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DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS, 10 JUNE 2023

SEXUAL INTENT AND OBSCENITY

 
1. Context
 
Kerala High Court recently quashed a case filed under the POCSO Act, India’s child protection law, against a woman accused of subjecting her children to an obscene act. The mere sight of a woman’s naked upper body should not be deemed sexual by default and it should be considered in the context in which it was published, the court observed on June 5, 2023.
 
2. POCSO Case
  • In June 2020, a Kerala-based women’s rights activist posted a video on social media that showed her two children, aged 14 and 8 years, painting on her “semi-nude torso” with the hashtag “Body Art and Politics”.
  • There was outrage, and she was accused of subjecting her children to an obscene act.
  • Police registered a case and in a final report filed at the Additional Sessions Court, Ernakulam charged her with offences under Sections 10 read with Section 9 (n), Section 14 read with Section 13 (b), and Section 15 of the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act, 2012.
  • The offences under Section 9 (n), read with Section 10, involve sexual assault by a child’s relative. Sections 13-14 are about using children for pornographic purposes and their punishment.
  • Section 15 of the Act lays down the punishment for storing child pornographic material. 
  • The Ernakulam court granted her bail but refused to discharge her, reasoning that there were grounds for assuming she committed the offences. 
3. IT and JJ Act
  • The police also charged the activist under Section 67B (a), (b), and (c) of the Information Technology (IT) Act, 2000, and Section 75 of the Juvenile Justice (JJ) Act,  Section 67B (a) (b) and (c) of the IT Act lays down the punishment for publishing or electronically transmitting obscene material, which depicts children in sexually explicit acts.
  • Section 67B (a) is attracted when the material depicts children engaged in sexually explicit acts, and Section 67(B) (b) is attracted when children are depicted in an obscene, indecent, or sexually explicit manner. 
  • Section 67B (c) is about the cultivation, enticement, or induction of children into online relationships for sexually explicit acts.
  • Section 75 of the JJ Act prescribes punishment for cruelty to children, which includes assaulting, abandoning, abusing, exposing, and wilfully neglecting them to cause unnecessary mental or physical suffering.
4. Court judgement about the case
  • After viewing the video, the court said that although it showed the activist’s son painting her chest, the crucial question was whether there was any sexual intent on the mother’s part.
  • Dismissing the POCSO charges against her, the court said that Sections 9 (n) and 10 are attracted when a child’s relative commits “sexual assault”. However, “sexual assault” under Section 7 of the Act requires “sexual intent” while touching the child’s private parts or making the child touch one’s own or another person’s private parts. 
  • It also includes “any other act with sexual intent” involving physical contact, without penetration, the court said.
  • “There is nothing wrong with a mother allowing her body to be used as a canvas by her children to paint to sensitise them to the concept of viewing nude bodies as normal,” the court said.
  • The essential ingredient of “sexual intent” in POCSO offences was missing in this case. 
  • Quashing the POCSO charges under Sections 13 (b) and 14 of the Act that involve using children for sexual gratification in any form of media, the court said, “There is nothing to show that the children were used for pornography.” 
  • On the use of Section 15 (punishment for storing pornographic material involving children), the court said the children in the video were clothed, and participating in a harmless and creative activity. 
  • In its order dated June 5, the court said that a mother-child relationship is one of the “most solemn and pious relationships”. Examining the statement of the activist’s children, the court said, “The children do not have a case that they were sexually exploited in any manner.” 
5. Definition of Obscenity
  • According to Black's Law Dictionary, 'obscene' means "extremely offensive under contemporary community standards of morality and decency; grossly repugnant to the generally accepted notions of what is appropriate".
  • The court referred to the Constitution Bench ruling in 'Ranjit D. Udeshi vs. the State of Maharastra )1965) where the Supreme Court followed the 'Hicklin test' that was laid down in the 1868 ruling in the UK, 'Queen vs. Hicklin'.
  • The test is whether the "tendency of the matter charged as obscene must be to deprave and corrupt those, whose minds are open to such immoral influences and into whose hands a publication of the sort may fall," the top court has said, holding D H Lawrence's book, Lady Chatterley Lover', to be 'obscene' under section 292 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860, which punishes the sale of obscene books, pamphlets, etc.

6. Obscenity laws in India

  • Under the Indian Penal Code (IPC), sections 292, 293 and 294 deal with the offence of obscenity.
  • Section 292 says that any content shall be deemed to be obscene if it is lascivious or appeals to the prurient interest, or if its effect tends to deprave and corrupt persons likely to read, see or hear the content. 
  • This section prohibits the sale or publication of any obscene pamphlet, book, paper, painting, and other such materials.
  • Section 293 criminalises the sale or distribution of obscene objects to anyone who is under the age of 20, or an attempt to do so.
  • Although it is a bailable offence, the maximum punishment for the first conviction is three years of imprisonment and a fine up to Rs 2,000, and for the second conviction seven years with a fine up to Rs 5,000.
  • Section 294 prohibits obscene acts and songs in public spaces. 
  • The maximum punishment for the person convicted under this charge is three-month jail and a fine.
  • With the advent of the digital age, laws were made to criminalise obscene conduct on the internet also.
  • With the advent of the digital age, laws were made to criminalise obscene conduct on the internet also. 
  • Section 67A of the IT Act deals with material containing a sexually explicit act etc in electronic form. The Punishment is five years and Rs 10 lakh (first conviction) or seven years and Rs 10 lakh (second conviction).
For Prelims: Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act, 2012, Section 67B (a), (b), and (c) of the Information Technology (IT) Act, 2000, and Section 75 of the Juvenile Justice (JJ) Act,  Section 67B (a) (b) and (c) of the IT Act, Hicklin test, Section 292, section 293, and Section 294 of IPC.
For Mains: 1. Discuss the key provisions of the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act. Do you think that anything has changed since the enactment of the POCSO Act in 2012? (250 Words)
Source: The Indian Express

WPI AND CPI AND REVERSE REPO RATE

 
1. Context
 
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) left the main policy instrument, the repo rate, unchanged at 6.50 per cent for the second consecutive monetary policy, giving relief to home, unchanged at 6.50 per cent for the second consecutive monetary policy, giving relief to home, vehicle and other retail borrowers from an increase in equated monthly instalments (EMIs).

2. Key points

  • The decision to keep the repo rate which is the interest rate at which the RBI lends to banks in the country unchanged was taken unanimously by the six Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) members as inflation continues to remain above the 4 per cent target.
     
  • The RBI has been mandated by the government to keep consumer price index-based inflation (CPI) at 4 per cent with a band of + or - 2 per cent.
  • Any inflation rate essentially tells us the rate at which prices have been rising in an economy.
  • As such, an inflation rate is expressed as a percentage. If the prices of onions rose from Rs 10 a kg last year to Rs 15 a kg this year, the inflation rate will be 50 per cent.
  • That's because a kg of onion is Rs 5 that is, 50 per cent more than the base price.
  • For every month, inflation rates are calculated both on a year-on-year basis and how prices have changed over the past year as well as on a month-on-month basis how prices have changed over the past month.

3. Calculation of Inflation rates

  • Inflation rates are calculated for all commodities and commodity groups. So, we have inflation rates for onions as well as for all food items.
  • But, the price of any commodity say onions, also varies whether one buys the commodity in the wholesale market or whether one buys in the city mall.
  • Comparing last year's wholesale prices of onions with this year's retail store prices will be misleading. 
  • So, the government comes out with two indices one for mapping inflation in the wholesale market and one for mapping inflation in the retail market.
  • Inflation rates are also calculated for rural and urban markets for better policy analysis.
 
4. WPI vs CPI

The two most-often used inflation rates in the country are the year-on-year.
  1. The wholesale price index (WPI) is based inflation rate and
  2. The consumer price index (CPI) is based on the inflation rate

  • The former is called the wholesale inflation rate and the latter is called the retail inflation rate.
  • Both WPI and CPI are price indices. In other words, these are two different baskets of goods and services.
  • The government assigns different weights to different goods and services based on what is relevant for those two types of consumers.
The two tables below bring out the differences.
 
Table 1: Composition of Wholesale Price Index
 
 
Table 2: Composition of Consumer Price Index
 
  • The CPI-based inflation data is compiled by the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation  (or MoSPI) and the WPI-based inflation data are put together by the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (or DPIIT).
  • Looking at the way the two indices are constructed, it becomes clear how and why the two inflation rates are different.
  • For instance, the WPI is dominated by the prices of manufactured goods while the CPI is dominated by the prices of food articles.
  • As such, broadly speaking, if food prices go up sharply, it will bump up the retail inflation rate far more than it would spike the wholesale inflation rate.
  • The reverse will happen when the prices of manufactured products (such as TVs and cars) rise sharply.
  • A key difference that must not be missed is that the WPI does not take into account the change in prices of services say a haircut or a banking transaction.
  • But CPI does. if services such as transport, education, recreation and amusement, personal care etc. get significantly costlier then retail inflation will rise but there will be no impact on wholesale price inflation.
  • Since these two inflation rates are calculated based on two very different indices, it is not uncommon to find them at considerable variance with each other.
 
For Prelims: Inflation, Wholesale Price Index, Retail Price Index, Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation, Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade, RBI, Repo rate, Monetary Policy Committee
For Mains:
1. Discuss how the Inflation rates are calculated and Explain the difference between Wholesale Price Index and Retail Price Index. (250 Words)
 
 
Previous Year Questions
 
1. With reference to inflation in India, which of the following statements is correct? (UPSC 2015)
A. Controlling the inflation in India is the responsibility of the Government of India only
B. The Reserve Bank of India has no role in controlling the inflation
C. Decreased money circulation helps in controlling the inflation
D. Increased money circulation helps in controlling the inflation
 
Answer: C
 
2. With reference to India, consider the following statements: (UPSC 2010)
1. The Wholesale Price Index (WPI) in India is available on a monthly basis only.
2. As compared to Consumer Price Index for Industrial Workers (CPI(IW)), the WPI gives less weight to food articles.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct? 
A. 1 only       B. 2 only       C. Both 1 and 2          D.  Neither 1 nor 2
 
Answer: C
 
3. Consider the following statements: (UPSC 2020)
1. The weightage of food in Consumer Price Index (CPI) is higher than that in Wholesale Price Index (WPI).
2. The WPI does not capture changes in the prices of services, which CPI does.
3. Reserve Bank of India has now adopted WPI as its key measure of inflation and to decide on changing the key policy rates.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
 A. 1 and  2 only       B. 2 only       C. 3 only           D. 1, 2 and 3
 
Answer: A
 
4. Who among the following is the head of the standing committee on economic statistics set up by Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MOSPI)? (SSC CGL 2020) 
A. Krishnamurthy Subramanian
B. Manmohan Singh
C. Pronab Sen
D. Raghuram Rajan
 
Answer: C
 
5. As per Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation, which state of India has the highest per capita income as of Sep 2019? (SSC CPO 2019) 
A. Goa                B.  Punjab         C. Tamil Nadu         D. Gujarat
 
Answer: A
 
6. The Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT) has revised the base year index of Eight Core Industries having a combined weight of about 40.27 percent in the Index of Industrial Production. Which one of the following is not one of the Eight Core Industries? (CDS 2022)
A. Coal
B. Refinery products
C. Rubber products
D. Cement
 
Answer: C
 
Source: The Indian Express

KHALISTAN MOVEMENT

1. Context 

INDIA ON June 8 2023 warned Canada that giving “space… to separatists, extremists” was “not good” for bilateral ties, after a video clip, being circulated on social media, showed a float that apparently celebrated the assassination of former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. The float was reportedly part of a parade held in the Canadian city of Brampton on June 4, 2023
 

2. Khalistan movement

  • The Khalistan movement is a fight for a separate, sovereign Sikh state in present-day Punjab (both India and Pakistan).
  • Over the years, it has survived in various forms, in various places and amongst different populations.
  • The movement was crushed in India following Operation Blue star (1984) and Operation Black Thunder (1986 and 1988), but it continues to evoke sympathy and support among sections of the Sikh population, especially in the Sikh diaspora in countries such as Canada, the UK and Australia.

3. Reasons for the origin of the movement

  • The origins of the movement have been traced back to India's independence and subsequent Partition along religious lines.
The Punjab province, which was divided between India and Pakistan, saw some of the worst communal violence and generated millions of refugees: Sikha and Hindus stranded in the West (in Pakistan) rushed to the east, whereas Muslims in the east fled westward.
  • Lahore, the capital of Maharaja Ranjit Singh's great Sikh Empire, went to Pakistan as did holy Sikh sites including Nankana Sahib, the birthplace of Guru Nanak, the founder of Sikhism.
  • While most Sikhs found themselves in India, they were a small minority in the country, making up around 2 per cent of the population.
  • The political struggle for greater autonomy began around the time of Independence, with the Punjabi Suba Movement for the creation of a Punjabi-speaking state.
  • The States Reorganisation Commission, in its 1955 report rejected this demand, but in 1966 after years of protest, the state of Punjab was reorganised to reflect the Punjabi Suba demand.
  • The erstwhile Punjab state was trifurcated into the Hindi-speaking, Hindu-majority states of Himachal Pradesh and Haryana and the Punjabi-speaking, Sikh-majority Punjab.

4. The Anandpur Sahib Resolution

  • The Punjabi Suba Movement had galvanised the Akali Dal which became a major force in the new Sikh-majority Punjab and gave Congress hard fights in the Legislative Assembly elections of 1967 and 1969.
  • But in 1972, in the aftermath of Indira Gandhi's resounding victory in the 1971 Lok Sabha elections, the Akali Dal's performance in the state was underwhelming.
  • The party met at the sacred town of Anandpur Sahib the birthplace of the Khalsa, in 1973 and released a list of demands that would guide the political path of the Akali Dal.
  • Among other things, the Anandpur Sahib Resolution demanded autonomy for the state of Punjab, identified regions that would be part of a separate state and sought the right to frame its internal constitution.
  • The Akali Dal was trying to cash in on the growing demand for an autonomous state which had emerged alongside the Punjabi Suba movement and had gone global by 1971 when an advertisement appeared in the New York Times proclaiming the birth of Khalistan.
  • While the Akalis themselves repeatedly made it clear that they were not demanding secession from India, for the Indian state, the Anandpur Sahib Resolution was of grave concern.

5. Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale

  • Many in Punjab sought to go beyond just a demand for greater autonomy.
  • One such man was Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale, a charismatic preacher who soon positioned himself as "the authentic voice of the Sikhs, in contrast to the Akali Dal's lukewarm, vacillating leadership".
  • Some accounts claim that Bhindranwale was propped up by Sanjay Gandhi, Indira's son, to stand against the Akalis for Congress's political benefit.
  • However, by the 1980s the appeal of Bhindranwale had grown so much that he started to become a problem for the government.
  • He found a captive audience in the state's youth, especially those in the lower rungs of the social ladder and massed a massive following. He and his followers were also getting increasingly violent.
  • In the summer of 1982, Bhindranwale, with support from the Akali Dal's leadership, launched a civil disobedience movement called Dharam Yudh Morcha.
  • He took up residence inside the Golden Temple, directing demonstrations and clashes with the Police.
  • The Movement was geared towards the demands first articulated in the Anandpur Sahib Resolution, especially the socio-economic demands, which addressed concerns of the state's rural Sikh population.
  • However, amidst growing religious polarisation, sectarian violence and Bhindranwale's harsh rhetoric against Hindus, Indira Gandhi's government declared the movement tantamount to secession.

6. Operation Blue Star

  • By 1984, the situation in Punjab had become increasingly untenable for the government.
  • Bhindranwale had given a call to arms and instances of violence against Hindus, as well as government officers, had become common.
  • In 1983, a senior police officer was shot dead after praying at the Golden Temple and his body was left to decay in the sun, while the local police station did nothing perhaps both out of fear and sympathy for Bhindranwale's cause.
  • Indira Gandhi took the fateful decision to order the Indian Army to flush out militants from the Golden Temple and neutralise Bhindranwale.
  • Operation Blue Star began on June 1, 1984, but due to fierce resistance from Bhindranwale and his heavily armed supporters, the Army's operation became larger and more violent than had been originally intended, with the use of tanks and air support.
  • The image of Indian Army tanks shelling the holiest shrine of Sikhism was traumatic and the very large number of civilian casualties that occurred during the operation added to the trauma.
  • According to the government, 83 Indian Army soldiers were killed and 249 were injured in the operation.  A total of 493 militants and civilians were killed in the operation.
  • Other estimates peg the number of casualties much higher as much as 3, 000.
  • The operation coincided with the martyrdom day of Guru Arjan Dev, the fifth Guru of the Sikhs; hence the number of pilgrims in the Golden Temple was higher than usual.

7. The aftermath of Operation Blue Star

  • While the operation was ostensibly successful in its aims Bhindranwale was killed and the Golden Temple was freed of militants it gravely wounded the Sikh community around the world. It also galvanised the demand for Khalistan.
  • On October 31, 1984, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was assassinated by two Sikh bodyguards.
  • This triggered the worst communal violence since Partition even according to conservative estimates, over 8, 000 Sikha were massacred in massive anti-Sikh street violence.
  • A year later, Sikh nationalists based in Canada blew up an Air India flight killing 329 people.
  • They claimed that the attack was to "avenge Bhindranwale's killing".
  • Punjab saw the worst violence, becoming the hub of a long-drawn-out insurgency that lasted till 1995.
  • While the movement was allegedly supported by Pakistan to cause internal unrest in its neighbouring country, it would slowly peter out by the 1990s as the violence took its toll, the bulk of the population turned against the militants and India headed towards economic liberalisation

8. The status of the Khalistan movement today

  • Punjab has long been peaceful, but the movement lives among some Sikh communities overseas.
  • The deep-rooted anger over Operation Blue Star and the desecration of the Golden Temple continues to resonate with some of the newer generations of Sikhs.
  • However, even though Bhindranwale is viewed as a martyr by many and the 1980s are remembered as dark times, this has not manifested into tangible political support for the Khalistna cause.

For Prelims & Mains

For Prelims: Khalistan Movement, Operation Bluestar, Golden Temple, Indira Gandhi Assassination, Bhindranwale, Operation Black Thunder, Sikhs, Guru Nanak, States Reorganisation Commission, The Punjabi Suba Movement, Guru Arjan Dev, 
For Mains:
1. What is Khalistan Movement and Explain the consequences which led to Operation Bluestar and its aftermath? (250 Words)
 
Source: The Indian Express

GAGANYAAN 

1. Context

In a clear indication that it needed more time to execute Gaganyaan, the human spaceflight programme, the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) on June 8, 2023 said the safety of astronauts was far more important than target dates. Speaking on the sidelines of an international conference on Spacecraft Mission Operations (SMOPS-2023), ISRO chairman S Somnath said the space agency had planned additional test flights before a human crew was used.
 

2. The manned space mission

  • A manned space mission is very different from all other missions that ISRO has so far completed.
  • In terms of complexity and ambition, even the mission to the Moon (Chandrayaan) and Mars (Mangalyam) are nowhere in comparison.
  • For a manned mission, the key distinguishing capabilities that ISRO has had to develop include the ability to bring the spacecraft back to Earth after the flight and to build a spacecraft in which astronauts can live in Earth-like conditions in space.
  • Over the years, ISRO has successfully tested many of the technologies that are required, but many others are still to be developed and tested.

3. About GSLV Mk-III rocket

  • One of the most important requirements is the development of a launch vehicle that can carry heavy payloads into space.
  • The spacecraft carrying human beings called the crew module is likely to weigh over 5 to 6 tonnes.
  • ISRO's main launch vehicle, the PSLV (Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle), which carried the Chandrayaan and Mangalyaan missions too, can carry payloads that are barely up to 2 tonnes and that too only to orbits at about 600 km altitude from the Earth's surface.
  • That is why the development of GSLV Mk-III, a launch vehicle with capabilities to deliver much heavier payloads much deeper into space was necessary.
4. About Gaganyaan
  • After three decades of efforts, mainly concentrated on developing an indigenous cryogenic engine to power the rocket, ISRO successfully tested GSLV Mk-III, now called LVM-3 (Launch Vehicle Mark-3), in an experimental flight in December 2014.
  • Then, in June last year, ISRO successfully launched the first "developmental" flight of LVM-3, which carried the GSAT-19 satellite into space.
  • The LVM-3 is the declared launch vehicle for taking the manned crew module into space. Over the next few years, many more flights of GSLV are scheduled.
  • These will help ISRO in perfecting the cryogenic technology for sending up heavier and heavier payloads. 
  • The government approved the funding for the next 10 flights of GSLV MK-III at an estimated cost of Rs 4, 338.2 crores. 
  • This was supposed to take care of GSLV Mk-III missions till 2024.
 
4.1. Reentry and recovery tech
  • The satellites normally launched by ISRO, like those for communication or remote sensing are meant to remain in space, even when their life is over.
  • Even Chandrayaan and Mangalyaan were not meant to return to Earth.
  • Any manned spacecraft, however, needs to come back. This involves mastering the highly complicated and dangerous reentry and recovery ability.
  • While rentering Earth's atmosphere, the spacecraft needs to withstand very high temperatures, over several thousand degrees, which is created due to friction.
  • Also, the spacecraft needs to reenter the atmosphere at a very precise speed and angle and even the slightest deviation could end in disaster.
  • The first successful experimental flight of GSLV Mk-III on December 18, 2014, also involved the successful testing of an experimental crew module that came back to Earth after being taken to an altitude of 126 km into space.
  • Called the Crew module Atmospheric Reentry Experiment (CARE), the spacecraft reentered the atmosphere at about 80 km altitude and landed in the sea near the Andaman and Nicobar Islands from where it was recovered by the coast Guard.
  • The external configuration of that crew module was the same as that to be used in the manned flight. Many more tests would be done over the next few years.
 
4.2. Crew Escape System
 
  • This is a crucial safety technology, involving an emergency escape mechanism for the astronauts in case of a faulty launch.
  • The mechanism ensures the crew module gets a warning of anything going wrong with the rocket and pulls it away to a safe distance, after which it can be landed either on sea or on land with the help of attached parachutes.
  • On 5th July 2018, ISRO completed the first successful flight of the crew escape system.
  • A simulated crew module weighing about 3.5 tonnes was launched from Sriharikota.
  • It reached 2.7 km into space before unfurling its parachutes and floating back to the Earth's surface.
  • The system is likely to undergo many more tests in the coming years.

4.3.. Life support
  • The Environmental Control and Life Support System (ECLSS) is meant to ensure that conditions inside the crew module are suitable for humans to live comfortably.
  • The inside of the crew module is a twin-walled sealed structure that will recreate Earthlike conditions for the astronauts.
  • It would be designed to carry two or three astronauts.
The ECLSS maintains a steady cabin pressure and air composition, removes carbon dioxide and other harmful gases, controls temperature and humidity and managers parameters like fire detection and suppression, food and water management and emergency support.
  • While the layout and design of the ECLSS have been finalised, its many individual components and systems are in the process of being tested.
  • The design and configuration of the inside of the crew module have also been finalised.
  • Ground testing will have to be followed by tests in the space orbit while simulating zero gravity and deep vacuum.

4.4. Astronaut training

  • In the early part of the planning process, a proposal for setting up an astronaut training centre in Bangalore was floated. Initially targeted by 2012, it is yet to take off.
  • While ISRO still plans to set up a permanent facility, the selected candidates for the first manned mission will most likely train at a foreign facility.
  • Candidates will need to train for at least two years in living in zero gravity and dealing with a variety of unexpected experiences of living in space.
  • Some training would also be imparted at the Institute of Aerospace Medicine of the Indian Air Force at Bengaluru. 

5. From an idea to a plan

August 2004: ISRO Policy Planning Committee recommends manned space mission.
November 2006: National Committee comprising 80 scientists and technocrats endorses the proposal.
September 2007: First Public announcement of the human space programme.
February- March 2009: Another committee, comprising Montek Singh Ahluwalia, R Chidambaram, Roddam Narasimha, M G K Menon, Yash Pal, M S Swaminathan and K Radhakrishnan discusses the desirability and feasibility of the programme and expresses support. 
April 2010: Failure of GSLV-D3
December 2010: Failure of GSLV-F06
December 18, 2014: Successful testing of experimental flight of GSLV Mk-III; this also successfully tests an experimental crew module, demonstrating reentry capability.
June 2017: First developmental flight of GSLV Mk-III
July 2018: The first successful flight of the crew escape system
August 15, 2018: Prime Minister announces manned mission to take place before 2022.

For Prelims & Mains

For Prelims: Gagayaan, ISRO, GSLV-Mk-III, GSLV-F06, GSLV-D3, Environmental Control and Life Support System, Crew module Atmospheric Reentry Experiment, Chandrayaan,  Mangalyaan, GSAT-19 satellite, ISRO Policy Planning Committee, PSLV
For Mains:
1.  What is Gagayaan's mission? discuss its significance (250 Words)
2. Write a short note on the following components of Gagayaan. (each 125 Words)
A. Environmental Control and Life Support System
B. Crew Escape System
 
Source: The Indian Express

Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (QUAD)

 
 
1.Context
 
As Prime Minister Narendra Modi prepares for his June 21-24 official state visit to Washington DC, India and the United States are said to be looking at “consecrating” their relationship premised on greater alignment of goals in Asia and the Indo-Pacific
 

2.About QUAD

Quad is an informal strategic forum comprised of Four Nations- United Nations of America (USA), India, Australia, Japan
Quad is a diplomatic network of four countries committed to supporting an open, exclusive, resilient region and it compliments other bilateral, regional and multilateral cooperation including with ASEAN
  • All four nations have a common ground called Democracy as well as a common interest of unhindered maritime trade and Security
  • In 2004, after Tsunami all these four nations came together for the relief operations so this could be a Genesis for this QUAD
  • Japan has come forward with the idea of QUAD in 2007 on the sidelines of the meeting of Asian South-East Nations (ASEAN)
  • QUAD dialogue objective is to increase cooperation in maritime of the four nations

3.Significance of QUAD

  • Quad is a platform for like-minded philosophical nations to have a dialogue amid the Russia-Ukraine war crisis
  • Leaders from these countries can see the vision of Free Indo-Pacific Trade and it will be a historical benefit to all
  •  This meeting can look like all the Democratic Countries has a similar opponent i.e China

4.Impact of QUAD and challenges faced by India 

  • QUAD tends to widen the present Indo-China ties which are breaking apart from the recent Galway skirmish 
  • The QUAD has a wide potential to counter INDO-RUSSIA international relationship 
  • India is uncomfortable with any conception of the Quad as an anti-China “alliance of democracies” (as U.S. President Joe Biden has put it). 
  • Another dilemma India faces is that any formal grouping of democracies through the Quad could raise expectations that it will be a vigorous proponent of promoting democracy abroad. But that will not sit well with India, which has traditionally refrained from advocating for democracy and democratic ideals in its foreign policy will not sit well with India, which has traditionally refrained from advocating for democracy and democratic ideals in its foreign policy
  • However, policymakers in India took notice that under AUKUS, the United States is sharing coveted technology with one Quad partner but not another. 

5.China Factor

China claims it has ownership of all the regions of the South China Sea  and in 2016 Internation court of Arbitration rejected this claim
Australia: The labour party's history and the emergence of china as a big issue during Australia's electoral campaign this time 

5.Way Forward 

  • Through the Quad, India can have more impact in shaping the global order and restraining China. At the same time, the Quad keeps the door open for India for close defence cooperation without resorting to a security alliance. 
  • India is also very important to the Quad
  • A Quad without India would have less heft, less credibility in Asia, and would immediately lose the “Indo” in “Indo-Pacific.” 
  • It’s a partnership of mutual gain, and to strengthen the Quad, the United States should not only continue to make clear to India that it is as valued a member as Japan and Australia but also think about formalizing a structure for the grouping, including by establishing a secretariat that would facilitate multilateral cooperation and think through what the Quad stands for, rather than who it is against.

 
 

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