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Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 18th December 2025

The Current Affairs questions are based on sources like ‘The Hindu’, ‘Indian Express’ and ‘PIB’, which are very important sources for UPSC Prelims Exam. The questions are focused on both the concepts and facts. The topics covered here are generally different from what is being covered under ‘Daily Current Affairs/Daily News Analysis (DNA) and Daily Static Quiz’ to avoid duplication. The questions would be published from Monday to Saturday before 2 PM. One should not spend more than 10 minutes on this initiative. Gear up and Make the Best Use of this initiative. Do remember that, “the difference between Ordinary and EXTRA-Ordinary is PRACTICE!!” Important Note: Don’t forget to post your marks in the comment section. Also, let us know if you enjoyed today’s test 🙂 After completing the 5 questions, click on ‘View Questions’ to check your score, time taken, and solutions. .To take the Test Click Here

DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 18th December

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Ramappa Temple Category: History and Culture Context: Recently, Ambassador and Permanent Representative of India to UNESCO-Paris visited the Rudreswara (Ramappa) Temple, in Palampet village of Mulugu district. About Ramappa Temple: Location: It is located in the state of Telangana. Construction: It was constructed in 1213 AD during the reign of the Kakatiya Empire by RecharlaRudra, a general of Kakatiya king Ganapati Deva. Presiding deity: The presiding deity here is Ramalingeswara Swamy. Other names: It is also known as the Rudreswara Temple. Uniqueness: It is probably the only temple in India that is named after the architect. The temple got its name Ramappa because of its chief sculptor Ramappa. Structure: The temple stands on a 6 feet high star-shaped platform (Upapitha) with walls, pillars and ceilings adorned with intricate carvings. Use of sandbox technique: The temple construction was done using the sandbox technique. This is a technique where the foundation pit is filled with a mixture of sand-lime, jaggery and black myrobalan fruit. Earthquake-proof: It is made out of clay mixed with acacia wood, chaff and myrobalan fruit (a family of amla), and the bricks used in building the gopuram of the temple are light enough to float on water. Using this technique has made the temple light, meaning, in case of a natural event like an earthquake, the probability of it collapsing would be very low. Historical Recognition: The traveller Marco Polo reportedly described it as the “brightest star in the galaxy of temples”. Significance: In 2021, the temple was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site as “Kakatiya Rudreshwara (Ramappa) Temple, Telangana”. Source: The Hindu Dieback Disease Category: Science and Technology Context: The withering of thousands of neem trees prompted the Mulugu-based FCRI to launch a comprehensive scientific probe into the devastating “dieback disease.” About Dieback Disease: Genus: The dieback fungus belongs to the genus Phytophthora. First case: It was first reported in the country during the 1990s near Dehradun in Uttarakhand. Causing agent: It is a fungal disease which kills a wide variety of plants. Transmission: The fungus is spread through the movement of soil and mud, especially by vehicles and footwear. It also moves in free water and via root-to root contact between plants. Infected parts: The fungus lives in susceptible plant tissue and soil, and migrates and reproduces in warm, moist conditions. Infected roots cannot provide the water and nutrients needed to maintain life, and the plants die from dehydration. Symptoms: It is responsible for causing wilting and browning of leaves from the tip of the branch, stem canker, and fruit rot. It causes almost 100% loss of fruit production in severely infected trees. Impact on native vegetation: Where the disease occurs, the native vegetation can become devastated, and the delicate fabric of ecosystems seriously impaired; certain species can disappear from the area. Timeline: The symptoms usually appear with the monsoon (warm and humid conditions) and worsen through late rainy season into early winter. Detection: Dieback is not easy to detect, as infected plants often appear to be dying from drought. Treatment: Currently, there is no known cure for the disease. Prevention: The strategies for prevention include: Pruning: Cutting and destroying infected twigs to stop the spread. Chemical Treatment: Spraying a blend of fungicide and insecticide after pruning or applying it to the soil around the base of small plants. Biological Control: Treating seeds with bio-agents like Trichoderma. Cluster Approach: Since the fungus can be airborne or spread by insects, community-level efforts in specific localities are more effective than treating isolated trees. Source: Deccan Chronicle Vellode Bird Sanctuary Category: Environment and Ecology Context: Migratory birds have begun arriving at the Vellode Bird Sanctuary at Vadamugam Vellode, as it serves as a breeding ground for both resident and migratory birds. About Vellode Bird Sanctuary: Location: It is located in the Erode district of Tamil Nadu. Area: It was established in 1966 and it covers an area of around 0.77 sq km. Designation: It is built around the Periyakulam lake and has been designated a protected Ramsar site since 2022. Significance: It is part of an important migratory bird flyway (central Asian flyway). It also serves as a breeding ground for both resident and migratory birds. Source of water: The sanctuary receives rainfall from the Northeast monsoon between September and December. Seepage from the Lower Bhavani Project (LBP) canal and rainwater are the main sources of water during the migration period. Fauna: Migratory birds like Northern pintail, Northern Shoveler, Garganey, Blue tailed bee-eater, Wood Sandpiper, Common Sandpiper, Green Sandpiper, Chestnut tailed starling, Blyth’s warbler, Skyes warbler are seen here. Flora: The Site is also an ideal habitat for notable plant species including Cayratia pedata, Tephrosia purpurea and Commelina tricolor. Source: The Hindu Project Mausam Category: Government Schemes Context: Archaeological Survey of India organised a National Workshop on the Project Mausam titled as “Islands at the Crossroads of Maritime Networks within Indian Ocean Region.” About Project Mausam: Nature: It is an Indian government-led cultural-diplomacy and maritime heritage initiative. Nodal ministry: It was launched in 2014 by the Ministry of Culture. Objective: It aims to explore the multi-faceted Indian Ocean ‘world‘ – collating archaeological and historical research in order to document the diversity of cultural, commercial, and religious interactions in the Indian Ocean. Countries involved: A total of 39 Indian Ocean littoral countries have been identified under Project Mausam. Significance: It serves as a tool for soft power diplomacy and counters historical narratives by focusing on shared Afro-Asian heritage. Implementation: The project is implemented by the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) as the nodal agency with research support of the Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts (IGNCA) and National Museum as associate bodies. Working mechanism: The project will have two major units, viz. Project Research Unit and World Heritage Nomination Unit. Focus areas: To study and document the Indian Ocean “world” shaped by monsoon winds (Mausam). To prepare transnational nominations for the UNESCO World Heritage List, such as the “Routes followed by the Cholas” and the “Spread of Buddhism”. To promote research on themes related to the study of maritime routes through international scientific seminars and meetings and by adopting a multidisciplinary approach.  To encourage the production of specialized works, as well as publications for the general public, with an attempt at promoting a broader understanding of the concept of a common heritage and multiple identities. Source: PIB   Exercise Ekatha Category: Defence and Security Context: Deputy Chief of the Naval Staff (DCNS), Indian Navy, is on an official visit to Maldives to attend the closing ceremony of Exercise Ekatha 2025. About Exercise Ekatha: Countries involved: Exercise Ekatha is an annual bilateral maritime exercise between the Indian Navy and the Maldives National Defence Force (MNDF). Establishment: The exercise was first instituted in 2017 with the objective of strengthening maritime cooperation between India and Maldives. Objective: It aims to improve operational synergy in maritime and littoral environments by addressing shared regional maritime security challenges. Significance: It aligns with India’s vision of Mutual and Holistic Advancement for Security and Growth for All in the Region (MAHASAGAR) and the Neighbourhood First Policy. Focus Areas: It primarily focuses on enhancing interoperability in: Combat and technical diving operations. Special forces tactics and asymmetric warfare. Boarding operations and explosive handling. About Exercise Ekatha 2025: It was the eighth edition of the Exercise. The exercise witnessed extensive professional interactions aimed at enhancing interoperability and operational synergy. The activities included technical and combat diving, boarding operations, firing drills, demolition and explosive handling, asymmetric warfare tactics, and special heli-borne operation drills. Source: PIB   (MAINS Focus) Migration as a Structural Force Reshaping Indian Democracy (UPSC GS Paper I – Society: Migration; GS Paper II – Polity: Elections, Representation, Federalism)   Context (Introduction) India is witnessing unprecedented population mobility due to urbanisation, labour markets, education and marriage. With over one-third of Indians classified as migrants, migration is no longer marginal but a structural force reshaping democracy, representation, and governance.   Scale and Nature of Migration in India   Magnitude: Census 2011 recorded 45.3 crore migrants, constituting 37.7% of India’s population, up from 31% in 2001. Internal Dominance: Over 99% of Indian migrants are internal migrants, making migration primarily a domestic governance challenge. Gender Composition: Around 68–70% of migrants are women, largely due to marriage, while male migration is predominantly economic. Economic Drivers: NSS and Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS) show employment and livelihood as the leading reasons for long-distance male migration.   Migration and Urbanisation Linkages Urban Pull: Economic Survey highlights that urban areas generate over 60% of GDP, accelerating rural-to-urban migration. City Transformation: Cities like Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru and Hyderabad have migrant populations exceeding 35–45%. Labour Dependence: Construction, manufacturing, logistics, domestic work and services are heavily migrant-dependent. Invisible Citizenship: Despite economic centrality, migrants remain politically under-represented in destination cities.   Citizenship–Territory Mismatch Territorial Assumption: Democratic rights presume stable residence within a fixed constituency. Mobility Reality: Migrants live, work and pay taxes in destination regions but vote (if at all) in source regions. Political Dislocation: This weakens accountability of urban local bodies and distorts representative democracy. Global Parallel: Similar challenges are visible in the U.S., EU, Gulf states and Southeast Asia, where mobility outpaces political inclusion.   Migration and Electoral Governance Electoral Roll Stress: Election Commission cites migration as a key cause of duplicate and outdated voter entries. Special Intensive Revision (SIR): Triggered by rapid mobility, urbanisation and multiple registrations across constituencies. Voting Exclusion: Migrant workers often fail to vote due to distance, documentation gaps and work constraints. Policy Gap: Unlike postal ballots for service voters, no nationwide migrant voting mechanism exists for internal migrants.   Migration and Federal Representation Uneven Flows: Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan and Odisha are net migrant-sending States, while Maharashtra, Delhi, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu and Kerala are net receivers. Political Consequence: Voting location determines political weight; migrants voting in source States dilute representation in destination States. Delimitation Impact: Post–Census 2027 delimitation will redistribute Lok Sabha seats, reflecting migration-driven population shifts. Silent Federal Shift: Migration is altering Centre–State political balance without explicit constitutional amendment.   Social and Political Dimensions Identity Politics: Migration reshapes language, culture and electoral strategies, reducing viability of rigid nativism over time. Urban Politics: Parties increasingly field migrant-origin candidates, reflecting demographic realities. Inequality Risk: Migrants often lack access to housing, healthcare, education and political voice despite economic contribution. Demographic Dividend: Migrant youth sustain ageing urban economies, making inclusion economically rational.   Key Challenges  Political Exclusion: Large migrant populations remain weakly represented in local governance. Administrative Capacity: Tracking mobile populations strains electoral and welfare databases. Policy Fragmentation: Migration is addressed sectorally (labour, elections, housing) rather than holistically. Public Anxiety: Migration becomes politicised through fears of demographic change and “outsider” narratives.   Way Forward Recognise Migration as Structural: Treat mobility as a permanent feature of development, not an anomaly. Migrant Voting Reform: Explore secure absentee, remote or portable voting models for internal migrants. Data Integration: Use Census, Aadhaar-linked residence data (with safeguards) to update rolls without exclusion. Urban Political Inclusion: Strengthen local governance and service-based representation in migrant-heavy cities. National Migration Framework: Integrate labour, housing, welfare and political rights into a unified migration policy.   Conclusion Migration is not merely a social phenomenon but a democratic force reshaping representation, federal balance and citizenship itself. India’s challenge is to adapt its political institutions to a mobile population without compromising inclusion, equity or democratic legitimacy.   Mains Question “Internal migration has emerged as a structural force reshaping Indian democracy.” Analyse its implications for electoral governance, federal representation and political inclusion. (250 words, 15 marks)   Source:  The Hindu Protection of the Aravalli Range: Ecological, Legal and Governance Dimensions (UPSC GS Paper III – Environment, Conservation, Land Degradation, Climate Change)   Context (Introduction) Judicial Intervention: In November 2025, the Supreme Court of India settled a long-standing ambiguity by adopting a uniform definition of the Aravalli hills and paused fresh mining leases across Delhi, Haryana, Rajasthan and Gujarat, responding to decades of ecological degradation and regulatory evasion.   Ecological Significance of the Aravalli Range Ancient Mountain System: One of the world’s oldest fold mountain ranges, nearly 2 billion years old, stretching ~650 km from Delhi to Gujarat. Desertification Barrier: Acts as a climatic shield, preventing the eastward expansion of the Thar Desert into Haryana, western Uttar Pradesh and the Indo-Gangetic plains. Groundwater Recharge: Supports aquifer systems and regulates hydrology in semi-arid regions with low rainfall. River Origins: Source region for rivers such as Chambal, Sabarmati and Luni, crucial for regional water security. Biodiversity Corridor: Hosts forest patches, wildlife corridors and tiger movement routes connecting Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh ecosystems. International Commitments: India is obligated under the UN Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) to protect ecologically fragile landscapes like the Aravallis.   Mining-Induced Degradation: The Core Challenge Excessive Quarrying: Four decades of legal and illegal mining for stone, sand and minerals caused habitat fragmentation and dust pollution. Air Quality Impact: Mining and stone-crushing worsened particulate pollution in NCR and adjoining regions. Water Table Decline: Removal of hill structures disrupted natural recharge, accelerating groundwater depletion. Regulatory Failure: Environmental restrictions imposed since the early 1990s were routinely violated at the State level.   Judicial and Institutional Responses 2009 Supreme Court Ban: Blanket prohibition on mining in Faridabad, Gurugram and Mewat (Haryana)due to rampant violations. 2024–25 Judicial Review: Supreme Court directed the Central Empowered Committee (CEC) to examine mining impacts across the entire Aravalli system. CEC Recommendations (2024): Scientific Mapping of the Aravalli range across States. Macro-Level Environmental Impact Assessment (cumulative, not project-wise). Absolute Mining Prohibition in ecologically sensitive zones — wildlife habitats, aquifer recharge areas, NCR region, water bodies. Strict Regulation of Stone-Crushing Units. Moratorium on New Mining Leases until mapping and assessments are completed. Judicial Acceptance: Supreme Court incorporated these recommendations in its November 2025 order.   Uniform Definition of the Aravalli Hills: Why It Matters Earlier Inconsistencies: States and agencies used divergent criteria, enabling regulatory arbitrage and illegal mining. Forest Survey of India (2010): Proposed slope-based and buffer-based definitions (slope >3°, foothill buffer 100 m, valley width 500 m). Expert Committee (2025): Included MoEFCC, FSI, Geological Survey of India, State Forest Departments and CEC. Final Judicial Definition: Hills above 100 metres elevation classified as Aravalli hills. Rationale: Court held this definition to be more inclusive, preventing exclusion of large hill systems while enabling enforceability. Criticism Addressed: Concerns about hills below 100 m being opened to mining were countered by broader ecological zoning and management planning.   Why the Supreme Court Did Not Impose a Total Mining Ban? Past Experience: Absolute bans historically fuelled illegal mining syndicates and sand mafias. Governance Reality: Enforcement gaps led to violence, corruption and ecological damage outside legal frameworks. Calibrated Approach: Existing legal mining continues under strict scrutiny. Fresh leases paused until scientific planning is completed. Permanent no-go zones demarcated for ecologically critical areas.   Management Plan for Sustainable Mining (MPSM): Court Directions Landscape-Level Planning: Entire Aravalli system to be treated as a single ecological unit. Zoning Framework: Absolute prohibition zones Highly regulated limited mining zones Ecological Carrying Capacity: Assessment before any activity approval. Wildlife and Habitat Mapping: Identification of corridors and breeding zones. Restoration Obligations: Mandatory mine reclamation and ecological rehabilitation. Enforcement Mechanisms: Monitoring, compliance audits and penalties.   Complementary Executive Initiative Aravalli Green Wall Project (2025): Expansion of green cover in a 5-km buffer zone across 29 districts of Delhi, Haryana, Rajasthan and Gujarat. Contribution to restoring 26 million hectares of degraded land by 2030, aligned with national land degradation neutrality goals.   Conclusion The Supreme Court’s intervention marks a shift from fragmented regulation to science-based landscape governance. By rejecting both unregulated exploitation and blanket bans, the Court has prioritised ecological integrity, enforceability and livelihood concerns. Protecting the Aravallis is central to climate resilience, groundwater security and desertification control in northern and western India.   Mains Question “The Aravalli range plays a critical role in preventing desertification and maintaining ecological balance in northern India.” Examine the threats faced by the range and evaluate the recent judicial and policy measures taken for its protection. (250 words, 15 marks)   Marital Rape Exception in India (UPSC GS Paper II – Indian Constitution, Fundamental Rights, Women and Vulnerable Sections)   Context (Introduction) Constitutional Framework: Articles 14, 15 and 21 of the Constitution guarantee equality, non-discrimination, dignity, privacy and bodily autonomy to all individuals, irrespective of marital status. Existing Legal Position: Section 63 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), 2023 retains the marital rape exception, exempting husbands from prosecution for non-consensual sexual intercourse with adult wives. Contemporary Concern: The exception reflects colonial-era patriarchal assumptions and stands increasingly at odds with constitutional jurisprudence and social realities.   Main Arguments (Removing the Marital Rape Exception) Equality Before Law: The marital rape exception creates an unreasonable classification between married and unmarried women, violating Article 14, as recognised in multiple Supreme Court rulings emphasising substantive equality. Right to Life and Dignity: Article 21 jurisprudence after Puttaswamy (2017) and Joseph Shine (2018) affirms bodily autonomy and decisional privacy, which the exception negates by presuming perpetual consent within marriage. Empirical Evidence of Harm: NFHS-5 data shows that 83% of women aged 18–49 who experienced sexual violence reported their current husband as the perpetrator, establishing marital spaces as the primary site of sexual violence. Legal Inconsistency: While forced sexual intercourse by a husband is recognised as abuse under the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005, it is excluded from criminal accountability under rape law. Committee Recommendations: The Justice Verma Committee (2013) categorically recommended removal of the marital rape exception, stating that marriage cannot be a defence to sexual violence. International Commitments: India’s obligations under CEDAW require elimination of discrimination in marriage and family relations, and the continued exception places India in violation of these commitments. Changing Judicial Standards: The Supreme Court has repeatedly rejected notions of conjugal ownership over women’s bodies, notably in Independent Thought (2017) which read down marital immunity for minors.   Concerns and Counter-Arguments Raised Sanctity of Marriage Argument: Opponents argue that criminalisation may destabilise marital institutions, despite evidence that domestic violence laws have not led to societal breakdown. Misuse Concerns: Claims of false cases mirror earlier objections to dowry and domestic violence laws, though NCRB data consistently shows underreporting of sexual offences rather than overuse. Evidentiary Challenges: Difficulty of proof is cited, even though criminal law routinely adjudicates offences occurring in private spaces based on testimony and circumstantial evidence. Fear of Over-Criminalisation: Concerns persist that criminal law may be excessive, despite sexual violence already being recognised as a serious offence outside marriage.   Way Forward Legislative Amendment: Parliament must delete the marital rape exception from the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita to align criminal law with constitutional guarantees. Procedural Safeguards: Standard safeguards such as preliminary inquiry, medical evidence, and judicial scrutiny can address misuse concerns without denying justice. Institutional Sensitisation: Police, prosecutors and judges require training on consent-based adjudication and trauma-informed investigation. Holistic Support Systems: Legal reform must be accompanied by strengthened counselling, shelter, and victim compensation mechanisms. Normative Shift: Marriage must be legally and socially recognised as a partnership of equals, not a licence for sexual entitlement.   Conclusion Constitutional Morality Over Social Morality: No personal relationship can override fundamental rights guaranteed by the Constitution. Gender Justice Imperative: Retaining marital rape immunity perpetuates systemic violence against women and undermines the rule of law. Democratic Maturity: Criminalising marital rape is essential for India to uphold dignity, autonomy and equality in both law and practice.   Mains Question “The marital rape exception represents a conflict between constitutional morality and social conservatism.” Examine the constitutional, legal and ethical arguments for its removal in India. (250 words, 15 marks)   Source: Indian Express   

DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 17th December

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) United Nations Alliance of Civilizations (UNAOC) Category: International Organisations Context: Recently, India reaffirmed its commitment to the ideals of Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam at the 11th United Nations Alliance of Civilizations, UNAOC, forum in Riyadh.        About United Nations Alliance of Civilizations (UNAOC): Establishment: It was established in 2005, as the political initiative of Mr. Kofi Annan, former UN Secretary-General. It was co-sponsored by the Governments of Spain and Türkiye. Objective: It was created to serve as a soft-power political tool of the United Nations Secretary-General for conflict prevention and conflict resolution. Headquarters: Its headquarters is located in New York, USA. Functions: It maintains a global network of partners including states, international and regional organizations, civil society groups, foundations, and the private sector to improve cross-cultural relations between diverse nations and communities. Governance: The Global Forum is the highest-profile event of the UNAOC which brings together prominent personalities, current and potential partners, and others from different sectors. Funding: The Secretary-General has established a voluntary Trust Fund for UNAOC. This fund supports the UNAOC projects, activities and outreach, undertaken by the High Representative for the United Nations Alliance of Civilizations in his official capacity, and core operational and human resources needs. Administration: The Trust Fund for UNAOC is administered by the United Nations Secretariat in accordance with the United Nations Financial Regulations and Rules. UNAOC also receives voluntary contributions from member states, international organizations, private sector and foundations. About UNAOC 2025 (11th Edition): Host: It was hosted by Saudi Arabia, Riyadh. Theme: Its theme was “UNAOC: Two Decades of Dialogue for Humanity—Advancing a New Era of Mutual Respect and Understanding in a Multipolar World.” Key highlights of the 11th edition: It renewed global commitment to dialogue, mutual respect, and religious harmony amid conflicts and trust deficits in multilateralism. It marked 20 years of UNAOC, setting the course for its third decade. It witnessed broad participation of political leaders, international organizations, religious and faith actors, youth, civil society, media, arts and sports to advance peacebuilding through dialogue. Source: News on AIR Chakrashila Wildlife Sanctuary Category: Environment and Ecology Context: Community-led conservation efforts at the Chakrashila Wildlife Sanctuary have successfully restored wild honey bee colonies and revitalized associated wildlife. About Chakrashila Wildlife Sanctuary: Location: It is locatеd in thе Kokrajhar and Dhubri districts of Assam. Area: It spans over 45.5 sq.km. of hilly tеrrain and dеnsе forеsts. Establishment: It was first declared a reserve forest in 1966 and upgraded to a wildlife sanctuary in 1994. Lakes: There are two lakes (Dheer Beel and Diplai Beel) on either side, which are integral to the ecosystem of the sanctuary.  Flora: The vegetation of the sanctuary is predominantly tropical moist deciduous forests, mixed deciduous forests, and semi-evergreen forests. Sal tree is a dominant tree in this forest. Fauna: It is home to various species, including elephants, tigers, leopards, clouded leopards, sambar deer, barking deer, and gaur. The sanctuary is also home to several species of birds, including the endangered Bengal Florican, Great Hornbill, and White-winged Wood Duck. Significance: The sanctuary is the second protected habitat for the endangered golden langur (Trachypithecus geei), a rare primate species endemic to the Indo-Bhutan border region. Source: The Sentinel MANPADS Category: Defence and Security Context: Indian Army is undertaking a strategic shift in its air defence operations, repurposing its MANPADS to specifically counter the rising threat of sub-sonic cruise missiles. About MANPADS: Full form: MANPADS stands for Man-Portable Air Defence Systems. Nature: MANPADS are surface-to-air missiles that can be fired by an individual or a small team of people against aircraft. These weapon systems often are described as shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles.  Structure: MANPADS are generally less than 2 metres in length and weigh approximately 10–20 kg, Range: MANPADS are most effective against low-flying aircraft (helicopters, UAVs, and cruise missiles) within a range of 8 km and an altitude of up to 4.5 km. First deployment: The United States and the Soviet Union first deployed MANPADS—the Redeye and Strela systems, respectively—in the 1960s to provide their infantries with portable anti-aircraft weapons.  Global operation: The militaries of about 105 countries across the world operate MANPADS, although only 12 countries, including India, produce them.  Famous varieties: The most famous MANPADS are the US-made ‘Stinger’ and the Soviet 9K32 Strela-2, or simply ‘SA-7′ with the China-made ‘FN-16’ being the latest entrant.  Types: Three general types of MANPADS exist: command line of sight, laser guided, and infrared seekers. Command line-of-sight MANPADS are guided to their targets through the use of a remote control.  Laser-guided or laser beam rider MANPADS follow a laser projected onto the target.  The most common MANPADS, frequently called heat seeking missiles, however, are infrared seekers that acquire their target by detecting the heat of an aircraft’s engine. India’s MANPADS arsenal: India is one of the 12 countries that produce these systems.  Igla-S: A Russian-origin system recently inducted to replace the aging Igla-M. It has a range of up to 6 km. VSHORADS: An indigenously developed system by DRDO (Research Centre Imarat). As of now, it has undergone successful flight trials to neutralize drones and low-altitude threats. Source: Defence Bluebird 6 Satellite Category: Science and Technology Context: ISRO is scheduled to launch the US-based commercial BlueBird-6 satellite developed by US-based AST Spacemobile in December 2025 using ISRO’s LVM-3 rocket. About Bluebird 6 Satellite: Nature: It is a heavy-lift commercial communication satellite designed to provide direct-to-mobile broadband connectivity. Origin: It is developed by the US-based commercial company AST SpaceMobile for global mobile coverage. Objective: It is designed to provide direct-to-device internet connectivity, enabling mobile phones to access broadband without relying on traditional cell towers. Mission Agency: It will be launched by ISRO via its commercial arm, NewSpace India Limited (NSIL). Launch Vehicle: It will be launched using LVM3 (formerly GSLV Mk-III), also known as “Bahubali”. Structure: It weighs around 6.5 tonnes, making it one of the heaviest satellites launched by ISRO. Orbit: It will operate in low-Earth orbit (LEO) to cover large regions of the Earth efficiently. Technology: It features one of the largest phased array antennas ever flown, which covers nearly 2,400 square feet, allowing it to communicate directly with standard mobile phones. Capacity: It is part of the “Block-2” series, offering up to 10,000 MHz of bandwidth and 10x higher data capacity than previous generations. Collaboration: It represents a significant step in Indo-US space cooperation and commercial space ventures. Significance: It enhances global mobile broadband connectivity, especially in remote and rural areas. Further, It is expected to help bridge the digital divide, providing internet access to regions without cellular infrastructure. Source: The Times of India Dandami Madia Tribe Category: Society Context: Recently, members of Dandami Madia tribe performed the traditional Bison Horn Maria dance at village festivals in Jagdalpur, Chhattisgarh. About Dandami Madia Tribe: Location: It is a tribal community which lives in Chhattisgarh. Nomenclature: They have derived their name from their unique custom of wearing a distinctive head-gear, which resembles the horns of a wild bison. They generally wear that head-gear during ceremonies. Other names: It is also known by other names like Bison Horn Maria and Khalpati Maria. Tradition: They identify themselves as part of the larger Gond tradition. Dance: They perform the traditional Bison Horn Maria dance during a village festival. It is performed by both men and women. Economy: They live by agriculture, supplemented by hunting and fishing. Belief: Their belief is a combination of Hinduism with Animistic beliefs. Marital norms: They permit divorce and widow remarriage. Uniqueness: Their ghotul (youth dormitory for unmarried boys and girls) is an important social institution. Language: The main distinct language spoken by this tribe is Dandami Maria. Some of them speak Gondi dialects, which is an oral language of Dravidian origins. Source: The Hindu (MAINS Focus) Stepping Stone: India’s Nuclear Governance Needs Regulatory Independence (UPSC GS Paper III – Infrastructure: Energy; Investment Models; Science and Technology; Regulatory Frameworks)   Context (Introduction) Nuclear power contributes only about 3% of India’s electricity generation, yet the government has set an ambitious target of installing 100 GW of nuclear capacity by 2047. The proposed SHANTI Bill seeks to enable private participation in civil nuclear energy to mobilise capital, reduce project risks, and accelerate capacity expansion, including through indigenous small modular reactors.   Rationale Behind the SHANTI Bill Need for Capital Mobilisation: Achieving the 100 GW target requires large-scale capital investment, which cannot be met by public resources alone. Expansion of Eligible Operators: Allowing licensed government entities, joint ventures, and private companies broadens the pool of project developers and distributes construction risk. Controlled Private Participation: Sensitive nuclear fuel cycle activities remain under state control, while private participation is limited to plant construction, operation, and parts of the supply chain relevant to power generation. Legal Clarity for Investors: Consolidating safety, enforcement, dispute resolution, and participation terms within a single statute reduces regulatory ambiguity for new entrants. Reduced Project Delays: Streamlined approvals and clearer liability structures can lower transaction costs and shorten commissioning timelines.   Key Challenges and Concerns Inadequate Liability Cap: The operator liability ceiling of ₹3,000 crore raises concerns about sufficiency for victim compensation and environmental remediation in the event of a major nuclear accident. Asymmetric Public Accountability: Exemption of central government nuclear installations from mandatory insurance or financial security necessitates stronger public accounting and transparency. Weak Supplier Accountability: Operator recourse against suppliers depends largely on contractual terms, leading to uneven accountability across projects. Regulatory Independence Deficit: Significant executive influence over appointments to the nuclear regulator and the Atomic Energy Commission undermines institutional autonomy. Public Trust and Investor Confidence: Limited regulatory independence risks eroding public confidence in nuclear safety and may deter long-term private investment. Way Forward Strengthen Regulatory Autonomy: Ensure functional and appointment-level independence of the nuclear regulator from executive control. Revisit Liability Framework: Align liability limits with international best practices to balance investor certainty with adequate victim compensation. Standardise Supplier Liability: Establish minimum statutory supplier accountability norms beyond contractual arrangements. Enhance Transparency: Mandate uniform financial disclosure and risk coverage for both public and private nuclear installations. Build Public Confidence: Embed safety oversight, accountability, and grievance redress mechanisms to sustain social acceptance of nuclear expansion.   Mains Question “Private participation is critical for scaling nuclear power in India, but regulatory independence remains a prerequisite for safety and public trust.” Examine the implications of the SHANTI Bill in this context. (250 words, 15 marks) India and the U.S.: 2005 versus 2025 (UPSC GS Paper II – International Relations: India–USA Relations; Global Strategic Architecture)   Context (Introduction)   In 2005, India–U.S. relations entered a transformative phase with Washington explicitly supporting India’s rise as a major global power. The 2025 U.S. National Security Strategy (NSS), however, signals a retreat from this internationalist vision, redefining partnerships through the lens of burden-sharing, strategic selectivity, and inward-looking realism.   2005 Moment: Strategic Optimism and Partnership Shared Confidence: The U.S. belief that strengthening rising powers would reinforce global stability underpinned the civil nuclear agreement and strategic partnership. India as an End in Itself: India’s rise was viewed as intrinsically valuable, not merely instrumental to counterbalancing another power. Internationalist Outlook: Washington embraced global leadership and institutional engagement as assets rather than liabilities. Strategic Autonomy Respected: India’s insistence on autonomy was accommodated within a framework of expanding cooperation. Civil Nuclear Breakthrough: Symbolised trust, long-term commitment, and widening strategic horizons on both sides.   2025 Shift: Retrenchment and Instrumentalism Burden Minimisation: The NSS explicitly rejects the role of the U.S. as the primary guarantor of global order, emphasising cost reduction. India as a Strategic Function: Cooperation with India is framed mainly in terms of its utility within the Indo-Pacific and China strategy. Conditional Partnership: Support is linked to India assuming greater regional responsibility, signalling reduced U.S. strategic investment. Hemispheric Inward Turn: Emphasis on enforcing exclusivity in the Western Hemisphere reflects a narrower geopolitical focus. Performative Strategy: The NSS prioritises domestic reassurance and political signalling over deep engagement with global complexities.   Implications for India End of Assumptive Support: India can no longer presume that the U.S. will actively enable its rise as a strategic objective. Selective Convergence: Cooperation will persist where interests align but will be transactional and issue-specific. Greater Strategic Responsibility: India must increasingly manage its regional security and geopolitical environment independently. Autonomy Revalidated: The U.S. embrace of unilateral realism ironically legitimises India’s long-standing emphasis on strategic autonomy. Expanded Strategic Space: Reduced American commitments create room for India to shape outcomes aligned with its own priorities.   Way Forward for India Build Internal Capacity:India’s rise must rest on economic strength, technological capability, and military preparedness. • Calibrated Partnership: Engage the U.S. pragmatically without anchoring India’s strategic future to American preferences. • Multi-Alignment: Deepen ties with Europe, Russia, Japan, ASEAN, and the Global South to hedge against strategic uncertainty. • Regional Leadership: Assume responsibility in the Indo-Pacific and South Asia on India’s own terms. • Civilisational Confidence: Craft a global role consistent with India’s scale, interests, and historical worldview. Conclusion The contrast between 2005 and 2025 marks a shift from shared optimism to asymmetric expectations. While India–U.S. cooperation remains important, the foundation has changed. India’s emergence as a major power will now depend less on external endorsement and more on its own strategic confidence and material capability. Mains Question “The evolution of India–U.S. relations from 2005 to 2025 reflects a shift from strategic optimism to selective partnership.” Analyse the implications of this shift for India’s foreign policy choices. (250 words, 15 marks    

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 17th December 2025

The Current Affairs questions are based on sources like ‘The Hindu’, ‘Indian Express’ and ‘PIB’, which are very important sources for UPSC Prelims Exam. The questions are focused on both the concepts and facts. The topics covered here are generally different from what is being covered under ‘Daily Current Affairs/Daily News Analysis (DNA) and Daily Static Quiz’ to avoid duplication. The questions would be published from Monday to Saturday before 2 PM. One should not spend more than 10 minutes on this initiative. Gear up and Make the Best Use of this initiative. Do remember that, “the difference between Ordinary and EXTRA-Ordinary is PRACTICE!!” Important Note: Don’t forget to post your marks in the comment section. Also, let us know if you enjoyed today’s test 🙂 After completing the 5 questions, click on ‘View Questions’ to check your score, time taken, and solutions. .To take the Test Click Here

DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 16th December

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) CoalSETU Policy Category: Government Schemes Context: The Union Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs recently approved the CoalSETU Policy by creation of new window in the NRS Linkage Policy. About CoalSETU Policy: Full Form: CoalSETU stands for Coal Linkage for Seamless, Efficient & Transparent Utilisation. Nature: It is a new auction-based coal linkage window under the Non-Regulated Sector (NRS) Linkage Policy, allowing any domestic industrial buyer to secure long-term coal linkages for own use or export (up to 50%), except resale within India. Objective: It will allow allocation of coal linkages on auction basis on long-term for any industrial use and export. Nodal ministry: It is implemented by Ministry of Coal, Government of India. Participation: Any domestic buyer requiring coal can participate in the linkage auction. Traders are not allowed to bid under this window. Key features of the policy: New CoalSETU Window in NRS Policy (2016): It allows any industrial consumer to participate in coal linkage auctions. Existing NRS auctions for cement, sponge iron, steel, aluminium, CPPs will continue. No End-Use Restrictions: Coal can be used for own consumption, washing, or export (up to 50%). Coking coal is excluded from this window. Export Flexibility: Companies may export up to 50% of allotted coal. Coal can also be shared across group companies as per operational needs. Alignment with Coal Sector Reforms: It complements the 2020 reform allowing commercial mining without end-use restrictions. Focus areas: To ensure transparent, seamless and efficient utilisation of domestic coal resources. To promote ease of doing business and reduce dependence on coal imports. To boost availability of washed coal and support export opportunities. Source: PIB Pax Silica Initiative Category: International Relations Context: The Congress party recently targeted Prime Minister over India’s exclusion from the United States-led strategic initiative, Pax Silica. About Pax Silica Initiative: Nature: It is a U.S.-led strategic initiative to build a secure, prosperous, and innovation-driven silicon supply chain—from critical minerals and energy inputs to advanced manufacturing, semiconductors, artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure, and logistics. Nomenclature: The term ‘Pax Silica’ comes from the Latin term ‘pax’ which means peace, stability, and long-term prosperity. Silica refers to the compound that is refined into silicon, one of the chemical elements foundational to the computer chips that enable AI. Objective: It aims to reduce coercive dependencies, protect the materials and capabilities foundational to AI, and ensure aligned nations can develop and deploy transformative technologies at scale. Countries that are part of Pax Silica: These include Japan, South Korea, Singapore, Netherlands, United Kingdom, Israel, United Arab Emirates and Australia. India’s position: Despite being part of the Quad critical minerals initiative and having a critical technology partnership with the US, India is not part of Pax Silica. Major focus areas: Pursue projects to jointly address AI supply chain opportunities and vulnerabilities in priority critical minerals, semiconductor design, fabrication, and packaging, logistics and transportation, compute, and energy grids and power generation. Pursue new joint ventures and strategic co-investment opportunities. Protect sensitive technologies and critical infrastructure from undue access or control by countries of concern. Build trusted technology ecosystems, including ICT systems, fibre-optic cables, data centres, foundational models and applications. Source: The Indian Express Gonorrhea Category: Science and Technology Context: The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted approval for two new oral medicines to treat gonorrhoea. About Gonorrhea: Nature: It is a preventable and curable sexually transmitted infection (STI)  Causing agent: It is caused by the bacteria Neisseria gonorrhea.  Other names: It’s also sometimes called “the clap” or “drip.”  Infected areas: Gonorrhea bacteria can infect the urethra, rectum, female reproductive tract, mouth, throat, or eyes. Transmission: It is most commonly spread during vaginal, oral or anal sexual activity. But babies can get the infection during childbirth. In babies, gonorrhea most commonly affects the eyes. Vulnerable people: IT can affect people of any age, anatomy, or gender, but it’s particularly common among teens and young adults between the ages of 15 and 24. Symptoms: Many people with gonorrhoea do not notice any symptoms. Men are more likely to experience symptoms. However, the symptoms include sore throat, conjunctivitis, unusual vaginal or penile discharge, and pelvic and genital pain. Prevention: It can be prevented by practicing safe sex. Treatment: It is treatable and curable with antibiotics. Antimicrobial resistance to gonorrhoea is a serious and growing problem, rendering many classes of antibiotics ineffective with the risk of becoming untreatable. Source: The Hindu Ponduru Khadi Category: Miscellaneous Context: Ponduru Khadi, which was appreciated by Mahatma Gandhi 100 years ago, recently received Geographical Indication (GI) tag. About Ponduru Khadi: Location: Ponduru Khadi, is a famous handspun and handwoven cotton fabric from Andhra Pradesh. Other names: It is locally known as Patnulu and it is produced in Ponduru village in Srikakulam district. Associated schemes: It has been nominated for the One District One Product (ODOP) scheme from the Srikakulam district.  Historical significance: During the pre-independence era, Mahatma Gandhi mentioned its virtues in his Young India (the national weekly that Gandhiji edited). Raw material: It is produced from one of three types of cotton: hill cotton, punasa cotton, or red cotton. ​Source of cotton: Cotton is indigenous to Srikakulam district and is grown in and around Ponduru. The entire process, from cotton to fabric, is carried out manually. Uniqueness: The process of cleaning the cotton with the jawbone of Valuga fish is unique to Ponduru khadi and is not practiced anywhere else in the world. Ponduru is the only place in India where spinners still use single-spindle charkhas with 24 spokes, also known as the “Gandhi Charkha”. High quality fabric: The fabric is known for its very high yarn count of about 100–120, indicating extreme fineness. Source: The Hindu Ratle Hydroelectric Project Category: Geography Context: Recently, Megha Engineering and Infrastructures Ltd. threatened to pull out of 850MW Ratle power project in J&K if ‘threats and political interferences’ were not stopped. About Ratle Hydroelectric Project: Location: It is located in the Kishtwar District of Jammu & Kashmir. Associated river: It is being built on the Chenab River. Capacity: Its capacity is 850 MW (850,000 kW). Implementing authority: The project is implemented by the Ratle Hydroelectric Power Corporation (RHPCL). Construction: The construction work is being undertaken by Megha Engineering and Infrastructure Limited (MEIL). Cost: It was approved by the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs in January 2021 at a cost of ₹5,281.94 crore. Project type: It is Run-of-the-river project, which means it uses the natural flow of the river with a small or no reservoir. Gravity dam: The project includes a 133-meter-tall and 194.8-meter-long concrete gravity dam, a diversion dam, and an underground powerhouse on the right bank of the river. Powerhouse: The underground powerhouse measuring 168 m x 24.5 m x 49 m will house four 205 MW Francis turbine-generating units and a 30 MW auxiliary turbine-generating unit. Significance: It is part of India’s plan to utilize its share of water under the Indus Waters Treaty, 1960. It is strategically also vital in the context of China’s CPEC initiative. Source: The Hindu (MAINS Focus) The Oman Visit: Beyond Routine Diplomacy (UPSC GS Paper II – International Relations: India and its neighbourhood; Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India’s interests)   Context (Introduction) Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s December 2025 visit to Oman, marking 70 years of diplomatic relations, comes amid West Asia’s geopolitical volatility, energy transitions, connectivity initiatives, and shifting global trade alignments, making it strategically significant rather than ceremonial.   Strategic Significance of Oman for India A Trusted Regional Balancer: Oman has historically pursued a foreign policy of moderation, mediation, and deliberate neutrality, making it a reliable partner for India in a conflict-prone West Asia, even when regional sentiment was unfavourable to New Delhi. Pillar of India’s West Asia Policy: India–Oman ties were elevated to a strategic partnership in 2008, with Oman invited as a guest country during India’s G20 Presidency in 2023, underlining mutual strategic trust. Geostrategic Location: Oman’s position overlooking the Gulf of Oman and the Arabian Sea enhances India’s maritime situational awareness, particularly amid expanding Chinese PLA Navy presence in the region.   Defence and Security Cooperation Deep Military Engagement: Oman is the first Gulf country to conduct joint exercises with all three wings of India’s armed forces, backed by a 2005 MoU on military cooperation. Maritime Security Role: Since 2012–13, Indian naval ships have been deployed in the Gulf of Oman for anti-piracy operations, with Oman facilitating overflight and transit for Indian military aircraft. Duqm Port Logistics Agreement: Signed in 2018, it provides basing and operational turnaround facilities for the Indian Navy, strengthening India’s Indian Ocean Region (IOR) security posture. Defence Trade and Future Scope: Oman was the first Gulf nation to procure Indian INSAS rifles; future cooperation may include Tejas aircraft, naval platforms, radar systems, and joint production.   Economic, Trade and Investment Engagement Growing Trade Relations: Bilateral trade has reached over $10.6 billion in FY 2024–25, reflecting steady expansion despite global economic uncertainty. Investment Architecture: The Oman–India Joint Investment Fund (OIJIF) has invested around $600 million in India, reinforcing long-term financial partnership. CEPA Prospects: The proposed India–Oman Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement would make Oman the second Gulf country after the UAE to sign such an accord with India, aiding trade diversification amid global tariff pressures.   Energy, Connectivity and Emerging Domains Energy Transition Cooperation: Engagement is expected to expand into green hydrogen, renewable energy, critical minerals, and strategic petroleum reserves, aligning with global decarbonisation trends. Connectivity Corridors: Oman’s potential role in the India–Middle East–Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC) enhances India’s strategic connectivity to Europe and West Asia. Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI): Linking payment systems through RuPay and NPCI cooperation positions Oman as a key partner in India’s global DPI outreach. Education, Health and Space: Proposals for offshore campuses of IITs and IIMs, along with expanded health and space cooperation, reflect diversification beyond traditional sectors.   Way Forward Institutionalise Strategic Cooperation: Fast-track CEPA implementation and expand defence logistics and joint production to deepen strategic interdependence. Anchor Oman in India’s Connectivity Vision: Integrate Oman more firmly into IMEC and maritime connectivity initiatives. Leverage Oman’s Neutrality: Use Oman as a diplomatic bridge in regional dialogues amid West Asian instability. Expand People-Centric Cooperation: Promote education, health, and digital partnerships to sustain long-term societal linkages.   Conclusion The Oman visit reaffirms one of India’s oldest and most stable Gulf partnerships. In a rapidly evolving regional and global order, India–Oman ties exemplify how trust, strategic autonomy, and diversification can anchor India’s expanding footprint in West Asia and the Indian Ocean Region.   Mains Question “Oman occupies a unique position in India’s West Asia policy as a trusted strategic and maritime partner.” Examine the significance of India–Oman relations. Source: The Hindu Upgrading India’s Biosecurity Architecture in the Age of Emerging Biothreats (UPSC GS Paper II – Governance, International Treaties, Security Challenges, Health Governance)   Context (Introduction) Rapid advances in biotechnology have expanded humanity’s ability to manipulate biological agents, raising the risk of deliberate misuse. India’s ecological diversity, porous borders and demographic scale necessitate an urgent upgrade of its biosecurity framework to address emerging state and non-state biothreats.   Main Arguments (Need for Biosecurity & International Framework) Conceptual Basis of Biosecurity: Biosecurity encompasses systems and practices aimed at preventing the intentional misuse of biological agents, toxins and technologies. It extends beyond human health to animal, agricultural and environmental protection, and is closely linked to biosafety, which prevents accidental pathogen release.  Biological Weapons Convention (BWC): The BWC, operational since 1975, is the first global disarmament treaty prohibiting the development, production, stockpiling and use of biological weapons. It mandates destruction of existing stockpiles and promotes peaceful use of biological sciences, though it lacks a robust verification mechanism. Technological Convergence and Dual-Use Risks: Advances in synthetic biology, gene editing and recombinant DNA research have lowered entry barriers for manipulating pathogens. These dual-use technologies, while beneficial for medicine and agriculture, increase risks of misuse by malicious actors. India’s Structural Vulnerabilities: India’s long land and maritime borders, high population density, biodiversity hotspots and heavy dependence on agriculture amplify the impact of biological threats, whether natural, accidental or deliberate. Emergence of Non-State Actors: Incidents such as the alleged preparation of Ricin toxin highlight that biothreats are no longer confined to states. Terror groups and lone actors can exploit accessible biological materials, intensifying the need for preventive biosecurity measures.   Existing Institutional and Legal Framework in India Multi-Agency Governance Structure: The Department of Biotechnology regulates research governance and lab safety; the National Centre for Disease Control oversees disease surveillance; animal and plant biosecurity fall under specialised departments, reflecting a sectoral approach. Legal and Regulatory Instruments: The Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 regulates hazardous microorganisms and GMOs. The WMD Act, 2005 criminalises biological weapons activities. Biosafety Rules (1989) and Recombinant DNA and Biocontainment Guidelines (2017) provide laboratory-level safeguards.  Disaster Preparedness Mechanisms: The National Disaster Management Authority has issued guidelines for managing biological disasters, integrating bio-events into the broader disaster management framework. International Engagements: India is a signatory to the BWC and participates in export-control regimes such as the Australia Group, reflecting its commitment to global biosecurity norms.   Challenges / Criticisms  Fragmented Governance Architecture: Despite multiple agencies, India lacks a unified national biosecurity framework, leading to coordination gaps across health, agriculture, environment and security sectors. Response Capacity Deficit: India ranks 66th on the Global Health Security Index. While detection capabilities have improved, response readiness has declined, indicating weaknesses in surge capacity, logistics and inter-agency coordination. Verification and Oversight Gaps: The absence of an international verification regime under the BWC limits enforcement, placing greater responsibility on national mechanisms that remain unevenly developed. Non-State Actor Threat Escalation: Accessible biological knowledge and materials increase the probability of asymmetric attacks, which are harder to detect and attribute than conventional security threats. Infrastructure and Workforce Constraints: Shortages of high-containment laboratories, trained biosecurity professionals and advanced surveillance systems constrain India’s preparedness against high-impact biological events.   Way Forward  National Biosecurity Framework: Develop an integrated biosecurity policy that coordinates health, agriculture, environment, defence and intelligence agencies under a single strategic vision. Capacity and Infrastructure Enhancement: Invest in high-containment labs, genomic surveillance networks and rapid response teams, building on lessons from pandemic preparedness. Strengthening Legal and Ethical Oversight: Update biosecurity regulations to address emerging technologies such as synthetic biology, while ensuring ethical research governance and accountability. Countering Non-State Actor Risks: Enhance intelligence-led monitoring of biological materials, research facilities and supply chains, and strengthen international cooperation on bio-threat intelligence sharing. Global Leadership and Diplomacy: Advocate for strengthening the BWC through confidence-building measures, transparency norms and discussions on verification mechanisms, positioning India as a responsible biosecurity leader.   Conclusion  In an era of rapid biotechnological change, biosecurity is no longer a niche health concern but a core national security imperative. Upgrading India’s biosecurity architecture through coordination, capacity-building and global engagement is essential to safeguard lives, livelihoods and democratic stability.   Mains Question  Discuss the mandate of Biological Weapons Convention. Does India need to upgrade its biosecurity measures in the context of emerging biotechnologies and non-state actor threats?  (250 words, 15 marks) Source: The Hindu   MGNREGA Reforms and VB-G RAM G: Strengthening Employment Security or Fraying the Safety Net? (UPSC GS Paper III – Inclusive Growth and Employment; GS Paper II – Welfare Schemes, Federalism, Governance)   Context (Introduction) The Union government has proposed replacing MGNREGA with the Viksit Bharat–Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission (Gramin) Bill. While promising expanded employment and technological efficiency, the move has raised concerns over fiscal federalism, demand-driven design and the dilution of the rural safety net.   Main Arguments (Rationale for Reform) Need for Reform in MGNREGA: MGNREGA has faced long-standing issues such as delayed wage payments, asset quality concerns, leakages and weak worksite monitoring. Reforming design and implementation was necessary to improve efficiency and accountability. Enhanced Employment Guarantee: VB-G RAM G proposes 125 days of guaranteed wage employment per rural household annually, compared to 100 days under MGNREGA, signalling an intent to strengthen livelihood security amid rural distress. Avoiding Agricultural Labour Distortions: The Bill restricts employment during a 60-day notified peak sowing and harvesting period, addressing criticism that MGNREGA distorted farm labour availability and agricultural wages. Technology-Driven Governance: Use of biometric authentication, GPS-enabled attendance, mobile-based monitoring and AI-driven fraud detection aims to reduce leakages and improve transparency, building on DBT reforms under MGNREGA. Crisis-Time Performance Legacy: The government highlights record employment generation during the pandemic—389 crore person-days in 2020–21 and 364 crore in 2021–22—demonstrating the scheme’s counter-cyclical role during economic shocks.   Challenges / Criticisms  Adverse Fiscal Federalism Shift: MGNREGA mandated 100% central funding of wages and 75% of material costs. VB-G RAM G shifts to a 60:40 Centre–State sharing ratio (90:10 for North-East and Himalayan states), significantly burdening fiscally constrained states. Risk of Suboptimal Implementation: States struggling to mobilise their share may limit coverage or delay payments, echoing the experience of PM Fasal Bima Yojana where delayed state contributions undermined scheme performance. Erosion of Demand-Driven Architecture: MGNREGA was designed as a rights-based, demand-driven programme where states assessed labour demand and the Centre responded with funds. VB-G RAM G replaces this with “normative allocations” determined by the Centre, weakening decentralisation. Threat to Legal Entitlement: MGNREGA provided a statutory right to work with unemployment allowance for non-provision. Centralised allocation risks converting a rights-based guarantee into a budget-limited welfare programme. State Capacity and Equity Concerns: Backward states with high poverty, weak revenue bases and high MGNREGA dependence may be disproportionately affected, undermining regional equity and inclusive growth objectives. Way Forward  Restore Strong Central Funding: For flagship social protection schemes like rural employment, the Centre should bear a dominant share of financing, especially wages, to prevent exclusion due to state fiscal stress. Retain Demand-Driven Core: Normative allocations may be used as a baseline, but demand-based supplementary funding must be guaranteed to preserve the scheme’s legal and counter-cyclical character. Differentiated Fiscal Design: Introduce variable Centre–State ratios based on state poverty levels, fiscal capacity and distress indicators, rather than a uniform 60:40 formula. Technology with Human Oversight: Digital tools should complement—not replace—local verification. Safeguards against biometric failures, digital exclusion and wrongful deletions must be institutionalised. Strengthen Panchayati Raj Role: Empower Gram Panchayats in planning, monitoring and social audits to preserve bottom-up governance and community accountability.   Conclusion  MGNREGA undoubtedly required reform, but VB-G RAM G risks weakening India’s rural employment safety net through poor fiscal design and centralisation. Sustainable reform must balance efficiency with federal equity, demand responsiveness and the rights-based spirit of rural employment guarantees.   Mains Question  Q. Critically examine the rationale for reform and key changes proposed in MGNREGA  scheme (250 words, 15 marks)   Source: Indian Express 

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 13th December 2025

The Current Affairs questions are based on sources like ‘The Hindu’, ‘Indian Express’ and ‘PIB’, which are very important sources for UPSC Prelims Exam. The questions are focused on both the concepts and facts. The topics covered here are generally different from what is being covered under ‘Daily Current Affairs/Daily News Analysis (DNA) and Daily Static Quiz’ to avoid duplication. The questions would be published from Monday to Saturday before 2 PM. One should not spend more than 10 minutes on this initiative. Gear up and Make the Best Use of this initiative. Do remember that, “the difference between Ordinary and EXTRA-Ordinary is PRACTICE!!” Important Note: Don’t forget to post your marks in the comment section. Also, let us know if you enjoyed today’s test 🙂 After completing the 5 questions, click on ‘View Questions’ to check your score, time taken, and solutions. .To take the Test Click Here

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 15th December 2025

The Current Affairs questions are based on sources like ‘The Hindu’, ‘Indian Express’ and ‘PIB’, which are very important sources for UPSC Prelims Exam. The questions are focused on both the concepts and facts. The topics covered here are generally different from what is being covered under ‘Daily Current Affairs/Daily News Analysis (DNA) and Daily Static Quiz’ to avoid duplication. The questions would be published from Monday to Saturday before 2 PM. One should not spend more than 10 minutes on this initiative. Gear up and Make the Best Use of this initiative. Do remember that, “the difference between Ordinary and EXTRA-Ordinary is PRACTICE!!” Important Note: Don’t forget to post your marks in the comment section. Also, let us know if you enjoyed today’s test 🙂 After completing the 5 questions, click on ‘View Questions’ to check your score, time taken, and solutions. .To take the Test Click Here

DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 15th December

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) APAAR Id Category: Government Schemes Context: Recently, the Orissa High Court directed education authorities to amend the consent form used for generating APAAR IDs to include an explicit opt-out option. About APAAR Id: Full Form: It is an acronym for Automated Permanent Academic Account Registry. Nature: It is a specialised identification system designed for all students in India, beginning from an early age. Objective: It aims to streamline and enhance the academic experience for students throughout India by assigning a unique and permanent 12-digit ID to each student, consolidating their academic records into a single accessible platform. In sync with NEP: It is introduced in accordance with the National Education Policy (NEP) of 2020 and the National Credit and Qualifications Framework (NCrF). Voluntary: Registration for an APAAR ID is voluntary, not mandatory. Tracks academic progress: Under the initiative, each student would get a lifelong APAAR ID, making it easy for the learners, schools, and governments to track academic progress from pre-primary education to higher education. Linked to Academic Bank of Credits (ABC): Every individual will have a unique APAAR ID, which will be linked to the Academic Bank of Credit (ABC). With the APAAR ID, students would be able to store all their certificates and credits, whether they come from formal education or informal learning. Gateway to Digilocker: It would serve as a gateway to Digilocker. When a student would complete a course or achieve something, it would be digitally certified and securely stored in his/her account by authorised institutions. Enhanced transparency: It ensures accountability and transparency in education by streamlining academic records. It enhances efficiency, combats fraud, and includes co-curricular achievements for holistic student development. Data-driven decision-making: With multiple use cases, APAAR facilitates a smooth transfer process and supports data-driven decision-making in educational institutions. Source: Hindustan Times Bar-headed Goose Category: Environment and Ecology Context: In a first-of-its kind study in eastern India, a bar-headed goose fitted with a GSM-GPS transmitter has revealed its migration route and flying pattern. About Bar-headed Goose: Nature: It is a migratory bird species which is known to be one of the highest-flying birds in the world.  Uniqueness: It can fly at altitudes of 25,000 feet, while migrating over the Himalayas, where oxygen and temperature levels are extremely low. They can cover distances of over 1,600 km in a single day. Distribution:  It is native to central Asia, where the species breeds, Bar-headed Geese, are found in countries like India, Pakistan, Nepal, Kazakhstan, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Japan, and other nearby regions.  Geographical spread in India: In India, their geographical range extends from the northeast to the southern parts of the country. Wintering Sites in India: Large congregations are often sighted at various Indian wetlands, including the Koonthankulam Bird Sanctuary in Tamil Nadu, Pong Dam Lake in Himachal Pradesh, and the East Calcutta Wetlands. Habitat: They reside near water bodies, preferring high-altitude lakes during the breeding season and freshwater lakes, rivers, and streams in their wintering habitats.  Wetland Health Indicator: Their presence indicates healthy wetland ecosystems, as they are sensitive to habitat changes. Appearance: This species is grey and white with two horseshoe-shaped, brownish-black bars on the back of its white head. Although male and female birds appear similar, the male bird is slightly larger than the female. Breeding pattern: They usually form monogamous pairs and are seasonal breeders. Conservation Status: It is classified as ‘Least Concern’ under the IUCN Red List. Source: Down To Earth International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) Category: International Organisations Context: The Government of India recently showcased the country’s pioneering achievements in various fields (such as rural development) at the IFAD–India Day event held in Rome. About International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD): Nature: It is an international financial institution and a specialized agency of the United Nations. Establishment: It was established as an international financial institution in 1977 through United Nations General Assembly Resolution. Objective: It is dedicated to eradicating poverty and hunger in rural areas of developing countries. It also seeks to empower rural people to increase their food security, improve the nutrition of their families. Association with UN: It is a member of the United Nations Development Group (UNDP). Membership: Currently, IFAD has 180 Member States, including India. (India is a founding member of IFAD). Governance: Its Governing Council is the highest decision-making body which meets every three years. Headquarters: Its headquarters is located in Rome, Italy. Focus on SIDS: Its projects and programmes are carried out in remote and environmentally fragile locations, including least-developed countries and Small Island developing States (SIDS). Supports pro-poor technologies: It grants support research, innovation, institutional change, and pro-poor technologies. Grants: It extends two types of grants, depending on the nature of the innovation and the scope of intervention: global or regional grants and country-specific grants. Source: PIB Chenchu Tribe Category: Society Context: NSU organised an exhibition on Ahobila Paruveta Utsavam, highlighting the Chenchu tribe’s unique traditional association with Ahobilam shrine and Lord Narasimha. About Chenchu Tribe: Location: The Chenchus are a food-gathering tribe primarily residing in the Nallamalai forests of Andhra Pradesh. They are also found in Telangana, Karnataka, and Odisha. Uniqueness: They are one of the Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups (PVTGs) in Andhra Pradesh. Language: They speak variants of Telugu, the Dravidian language of the region. Habitat: A Chenchu village is known as “Penta“. Each penta consists of a few huts that are spaced apart and are grouped together based on kinship patterns.  Social order: “Peddamanishi” or the village elder, is generally the authority to maintain social harmony in a family or a village.  Norms of equality: Small conjugal families predominate, women taking equal rank with men and marrying only upon maturity. Rituals: Their rituals are few and simple; religious and political specializations are slight. Livelihood: The Chenchu live life with exemplary simplicity.  Most of them still gather food from the forest and roam in it to find things to meet their needs. The bow and arrow and a small knife are all the Chenchus possess to hunt and live. Work with cooperatives: The Chenchus collect forest products like roots, fruits, tubers, beedi leaf, mohua flower, honey, gum, tamarind, and green leaves and make a meagre income from it by selling these to traders and government cooperatives. Religion: Chenchus worship a number of deities. Chenchus have also adopted certain religious practices from Hindus. Association with Srisailam temple: For ages, the Chenchus have been associated with the famous Srisailam temple (dedicated to Lord Shiva and Devi Brahmaramba) in Andhra Pradesh, situated at the heart of Chenchu land. The Chenchus enjoy special privileges at Srisailam temple. Source: The Hindu Supernova Category: Science and Technology Context: Recently, rare supernova from 730 million years after the Big Bang was spotted by James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). About Supernova: Definition: A supernova is a massive stellar explosion marking the end of a star’s life Uniqueness: They are the largest explosions that take place in space. Based on hydrostatic equilibrium: A star maintains stability through a balance between the inward pull of gravity and the outward pressure from nuclear fusion in its core. A supernova occurs when this balance is lost. Remnants: Depending on the original mass of the star, a supernova can leave behind a dense neutron star or a black hole. Energy emission: It can emit more energy in a few seconds than our sun will radiate in its lifetime of billions of years. Types: Type II Supernova (Core-Collapse): It occurs in single massive stars (at least 8-10 times the mass of the Sun) at the end of their life cycle. The core, having exhausted its nuclear fuel, collapses under its own immense gravity, triggering a shockwave that ejects the outer layers in a massive explosion. Type Ia Supernova (Thermonuclear Runaway): It occurs in a binary star system where one star is a white dwarf. The white dwarf siphons matter from its companion star. Once it exceeds a critical mass limit (the Chandrasekhar limit), it completely destroys the white dwarf without leaving a remnant. Spectacularity: These spectacular events can be so bright that they outshine their entire galaxies for a few days or even months. Source of heavy elements: They can be seen across the universe and they are the primary source of heavy elements in the universe. Frequency: Astronomers believe that about two or three supernovas occur each century in galaxies like our own Milky Way. Because the universe contains so many galaxies, astronomers observe a few hundred supernovas per year outside our galaxy. Significance: Element Creation: They are the primary source of all elements heavier than iron (e.g., gold, silver, uranium) through a process called nucleosynthesis. Cosmic Recycling: The expelled material enriches the interstellar medium, providing the building blocks for subsequent generations of stars, planets, and life itself. Cosmic Distance Indicators: Type Ia supernovae have a consistent peak brightness, making them “standard candles” for measuring vast cosmic distances and understanding the accelerating expansion of the universe. Source: Money Control   (MAINS Focus) NHRC’s Directive on Custodial Death Compensation (UPSC GS Paper II – Statutory Bodies, Human Rights Commissions, Governance & Accountability)   Context (Introduction) NHRC’s order directing Uttar Pradesh to pay ₹10 lakh for a 2021 custodial death comes at a time of rising custodial violence and growing concerns about the Commission’s diminishing autonomy, limited enforcement capacity, and declining credibility in safeguarding human rights.   Main Arguments: Why the NHRC Directive Matters?  Reaffirmation of State Accountability: With 4,400+ custodial deaths (2020–22) nationwide and nearly 1,000 in UP, the directive underscores the constitutional principle that the State is answerable for violations of the right to life inside its custody. Attempt to Reclaim Institutional Purpose: Once proactive in shaping human-rights jurisprudence — on extra-judicial killings, prison reforms, and compensation norms — NHRC had grown passive in politically sensitive cases. The directive signals a possible reorientation toward its founding mandate. Highlighting Police Culture & Excessive Force: Recent survey-based assessments reveal troubling approval for coercive policing among personnel, indicating deep-rooted behavioural norms that enable custodial violence. Revisiting Public Trust in Oversight Bodies: By intervening in a long-pending case, the NHRC sends a message that constitutional oversight still matters, even if delayed. Restoring India’s Rights Architecture: Given concerns about falling institutional standards, the directive serves as a reminder that human-rights bodies must be independent, assertive, and citizen-centred.   Challenges / Criticisms of NHRC  Weak Enforcement Powers: NHRC’s recommendations are non-binding, leading to frequent state non-compliance and rendering it largely advisory rather than authoritative. Lack of Independence in Appointments: Reports highlight executive-dominated selection processes, limited diversity, and lack of transparency — weakening autonomy and raising conflict-of-interest concerns. Inadequate Resources & Overburdened Structure: Shortage of investigators, delays in case disposal, and heavy reliance on police officers on deputation reduce credibility and effectiveness. Limited Jurisdiction Over Armed Forces: NHRC can only seek reports in cases involving armed forces, with no power to conduct independent investigations — a long-standing institutional weakness. Reluctance to Pursue Sensitive Cases: Documented hesitancy to take up politically inconvenient cases has fuelled perceptions of drift, passivity, and excessive deference to governments. Deficient Monitoring & Follow-Through: Compliance tracking mechanisms remain weak; many states ignore directives on compensation, custodial safeguards, and prison conditions without consequence.   Way Forward Strengthen Statutory Mandate & Enforceability: Give NHRC binding powers in grave violations, allow independent investigations, and expand jurisdiction over all uniformed services — aligning practice with global standards for human-rights bodies. Overhaul Appointment Processes: Introduce transparent, merit-based, and diversity-enhancing selection norms; reduce executive dominance; ensure adequate representation of women, civil society, and marginalised groups. Professionalise Investigative Capacity: Build a dedicated cadre of civilian investigators, forensic experts, psychologists, and social workers instead of relying heavily on police personnel. Ensure Accountability of State Authorities: Mandate time-bound compliance to NHRC recommendations, create a public dashboard of implementation status, and institutionalise penalties for unjustified non-compliance. Prioritise Custodial Violence Prevention: Install CCTV systems in all police stations, strengthen judicial oversight of custodial interrogations, and embed behavioural and ethical training within police academies. Revitalise State Human Rights Commissions (SHRCs): Enhance funding, staffing, suo-motu powers, and coordination with NHRC to build a multi-layered rights-protection ecosystem across states.   Conclusion: NHRC’s directive in the UP custodial death case is significant not for its monetary value but for its symbolic assertion that human dignity remains non-negotiable. However, without structural reforms — stronger powers, independent appointments, professional capacity, and robust state compliance — the Commission’s impact will remain limited. Institutional renewal must accompany individual interventions.   Mains Question  Critically examine the challenges facing the NHRC and outline reform measures needed to restore its effectiveness. (250 words, 15 marks) Source: Indian Express India’s Proliferation of FTAs: Strategic Logic Beyond Economics (UPSC GS Paper II – “Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India’s interests”; GS Paper III – “Effects of liberalization on the economy”)   Context (Introduction) India’s rapid acceleration in signing Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) with diverse partners — from EFTA to New Zealand, Oman, Canada and potentially Russia — reflects a shift from purely economic objectives toward geopolitical signalling, strategic hedging, and securing political safety nets in an uncertain global order.   Main Arguments: Why India Is Signing So Many FTAs Now? FTAs as Strategic Insurance: As global geopolitics fractures — with increasing U.S.–China polarisation and a weakened WTO — FTAs serve as political stabilisers rather than trade boosters, helping India lock in partnerships amid global realignments. Formalising Existing Trade Rather Than Creating New Trade: Empirical trends show India’s FTAs historically do not significantly expand trade—export shares with ASEAN, Japan, and Korea remained stagnant or declined. FTAs mostly codify existing flows, not generate new ones. Leveraging FTAs for WTO-Plus Areas: India uses FTAs to negotiate cooperation in services, investment, mobility, data, standards, and supply-chain security, areas where the WTO has stagnated and multilateralism is gridlocked. Political Logic Over Economic Logic: Recent FTAs (UAE, EFTA, Australia) align more with India’s Indo-Pacific strategy, its QUAD logic, and broader foreign-policy goals rather than immediate economic gains — hence the MEA increasingly leads instead of Commerce. Pre-Emptive Hedging against “Big Two” Realignment: Trump’s burst of bilateral FTAs and U.S. retreat from multilateralism has forced India to diversify partners. If Washington and Beijing consolidate into a “Big Two”, India’s FTAs serve as geostrategic hedges.   Challenges / Criticisms  Limited Trade Gains Despite Multiple FTAs: Data show negligible increases in intra-FTA trade; partner tariffs were already low, India’s services strength was underutilised, and fears of Chinese goods rerouted via ASEAN undercut domestic industry support. Underperformance in Services Liberalisation: Despite India’s comparative advantage, most Asian partners resisted services mobility, resulting in FTAs that are skewed toward goods, limiting India’s value capture. Fragmented RTA Implementation: Out of nearly 18 FTAs/PTAs, only eight include services agreements and only two have defined end-date implementation schedules — reflecting weak follow-through. Domestic Political Economy Constraints: Import-competing firms, tariff-sensitive manufacturing groups, and MSMEs often resist deeper liberalisation, lowering India’s appetite for ambitious FTA commitments. Geopolitical Overload Diluting Economic Priorities: As FTAs are increasingly driven by strategic diplomacy, economic ministries may under-prioritise competitiveness reforms, supply-chain integration, and structural capabilities needed to benefit from agreements.   Way Forward:  Reprioritise Services & Mobility Negotiations: Focus FTAs on Mode 4 mobility, professional visas, digital services, fintech, and regulatory harmonisation with partners — areas where India has real comparative advantage. Streamline RTA Design for Economic Coherence: Move toward template-based FTAs, stronger end-date implementation, and periodic review mechanisms like those adopted in EU and CPTPP agreements. Deepen Domestic Competitiveness Reforms: Boost logistics efficiency, reduce tariff dispersion, accelerate PLI-linked productivity, and strengthen MSME readiness — necessary to fully leverage FTAs as economic tools. Ensure Clear MEA–Commerce Coordination: Institutionalise joint decision-making structures so geopolitical goals do not overshadow economic outcomes; create an inter-ministerial FTA strategy cell. Explore Strategic FTAs like India–Russia: Given shifting global alignments, an India–Russia FTA could secure energy, minerals, and logistics corridors (Northern Sea Route), serving long-term strategic autonomy.   Conclusion India’s recent proliferation of FTAs is less a story of trade expansion and more a reflection of strategic adaptation. In a fractured global order, FTAs have become political safety nets, signalling alignment, hedging rivalries, and ensuring economic resilience. To truly benefit, however, India must strengthen services negotiations, institutional coherence, and domestic competitiveness — aligning geopolitics with economic substance.   Mains Question  “India’s recent burst of FTAs is driven more by geopolitical calculations than economic imperatives.” Discuss (250 words, 15 marks)   Source: Indian Express    

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 12th December 2025

The Current Affairs questions are based on sources like ‘The Hindu’, ‘Indian Express’ and ‘PIB’, which are very important sources for UPSC Prelims Exam. The questions are focused on both the concepts and facts. The topics covered here are generally different from what is being covered under ‘Daily Current Affairs/Daily News Analysis (DNA) and Daily Static Quiz’ to avoid duplication. The questions would be published from Monday to Saturday before 2 PM. One should not spend more than 10 minutes on this initiative. Gear up and Make the Best Use of this initiative. Do remember that, “the difference between Ordinary and EXTRA-Ordinary is PRACTICE!!” Important Note: Don’t forget to post your marks in the comment section. Also, let us know if you enjoyed today’s test 🙂 After completing the 5 questions, click on ‘View Questions’ to check your score, time taken, and solutions. .To take the Test Click Here

DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 13th December

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) GlowCas9 Category: Science and Technology Context: GlowCas9 protein could help scientists observe the molecular scissors called Cas9 enzyme as it enables gene editing for treating genetic diseases including cancer. About GlowCas9: Nature: It is a CRISPR protein that lights up while performing gene editing. It is a bioluminescent version of Cas9 that glows inside cells. Creation: It is created by scientists at the Bose Institute in Kolkata. Structure: It is created by fusing Cas9 with a split nano-luciferase enzyme derived from deep-sea shrimp proteins. Properties: The GlowCas9 is very stable and maintains its structure and activity at higher temperatures compared to the conventional enzyme. It glows inside cells, allowing for real-time monitoring of CRISPR operations. Working mechanism: The split nano-luciferase enzyme pieces reconnect when Cas9 folds correctly, producing light. This glowing activity allows scientists to monitor CRISPR operations in living cells, tissues, and even plant leaves, without harming them. Advantages: It provides a way to observe gene editing in real-time without harming cells. The bioluminescence allows tracking of the gene-editing process in living cells, tissues, and even plant leaves. It is more stable than conventional Cas9 and can maintain its structure and activity at higher temperatures. This increased stability is important for gene therapy, ensuring effective delivery of the Cas9 protein for treatment. Applications: Gene Therapy Implications: GlowCas9 can aid in gene therapy by improving the precision of homology-directed repair (HDR), which is essential for fixing hereditary mutations linked to diseases like sickle cell anaemia and muscular dystrophy. Theratracking: It also pioneers the emerging field of theratracking (visualizing molecular gene therapy in motion), which could greatly enhance the success rate of treatments for diseases like sickle cell anaemia and muscular dystrophy. Applications in Crop Improvement: The technology is also applicable to plant systems, suggesting potential non-transgenic applications in crop improvement. Source: PIB   Buxa Tiger Reserve Category: Environment and Ecology Context: Recently, the year’s largest wildlife survey began across the Buxa Tiger Reserve, with an extensive four-month monitoring survey. About Buxa Tiger Reserve: Location: It is located in the Alipurduar district of West Bengal. Its northern boundary runs along the international border with Bhutan. Area: Buxa Tiger Reserve and National Park covers about 760 square kilometers. Landscape: The fragile “Terai Eco-System” constitutes a part of this reserve. Important for elephant migration: It serves as an international corridor for elephant migration between India and Bhutan. Connectivity: The reserve has corridor connectivity across the border with the forests of Bhutan in the North, on the East it has linkages with the Kochugaon forests, Manas Tiger Reserve and on the West with the Jaldapara National Park. Rivers: The rivers Sankosh, Raidak, Jayanti, Churnia, Turturi, Phashkhawa, Dima, and Nonani flow through Buxa National Park. Vegetation: The forests of the reserve can be broadly classified as the ‘Moist Tropical Forest’. Flora: Prominent tree species include Sal, Champ, Gamar, Simul, and Chikrasi, contributing to the reserve’s diverse and vibrant ecosystem. Fauna: The primary wildlife species include the Asian Elephant, Tiger, gaur (Indian bison), Wild boar, Sambar, and Wild dog (Dhole). Endangered species in Buxa Tiger Reserve encompass the Leopard cat, Bengal florican, Regal python, Chinese Pangolin, Hispid hare, and Hog deer.  Conservation Initiatives: Introduction of chitals (spotted deer) to enhance the tiger’s prey base, fostering favorable conditions for their return, and showcasing successful conservation efforts. Proactive measures have been taken to expand the grassland, creating an ideal habitat for tigers and other wildlife. Tiger Augmentation Project was launched in 2018, this collaborative project involves the state forest department, the Wildlife Institute of India, and the NTCA, focusing on monitoring and enhancing the tiger population. Source: Millennium Post   PM Vishwakarma Scheme Category: Government Schemes Context: Recently, National Steering Committee (NSC) for PM Vishwakarma scheme approved several proposals and policy measures to improve loan sanctions and disbursements. About PM Vishwakarma Scheme: Launch: It was launched in September 2023 to provide holistic, end-to-end support to traditional artisans and craftspeople (Vishwakarmas). Nodal ministry: It is a central sector scheme launched by the Ministry of Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises. Objective: It aims to strengthen and nurture the Guru-Shishya parampara, or family-based practice of traditional skills by artisans and craftspeople working with their hands and tools.  Services offered: It offers services like market linkage support, skill training, and incentives for digital transactions to artisans and craftspeople engaged in specified trades. Time period: It is fully funded by the central government with an outlay of ₹13,000 crore for five years (FY 2023-24 to FY 2027-28). Coverage: About five lakh families were covered in the first year and about 30 lakh families will be covered over five years. Key Features of the Scheme: Recognition: Recognition of artisans and craftspeople through PM Vishwakarma certificate and ID card. Skill Upgradation: Basic Training of 5-7 days and Advanced Training of 15 days or more, with a stipend of Rs. 500 per day; Toolkit Incentive: A toolkit incentive of upto Rs. 15,000 in the form of e-vouchers at the beginning of Basic Skill Training. Credit Support: Collateral free ‘Enterprise Development Loans’ of upto Rs. 3 lakhs in two tranches of Rs. 1 lakh and Rs. 2 lakh at a concessional rate of interest fixed at 5%. Eligibility: It is available for rural and urban artisans and craftsmen across India. It covers 18 traditional crafts such as Boat Maker; Armourer; Blacksmith; Hammer and Tool Kit Maker; etc. Aged 18+, engaged in traditional trade, no similar loans in the past 5 years. Only one member per family is eligible for registration and benefits. Source: PIB United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) Category: International Organisations Context: India’s election to the UNHRC reflects the global confidence in democratic institutions, a senior official at the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) said recently. About United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC): Nature: The Human Rights Council is an inter-governmental body within the United Nations system responsible for strengthening the promotion and protection of human rights around the world. Formation: The Council was created by the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) in 2006. It replaced the former United Nations Commission on Human Rights. Headquarters: Its headquarters is located in Geneva, Switzerland. Significance: The UNGA takes into account the candidate States’ contribution to the promotion and protection of human rights, as well as their voluntary pledges and commitments in this regard. Election: It is made up of 47 United Nations Member States which are elected by the UN General Assembly (UNGA) through secret ballot. Term: Members of the Council serve for a period of three years and are not eligible for immediate re-election after serving 2 consecutive terms. Equitable distribution of seats: The Council’s Membership is based on equitable geographical distribution. Seats are distributed as follows: African States: 13 seats Asia-Pacific States: 13 seats Latin American and Caribbean States: 8 seats Western European and other States: 7 seats Eastern European States: 6 seats Working mechanism: Universal Periodic Review: UPR serves to assess the human rights situations in all United Nations Member States. Advisory Committee: It serves as the Council’s “think tank” providing it with expertise and advice on thematic human rights issues. Complaint Procedure: It allows individuals and organizations to bring human rights violations to the attention of the Council. UN Special Procedures: These are made up of special rapporteurs, special representatives, independent experts and working groups that monitor, examine, advise and publicly report on thematic issues or human rights situations in specific countries. Source: The Week   Champions of the Earth Award Category: Environment and Ecology Context: Recently, ACS Ms Supriya Sahu of Tamil Nadu won the UN Environment Programme’s 2025 Champions of the Earth Award. About Champions of the Earth Award: Establishment: It was established in 2005 and awarded by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP). Objective: The award honours individuals and organizations for their innovative and sustainable efforts to address climate change, biodiversity loss, and pollution. Uniqueness: It is the UN’s highest environmental honour, recognises trailblazers at the forefront of efforts to protect people and the planet. Significance: Every year, UNEP honours individuals and organizations working on innovative and sustainable solutions to address the triple planetary crisis of climate change, nature and biodiversity loss, and pollution and waste. Four Categories: Champions of the Earth are Celebrated in 4 categories: Policy leadership: Public sector officials leading global or national action for the environment. They shape dialogue, lead commitments and act for the good of the planet. Inspiration and action: Leaders taking bold steps to inspire positive change to protect our world. They lead by example, challenge behavior and inspire millions. Entrepreneurial vision: Visionaries challenging the status quo to build a cleaner future. They build systems, create new technology and spearhead a groundbreaking vision.  Science and innovation: Trailblazers pushing the boundaries of technology for profound environmental benefit. Notable Indian Winners: Notable Indian honourees include Prime Minister Narendra Modi (2018), Madhav Gadgil (2024) and Purnima Devi Barman (2022). Source: News on AIR   (MAINS Focus) Freeing Indian Entrepreneurs: The Promise of the Jan Vishwas Siddhant (UPSC GS Paper III – Indian Economy: Ease of Doing Business, Regulatory Reforms, MSMEs, Employment Generation)   Context (Introduction) India’s regulatory environment remains heavy with compliances, permissions, and criminal penalties inherited from the Licence Raj. The proposed Jan Vishwas Siddhant seeks to transform this landscape by shifting from permission-driven governance to self-registration, rationalised compliances, and transparent regulatory processes—crucial for unlocking entrepreneurial growth and non-farm job creation.   Main Arguments: What Holds Back Indian Entrepreneurs?   Regulatory Over-Criminalisation: Thousands of business activities—many minor procedural lapses—carry criminal penalties. Jail provisions rarely lead to successful prosecution but are routinely used for harassment, clogging courts (e.g., 43 lakh cheque bouncing cases forming 10% of pendency). Instrument Proliferation: Instead of the constitutional hierarchy of Acts + Rules, India has created 12,000+ non-law instruments (notifications, circulars, FAQs, SOPs, orders). Entrepreneurs must comply with this vast, unclear ecosystem, breeding confusion and corruption. Compliance Blind Spot:  India began 2025 with 69,000+ compliances. Policymakers focus on legislation but forget cumulative compliance burdens. Regulations micro-specify processes rather than target outcomes, ignoring global best practices in smart regulation. Enforcing the Unenforceable: One inspector monitoring 3.3 lakh weighing instruments, or numerous field requirements that cannot be realistically enforced, convert noble intentions into corruption and inefficiency. This weakens rule of law and creates a culture of discretion. Process as Punishment: Entrepreneurs face disproportionate penalties, long delays, and microspecification-heavy rules. The combination of low prosecution probability and high harassment potential produces a system where the innocent suffer and risk-taking is discouraged. Lack of a Single Source of Truth: Regulatory obligations remain scattered across outdated databases. Entrepreneurs often cannot verify whether a compliance requirement was legally issued, enabling rent-seeking and discretion.   What the Jan Vishwas Siddhant Proposes? Perpetual Self-Registration: All licences outside national security, public safety, human health, and environment will be replaced with self-registration. Everything is permitted unless explicitly prohibited. Risk-Based, Randomised Inspections: Inspections will shift from inspector raj to third-party, algorithm-based, and risk-weighted checks. Decriminalisation of Business Laws: DPIIT’s decriminalisation guidelines will apply across ministries; punishments will be proportionate and non-custodial for economic offences. Regulatory Discipline: No new regulatory obligations without consultation; all transitions implemented on a fixed date annually (e.g., January 1). Only Acts and Rules may carry penal provisions—ending proliferation of informal instruments. Digital Governance & IndiaCode Modernisation: A live, comprehensive, gazette-integrated digital repository (IndiaCode) will be the single source of truth for all regulations, eliminating ambiguity and corruption. Annual Regulatory Impact Assessment: All ministries will assess compliance burdens and publish annual reports on enforcement, making regulation transparent and outcomes-driven.   Why These Reforms Matter for India’s Growth Model? Unlocking Entrepreneurship: India has 6.3 crore enterprises, yet only 30,000 companies have paid-up capital above ₹10 crore. Over-regulation creates “dwarfs, not babies”—firms that stay small due to compliance fear, not lack of ambition. Boosting Non-Farm Job Creation: Entrepreneurship is key to India’s employment challenge. Freeing MSMEs from the “ijaazat raj” enables innovation, formalisation, and productivity growth—critical for labour absorption. Transforming Governance: Moves from permission-based rule to trust-based governance—turning praja into nagrik, and ruling into governing.   Conclusion The Jan Vishwas Siddhant is a foundational shift in India’s regulatory philosophy—prioritising trust, proportionality, transparency, and ease of compliance. By dismantling regulatory cholesterol and unleashing entrepreneurial energy, India can accelerate non-farm job creation and build a governance model where entrepreneurship is iterative experimentation, not a battle against bureaucracy.   Mains Question  “India’s regulatory environment is a bigger barrier to entrepreneurship than access to finance or markets.” Discuss how reforms such as the Jan Vishwas Siddhant can transform the ease of doing business and support inclusive economic growth. (250 words, 15 marks)   Source: Indian Express The Indian Ocean as the Cradle of a New Blue Economy (UPSC GS Paper II & III – “International Relations; Blue Economy; Maritime Security; Climate Change; Sustainable Development”)   Context (Introduction) As climate pressures mount on the Indian Ocean—one of the world’s most vulnerable basins—India is positioned to reshape regional ocean governance. The article argues that India can lead a new Blue Economy model rooted in sustainability, resilience, and equitable growth.   Main Arguments:  Historical Maritime Leadership: India has a legacy of advocating global ocean justice, from supporting “common heritage of mankind” during UNCLOS to Nehru’s early recognition of oceans as vital to India’s prosperity. This credibility uniquely positions India to lead again. Rising Oceanic Threats: Climate change has intensified ocean warming, acidification, sea-level rise, and IUU (Illegal, Unreported, Unregulated) fishing. The Indian Ocean basin—home to one-third of humanity—is among the world’s most climate-vulnerable regions. Blue Economy Opportunity: A modern Blue Economy must integrate stewardship, resilience, and inclusive growth. India can shape sustainable fisheries, ecosystem restoration, green shipping, marine biotechnology, and offshore renewable energy. Emerging Global Finance Momentum: New commitments—€25 billion existing pipelines, €8.7 billion new at BEFF 2025; $7.5 billion annually from the Finance in Common Ocean Coalition; Brazil’s $20 billion One Ocean Partnership—signal unprecedented ocean-focused funding. Security Through Sustainability: Ecosystem collapse, not naval rivalry alone, is the deeper source of insecurity. India’s SAGAR doctrine aligns security with stewardship, enabling integrated maritime domain awareness, climate preparedness, and disaster response.   Challenges / Criticisms  Fragmented Regional Governance: Indian Ocean governance remains scattered across multiple forums; unlike the Pacific, there is no unified ocean strategy guiding littoral cooperation. Climate Vulnerability: Sea-level rise, storm surges, coral bleaching, and fisheries depletion threaten economies from East Africa to Southeast Asia—creating regional instability and migration pressures. Finance–Implementation Gap: Despite growing global pledges, most Indian Ocean states lack institutional mechanisms to absorb and deploy Blue Economy investments effectively. Capacity Deficits in Small States: Small Island Developing States (SIDS) struggle with scientific capacity, monitoring, early warning systems, and access to marine technology—limiting regional collective action. Geopolitical Overhang: Indo-Pacific security narratives often overshadow environmental priorities, reducing room for cooperation as military competition intensifies.   Way Forward:  Stewardship of the Global Commons: Champion biodiversity protection, sustainable fisheries, deep-sea governance, and ecosystem restoration—mirroring India’s earlier UNCLOS role as a fairness-driven leader. Regional Ocean Resilience Hub: Create an Indian Ocean Resilience & Innovation Centre to support SIDS and African states with ocean observation, early warning systems, climate modelling, and technology transfer—similar to IOC-UNESCO frameworks. Indian Ocean Blue Fund: Establish a multilateral financing mechanism seeded by India and open to development banks, philanthropy, and private capital—turning global pledges into actionable regional projects. Sustainable Blue Growth Sectors: Promote green shipping corridors, offshore wind and wave energy, sustainable aquaculture, marine biotech, and ocean-based carbon removal—aligned with BBNJ and UNOC3 pathways. Security–Environment Integration: Through SAGAR, align naval and coast guard cooperation with environmental monitoring, IUU fishing control, and climate-driven disaster management—mirroring Australia’s and Japan’s integrated maritime models. BBNJ Ratification & Norm Leadership: Ratify the Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction treaty early to signal India’s readiness to shape global norms on deep-sea mining, marine genetic resources, and equitable benefit-sharing.   Conclusion The Indian Ocean, once central to early global civilisation, can now anchor a new global Blue Economy where prosperity and sustainability are inseparable. India—drawing on historic moral leadership, strategic geography, and scientific capability—can redefine ocean governance through stewardship, regional cooperation, and inclusive development. Leading with the principle “From the Indian Ocean, for the World” would allow India to turn a climate-risked ocean into a model of resilience and shared prosperity.   Mains Question  Why is the Indian Ocean central to India’s Blue Economy strategy, and what key challenges must India overcome to lead a sustainable and cooperative ocean governance framework in the region? (250 words, 15 marks)   Source: The Hindu