Exclusive April and May Insights
Exclusive April and May Insights
Exclusive April and May Insights
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April 2017 – 20 May 2017
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Insights PT 2017 Exclusive
Table of Contents
A. Economy
1. Revised Prompt Corrective Action (PCA) Framework.................................................................6
2. Anchor investors.......................................................................................................................6
3. ODA (Official development Assistance).....................................................................................6
4. Three Year Action Agenda: NITI Aayog......................................................................................7
5. Cell for IPR Promotion and Management (CIPAM)....................................................................7
6. Goods and Services Tax Network (GSTN)..................................................................................8
7. Project Saksham.......................................................................................................................8
8. Directorate of Enforcement......................................................................................................8
9. Infrastructure investment trust fund (InvITs)............................................................................8
10. Banganapalle mango gets GI tag.............................................................................................9
11. World Press Freedom Index 2017............................................................................................9
12. Technology and Innovation Support Centres (TISC).................................................................9
13. Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB)..........................................................................10
14. Goods and Services Tax (GST)................................................................................................10
15. RAIL-CESS..............................................................................................................................11
16. New series WPI, IIP released with base year 2011-12............................................................11
G. Polity
1. Joint Trial of Cases..................................................................................................................48
2. Rail Development Authority (RDA)..........................................................................................48
3. Survey of India........................................................................................................................48
4. National Lok Adalat................................................................................................................49
5. National Scheduled Castes Finance and Development Corporation (NSFDC)...........................50
6. Advertising Standards Council of India (ASCI)..........................................................................50
7. Central Consumer Protection Council......................................................................................51
8. Nutrient Based Subsidy (NBS).................................................................................................51
9. Two-child norm tied to jobs in Assam.....................................................................................51
10. Red Beacons.........................................................................................................................51
11. Right to Information Act 2005...............................................................................................52
12. Crime and Criminal Tracking Network and Systems (CCTNS).................................................52
H. Social Issues
1. The Paths We
Walk...........................................................................................................................................56
2. National Anti Doping Agency (NADA)......................................................................................56
3. New Taxi Policy Guidelines.....................................................................................................56
4. Notify HIV-hit children as disadvantaged group: SC.................................................................57
5. Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens (MWPSC) Act..................................57
6. Indian rankings 2017...............................................................................................................57
7. First NIMCARE World Health Day Summit 2017.......................................................................58
8. Travel & Tourism Competitiveness Report 2017......................................................................58
9. Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups (PVTGs)........................................................................58
10. World Tuberculosis Day (WTD).............................................................................................59
Economy NOTES
2. Anchor investors
Anchor investors are institutional investors like sovereign wealth funds,
mutual funds and pension funds that can bid for shares ahead of the IPO.
Anchor investors or cornerstone investors are invited to subscribe for shares
ahead of the IPO to boost the popularity of the issue and provide confidence
to potential IPO investors.
The benefit for institutional investors applying in anchor quota is that they
get guaranteed allotment. Allotment to investors applying in an IPO depends
on the number of times the issue gets subscribed.
Anchor investors, however, cannot sell their shares for a period of 30 days
from the date of allotment as against IPO investors who are allowed to sell on
listing day.
7. Project Saksham
Project Saksham is the name given to Central Board of Excise and Custom
(CBEC’s) IT Infrastructure Project.
This IT Infrastructure project will enable not just the implementation of
Goods and Services tax (GST) but also support all existing services in
Customs, Central Excise and Service Tax.
In addition, it will also enable extension of the Indian Customs Single Window
Interface for Facilitating Trade (SWIFT) and other taxpayer-friendly initiatives
under Digital Indian and Ease of Doing Business of CBEC.
It will enable setting up of an information exchange mechanism with GSTN
through the use of secure methods of message exchange.
8. Directorate of Enforcement
Directorate of Enforcement is a specialized financial investigation agency
under the Department of Revenue, Ministry of Finance, Government of
India, which enforces the following laws:
o Foreign Exchange Management Act,1999 (FEMA) – A Civil Law, with
officers empowered to conduct investigations into suspected
contraventions of the Foreign Exchange Laws and Regulations, and
impose penalties on those adjudged to have contravened the law.
o Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002 (PMLA) – A Criminal Law,
with the officers empowered to conduct investigations to trace assets
derived out of the proceeds of crime, to provisionally attach/
confiscate the same, and to arrest and prosecute the offenders found
to be involved in Money Laundering.
o The Act and Rules notified there under impose obligation on banking
companies, financial institutions and intermediaries to verify identity
of clients, maintain records and furnish information.
The main investors could be foreign institutional investors, insurance and NOTES
pension funds and domestic institutional investors (like mutual funds, banks)
and also super-rich individuals.
How do InvITs work?
o Two types of InvITs have been allowed: one, which invests in
completed and revenue generation infrastructure projects;
o The other, invest in completed or under-construction projects.
o InvITs which invest in completed projects take the route of public
offer of its units, while those investing in under construction projects
take the route of private placement of units.
o Both forms are required to be listed on stock exchanges.
GST regime will not be applicable to Jammu and Kashmir because Article NOTES
370 gives special status to the state. So, the state will have to legislate its own
law and integrate with the GST regime.
The tax rates under GST are based on the recommendation GST Council.
o The GST Council headed by finance Minister Arun Jaitley has finalised
a 4-slab tax structure at the rates of 5, 12, 18 and 28 per cent.
o Luxury hotels, gambling, race club betting and cinema services will
attract a tax rate of 28%.
o Education, healthcare and non-AC rail travel will remain exempted
from the GST tax regime.
States will also be permitted to levy any new tax as the taxation powers of
the states have only been restricted and not abolished after the rollout of
GST.
GST Council:
o As per Article 279A of the Constitution, GST Council is joint forum of
the Centre and the States.
o It includes Union Finance Minister as the Chairperson, Union Minister
of State (MoS) in-charge of Revenue of finance (Member) and
Minister In-charge of taxation or finance or any other Minister
nominated by each State Government (Members).
15.RAIL-CESS
Plagued by repeated derailments, the Railways is considering imposing
safety cess on train tickets to be utilised for strengthening accident
prevention measures.
A cess is a tax that is levied by the government to raise funds for a specific
purpose.
Likewise, money collected from the newly introduced Krishi Kalyan Cess is to
be used for funding agri development initiatives.
All the taxes collected by the government usually go into the Consolidated
Fund of India (CFI) which can be spent on any legitimate activity.
But the collections from a cess are required to be kept outside of the CFI to
be spent only on the specific purpose for which it was levied.
If there is an unspent amount, it is simply carried forward for use in the
following year.
Cesses are resorted to only for a particular purpose and are to be
discontinued after the objective is met.
Industry. NOTES
o In the revised series, WPI will continue to constitute three major
groups namely primary articles, fuel & power and manufactured
products. There is increase in number of items from 676 to 697.
o In the new series of WPI, prices used for compilation do not include
indirect taxes in order to remove impact of fiscal policy. This will
make the new WPI conceptually closer to ‘Producer Price Index’.
o A new “WPI Food Index” will be compiled to capture the rate of
inflation in food items.
o The government has also set up a high-level technical review
committee for dynamic review in order to keep pace with the
changing structure of the economy.
IIP:
o It is compiled and published monthly by the Central Statistical
Organisation (CSO).
o The new IIP series has a total of 809 items.
o The electricity sector now includes data from renewable energy
sources.
o The coverage of the mining sector has undergone a change on
account of the Mineral Conservation and Development (MCDR)
Amendment Rules, 2016.
2. Indian wolf
An Indian wolf (Canis lupus pallipes) has reportedly
been sighted for the first time in the Sunderbans.
The forest department is yet to verify the veracity of
the claim.
The sighting is significant since wolves in Bengal are
mostly found in the western parts bordering
Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand.
The Indian wolf is a Schedule I animal in the Wildlife (Protection) Act 1972 of
India.
It prefers to live in scrub lands, grasslands and semi-arid pastoral/
agricultural landscape.
It is categorised as ‘endangered’ by the International Union for Conservation
of Nature.
Less than 2,000 wolves are there in the Indian forests.
3. Vembanad Lake
Vembanad is the longest lake in India, and the
largest lake in the state of Kerala.
Spanning several districts in the state of Kerala, it
is known as Punnamada Lake in Kuttanad, Kochi
Lake in Kochi.
The Nehru Trophy Boat Race is conducted in a
portion of the lake.
Government of India has identified the Vembanad
wetland under National Wetlands Conservation
Programme.
The Vembanad Wetland system was included in
the list of wetlands of international importance, as defined by the Ramsar
Convention. It is the largest of the three Ramsar Sites in the state of Kerala.
4. Dal lake
The Jammu & Kashmir High Court has come down heavily on authorities for
failing to contain the ever growing pollution and encroachments in and
6. Saraswati River
The Centre plans to tap rural employment guarantee funds to recharge
remnants of ancient rivers — including the mythical Saraswati — in a bid to
boost groundwater reserves.
Reviving such palaeo-channels may not be useful for irrigation but it could
improve groundwater storage.
Background:
o Palaeo-channels are old rivers that have dried up and filled with
sediment.
o Recent study commissioned by the Water Resources Ministry —
reported evidence on the course of the Saraswati, mentioned in the
Rigveda and Hindu mythology.
About Saraswati:
o Saraswati River flowed through Haryana, Rajasthan and North
Gujarat. It also flowed through Pakistan before meeting Western Sea
through Rann of Kutch.
o One-third of the river stretch fell in present-day Pakistan.
o The river had two branches: western and eastern.
o The Sutlej River “represented the western branch of the Saraswati.”
8. Amur Falcon
Amur falcons are the longest travelling raptors in the
world.
The species flies non-stop from Mongolia to northeast
India covering 5,600 km in five days and nights, a
small part of its 22,000 km circular migratory journey.
Until recently, Naga tribesmen used to hunt thousands of Amur falcons for
meat. But, after a vigorous campaign by wildlife activists, they have pledged
to protect the bird and since then, not a single bird has been hunted in the
area.
The Doyand Lake in Nagaland is an eco-tourism spot for bird-watchers. Amur
falcons come to roost at Doyang Lake every year, during their flight from
Mongolia to Africa.
Mudra’s unique features include a Mudra Card which permits access to NOTES
Working Capital through ATMs and Card Machines.
There are three types of loans under PMMY:
o Shishu (up to Rs.50,000).
o Kishore (from Rs.50,001 to Rs.5 lakh).
o Tarun (from Rs.500,001 to Rs.10,00,000).
MUDRA Bank:
o MUDRA Bank is a public sector financial institution in India
launched on 8 April 2015.
o It provides loans at low rates to micro-finance institutions and non-
banking financial institutions which then provide credit to MSMEs.
o MUDRA Bank is a wholly owned subsidiary of SIDBI.
o The MUDRA (SIDBI) Bank will undertake refinance operations and
provide support services with focus on portal management and also
data analysis etc.
o Credit Guarantee Fund for MUDRA Units (CGFMU) was created which
guarantee loans sanctioned under PMMY to reduce the credit risk to
Banks and other financial intermediaries.
that enables procurement of common use goods and services with minimal NOTES
human interface.
DGS&D with technical support of NeGD (MeitY) has developed GeM portal
for procurement of both Products & Services.
The Act provides for coverage of upto 75% of the rural population and upto NOTES
50% of the urban population for receiving subsidized food grains under
Targeted Public Distribution System (TPDS).
The eligible persons will be entitled to receive 5 Kgs of food grains per
person per month at subsidised prices of Rs. 3/2/1 per Kg for
rice/wheat/coarse grains.
The existing Antyodaya Anna Yojana (AAY) households, which constitute the
poorest of the poor, will continue to receive 35 Kgs of food grains per
household per month.
The Act also has a special focus on the nutritional support to women and
children.
Besides meal to pregnant women and lactating mothers during pregnancy
and six months after the child birth, such women will also be entitled to
receive maternity benefit of not less than Rs. 6,000.
Children upto 14 years of age will be entitled to nutritious meals as per the
prescribed nutritional standards.
In case of non-supply of entitled food grains or meals, the beneficiaries will
receive food security allowance.
The Act also contains provisions for setting up of grievance redressal
mechanism at the District and State levels.
As per the act, every State Government shall, constitute a State Food
Commission for the purpose of monitoring and review of implementation of
this Act.
11.Wind Energy
For the first time, wind power installations (windmills) in the country have
crossed the 5 Gigawatts mark, to reach 5,400 MW in 2016-17.
The earlier record was 3,472 MW of 2015-16. The current year might see
installations of 6 GW.
India, with 32,280 MW, has the fourth biggest capacity in the world, after
China, the U.S. and Germany.
The national target is 60 GW by 2022. Wind accounts for 10% of India’s total
power capacity of 3.2 lakh MW; and 4% in terms of electricity produced.
The Indian wind industry has been around since the late 1980s. For many
years, it existed only in T.N., the windiest State.
In the last decade, it spread to eight other States that have wind potential —
four other southern states, M.P., Maharashtra, Gujarat and Rajasthan.
14.PowerTex India
The Government has launched PowerTex India, a comprehensive scheme for
powerloom sector development.
The PowerTex India scheme aims to boost common infrastructure and
modernisation of the powerloom sector in the country.
It has overall nine major components, including two new schemes.
The two new schemes are Pradhan Mantri Credit Scheme (PMCS) for
powerloom weavers:
o Financial assistance, including subsidy and interest reimbursement,
will be given as against the credit facility under Pradhan Mantri
Mudra Yojana to the decentralised power loom units.
Solar energy scheme (SEC) for powerlooms:
o Financial subsidy for the installation of the Solar Photo Voltaic Plants
will be provided to alleviate the problems of power cuts.
o Developers can sell units only on carpet area, which means the net NOTES
usable floor area of an apartment.
o Depositing 70% of the funds collected from buyers in a separate
bank account. This is intended to cover the cost of construction and
the land cost and the amount deposited shall be used only for the
concerned project.
o Projects with plot size of minimum 500 sq.mt or eight apartments
shall be registered with Regulatory Authorities.
o Both developers and buyers to pay the same penal interest of SBI’s
Marginal Cost of Lending Rate plus two percent in case of delays.
o A promoter shall accept amount not more than 10% of the cost of the
apartment as advance payment/application fee without entering into
a registered agreement for sale.
20.SAMADHAN
The Home Minister has enunciated an operational strategy ‘SAMADHAN’ to
fight Left Wing Extremism.
The elements of this strategy are:
o S for Smart Leadership.
o A for Aggressive Strategy.
o M for Motivation and Training.
o A for Actionable Intelligence.
o D for Dashboard-based Key Result Areas and Key Performance
Indicators.
o H for Harnessing Technology.
o A for Action Plan for Each Theatre.
o N for No access to Financing.
There are 10 LWE affected states- Bihar, Odisha, Uttar Pradesh,
Maharashtra, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, West Bengal, Andhra Pradesh,
Telangana and Madhya Pradesh.
26.e-Krishi Samvad
e-Krishi Samvad is internet-based interface and is a unique platform that will
provide direct and effective solutions to the problems faced by farmers and
stakeholders in the agriculture sector.
With this, people can get the appropriate solutions from the subject matter
specialists and institutes through web or SMS.
Stakeholders can upload photographs related to diseases of the crops,
animals or fishes for diagnostics and remedial measures instantly from the
specialists.
3. Geotagging
It is the process of adding geographical identification like latitude and
longitude to various media such as a photo or video.
Geotagging can help users find a wide variety of location-specific information
from a device.
The government has proposed to prepare inventory of the assets created in
the last one decade (2007-2017) under RKVY through Geotagging technique.
o National Remote Sensing Centre (NRSC), wing of Indian Space
Research Organisation is providing technical support to Rashtriya
Krishi Vikas Yojana (RKVY) division and has come up with a detailed
procedure for the same.
Mahatma Gandhi NREGS has reached a new milestone today by geotagging
one Crore assets and putting them in public domain.
5. Technical Textiles
Technical Textiles are defined as Textile
material and products manufactured
primarily for their Technical performance and
functional properties rather than aesthetic and
decorative characteristics.
Technical textiles include textiles for
automotive applications,
medical textiles (e.g.,
implants), geotextiles
(reinforcement of
embankments), agrotextiles
(textiles for crop protection),
and protective clothing (e.g.,
heat and radiation protection
for fire fighter clothing,
molten metal protection for welders, stab protection and bulletproof vests,
and spacesuits).
Functional textiles can be woven or non-woven. Automobile, geo, medical,
industrial, and agro textiles are among the range of products that are made in
the country.
It secretes enzymes onto the surface of the plastic and these break the NOTES
chemical bonds between the plastic molecules, or polymers.
The fungus was found in Pakistan.
7. Belle-II experiment
The High Energy Accelerator Research
Organisation (KEK) has completed the much-
awaited ‘rolling-in’ of the Belle-II experiment in
Tsukuba, Japan.
Belle II is an upgraded detector to allow the
experiment to record the enormous numbers of
particle processes that are produced by the
SuperKEKB accelerator.
Complementary to the direct search experiments being carried out at the
Large Hadron Collider in CERN, Belle-II will indirectly probe new physics using
intense electron-positron beams and a sensitive detector.
It is grand collaboration of 700 scientists from 23 countries including India.
Compared to previous Belle experiment, Belle-II will allow collection of much
larger data samples with much improved measurement precision.
The fourth layer of the six-layer, highly sensitive particle detector, which is at
the heart of Belle-II, has been built by Indian scientists.
9. Oxytocin
According to a recent study, Oxytocin, often referred to as “the love
hormone,” is involved in a broader range of social interactions than
11.RTS,S/AS01
RTS,S/AS01 — trade name Mosquirix — is a recombinant protein-based
malaria vaccine.
Developed by British drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline to protect children from the
most deadly form of malaria.
Ghana, Kenya and Malawi will pilot the world’s first malaria vaccine from
2018, offering it for babies and children in high-risk areas as part of real-life
trials.
This is WHO’s pilot programme to assess whether the Mosquirix’s protective
effect in children aged 5 to 17 months can be replicated in real-life.
12.Stereolithography
Scientists have developed a novel way to 3D-print objects using glass, an
advance that could be used to make very small optical components for
complex computers.
The process is known as Stereolithography.
Stereolithography is a form of 3D-printing technology used for creating
models, prototypes, patterns and production parts in a layer by layer fashion
using photopolymerisation, a process by which light causes chains of
molecules to link, forming polymers.
1. UN Messenger of Peace
United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has appointed Nobel
laureate Malala Yousafzai as a UN Messenger of Peace to promote girls
education.
At 19, Yousafzai is the youngest Messenger of Peace, the highest honour
given by the United Nations.
United Nations Messengers of Peace are distinguished individuals, carefully
selected from the fields of art, literature, science, entertainment, sports or
other fields of public life, who have agreed to help focus worldwide attention
on the work of the United Nations.
The messengers are initially chosen for a period of three years.
Whilst the goodwill and honorary ambassadors mainly promote the work of
the UN agency they are ambassador for, the messengers of peace are
intended to promote the work of the United Nations in general and are
appointed directly by the Secretary-General of the United Nations.
Background: NOTES
o India is a founder
member of the
International
Labour
Organization (ILO),
which came into
existence in 1919.
o At present, the ILO
has 187 members.
o The principal
means of action in
the ILO is the setting up of International standards in the form of
Conventions, Recommendations and Protocol.
o India has so far ratified 45 Conventions, out of which 42 are in force.
4. UK-India Fund
India and the UK have announced the joint UK-India Fund, namely a Green
Growth Equity Fund which aims to leverage private sector investment from
the City of London to invest in green infrastructure projects in India.
Both governments have reaffirmed their commitment to anchor invest up to
£120 million each (i.e. totally £ 240 million) in the joint fund which will be
established under the National Investment and Infrastructure Fund
(NIIF) framework.
About Green Growth Equity Fund:
o The Green Growth Equity Fund will be a sub-fund of NIIF.
o The Fund will invest in mid to large-sized companies in the green
infrastructure space in India.
o GGEF would be managed by a third-party investment manager,
5. Belmont Forum
The Belmont Forum, created in 2009, is a high level group of the world’s
major and emerging funders of global environmental change research and
international science councils.
It provides an opportunity to identify study and deliver international
environmental research priorities.
India is a member of Belmont Forum, besides Australia, Brazil, Canada,
European Commission, France, Germany, Japan, Netherland, South Africa, UK
and USA etc.
Ministry of Earth Science (MoES), represents India in the Belmont Forum
since 2012.
A Secretariat is hosted by one of the Belmont forum member on rotational
basis.
French National Research Agency (ANR), France is hosting the Secretariat
from January, 2015 to December, 2017.
About Mongolia:
o Mongolia is a landlocked unitary
sovereign state in East Asia.
o It is sandwiched between China
to the south and Russia to the
north.
o It is also the world’s second-
largest landlocked country behind
Kazakhstan and the largest landlocked country that does not border
a closed sea.
o The group also hosts separate meetings of finance ministers and NOTES
central bank governors.
11.BRS Conventions
An inter-ministerial Indian delegation headed by the Secretary, Ministry of
Environment, Forest and Climate Change, participated in the 2017
Conference of Parties (COPs) to the Basel, Rotterdam, Stockholm (BRS)
Conventions.
Meetings of the COPs of BRS Conventions are generally held every alternate
year. India has participated in the earlier meetings of the COPs of the BRS
Conventions.
BRS Conventions are multilateral environmental agreements, which share
the common objective of protecting human health and the environment
from hazardous chemicals and wastes.
Basel Convention:
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28.Sagarmatha Friendship-2017
Nepal and China are planning to hold the first-ever joint military exercise-
Sagarmatha Friendship-2017, with a special focus on combating terror and
disaster management.
Sagarmatha is the Nepali name of Mount Everest, the world’s highest peak
that is bordering between Nepal and China.
29.GBU-43/B
The GBU-43/B – dubbed the ‘Mother of all bombs’ – has been dropped on an
Islamic State complex in Afghanistan by the US forces.
The Moab or GBU-43/B is the world’s largest non-nuclear weapon.
It is designed to destroy heavily reinforced targets or to shatter ground forces
and armour across a large area.
Its blast is equivalent to 11 tons of TNT. By comparison, the nuclear weapon
dropped on Hiroshima had a blast yield of 15 tons of TNT.
While it has a blast radius that stretches a mile in each direction the bomb
leaves no lasting radiation effect because it is non-nuclear.
30.Operation Meghdoot
Operation Meghdoot the code-name for an Indian Armed Forces operation,
was launched on April 13th 1984, when Pakistan started permitting
mountaineering expeditions into Siachen Glacier because of which India had
to keep a close watch on Siachen.
The operation was launched to capture the Siachen Glacier in the Jammu and
Kashmir. The military action resulted in gaining control over the world’s
highest battlefield.
Siachen Glacier is 76.4 km long and covers about 10,000 sq km uninhabited
terrain. It lies in the Karakoram Range in the North West India.
33.UN-Habitat
India has been unanimously elected as the President of the UN-Habitat.
It is the third time that India has been elected to lead this important
organization after 2007 and 1988.
India will be represented by the Union Minister of Housing & Urban Poverty
Alleviation. The minister chaired the meeting of the 58 member Governing
Council of UN-Habitat in Nairobi, Kenya.
The theme of the 26th Meeting of the Governing Council was “Opportunities
for effective implementation of the New Urban Agenda” with focus on
inclusive, sustainable and adequate housing for a better future
About UN Habitat:
o The United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN–Habitat) is
the United Nations agency for human settlements and sustainable
urban development.
o It was established in 1978 as an outcome of the First UN Conference
on Human Settlements and Sustainable Urban Development
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34.Ebola outbreak
The World Health Organization has declared an Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of
Congo (DRC), Africa.
Background:
o More than 11,000 people died in the Ebola outbreak in West Africa in 2014-2015, mainly in
Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia. The last outbreak in the DRC was in 2014 and killed more
than 40 people.
Ebola virus disease (EVD), formerly known as Ebola haemorrhagic fever, is a severe, often fatal
illness in humans.
Transmission: The virus is transmitted to people from wild animals and spreads in the human
population through human-to-human transmission.
The average EVD case fatality rate is around 50%. Case fatality rates have varied from 25% to 90%
in past outbreaks.
Prevention: Community engagement is key to successfully controlling outbreaks
Early supportive care with rehydration, symptomatic treatment improves survival.
There is as yet no licensed treatment proven to neutralise the virus but a range of blood,
immunological and drug therapies are under development.
1. Padayani Dance
Padayani is a traditional folk dance and a ritual art from
Kerala.
A ceremonial dance involving masks, it is an ancient
ritual performed in Bhagavati temples.
Background:
o Padayani was performed by magico-medicine
men of Kerala to heal the illnesses not amenable
to medical modalities of intervention.
o It is believed that it is evolved from a symbolic
past reminiscent of fencing march of martial art
Kalari.
Unique features:
o The dance is performed in honour of Bhadrakaali.
o Padayani is an art form that blends music, dance, theatre, satire,
facial masks, and paintings.
2. Channakeshava temple
The Channakeshava temple in Belur, Karnataka
— a masterpiece of Hoysala architecture —
turned 900 this year.
Belur, along with Halebid, is proposed as a
UNESCO heritage site.
About the temple:
o The temple, constructed by Vishnuvardhana of the Hoysala dynasty,
is a monument recognised by the ASI.
o Considered to be the first temple of Hoysala style, it was built
between 1106 and 1117.
o The temple commemorates the king’s victory in 1104.
3. Battle of Adyar
History lovers, curious onlookers, veterans and NCC cadets gathered recently
in Chennai to commemorate The Battle of Adyar, a turning point in modern
Indian history.
The Battle of Adyar took place on 24 October 1746. The battle was between
the French East India Company men and Nawab of Arcot forces over the St.
George Fort, which was held by the French.
The French had captured Fort St. George from the British East Indian
Company.
The battle was part of the First Carnatic War between the English and the
French.
The Battle of Adyar ended with the French retaining control over Fort St.
George.
4. Swachagraha NOTES
To mark the 100-year anniversary of Satyagrah movement, led by Mahatma
Gandhiji, an exhibition ”swachagraha” Bapu Ko Karyanjali” – A Mission, An
Exhibition, at the National Archives of India, was recently inaugurated.
The exhibition aims to sensitise future generations to fulfil Gandhiji’s dream
of Swachh Bharat
The exhibition succinctly depicts the events that unfolded in Champaran on
April 10, 1917, when Gandhiji started the Satyagrah movement, to fight for
the rights of Indigo plantation farmers living in the region.
5. Paika Rebellion
Two-hundred years ago in 1817, a valiant uprising of soldiers led by Buxi
Jagabandhu (Bidyadhar Mohapatra) took place in Khurda of Odisha. This is
known as Paika rebellion.
The Paikas were the traditional land-owning militia of Odisha and served as
warriors.
When armies of the East India Company overran most of Odisha in 1803, the
Raja of Khurda lost his primacy and the power and prestige of the Paikas
went on a decline.
The rebellion had several other underlying causes – like the rise in the price
of salt and an overtly extortionist land revenue policy.
o The Dongria Kondh call themselves Jharnia meaning those who live by NOTES
the Jharana (streams).
o Hundreds of perennial streams flow from Niyamgiri hill, and there are
hundreds of Dongria villages by the streams.
o The Dongria are considered the protectors of these streams, hills and
jungles by the people of the nearby plains.
Polity NOTES
3. Survey of India
The Survey of India, the country’s oldest scientific organisation and official
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maker of maps, has set up a web portal called Nakshe that allows 3,000 of its NOTES
7,000 maps to be downloaded for free.
Key facts:
o To download the maps, one would require providing their Aadhaar
number.
o The SoI maps —prepared for defence and civilian purposes — are
considered a standard reference for the shape, extent and geographic
features of the country.
About Survey of India:
o Survey of India, the National Survey and Mapping Organization of the
country under the Department of Science & Technology, is the oldest
scientific department of the GOVT. of INDIA set up in 1767.
o The Survey of India acts as adviser to the Government of India on all
survey matters, viz Geodesy, Photogrammetry, Mapping and Map
Reproduction.
is settled subsequently, the court fee originally paid in the court is also NOTES
refunded back to the parties.
o The persons deciding the cases in the Lok Adalats have the role of
statutory conciliators only and do not have any judicial role.
o The disputing parties plead their case themselves in Lok Adalats. No
advocate or pleader is allowed, even witnesses are not examined.
10.Red Beacons
With a view to strengthening healthy democratic
values in the country, the Central Government
decided to do away with beacons of all kinds
atop all categories of vehicles in the country.
States are also being stripped of their power to
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specify persons whose vehicles can use blue flashing lights. NOTES
Amendments were made in the Central Motor Vehicles Rules of 1989.
Beacons, however, will be allowed on vehicles concerned with emergency
and relief services, ambulance, fire service etc.
15.Bharat ke Veer
It is a web portal and mobile application launched recently on the occasion
of Valour Day of Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF).
The portal is an IT based platform, with an objective to enable willing donors
to contribute towards the family of a braveheart who sacrificed his/her life
in line of duty.
This website is technically supported by National Informatics Centre (NIC)
and powered by State Bank of India.
The amount so donated will be credited to the account of ‘Next of Kin’ of
those Central Armed Police Force/Central Para Military Force soldiers.
Background:
o The Valour Day is celebrated in remembrance of an act of
unparalleled bravery displayed by a small contingent of CRPF
personnel, pitted against a full-fledged infantry brigade of Pakistani
Army, trying to overrun their post, at Sardar Post, Rann of Kutch,
Gujarat on April 09, 1965.
o The saga of valour of Sardar Post is a rich source of inspiration to the
officers and men of CRPF and befittingly 9th April is observed as the
“Valour Day”.
o The driver’s identification along with the photo and registration NOTES
number of the vehicle should also be prominently displayed in the
taxi.
o Violation of the stipulated rules by the taxi operators/drivers should
be strictly dealt in accordance with law.
o Sharing of seat should be subject to willingness of passengers.
Engineering category while IISC, Bangalore sits at the top of the Common NOTES
Overall Rankings.
In the list of the best Management institutes in the country, the Indian
Institute of Management (IIM) Ahmedabad gets the top spot.
IISc Bangalore tops the list of the best universities in the country.
PVTGs are more vulnerable among the tribal groups. In this context, in 1975, NOTES
the Government of India initiated to identify the most vulnerable tribal
groups as a separate category called PVTGs.