Prelims-Pinpointer-for-04-12-2025 current affairs notes

Prelim Oriented

State Election Commissions (SECs)

About SECs

  • SECs conduct free, fair, and impartial elections to Panchayats and Municipalities.
  • Appointed by the Governor under constitutional mandate.

Constitutional Powers

  • Article 243K(1)
    • Grants superintendence, direction and control over electoral rolls and elections to Panchayats.
    • Municipal elections are governed similarly under Article 243ZA.
    • Headed by a State Election Commissioner, appointed by the Governor.
  • Article 243K(2) – Tenure
      • Tenure and service conditions are determined by the state legislature through law.
  • Removal
    • SEC has status, salary and allowances of a High Court Judge.
    • Removal follows the same process and grounds as for a High Court Judge.

Issues with SECs

  • Election-related violence; e.g., West Bengal panchayat polls witnessing violence blamed on SEC.
  • State interference despite constitutional mandate requiring non-interference.
  • Lack of impartiality and accountability, with some SECs acting aligned with ruling governments.
  • Appointment of serving bureaucrats, criticised by Supreme Court as a “mockery of the Constitution.”
  • Weak independence due to legislature-controlled tenure and appointment.
  • Conflicts with state governments, e.g., Maharashtra (2008) where SEC Nand Lal was jailed after breach-of-privilege proceedings.

Reform Suggestions

  • Supreme Court (2021)
      • Serving bureaucrats must not be appointed as SECs to ensure independence.
  • 2nd Administrative Reforms Commission (ARC)
      • Appointment through a collegium: CM + Speaker + Leader of Opposition.
      • Calls for an institutional mechanism for coordination between ECI and SECs.
  • Law Commission 255th Report
    • Recommend a constitutional amendment creating a separate, independent, permanent Secretariat for the ECI.
    • Similar secretariats suggested for SECs to ensure autonomy and fair local elections.

National Commission for Backward Classes (NCBC)

Context: NCBC recommended excluding 35 communities from West Bengal’s Central OBC list, mostly Muslim communities, following scrutiny initiated after 2014 inclusions ahead of Lok Sabha elections.

NCBC

  • Background and Evolution
      • NCBC was originally created in 1993 under the National Commission for Backward Classes Act, 1993.
      • It functioned under the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment.
      • It received constitutional status through the 102nd Constitutional Amendment Act, 2018.
      • The amendment inserted Article 338B, Article 342A, and Clause 26C in Article 366, redefining the framework for SEBC/OBC identification.
  • Composition
    • The Commission consists of:
      • Chairperson,
      • Vice-Chairperson,
      • Three Members (in rank and pay of Secretary to Government of India).
    • All members are appointed by the President through a warrant under his hand and seal.
  • Key Functions (Article 338B)
      • Investigate and monitor all matters relating to safeguards for Socially and Educationally Backward Classes (SEBCs) under the Constitution, law, or government orders.
      • Inquire into specific complaints regarding deprivation of rights and safeguards of SEBCs.
      • Advise and participate in socio-economic development programmes for SEBCs and evaluate progress across Union and States.
      • Submit annual and periodic reports to the President on implementation of safeguards.
      • Recommend measures for protection, welfare, and socio-economic advancement of SEBCs.
      • Perform additional functions assigned by the President, subject to Parliamentary law.
  • Reporting Requirement
    • The President lays NCBC reports before both Houses of Parliament.
    • A memorandum explaining action taken or reasons for non-acceptance of recommendations must accompany the report.
  • Powers of the Commission
    • While conducting inquiries, NCBC enjoys civil court powers, including:
      • Summoning persons,
      • Enforcing document production,
      • Receiving evidence on affidavits.
    • The Union and all State governments must consult the Commission on major policy matters affecting SEBCs.
    • NCBC has authority to regulate its own procedures.

Article 342A

  • Inserted by the 102nd Amendment Act, 2018.
  • Empowers the President to notify the Central List of SEBCs for each State/UT.
  • Any modification to this central list can be made only by Parliament.

De-Notified, Nomadic and Semi-Nomadic Tribes (DNTs)

Who are DNTs?

  • De-Notified Tribes (DNTs) refer to communities once listed under the Criminal Tribes Acts (1871–1947) imposed by the British.
  • These Acts branded several communities as “born criminals.”
  • After Independence, the Acts were repealed in 1952, and listed communities were officially “de-notified.”
  • Many DNT communities were nomadic, relying on seasonal movement for livelihood.
  • Semi-nomadic groups moved shorter distances and at lower frequency compared to fully nomadic tribes.

Status of DNTs in India

  • Over 10 crore people across 1,400+ communities fall under DNT, nomadic or semi-nomadic categories.
  • DNTs are spread across various States, with many still practicing mobility-based livelihoods.
  • A large number remain outside the reach of mainstream welfare systems due to lack of identification and documentation.

Commissions on DNTs

  • Idate Commission (2014)
      • Tasked to:
        • Compile a State-wise list of DNT and nomadic communities.
        • Recommend suitable measures for their welfare to Centre and States.
  • Renke Commission (2008)
  • Earlier effort to identify and list DNT communities nationwide.
  • Development and Welfare Board for DNTs (DWBDNCs)
    • Renke and Idate Commissions suggested a permanent commission.
    • Government rejected this because duties would overlap with NCSC, NCST and NCBC, as most DNTs appear under SC/ST/OBC categories.
    • Instead, DWBDNCs was created in 2019 (under Societies Registration Act, 1860) under the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment.
    • Mandate: Implement welfare schemes and support programmes for DNTs.

SEED Scheme (Scheme for Economic Empowerment of DNTs)

  • Launch: February 2022 • Allocation: ₹200 crore (2021–22 to 2025–26).
  • Implementing agency: DWBDNCs.
  • Key Components
      • Education: Free coaching for competitive exams.
      • Health: Insurance cover via PM Jan Arogya Yojana.
      • Livelihoods: Support through NRLM and SRLMs.
      • Housing/Land: Financial aid for home construction under PM Awas Yojana.
  • Eligibility
    • Families with annual income ≤ ₹2.5 lakh.
      • Beneficiaries not availing similar benefits under any other central/state scheme.

International IDEA

Context

  • The Chief Election Commissioner of India will assume charge as Chairperson of International IDEA in 2026.

International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (International IDEA)

    • Inter-governmental organisation formed in 1995 to support global democratic strengthening.
    • Granted UN Observer Status, enabling participation in UN deliberations.
    • Works globally to improve electoral systems, democratic institutions and political participation.
  • Objectives
    • Promote stronger, more legitimate, and sustainable democracies.
    • Support reforms that enhance institutional integrity, effective governance, and public trust.
  • Membership
    • Comprises 35 member countries.
    • India is a founding member of the organisation.
    • The United States and Japan participate as observer countries.
  • Governance Structure
    • Governance includes:
      • Council of Member States
      • Steering Committee
      • Finance and Audit Committee
      • Board of Advisers
      • Secretariat led by the Secretary-General
    • The Council elects a Chair and two Vice-Chairs annually from member states.
  • Core Functions
  • International IDEA operates through four key modalities:
        • Knowledge Production: research, comparative studies, policy analysis.
        • Capacity Development: technical assistance and institutional strengthening.
        • Advocacy: promoting democratic norms and reforms.
        • Dialogues and Convening: platforms for stakeholder engagement.
  • Key Workstreams
      • Electoral Processes: improving electoral integrity and management.
      • Constitution-Building: supporting drafting, reform, and implementation.
      • Democracy Assessment: evaluating performance of democratic systems.
      • Political Participation & Representation: enhancing inclusion and fairness.
      • Climate Change & Democracy: examining governance responses to climate risks.
      • Digitalisation & Democracy: addressing digital impacts on democratic systems.
  • The Secretariat is located in Stockholm, Sweden.

Devaluation & Depreciation of Rupee

Meaning of Devaluation

  • Devaluation is a deliberate downward adjustment of a country’s currency value by the central bank.
  • It aims to boost export competitiveness, reduce trade deficits, and correct external imbalances.
  • However, it increases import costs and can create additional domestic inflation.

Meaning of Depreciation

  • Depreciation of the rupee occurs when its value falls due to market forces, not policy.
  • Influenced by supply–demand shifts, global conditions, capital flows and investor sentiment.
  • Reflects market-based weakening, unlike policy-driven devaluation.

Reasons for Recent Rupee Decline

  • Internal Factors
    • High inflation erodes purchasing power and weakens rupee value.
    • Widening trade deficit increases demand for foreign currency, especially due to oil imports.
    • Fiscal deficit pressures reduce macroeconomic stability.
    • Unclear policy direction from RBI creates uncertainty in currency markets.
  • External Factors
    • Capital outflows as foreign investors exit during global uncertainty.
    • Geopolitical tensions, including Russia–Ukraine, raise commodity prices.
    • Global economic slowdown reduces export demand.
    • Stronger US dollar following aggressive Fed rate hikes.

Consequences of a Falling Rupee

  • Higher import costs for crude, electronics and raw materials.
  • Imported inflation as firms pass on increased costs.
  • Short-term export advantage erodes due to inflation-driven production costs.
  • Capital flight weakens market confidence.
  • Costlier external borrowing increases repayment burdens.

Measures to Stabilise the Rupee

  • Monetary Tools
    • RBI forex intervention to stabilise supply-demand.
    • Interest rate hikes to attract foreign inflows.
    • Currency swap agreements to diversify forex sources.
  • Fiscal Tools
    • Reduce import dependence through domestic production.
    • Support exporters via incentives to boost foreign exchange.
    • Invest in infrastructure to lower production costs.
    • Attract long-term FDI for stability.

Way Ahead

  • Create a stable exchange rate framework to reduce volatility.
  • Strengthen domestic manufacturing under initiatives like Make in India.
  • Maintain price stability through coordinated policy actions.
  • Diversify forex reserves to reduce dollar reliance.

Solar Flares

What They Are

  • Solar flares are sudden, powerful eruptions of energy from the Sun’s surface.
  • They arise when magnetic energy stored around sunspots is rapidly released.
  • Flares emit radiation across the entire electromagnetic spectrum, including radio waves, UV, X-rays and gamma rays.

How They Form

  • Twisted magnetic fields around sunspots accumulate stress due to solar rotation and plasma movement.
  • Magnetic reconnection causes these stressed field lines to snap and reconnect, releasing enormous energy.
  • The event superheats solar plasma to millions of degrees and accelerates charged particles outward.
  • Flares may occur independently or alongside coronal mass ejections (CMEs) that expel massive solar plasma clouds.

Key Features

  • X-ray classification ranks flares from A, B, C, M to X class, with each class ten times stronger than the previous.
  • X-class flares are the most intense and can trigger radio blackouts, disrupt navigation and expose satellites to harmful radiation.
  • They emit multi-wavelength radiation that instantly alters space-weather conditions.
  • Flares emerge mainly from large, magnetically complex sunspots, making prediction difficult.
  • They develop in minutes and release immense, unpredictable bursts of energy.

Implications

  • Communication impact: High-frequency radio failures affecting aviation, maritime and defence networks.
  • Satellite hazards: Can disable electronics, sensors and pose radiation risks to astronauts.
  • Geomagnetic storms: If accompanied by Earth-directed CMEs, can distort Earth’s magnetic field and potentially damage power grids.

INS Aridaman

What It Is

  • INS Aridaman is India’s third indigenously developed SSBN under the Arihant-class nuclear submarine programme.
  • It strengthens India’s assured nuclear second-strike capability under the no-first-use doctrine.
  • Constructed under the Advanced Technology Vessel (ATV) Project with >90% indigenous components.

Background

  • India launched its nuclear submarine programme in the late 1980s to secure a credible underwater deterrent.
  • INS Arihant (commissioned 2016) made India the sixth country with operational SSBN capability.
  • INS Arighat followed in 2024; Aridaman makes India capable of continuous at-sea deterrence.

Key Features

  • Displacement: ~6,000 tonnes (surface), ~7,000 tonnes (submerged).
  • Propulsion: 83 MW pressurised water reactor (BARC), offering near-unlimited endurance.
  • Weapons:
    • Four vertical launch tubes.
    • Can carry 24 K-15 Sagarika SLBMs (750 km) or K-4 missiles (3,500 km).
  • Stealth Enhancements: Anechoic tiles, advanced sonar (bow, flank, towed array).

Significance

  • Completes the nuclear triad, ensuring survivable nuclear capability at sea.
  • Extends India’s maritime deterrence across the Indo-Pacific amid regional power shifts.
  • Major achievement for Aatmanirbhar Bharat, demonstrating mastery in nuclear propulsion and indigenous shipbuilding.

INS Taragiri

What It Is

  • INS Taragiri is the fourth Nilgiri-class stealth frigate under Project 17A.
  • Designed as a multi-role combat vessel with enhanced stealth, firepower, automation and survivability.
  • Built by Mazagon Dock Shipbuilders Ltd., Mumbai.

Project 17A Ships

  • INS Nilgiri
  • INS Himgiri
  • INS Udaygiri
  • INS Taragiri
  • INS Dunagiri (upcoming)

Key Features

  • Stealth Design: Reduced radar, acoustic and infrared signatures.
  • Propulsion: CODOG system with diesel engines + gas turbines; controllable pitch propellers.
  • Sensors & Weapons:
    • BrahMos supersonic cruise missiles.
    • MF-STAR multifunction radar.
    • MRSAM air defence missile system.
    • 76 mm SRGM, CIWS (30 mm and 12.7 mm).
    • Torpedoes and rockets for anti-submarine warfare.
  • Automation: Integrated Platform Management System (IPMS) for machinery and damage-control functions.
  • Indigenisation: ~75% indigenous content with contributions from 200+ MSMEs.

Significance

  • Boosts India’s multi-mission naval capability, including air defence, anti-ship and anti-submarine warfare.
  • Accelerates India’s progress in indigenous warship construction within compressed timelines.
  • Strengthens maritime security and supports Aatmanirbhar Bharat with high domestic technological participation.

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