Current Affairs for SSC CGL Exams - 16 DECEMBER 2019
::NATIONAL::
Centre denies plans to extend article 371 to Jammu
- The Central government does not intend to extend Article 371 of the
Constitution to Jammu and Kashmir, Union Minister Jitendra Singh said.
- Article 371, which has special provisions and is applicable in some
states especially in the Northeast, safeguards the rights of native people
with regard to religious or social practices, customary laws and procedures,
ownership and transfer of land and resources, and employment and education.
- Reiterating that Article 370 is "gone forever as a whole", he said there
is a basic difference between the essence and spirit of Article 370 which
has been revoked from Jammu and Kashmir and Article 371 which is applicable
in certain areas of the Northeast.
- Singh said the vested interests will have to "swallow a bitter pill"
whether they like it or not. However, the minister said it is the duty of
"all patriotic, nationalistic and right-thinking citizens" to cooperate in
smooth implementation of the same laws and rules which are applicable in the
rest of India.
Home ministry plans to set up high security prisons in each state
- The Union home ministry has directed the states and Union territories to
set up “a high security prison” in each state to check radicalisation of
inmates.The National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB), in a recent report on
prisons, said jails in several states are overcrowded.
- The advisory to chief secretaries also expresses concern over secure
custody of inmates. Last month, the clash between Delhi police and lawyers
could have led to escape of hundreds of hardened criminals.
- It further said, “The first requisite of a progressive prison is the
scientific classification of prisoners. The reformation of prisoners cannot
be if all types of prisoners are lodged together. Different types of
criminals need individual treatment. Unless a well planned classification of
inmates is made and habitual and hardened criminals who have adopted crime
as a way of life are separated from the rest, it would be difficult to save
the first offenders from the crime infection.”
::ECONOMY::
NITI Aayog to begin improvement of data quality
- NitiAayog, India’s key policy think tank, has begun work on a roadmap
that will suggest steps to swiftly tackle quality issues confronting
official data.
- The move comes close on the heels of a controversy over the consumption
survey that was subsequently junked by the government on data quality
concerns.
- It also comes amid a move by the Ministry of Statistics and Programme
Implementation (MoSPI) to address data quality issues of various surveys,
introducing checks for data collection apart from increasing the sample size
of surveys to improve accuracy.
- Statistics is no longer the old system, but has a huge technology
component as well, the source added. “It is a challenge to obtain, store and
maintain data and so is data governance, especially who has access to data,”
the source said.
- The credibility of India’s official data has come under strain following
last month’s leak of the draft Household Consumer Expenditure report, which
showed a decline in spending in rural India in financial year 2018, and was
later shelved.
Govt.plans to impose anti-dumping duty on chemical imports
- The government may impose anti dumping duty on a chemical used in
polyester fibres and films, imported from five countries as the commerce
ministry has launched an investigation for the same.
- According to a notification of the Directorate general of Trade Remedies
(DGTR), the company has requested for imposition of anti-dumping duties on
the imports.India Glycols Limited has also supported the application.
- It said that the authority has prima facie found that there is
sufficient evidence of dumping of the chemical from thesecountries.In the
probe it would determine the existence, degree and effect of alleged
dumping, and consequent injury to the domestic industry.
- If established that dumping has caused material injury to domestic
industry, the directorate would recommend the amount of anti-dumping duty.
- As a counter measure, they impose duties under the multilateral regime
of the World Trade Organization.The duty is aimed at ensuring fair trade
practices and creating a level-playing field for domestic producers.
::INTERNATIONAL::
Bangladesh seeks report from India on number of illegal Bangladeshi occupants in
the country.
- Bangladesh Foreign Minister A K Abdul Momen on Sunday said his country
has requested India to provide a list of any Bangladesh nationals living
illegally in the country and it will allow them to return.
- Responding to a question on India's National Register of Citizenship
(NRC), Momen, who cancelled his visit to India on Thursday citing his busy
schedule, said Bangladesh-India relations are normal and "very sweet" and
they will not be affected. He said India has termed the NRC process as its
internal matter and assured Dhaka that it would not affect Bangladesh.
- He rejected speculation of "pushback" attempts by India, saying some
Indian nationals are illegally entering Bangladesh through middlemen due to
economic reasons.
- Asked why he cancelled his India visit, the minister said his busy
schedule coinciding with the Martyred Intellectuals Day and Victory Day and
also the absence of the state minister for foreign affairs ShahriarAlam and
the ministry's secretary in the country made him defer his tour.
- Diplomatic sources in New Delhi had said that Momen and Home Minister
Asaduzzaman Khan cancelled their visits to India over the situation arising
out of the passage of the controversial Citizenship (Amendment) Bill in
Parliament.
::SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY::
Around 73 countries join climate ambition alliance at COP 25
- Around 73 countries have joined the Climate Ambition Alliance (CAA) at
the COP25. The alliance is led by Chile and was launched at the Climate
Action Summit, New York in 2019.
- Both Chile and UK will work together to mobilize additional actors to
join the alliance. They will also work towards COP26 that is to be held in
November 2020 at Glasgow, UK.
- The CAA will focus on Nationally Determined Contributions in order to
achieve Net Zero by 2050. It will focus in resilience in infrastructure,
management of water and sustainability of cities. The main purpose of the
alliance is to upscale 2020 targets of members of UN and to achieve Net Zero
Carbon Emissions by 2050.
- The alliance is important to enhance the Nationally Determined
Contributions of countries all over the world. The United Nations
Environment Programme (UNEP) in its Emissions Gap Report, 2019 warned that
in order to achieve the goal of 1.5°C increase in temperatures over
pre-industrial levels, it is essential to reduce the emissions by 7.6%
between 2020 and 2030.
- The Emissions Gap Report that was released by the UNEP in December 2019,
measures the gap between measures being done and measures to be done to
tackle climate change.