Prelims Pinpointer

Quality Council of India (QCI)

Context: QCI announced next-generation quality reforms to strengthen India’s quality ecosystem. The reforms target healthcare, laboratories, MSMEs, and manufacturing sectors.
About Quality Council of India
- QCI is a non-profit autonomous organisation, registered under Societies Registration Act, 1860.
- Established in 1997 through a joint initiative of Government of India and Indian industry.
- Industry partners include ASSOCHAM, CII, and FICCI.
- Functions under administrative control of DPIIT, Ministry of Commerce and Industry.
Mandate and Core Functions
- Acts as the national accreditation body for quality assurance.
- Creates mechanisms for independent third-party assessment of products, services, and processes.
- Promotes adoption of quality standards across sectors.
- Supports Quality Management Systems, Food Safety Management Systems, and product certification.
- Leads nationwide quality movement through the National Quality Campaign.
- Enhances trust, reliability, and global acceptance of Indian goods and services.
Accreditation and Certification Role
- Accredits certification and inspection bodies via NABCB.
- Ensures uniformity, transparency, and credibility in accreditation processes.
- Facilitates international recognition of Indian conformity assessment systems.
Boards and Divisions under QCI
- NABL – Testing and Calibration Laboratories accreditation.
- NABH – Hospitals and Healthcare Providers accreditation.
- NABET – Education and Training accreditation.
- NABCB – Certification Bodies accreditation.
- NBQP – Quality promotion and awareness initiatives.
- Each board is functionally independent and domain-specific.
Institutional Structure
- QCI comprises 38 members.
- Ensures equal representation from government, industry, and other stakeholders.
- Promotes collaborative governance in national quality infrastructure.
Significance
- Strengthens India’s quality ecosystem.
- Improves competitiveness of MSMEs and manufacturing.
- Enhances healthcare and laboratory standards.
- Supports India’s integration with global quality and accreditation frameworks.
Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI)

Overview
- Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) is India’s premier investigative agency.
- Operates under the Ministry of Personnel, Public Grievances and Pensions.
- Investigates corruption, economic offences, and serious crimes of national importance.
- Functions as Interpol’s nodal agency for coordination with member countries.
- It is neither a constitutional nor a statutory body.
Origin and Evolution
- Originated in 1941 as the Special Police Establishment (SPE).
- Created to investigate corruption in the War and Supply Department during World War II.
- Delhi Special Police Establishment (DSPE) Act, 1946 provided legal backing.
- Formally constituted as CBI in 1963 following Santhanam Committee recommendations.
- Shifted later to the Ministry of Personnel, Public Grievances and Pensions.
Organisational Structure
- Headed by a Director, usually an IPS officer of DGP rank.
- Assisted by Special Directors, Additional Directors, and Joint Directors.
- Organised into specialised divisions:
- Anti-Corruption Branch for public sector corruption.
- Economic Offences Wing for financial and economic crimes.
- Special Crimes Unit for serious and sensitive cases.
Appointment of CBI Director
- Appointed by Appointments Committee of the Cabinet.
- Based on recommendations of a high-powered Selection Committee.
- Committee members include:
- Prime Minister.
- Leader of Opposition or single largest opposition party leader.
- Chief Justice of India or nominee.
- DSPE Amendment Act, 2021 allows tenure extension up to five years, annually.
Jurisdiction and Consent
- CBI requires State consent under Section 6 of DSPE Act.
- General consent allows seamless investigation within a State.
- Specific consent required if general consent is withdrawn.
- Supreme Court and High Courts can order CBI probes without State consent.
Functions
- Investigates corruption involving Central Government employees and PSUs.
- Probes economic and fiscal offences, including customs and foreign exchange violations.
- Handles serious crimes with national or international ramifications.
- Coordinates with State police forces and anti-corruption agencies.
- Compiles and disseminates criminal intelligence and crime statistics.
Judicial Safeguards
- Vineet Narain case (1997) ensured fixed tenure and independent appointments.
- Subramanian Swamy case (2014) struck down prior sanction for senior officials.
- Common Cause case (2018) upheld selection committee-based appointments.
Challenges
- Allegations of political interference undermine institutional credibility.
- Manpower shortages and limited resources affect efficiency.
- Exemption from RTI Act raises transparency concerns.
- Dependence on State consent restricts operational autonomy.
Way Forward
- Enact a new CBI Act replacing DSPE Act.
- Grant statutory status with clearly defined powers and jurisdiction.
- Strengthen capacity building, technology adoption, and parliamentary oversight.
Mediation: “Law’s Highest Evolution”

Context: Chief Justice of India Surya Kant stated that mediation represents law’s highest evolution, not its weakness, while addressing a conference in Goa on Friday. He emphasized mediation as a transition from adjudication culture to participation culture, cultivating harmony through dispute resolution.
More in News
- CJI addressed conference “Mediation: How significant in present-day context” organized by India International University of Legal Education.
- He envisioned transition towards multi-door courthouse as comprehensive centre for dispute resolution, not merely trial place.
- CJI participated in symbolic “Mediation Awareness” walk near Kala Academy in Panaji earlier during the day.
- Mediation is being accepted as successful and cost-effective, providing win-win situation for both parties involved.
- Supreme Court launched “Mediation for Nation” initiative targeting consumers of justice and direct stakeholders with awareness message.
Mediation Act, 2023
- Background and Rationale
-
- The Mediation Act, 2023 establishes a comprehensive legal framework for mediation in India.
- It promotes voluntary, time-bound, and cost-effective resolution of civil and commercial disputes.
- The Act aims to reduce judicial backlog and strengthen alternative dispute resolution culture.
- It encourages resolving disputes outside traditional courts, improving access and efficiency.
- Objectives of the Mediation Act, 2023
-
- Promote mediation as a first step to prevent avoidable litigation.
- Ensure time-bound mediation, ordinarily completed within 120 days, extendable by 60 days.
- Provide legal enforceability to mediated settlement agreements.
- Strengthen institutional mediation through accredited institutions and regulators.
- Ensure confidentiality, transparency, and ethical conduct during mediation.
- Promote online mediation to expand reach and reduce dispute resolution costs.
- Key Features of the Act
-
- Makes pre-litigation mediation mandatory for many civil and commercial disputes.
- Establishes the Mediation Council of India as a central regulatory body.
- Recognises institutional, community, and online mediation as valid modes.
- Ensures confidentiality, barring use of mediation statements in subsequent court proceedings.
- Grants Mediated Settlement Agreements (MSAs) the status of a court decree.
- Allows challenges to MSAs only on limited grounds, including fraud or coercion.
- Prescribes a strict challenge timeline of 90 days, extendable by another 90 days.
- Provides a broad definition of mediation, covering conciliation and digital mediation methods.
- Mediation Council of India: Functions
-
- Registers and regulates mediation institutions and service providers.
- Accredits mediators and prescribes training, qualifications, and conduct standards.
- Maintains a national mediator panel for transparency and accessibility.
- Frames mediation rules, guidelines, and quality benchmarks.
- Promotes awareness, research, innovation, and online mediation frameworks.
- Disputes Excluded from Mediation
-
- Non-compoundable criminal offences and cases involving serious violence.
- Disputes involving minors, unsound persons, or guardianship issues.
- Matters affecting third-party rights not participating in mediation.
- Taxation disputes, sovereign functions, and national security matters.
- Public interest cases and disputes barred under special legislations.
- Matters requiring urgent judicial intervention or formal investigation.
- Challenges and Concerns
-
- Severe shortage of trained mediators, with fewer than 10,000 professionals nationwide.
- Mandatory pre-litigation mediation may delay access to courts in urgent cases.
- Low public awareness, with over 65% litigants unaware of mediation options.
- Digital divide, limiting access to online mediation in rural and low-income areas.
- Uneven implementation capacity across States, favouring urban regions.
- Impact on Indian Judicial System
-
- Helps reduce court pendency, exceeding 4.4 crore cases nationwide.
- Enables faster dispute resolution compared to prolonged litigation.
- Offers cost-effective justice, benefiting individuals and MSMEs.
- Enhances commercial confidence through confidential and predictable settlements.
- Encourages a collaborative dispute resolution culture, preserving relationships.
Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI)

About UIDAI
- Established as a statutory body under the Aadhaar Act, 2016.
- Operational since 12 July 2016.
- Functions under the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY).
- Headquarters located in New Delhi.
Core Functions of UIDAI
- Issues 12-digit Aadhaar numbers to residents of India.
- Provides biometric and demographic authentication services.
- Ensures data security and privacy of Aadhaar information.
- Enables digital inclusion through welfare and financial services access.
- Develops policies for the entire Aadhaar lifecycle management.
Overall Relevance
- The PoC showcases Aadhaar’s potential beyond welfare delivery.
- Strengthens technology-driven governance and secure identity verification.
- Sets a precedent for future exam reforms using biometric authentication.
Camellia Sinensis

Context: FSSAI clarified that a beverage qualifies as “tea” only if derived from Camellia sinensis. This clarification aims to ensure accurate labelling and consumer transparency in tea products.
About Camellia Sinensis
- Botanical Profile
-
- Camellia sinensis belongs to the Theaceae family, commonly called the tea plant.
- It is the primary source of green tea, black tea, and oolong tea.
- The plant grows as a shrub or evergreen tree, reaching heights up to 16 metres.
- Tea leaves are processed differently to produce distinct tea varieties, without changing the plant source.
- Climatic and Environmental Requirements
- Temperature: Optimal growth occurs between 15°C and 23°C.
- Climate: Prefers warm and humid conditions with at least five hours of sunlight daily.
- Rainfall: Requires 150–300 cm annual rainfall, evenly distributed across the year.
- Soil: Grows best in slightly acidic, calcium-free soil with porous sub-soil.
- Terrain: Sloping terrain is ideal to ensure effective drainage and prevent waterlogging.
- Altitude: Cultivated on mountain slopes up to 2,200 metres, enhancing leaf quality.
- Reproductive Characteristics
- Camellia sinensis flowers are complete and bisexual.
- Flowers contain functional male and female reproductive organs.
- Reproductive structures include stamens, carpels, ovary, androecium, and gynoecium.
- These features enable efficient sexual reproduction and genetic variability.
- Global Distribution
- Cultivated mainly in subtropical and warm temperate regions of South-east Asia.
- Major producing countries include China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Bangladesh, and Bhutan.
- Suitable climate and terrain in these regions support commercial tea cultivation.
- Regulatory Significance
- FSSAI clarification restricts the term “tea” exclusively to beverages from Camellia sinensis.
- Helps prevent misbranding of herbal infusions as tea.
- Strengthens food safety standards and consumer awareness in India.
Invasive Mosquito Species

Context and National Targets
- India aims to eliminate malaria by 2030, aligned with global commitments.
- An intermediate goal targets zero indigenous malaria cases by 2027.
- Malaria cases declined from 11.7 lakh (2015) to 2.27 lakh (2024).
- Despite progress, urban malaria resurgence threatens elimination timelines.
Role of Invasive Mosquito: Anopheles stephensi
- Anopheles stephensi is identified as a major invasive urban malaria vector.
- The mosquito thrives in urban environments, unlike traditional rural vectors.
- It breeds in artificial water containers, including tanks, tyres, and construction sites.
- The species efficiently transmits Plasmodium falciparum and P. vivax parasites.
- Its adaptability challenges existing malaria control and surveillance systems.
- Urban spread linked to high population density and fragmented healthcare delivery.
- Construction activity and informal settlements increase container-breeding habitats.
- The vector’s expansion poses a global malaria control concern, including India.
Urban Malaria: Emerging Vector-Driven Risks
- Urban malaria, especially in metropolitan areas like Delhi, is rising.
- Traditional rural-focused strategies are insufficient for urban vector control.
- Cities require location-specific mosquito surveillance and control approaches.
- Invasive mosquito presence complicates vector monitoring and insecticide use.
High-Burden and Residual Transmission Areas
- Malaria now persists in localised high-risk pockets, not widespread regions.
- Odisha, Tripura, and Mizoram report persistent malaria burden.
- Border districts face cross-border transmission from Myanmar and Bangladesh.
- Tribal, forested, and migrant settings remain vulnerable due to vector dynamics.
Surveillance and Control Challenges
- Asymptomatic infections enable silent malaria transmission.
- Population movement sustains mosquito-human contact across regions.
- Limited entomological capacity weakens mosquito surveillance.
- Drug and insecticide resistance reduce effectiveness of interventions.
- Inconsistent private-sector reporting hampers accurate mosquito-linked data.
Planetary Science: Re-evaluating Titan’s Subsurface

Context
- Re-analysis of Cassini data questions the long-held assumption of a subsurface ocean on Titan.
- Cassini conducted multiple flybys since 2004, generating extensive gravitational and geophysical datasets.
Basic Profile
- Titan is the largest moon of Saturn and the second largest moon in the Solar System.
- Discovered by Christiaan Huygens on 25 March 1655.
- Radius is about 2,575 km, nearly 50% wider than Earth’s Moon.
- Slightly smaller than Ganymede, Jupiter’s largest moon.
Atmospheric and Surface Features
- Only moon with a dense atmosphere in the Solar System.
- Atmosphere composed primarily of nitrogen, with methane traces.
- Exhibits liquid bodies on the surface, including rivers, lakes, and seas.
- Liquids are hydrocarbons, mainly methane and ethane, not water.
- Possesses an Earth-like liquid cycle involving evaporation, clouds, rainfall, and surface flow.
- Surface features shaped by methane rain and erosion processes.
Orbital and Rotational Characteristics
- Completes one orbit around Saturn in 15 days and 22 hours.
- Tidally locked, always showing the same face to Saturn.
- Synchronous rotation similar to Earth–Moon system.
Scientific Significance
- Considered a key laboratory for studying prebiotic chemistry.
- Dense atmosphere enables complex organic chemical reactions.
- Long suspected subsurface ocean raised astrobiological interest.
- New analysis suggests Titan may lack a global internal ocean, revising earlier models.
Cassini Mission Contribution
- Cassini was a NASA–ESA–ASI joint mission, launched in 1997.
- Included the Huygens probe, which successfully landed on Titan.
- Provided first direct surface and atmospheric observations.
- Data reshaped understanding of planetary atmospheres and icy moons.
Overall Relevance
- Titan remains unique among moons for atmosphere and surface liquids.
- Revised subsurface interpretations refine models of icy moon evolution.
- Continues to be central to studies on habitability beyond Earth.
Himalayan Red Fox

Context
- A viral roadside video near Pangong Tso, Ladakh highlighted human–wildlife interaction risks.
- Wildlife officials cautioned against feeding or approaching wild animals in high-altitude ecosystems.
Taxonomy and Identity
- Scientific name: Vulpes vulpes montana.
- A high-altitude subspecies of the widely distributed red fox (Vulpes vulpes).
- Among the most adaptable predators of Himalayan cold-desert landscapes.
Geographical Distribution
- Native to the Himalayan mountain range across India, Nepal, Bhutan, and Tibet.
- In India, found in Jammu and Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh, and Ladakh.
Habitat and Altitudinal Range
- Occupies elevations between 2,500–5,000 metres.
- Inhabits alpine meadows, grasslands, forests, agricultural lands, and cold deserts.
- Thrives in human-modified landscapes, reflecting high ecological adaptability.
Physical Characteristics
- Medium-sized mammal with body length 50–90 cm and tail 30–45 cm.
- Adult weight ranges 4–7 kg, males generally larger than females.
- Rusty-red coat, white underparts, and a distinct white-tipped tail.
- Dense insulating fur enables survival in extreme cold conditions.
Behaviour and Ecology
- Solitary and nocturnal, reducing direct competition with larger predators.
- Agile runner, capable of speeds up to 60 km/hr.
- Also a competent climber and swimmer.
- Opportunistic feeder, consuming rodents, birds, insects, fruits, and carrion.
- Plays a role in rodent population control in fragile mountain ecosystems.
Conservation Status
- Listed as Least Concern under the IUCN Red List.
- Faces localized threats from human interference and habitat disturbance.
Associated Location: Pangong Tso
- Endorheic high-altitude lake at about 4,350 metres in Ladakh Himalayas.
- Extends 134 km, with one-third in India and two-thirds in China.
- Known as the world’s highest saltwater lake, with striking colour variations.
Minamitori Island (Marcus Island)

Context: Japan will conduct test mining of rare-earth-rich mud from deep seabed areas near Minamitori Island. The initiative focuses on securing strategic minerals critical for advanced technologies.
Location and Strategic Significance
- Minamitori Island, also called Marcus Island, is an isolated Japanese coral atoll.
- It lies in the north-western Pacific Ocean, at Japan’s easternmost territorial edge.
- The island is 1,950 km southeast of central Tokyo.
- It is Japan’s first landmass to witness sunrise, symbolising its extreme eastern position.
- Strategically important for Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) expansion and seabed rights.
Topography and Geological Formation
- The island represents the summit of a massive seamount rising from the ocean floor.
- It is located on the Marcus–Necker Ridge, a significant underwater mountain chain.
- Minamitori is Japan’s only landmass situated on the Pacific Plate.
- Surrounded by deep ocean basins with high mineral potential.
Climate Characteristics
- Falls within a transitional tropical–subtropical climatic zone.
- Experiences an oceanic climate with limited seasonal variation.
- Average annual temperature remains around 25.6°C, favourable for marine ecosystems.
Marine Resource Potential
- Surrounding waters contain rare-earth-rich muds and cobalt-rich crusts.
- These resources are crucial for high-technology and clean-energy industries.
- Japan views the region as key to reducing dependence on external mineral suppliers.
Rare-Earth Mud: Key Features
- Rare-earth muds are pelagic sediments formed from accumulated plankton remains.
- They contain high concentrations of rare-earth elements (REEs).
- Important minerals include neodymium and dysprosium, used in high-performance magnets.
- Such magnets are essential for electric motors, wind turbines, and power generators.
- These muds form a thin seabed layer, unlike deeply buried coal deposits.
- Extraction requires specialised deep-sea mining technology, not conventional excavation.
Overall Significance
- Test mining near Minamitori Island highlights Japan’s push for mineral security.
- The project also raises issues of deep-sea resource governance and sustainability.

