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Thursday, January 06, 2022

Current Affairs- January 5, 2022

 

INDIA

– PM inaugurates and lays the foundation stone of various developmental projects in Imphal, Manipur
– PM inaugurates the New Integrated Terminal Building at Maharaja Bir Bikram Airport in Agartala
– Dr. Jitendra Singh launches Web Portal for PM’s Excellence Award, says prize money doubled to 20 lakh rupees for awarded District or Organization
– Union Minister Dr Jitendra Singh releases Special Postage Stamp commemorating 75th Platinum Jubilee year of CSIR-National Physical Lab
– Ladakh: BRO (Border Roads Organisation) creates history, Zoji-La pass opens to vehicles for the first time ever in January
– Kerala Governor Arif Mohammed Khan to discontinue as Chancellor of Universities
– Indian Navy’s 1971 war veteran Vice Admiral S.H. Sarma dies at 100

ECONOMY & CORPORATE

– RBI notifies market making scheme to promote retail participation in G-Secs
– SBI, ICICI, HDFC Bank continue to remain Domestic Systemically Important Banks (D-SIBs): RBI
– Power and New and Renewable Energy Minister R. K. Singh dedicates AGC (Automatic Generation Control) to the nation, aims to achieve government’s target of 500 GW non-fossil fuel-based generation capacity by 2030
– ICMR approves India-made kit to detect Omicron; manufactured by Tata Medical and Diagnostics and is named OmiSure
– $30 million of AAI assets seized over Antrix award: Devas
– Sri Lanka Cabinet clears Trincomalee oil tank farm deal with India
– Rotomac owner Vikram Kothari passes away in Kanpur at the age of 73

WORLD

– World Braille Day celebrated on Jan 4; is birth anniversary of French educator Louis Braille

Current Affairs-January 6, 2022

 

INDIA

– PM Modi cancels Ferozepur visit after major security breach in Punjab
– ‘Integrated Approach in Science and Technology for Sustainable Future’ announced as theme of National Science Day 2022 to be celebrated on February 28
– CDS Gen Bipin Rawat chopper crash of Dec 8: No technical snag or sabotage, bad weather identified as prime reason
– India’s TS Tirumurti assumes new chair of UN Counter-Terrorism Committee
– 3 killed in firecracker unit explosion at Virudhunagar in Tamil Nadu
– Renowned social worker Sindhutai Sapkal dies in Pune at 74; awarded Padma Shri in 2021

ECONOMY & CORPORATE

– UJALA (Unnat Jyoti by Affordable LEDs for All) scheme completes 7 years; Over 36 crore 70 lakh LEDs distributed across the country so far
– Union Minister for Food Processing Industries Pashupati Kumar Paras launches 6 brands under One District-One Product (ODOP)
– Smart Cities Mission launches “Smart cities and Academia Towards Action & Research (SAAR)” program
– NCLAT sets aside NCLT order approving Twin Star’s bid for Videocon Group

WORLD

– Former US diplomat Atul Keshap appointed president of U.S.-India Business Council (USIBC)

Education Ministry begins registration for Vidyanjali higher education volunteer programme

 

The Vidyanjali Higher Education Volunteer Programme is in line with Aatmanirbhar Bharat initiative, started by the Government of India.

The Ministry of Education (MoE) has started registration for the Vidyanjali Higher Education Volunteer Programme that aims to connect institutions of higher education with varied volunteers from the Indian diaspora namely young professionals, retired/working teachers, retired/ working government officials, professionals, and students of PG and PhD levels.

To register, individuals and institutions will have to sign up at the official website – vidyanjali-he.education.gov.in. After registering for the specialised areas that they need to volunteer for in the programme, volunteers will be able to interact directly with the academic service and activity with relevant knowledge and skillset. Volunteers can also sign up to help institutions by donating assets and equipment.

Through this portal, the volunteers can make their skills and specialised services they want to offer known to the institutions. The institutions can also, on the other hand, make their requirement known through the portal to seek volunteers.

There are almost 27 academic activities and sponsorship services that volunteers can chip in with for their services. In terms of infrastructure support, volunteers can also support institutions with basic civil and electrical infrastructure, classroom equipment for teaching, and digital infrastructure.

Source: Indian Express, 6/12/22

Raising women’s marriage age to 21 is move towards empowerment

 

Guru Prakash, Ruchi Singh write: No excuse — biological, social, or data and research-based — can justify the inequality in age between men and women to enter into a valid marriage


India has taken a progressive step to realise Goal 5 of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Goal 5 categorically asks nation-states to formulate policies to achieve gender equality. The Centre recently gave a final shape to this goal by ensuring equality in marriage age by raising the marriageable age for women to 21 years.

India had ratified the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women in 1993. Article 16 of the Convention strictly forbids child marriage and asks governments to identify and enforce the minimum marriage age for women. Since 1998, India has had national legislation exclusively on human rights protections drafted in consonance with international instruments such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 1948. Protection of women against early and child marriage is a protection of their basic rights and this monumental step will lead to changes in related legislative frameworks to provide a comprehensive rights-based framework for the aadhi aabadi.

The regressive perception that marriage provides women with social protections and recognition needs to change. It has been established that child marriage exposes women to early pregnancy, malnutrition, and violence (mental, emotional, and physical). Such marriages have, therefore, been brought under the ambit of the Prohibition of Child Marriage Act, 2006. However, Section 2(a) of the Act declares women under the age of 18 to be children while for men this age is 21. This difference seems to have no justifiable logic. The age of voting can be equal for men and women under the Representation of Peoples Act, and the age to consensually, wilfully, and validly enter into a contract is the same for men and women. What has stopped us from instilling equality in the age requirements to enter into a valid marriage? This difference in criteria was more social than biological. The general arguments based on local value judgments that women should be younger in a marriage union have faded with time. Today, women stand on equal footing to men in all possible spheres of life.Equality emanates from equal laws and social transformations are both the precursors of laws and a consequence of them. A change in law also fundamentally changes social perceptions in progressive societies.

The equality in marriage age brought about by the Narendra Modi government will add to its many initiatives to promote women’s education. As per the All-India Survey on Higher Education, the enrolment of female students in higher education has increased from 46.2 per cent in 2015-16 to 49 per cent in 2019-20. The overall growth of female student enrolment between 2015-2020 has increased by 18.2 per cent. It is notable that from Ujjwala to Mudra to Pradhan Mantri Jan-Dhan Yojana, the largest section of beneficiaries of government schemes has been the women. For the first time in Indian politics, we are witnessing remarkable levels of representation of women at crucial decision-making positions from the Union Council of Ministers to party structures. Women’s empowerment will get a further fillip with equality in marriage age.

The institution of marriage in India is one of the pillars that hold up the customs and norms of society. Several arguments have been raised on why shouldn’t the government make the existing legislation on the prohibition of the Child Marriage Act more stringent or make such marriages void ab initio in all cases. But we often tend to forget about equal rights for women in terms of their age of marriage. Presently a child marriage is voidable and the law gives the parties two years from the date of solemnisation to file a petition to nullify it. If men can nullify such a marriage till the age of 23, why should this age be just 20 years for women?

Sometimes, objective equality is the need of the hour. Any justification — biological, social, or data and research-based — cannot justify the inequality in age between men and women to enter into a valid marriage. India decided in 1954 with the Special Marriage Act that age must be one of the basic requisites of a valid marriage. The only flaw was not having equality in this regard. That is being corrected. The NITI Aayog task force constituted under the leadership of the Prime Minister has done a commendable job in proposing such a move to empower India’s daughters and sisters.

Written by Guru Prakash , Ruchi Singh

Source: Indian Express, 6/01/22

Bulli Bai is latest example of harassment women face online

 

Meeran Chadha Borwankar writes: Prompt reporting of cases, well-trained investigators and prosecutors, fast and fair trial are essential to control cyber crimes against women.

The first email in the morning was from a young girl threatening to commit suicide. She had approached me earlier complaining about her former boyfriend, who, she alleged, had morphed her photos that she had shared with him on social media. I advised the lady officer heading the Pune Police Cyber Cell to register an FIR. But the officer investigating the case had to proceed on emergency leave. Since the boy had not been arrested, the young girl had threatened to kill herself. I was the Commissioner of Police, Pune and the story is of 2011. The sordid tale continues with the blatant abuse of cyber technology, especially targeting women of all ages, professions and communities.

As per the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) there were around 825 million internet users in India at the end of March 2021. Most of them are genuine ones with a minuscule number of rogue elements. But such rogue elements have the lethal capability to create havoc in the nation, its polity, economy and the personal and professional lives of citizens. They can also strain the fragile social fabric of the country as can be seen in the open-source app, Bulli Bai, hosted on the web platform GitHub for “auctioning Muslim women”. Similarly, in July last year, Sulli Deals had been created with profiles of around 80 Muslim women, describing them as “deals of the day”. Recent arrests by the police in the Bulli Bai case will, hopefully, disclose details behind the heinous crime.

While Bulli Bai and Sulli Deals made headlines and the Mumbai and Delhi police are working with the Computer Emergency Response Team, India (CERT-IN) to track down the criminals, there are many unreported cases of women facing cyber bullying, stalking, threats, and blackmail. Many times, police officers are approached by anxious parents, days before marriage, seeking help about fake profiles or morphed photographs of their daughters on the internet. Marriage being a very delicate affair in India, the slightest aspersion on the bride’s “character” can lead to cancellation of the ceremony. A formal police case is thus never lodged. The National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) in “Crime in India 2020”, therefore, accounts for only 251 cases of defamation or morphing of women’s photos and 354 cases of their fake profiles under the Indian Penal Code, Information Technology Act and Indecent Representation of Women (Prohibition) Act.

The stark reality is that cyber blackmailing, stalking and bullying is a humongous issue, causing a lot of stress to women and their families. It is not confined to metros or peculiar to a particular caste or community. Small towns too have been badly afflicted. Reluctance to report is, however, common. NCRB statistics show that total cyber crimes in India during 2020 were 50,035, and those specifically against women were only 10,405. These statistics are but a fraction of the ground reality.

To find out the true magnitude of cyber crime, prompt reporting and registration are the only options. The reluctance to report/register the crimes is encouraging and emboldening cyber criminals. They are harnessing pictures of women from social media to promote online sex chats and pornography besides blackmailing and bullying the victims. They have become reckless “experts” in changing one image to another using morphing tools and also, in evading law enforcing agencies. There are many international gangs which successfully avoid detection as “servers” used by them are located outside India. International cooperation through formal treaties and informal channels has to be pursued. CERT-IN has been doing commendable work in this regard. However, registering a criminal case is the first crucial step as it sets the law into motion, leading to tracing, arresting and prosecuting the rogues even if they are located outside the country.

Another step could be to increase awareness about cyber safety and security so that youth, especially young girls and women, take proper precautions while surfing the virtual world. This cannot be left to the law enforcement agencies. Schools, colleges, universities and communities must take an active role in educating their wards about the rampant cyber abuse and safety measures/avenues available. We also need to involve social media platforms and encourage them to monitor and check abusive traffic and create more safeguards for users, especially women and children.

As for the police, we do need better infrastructure, more special cyber cells and police stations, regular training, and collaboration with cyber experts on a continuous basis. Strengthening the capability of forensic laboratories can lead to timely collection of evidence of cyber bullying, threatening, morphing and profiling. It is a highly technical job requiring sharp skills as the virtual world is constantly changing at an unimaginable speed. But many state labs do not have sufficient numbers of cyber experts to seize, preserve and store images of digital evidence essential for securing conviction in courts. The central government has given funds to states and Union territories under the Cyber Crime Prevention Against Women and Children (CCPWC) scheme to start “cyber forensic-cum-training laboratories”. Considering the gravity of the issue, states need to allocate similar resources for their forensic units.

Fast trial of cyber crimes would indeed help. As per the NCRB, during 2020, court trials were completed in only nine cases of cyber blackmailing and threatening with a 66.7 per cent conviction rate — 393 such cases are pending in courts. Similarly, 29 cases of cyber stalking and bullying of women and children were completed with a 27.6 per cent conviction rate — 1,508 cases are pending in courts. Trial has been completed in only two cases of fake profiling while 148 cases are pending. Systematic training of prosecutors and judicial officers in dealing with cyber crimes would definitely speed up trials.

Prompt reporting of cyber crime by citizens, technically proficient investigation by police adequately supported by forensics, and time-bound completion of court trials are essential for catching cyber offenders who are terrorising people, especially women, in the virtual as well as the real world.

Written by Meeran Chadha Borwankar

Source: Indian Express, 6/01/22

Wednesday, January 05, 2022

Quote of the Day January 5, 2022

 

“Good thoughts bear good fruit, bad thoughts bear bad fruit.”
James Allen
“सुविचारों से सुफल उपजते हैं और कुविचारों से कुफल।”
जेम्स एलन

Tips to prepare for the GATE exam

 The Graduate Aptitude Test for Engineers (GATE) is an exam conducted by the Indian Institute of Science (IISC) and seven institutes of technology (IITs) to test graduating engineers and science students. The idea is to test their knowledge and areas of interest for admission to Master’s and even recruitment by some public sector companies. With GATE 2022 set to start on February 5, many candidates might be feeling the pressure. So, here are some tips to help you deal with stress and fatigue.

Revision: Focus on the main subjects topics that are your strength. Go through and revise all notes in the time available. Don’t start new topics in the little time left. This will be a waste of time and cause you more stress and anxiety. Strengthen areas you are good at instead.

Mocks tests: Start taking as many full-length tests as possible. Solving the previous years’ papers will not only help increase your knowledge but also improve your speed. You will also learn to analyse your strong and weak points with more practice and become familiar with the paper pattern and the online technology.

Stay calm: Stress and pressure will not help you. You will progress if your mind is peaceful and calm. Make time in your schedule to de-stress. Go for a walk, listen to music, play a sport or meditate. Ensure you have breaks to refresh your mind and help you concentrate better.

Pattern: Being well versed with the syllabus and the changes to the exam pattern are important. Make sure you are referring to reference books that are updated.

Virtual Calculator: You will have to use a Virtual Calculator for the numerical-based questions. Get used to working on that, as the better your speed the more time you will have. This can also impact your marks.

Avoid discussions: Don’t try pre-exam discussions on preparation. Each person prepares in his or her own way. So listening to a friend’s strategy may increase your stress.

Section-wise prep: Since General Aptitude and Engineering Maths have the most points, concentrate on these two. They also require total accuracy. Go over the basic problems in the former and learn the formulas of the latter.

Keep faith in yourself, eat a healthy diet and ensure you are well rested. Your hard work will pay off.

Source: The Hindu, 26/12/21

Rohit Jain