World Red Cross Day 2020: All That You Need to Know
Recently,
the World Red Cross Day was celebrated by the Indian Red Cross Society (IRCS).
- World Red Cross day is observed on May
8 on the birth anniversary of Henry Dunant, who was the founder of the
International Committee of the Red Cross.
- Henry
Dunant was also the recipient of the first Nobel Peace Prize.
- The main aim of the Red Cross Society is
basically to inspire, initiate and encourage all kinds of humanitarian
activities under all times and circumstances.
- Programmes conducted by the Red Cross Society
can be broadly categorised into four parts including the
promotion of humanitarian principles and values; disaster response; disaster
preparedness; and health and care.
- The Red Cross Society is based on 7
principles namely, humanity, impartiality, neutrality, independence,
voluntary, unity and universality.
Indian Red Cross Society
- IRCS is a voluntary humanitarian
organization to protect human life and health with the help of its
network of over 1100 branches throughout India.
- It was established in 1920 and
has completed its 100 years of existence.
- It is a part of the
largest independent humanitarian organisation in the world, the International
Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement.
- Its mission is to provide
relief at the time of disasters/emergencies and also promotes healthcare
facilities among vulnerable people and communities.
The President of India is the President and the Union Health Minister is the Chairman of the Society.
Should
India use perpetual bonds to finance Covid-19 recovery?.
The Covid-19 pandemic and consequential national lockdown
in the country has laid a grave impact on the Indian economy.
- Considering the above scenario, the large
stimulus needs to be introduced by the government to pull back the
economy where the required stimulus will exceed the current revenue receipts of
the government.
- The stimulus refers
to attempts to use monetary or fiscal policy (or stabilization policy in
general) to stimulate the economy.
- Thus, an introduction of a Consol
Bond is one of the solutions for the government to fund the stimulus.
Background
- In the Budget (2020) before the pandemic, India projected a deficit of
Rs.7.96-lakh crore.
- Further, the financial deficit is expected
to increase by a wide margin due to revenue shrinkage from
the coming depression accompanied by a lack of disinvestment.
- Though, the government and RBI have announced
various economic measures to deal with the economic impact of nationwide lockdown
but these measures are considered to be inadequate.
- In
addition to the planned expenditure, the government needs to spend nearly
Rs.5-lakh crore and Rs.6-lakh crore as stimulus.
Consol
Bonds
- Description:
- Consol
bond (also known as perpetual bond) is a fixed income
security with no maturity date.
- It
is often considered a type of equity, rather than debt.
- The
major benefit of these bonds is that they pay a steady stream of
interest payments forever. However, these bonds can be
redeemed at issuer's discretion.
- Notable Existence of Consol Bonds in the
History:
- The
console bonds were majorly used by the British government during World War-I.
- The
bonds were issued in 1917 as the British government sought to
raise more money to finance the ongoing cost of World War-I.
- In
2014, the British government, a century after the start of World War-I, paid
out 10% of the total outstanding Consol bond debt.
Consol
Bonds and Current Indian Economic Scenario
- Consol Bonds Instead of PM-CARES:
- The
introduction of the Consol bonds would have been a better solution for the
government if people would have invested in consol bonds instead of making
donations to PM-CARES. It could have made citizens
as active participants in handling the economic scenario of the
country.
- Unlike
PM-CARES, the proceeds of the bonds could have been used to fulfil the
various essential medical as well as economic requirements of the
country.
- One of the Available Solutions:
- The
fall of real estate and given the lack of safe havens outside of gold, the bond
would offer a dual benefit as a risk free investment for retail
investors.
- An attractive
coupon rate for the bond or tax rebates can also be an incentive for
investors.
The government can consider a phased redemption of these bonds after the economy is put back on a path of high growth.
A
new concern: early locusts
Recently,
scientists at the Locust Warning Organisation (LWO) observed
groups of desert locusts at Sri Ganganagar and Jaisalmer
districts of Rajasthan.
- This has raised the alarm-bell for the
authorities as they caused huge damage to the growing rabi crops along western
Rajasthan and parts of northern Gujarat during December, 2019-January, 2020.
- The desert locust (Schistocerca
gregaria) is a short-horned grasshopper. These winged insects differ
from normal hoppers.
- The genesis of present desert
locust upsurge lies in the Mekunu and Luban cyclonic storms that struck Oman and Yemen,
respectively in 2018.
- These
storms turned large desert areas in remote parts of the southern Arabian
Peninsula into lakes, which allowed the insects to breed undetected across
multiple generations.
Locust
- A locust is a large, mainly
tropical grasshopper with strong powers of flight. They differ
from ordinary grasshoppers in their ability to change behaviour
(gregarize) and form swarms that can migrate over large distances.
- Gregarization means transformation of solitary
insects etc. into a swarm due to rapid growth in population.
- Locusts are generally seen during the months
of June and July as the insects are active from summer to the rainy
season.
- Locusts have a high capacity to multiply,
form groups, migrate over relatively
large distances (they can fly up to 150 km per day) and, if good rains fall and
ecological conditions become favourable, rapidly reproduce and increase some
20-fold in three months.
- Threat to Vegetation: Locust adults can eat their own
weight every day, i.e. about two grams of fresh vegetation per day. A
very small swarm eats as much in one day as about 35,000 people, posing
a devastating threat to crops and food security.
- If infestations are not detected and
controlled, devastating plagues can develop that often take several years and hundreds of
millions of dollars to bring under control with severe consequences on food security
and livelihoods.
- Locust Control measures include destroying egg masses laid by
invading swarms, digging trenches to trap nymphs, using hopperdozers (wheeled
screens that cause locusts to fall into troughs containing water and kerosene),
using insecticidal baits, and applying insecticides to both swarms and breeding
grounds from aircraft.
- Organophosphate
insecticides such as Malathion are effective against locusts.
- The Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) provides information on the general locust situation to
the global community and gives timely warnings and forecasts to
those countries in danger of invasion.
- The
FAO raised alarm over the locust outbreak in northeast Africa and Saudi Arabia
in February, 2019.
Locusts
in India
- Four species viz. Desert locust (Schistocerca
gregaria), Migratory locust (Locusta migratoria), Bombay Locust ( Nomadacris
succincta) and Tree locust (Anacridium sp.) are found in India.
- The existing series of locust swarms that
have entered India via Pakistan had originated in Iran. Movement of locusts is
facilitated by summer dusty winds, which flow from the Arabian Sea, taking
along these creatures from Sindh in Pakistan to western Rajasthan.
- The last major locust outbreak that
was reported in Rajasthan was in 1993.
Locust Warning Organisation (LWO), Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers Welfare, is responsible for monitoring, survey and control of Desert Locust in Scheduled Desert Areas mainly in the States of Rajasthan and Gujarat.
AIIB
clears $500-mn loan to support India’s fight against COVID-19
Recently,
the Asian
Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) has approved US$ 500 million for ‘Covid-19
Emergency Response and Health Systems Preparedness Project’ initiated
by India.
- The project is expected to help India to
respond to the Covid-19 pandemic and strengthen its public health preparedness.
- Aim:
- The
project intends to slow down and limit the spread of Covid-19
in India.
- It
includes an immediate support for enhancement of disease detection capacities,
oxygen delivery systems and medicines among others.
- The
project also strives to strengthen India’s Integrated Disease Surveillance Program (IDSP) and the capacity to effectively manage
future disease outbreaks.
- IDSP
aims to strengthen/maintain decentralized laboratory based and IT enabled
disease surveillance systems for epidemic prone diseases to monitor disease
trends.
- It
also aims to develop capacity and systems to detect existing and
emerging zoonoses and upgrade viral research and diagnostic laboratories
for testing and research.
- As
around 75% of new infectious diseases begin with human-to-animal
contacts.
- Beneficiaries:
- The
project will cover all States and Union Territories across India and address
the needs of infected people, at-risk populations, medical and emergency
personnel and service providers, medical and testing facilities, and national
and animal health agencies.
- Finances:
- The
project is being financed by the World Bank and AIIB in the amount of $1.5
billion, of which $1.0 billion will be provided by the World Bank and $500
million will be provided by AIIB.
- Implementation:
- It
will be implemented by the National Health Mission (NHM), the National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) and the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR).
- NHM
was launched by the government of India in 2013 subsuming the National Rural
Health Mission and the National Urban Health Mission.
- NCDC
functions as the nodal agency in the country for disease surveillance
facilitating prevention and control of communicable diseases under the Ministry
of Health and Family Welfare.
- ICMR
is the apex body in India for the formulation, coordination and promotion of
biomedical research.
Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank
- The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank
(AIIB) is a multilateral development bank with a mission to
improve social and economic outcomes in Asia.
- It is established by the AIIB Articles
of Agreement (entered into force Dec. 25, 2015) which is a
multilateral treaty. The Parties (57 founding members) to agreement comprise
the Membership of the Bank.
- It is headquartered in Beijing and
began its operations in January 2016.
- India joined AIIB in 2016 as a regional
member of the Bank.
- The members of the Bank have now grown to
102 approved members worldwide.
- Further,
fourteen of the G-20
nations are
AIIB members including France, Germany, Italy and the United Kingdom.
By investing in sustainable infrastructure and other productive sectors in Asia and beyond, it connects people, services and markets that over time will impact the lives of billions and build a better future.
Covid-19:
28 Indian scientists returning from an Antarctica expedition are stuck in Cape
Town
National
Centre for Polar and Ocean Research,Goa has contributed in the fight
against Covid-19
pandemic through
significant analytical work in the different laboratories for research work.
- It also actively participated in the
various webinars and sessions organized by the Ministry of Earth Sciences
during the lockdown.
National
Centre for Polar and Ocean Research
- National Centre for Polar and Ocean
Research (NCPOR) was established as an autonomous Research and Development
Institution of the Ministry of Earth Sciences in 1998.
- It is the nodal agency for planning,
promotion, coordination and execution of the entire gamut of polar and
southern ocean scientific research in the country as well as for the
associated logistics activities.
- Its responsibilities include:
- Management
and upkeep of the Indian Antarctic Research Bases “Maitri”
and “Bharati”, and the Indian Arctic base “Himadri”.
- Management
of the Ministry’s research vessel ORV Sagar Kanya as well as
the other research vessels chartered by the Ministry.
- Scientific
research activities being
undertaken by several national institutions and organizations in Antarctica,
the Arctic and in the Indian Ocean sector of the Southern Ocean.
- Geoscientific
surveys of the country’s Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) and its extended continental shelf
beyond 200m, deep-sea drilling in the Arabian Sea basin through the International Ocean Discovery Program
(IODP),
exploration for ocean non-living resources such as gas hydrates and multi-metal sulphides in
mid-ocean ridges.
IODP is an international marine research collaboration that explores Earth's history and dynamics using ocean-going research platforms to recover data recorded in seafloor sediments and rocks and to monitor subseafloor environments.
Failing
to control Covid-19 spread means even helicopter money won’t be sufficient to
provide relief
Recently,
the Telangana Chief Minister suggested that the helicopter money can
help states to come out of the economic chaos created by Covid-19 pandemic.
- Helicopter money:
- It
is an unconventional monetary policy tool, which
involves printing large sums of money and distributing it to the
public, to stimulate the economy during a recession (decline in
general economic activity) or when interest rates fall to zero.
- Under
such a policy, a central bank "directly increases the money supply and,
via the government, distribute the new cash to the population with the
aim of boosting demand and inflation.".
- The
term was coined by American economist Milton Friedman. It
basically denotes a helicopter dropping money from the sky.
- Difference between helicopter money and
quantitative easing:
- Helicopter
money should not be confused with quantitative easing, because
both aim to boost consumer spending and increase inflation.
- In
case of helicopter money, currency is distributed to the
public and there is no repayment liability.
- Whereas
in case of quantitative easing, it involves the use of printed
money by central banks to buy government bonds. Here the government has
to pay back for the assets that the central bank buys.
- Benefits of helicopter money:
- It
does not rely on increased borrowing to fuel the economy, which means that it
doesn’t create more debt.
- It
boosts spending and economic growth more effectively than quantitative easing
because it increases aggregate demand – the demand for goods and services –
immediately.
- Issues with helicopter money:
- It
does not involve repayment liability, therefore many people argue that it’s not
a feasible solution to revive the economy.
- It
may lead to over-inflation.
It may devalue the currency in the foreign exchange market.
Israel names street after Rabindranath
Tagore to celebrate his 159th birth anniversary
Israel
named a street in Tel Aviv Tagore Street to commemorate the poet's birth
anniversary on Rabindra Jayanti.
The
Prime Minister of India paid tributes to Rabindranath Tagore on his 159th Jayanti
on 7th May, 2020.
- Rabindranath Tagore was born in Calcutta on May 7, 1861.
He was also referred to as ‘Gurudev’, ‘Kabiguru’, and ‘Biswakabi’.
- Regarded as the outstanding
creative artist of modern India and hailed by W.B Yeats, Rabindranath
Tagore was a Bengali poet, novelist, and painter, who was
highly influential in introducing Indian culture to the west.
- Rabindranath was an exceptional literary
figure and a renowned polymath who singlehandedly
reshaped the region's literature and music.
- In 1913 Rabindranath Tagore was awarded
the Nobel Prize in Literature for his work on Gitanjali.
- He
was the first non-European to receive the Nobel Prize.
- In 1915 Tagore was awarded
knighthood by the British King George V. In 1919, following the Jallianwalla Bagh massacre he renounced his Knighthood.
- Besides all his literary achievements he
was also a philosopher and educationist who in 1921 established
the Vishwa-Bharati University, a university that challenged
conventional education.
- Rabindranath Tagore was a good friend
of Mahatma Gandhi and is said to have given him the
title of Mahatma.
- Tagore had always stressed that unity
in diversity is the only possible way for India’s national
integration.
- He not only gave the national
anthems for two countries, India and Bangladesh, but also inspired
a Ceylonese student of his, to pen and compose the national
anthem of Sri Lanka.
Also Read - https://www.firstpost.com/india/rabindranath-tagore-159th-birth-anniversary-here-are-five-lesser-known-facts-about-the-first-indian-nobel-laureate-8341961.html
Magic
spell: Millions of Olive Ridley turtles make their way to the sea on the Odisha
coast
Mass
hatching of Olive Ridley turtles has begun at Odisha’s Rushikulya rookery (near
Ganjam district).
- The coast of Odisha in India is the
largest mass nesting site for the Olive-ridley, followed by the coasts
of Mexico and Costa Rica.
- Features:
- The
Olive ridley turtles are the smallest and most abundant of all sea
turtles found in the world.
- These
turtles are carnivores and get their name from their olive
colored carapace.
- Habitat: They are found in warm waters of the
Pacific, Atlantic and Indian oceans.
- Migration: They migrate thousands of kilometers
between feeding and mating grounds in the course of a year.
- Arribada (Mass Nesting): They are best known for their
unique mass nesting called Arribada, where thousands of females come
together on the same beach to lay eggs.
- They
lay their eggs over a period of five to seven days in conical nests about one
and a half feet deep which they dig with their hind flippers.
- Threats:
- They
are extensively poached for their meat, shell and leather, and their
eggs.
- However,
the most severe threat they face is the accidental killing through
entanglement in trawl nets and gill nets due to uncontrolled
fishing during their mating season around nesting beaches.
- Protection Status:
- IUCN
Red List: Vulnerable
- Indian Wildlife
(Protection) Act, 1972: Schedule I
Step Taken for Conservation: To reduce accidental killing in India, the Odisha government has made it mandatory for trawls to use Turtle Excluder Devices (TEDs), a net specially designed with an exit cover which allows the turtles to escape while retaining the catch.
New road for Kailash Mansarovar pilgrims is
ready, will cut travel time by three days
Recently,
the Defence Minister of India has inaugurated a new 80-km
road in Uttarakhand connecting the Line of Actual Control (LAC) and opening a new route
for Kailash Mansarovar yatra via Lipulekh Pass (China
border).
- It is scheduled to be completed by December
2022 and will significantly reduce the travel time for pilgrims.
- The Link Road is named as the Kailash-Mansarovar
Yatra Route under which the Border Roads Organisation (BRO) achieved road connectivity
from Dharchula (Pithoragarh, Uttarakhand) to Lipulekh.
- Lipulekh
Pass also known as Lipu-Lekh Pass/Qiangla or Tri-Corner is a
high altitude mountain pass situated in the western Himalayas with
a height of 5,334 metre or 17,500 feet.
- It
is an International mountain pass between India, China
and Nepal.
- The road was made under directions of the China
Study Group (CSG) and is funded by Indo-China Border Road (ICBR).
- It was approved by the Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS)
in 2005.
- The last 5-km of the road could not be
finished due to a temporary ban placed on the last-mile
connectivity in 2016 by the Director General Military
Operations, which is yet to be lifted.
- Advantages:
- It
is the shortest and cheapest route with just one-fifth
distance of road travel as compared to other old routes. The other
route is via Sikkim.
- There
is no air travel involved and the majority of the
travel (84%) is in India and only 16% in China compared to other
routes where 80% road travel is in China.
- Except
for a 5-km trek, whole travel will be on vehicles reducing the
5-day trek to 2- days road travel.
Kailash Mansarovar
- To Hindus it is the earthly
embodiment of the dominant mountain of heaven, Meru, and the residence
of Lord Shiva and his consort Goddess Parvati.
- The Kailash range’s supreme peak lies in
the Chinese-occupied Tibet at the height of 6,675
meters.
- The pilgrimage to Kailash and
to the sacred Mansarover lake that lies 30 km to its south, is
run exclusively by a government organization, the Kumaon Mandal Vikas
Nigam (KMVN).
The organization works in collaboration with the Government of India’s
Ministry of External Affairs and the Government of China.
Rajnath Singh approves abolition of 9,304
posts in Military Engineering Service
Recently,
the Defence Minister of India has approved a proposal for the
abolition of a number of posts in the Military Engineering Service (MES).
- This move is in lines with the
recommendations of the Lt. Gen. D.B. Shekatkar (Retd.) Committee.
- MES is the infrastructure
development agency for the armed forces and defence establishments.
- Optimum Utilisation of Resources: This step of abolition of around 9000
posts of basic and industrial staff will lead to significant savings.
- Almost 70%
of the budget is used for payment of salaries and allowances and
leaves very little money for actual infrastructural development.
- Restructuring of Workforce: The committee also recommended to
restructure the civilian workforce in a manner that the work of the MES could
be partly done by departmentally employed staff and other
works could be outsourced.
- Efficient & Lean Workforce: Its goal is to make the MES an
effective organisation with a leaner workforce, well equipped to handle
complex issues in an efficient and cost-effective manner.
- Projected Savings: The recommendations can save
up to ₹25,000 crore in defence expenditure, if
implemented over the next five years.
- According
to Stockholm
International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), India was the among the top three top military
spenders in
the world in 2019 after the US and China.
Shekatkar
Committee
- It was a 11-member committee, appointed
by the erstwhile Defence Minister in mid-2016.
- It was headed by Lt. Gen. D.B.
Shekatkar (Retd).
- It had the mandate to
suggest measures to enhance combat capability and rebalance
defence expenditure of the armed forces.
- It submitted its report in December 2016.
- Recommendations:
- It
made about 99 recommendations from optimising defence budget
to the need for a Chief of the Defence Staff.
- Of
these, the first batch of 65 recommendations pertaining to the
Army were approved in August 2017.
- It
recommended that India’s defence budget should be in the range of
2.5-3% of GDP (Gross
Domestic Product), in view of current and future
threats.
- It
had also suggested the establishment of a Joint Services War College for
training of middle-level officers, with three separate war colleges at
Mhow (Madhya Pradesh), Secunderabad (Telangana) and
Goa, focusing on training younger officers.
- The
committee had also mooted for the Military Intelligence School at Pune to
be converted to a tri-service intelligence training establishment.
- The
recommendations on the creation of the Chief of Defence Staff post and a Department of Military Affairs have been already implemented.
- Restructuring
of Army headquarters
- The
Army headquarters had instituted 4 studies with an overall aim
to enhance
the operational and functional efficiency of the force, optimize budget expenditure, facilitate
modernization and address aspirations.
- These studies are
Re-organisation and right-sizing of the Indian Army, Re-organisation of the
Army Headquarters, Cadre review of officers and Review of terms of engagement
of rank and file.
- Government
Owned Contractor Operated (GOCO) Model
- In
the model, the assets owned by the government are operated by the private industries.
- The main
advantage of the model is that it is efficient and
will boost competitiveness among the private entities.
- Closure of Military Farms and Army
Postal Establishments in peace locations.
Other recommendations which have been implemented include, optimisation of signals establishments, restructuring of repair units, redeployment of ordnance echelons, better utilisation of supply and transportation units and animal transport entities, etc.
Vizag Gas Leak: 'Strict Liability' Or 'Absolute Liability'?
Recently,
the National
Green Tribunal (NGT)
found LG Polymers prima facie liable under the strict
liability principle for the Vizag gas leak.
- However, according to the lawyers, the
term absolute liability principle should have been used
instead.
The NGT directed the company to deposit an initial amount of ₹50 crore and formed a fact-finding committee.
The use of the term strict liability has been questioned by the lawyers because it was made redundant in India by the Supreme Court in 1987.
Strict Liability Principle:
Under it, a party/company is not liable and need not pay compensation if a hazardous substance escapes its premises by accident or by an ‘act of God’ (Force Majeure) among other circumstances.
Absolute Liability Principle:
Under it, a party/company in a hazardous industry cannot claim any exemption. It has to mandatorily pay compensation, whether or not the disaster was caused by its negligence.
The National Green Tribunal Act of 2010 incorporates the absolute liability principle.
Section 17 of the act mandates that the Tribunal should apply the absolute liability principle even if the disaster caused is an accident.
A hazardous enterprise is liable even if the disaster is an accident and not caused by the negligence of the company.
Background
- The Supreme Court, in the M.C.
Mehta vs Union of India 1987, found strict liability principle
inadequate to protect citizens’ rights and replaced it with
the absolute liability principle.
- This judgement came on the Oleum
gas leak case of Delhi in 1986.
- Oleum
gas leaked from a fertiliser plant of Shriram Food and Fertilisers Ltd. complex
at Delhi, causing damages to several people.
- Oleum or fuming sulfuric acid refers
to solutions of various compositions of sulfur trioxide in sulfuric acid or
sometimes more specifically to disulfuric acid (also known as pyrosulfuric
acid).
- The court found that strict liability which
was evolved in an English case called Rylands versus Fletcher, 1868,
provided companies with several exemptions from assuming liability.
- Absolute liability, on the other hand,
provides them with no defence or exemptions and is part of Article 21
(Right to Life).
- Article
21 declares that no person shall
be deprived of his life or personal liberty except according to
procedure established by law. This right is available to both citizens
and non-citizens.
- The court wanted corporations to
be made fully liable for future undeserved suffering of innocent
citizens and held that a hazardous enterprise has an absolute
non-delegable duty to the community.
- That time, India was still under the shock
of the Bhopal
gas tragedy, 1984.
- Methyl Isocyanate (MIC) leaked from the pesticide plant
of Union Carbide in the capital city of Madhya
Pradesh.