over 6 years. RBI relief measures: liquidity, procedural relaxations, credit support for exporters. Aim: cushion tariff impact + restore competitiveness. Is This a Structural Shift or a Temporary Shock ? Arguments for a Temporary Shock U.S. tariffs are a one-off external event. Bullion imports may normalize once uncertainty eases. Re-routing exports and supply chain realignments take time; cannot be labelled structural yet. Arguments for a Structural Shift India is consciously reducing Russian crude share. Increasing U.S. imports to stabilise strategic relations. Export stagnation in labour-intensive sectors indicates deeper competitiveness issues. Reliance on imported intermediates signals systemic domestic production gaps. Why Heavy Dependence on the U.S. is Risky ? U.S. accounts for nearly 20% of India’s total exports. Exposure to: Protectionist tariffs Geopolitical pressures Currency volatility Supply-chain disruptions “Single-market reliance” = economic + diplomatic vulnerability. Long-Term Consequences if Dependence Continues Persistent trade deficits. Employment hit in labour-heavy sectors (textiles, leather, gems). Rupee depreciation pressure. Declining manufacturing self-sufficiency. Reduced bargaining power in trade negotiations. What India Must Do ? 1. Diversify Export Markets Target Latin America, Africa, Middle East, ASEAN+3. Reduce concentration risk: broaden beyond U.S. & EU. 2. Deepen Manufacturing Ecosystems Strengthen domestic intermediates production. Accelerate PLI 2.0, logistics reform, SEZ modernization. 3. Build Tariff-Resilient Sectors Promote advanced engineering, electronics, green tech, medical devices. Modernise textiles: MMF focus, technical textiles, design competitiveness. 4. Stabilise India–U.S. Trade Architecture Conclude bilateral trade agreement. Seek tariff rollbacks linked to wider strategic cooperation. Conclusion The October 2025 deficit is partly a shock, partly a signal. The key lesson: India’s overdependence on the U.S. has converted a single tariff action into a national trade crisis. A structural shift in India’s trade portfolio—towards market diversification, domestic manufacturing depth, and balanced import sources—is not only inevitable but strategically overdue. Language of security needs upgrade, beyond OTP  Why in News? Article highlights the rising ineffectiveness of OTP-based authentication amid soaring digital fraud cases in India. Points to need for new security terminology (e.g., “FTP — Financial Transaction Password”) to reduce fraud by improving user psychology and behavioural responses. Relevance GS2 (Governance) Citizen–state digital interface; RBI/CERT-In regulations; secure digital payments. Trust in public digital infrastructure (UPI, Aadhaar-enabled services). GS3 (Science & Technology – Cybersecurity) Digital fraud, OTP-fatigue, behavioural vulnerabilities. Need for human-centric security design and terminology innovation (FTP). Practice Question “Technological solutions alone cannot address India’s digital fraud epidemic. Behavioural and linguistic redesign is equally critical.” Explain.(250 Words) What Is OTP and Why It Was Created? OTP (One-Time Password) = temporary authentication code for online verification. Initially added as a second-factor security layer to reduce unauthorized access. Used for Aadhaar authentication, bank payments, tax filings, UPI, card-not-present transactions. Why OTP Has Lost Psychological Meaning? OTP is used for almost every digital action, making people desensitised. Users routinely share OTPs for deliveries, subscriptions, device logins → weakens security discipline. Perception: OTP feels like “a simple code handed by a service provider”, not a serious safeguard. Fraud data: 200%+ rise in digital fraud cases year-on-year. ₹22,845 crore reported losses to citizens. Overuse = security fatigue + rising scams such as phishing, vishing, remote-access tricks. Core Argument of the Article 1. Security Failures Are Linguistic and Behavioural, Not Just Technological People share OTPs not due to ignorance but due to habitual desensitisation. Research in behavioural economics: Small linguistic modifications change user response significantly. Word choice affects perception → affects caution levels. 2. Proposed Shift: Replace OTP with “FTP” FTP = Financial Transaction Password. Reserved only for actual money-transfer transactions, not for general logins, couriers, apps. Separates financial risk events from routine authentication. Raises seriousness, caution, and psychological barrier. How FTP Improves Behavioural Security? Clarifies that FTP = money movement. Deters sharing since the term communicates risk + financial consequences. Makes users more alert in UPI, NEFT/IMPS, and debit-card operations. Similar to the way “ATM PIN” creates strong caution vs. ordinary passwords. Why India Needs This Shift? UPI Dominance 13+ billion monthly transactions. Small lapses create massive aggregate risk. Widespread Digital Fraud Remote app scams Fake UPI collect pulls Phishing links Social engineering High-speed digitisation demands high-speed behavioural adaptation Tech alone insufficient. Requires “language of security” to evolve. Low-cost intervention Changing terminology = inexpensive but high psychological impact. Systemic Solutions Recommended 1. Upgrade Security Terminology Introduce FTP for financial transactions. Restrict OTP to non-financial actions only. 2. Banking Interface Overhaul Payment apps, netbanking, UPI should: Use distinct FTP screens. Provide warning prompts on financial authorisations. 3. Regulators & Financial Institutions Conduct mass awareness campaigns. Promote FTP like ATM PIN standards. Integrate FTP into UPI 3.0 / 4.0 ecosystem as optional or mandatory. 4. Policy-Level Action Aligns with India’s cybersecurity strategy, CERT-In advisories, RBI’s digital payment security initiatives. Helps reduce losses borne by banks and insurers. Strategic Significance Behavioural Economics Overview Humans make security errors due to framing, cognition, and expectations, not only due to lack of knowledge. Language shifts can reduce fraud without heavy tech upgrades. Trust & Digital Governance Essential for India’s aspiration of becoming a trillion-dollar digital economy. Enhances confidence in UPI, Aadhaar-enabled payments, and public digital infrastructure. Broader Implications India’s digital expansion → high risk of cybercrime at scale. Without behavioural security design, technological innovation becomes counterproductive. FTP-like segmentation = global best practice in human-centric cybersecurity. Prelims Pointers OTP = widely used authentication mechanism, vulnerable due to user habituation. FTP (proposed): restricted to financial transactions; improves behavioural caution. Major fraud losses: ₹22,845 crore reported. India: one of the world’s fastest digitising economies → rising digital fraud risk.

Daily Current Affairs

Current Affairs 19 November 2025

Content SC Recalls Verdict on Retrospective Green Clearances What Can Local Bodies Expect from the 16th Finance Commission? What Changes Are Planned for the Plant Variety Act? DPDP Rules 2025 — Separate Section for Persons with Disabilities The Rare Ginkgo-Toothed Beaked Whale Glass vs PET: Alcobev Sector Rethinks Packaging Strategy SC recalls verdict on retrospective green clearances  Why is it in News? A three-judge Bench of the Supreme Court has recalled its May 16, 2025 judgment that had declared retrospective/ex-post facto environmental clearances as “gross illegality”. Majority (CJI B.R. Gavai & Justice K. Vinod Chandran) held that allowing the earlier judgment to operate would have devastating economic consequences. Justice Ujjal Bhuyan dissented, warning the Court is “backtracking on sound environmental jurisprudence”. Relevance : GS 3: Environment & Ecology (EIA, environmental governance, precautionary principle) GS 2: Judiciary & Governance (judicial review, balance between environment–economy, Article 21) GS 3: Infrastructure & Industry (impact on projects, regulatory compliance) What are Environmental Clearances (ECs)? Statutory requirement under Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 & EIA Notification 2006. Mandates prior environmental approval before construction, expansion, or operation of certain projects. Ensures: Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) Public consultation Mitigation measures Compliance monitoring. What are Ex Post Facto ECs? ECs granted after a project has already started/been completed, violating the “prior approval” principle. Considered legally questionable because: Violates the precautionary principle. Undermines sustainable development norms. Rewards non-compliance. The May 16, 2024 Judgment (Now Recalled) Bench of Justice A.S. Oka & Justice Ujjal Bhuyan. Held that: Ex post facto ECs are an “anathema” and “gross illegality”. Violates Article 21 (right to clean environment). Projects constructed without EC must face strict consequences. Would have impacted: Large real estate, infrastructure, industrial projects. Thousands of crores of investment. The November 2025 Review Judgment (Recall Order) Majority View (CJI Gavai + Justice Chandran) Allowing the May 16 ruling to stand would cause “devastating economic impact”. Thousands of crores of investment would be wasted; projects would become illegal overnight. Review allowed primarily on economic & practical grounds, not on legal reinterpretation. Stressed need to balance environmental protection with economic stability. Suggests that procedural lapses should not destroy completed projects if rectification is possible. Minority View (Justice Ujjal Bhuyan) Strong dissent; called the recall “pained backtracking on environmental jurisprudence”. Argues: Precautionary principle, polluter-pays, inter-generational equity are being diluted. Granting ex post facto ECs rewards violators and encourages non-compliance. The judiciary’s role is to protect environmental rule of law, not facilitate retrospective regularisation. Points to Delhi smog as a daily reminder of environmental degradation. Says the majority is overlooking “fundamentals of environmental law”. Key Issues Raised by the Case 1. Precautionary Principle vs. Economic Considerations Precautionary principle requires prior approval; retrospective permission undermines it. Majority prioritised economic stability. Minority prioritised environmental sanctity. 2. Separation of Powers Whether courts can effectively validate retrospective permissions that dilute statutory requirements. 3. Environmental Rule of Law Recall signals a potential softening of strict judicial scrutiny of environmental compliance. 4. Governance Implications Encourages laxity by developers expecting post-facto regularisation. Raises concerns about regulatory capture and weak enforcement. Implications Short-Term Relief for construction/real estate/industrial sectors. Prevents mass demolition or halting of ongoing commercial activity. Long-Term Weakens deterrence against environmental violations. Could reduce the effectiveness of the EIA regime. Raises doubts about India’s commitment to sustainable development jurisprudence. Conclusion The case is a classic environment vs. economy conflict. Reflects movement from strong judicial environmentalism (Oka–Bhuyan approach) to pragmatic judicial balancing (Gavai–Chandran approach). Highlights the institutional tension between environmental rule of law and economic governance. What can local bodies expect from the 16th FC?  Why is it in News? On November 17, the 16th Finance Commission submitted its report to the President of India. Key expectations: Vertical devolution (share of Union taxes to States) and Horizontal distribution formula across States (Article 280). Important focus: recommendations for panchayat & municipal finances (Art. 280(3)(bb) & (c)). Relevance GS 2: Polity & Governance (73rd/74th Amendments, fiscal decentralisation, local government) GS 3: Economy (fiscal federalism, vertical–horizontal devolution, public finance) GS 2: Centre–State Relations (role of Union FC vs SFCs) Constitutional Framework for Finance Commissions Union Finance Commission (UFC) – Article 280 Constituted every 5 years. Mandate includes: Vertical & horizontal tax devolution. Measures to strengthen State finances. Augment the Consolidated Fund of States for panchayats & municipalities. State Finance Commissions (SFCs) – 73rd & 74th Amendments Each State must set up an SFC every 5 years. Recommends: Local share in State taxes. Assignment of revenue handles. Conditional/unconditional grants. Devolution of functions & functionaries. Local Governments: Functional & Fiscal Architecture Functions Assigned through the 11th Schedule (29 subjects) for panchayats & 12th Schedule (18 subjects) for municipalities. However: These lists are illustrative, not mandatory. States decide actual functional assignments → wide inter-State variation. Revenue Powers Local bodies collect: Property tax Advertisement tax Market fee, tolls, user charges, etc. But large mismatch exists between: Revenue capacity Expenditure responsibilities (water, sanitation, public health, rural roads, asset maintenance). Impact States often assign functions without funds & staff → Operational inefficiency Dependence on higher-level transfers Weak service delivery Fiscal deficits at local levels. Role & Challenges of SFCs Over 100 SFC reports submitted across States. Major issues: Delays in constitution & report submission. Poor record of acceptance by State legislatures. Recommendations often ignored or partially implemented. Result: local bodies must rely heavily on Union FC transfers, not States. What Previous Union Finance Commissions Did Key Pattern Six UFCs have issued local government recommendations so far. Persistent issues: Could not quantify actual resource needs of 2.7 lakh panchayats & 5,000 municipalities. Relied on ad hoc lump-sum grants. 13th FC (Turned Point) Introduced formula-based transfers: Grant as a percentage of the divisible pool. Rationale: Inflation neutrality Buoyancy with Union tax revenues Consulted legal experts; pushed for predictable growth-linked transfers. 14th & 15th FCs (Reversal of 13th FC Approach) Returned to lump-sum grants. Introduced conditionalities: “Basic” (unconditional) “Performance-based” (conditional) Problem: Each FC changed reform conditions, creating discontinuity. 13th FC: 6 conditions (mostly unmet by States). 14th FC: new and unrelated set of conditions. 15th FC: different conditions again. Core Issues in Local Government Fiscal Federalism 1. Vertical–Horizontal Imbalance Local governments do not have predictable, adequate revenue streams. Functional responsibilities grow but revenue handles remain restricted. 2. Assignment Problem No dedicated constitutional list for: Local functions Local revenue sources States exercise wide discretion → fiscal asymmetry. 3. Overdependence on Union FC Weak SFC implementation forces panchayats/municipalities to rely on central transfers. 4. Conditionality Instability Reform-linked grants change every 5 years → No continuity No long-term incentive alignment. What Is Expected from the 16th Finance Commission? Move beyond ad hoc or lump-sum grants. Assess actual resource requirements of 2.7 lakh panchayats & 5,000 municipalities. Provide stable, formula-driven, buoyancy-linked transfers. Standardise performance conditions instead of frequent redesign. Strengthen local bodies as institutions of: Economic development Social justice Comprehensive Significance Strengthens decentralised governance, core to the 73rd & 74th Amendments. Potentially creates India’s first consistent, long-term local fiscal framework. Aligns local governance with national goals: Drinking water Sanitation Public health Rural/urban infrastructure. What changes are planned for the plant variety Act?  Why is it in News? Union Agriculture Minister announced that the Centre will amend the PPV&FRA Act, 2001. A committee headed by R.S. Paroda (appointed by the PPVFR Authority) has begun stakeholder consultations. Aim: update the 20-year-old Act in light of technological changes, trade dynamics, and evolving farmers’ needs. Relevance GS 3: Agriculture (seed systems, breeders’ rights, farmers’ rights) GS 3: IPR in Agriculture (PPV&FRA, UPOV pressures, TRIPS compliance) GS 2: Governance (regulatory institutions, stakeholder concerns) What Is the PPV&FRA Act, 2001? India’s sui generis law under TRIPS to protect plant varieties and recognise farmers’ rights. Ensures: Breeders’ rights Farmers’ rights to save, use, sow, resow, exchange, share or sell farm seeds (but not branded varieties) Benefit sharing Protection of traditional varieties Establishes the Protection of Plant Varieties & Farmers’ Rights Authority (PPVFRA). Why Amend the Act Now? Two decades of scientific & technological change: Tissue culture Synthetic seeds Hybrids and genotype combinations New trade realities, IPR pressures, and global norms. Need to address deficiencies, ambiguities, and implementation gaps. What the Paroda Committee Is Examining ? Definitions & Scope Redefining “variety” to include “combination of genotypes” (align with Seeds Bill 2019). Expanding the definition of “seed” to include: Seedlings Tubers, bulbs, rhizomes Roots, tissue culture plantlets Synthetic seeds Vegetatively propagated materials Defining “institution” under “breeder” to include public & private entities. DUS Test (Distinctness, Uniformity, Stability) Considering inclusion of trait-based criteria in DUS guidelines. Review of procedural integrity due to allegations of improper DUS testing in some cases (e.g., njavara paddy variety). Abusive Acts Proposal to legally define and criminalise “abusiveacts” such as: Producing/selling varieties with identical denominations Marketing/importing/exporting deceptive varieties Aim: prevent fraud, confusion, and misappropriation. Concerns Raised by Farmer Groups 1. Protection of Community-Developed Seeds Demand for mandatory registration of all community-developed seeds. Warning: varieties passing DUS tests should not be registered under an individual or private company, to prevent monopolisation. 2. Fear of Misuse of DUS Process Allegations of improper DUS evaluation (e.g., njavara). Concern: weak oversight may enable private appropriation of farmers’ varieties. 3. Small Peasantry & IPR Fit Many small farmers see seeds as shared biocultural commons, not IPR objects. Fear: amendments may tilt law towards exclusive economic rights, incompatible with farmer traditions. 4. Global IPR Pressure Civil society warns about attempts to align Indian law closer to UPOV norms. Risk: erosion of India’s farmer-friendly sui generis architecture. 5. Incomplete Compensation Mechanisms Although the original Act provides for compensation when IP-protected seeds fail, Rules do not detail criteria or enforcement, leaving farmers unprotected. Comprehensive Overview A. Legal & Policy Significance PPV&FRA is globally applauded for balancing breeders’ rights and farmers’ rights. Amendments risk shifting equilibrium towards industry interests if not carefully designed. Defining “abusive acts” is critical for seed market integrity. B. Technological Imperatives Modern breeding technologies require updated definitions to avoid grey zones. Inclusion of tissue culture and synthetic seeds expands the law’s coverage. C. Farmers’ Rights Concerns Community stewardship is central to India’s seed culture. Registration of community varieties under private names can create biopiracy risks. D. Governance & Regulatory Gaps DUS testing lacks transparency; uniformity needed across centres. Lack of clear compensation mechanisms reduces accountability of seed companies. E. International Context Many countries are experimenting with open-source seed systems to keep local varieties outside restrictive IPR regimes. India may need hybrid models to protect diversity while encouraging innovation. Way Forward Transparent, participatory amendments with strong farmer representation. Strengthen DUS protocols and grievance mechanisms. Ensure open-source / commons-based protection for traditional varieties. Clearly define compensation criteria for seed failure. Maintain India’s sui generis character, resisting pressure to mimic UPOV. DPDP Rules 2025 — Separate Section for  Persons with Disabilities Why in News ? Disability rights groups objected to the draft DPDP Rules that clubbed persons with disabilities (PwDs) with children for guardian-based consent. Ministry of Electronics & IT revised the final Rules (2025), creating a separate section for PwDs, removing them from child-specific restrictions. Relevance : GS 2: Governance (data protection, rights-based policymaking, digital consent) GS 2: Vulnerable Sections (PwD rights, RPWD Act 2016, UNCRPD) GS 2: Social Justice (disability autonomy, preventing structural discrimination) Basics DPDP Act, 2023: Governs digital personal data processing based on consent and purpose limitation. Draft Rules: Initially treated PwDs and children similarly regarding online consent. Issue: PwDs are a diverse group; many can independently manage digital interactions. What Has Changed ? PwDs no longer fall under child-specific restrictions such as: Mandatory parental consent for online activities. Restrictions on behavioural monitoring or targeted advertising. Separate consent framework created specifically for PwDs. Why the Change Matters ? Recognises autonomy and adult legal status of PwDs. Avoids structural discrimination caused by equating disability with legal incapacity. Aligns with the RPWD Act, 2016 and UNCRPD principles. Key Issues Still Unresolved No Illustrations Provided: Unlike the children’s section, the PwD section lacks examples for: Situations requiring guardian consent. Situations where independent consent is valid. How platforms should assess capacity in digital environments. Ambiguity in Guardianship Law: The rules do not clarify whether: NT Act, 1999 (based on “decision-making incapacity”), or RPWD Act, 2016 (supports autonomy) should guide guardianship decisions. Incomplete Operational Guidance: No clarity on: Verification of guardianship status. Dispute resolution if a platform doubts the guardian’s legitimacy. Treatment of persons with psychosocial disabilities with fluctuating capacity. Concerns from Activists and Civil Society Treating PwDs as a vulnerable group without safeguards risks paternalism. Lack of illustrations leaves service providers uncertain, leading to over-cautious blocking of PwDs’ access. Many small and marginalised PwD communities may not understand techno-legal implications. Fear that outdated NT Act provisions may be used to override autonomy. Positive Outcomes of the Revision Restores rights to personalised services such as: Assistive technologies relying on behavioural patterns. Targeted content for screen-reader or accessibility purposes. Eliminates unnecessary parental/guardian gatekeeping for adult PwDs. Indicates a consultative, responsive government policy process. Way Forward Provide detailed guidelines/illustrations for: Consent for different disability categories. Supported decision-making mechanisms. Online guardian verification. Amend the DPDP Act wording itself, which still groups children and PwDs together. Harmonise guardianship standards: Prioritise RPWD Act (2016) over NT Act (1999) to comply with UNCRPD. The Rare Ginkgo-Toothed Beaked Whale  Why in news? Scientists recorded the first-ever sighting in the wild of the ginkgo-toothed beaked whale (Mesoplodon ginkgodens) off Baja California, Mexico. Findings published in Marine Mammal Science. Species previously known almost entirely from rare stranding records. Relevance : GS 3: Environment & Biodiversity (marine species, deep-sea ecology, conservation challenges) GS 3: Science & Tech – Ecology Research (species discovery, behavioural ecology) Basics Species: Mesoplodon ginkgodens. Family: Ziphiidae (beaked whales). Group significance: Beaked whales are the second-most diverse group of cetaceans after dolphins. Habitat: Deep ocean; extremely elusive; surface only briefly. Key features of ginkgo-toothed beaked whale Name origin: Teeth shaped like ginkgo leaves. Size: Up to 17.3 ft (both sexes). Body characteristics: Robust build. Less heavily scarred than other beaked whales → suggests less male–male aggression or tooth-related external impacts. Rarity: Extremely difficult to observe alive; known mostly from sparse stranding data. Behavioural & ecological significance Deepest-diving mammals: Dive thousands of metres. Stay underwater for very long durations. Surface only briefly. Shy species → avoid boats, difficult to study. Importance for deep-sea ecosystem studies: Indicators of deep-ocean health. Crucial for understanding cetacean evolution and diving physiology. Scientific importance of the sighting First high-quality field documentation of the species. Enhances understanding of: Distribution. Behaviour. Morphological variation. Conservation needs. Helps fill major data gaps in Mesoplodon genus biology. Threats & conservation context Vulnerabilities: Bycatch. Marine noise pollution (sonar). Prospective deep-sea mining. Climate-linked habitat shifts. Conservation challenge: Extremely limited population data due to cryptic behaviour. Glass vs PET: Alcobev Sector Rethinks Packaging Strategy  Why in news ? Alcobev industry shifting toward PET and aseptic packaging due to glass price volatility, furnace shutdowns, and supply disruptions. Supreme Court objected to pocket-sized liquor packs, calling them deceptive and dangerous. Relevance GS 3: Economy (industrial supply chains, cost pressures, market shifts) GS 3: Environment (recyclability, waste management, circular economy) GS 3: Science & Tech (packaging materials, rPET technology) Packaging types Glass: Premium image, inert, recyclable. High cost, breakage risk, volatile supply. PET: Lower cost, lightweight, easier logistics. Environmental concerns; weaker premium perception. Aseptic / multilayered board packs: Used in low-end segments; harder to counterfeit. Under Supreme Court scrutiny for safety/deception concerns. rPET: Recycled PET; costlier than virgin PET currently. Improves supply stability; strengthens circular economy. Market context Mass-market in Karnataka uses ~80% multilayered board due to dominance of low-end segments. UP and Karnataka widely use aseptic packs; Kerala, AP, Maharashtra, Telangana use PET. Some states lack excise provisions for formats like rPET. Economic drivers Glass pricing volatility: Furnace shutdowns → cross-regional sourcing → higher freight (e.g., United Spirits). Capacity > demand (e.g., Radico Khaitan) but utilisation remains uneven. Prices stable now but historically unpredictable → margin risks. Cost pressures: Rising packaging costs push companies toward alternatives. PET lowers logistics cost and breakage losses. rPET offers long-term stability but not yet margin-improving. Industry adjustments Long-term vendor contracts and alternative sourcing to manage inflationary pressures. Migration to PET for low-end brands to preserve wafer-thin margins. Premium and mid-segment brands retain glass for brand positioning and consumer preference. Regulatory angle Supreme Court concern: Pocket-sized liquor packs resemble juice boxes → misleading and unsafe. Anti-counterfeit considerations: Multilayered packs reduce revenue leakages. State-level divergence on PET acceptance due to environmental considerations. Environmental perspectives Glass: Infinitely recyclable but suffers from poor collection and reprocessing in India. PET/rPET: Lower transport emissions; potential circularity; pollution risks persist. rPET expected to become cost-competitive as ecosystem scales. Structural vs cyclical changes Packaging shift considered structural, not tied to temporary glass price volatility. Drivers: Supply stability, logistics optimisation, anti-counterfeit needs, and predictable long-term costs.

Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 18 November 2025

Content DPDP Rules, 2025 Notified Powering the AVGC-XR Revolution DPDP Rules, 2025 Notified Why in News? Government notified the Digital Personal Data Protection (DPDP) Rules, 2025 on 14 November 2025, completing the operationalisation of the DPDP Act, 2023. Rules framed after nationwide consultations receiving 6,915 public inputs. Relevance : GS2 (Governance) Implements DPDP Act → strengthens citizen privacy rights and grievance systems. Regulates State–citizen data relationship; aligns with right to privacy (Art. 21). GS2 (Polity & Law) Operationalises a major digital rights law; impacts RTI–privacy balance. Establishes Digital Data Protection Board. GS3 (Cybersecurity) Mandatory breach reporting; stronger data security norms. Reduces cyber vulnerabilities across digital platforms. Basics: DPDP Act, 2023 – Foundation Enacted on 11 August 2023 to create a full framework for digital personal data protection. Based on SARAL design: Simple, Accessible, Rational, Actionable. Establishes: – Data Fiduciary – Data Principal – Data Processor – Consent Manager – Data Protection Board Core principles: consent, transparency, purpose limitation, data minimisation, accuracy, storage limitation, security safeguards, accountability. Penalties: – Up to ₹250 crore for failure to maintain security safeguards. – Up to ₹200 crore for breach notifications or violation of obligations related to children. – Up to ₹50 crore for other violations. Why DPDP Rules, 2025 Were Needed To operationalise the Act with granular procedures. To create uniform standards for consent, breach notification, grievance redressal. To ensure citizen-centricity, legal clarity, and predictable compliance frameworks for industry. Key Features of DPDP Rules, 2025 A. Phased Implementation 18-month compliance window for gradual adoption.Mandatory separate consent notices: plain language, purpose-specific. Consent Managers must be India-based companies. B. Personal Data Breach Protocols Mandatory immediate notice to affected individuals. Notice must explain: nature of breach, harm, mitigation measures, help contacts. Parallel reporting to the Data Protection Board. C. Transparency & Accountability Requirements Data Fiduciaries must display clear contact information (designated officer/DPO). Significant Data Fiduciaries (SDFs): – Independent audits. – Data Protection Impact Assessments (DPIAs). – Stricter oversight for AI, biometrics, sensitive technologies. – Government-mandated obligations for restricted datasets (including possible local storage). D. Strengthening Rights of Data Principals Rights operationalised through explicit timelines and formats: – Access, correction, update, erasure rights. – Right to receive copies of personal data. – Right to nominate another person. Mandatory response within 90 days by Data Fiduciaries. E. Digital-First Data Protection Board 4-member, fully digital Board: – Online complaint filing. – Case tracking via portal & mobile app. Appeals to TDSAT. How DPDP Rules Empower Citizens Consent-centric model: explicit, informed, withdrawable anytime. Clear visibility into what data is collected and why. Data lifecycle rights: access, correction, update, erasure. Early breach alerts → empowers citizens to mitigate harm. Designated grievance contact mandatory for all organisations. Enhanced safeguards for: – Children: verifiable parental consent (exceptions: healthcare, education, real-time safety). – Persons with disabilities: lawful guardian consent where required. Alignment with the RTI Act DPDP revises Section 8(1)(j) of RTI to integrate privacy protections. Based on SC’s Puttaswamy (2017) judgment – privacy as a fundamental right. Protects personal information while preserving transparency regime. Section 8(2) RTI continues to allow disclosure when public interest outweighs privacy harm. Removes ambiguity between privacy rights vs. right to access public information. Implications for Stakeholders A. Citizens Stronger control → consent, correction, deletion, nomination. Enhanced breach transparency. Simplified grievance redressal. B. Businesses & Startups Longer compliance runway (18 months). Reduced ambiguity through standardised notices and timelines. Higher compliance cost for SDFs due to audits & DPIAs. C. Government Strengthens trust in digital governance. Builds regulatory capacity via digital Board. Harmonises national privacy regime with global best practices. Comparison with Global Frameworks Similar to GDPR in consent, breach reporting, principals’ rights. More simplified and India-specific: SARAL, 90-day response period, lighter obligations for MSMEs. Less categorisation of data (no “sensitive data” category unlike GDPR). Critical Analysis Strengths: – Clarity, plain language, graded obligations. – Faster enforcement via digital processes. – Strong penalties ensure deterrence. Concerns: – Government power to mandate storage/restricted processing may raise surveillance concerns. – Absence of independent DPA (Board appointed by govt). – Child consent requirements may burden edtech, gaming sectors. – No localisation as default → cross-border flows depend on govt notifications. Powering the AVGC-XR Revolution Why in News? PIB released a detailed update on India’s AVGC-XR ecosystem, highlighting IICT’s operationalisation, global partnerships, WAVES Summit outcomes, state-level AVGC policies, and rapid expansion of India’s creative-tech economy. India positions the AVGC-XR sector as a core driver of its USD 100 billion media & entertainment vision for 2030. Relevance : GS2 (Governance) IICT, AVGC Task Force, and new policies shaping India’s creative-tech ecosystem. Reforms under Cinematograph (Amendment) Act, 2023. GS3 (Economy) Sunrise sector; M&E industry projected to cross USD 100 bn. High employment and export potential. GS3 (Science & Tech) Growth of AR/VR/XR, virtual production, real-time rendering. Collaboration with global tech firms (Meta, Google, NVIDIA). Basics: AVGC-XR Sector AVGC-XR = Animation, Visual Effects (VFX), Gaming, Comics, Extended Reality (AR/VR/MR). Role: High-value digital content, tech-driven storytelling, global outsourcing hub, cultural diplomacy, innovation backbone for media & entertainment. India’s Media & Entertainment (M&E) Sector – Snapshot Sunrise industry; projected to cross USD 100 billion by 2030. Current projection: ₹3,067 billion by 2027 (CAGR ~7%). Contributes significantly to GVA and job creation. Cost advantage: 40–60% in VFX/animation vis-à-vis global studios. 25% OTT viewership from overseas, boosting India’s soft power. Strategic Pillars Driving Growth Talent Development: Skilling, global-standard curricula, industry tie-ups. Infrastructure: Production clusters, AVGC hubs, NCoE, IICT. Innovation & Industry: Start-up accelerators, XR applications, co-productions. Inclusive Participation: Regional language content & creative clusters. Genesis of the AVGC-XR Push 2022: AVGC Promotion Task Force formed; recommended National AVGC-XR Mission with “Create in India” focus. Projection: ~20 lakh direct/indirect jobs in 10 years. Aim: Make India a global digital content creation hub. IICT – Indian Institute of Creative Technologies Institutional Milestones May 2025: IICT formalised as Section 8 not-for-profit company. Global partners: Google, Meta, YouTube, NVIDIA, Adobe, Microsoft, Wacom, JioStar. July 2025: Courses launched; MoU with University of York for global benchmarking. July 18, 2025: First campus inaugurated at NFDC Complex, Mumbai (Budget: ₹400 crore). August 2025: WaveX Startup Incubator launched – first cohort of 15 start-ups. October 2025: MoU with FICCI + Netflix under Netflix Fund for Creative Equity. Functions Skilling + R&D + incubation + industry-education integration. Globally benchmarked content-creation & tech curriculum. National Centre of Excellence (NCoE) for AVGC-XR Approved 2024; apex national body for training, research, industry collaboration. Modern curriculum, joint R&D, global linkages. State-Level Policy Momentum Karnataka – AVGC-XR Policy 2024–29 Skilling ecosystem, incubation, export competitiveness, clusters. Maharashtra – AVGC-XR Policy 2025 (₹3,268 crore) Long-term roadmap till 2050. Focus on investments, jobs, dedicated production clusters. Key Policy and Legislative Reforms 1. Cinematograph (Amendment) Act, 2023 Anti-piracy (Sections 6AA & 6AB): Jail up to 3 years; fines up to 5% of audited production cost. Government empowered to direct intermediaries to remove pirated content. Permanent film certification + age-based categories. Supports content integrity + industry growth. 2. National Broadcasting Policy (Under formulation) Framework for content diversity, competition, ethical standards. Promotes digital broadcasting, IP protection, global presence. 3. India Cine Hub (NFDC) Single-window clearance for film shooting in India. Integrates permissions + incentives → boosts India’s film facilitation ecosystem. WAVES – World Audio Visual & Entertainment Summit (2025) Inaugural edition: 1–4 May 2025, Mumbai. PM inaugurated; global participation. Outcomes: WAVES Declaration on Global Media Cooperation. ₹1,328 crore business pipeline. ₹50 crore investment pool for WaveX startups. India positioned as global M&E hub under Viksit Bharat 2047. Technological Evolution & Impact Early VFX capability: Ra.One (2011), Baahubali (2015), Brahmastra (2022). Current capabilities: real-time rendering, volumetric capture, virtual production. Indian studios now handle high-end global projects. Global Projects Handled by Indian Studios Avatar: 200+ VFX shots. Game of Thrones: Dragon animations. Thor: The Dark World: Major VFX work. RRR: 2,800+ VFX shots; sophisticated workflows. Skilling & Workforce Development MESC leading training, competency standards, modular courses. Produces employable workforce in animation, VFX, gaming, XR, post-production. Innovation and Enterprise Gaming Industry Indian titles gaining traction: BGMI, FAU-G, Indus Battle Royale, Raji. Growing investor interest; shift from outsourcing → IP creation. Comics & Indian IPs Classic characters (Suppandi, Chacha Chaudhary, Shikkari Shambhu) being adapted into animation and series. Strong potential for transmedia storytelling. Academic–Industry Convergence IICT + NCoE + state-level clusters. Joint research, industry-designed curricula, incubation for media-tech startups. WaveX + T-Hub partnership → innovation hubs for AVGC-XR. The Road Ahead Animation & VFX Fiscal incentives + CoEs to position India as post-production hub. Global co-productions & IP-led animation. Gaming & eSports Structured tournaments + ethical frameworks. Start-up funding for gaming ed-tech, med-tech, health-tech applications. XR & Immersive Tech Scale XR in education, defence, tourism, healthcare. Standards for accessibility & interoperability. Comics & Digital IP Digitisation + new franchises + cross-platform storytelling. Strong alignment with cultural heritage. Cross-Sectoral Enablers Integrate AVGC-XR into higher education & vocational training. National talent registry + certification standards. IP protection, co-production treaties, global market access. “Create in India” + “Brand India” promotion for digital content exports.

Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 18 November 2025

Content The lower judiciary — litigation, pendency, stagnation India–Africa Relations: Ten Years After IAFS-III  The lower judiciary — litigation, pendency, stagnation Why in News? Constitution Bench led by the CJI linked massive pendency (4.69 crore cases in district courts) to stagnation in subordinate judiciary. Another SC Bench flagged poor basic knowledge among Delhi judges and ordered training. Debate revived on structural reforms, procedural simplification, and judicial capacity-building. Relevance GS-II (Polity & Governance): Judicial reforms, pendency, subordinate courts, Article 233–235, access to justice. GS-II (Welfare & Governance): Impact of procedural delays on citizens, rule of law. GS-II (Judiciary): Capacity-building, training, structural reforms, case management. Practice Questions Discuss the structural and procedural causes of pendency in India’s subordinate judiciary. Suggest reforms to improve trial court efficiency.(250 Words) Basics: Structure of Subordinate Judiciary Three tiers: District Judges → Senior Civil Judges → Civil Judges (Junior Division). Governance: Appointments and service conditions under Art. 233–235, controlled by High Courts. Workload: Handle 85–90% of India’s total caseload; first point of citizen–justice interface. Pendency drivers: Delays in summons, adjournments, procedural complexity, understaffing, lack of training. Core Problem 1: Ministerial Work Consumes Judicial Time Subordinate judges forced to: Call cases for appearance Issue/reissue summons Receive vakalatnamas, written statements Morning session (10:30 AM–12 PM) consumed by clerical duties → little time left for hearing matters on merits. Quality judicial hours lost daily → slows trials and judgments. Proposed Reform Appoint a ministerial judicial officer (lowest rank) per district: Handles clerical/administrative tasks full day Records ex-parte evidence, issues summons, receives filings Prepares next-day cause list for each court; publish online Actual courts start trial work at 10:30 AM → improves output and judgments. Core Problem 2: Declining Quality of Subordinate Judges Earlier: District munsifs/magistrates selected from lawyers with 10+ years of mentorship & practice. Now: Fresh graduates with no court experience → struggle with drafting orders, managing courtroom. SC noted “lack of basic knowledge” → ordered mandatory training for Delhi judges. Proposed Reform Mandatory few-month training at High Court Benches: Observe hearings, order-writing, argument structure Learn judgment reading & case management culture Raises competence, reduces poor orders, cuts unnecessary appeals. Core Problem 3: Statutory Provisions Increasing, Not Reducing, Pendency (a) Commercial Courts Act – Section 12A (Pre-suit Mediation) Mandatory mediation before filing commercial suits (Patil Automation, 2022). Business disputes already involve pre-litigation notice → mandatory mediation adds delay. Suit filing gets blocked → increases pendency. (b) Marriage Laws – 6-Month Cooling-off Couples wanting quick mutual consent divorce are forced to wait, unless court waives period. Many courts don’t waive → false declarations about “one-year separation” → more litigation. (c) New Rent Act Confusion Conflicting rulings on whether rent court has jurisdiction without registered lease. Same facts → civil court/commercial court jurisdiction, but not rent court. Result: Forum confusion and fresh filings → pendency rises. Core Problem 4: Archaic & Complex Procedural Law (CPC) Key flaws Preliminary & final decree system in partition suits → doubles litigation. Execution proceedings (Order XXI – 106 rules) highly technical → tools for delaying decree implementation. Order VIII Rule 1 (90-day limit on written statement): Rigid for title suits; does not speed disposal. Leads to poorly drafted pleadings, not faster justice. Needed Reforms Merge preliminary–final decrees; make final decree automatic. Simplify execution proceedings; introduce fast-track enforcement. Introduce asset disclosure at framing of issues → speeds recovery. Modernise procedural law designed for 1908 litigation realities. Core Problem 5: Higher Judiciary’s Role Pendency not just a trial court issue—appellate delays also cause stagnation. Need: Faster disposal of appeals Stricter adjournment norms Monitoring of High Court case management Way Forward Create ministerial courts for summons/filings. Recruit experienced lawyers as trial judges (reverse current trend). Mandatory High Court bench exposure for new judges. Overhaul procedural law (CPC, Rent Act, Commercial Courts Act). Fast-track execution of decrees & arbitration awards. Digital cause-lists, e-summons, video evidence recording. Increase judge-to-population ratio (India: ~21 judges per million; global avg: 50+). Fill vacancies quickly; periodic performance reviews. India–Africa Relations: Ten Years After IAFS-III Why is it in News? A decade has passed since India hosted IAFS-III in 2015, the last India–Africa Forum Summit attended by all 54 African states. India has since expanded missions, investments, and diplomatic engagement, but the IAFS mechanism has not reconvened. Strategic review needed as Africa gains demographic, economic, and geopolitical weight; India–Africa ties entering new competitive and opportunity-rich phase. Relevance GS-II (International Relations): India–Africa partnership, South–South cooperation, diplomacy. GS-II (Global Governance): AU in G20, India’s role in multilateral forums. GS-III (Economy): Trade, investments, digital corridor, AfCFTA. GS-III (Security): Maritime cooperation, Indo-Pacific, anti-piracy. Practice Questions IAFS has not met since 2015. Critically analyse the implications for India’s long-term Africa strategy.(250 Words) Basics: India–Africa Forum Summit (IAFS) Institutional platform for structured India–Africa partnership. Held in 2008 (Delhi), 2011 (Addis Ababa), 2015 (Delhi). Themes: capacity building, grants, Lines of Credit (LoCs), training, education, agriculture, energy, digital connectivity. Status of India–Africa Engagement Since 2015 Diplomatic Expansion 17 new Indian missions opened across Africa. India supports African Union’s global role → key in securing AU’s full G20 membership. Economic Links Trade crossed $100 bn. Cumulative investments: $75 bn, placing India among Africa’s top five investors. Shift from resource-led projects to co-creation: ports, grids, vaccines, digital tools. Strategic & Maritime Cooperation 2025: First Africa–India Key Maritime Engagement (AIKEYME) with nine African navies. Focus on Indo-Pacific, anti-piracy, maritime domain awareness. Development Partnerships EXIM Bank extended $40 mn line of credit to ECOWAS Bank → signalling support for African-led development. Knowledge partnerships strengthened (ITEC, ICCR, Pan-African e-Network). Education & People-to-People IIT Madras Zanzibar campus → first offshore IIT. 40,000 Africans trained in India in the last decade. African students, athletes, researchers increasingly visible in India → reciprocal people-to-people linkages. Opportunities: The Growth Corridor By 2050: 1 in 4 humans will be African, while India becomes the 3rd largest economy. Complementary strengths: Africa’s demography + India’s technology Africa’s markets + India’s industry Shared colonial history + Global South leadership AfCFTA is creating a single African market → opportunities for Indian manufacturing and digital finance. Challenges India lags behind China in trade volume and infrastructure presence. Indian firms face: Small balance sheets Slow execution Policy uncertainty Bureaucratic delays Africa’s innovation hubs (Kigali, Nairobi, Lagos) face intense global competition → India must move faster. Sectoral Priorities for the Next Decade 1. Co-invest in Future Sectors Green hydrogen Electric mobility Digital public infrastructure Vaccine & pharma manufacturing Agritech & food processing 2. Build an India–Africa Digital Corridor Combine India Stack/UPI with Africa’s mobile-first digital ecosystems. Joint platforms for: Tele-education Tele-health Payments Government services 3. Strengthen Institutional Mechanisms Revive IAFS-IV to reset long-term agenda. Annual ministerial consultations, thematic working groups (health, digital, energy). India’s Competitive Advantage Historical goodwill; no colonial baggage. Affordable technology and capacity-building model. Strong diaspora links and educational exchanges. Soft power: Bollywood, cricket, yoga, healthcare. Core Strategic Logic Africa’s rise is inevitable; India’s rise is ongoing → convergence creates a South–South Growth Corridor. India–Africa partnership must shift from donor–recipient to co-creation and co-investment. Delivery, not mere announcements, will define the next phase.

Daily Current Affairs

Current Affairs 18 November 2025

Content Ladakh Groups Submit Draft Proposal to MHA on Statehood & 6th Schedule Status Social Audit for SIR 2.0 Trajectory of Anti-Rape Laws in India Batukeshwar Dutt National Gopal Ratna Awards (NGRA) 2024–25 Digital Labour Chowk, LCFCs & New Cess Portal UNESCO’s Global Ethics Framework on Neurotechnology Ladakh Groups Submit Draft Proposal to MHA on Statehood & 6th Schedule Status Why in News? Leh Apex Body (LAB) and allied groups submitted a 29-page draft proposal to the MHA demanding: Statehood for Ladakh Sixth Schedule status General amnesty for those arrested after September 24 violence Release of climate activist Sonam Wangchuk, detained under the NSA. Negotiations between Ladakhi groups and MHA stalled in September after Wangchuk’s hunger strike. Relevance : GS2: Polity & Governance Centre–State relations, Union Territories without legislature Sixth Schedule, Tribal rights, Constitutional safeguards Democratic deficit, decentralisation, federalism GS3: Internal Security Governance in border regions (LAC with China) NSA use, civil society movements, environmental activism GS1 (Society) Tribal identity, cultural preservation in Himalayan regions Governance Structure of Ladakh Became a Union Territory (UT) without legislature after J&K Reorganisation Act, 2019. Administration controlled by: Lieutenant Governor (LG) Two Autonomous Hill Development Councils: Leh Hill Council Kargil Hill Council No elected Assembly — demand for democratic deficit & resource control. What is the Sixth Schedule? Constitutional provision for tribal-majority areas ensuring: Autonomous District Councils with legislative, judicial and financial powers. Special protections over land, culture, natural resources. Applicable currently in Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, Mizoram. Why Ladakh Wants Sixth Schedule Status? Tribal population ≈ 90% (Scheduled Tribes). Fears over: Unregulated industrialisation Loss of land, culture, ecology External demographic pressures Sixth Schedule seen as stronger protection than current Hill Councils. Key Demands in the 29-Page Draft Proposal Full Statehood to ensure democratic governance. Sixth Schedule inclusion for constitutional protection of land & resources. General Amnesty for those arrested after September 24 clash in Leh. Immediate Release of Sonam Wangchuk detained under NSA. Resumption of stalled talks with clear timelines. Enhanced powers for local bodies, environmental protection, and tribal safeguards. Why the Issue Matters? Involves Centre-State relations, tribal rights, UT governance. Part of India’s border governance strategy with China. Reflects challenges in post-2019 reorganisation of J&K. Integrates themes of environmental activism, federalism, security law use (NSA). Challenges & Concern Areas Centre’s hesitation to grant 6th Schedule → precedent concerns for other UTs/states. Security implications due to location near LAC. Divergence between Leh (favors unionism) and Kargil (historically pro-statehood) narrowing, but still present. Rising youth discontent, seen in September 24 clashes. Potential Outcomes Going Forward MHA may: Offer enhanced powers under Ladakh Hill Councils Act instead of Sixth Schedule. Consider partial concessions (cultural & land safeguards) without full autonomy. Set timelines for institutional mechanisms like Tribes Advisory Council. If negotiations stall: More civil society mobilisations expected. International attention due to climate activism angle. Social Audit for SIR 2.0 Why in News? ECI initiated Special Intensive Revision (SIR) 2.0 across 12 States/UTs to reverify voter eligibility. The article warned that the Bihar experience shows potential mass disenfranchisement, particularly of women, Muslims, and migrants, threatening the integrity of electoral democracy. Relevance : GS2: Polity & Governance Electoral reforms, electoral roll accuracy ECI’s constitutional mandate, independence & accountability Social audits (constitutional backing: Local Bodies, transparency) What is Special Intensive Revision (SIR)? A documentation-heavy re-verification of existing voters. Requires fresh submission of documents proving: Identity Address (ordinary residence) Age eligibility Intended purpose: clean rolls, remove duplicates, update migrant data. Problem: No specific Rules, procedural clarity, or transparent oversight mechanism under existing electoral law. Legal Framework: Electoral Roll Revision Governed by Representation of the People Act, 1950. Section 19: Person must be “ordinarily resident” to be enrolled. Section 20: Defines “ordinaryresidence”, but outdated; does not recognise: Long-term migrants Short-term/seasonal workers Circular migrants SIR’s reliance on strict documentation → risks excluding these groups. Bihar Case Study: What Went Wrong? Evidence of Disenfranchisement Sharp drop in adult–elector ratio. Large-scale deletions of women and Muslim voters. Duplicate names, bogus entries, inconsistent deletions. People unable to produce documents → lost voting rights. Why It Became Controversial ? Exercise resembled a citizenship screening regime, not voter roll maintenance. Heavy burden placed on citizens rather than ECI/BLOs. Led to fear of stealth NRC-like filtration through electoral rolls. Institutional Issues Raised Election Commission of India (ECI) Allegations of: Lack of transparency Defensive posture in court filings Avoiding scrutiny Prioritising institutional authority over inclusive roll preparation Perception of declining impartiality and institutional credibility. Supreme Court Monitored the exercise but: Avoided ruling on legality of SIR powers. Allowed SIR to continue despite procedural deficiencies. Mitigated small inequities but did not address structural flaws. Risk of legitimising an unconstitutional framework with discriminatory outcomes. Vulnerability of Internal Migrants India has 450+ million internal migrants (Census projection-based estimates). Tamil Nadu flagged as a major concern due to high migrant worker population. Strict interpretation of “ordinary residence” → mass exclusions. SIR does not differentiate between types of migrants, leading to: Loss of franchise Distorted voter representation Urban–industrial disenfranchisement Democratic Implications Universal adult franchise depends on: Automatic, accurate enrollment No arbitrary deletions No documentation barriers SIR introduces burdens that shift responsibility from the State to citizens. High non-participation already exists: 30–40% do not vote; forcing reapplications worsens exclusion. Need for Mandatory Social Audit Concept Community-based verification of public records. Ensures transparency, accountability, and participation. Constitutional & Institutional Backing Articles 243A & 243J empower community monitoring. CAG formally endorses social audits as essential for mass programmes. Advantages for Electoral Roll Verification Ground-level correction by: Gram sabhas Ward sabhas Booth-level committees Ensures: Minimal manipulation Maximum inclusion Real-time correction of errors Historical Precedent (2003 Experiment) Conducted under CEC J.M. Lyngdoh. Decentralised social audits in 5 poll-bound States. In Rajasthan alone: 7 lakh corrections made after public audit. Demonstrated best practice for inclusive and transparent roll revision. Article’s Recommendation ECI must: Frame clear Rules for SIR. Make social audit mandatory. Consult civil society, political parties, and rights groups. Ensure that SIR 2.0 does not replicate Bihar’s exclusions. Trajectory of Anti-Rape Laws in India Why in News? Chief Justice of India B. R. Gavai publicly condemned the 1979 Supreme Court acquittal in the Tukaram v. State of Maharashtra (Mathura rape case), calling it an “institutional embarrassment.” CJI’s remarks highlight India’s evolving anti-rape legal framework, reforms in consent definitions, custodial rape protections, and contemporary changes under the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) 2023. Article traces the entire legal trajectory from 1972 to 2023, linking reforms to public outrage and judicial criticism. Relevance : GS2: Polity & Social Justice Evolution of criminal law, custodial violence, women’s safety laws BNS 2023 changes (gender neutrality, consent definition) Judicial interpretations shaping reforms (Mathura, Nirbhaya) GS1: Society (Women Issues) Gender norms, patriarchal biases in law enforcement Understanding the Mathura Rape Case (Tukaram Case, 1972–79) Survivor: Tribal girl, 14–16 years, sexually assaulted inside a police station by two policemen. Trial Court (1974): Disbelieved survivor, labeled her “habituated”; held no rape proven. Bombay High Court (1976): Convicted policemen, recognized power imbalance and coercion. Supreme Court (1979): Acquitted the accused, arguing: No injuries → “peaceful intercourse” Survivor “did not resist” Reflected a patriarchal, colonial-era understanding of consent. Turning Point: The 1979 Open Letter Written by: Upendra Baxi, Lotika Sarkar, Vasudha Dhagamwar, Raghunath Kelkar. Key arguments: Submission ≠ Consent Absence of resistance ≠ consent Court ignored: Power of police Survivor’s age Illegality of calling minor girls to police station at night Socio-economic vulnerability Sparked national protests → beginning of India’s modern women’s rights movement. Immediate Legal Reforms Triggered Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1983 Custodial rape created as a separate aggravated offence. Burden of proof shifted to the accused in custodial rape cases after intercourse is proved. Strengthened: Dowry Act penalties Family Courts First major statutory shift recognising coercive environments. Evolution Through Major Cases & Movements Nandini Satpathy Case (1978) Justice Krishna Iyer: Women cannot be summoned to police stations. Must be questioned at residence. Highlighted custodial vulnerabilities even before Mathura verdict. Bhanwari Devi Case & Vishaka Guidelines (1992–1997) Bhanwari Devi gangraped for stopping child marriage. Vishaka Guidelines (1997) laid foundational framework for workplace sexual harassment law. Recognised State obligation to ensure safe working spaces for women. Nirbhaya Case & Criminal Law Amendment Act, 2013 Rape-and-murder of a 22-year-old physiotherapy intern (Dec 2012). Massive protests → Justice J.S. Verma Committee → sweeping reforms: Definition of rape expanded beyond penetration. Police non-registration of FIR punishable. Hospitals mandated free treatment to survivors. Silence or “feeble no” ≠ consent. Age of consent raised to 18. Death penalty for extreme cases & repeat offenders. Unnao and Kathua Cases (2017–18) & Criminal Law Amendment Act, 2018 Unnao: MLA Kuldeep Sengar convicted for rape of a minor. Kathua: Minor girl gangraped and murdered. Reforms: Death penalty for rape of girls below 12 years. Minimum 20-year sentence for rape of girls below 16. Fast-tracked: Investigation: 2 months Trial: 2 months Appeals: 6 months Latest Phase: Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) 2023 Major overhaul replacing IPC. Key changes: Sexual offences made gender-neutral for victims and perpetrators. Gangrape of a woman below 18: death or life imprisonment. New offence: sexual intercourse under false pretences/false promise of marriage. Expanded definition of: Sexual harassment Non-consensual sexual acts not covered earlier Reflects modern understanding of consent and coercion. Themes Underlying India’s Legal Evolution Recognition of power asymmetry (custodial, caste, economic, institutional). Increasing acknowledgment that: Consent must be affirmative, voluntary. Lack of resistance is not consent. Greater victim-sensitive procedures: FIR rights Medical care Shifting burden in custodial cases Faster trials in minors’ cases Progressive move away from: Stereotypes about “chastity,” “habituality,” “conduct” Injury-based understanding of rape Challenges That Continue Low conviction rates (~27–33% nationally). Police bias, investigative lapses, hostile environments. Victim intimidation, delays in evidence collection. Need for: Better forensics Survivor support systems Gender-sensitisation of police and judiciary Batukeshwar Dutt Why in News? A recent article revisits the life, legacy, and neglect of Batukeshwar Dutt, co-revolutionary of Bhagat Singh, on the occasion of renewed debates around revolutionary memorialisation. Highlights the 1929 Central Assembly bombing, Dutt’s sacrifices, and the lack of adequate national recognition despite his central role. Relevance : GS1: Modern Indian History Revolutionary nationalism, HSRA, Central Assembly Bombing Freedom fighters’ contributions beyond textbook icons GS1: Heritage & Personalities Historical neglect, issues of memorialisation Basic Facts  Event: Central Assembly Bombing, April 8, 1929 (Delhi). Actors: Bhagat Singh & Batukeshwar Dutt (HSRA members). Objective: Protest against the Public Safety Bill & Trade Disputes Bill; aimed to “make the deaf hear”. Nature of Bombs: Harmless, non-lethal; intended for symbolic protest. Slogans: Inquilab Zindabad; Samrajyavad ka Nash Ho. Pamphlet: “To Make the Deaf Hear”. Outcome: Both arrested; life sentence for Dutt, death sentence later in Lahore Conspiracy Case for Bhagat Singh. Batukeshwar Dutt: Life & Background Born: 18 November 1910, Burdwan (Bengal). Joined HSRA as a young revolutionary; close associate of Bhagat Singh. Convicted in the Delhi Assembly Bomb Case (June 12, 1929); sentenced to transportation for life. Jail Years & Hunger Strikes Imprisoned in Multan, Jhelum, Trichinopoly, Salem, Andamans. Undertook multiple hunger strikes demanding political prisoner rights. Twice fasted over a month, highlighting prison brutality. Was in Salem Jail when Bhagat Singh, Rajguru, Sukhdev were executed (March 23, 1931). Post-Release Struggles Released in 1938; re-arrested in Quit India Movement (1942); jailed again for 4 years. Married Anjali; lived in Patna. Bihar govt allotted him a coal depot — economically unviable. President Rajendra Prasad urged support; resulted only in a token 6-month nomination to Bihar Legislative Council. Health Decline & Death Suffered from bone cancer (mid-1960s). Admitted to AIIMS Delhi; eight months of suffering. Plans to send him abroad dropped after assessment that Indian care was comparable. Died: 20 July 1965. Cremated at Hussainiwala, Punjab — beside Bhagat Singh, Rajguru, Sukhdev. Neglect vs Recognition Massive state funeral attended by President, PM, ministers, large public turnout. Yet no portrait of Bhagat Singh or Dutt in Parliament; contrast with Savarkar’s portrait being prominently placed. 2014 protests by MPs for inclusion of Bhagat Singh’s portrait; ignored. Dutt largely absent from school textbooks, memorials, public memory. Chaman Lal Azad’s Documentation Journalist and revolutionary; cared for Dutt during his final months. Wrote Urdu series compiled as Bhagat Singh aur Dutt ki Amar Kahani (1966). Contains: Bhagat Singh’s letters, statements, postcards. Gandhi’s letter to Dutt. Rare photographs with Nehru, Indira Gandhi. Dutt’s recollections of fellow revolutionaries (Hari Kishan Talwar, Ehsan Ilahi, etc.). Hindi translation commissioned but unpublished due to copyright issues. Revolutionary Network & Personal Bonds Close ties with Bhagat Singh’s family; Mata Vidyawati stayed with him in final days. She even sold a poetic manuscript to raise money for his treatment. Comrades like Shiv Verma, Kiran Das, and others remained with him. Leaders like Gulzari Lal Nanda, Y. B. Chavan, Jagjivan Ram visited, though recognition came mostly posthumously. Ideas & Ideological Contributions Shared Bhagat Singh’s vision of socialism, secularism, and class equality. Emphasised Singh’s intellectual depth — always reading, studying, debating ideology. Dutt criticised early films on Bhagat Singh for distortions; approved only Manoj Kumar’s “Shaheed” (1965). Key Takeaways Dutt’s journey reveals systemic neglect of revolutionaries post-independence. Highlights tensions between ideological preferences in official memorialisation. Shows how state narratives often sideline figures who challenge mainstream political icons. His life symbolises the unrewarded sacrifices of many lesser-known freedom fighters. Demonstrates the importance of archival preservation — many primary sources remain inaccessible. National Gopal Ratna Awards (NGRA) 2024–25 Why in News? Union Animal Husbandry Ministry announced winners of the National Gopal Ratna Awards (NGRA). Aravind Yashavant Patil (Kolhapur, Maharashtra) won the top award for Best Dairy Farmer – Indigenous Cattle/Buffalo Breeds. A total of 2,081 applications were received for the 2024–25 cycle. Awards will be presented on November 26. Relevance : GS3: Agriculture & Allied Sectors Dairy sector, livestock economy, indigenous breeds Breed improvement, fodder, veterinary infrastructure GS3: Economics (Rural Economy) Dairy cooperatives, SHGs, FPOs, rural livelihoods Basics  Ministry: Union Ministry of Fisheries, Animal Husbandry & Dairying. Launched under: National Programme for Bovine Breeding & Dairy Development (NPBBDD). Purpose: Promote indigenous bovine breeds, scientific dairy practices, and farmer-led breed conservation. Categories typically include: Best Dairy Farmer (Indigenous breeds) Best Artificial Insemination Technician Best Dairy Cooperative/SHG/Producer Company Best Dairy Entrepreneur Objectives of NGRA Encourage farmers to rear indigenous cattle and buffaloes. Promote breed improvement, genetic purity, and productivity enhancement. Reward best practices in animal management, feeding, disease control, clean milk production. Strengthen local germplasm conservation and sustainable dairy economy. Highlight role of dairy sector in rural livelihoods and nutritional security. Significance for Dairy Sector India is the world’s largest milk producer (~230+ million tonnes annually). Indigenous breeds (Gir, Sahiwal, Tharparkar, Red Sindhi, Murrah, Jaffarabadi etc.) are critical for: Higher disease resilience Lower maintenance cost Adaptation to climatic stress (heat stress + drought) Better A2 milk demand Awards push formalisation, quality improvement, and skill development among dairy workers. Recent Trends & Data Increasing shift toward indigenous breed improvement programmes, including: Rashtriya Gokul Mission National Kamdhenu Breeding Centres IVF & Embryo Transfer initiatives NGRA complements government’s push for breed conservation + commercial viability. Rising pan-India applications (2,081 this year) shows growing interest in scientific dairy farming. Governance & Implementation Angle Supports Atmanirbhar Bharat via livestock-based rural economy. Strengthens cooperatives, SHGs, and Farmer Producer Organisations. Encourages private sector and youth participation in dairy entrepreneurship. Recognises role of women dairy farmers, often the backbone of rural dairy work. Environmental & Sustainability Linkages Indigenous breeds help reduce climate vulnerability of rural dairy systems. Lower input requirements → lower carbon footprint vs exotic breeds. Promote pastoral, mixed-farming systems and biodiversity conservation. Issues & Criticisms Indigenous breeds often face: Lower productivity vs crossbreeds Inadequate veterinary infrastructure Fragmented breed conservation efforts Artificial insemination skill gaps Awards must be backed by financial support, extension services, fodder development, and market linkages. Digital Labour Chowk, LCFCs & New Cess Portal Why in News? The Construction Workers’ Federation of India (CWFI) criticised the Union Labour Ministry’s new digital initiatives: Digital Labour Chowk Portal & App Labour Felicitation Centres (LCFCs) Online Building and Construction Workers (BOCW) Cess Collection Portal CWFI alleges these measures aim to “de-unionise” workers, bypass unions, and strengthen employer control. Claims that these initiatives divert attention from the government’s failure to register workers and disburse accumulated welfare funds under the BOCW Act. Relevance : GS2: Governance Labour welfare laws, tripartism, de-unionisation debate Digital governance, welfare delivery reform GS3: Economy Informal sector, migrant labour, construction sector shape Cess utilisation & transparency Basics Building and Other Construction Workers (Regulation of Employment and Conditions of Service) Act, 1996 Mandates: Registration of construction workers. Safety, welfare, social security benefits. Funded through 1% cess on construction cost collected from employers. Key Institutions Central/State BOCW Welfare Boards → responsible for worker registration, fund management, benefit distribution. Cess Collection Portal (new) → digitises employer payments, compliance, and transparency. Digital Labour Chowk → digital job-matching platform for construction labour. What the New Digital Initiatives Do Digital Labour Chowk Portal & App Online marketplace connecting workers & contractors. Digitises hiring, attendance, wage flow, and worker profiles. Intended to reduce middlemen and informal negotiation. Labour Felicitation Centres (LCFCs) Physical centres for onboarding workers, grievance redress, digital literacy. Online BOCW Cess Collection Portal Streamlines cess payment. Reduces leakages and manual delays. CWFI’s Key Objections No consultation with trade unions → violates tripartite approach (state–employer–worker). De-unionisation: Digital hiring bypasses unions → weakens collective bargaining power. Surveillance concerns: Portals emphasise worker tracking and data collection. Top-down design: Insufficient worker involvement in shaping the system. Diversion from core failures: Millions of workers still unregistered. Thousands of crores of cess funds lie unspent (due to bureaucratic delays). Benefits remain inaccessible to migrant and unorganised workers. CWFI’s Specific Critiques 1. “Digital gates while the vault stays locked” Government focuses on tech platforms but not on actual welfare delivery. Portal efficiency irrelevant if benefits remain undistributed. 2. Fundamental flaws App and portal require digital literacy, documentation, and smartphones → excluding a majority of migrant BOCW workers. Job-matching platforms may promote casualisation rather than secure employment. Digital systems may formalise employer control over hiring without strengthening worker rights. 3. Anti-worker implications Weakens unions → reduces bargaining over wages, safety gear, work hours. Employers gain real-time access to labour pools → pushes wages downward. Increased vulnerability for interstate migrant workers. 4. Lack of transparency about welfare funds Unspent cess funds in many states (estimates often run into thousands of crores). Digital makeover may obscure rather than solve the welfare delivery problem. Government’s Expected Rationale  Digitisation increases efficiency, transparency, and portability of benefits. Helps track migrant workers across states. Reduces leakages in cess collection. Supports ease of doing business by simplifying compliance. Aims to build a national labour database ahead of full implementation of Labour Codes. Issues & Challenges Deep digital divide → exclusion risk. Migrant construction labour is highly mobile; portal registration alone does not ensure welfare access. Centralised platforms risk data misuse without strong privacy safeguards. Undermining unions creates long-term asymmetry of power between labour and contractors. Labour Codes (still pending/partially rolled out) already weakened traditional protections — unions view new portals as part of this trend. Broader Structural Context Construction workforce: ~5 crore workers, highly informal, migrant-heavy. One of India’s most dangerous sectors → high accident rate, low safety compliance. Historically under-registered: welfare boards often have less than 30–40% coverage. Cess utilisation varies widely; some states have used barely 20–30% of collected funds. Key Takeaways CWFI sees the digital initiatives as centralised, surveillance-oriented, and designed to weaken worker collective strength. Major concern: digitisation without welfare delivery → cosmetic reform over substantive rights. Highlights India’s persistent challenge: bringing informal, migrant, construction workers under real welfare protection. UNESCO’S global Ethics Framework on Neurotechnology Why in News? UNESCO issued the first-ever global normative framework on neurotechnology ethics on November 5, 2025, which came into force on November 12. Aims to balance innovation with human rights, prevent misuse of brain data, and protect freedom of thought in the emerging neurotech era. Parallelly, a new study on transgenerational behavioural inheritance in C. elegans (published in eLife, Nov 11) highlighted ethical concerns around neurodata interpretation and biological determinism — relevant to the framework’s “future generations” principle. Relevance : GS2: International Relations Global ethics norms, UNESCO role Neurorights emerging in global governance GS3: Science & Technology Neurotech, BCIs, AI–brain interfaces Data protection, mental autonomy, future risks GS4: Ethics Mental integrity, autonomy, human dignity Ethical limits on technology, consent, manipulation What is Neurotechnology? Devices, procedures, and systems that access, assess, or act on neural systems. Examples: AI-assisted neuroimaging Brain–computer interfaces (BCIs) Neural implants (e.g., Neuralink) Cognitive enhancement tools Global Investment: Public funding > $6 billion (2023 UNESCO study). Private funding > $7.3 billion (end-2020). Why a Framework Was Needed ? Neurotechnology can decode neurodata → enabling: Tracking emotional states Predicting preferences Decoding intentions Influencing decision-making Risks identified: Political persuasion via brain-signal profiling Insurance discrimination using neural markers Workplace screening using stress tolerance or hidden traits Covert manipulation of behaviour through stimuli Absence of global norms despite rapid commercialisation. Key Drivers Before UNESCO Framework 2019 OECD Standards: Responsible innovation, tech transfer, IP pools, and licensing norms. 2022 UNESCO Bioethics Committee Report: Called for a comprehensive governance structure. Growing “neurorights” movement: Chile: first to protect “mental integrity” constitutionally. California (2024): law protecting brain data. What UNESCO’s Framework Contains  Three-Pillar Structure Definition of neurotechnology & neurodata Values, principles, sector-specific (health, education) guidance Special protections for vulnerable groups (children, elderly, disabled) Core Ethical Principles  Protection Principles Mental autonomy & freedom of thought Mental integrity Privacy and protection of neural data Prohibition of manipulation, deception, political or commercial influence Non-discrimination & inclusivity No harm & proportionality Innovation Principles Beneficence Accountability & transparency Trustworthiness Epistemic justice Protection of future generations Sustainable development alignment Explicit Prohibitions Using neural signals for political microtargeting Brain-data-driven insurance premium decisions Employer/HR neuro-screening mandates Manipulative neurostimulation to influence choices Covert extraction of neural data through devices or interfaces Framework on Innovation & IP Encourages responsible research and innovation (RRI): Anticipate social impacts Engage public & stakeholders Build “ethics-by-design” Promotes open science: Open datasets, shared tools Verifiability, reuse, collaborative development Tension highlighted: Open science vs intellectual property rights Need to avoid commodification of the human brain Calls for balanced licensing & equitable technology transfer Implementation Expectations States to integrate principles into: Health regulations Education systems Data protection laws Labour and employment policies Companies to adopt: Internal ethics boards Transparent neurodata policies Safety audits Voluntary compliance codes Key Takeaways  UNESCO’s framework is the first global ethical code for neurotechnology — landmark event. Protects freedom of thought, mental autonomy, integrity of neural data, and human dignity. Explicitly prohibits manipulative uses of brain data in politics, employment, insurance, and advertising. Encourages open science, responsible innovation, and balanced IP rights.

Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 17 November 2025

Content Electronics Development Fund EXERCISE GARUDA 25 Electronics Development Fund Why in News? PIB reported that the Electronics Development Fund has invested ₹257.77 crore in 8 Daughter Funds, enabling ₹1,335.77 crore downstream investments into 128 startups. EDF-supported startups have created 23,600+ high-tech jobs and generated 368 Intellectual Properties (IPs) as of 30 September 2025. Relevance : GS-III: Economy & S&T Boosts semiconductor, ESDM, AI, robotics, cybersecurity innovation. Strengthens R&D, IP creation, design-led manufacturing. Addresses deep-tech funding gaps and reduces electronics import dependence. GS-III: Government Policies Case study of Fund-of-Funds model, public–private investment mobilisation. Supports Digital India, Make in India, Atmanirbhar Bharat. GS-II/III: Development & Security Enables strategic tech capabilities (drones, AI, cybersecurity). High-value job creation and startup ecosystem strengthening. What is the Electronics Development Fund (EDF)? Launched in February 2016 by MeitY to create a “Fund of Funds” model for electronics, nano-electronics, and IT innovation. Objective: Build India’s Electronics System Design & Manufacturing (ESDM) ecosystem through risk capital for technology startups. Structure: Government invests in Daughter Funds → These invest in startups developing deep-tech products and IPs. Strategic Objectives (Conceptual Foundation) Strengthen Innovation & R&D – Promote domestic capability in electronics and advanced technologies. Support Venture/AIF Funds – Provide anchor capital to Category I & II SEBI-regulated Alternative Investment Funds. Foster Indigenous Product Development – Promote IP creation and reduce import dependence. Enhance Domestic Design Ecosystem – Promote local ESDM design for strategic and commercial sectors. Enable Strategic Tech Acquisition – Encourage purchase/acquisition of critical foreign technologies. Build National IP Pool – Strengthen India’s IP ownership in frontier tech. Operational Framework (How EDF Works) Institutional Architecture Anchor Investor: Ministry of Electronics & IT (MeitY) Trustee & Sponsor: Canara Bank Investment Manager: Canbank Venture Capital Funds Ltd. Key Features Functions as a Fund of Funds; invests indirectly through Daughter Funds. Maintains minority participation, catalysing large private-sector co-investments. Daughter Funds must be SEBI-registered Category I/II AIFs. Daughter Fund managers have autonomy in investment decisions. EDF covers the entire electronics/IT value chain, from hardware design to deep tech startups. Selection of Daughter Funds based on strict due diligence. Performance & Achievements (Data-Driven Analysis) Financial Footprint Total EDF Investment: ₹257.77 crore Total Downstream Investment by Daughter Funds: ₹1,335.77 crore Leverage Ratio: For every ₹1 invested by EDF → ~₹5.18 mobilised in the ecosystem. Startup-Level Outcomes Total Startups Supported: 128 Job Creation: 23,600+ jobs Intellectual Properties Generated: 368 IPs Exits: 37 exits Cumulative Returns to EDF: ₹173.88 crore Priority Sectors Supported IoT Robotics Drones Autonomous Vehicles HealthTech AI/ML Cybersecurity Semiconductor & Embedded Systems Overview Relevance to Electronics Manufacturing & Digital Economy EDF plugs India’s early-stage funding gap in deep tech. Critical to India’s semiconductor and design-led manufacturing goals. Aligns with Make in India, Digital India, and Atmanirbhar Bharat. Economic & Strategic Significance Reduces import dependence on critical electronics (India’s annual imports >$70 bn historically). Boosts domestic design, raising India’s share in global electronics value chains. Strengthens strategic tech sectors (AI, robotics, cybersecurity, drones) important for national security. Policy & Governance Evaluation Minority participation model ensures market efficiency and avoids micromanagement. Fund-of-Funds design mitigates risk and creates multipliers in private funding. Transparent SEBI-regulated structure improves investor confidence. Challenges / Limitations Financing gap persists for hardware-heavy startups with long gestation periods. India still lacks large-scale deep-tech venture capital depth compared to US/China. Scaling from prototype to commercial production remains challenging for ESDM. Future Imperatives Increase EDF corpus aligned with semiconductor strategy. Deeper linkages with academia (IITs, IIITs) and R&D labs. Integration with Production Linked Incentive (PLI) schemes. Strengthen exit ecosystem (IPOs, strategic acquisitions). Conclusion The Electronics Development Fund is a key pillar in India’s shift from electronics assembly to electronics design leadership. Its Fund-of-Funds model has successfully mobilised private capital, supported deep-tech startups, created high-value IP, and strengthened India’s innovation ecosystem. EDF now occupies a strategic position in India’s long-term tech self-reliance and semiconductor roadmap. EXERCISE GARUDA 25  Why in News? PIB announced India’s participation in Exercise Garuda 25, the 8th edition of the bilateral air exercise with the French Air and Space Force (FASF), held at Mont-de-Marsan, France (16–27 Nov 2025). IAF deployed Su-30MKI fighters, supported by C-17 Globemaster III and IL-78 flight refuellers. Relevance : GS-II: International Relations Key pillar of India–France defence partnership. Defence diplomacy tool; strengthens Indo-Pacific alignment. GS-III: Defence & Internal Security Enhances IAF interoperability, BVR/EW capability, multi-domain readiness. Improves preparedness for high-intensity and coalition operations. What is Exercise GARUDA? Bilateral air exercise between the Indian Air Force (IAF) and the French Air & Space Force (FASF). Launched in 2003 as part of expanding India–France strategic defence cooperation. Hosted alternately in India and France. Among the longest-running IAF international air exercises. Key Features of GARUDA 25 (2025 Edition) Host: France (Mont-de-Marsan Air Base). Date: 16–27 November 2025. IAF Deployment: Su-30MKI; C-17 for strategic airlift; IL-78 for mid-air refuelling. French Deployment: Rafale (F3R), Mirage-2000 variants, support aircraft. Exercise Scenarios: Advanced air combat Air defence and joint strike missions Multi-domain coordination Complex BVR and EW settings Objectives (Strategic & Tactical) Strengthen interoperability with a major strategic partner. Exposure to advanced NATO-aligned air combat doctrines. Training in air superiority, joint strike, and defensive counter-air ops. Enhance long-range strike capability through IL-78 refuelling support. Increase personnel exchanges and operational best-practice sharing. Operational Significance Enables Su-30MKI to engage with European multirole fighters in realistic contested airspace. Supports IAF’s transition towards network-centric, multi-domain operations. Boosts proficiency in BVR combat, EW tactics, and mixed fighter package ops. Enhances joint planning and execution of combined air campaigns. India–France Defence Cooperation Context France is a long-term defence partner (Mirage-2000 → Rafale). Part of the tri-service exercise framework: Varuna (Navy), Shakti (Army), Garuda (Air). Strong alignment on Indo-Pacific priorities including maritime security and open sea lanes. Broader Strategic Context Fits India’s push for high-end military exercises with trusted partners. Improves preparedness for high-intensity combat and coalition operations. Supports indigenisation by validating domestic systems in multinational settings. Enhances defence diplomacy, especially with European strategic actors. Strengthens capability for long-duration missions in contested operations. Significance for the Indian Air Force Improves operational readiness through realistic multinational scenarios. Enhances Dissimilar Air Combat Training (DACT) exposure for pilots. Strengthens interoperability for future UN/multilateral contingencies. Contributes to IAF’s evolving combat doctrine and integrated air defence architecture. Past Editions at a Glance Conducted in: 2003, 2006, 2010, 2014, 2019, 2022, 2023/24, 2025. Venues included Istres (France), Jodhpur (India), and Mont-de-Marsan (France). Progression from basic DACT to full-spectrum, multi-domain combat simulations.

Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 17 November 2025

Content The POCSO Act is gender-neutral by design Too little, much later The POCSO Act is gender-neutral by design  Why in News? The Supreme Court issued notice on a petition where a woman is accused of ‘penetrative sexual assault’ (Section 3, POCSO Act, 2012). The petitioner argued that Section 3 applies only to male perpetrators, claiming the provision is gender-specific. The case raises a foundational question: Can women be prosecuted for penetrative sexual assault under POCSO? Relevance : GS-II: Police reforms, Judicial Interpretation, Vulnerable sections (Children), Legislative intent GS-I (Society): Gender issues, Protection of children GS-II (Governance): Statutory interpretation, Role of General Clauses Act GS-II (Polity): Constitutional values—equality (Art 14), non-discrimination (Art 15), protection of children Practice Question : The POCSO Act is often described as gender-neutral by design. Discuss how statutory interpretation, legislative intent, and child-centric principles support a gender-neutral reading. (250 Words) What is the POCSO Act? Enacted in 2012 to protect children (below 18 years) from sexual offences. Covers penetrative sexual assault, aggravated assault, sexual harassment, pornography. Designed as a comprehensive, child-centric special law with mandatory reporting, special courts, and survivor-friendly procedures. Core Legal Issue in This Case Whether Section 3 (penetrative sexual assault) applies to female perpetrators. Petitioner’s claim: Section uses the pronoun ‘he’, implying only males can be offenders. Judicial question: Is POCSO gender-neutral regarding perpetrators, victims, or both? Textual Evidence Supporting Gender Neutrality Section 13(1), General Clauses Act (1897): Words importing masculine gender include females unless statute states otherwise. The POCSO Act does not explicitly restrict offenders to males. Section 3 includes acts beyond penile penetration: Digital penetration Object penetration Oral penetration Acts where a child performs penetrative acts on themselves or a third person These acts can be committed by persons of any gender, reinforcing neutrality. Legislative Intent: Explicitly Gender-Neutral Lok Sabha written reply (Dec 20, 2024): Government clarified POCSO is gender neutral. Statement of Objects & Reasons, POCSO Amendment Bill 2019: Reiterates gender neutrality. Comparative logic: BNS Section 63 (rape) is explicitly gender-specific (“a man” commits rape against “a woman”). If Parliament wanted POCSO to be gender-specific, it would have written similar wording. Its absence shows deliberate legislative intent to keep POCSO gender-neutral. Do Government Statements Limit Neutrality Only to Victims? Some replies mention “covers sexual abuse of boys as it is gender-neutral”. However, this does not exclude gender–neutrality for perpetrators. A restricted reading would contradict: Statutory language General Clauses Act Legislative history Broader protective purpose of POCSO. Normative Justification for Gender-Neutral Interpretation Supreme Court in Sakshi v. Union of India (2004): Child sexual abuse involves many forms beyond penile-vaginal intercourse. Abuse is rooted in power, trust, vulnerability, not just gender dynamics. Research shows women can and do commit sexual offences against children. Gender-specific reading would: Render certain offences invisible Deny justice to victims abused by female offenders Undermine the Act’s protective purpose. Why Gender-Neutral Reading Serves the Law’s Purpose POCSO’s objective: protect children from all forms of sexual abuse. Must be interpreted in a manner that: Reflects ground realities Ensures all victims are protected Holds all offenders accountable Gender-neutral interpretation aligns with: Statutory text Legislative intent Judicial precedents Modern understanding of abuse dynamics. Constitutional & Policy Angle  Aligns with Articles 14 & 15 (equality, protection from discrimination). Prevents arbitrary exclusion of perpetrators based on gender. Supports a rights-based approach centred on child safety, not gender assumptions. Likely Judicial Considerations Court will examine: Statutory wording General Clauses Act Legislative debates, official statements Purpose-oriented interpretation Expected direction: Upgrading POCSO interpretation to align with child-centric justice. Conclusion Strong legal, textual, and normative grounds indicate that POCSO is gender-neutral for both victims and perpetrators. A gender-neutral reading best fulfils the intent and purpose of the Act: Protecting all children Recognising all forms of abuse Holding all offenders accountable Too little, much later  Why in News? The Government notified the Digital Personal Data Protection (DPDP) Rules, 2025 on 14 November 2025. The Rules delay implementation of almost all key data protection safeguards until 2027, while the dilution of the Right to Information (RTI) Act takes immediate effect. Raises concerns over: Weak privacy protections, Reduced transparency under RTI, A non-independent Data Protection Board of India (DPBI), Prolonged compliance timelines favouring Big Tech and government agencies. Relevance : GS-II: Government policies, Transparency, RTI, Regulatory bodies GS-III: Data governance, Cybersecurity, Privacy as a fundamental right GS-II (Polity): Executive accountability, Separation of powers GS-III (Tech): Digital economy regulation, Big Tech oversight Practice Question : The Digital Personal Data Protection Rules, 2025 have been criticised for delaying privacy protections while immediately curtailing transparency under the RTI Act. Analyse. (250 Words) Evolution of India’s Data Protection Framework 2017: Supreme Court in Puttaswamy (Privacy) judgment declared privacy a fundamental right. 2018: Srikrishna Committee draft – strong, rights-based, independent regulator. 2019–2021: Multiple drafts diluted user rights; Joint Parliamentary Committee suggested 90+ amendments. 2022: Govt withdrew the JPC Bill, promised a new framework. 2023: DPDP Act passed – simplified but diluted user protections; expansive exemptions for government. 2025: DPDP Rules notified – criticised for delaying safeguards and weakening transparency. What the DPDP Act 2023 Sought to Do ? Regulate digital personal data processing. Obligations on Data Fiduciaries, rights for Data Principals. Introduced Data Protection Board of India (DPBI). Provided broad government exemptions (national security, public order, research). Amended RTI Act to narrow definition of “information.” Key Features of DPDP Rules 2025 Most core provisions deferred to 2027, including: Independent grievance timelines Data breach notifications Rights to correction, erasure, and portability Strict purpose limitation Immediate implementation of RTI dilution restricting access to personal information. Compliance timelines (12–18 months) for private companies, despite long prior awareness. Procedural framework for DPBI but no structural independence. Major Concerns Raised a) Delay of Protections to 2027 Pushes actual privacy enforcement nearly 4 years after the Act, leaving users vulnerable. Weakens constitutional promise of informational privacy. b) RTI Dilution Implemented Immediately Public Information Officers may now decline any personal information unless mandated elsewhere. Shrinks transparency space built since 2005. c) Non-Independent Data Protection Board DPBI placed under MeitY, which: Courts Big Tech investments, and Will investigate those same firms. Structural conflict of interest; lacks autonomy of regulators like TRAI/SEBI. d) Weak Checks on Government Access Wide exemptions remain unchanged. Limited accountability for state surveillance or misuse of citizen data. e) Industry-Favourable Timelines Big Tech receives long compliance buffers despite advance preparedness. Citizens continue without meaningful privacy safeguards. Implications for Citizens Continued asymmetry of power between citizens and the state/Big Tech. Users remain “open books”, with limited control over: What data is collected How long it is stored How it is used/shared Reduced ability to use RTI for accountability of public institutions. Governance & Institutional Issues Lack of independence undermines credibility of the data protection regime. Over-reliance on executive rule-making without sufficient parliamentary oversight. DPBI’s structure insufficient for complex enforcement (cross-border flows, AI profiling). Comparison with 2018 Draft / Global Norms 2018 Draft: Strong rights, strict data minimisation, independent regulator. Closer to GDPR standards. 2023 Act + 2025 Rules: More centralised control Far weaker user autonomy Broader government exemptions Reduced enforcement power Global Gap: India diverges from GDPR, Brazil LGPD, South Korea PIPA — all of which ensure independent regulators. Impact on Transparency & Accountability  Immediate RTI dilution reduces: Democratic oversight Investigative journalism Anti-corruption disclosure Creates a privacy–transparency paradox: privacy protections delayed, transparency curtailed overnight. Constitutional & Rights-Based Analysis Delaying protections undermines the right to privacy (Art. 21). RTI dilution weakens citizens’ right to information, affecting participatory democracy. Conflicts with constitutional principles of proportionality, necessity, accountability. Way Forward Ensure independence of DPBI akin to a statutory regulatory authority. Revisit RTI amendments to restore transparency. Clear timelines and immediate enforcement of core user rights. Stronger safeguards for: Government access AI-based processing Cross-border transfers Data localisation balance Increased parliamentary scrutiny and open public reasoning for rule-making. Conclusion Eight years after recognising privacy as a fundamental right, India remains far from a robust privacy framework. The 2025 Rules delay protections, weaken transparency, and maintain structural weaknesses in the institutional architecture. For citizens, the result is a continued imbalance of privacy vs state/industry power, undermining both accountability and digital rights.

Daily Current Affairs

Current Affairs 17 November 2025

Content An uncertain solar-powered future What are Digital Personal Data Protection Rules? How is the global precision medicine market shaping up? Article 32 enables people to approach SC for fundamental rights, says CJI Gavai Senkaku Islands Coronal Mass Ejection (CME) detected on another star After tax havens, dirty money finds a new home: Cryptocurrency Case Study : An uncertain solar-powered future  Why in News? Thousands of villagers from Jharkhand (Dhanbad district) and West Bengal (Purulia district) jointly protested on October 15 against upcoming floating and ground-mounted solar power projects on the Panchet Dam reservoir. Locals fear loss of access to grazing land, fishing zones, and displacement due to land acquisition for renewable energy expansion by DVC–NTPC JV (GVREL). Relevance: GS 2 – Governance Land acquisition, rehabilitation, resettlement failures. Federal issues: Centre–State–local governance overlap (DVC, NTPC, Jharkhand, WB). Stakeholder participation, Gram Sabha role, Scheduled Areas governance. GS 3 – Environment & Energy Renewable energy targets, COP26 commitments, solar policy. Conflicts in RE expansion; socio-environmental impact of floating solar. Ecology: aquatic systems, reservoir ecosystems. GS 1 – Society Impact on Adivasi livelihoods, fishing communities, pastoralists. Historical displacement and land rights issues. Panchet Dam Built: 1959; last of the four multipurpose dams under the first phase of the Damodar Valley Corporation (DVC). Location: Northern bank – Dhanbad, Jharkhand. Southern bank – Purulia, West Bengal. Purpose: Flood control in the Damodar River (historically called “Sorrow of Bengal”), irrigation, hydropower. Original displacement (1950s–70s): 33,898 acres acquired; 10,339 families displaced (DVC archival reports, 1957–76). Large-scale submergence of villages; inadequate compensation and unresolved land title issues continue. Upcoming Renewable Energy Projects Floating Solar Project Promoter: Green Valley Renewable Energy Ltd. (GVREL) – JV: NTPC Green Energy Ltd. (51%) DVC (49%) Capacity: 155 MW AC floating solar + ground-mounted PV plant. Site: Surface of Panchet reservoir + adjoining land. Central Government Policy Push Driven by India’s COP26 Panchamrit commitments: 500 GW non-fossil capacity by 2030. 50% energy from renewables by 2030. Solar projects rising rapidly, especially floating solar for land-scarce regions. Stakeholder Concerns Livelihood Loss Fishing community (~2,500 people across both States): Reservoir access to be restricted → direct loss of daily income (₹500–800 on good days). Grazing lands: Floating solar + fenced zones → cattle-grazing areas blocked. Villages already have minimal greenery. Displacement Anxiety Already displaced once during the 1950s dam construction. Fresh land acquisition reignites fear of second displacement cycle. Land Rights Issues Majority of families still lack: Land titles Aadhaar Caste certificates Voter list validation Current settlements on “wasteland” without documentation → high vulnerability. Broken Promises Old commitments during dam construction (land, rehabilitation, infrastructure) remain pending. New RE projects revived demand for return of unused DVC land, and for bridge connectivity (Bathanbari–Mahishnadi). Conflict and Governance Dimensions Land Conflict Watch Report Findings 45% RE land-acquisition cases lack community consultation. 48% conflicts occur on common lands: Adivasi, Dalit, and pastoralist-dependent. 29%: Completed RE projects still face protests. 5 major national RE projects stalled due to community opposition. Why Conflicts Intensify? Solar energy is land-intensive. Exemptions from environmental & social impact assessments for speed of implementation. Overlapping jurisdictions: DVC (central), State govts (WB & Jharkhand), Local Panchayats. Weak social safeguards in RE infrastructure expansion. Environmental & Social Impact Floating solar reduces fishing zones and affects aquatic ecosystems. Shadowing effect impacts plankton growth → reduces fish breeding. Restricted mobility around reservoir affects tribal communities’ traditional grazing and collection activities. Governance Questions Raised Who benefits from the solar project? Why no updated rehabilitation for old displacement? Why no land rights regularisation before new land acquisition? Demand for transparent EIAs and Gram Sabha consultation (especially in Scheduled Areas). Government/Agency Stand (Implied) DVC and GVREL aim to align with national RE targets. Consider floating solar as optimal for land-scarce, high-water-storage zones. No detailed public response yet (as per report) What are Digital Personal Data Protection Rules?  Why in News? Government notified the Digital Personal Data Protection (DPDP) Rules, 2025 on 14 November 2025, operationalising major parts of the DPDP Act, 2023. Notification triggers: Formation of Data Protection Board of India (DPBI). Implementation of consent framework, data processing norms, and compliance timelines. Controversy: Amendment to Section 8(1)(j) of RTI Act, 2005 officially comes into force, sparking protests from transparency activists (MKSS, NCPRI). Relevance GS 2 – Polity & Governance DPDP Act, 2023 + DPDP Rules, 2025 implementation. Privacy vs transparency debate (RTI Act Section 8(1)(j) amendment). Data Protection Board of India (DPBI): powers & limitations. State–citizen interface: consent, data processing, grievance redressal. GS 3 – Cybersecurity Data breach reporting norms, digital governance challenges. Rights of minors online; digital ecosystems. DPDP Act, 2023 Purpose India’s first comprehensive data protection law—parallel to GDPR (EU) and PDPA (Singapore). Key Concepts Data Fiduciary: Entity (firm/state) processing personal data. Data Principal: Individual whose data is processed. Significant Data Fiduciary (SDF): Large firms with higher compliance obligations. Core Obligations on Fiduciaries Security safeguards: Encryption, access control, security audits. Purpose limitation: Data collected only for specific, lawful purposes. Storage limitation: Delete data after purpose is fulfilled or inactivity. Breach notification: Report as soon as possible. Rights of Data Principals Informed consent backed by clear summaries. Right to access data. Right to correction, erasure, deletion. Right to grievance redressal. Right to withdraw consent. Children’s Data Restrictions on data processing and targeted ads. Rules carve out parental access to child’s location. DPDP Rules, 2025 – What They Add Operational details for consent notices, breach reporting, storage deletion. Consent Manager Ecosystem: Users manage data permissions across platforms via a single interface. Comparable to OS-level permissions managers. Data Protection Officer (DPO) requirement for SDFs becomes enforceable in 1 year. Compliance timelines: Firms get up to 18 months. Penalties: ₹10,000 to ₹250 crore depending on severity and repeated non-compliance. Institutional Mechanism Data Protection Board of India (DPBI) Now operational. Under MeitY, with four members. Functions: Inquiry into breaches. Adjudication of penalties. Oversight and compliance. Major Controversy: RTI Act Amendment What changed? Section 8(1)(j) earlier exempted “personal information” unless public interest justified disclosure. DPDP Act removed the public interest override. Now govt bodies can reject requests more broadly. Why activists oppose it? Eliminates a critical transparency safeguard. Potential consequences: Social audits (ration rolls, muster rolls, work logs) risk being classified as private. Shields officials from scrutiny in corruption cases. Undermines MKSS-led accountability campaigns. MKSS and NCPRI protested since 2022 draft; vowed to challenge implications. Government stance Amendment notified despite resistance. Another amendment to IT Act, 2000 still pending. Wider Governance Issues Increased government discretion in defining “personal information”. Risk of over-classification by officials. Debate on balancing: Privacy rights Transparency and public interest Accountability in public expenditure Comparison with GDPR Similarities: Consent, data minimisation, erasure rights, fiduciary obligations. Differences: No data localisation mandate. No explicit independent regulator (DPBI under MeitY). Broader govt exemptions. Narrower scope of “sensitive personal data”. Status of Implementation In force now: DPBI formation RTI amendment Consent Manager framework (initialisation) To be enforced within 18 months: Firm-level compliance DPO appointment Full breach reporting norms How is the global precision medicine market shaping up?  Why in News? A detailed expert analysis by Shambhavi Naik (Takshashila Institution) was published, highlighting India’s progress, challenges, and opportunities in precision biotherapeutics. Comes amid rapid global advances in gene editing, CAR-T therapy, mRNA therapeutics, and India’s push towards genomics-driven healthcare under DBT’s biotechnology priorities. Relevance:   GS 3 – Science & Technology Gene editing (CRISPR), mRNA therapeutics, cell therapy, biologics. India’s biotech sector: regulatory vacuum, ATMP challenges. GenomeIndia, IndiGen, precision oncology. GS 2 – Health NCD burden in India, health innovation priorities. Access, affordability, public health ethics. What Are Precision Biotherapeutics? Definition: Medical interventions tailored to a patient’s unique genetic, molecular, proteomic, or cellular profile. Aim: Correct the root cause of disease rather than managing symptoms. Core Technologies Genomic & proteomic analysis Identifies mutations, protein dysfunctions; basis of personalised therapies. Gene editing therapies CRISPR-based correction of defective genes (e.g., blood disorders). mRNA / nucleic acid therapeutics Program cells to produce needed proteins or silence harmful ones. Monoclonal antibodies & biologics Target specific disease proteins (cancer, autoimmune, viral diseases). AI-driven drug discovery Predicts molecular interactions, accelerates drug design. Why India Needs Precision Biotherapeutics 65% of deaths in India caused by NCDs (cancer, diabetes, cardiovascular diseases). High genetic diversity → foreign-developed drugs may not suit Indian populations. Enables predictive, preventive, personalised healthcare. Uses large Indian genomic resources: IndiGen, GenomeIndia, disease-mapping studies. Addresses India-specific disease burdens and drug response variations. Where India Stands: Current Status Government & Research Initiatives DBT lists precision biotherapeutics as 1 of 6 national biotech priorities. Leading institutions: Institute of Genomics & Integrative Biology (IGIB) National Institute of Biomedical Genomics (NIBMG) Translational Health Science and Technology Institute (THSTI) Focus: genetic diversity mapping, disease susceptibility profiling. Private Sector Efforts Biocon Biologics, Dr Reddy’s: biosimilars, monoclonal antibodies. Immuneel Therapeutics: immuno-oncology. Bugworks Research: novel antibiotics. Akrivia Biosciences: precision cancer diagnostics. miBiome Therapeutics: patient-centric healthcare. 4baseCare: AI-driven precision oncology. ImmunoACT: first Indian company to bring CAR-T therapy to India. Challenges for India Regulatory No clear regulatory framework for gene editing, cell therapy, mRNA therapeutics. Guidelines restrict therapeutic use but do not define scope of therapy. Lack of harmonised ethics guidelines across institutions. Manufacturing & Infrastructure Limited biologics and advanced therapy (ATMP) manufacturing capacity. Heavy dependence on imports for raw materials and equipment. Cost & Access Precision therapies are extremely expensive → accessible only to affluent urban patients. Insurance coverage gaps and weak public-sector capacity. Data Governance Risks Genetic data privacy concerns. Lack of comprehensive protections (DPDP Act insufficient for genomic data). Risk of misuse: discrimination, insurance profiling, surveillance. India’s Opportunities Global precision medicine market projected to cross $22 billion by 2027. India’s advantages: Skilled scientific workforce. Strong IT + data analytics ecosystem. Low-cost biotech manufacturing potential. Can emerge as global hub for affordable precision therapeutics. Export potential: biosimilars, AI-driven diagnostics, cell therapy services. Opportunity to build a regulatory model balancing innovation, ethics, and affordability. Article 32 enables people to approach SC for fundamental rights, says CJI Gavai  Why in News? Chief Justice of India B.R. Gavai delivered a lecture on “India and the Living Indian Constitution at 75 Years”, emphasising the origins and significance of Article 32. The two developments stirred national debate on the foundations of constitutional rights, social reform legacies, and political misuse of historical narratives. Relevance: GS 2 – Polity Fundamental rights enforcement, writ jurisdiction. Article 32 as part of Basic Structure. Constitutional morality, role of judiciary, Ambedkar’s vision. Emergency provisions (Art. 359), judicial remedies. What is Article 32? Constitutional remedy for enforcement of Fundamental Rights. Guarantees the right to move the Supreme Court directly for rights violations. Empowers the SC to issue five writs: Habeas Corpus, Mandamus, Prohibition, Certiorari, Quo Warranto. Dr. B.R. Ambedkar called it the “heart and soul of the Constitution.” Ambedkar’s Vision (As Highlighted by CJI Gavai) Rights without remedies are meaningless → Article 32 inserted to provide effective remedy, not mere declaration. Objective Resolution (1946) lacked enforceability; Article 32 filled this gap. Ambedkar wanted a Constitution that was living, evolving, enabled through Article 368 (amendments). Constitution built on justice, liberty, equality, fraternity. Advanced Constitutional Analysis Article 32 is part of Basic Structure (SC in L. Chandra Kumar, 1997). Remedies under Article 32 cannot be suspended except during Emergency (Art. 359). Article 32 is simultaneously a Fundamental Right and a remedy mechanism. CJI Gavai highlighted how debates of the Constituent Assembly remain critical to understanding constitutional morality. Current Issues Highlighted by CJI Gavai Need to safeguard Constitution from political distortion. Need for citizens and lawyers to understand Constituent Assembly debates. Amendments remain contentious → liberal vs restrictive interpretations. Importance of continuing Ambedkar’s project of social and economic equality (DPSPs). Senkaku Islands  Why in News? China Coast Guard (CCG) vessels conducted a “rights enforcement patrol” inside waters of the Japan-administered Senkaku Islands (called Diaoyu by China). Move came days after Japan PM Sanae Takaichi stated that a Chinese attack on Taiwan could trigger a military response by Japan, escalating tensions. China condemned the statement and has stepped up maritime and aerial activities near both Japan and Taiwan. Relevance GS 2 – International Relations China–Japan maritime dispute; US–Japan security treaty (Article 5). Taiwan crisis spillover; Indo-Pacific power shifts. Grey-zone warfare, Coast Guard militarisation. GS 3 – Security Maritime security, freedom of navigation, SLOC vulnerability. Implications for India: Indo-Pacific strategy, QUAD cooperation. Where Are the Senkaku (Diaoyu) Islands? Located in the East China Sea, northeast of Taiwan and southwest of Okinawa. Uninhabited but strategically critical for geopolitics and maritime control. Administered by Japan, but claimed by China and Taiwan. Located near rich fishing grounds, potential hydrocarbon deposits, and critical shipping lanes. Territorial Claims Japan (Senkaku): Claims sovereignty since 1895; incorporated the islands as terra nullius. Administers them since 1972 (post-US handover). China (Diaoyu): Claims historical control dating back to Ming dynasty. Argues Japan seized them during imperial expansion. Taiwan (Tiaoyutai): Aligns largely with China’s historical claim. Why Senkaku Matters Strategically ? Geopolitical Hotspot: Japan-China territorial standoff; US–Japan alliance involved. First Island Chain: Key to China’s strategy to break US-led maritime dominance. Buffer for Okinawa: Just 170 km from Okinawa, home to major US military bases. Proximity to Taiwan: Close enough to matter in any Taiwan-related conflict. Control of SLOCs: Dominance enables influence over East Asian supply routes. Latest Developments: China’s “Rights Enforcement Patrol” CCG vessel 1307 sailed inside territorial waters of Senkaku. China called it a “lawful mission to defend national sovereignty”. Follows a pattern: China regularly uses CCG (not PLA Navy) for grey-zone coercion, avoiding open conflict but asserting presence. Japan often shadows these ships using its Coast Guard. Why China Is Increasing Pressure Now ? Retaliation against Japan PM’s Taiwan remarks: Japan stated it may respond militarily if China attacks Taiwan → major shift from post-war pacifism. China demands retraction, accuses Japan of violating “One China principle”. Taiwan-related escalation: Over 30 PLA aircraft and seven naval vessels detected around Taiwan on the same day. China conducted “joint combat patrols”, signalling capability for multi-front pressure. Testing Japan–US alliance resolve: China probes how far the US will back Japan under the US-Japan Security Treaty (Article 5), which explicitly covers Senkaku. Japan’s Response and Strategic Concerns Japan views incursions as violations of sovereignty. Strengthening Coast Guard and Self-Defense Forces in the Ryukyu and Okinawa regions. Increasing interoperability with the US for East China Sea contingencies. Taiwan scenario now central to Japan’s defence strategy (2022 NSS). US Position The US recognises Japanese administration but not sovereignty. However, Senkaku falls under Article 5 of the US-Japan treaty, meaning the US would defend Japan if attacked. This elevates any Senkaku incident to a potential US-China flashpoint. Broader East Asian Security Implications Intensifies Japan–China rivalry. Increases risks of miscalculation in crowded maritime zones. Pushes Japan to further militarise → shift away from its post-war pacifist doctrine. Strengthens trilateral security alignment: US–Japan–Taiwan (de facto). Encourages China’s use of paramilitary maritime forces (coast guard, militia) for incremental territorial assertion. Implications for India Validates India’s concerns about Chinese expansionist behaviour in Ladakh and Indian Ocean. Reinforces India–Japan strategic partnership in the Indo-Pacific. Provides rationale for stronger Quad cooperation on maritime domain awareness and rule-based order. Coronal Mass  Ejection (CME) detected on another star Why in News? Astronomers, using the LOFAR (Low-Frequency Array) telescope network, have detected a coronal mass ejection (CME) on a star other than the Sun for the first time. The CME originated from red dwarf StKM 1-1262, located ~133 light years away. Published in Nature, the discovery marks a breakthrough in studying stellar space weather and exoplanet habitability. Relevance: GS 3 – Science & Tech Space weather, exoplanet habitability, stellar magnetic activity. Significance of LOFAR radio network, astronomy breakthroughs. Impact of CMEs on atmospheres, satellites, communication systems. What Is a Coronal Mass Ejection (CME)? Massive bursts of plasma and magnetic fields ejected from a star’s corona. On the Sun: Can disrupt satellites, GPS, radio communications. Trigger auroras; recent Nov 12 auroras reached as far south as Tennessee and New Zealand. Traditionally observed only on the Sun due to difficulty detecting faint radio signatures from distant stars. The Breakthrough Discovery LOFAR has been continuously collecting low-frequency radio data since 2016. While originally built to study black holes and other high-energy cosmic phenomena, its wide field of view also captures background stars. Researchers reprocessed archived data and detected a one-minute-long explosive burst from 2016. Confirmed to be a CME — the first-ever radio detection of such an event on a non-Sun star. The CME was 10,000 times more powerful than typical solar CMEs. About the Host Star: StKM 1-1262 A red dwarf star, mass 10–50% of the Sun. Most common host star type for Earth-sized exoplanets in the galaxy. Known for high magnetic activity and violent stellar flares. Scientific Significance Breakthrough for Stellar Space Weather Opens the field of extra-solar space weather—understanding how other stars affect their planetary systems. Allows study of stellar magnetic activity through continuous radio monitoring. New Methodology Demonstrates that archival low-frequency radio data can detect extreme stellar events. Provides a new tool to study stellar magnetic cycles similar to the Sun’s 11-year cycle. Implications for Planetary Habitability Atmospheric Erosion Red dwarf CMEs can strip atmospheres of planets in close orbits (common around red dwarfs). Without an atmosphere, planets lose: Surface water stability UV protection Climate stability Such CMEs severely weaken chances for life near red dwarfs. Reassessing Exoplanet Habitability Models Many “habitable zone” planets (e.g., TRAPPIST-1 system) orbit red dwarfs. New evidence suggests: High stellar activity may make these environments far less habitable than earlier believed. Need for stronger planetary magnetic fields to retain atmospheres. Astronomy & Astrophysics Relevance First direct confirmation that stellar CMEs occur beyond the Sun. Helps refine models of: Star–planet interactions Atmospheric retention Magnetic shielding Evolution of exoplanetary climates Why This Matters for the Future of Exoplanet Research Radio detection is scalable → enables studying thousands of nearby stars. Helps prioritise exoplanets with stable stellar environments for biosignature searches. Supports missions like JWST, PLATO, ARIEL that study exoplanet atmospheres. Cryptocurrency and Dirty Money Why in News? An international investigation by The Indian Express + International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) + The Coin Laundry Project exposed how cryptocurrency is emerging as the new hub for cross-border money laundering, replacing traditional tax havens. Agencies tracked laundering routes from India → Dubai → China → Cambodia via crypto exchanges and OTC brokers. The report highlights misuse of mule accounts, fake wallets, P2P transfers, and unregulated crypto channels for hawala-style transactions. Relevance : GS 3 – Economy & Security Money laundering through crypto; hawala 2.0. PMLA applicability to crypto; FIU, ED roles. Financial fraud ecosystems (Cambodia scam hubs, Chinese networks). FATF, AML/CFT regulations, global crypto governance. GS 2 – Governance Cybercrime regulation gaps; need for global crypto rulebook. Issues with KYC, consent, anonymity. GS 3 – Internal Security Crypto in sextortion, betting, cybercrime, loan apps. Cross-border criminal networks. What is Crypto Money Laundering? Using digital assets (BTC, USDT, ETH) to obscure origins of illicit funds. Operates through anonymous wallets, mixers/tumblers, P2P platforms, decentralised exchanges (DEXs). Mimics old hawala, but: Faster Harder to trace Borderless Uses technology to hide audit trails How Cryptocurrency Is Used to Launder Money (as per investigation) Victims defrauded → money deposited in mule bank accounts. Funds routed to pool accounts controlled by operators. Operators use: Crypto OTC desks P2P transfers Unhosted wallets International crypto exchanges Crypto moved to Dubai / Cambodia / China → cashed out into local currency → returned as “clean” funds. Mimics classic hawala but using USDT (Tether) as preferred stablecoin due to near-zero volatility. Key Findings from The Coin Laundry Project Over $12 billion globally laundered via crypto-linked fraud networks (ICIJ estimate). India emerging as a major node for: Pig-butchering scams Crypto-based forex arbitrage Investment fraud networks Crypto transactions used to layer money across borders without physical movement. Migrant workers, students, and gullible individuals used as mule account operators. Several crypto exchanges in India flagged for weak KYC, fake identities, and lax monitoring. Why Crypto is Attractive for Criminal Networks No central authority, decentralised validation. Pseudo-anonymity: wallet addresses not linked to verified identities. Micro-transactions allow easy structuring. Instant transfer across borders with minimal cost. Difficulty for agencies to track mixers, privacy coins, TOR + VPN used transactions. Case Studies Mentioned Multiple Indian firms and individuals allegedly routed money through USDT to China-based operators. Fraud rings in Jharkhand, Maharashtra, Telangana using cryptocurrency to bypass hawala raids. Several accounts flagged for₹1,000 crore+ cyber fraud ecosystem connected to Cambodia scam factories. Agencies’ Findings (ED, FIU, State Police) Crypto part of layering in cybercrime, betting rackets, sextortion, loan apps. ED & FIU identified routes: India → Dubai (crypto OTC desks) Dubai → China (USDT wallets) China → Cambodia scam hubs P2P crypto traders act as parallel hawala operators. FIU issued notices to several exchanges for AML violations. Regulatory Issues in India Crypto is not illegal but unregulated. AML provisions extended under PMLA (2023) but enforcement weak due to: No licensing framework Unhosted wallets outside Indian jurisdiction Difficulty tracing foreign exchanges India proposed global crypto regulatory framework at G20 (2023) but progress slow. Implications for India Cybercrime escalation: online scams use crypto for instant international payouts. Economic risks: capital flight via unregulated crypto pathways. Internal security challenge: scam operations in Cambodia/Myanmar targeting Indians. Threat to banking integrity: mule accounts becoming systemic. Diplomatic/consular challenges: rescuing Indians trapped in foreign cyber-scam factories. Global Context FATF identifies crypto as a major ML/TF threat. Countries like US, EU, Singapore tightening rules on: KYC for exchanges Travel Rule Mixer/service provider licensing Rise of privacy coins (Monero, Zcash) complicates global enforcement. Way Forward Implement comprehensive crypto regulation covering exchanges, wallets, stablecoins. Full FATF Travel Rule compliance for Indian exchanges. Mandatory KYC + PAN integration for large crypto transfers. Licensing regime for OTC desks. Strengthen FIU, ED digital forensic tools for tracing blockchain trails. India must push for global cooperation on unregulated exchanges and scam hubs.

Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 15 November 2025

Content Janjatiya Gaurav Divas Government notifies DPDP Rules to empower citizens and protect privacy Janjatiya Gaurav Divas Why in News? November 15 is observed as Janjatiya Gaurav Divas annually to honour Birsa Munda, whose 150th birth anniversary is being commemorated in 2024–25 as Janjatiya Gaurav Varsh. Ministry of Tribal Affairs is conducting nationwide programmes (1–15 Nov) and establishing 11 Tribal Freedom Fighters’ Museums. Recently inaugurated: Shaheed Veer Narayan Singh Memorial & Tribal Freedom Fighters Museum (Raipur) by PM on 1 Nov. Relevance : GS1 – Modern Indian History Tribal revolts: Ulgulan, Bhumkal, Halba, Santhal, Bhil, Koya. Corrective historiography and underrepresented tribal narratives. GS1 – Indian Society Tribal identity, culture, customs, language preservation. Role of museums in cultural mainstreaming. GS2 – Governance Tribal policy ecosystem: PM-JANMAN, EMRS, Digital Tribal Mission. Constitutional safeguards (Articles 46, 244, 275, 339, 342). Institutional capacity-building through Tribal Research Institutes. Basics Announced in 2021 to recognise India’s tribal contribution to freedom struggle and cultural heritage. Aligns with Constitutional commitments under Articles 46, 244, 275, 339, 342. Celebrated on Birsa Munda’s birth anniversary (15 Nov 1874). Birsa Munda – Quick Facts Led Ulgulan (1899–1900) for Munda self-rule and protection of Khuntkatti land rights. Revered as Dharti Aaba (Father of Earth). Died at age 25 in Ranchi Jail. Central figure in anti-colonial tribal assertion. Significance of Janjatiya Gaurav Divas Corrective historiography: tribal resistance movements were historically underrepresented. Cultural mainstreaming: connects tribal identity, language, arts to national consciousness. Institutional recognition: 11 museums create permanent archives of tribal movements. Policy relevance: aligns with PM-JANMAN, EMRS expansion, Digital Tribal Mission. Tribal Freedom Fighters’ Museum Initiative Goal: Document and exhibit tribal uprisings, culture, leaders, knowledge systems. Funding mechanism: Support to Tribal Research Institutes scheme. 11 Museums – Key Data Total approved cost: ~₹600+ crore Largest project: Rajpipla, Gujarat (₹257.94 crore) Four museums inaugurated: Raipur, Ranchi, Chhindwara, Jabalpur Key Museums & Freedom Fighters A. Shaheed Veer Narayan Singh Memorial, Raipur Inaugurated: 1 Nov 2025. Cost: ₹53.13 crore (₹42.47 crore central share). Features: 650 sculptures, 16 galleries, AI-based displays, RFID screens. Covers major tribal uprisings: Halba, Sarguja, Bhopalpattanam, Paralkot, Tarapur, Meria, Koi, Lingagiri, Muria, Bhumkal (1910). Narayan Singh: Broke British grain stores (1856 famine), executed 10 Dec 1857. B. Birsa Munda Museum, Ranchi Inaugurated: Nov 15, 2021. Focus: Ulgulan, Khuntkatti rights, anti-missionary movements. Highlights Munda socio-political systems and Birsa’s vision. C. Badal Bhoi Museum, Chhindwara Inaugurated: Nov 15, 2024. Led 1923 protests; arrested repeatedly; died in custody (suspected poisoning, 1940). D. Raja Shankar Shah & Kunwar Raghunath Shah Museum, Jabalpur Inaugurated: Nov 2024. Gond royals who resisted British during 1857. Used poetry as political resistance; executed 18 Sept 1858. Janjatiya Gaurav Varsh (Fortnight 1–15 Nov) Activities J&K: PM JANMAN workshops, digital literacy for ashram schools. Meghalaya: Cultural festival, floral tributes at Shillong. Rajasthan: EMRS-wide painting/essay competitions. AP: Cultural festival marking Birsa Munda’s 150th anniversary. Sikkim: Tribal language teachers’ workshop; youth sports events. Manipur: Cleanliness drives, tributes at Rani Gaidinliu market. Odisha: Birsa pavilion, photo exhibitions (80 photographs). Gujarat: National symposium at Ekta Nagar (600+ scholars). Other Government Initiatives for Tribal Heritage Digital & Linguistic Preservation Adi Sanskriti: 100 courses; 5,000+ documents on tribal arts. Adi Vaani: Real-time text/speech translation; Mundari, Gondi, Bhili, Santhali, Kui, Garo. Digital Document Repository: Central archive for tribal research. Language & Oral Tradition Varnamala initiative: local rhymes, stories in tribal languages. Documentation of oral traditions: folklore, folktales, songs. Knowledge Systems & Research Studies on: Indigenous healing, medicinal plants, Adivasi agriculture, painting, dance. Support for literary festivals & tribal authors. Cultural Promotion Aadi Mahotsav: flagship national tribal festival. Craft Melas & Cultural Events: dance festivals, painting workshops. Critical Analysis A. Governance Perspective Strengthens cultural federalism. Reinforces Article 51A(f) (value and preserve rich heritage). Museum network = long-term institutional memory. B. Tribal Empowerment Elevates social identity, combats invisibilisation. Encourages youth connect via digital tools & museums. Supports NEP 2020 linguistic goals. C. Historical Justice Recognises revolts like: Santhal (1855), Khond resistance, Koya, Bhil, Munda movements. Corrects colonial-centric narratives. D. Challenges Need for accurate anthropological documentation. Museum upkeep, community participation. Digital divide in tribal areas. Conclusion Janjatiya Gaurav Divas institutionalises the legacy of India’s tribal freedom fighters and embeds their narratives within national history. Through 11 museums, digital projects like Adi Sanskriti & Adi Vaani, and nationwide cultural mobilisation during Janjatiya Gaurav Varsh, India advances an inclusive vision of heritage aligned with Ek Bharat, Shreshtha Bharat. Government notifies DPDP Rules to empower citizens and protect privacy Why in News? Government has notified the Digital Personal Data Protection (DPDP) Rules, 2025, completing operationalisation of the DPDP Act, 2023. Establishes India’s first comprehensive digital personal data protection regime, combining citizen rights with innovation-friendly compliance. Relevance : GS2 – Governance, Transparency & Accountability Digital rights, privacy protection, citizen-centric governance. Regulatory frameworks, grievance redressal through Digital Data Protection Board. Stakeholder consultations as part of cooperative governance. GS2 – Polity Operationalising fundamental right to privacy (Puttaswamy 2017). Legislative–executive interplay in rule-making. GS2 – Social Justice Special safeguards for children and persons with disabilities. Digital inclusion and accessible consent frameworks. DPDP Act, 2023 – Core Features Passed on 11 August 2023; applies to digital personal data processed in India. Based on SARAL design (Simple, Accessible, Rational, Actionable). Defines: Data Principal – individual Data Fiduciary – entity determining how data is processed Consent Manager – entity enabling permission management Seven Core Principles Consent and transparency Purpose limitation Data minimisation Accuracy Storage limitation Security safeguards Accountability Inclusive and Consultative Rule-Making Draft Rules issued for public comments. Consultations across Delhi, Mumbai, Guwahati, Kolkata, Hyderabad, Bengaluru, Chennai. Inputs taken from startups, MSMEs, industry bodies, civil society, and government departments. Ensures legitimacy, stakeholder buy-in and smoother implementation. Phased and Practical Implementation 18-month compliance timeline for organisations. Prevents regulatory shock and supports legacy transitions. Consent notices: Must be standalone, purpose-specific, simple, and plain language. Consent Managers must be Indian-incorporated companies → ensures jurisdictional control. Personal Data Breach Protocols Mandatory, prompt notification to affected individuals. Notification must: Be in plain language Explain nature & consequences Detail remedial steps Provide assistance contact points Ensures early risk mitigation and trust. Safeguards for Children & Persons with Disabilities Verifiable consent required for children’s data. Limited exemptions: education, healthcare, real-time safety. For persons with disabilities lacking legal capacity, consent via lawful guardian. Aligns with UNCRC and rights-based frameworks. Transparency & Accountability Requirements Data Fiduciaries must display clear contact information: Designated officer / Data Protection Officer. Significant Data Fiduciaries (SDFs): Independent audits Data Protection Impact Assessments (DPIA) Technology due diligence Adherence to government restrictions (including selective localisation) Ensures risk-proportionate regulation. Strengthening Rights of Data Principals Rights include: Access Correction Updating Erasure Nomination for rights after death/incapacity Mandatory response window: within 90 days. Establishes robust digital civil rights framework. Digital-First Data Protection Board Fully digital operations: Online filing Tracking through portal + mobile app Decisions appealable before TDSAT. Aims to reduce friction and ensure low-cost grievance redressal. Balancing Privacy with Innovation Technology-neutral framework → future-proofing. Compliance reliefs for startups and MSMEs. Promotes secure digital economy growth. Prioritises innovation while maintaining essential safeguards. Critical Analysis A. Governance Perspective Establishes a rights-based digital governance model. Strengthens rule of law in data processing. Boosts India’s global digital credibility (e.g., G20 Data Governance Principles). B. Economic & Innovation Impact Predictable regulatory environment attracts: Cloud services Health-tech FinTech AI/ML companies Clarity on breach protocols reduces long-term systemic risks. C. Privacy & Fundamental Rights Operationalises Justice K.S. Puttaswamy (2017) judgment recognising privacy as a fundamental right. Provides enforceable citizen rights. D. Challenges Capacity constraints among small enterprises. Technological readiness for audits and DPIAs. Large-scale citizen awareness required. Need for clarity on cross-border data flows. Conclusion The DPDP Rules, 2025 operationalise India’s first full-fledged digital personal data protection regime, creating a balanced, citizen-centric framework. With phased implementation, strong transparency obligations, special safeguards for vulnerable groups, and a digital-first Data Protection Board, the model aims to embed privacy protection into India’s rapidly expanding digital economy while supporting innovation and global competitiveness.