UPSC 2017: Comprehensive News Analysis - November 16

TABLE OF CONTENTS

A. GS1 Related
B. GS2 Related
POLITY
1. Centre to aid start-ups in cybersecurity push
INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
1. Zimbabwe Army seizes power, President Robert Mugabe 'confined to his home'
2. France wants to work with India in Indo-Pacific
3. Australians say ‘yes’ to same-sex marriage
C. GS3 Related
ECONOMY
1. More banks may sign MoUs with govt.
INFRASTRUCTURE
1. Highways to be rated on safety features
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND ECOLOGY
1. Delhi to get BS-VI fuel two years early to tackle pollution
INTERNAL SECURITY AND DEFENSE
1. Futuristic combat vehicle plan a game changer: Army
D. GS4 Related
E. Miscellaneous news
1. All Bihar jails to have videoconferencing: Nitish
F. Prelims Fact
G. UPSC Prelims Practice Questions
H. UPSC Mains Practice Questions 

 

A. GS1 Related

Nothing here for Today!!!

 

B. GS2 Related

Category: POLITY

1. Centre to aid start-ups in cybersecurity push

In news:

  • To encourage development of new technologies in the field of cybersecurity, the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology will offer challenge grants of up to Rs.5 crore to start-ups to spur research and development.
  • The government is also in process of setting up a centre of excellence for blockchain technology.

Category: INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS

1. Zimbabwe Army seizes power, President Robert Mugabe ‘confined to his home’

In news:

  • Zimbabwe’s military said it had seized power in a targeted assault on “criminals” around President Robert Mugabe, who were causing social and economic suffering, but came out with an assurance that the 93-year-old leader and his family were “safe and sound”.
  • The army said today it has the President and his wife in custody and was securing government offices and patrolling the capital’s streets following a night of unrest.

Turmoil in Zimbabwe:

  • Mugabe has led Zimbabwe for the last 37 years.
  • In contrast to his elevated status on the continent, Mr. Mugabe is reviled in the West as a despot whose disastrous handling of the economy and willingness to resort to violence to maintain power destroyed one of Africa’s most promising states.
  • In the last year, a chronic absence of dollars has led to long queues outside banks and an economic and financial collapse that many fear will rival the meltdown of 2007-2008, when inflation topped out at 500,000,000,000%.
  • Imported goods are running out and economists say that, by some measures, inflation is now at 50% a month.

2. France wants to work with India in Indo-Pacific

In news:

  • France will like to deepen cooperation with India in the Indo-Pacific bilaterally and not as a part of a multilateral arrangement like the recently convened “quadrilateral” between India, U.S., Japan and Australia.
  • France’s Ambassador Alexandre Ziegler announcement:
    • “We have a growing cooperation in the Indian Ocean, where both India and France have focal positions, and we are in the process of forming a defence and security partnership in the Indo-Pacific,”
    • This new cooperation would be discussed as part of the strategic partnership along with cooperation in counter-terrorism, defence hardware, nuclear energy, and space cooperation during the upcoming visit of Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian to India.

Large territory:

  • France is the only western country with large territory in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR) including the Reunion Islands, that spans about two million square kilometres of an Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ), and it has a population of one million French Citizens in the region, including about 30% of Indian origin.
  • The French navy maintains bases in the UAE, Djibouti as well as in Reunion, with a total of 20,000 forces permanently based in the IOR.
  • France is India’s oldest strategic partner, and has conducted India’s first international ‘Varuna’ joint naval exercises since 1983.

3. Australians say ‘yes’ to same-sex marriage

In news:

  • Celebrations swept across Australia as voters emphatically endorsed same-sex marriage after more than a decade of divisive debate, and political leaders immediately began moves to enshrine the historic shift in law by Christmas.
  • Almost 62% of the 12.7 million people who participated voted “yes” to the question: “Should the law be changed to allow same-sex couples to marry?” Just 38.4% voted “no”, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics, which carried out the poll.
  • Nearly 80% of eligible voters took part in the poll, with the “yes” vote winning a majority in all of Australia’s States and territories.

 

C. GS3 Related

Category: ECONOMY

1. More banks may sign MoUs with govt.

In news:

  • The government is planning to ask more public sector banks to enter into an agreement with it if they want more capital, provided banks improve their performance.
  • Earlier, the government had entered into an agreement with 11 banks, and had asked them to submit a turnaround plan and had linked capital infusion with the pace of turnaround.
  • In the earlier round of MoUs, banks were asked to achieve several parameters such as reduction in gross non-performing assets, increase in recovery, restriction of slippages, among others. In other words, capital infusion in these laggard banks were to be linked to their performance.
  • Recently, the government had announced a capital infusion of Rs.11 lakh crore in public sector banks over two financial years, starting from the current fiscal.
  • Of the amount, the government plans to issue recapitalisation bonds worth Rs.35 lakh crore and the remaining would come from budgetary provisions and fund raising by banks from the market.

Category: INFRASTRUCTURE

1. Highways to be rated on safety features

In news:

  • In a bid to make Indian roads safer and curb fatalities, a global charity unveiled an India Road Assessment Programme (IndiaRAP) that will rate highways’ safety levels, and seek to eliminate the most unsafe roads.
  • The ratings are assigned on the basis of the level of safety which is ‘built-in’ to a road for vehicle occupants, motorcyclists, bicyclists and pedestrians.
  • Five-star roads are the safest while one-star roads are the least safe.
  • The IndiaRAP programme is being supported by FedEx Express and will be hosted by the Asian Institute of Transport Development, and will work with government agencies as well as investors, researchers and NGOs to assess existing highways and promote the use of better design to make roads safer.

Category: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND ECOLOGY

1. Delhi to get BS-VI fuel two years early to tackle pollution

In news:

  • The world’s cleanest fuel will be introduced in the national capital two years earlier than planned, the Union government said on Wednesday as it seeks to reduce vehicular pollution.
  • Bharat Stage VI (BS-VI) fuel will now be available with effect from 1 April 2018 in Delhi, the petroleum ministry said, and added that it is examining the possibility of introducing BS-VI fuel across the national capital region by 1 April 2019.
  • Positive impact: This measure is expected to help mitigate the problem of air pollution in NCT of Delhi and surrounding areas.
  • Key Fact: In January last year, the Bharatiya Janata Party-led National Democratic Alliance decided to move the country up to BS-VI from the current BS-IV standards by 2020, skipping an intermediate level.

Key Stats:

  • A 2016 report by Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur, showed that cars and jeeps emit less than 10% of particulate matter, while trucks are the bigger culprits.
  • A big contributor to Delhi’s air pollution is road dust, which accounts for about 35% of tiny particles known as PM 2.5 in the air, followed by vehicles at 25%.
  • Other contributors are domestic cooking, power plants and industries.
  • PM 2.5 are tiny particles in the air that reduce visibility and cause the air to appear hazy when levels are elevated.
  • Seattle-based Global Burden of Disease Study estimates that 586,787 premature deaths in India were attributable to fine particulate matter pollution in 2013.
  • NOx, or oxides of nitrogen, are also major pollutants. They are a family of poisonous, highly reactive gases that form when fuel is burned at high temperatures.

Category: INTERNAL SECURITY AND DEFENSE

1. Futuristic combat vehicle plan a game changer: Army

Key points:

  • The two ambitious projects- Futuristic Infantry Combat vehicle (FICV) and Future Ready Combat Vehicle (FRCV) programmes, to equip the Army with futuristic combat vehicles are a game changer for the Indian industry.
  • The FICV is an ambitious effort to indigenously design and manufacture a futuristic infantry vehicle by the private industry by roping in foreign Original Equipment Manufacturers.
  • The Army has a requirement for more than 2,600 vehicles.
  • On the other hand, the FRCV is a tender for the procurement of futuristic tanks through the Strategic Partnership model.

 

D. GS4 Related

Nothing here for Today!!!

 

E. Miscellaneous news

1. All Bihar jails to have videoconferencing: Nitish

In news:

  • Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar announced that all jails in the State would have videoconferencing facility from next year.
  • He also inaugurated 56 telephone exchanges at 30 jails, canteen facility for prisoners in 11 jails and laid foundation stones for multipurpose auditoriums at eight Central jails of the State.
  • Advantages: All jails in the State will have videoconferencing facility, which would do away with the need for taking undertrials to the court for hearing of their cases. This will also ensure speedy dispensation of justice

 

E. PRELIMS FACT

Nothing here for Today!!!

 

G. Practice Questions for UPSC Prelims Exam

Question 1. India has: [CDS 1992]
  1. Socialistic economy
  2. Gandhian economy
  3. Mixed economy
  4. Free economy

See

Answer


(c
)

Type: Economy
Level: Easy
Explanation:

The economy of India is a developing mixed economy.

Question 2. The salaries of the Judges of the Supreme Court of India:
  1. Can never be reduced under any circumstances
  2. Can be reduced during their term of office
  3. Cannot be reduced during the term of their office except during a financial emergency
  4. Are fixed by President of India

See

Answer


(c
)

Type: Polity
Level: Easy
Explanation:

Self Explanatory.

Question 3. During the Mughal rule the finance minister was known as
  1. Vakil
  2. Diwan
  3. Kotwal
  4. Amin

See

Answer


(b
)

Type: History
Level: Easy
Explanation:

Self Explanatory.

Question 4. The latitude of a place expresses its angular position relative to the plane of
  1. Axis of the Earth
  2. Equator
  3. North pole
  4. South pole

See

Answer


(b
)

Type: Geography
Level: Moderate
Explanation:

Self Explanatory.

Question 5. The constitution of India is republican because it 
  1. provides for an elected Parliament
  2. provides for adult franchise
  3. contains a bill of rights
  4. has no hereditary elements

See

Answer


(d
)

Type: Polity
Level: Easy
Explanation:

Republic: a state in which supreme power is held by the people and their elected representatives, and which has an elected or nominated president rather than a monarch.

H. UPSC Mains Practice Questions

GS Paper II
 
  • Does the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016 ensure effective mechanism for empowerment and inclusion of the intended beneficiaries in the society? Discuss.
GS Paper III
  • India has achieved remarkable successes in unmanned space missions including the Chandrayaan and Mars Orbitter Mission, but has not ventured into manned space mission, both in terms of technology and logistics? Explain critically.
Also, check previous Daily News Analysis

 

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