Current Affairs for SSC CGL Exams - 14 MARCH 2019
::NATIONAL::
Supreme court gives clarity on DGP appointment
- The Supreme Court on Wednesday said the post of Director
General of Police (DGP) of a State was reserved for the best. It was
meant neither for the political establishment’s favourite officers, who
were on the verge of retirement, nor only for those with a minimum
residual tenure of two years before superannuation, the court clarified.
- Dispelling confusion regarding an order issued on July 3,
2018, a Bench led by Chief Justice of India RanjanGogoi said senior
police officers with a residual tenure of six months before normal
retirement could be considered for the post of DGP.
- The order came on a plea by former Uttar Pradesh DGP Prakash
Singh, who contended that the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) was
only considering police officers with a minimum two years’ residual
tenure for appointment as DGP. This had led to many competent officers
being overlooked.
- On July 3, 12 years after introducing drastic reforms to free
the police from political influence, the Supreme Court had barred State
governments from appointing DGPs without first consulting the UPSC.
Global environment outlook stresses on Paris climate deal accomplishment
- India could save at least $3 trillion (Rs. 210 trillion
approx.) in healthcare costs if it implemented policy initiatives
consistent with ensuring that the globe didn’t heat up beyond 1.5
degrees Celsius by the turn of the century, says the sixth edition of
the Global Environmental Outlook (GEO), prepared by the United Nations
Environment Programme.
- “Damage to the planet is so dire that people’s health will be
increasingly threatened unless urgent action is taken.Unless
environmental protections were drastically scaled up, cities and regions
in Asia, the Middle East and Africa could see millions of premature
deaths by mid-century,” a press statement accompanying the report noted.
- India’s stated commitment is to lower emissions intensity of
its GDP by 33-35% compared to 2005 levels by 2030; increase total
cumulative electricity generation from fossil free energy sources to 40%
by 2030, and create additional carbon sink of 2.5 to 3 billion tons
through additional forest and tree cover.
- India is on track to achieve two of these goals of emissions
intensity and electricity generation according to independent
climate-watch site Climate Tracker.
- However these actions are only enough and provided other
countries too live up to their commitments to limit temperature rise to
2 degrees.
- For India to leapfrog onto a 1.5-degree pathway it would have
to “abandon plans to build new coal-fired power plants,” said Climate
Tracker’s most updated analysis as of Dec 2018.'
::ECONOMY::
RBI to conduct Forex swap agreements to inject liquidity
- The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has decided to inject rupee
liquidity into the system through long-term foreign exchange buy/sell
swap a first-of-its-kind instrument used for liquidity management.
- The RBI would conduct dollar-rupee buy/sell swap auction of $5
billion for a three-year tenor on March 26. “In order to meet the
durable liquidity needs of the system, the Reserve Bank has decided to
augment its liquidity management toolkit and inject rupee liquidity for
longer duration through long-term foreign exchange buy/sell swap,” the
central bank said in a statement on Wednesday.
- “The U.S. dollar amount mobilised through this auction would
also reflect in RBI’s foreign exchange reserves for the tenor of the
swap while also reflecting in RBI’s forward liabilities,” it added.
- According to bankers, the move is seen to lower the dependence
on open market operations which have been a significant amount of the
overall borrowing. “Higher OMOs can distort the rates curve,” said a
banker. The move would boost RBI’s foreign exchange reserves which were
at $401.7 billion for the week ended March 1.
- Market participants would be required to place their bids in
terms of the premium that they were willing to pay to the RBI for the
tenor of the swap. RBI said the auction cut-off would be based on the
premium and the auction would be a multiple-price based auction.
- RBI also has raised the trade credit limit under the automatic
route to $150 million for oil/gas refining and marketing, airline and
shipping firms. For others, the limit is set at $50 million or
equivalent per import transaction.
::INTERNATIONAL::
India- Pakistan to discuss Kartarpur subject today
- India will urge Pakistan to not utilise the holy Kartarpur
shrine for propaganda about the Khalistan issue, sources said here on
Wednesday.
- The issue is part of the security concerns that is being
considered by the Indian side as paramount for the bilateral talks that
will be held in Attari tomorrow.
- The talks that will focus on the essential features of the
draft agreement on the religious corridor project has already created a
controversy after Pakistan alleged that India did not grant visas for
Pakistani journalists for the meeting.
- Pakistan’s foreign office spokesman took to social media to
argue that Pakistan had granted visas to more than 30 Indian journalists
who covered the Kartarpur ground-breaking ceremony in Pakistan last
year.
- The project will include a vast facility for the pilgrims on
the Indian side which will be ready to host at least 5,000 pilgrims on
any given day. It was learnt that India will also prepare for “surge” in
pilgrims flow during special, festive seasons. Accordingly facilities
will be created for at least 10,000 more pilgrims on the facilities on
the Indian side.
- India has acquired 50 acres of land for the facility for the
pilgrims to be built in Khanda style which represents oneness of the
humanity. The infrastructure would be built in two phases and the first
phase will spread over 15 acres of land. The Passenger Terminal Building
will be the main structure around which the rest of the land will be
developed.
- The talks will also include discussion over mismatch between
the alignment of Indian and Pakistan designs. The facility that India
will build on the Indian side of the project will include 54 immigration
counters for processing the paper works necessary for the visit to the
gurdwara which is one of the holiest shrines associated with Sikh
religion.
U.S urges countries to further pressurise Iran
- The U.S. has not ended the exemption to sanctions for
purchases of Iranian oil, received by India and seven other countries
last November when sanctions came into effect, following the U.S’s
withdrawal from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) or the
“Iran Deal”.
- This was conveyed in an email to The Hindu by a State
Department spokesperson. The exemptions were initially meant to last six
months and therefore due to expire in March.
- “Our policy goal remains to get all countries to stop
purchasing Iranian crude as quickly as possible. The U.S. granted
significant reduction exemptions (SRE) to China, India, Italy, Greece,
Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and Turkey in November 2018,” the statement
said.
- “Each of those jurisdictions had already demonstrated
significant reductions of the purchase of Iranian crude over the past
six months, and indeed two of those eight already completely ended
imports of Iranian crude and will not resume as long as the sanctions
regime remains in place. We continue working with the remaining SRE
recipients to end imports of Iranian crude.”
- It is expected that the exemptions are part of the discussions
Foreign Secretary Vijay Gokhale is having in Washington. Mr.Gokhale met
with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Monday as well as members of
Congress. He also met Undersecretary David Hale on Tuesday.
- Mr.Gokhale and Mr. Hale reviewed the progress made since the
2+2 Ministerial that was held in New Delhi last September, reaffirmed
their cooperation towards achieving their joint goals in the
Indo-Pacific region, discussed cross-border terrorism, Iran, North
Korea, Venezuela and Afghanistan, according to official statements.
::SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY::
UN report claims environment damage a major reason for premature deaths
- A quarter of all premature deaths and diseases worldwide are
due to manmade pollution and environmental damage, the United Nations
said on Wednesday in a landmark report on the planet’s parlous state.
- Deadly emissions, chemicals polluting drinking water, and the
accelerating destruction of ecosystems crucial to the livelihoods of
billions of people are driving a worldwide epidemic that hampers the
global economy, it warned.
- As greenhouse gas emissions continue to rise amid a
preponderance of droughts, floods and superstorms made worse by climbing
sea levels, there is a growing political consensus that climate change
poses a future risk to billions.
- Lacking access to clean drinking supplies, 1.4 million people
die each year from preventable diseases such as diarrhoea and parasites
linked to pathogen-riddled water and poor sanitation.
- Chemicals pumped into the seas cause “potentially
multi-generational” adverse health effects, and land degradation through
mega-farming and deforestation occurs in areas of earth home to 3.2
billion people.
- Food waste for instance, which accounts for 9% of global
greenhouse gas emissions, could be slashed. The world currently throws
away a third of all food produced. In richer nations, 56% goes to waste.
- It also called for a rapid drawdown in greenhouse gas
emissions and pesticide use to improve air and water quality.
::SPORTS::
Australia clinches series against India
- Australia Wednesday defeated India by 35 runs in the final ODI
at the Feroz Shah Kotla Stadium in Delhi to clinch the five-match series
3-2.
- Chasing a victory target of 273 runs, the hosts were all out
for 237 runs in the stipulated 50 overs. India vice-captain Rohit Sharma
completed 8000 runs in ODI Cricket. He made 56 runs.
- Earlier, electing to bat after winning the toss, Australia
made 272 runs in the stipulated 50 overs losing nine wickets.
UsmanKhawaja top-scored 100.