Call Us Now

+91 9606900005 / 04

For Enquiry

legacyiasacademy@gmail.com

Current Affairs 03 December 2025

  1. DoT Order to Pre-Install Sanchar Saathi App
  2. Why There Is No Peace in Ukraine
  3. Why the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) Needs Complete Digitisation
  4. Only 20% of Candidates Accepted PM Internship Scheme Offers
  5. WHO Issues First Global Guidelines on GLP-1 Weight-Loss Drugs
  6. How the River Kosi’s Shifting Course Exposes the Perils of Embankments


Why Is It in the News?

  • DoT issued a mandatory order directing all smartphone manufacturers to pre-install the Sanchar Saathi app on every device sold in India.
  • Triggered political backlash (Opposition leaders calling it unilateral, undemocratic).
  • Digital rights activists raised concerns over privacy, informed consent, and surveillance.
  • Experts warned that pre-installed, non-removable apps can access OS-level permissions, creating potential pathways for malware/spying.

Relevance

GS-II: Governance

  • Executive overreach vs citizen rights; informed consent; digital governance ethics.
  • Accountability gaps: absence of statutory backing for mandatory apps.
  • Public consultation deficits in tech regulation.

GS-II: Polity (Fundamental Rights)

  • Right to Privacy (Puttaswamy test: legalitynecessityproportionality).
  • Surveillance concerns, metadata collection, state intrusion.

GS-III: Cybersecurity

  • Risk of system apps with OS-level permissions.
  • Threat surface expansion; malware vector risks; IMEI–identity linking.

What is Sanchar Saathi?

  • Launched by DoT in 2023 as a web portal, later upgraded to a mobile app.
  • Objective: Counter telecom fraud, enable blocking of stolen devices, verify IMEI authenticity.
  • Key functions:
    • Report fraudulent calls/number misuse.
    • Check IMEI genuineness via CEIR.
    • Request blocking/unblocking of stolen/ lost phones.
    • Monitor numbers linked to a single identity (TAFCOP component).

What Does the New DoT Mandate Require?

  • Pre-installation on all new smartphones sold in India.
  • Likely non-removable, as most pre-loaded system apps are integrated into OEM firmware.
  • No public consultation before mandating.
  • Not backed by a specific Act of Parliament.

Why Did Government Push It? (Official Rationale)

  • Sharp rise in online fraud, “digital arrest” scams, impersonation and cross-border cybercrime.
  • Increase in IMEI spoofing, sale of fake devices.
  • App-based services like WhatsApp/Telegram can function even when SIM credentials change → traceability gap.
  • Aim: strengthen device-SIM-identity link and support real-time cybercrime response.

Concerns Raised (Governance, Legal, Technical)

A. Governance Concerns

  • Absence of consultation with industry/citizens.
  • Mandatory installation contradicts the principle of informed consent.
  • Risks of normalising state-pushed software on personal devices.

B. Legal and Constitutional Concerns

  • Must pass Puttaswamy (2017) tests:
    • Legality: no explicit law authorising such surveillance-enabling installations.
    • Necessity: alternatives available (portal/SMS verification).
    • Proportionality: intrusive, continuous access to device metadata possible.
  • Could blur lines between regulation and surveillance.

C. Technical & Cybersecurity Concerns

  • Pre-installed apps often gain OS-level privileges (system apps).
  • Users often cannot uninstall them → persistent capability.
  • As cybersecurity expert Anand Venkatanarayanan noted:
    • Once an app has system-level access, an over-the-air update can give it deeper permissions.
    • Creates a potential single point of failure if app is compromised.
  • Government becomes a potential malware vector—a major red flag.

D. Risks of Abuse

  • Potential for continuous digital supervision (CPI-M MP John Brittas).
  • Could enable mass metadata collection across millions of devices.
  • History of spyware allegations (Pegasus) intensifies distrust.
  • Manufacturer pushback: compromises secure OS architecture (Apple’s protest expected).

Broader Implications

  • Expands executive authority without legislative scrutiny.
  • Sets precedent: government apps may be forced on all devices in future.
  • Could impact India’s reputation on digital rights and data protection.
  • Could weaken India’s cybersecurity posture if exploited by threat actors.

International Practices

  • Democratic countries rarely mandate pre-installed government apps.
  • Exceptions:
    • South Korea’s disaster alert apps (voluntary install, not system apps).
    • Covid apps globally were voluntary (UK, EU, Japan).
  • India’s approach resembles state-led firmware intervention, not standard global regulation.

Critical Overview

Strengths (Limited but Relevant)

  • Helps combat rising telecom fraud.
  • Facilitates faster IMEI tracking.
  • Streamlines reporting of stolen devices.

Major Weaknesses

  • Disproportionate → security benefits achievable without deep device intrusion.
  • Undermines autonomy and informed consent.
  • High systemic cybersecurity risk.
  • Weak accountability → no statutory oversight.
  • Diminishes trust in government technology.

Way Forward

  • Shift from mandatory to opt-in installation.
  • Run Sanchar Saathi as a service layer, not firmware layer.
  • Enact a statutory framework defining digital surveillance limits.
  • Conduct third-party security audits, open-source app code.
  • Keep IMEI–SIM linkage at the telecom backend, not user device.
  • Launch transparent public consultation with industry, civil society.

Conclusion

The DoT’s move stems from a genuine rise in cybercrime but adopts a legally weak, technologically intrusive, and governance-deficient route.
Mandatory pre-installation transforms a user’s smartphone into a potential instrument of persistent digital oversight. The policy must be redesigned along principles of proportionality, transparency, and privacy-by-design.



Why Is It in the News?

  • New U.S. (Trump administration)led peace plan for the Russia–Ukraine war has been circulated to stakeholders.
  • The plan is far less favourable to Ukraine than the 2022 Istanbul framework.
  • Comes amid Ukrainian battlefield setbacks (Pokrovsk, Kupiansk), Western fatigue, domestic corruption scandals, and Trumps shift in U.S. policy.
  • Marks a major turning point: Ukraine is weaker, Russia stronger, and Western alignment fractured.

Relevance

GS-II: International Relations

  • Power shifts in RussiaUkraine conflict; failure of 2022 Istanbul process.
  • Changing US foreign policy under Trump; Reverse Kissingerrealignment attempt.
  • Europes strategic autonomy gaps & NATO credibility questions.

GS-I/World History

  • Territorial annexation, violation of post-1945 norms; coercive peace frameworks.

GS-II: Global Governance

  • Erosion of international law due to legitimising territorial conquest.
  • UN diplomacy limitations; great-power politics shaping peace frameworks.

Timeline of Peace Attempts (2022–2025)

A. Early 2022: Belarus Turkey Talks

  • Days after Russia invaded (Feb 2022), both sides opened negotiations in Belarus.
  • Russian troops pushed towards Kharkiv and Kherson, aiming for a quick victory.

B. March 2022 Istanbul Talks

  • Mediated by Turkey; first serious diplomatic breakthrough.
  • Ukraine indicated willingness to:
    • Renounce NATO membership,
    • Recognise Russian as an official language,
    • Accept neutrality under multilateral security guarantees.
  • Russia signalled readiness to:
    • Withdraw to pre-Feb 24, 2022 lines, keeping Crimea and parts of Donetsk/Luhansk.
  • Fiona Hill & Angela Stent (Foreign Affairs, 2022):
    • Both sides reached a tentative interim settlement outline.

C. Collapse of the Istanbul Process

  • Western powers hesitant to offer hard security guarantees to Ukraine.
  • Boris Johnson reportedly urged Kyiv to continue fighting.
  • Zelenskyy grew confident after Russia withdrew from Kyiv–Chernihiv.
  • Result: Ukraine resumed war → later expelled Russian forces from Kharkiv and Kherson (late 2022).
  • Russia retaliated by:
    • Annexing four more regions (Sept 2022),
    • Launching partial mobilisation,
    • Settling into a long-war strategy.

Shift in Strategic Landscape (2023–2025)

A. Military

  • 2023 Ukrainian counter-offensive failed decisively → military option closed.
  • Russia adapted to sanctions, stabilised economy, and improved defence lines.
  • By 2024–25: Russia regained initiative → capture of Pokrovsk marks major advance.

B. Political

  • Zelenskyy extended term under martial law; recent corruption scandals eroded legitimacy.
  • U.S. under Biden: “support as long as it takes”.
  • U.S. under Trump:
    • Views war as lost,
    • Shifts burden to Europe,
    • Seeks potential reset with Russia, including a “Reverse Kissinger” (tilting Russia away from China).

Trump’s 28-Point Peace Plan: Key Features

A. Territorial Settlement (Favors Russia)

  • Crimea, Luhansk, Donetsk recognised as de facto Russian.
  • Ukraine must withdraw from Donetsk (Russia currently controls ~80%).
  • Contact lines in Kherson and Zaporizhzhia frozen → Russia keeps captured areas.
  • Other seized territories outside annexed oblasts returned by Russia.

B. Military Terms

  • Ukraine must cap military strength at 600,000 personnel.
  • Demilitarised buffer areas likely around the frontline.

C. NATO Issue (Core Russian Demand)

  • Ukraine must constitutionally renounce NATO membership.
  • NATO must legally commit that Ukraine will never be admitted.
  • Ukraine can join the EU.

D. Security Guarantees

  • Separate 3-point draft proposes NATO-style assurances for 10 years, renewable.
  • Significant Russian attack treated as threat to transatlantic security.

E. Sanctions & Russias Reintegration

  • Russia to be reintegrated into global economy.
  • Sanctions can be lifted; Russia could rejoin G8.
  • Long-term U.S.–Russia economic cooperation (conditional).
  • Russia to enact legal non-aggression commitments.

Why Is the Plan Considered Pro-Russia?

  • Ukraine loses ~20% of its pre-2014 territory permanently.
  • NATO door shut irreversibly.
  • Russia’s gains legitimised; its losses not fully reversed.
  • Security guarantees for Ukraine remain vague.
  • Russia receives economic reintegration even without full withdrawal.
  • U.S. role shifts from active military supporter to mediator with Russia.

Zelenskyy’s Dilemma

If he accepts:

  • Effectively admits Russian victory.
  • Major political blow at home → backlash from military, nationalist groups.
  • Legitimacy crisis given expired term + corruption scandals.
  • Loss of territory becomes permanent.

If he rejects:

  • U.S. may withdraw support, further isolating Ukraine.
  • Risk of losing more territory in prolonged war.
  • Europe alone cannot sustain Ukraine financially/militarily.

Europe’s Position

  • Germany, France, U.K. vow continued support but lack U.S.-scale capability.
  • European unity under strain due to energy, defence readiness, budget fatigue.
  • Europe fears Trump’s plan may entrench Russian strategic advantages.

Ground Reality (Dec 2025)

A. Russia

  • Controls:
    • All of Crimea,
    • All of Luhansk,
    • ~80% of Donetsk,
    • Significant parts of Kherson & Zaporizhzhia,
    • Slowly advancing in Kharkiv region.
  • War economy stabilised; military industrial production revived.

B. Ukraine

  • Facing power outages due to strikes on grid.
  • Economic collapse prevented only through Western aid.
  • Morale eroding; no feasible path to offensive victory.

Why Istanbul Moment Cannot Return ?

  • 2022: Russia was on back foot → willing for concessions.
  • 2025: Russia has battlefield momentum + geopolitical leverage.
  • Ukraine now negotiating from weakness, not parity.
  • Trump plan reflects changed power balance, not diplomatic creativity.

Implications for Global Politics

A. U.S.–RussiaChina Triangle

  • Trump may pursue Reverse Kissinger:
    • Draw Russia away from China to weaken Beijing.
  • Success uncertain due to deep Russia-China alignment.

B. NATO Credibility

  • Forcing Ukraine to give up NATO path may weaken NATO’s moral authority.
  • Sets precedent that military pressure can force Western concessions.

C. International Law

  • Legitimising territorial conquest undermines post-1945 rules.

Conclusion

  • Peace efforts collapsed in 2022 due to Western hesitation and Ukrainian optimism.
  • Strategic balance shifted sharply in Russia’s favour over 2023–25.
  • Trump plan formalises Ukraines territorial losses and neutrality.
  • Ukraine in 2025 faces its toughest moment: military setbacks + political crisis + U.S. pressure.
  • The new plan is a coercive peace, not a negotiated settlement.


 What is Special Intensive Revision (SIR)?

  • Periodic exercise by the Election Commission to update, correct, and verify electoral rolls.
  • Traditionally meant to remove dead/shifted voters, include new voters, and correct errors.
  • Requires accurate foundational records for reliability.

Relevance

GS-II: Governance

  • Electoral roll integrity; administrative capacity; citizenstate interaction.
  • Digital governance failures due to legacy datasets.

GS-II: Polity – Elections

  • Role of Election Commission; BLO functioning; voter rights protection.
  • Challenges to free, fair, and inclusive elections due to faulty rolls.

GS-III: Technology in Governance

  • Need for structured, searchable databases; Aadhaar/PAN integration with safeguards.
  • Digital workflow vs paper-based systems; reducing human error.

Why This Issue Is in News?

  • SIR 2.0 depends on legacy voter rolls (2002–04) created manually on paper.
  • India’s advanced digital systems (ECINet, Aadhaar-based verification, online EF system) are not fully used.
  • Result: widespread errors, non-searchable data, mass deletions, voter panic, and operational delays.

Core Problem: Weak Foundation

  • Garbage in, garbage out” rule: flawed base data = flawed electoral rolls, no matter the procedure.
  • 2002–04 rolls have:
    • Manual entries, handwritten, high spelling variation.
    • No standardised metadata or searchable fields.
    • Missing EPICs, house numbers, surnames, gender/age inconsistencies.
    • Zero digitisation quality control.

Evidence of Failure in Legacy Rolls

  • Random audits reveal anomalies:
    • Entries implying polygamy (two wives with same husband name).
    • Incomplete names like “Rakesh”, “Vir”, “Sahgal/Sangal” mismatched spellings.
    • Missing EPIC numbers, addresses, and house numbers.
  • Author (IIT/DRDO/IITK professor) scanned thousands of entries and couldn’t find his own record despite voting for decades.
  • Non-searchable PDFs make identification practically impossible.

Systemic Regression: Why SIR 2.0 Fails

  • Falls back to paper-era workflow:
    • BLOs collect paper forms → later digitised manually → verified again → digitally uploaded.
    • Massive delays: Over 50% of Uttar Pradeshs EFs undigitised (EC statement, Nov 27).
    • Low digital skills among BLOs: errors, delays, inconsistent formats.
  • Voters forced to:
    • Bring paper photos.
    • Submit duplicate proofs.
    • Make multiple visits.

ECINet vs Legacy SIR: Stark Underutilisation

ECINet Capabilities (Modern System)

  • One-billion–record searchable database.
  • Searchable by name, mobile, EPIC, DOB, address, relatives.
  • Duplicate detection, Aadhaar linking, auto-verification.
  • Online EF filing, constituency locator, grievance tracking.

Legacy SIR Reality

  • Non-searchable PDFs.
  • Manual forms, manual corrections.
  • Broken search interface → “error” or “no details found”.
  • EC disclaims ownership: “rolls published exactly as received from CEOs”.

Key Administrative Issues

  • EC expects voters to remember where they voted in 2002–04, unrealistic after 20 years.
  • EPIC cards from those years not archived; voters relied on scrap slips.
  • BLOs often demand unnecessary documents (birth certificate, extra address proof) contrary to EC guidelines.
  • For voters deleted from rolls:
    • Online Form 6 forces them to declare as first-time voters, introducing further distortions.
  • Approval requirements for minor corrections via Form 8 are restrictive and slow.

Consequences

  • Millions cannot locate or verify their names.
  • Errors propagate through the system because the foundational dataset is unverified.
  • Panic among citizens, overload on BLOs, political tensions during elections.
  • Months-long disruption instead of a clean-up.

What Should Have Been Done ?

  • Digital-only workflow, eliminating paper forms entirely.
  • Deploy mobile kiosks with trained personnel for citizens lacking digital skills.
  • Build searchable databases for legacy rolls before initiating SIR.
  • Integrate Aadhaar (with safeguards), PAN, local body records via API checks.
  • Uniform standards for names, addresses, metadata.

Transformation Blueprint: Fully Digital SIR 2026

a) Complete Digitisation

  • Convert all State/UT rolls (2002–04 included) into English-searchable structured datasets.
  • Regional scripts kept as display only, not for search logic.

b) Data Integration

  • Merge legacy data with reliable datasets:
    • Aadhaar
    • Income Tax/PAN
    • Driving licence
    • Local body property records
  • Automated consistency checks.

c) Voter Classification

  1. Stable-address voters.
  2. Frequent movers.
  3. Citizenship/immigration ambiguity cases.

d) Online EF Submission

  • 100% online workflows (mobile + web).
  • Kiosks for rural/elderly users.
  • Dedicated trained digital staff.

e) Digitise All Post-Submission Steps

  • Document verification, approval, objections, final roll publication – all within ECINet.
  • Real-time tracking of corrections/deletions.

Benefits of a Fully Digital System

  • Eliminates legacy errors permanently.
  • Single national database → consistent, verifiable, auditable.
  • Faster approvals, real-time grievance handling.
  • Massive reduction in human errors and BLO overload.
  • Ensures transparency, trust, and electoral integrity.

The Way Ahead

  • Digital SIR is not optional — essential for a credible democratic process.
  • Most reforms are immediately implementable; only deep integration may extend beyond SIR 2.0.
  • Once digitised, future revisions become simple annual updates, not massive crisis-driven exercises.
  • SIR 2026 must become a technology-led trust revolution, not a paper-driven crisis.


What is the PM Internship Scheme?

  • A national-scale internship programme announced in Union Budget 2024.
  • Objective: Provide 1 crore internships in five years in top Indian companies.
  • Designed to bridge: industryacademia gap, employability skills, and early career exposure for youth.
  • Implemented via Ministry of Corporate Affairs; companies post internships on a central portal.

Relevance

GS-II: Governance

  • Scheme design flaws; weak policy feedback loops; centreindustry coordination gaps.
  • Budget utilisation issues; outcome vs output mismatch.

GS-III: Economy

  • Labour market dynamics; employability and skilling ecosystem.
  • Youth job-preparedness and industry-academia mismatch.

GS-II: Social Sector Development

  • Youth aspirations; access barriers; regional disparities.
  • Internship quality norms; role clarity; stipend adequacy.

Why is it in News?

  • Data presented in Parliament shows low acceptance and high dropout rates.
  • Despite exceeding target of 1.25 lakh internship offers for the pilot, only 20% of candidates accepted across two rounds.
  • Nearly 20% of those who accepted quit mid-way, raising concerns about scheme design, workplace quality, and alignment with youth expectations.

Pilot Scale & Targets

  • Pilot launched in October 2024, target: 1.25 lakh internships in one year.
  • Total internships posted (Round 1 + Round 2): 2.45 lakh+ opportunities.

Key Numbers (Two Rounds Combined)

  • 1.65 lakh offers made by companies.
  • 33,300 offers acceptedAcceptance rate: 20.2%.
  • 6,618 candidates left prematurelyDropout rate: 19.9% among accepted candidates.

Round-wise Performance

Round 1

  • Opportunities posted: 1.27 lakh.
  • Applications: 6.21 lakh.
  • Offers made: 82,000.
  • Accepted: 8,700 (10.6% acceptance).
  • Dropouts: 4,565More than 50% of interns quit mid-way.

Round 2 (January onwards)

  • Opportunities posted: 1.18 lakh.
  • Applications: 4.55 lakh.
  • Offers made: 83,000+.
  • Accepted: 24,600 (30% acceptance).
  • Dropouts: 2,0538.3% quit rate.

Youth Response: Why Only 20% Acceptance?

  • Data indicates candidates declined offers due to:
    • Location mismatch (internships far from home; low stipends insufficient to support relocation).
    • Unsuitable roles (low-skilled tasks, perceived lack of value).
    • Long durations incompatible with academic calendars/exams.
  • Many internships may not align with career aspirations or sector preferences.

High Dropout Rates: Key Reasons

  • Poor role clarity and limited learning outcomes.
  • Inadequate mentorship, long work hours, or project irrelevance.
  • Stipend-quality mismatch: opportunity cost remains high for many students.
  • Mismatch between expectations (skill-building) and reality (routine administrative tasks).
  • Better opportunities elsewhere (private platforms/placements).

Utilisation of Funds

  • Original pilot budget: ₹840 crore.
  • Revised allocation (FY 2024–25): ₹380 crore.
  • Actual utilisation so far: ₹73.72 crore.
  • Low utilisation reflects low participation and operational delays.

Structural Challenges in PMIS

  • Geographical concentration of opportunities in large metros; rural/remote candidates unable to relocate.
  • Sector skew: many roles posted in sales, operations, basic admin; fewer in high-skill domains.
  • Insufficient company participation from top-tier firms.
  • Lack of flexibility in internship timings and duration.
  • Portal-based recruitment lacks personalised matching, career guidance, or screening support.

Implications

  • Indicates a misalignment between scheme design and youth aspirations.
  • Calls into question feasibility of reaching the target of 1 crore internships.
  • Poor internship experience could undermine employability goals.
  • High dropout → signals issues in internship quality, company readiness, or monitoring.
  • Low acceptance → reflects need for stronger incentives for both companies and interns.

Required Reforms

  • Stipend rationalisation based on city tiers and living cost.
  • Remote/hybrid internship options to expand reach.
  • Sector diversification: tech, digital, green economy, EV, logistics, AI, MSMEs.
  • Academic integration: credit-linked internships through universities.
  • Quality assurance framework: standardised projects, mentorship norms, feedback loop.
  • Improved matching algorithm on the portal to align skills–roles–location.
  • Performance-based incentives for companies ensuring high-quality mentorship.

Conclusion

  • The pilot achieved numbers in terms of offers, not uptake.
  • The bottleneck is not supply but acceptance and retention.
  • For the scheme to succeed at national scale:
    • Roles must be meaningful.
    • Stipends must be realistic.
    • Duration must be flexible.
    • Companies must be accountable.
  • Without addressing these structural issues, scaling to 1 crore internships in 5 years is unlikely.


Why is it in News?

  • On 1 December 2025, the World Health Organization (WHO) issued its first global guidelines on the use of GLP-1 (Glucagon-Like Peptide-1) weight-loss drugs for treating adult obesity.
  • WHO formally recognised GLP-1 therapies as effective, but issued conditional recommendations due to limited long-term data, high costs, and global inequity in access.
  • The decision has major implications for public health, global obesity economics, and equitable access to new metabolic drugs.

Relevance

GS-II: Health

  • WHOs first global obesity-drug guidelines; global obesity governance.
  • Integration of pharmacotherapy with behavioural interventions.

GS-III: Science & Tech

  • GLP-1 mechanism; metabolic diseases; long-term safety questions.
  • Supply-demand imbalance; counterfeit risks.

GS-II: Equity & Public Policy

  • High cost; insurance gaps; unequal access in LMICs.
  • Role of generics, price caps, regulated distribution.

What Are GLP-1 Drugs?

  • GLP-1 = Glucagon-Like Peptide-1, a hormone produced in the gut.
  • Functions:
    • Stimulates insulin secretion.
    • Slows gastric emptying.
    • Reduces appetite and cravings.
    • Improves metabolic markers (glucose, lipids).
  • Designed originally for type-2 diabetes → later found to cause significant weight loss.

Examples of GLP-1 Drugs

  • Semaglutide (Ozempic, Wegovy)
  • Liraglutide (Saxenda)
  • Tirzepatide (Mounjaro; dual GLP-1/GIP agonist, highly effective)

Why GLP-1 Matters Globally

  • Obesity ≠ lifestyle problem; it is a chronic metabolic disease.
  • GLP-1 drugs represent the first major breakthrough since bariatric surgery.

Impact

  • Weight loss: ~15–22% depending on drug.
  • Reduced risk of:
    • Type-2 diabetes
    • Cardiovascular events
    • Certain cancers
    • Severe infectious disease outcomes
  • Economic angle: Obesity may cost $3 trillion annually by 2030.
  • GLP-1 drugs could reduce this burden if made accessible.

Key Elements of WHO’s New Guidelines

Conditional Recommendation

  • Use GLP-1 drugs for adults with obesity, except pregnant women.
  • Conditional because:
    • Limited long-term safety data.
    • Unknown effects after drug discontinuation.
    • Extremely high cost and equity barriers.

Must Accompany Behavioural Interventions

  • Drugs cannot be used alone.
  • Diet modification + physical activity + counselling remain essential.
  • GLP-1 → only when lifestyle interventions fail or when obesity is severe.

Equity as Central Principle

  • WHO stresses:
    • Tax-funded or insurance-backed programmes.
    • Avoiding two-tier systems where only the rich can access treatments.
    • Need for affordable generics in developing countries.

Why WHO Issued Guidelines Now ?

  • Rapid worldwide adoption of drugs like Ozempic/Wegovy.
  • Sharp rise of off-label use and medical tourism.
  • Multiple countries witnessing shortages due to demand.
  • Need for global standards on:
    • Who should use the drugs.
    • How to integrate them into national obesity programmes.
    • Ensuring safe and monitored usage.

Concerns Acknowledged by WHO

High Cost

  • GLP-1 drugs cost ₹20,00030,000/month in India (imported brands).
  • Remains unaffordable for most low-middle-income populations.
  • Insurance coverage extremely limited.

Limited Long-Term Data

  • Weight regain after stopping is common.
  • Safety beyond 5–10 years still unclear.
  • Issues of gastrointestinal side effects (nausea, vomiting, inflammation).

Supply-Demand Problems

  • High demand has led to shortages even in countries like US & UK.
  • Could divert supply away from diabetics who need them clinically.

India-Specific Issues

Cost Barrier

  • Experts say affordability is the biggest obstacle.
  • Need for:
    • Generic manufacturing
    • Government price caps
    • Wider insurance coverage

Misuse Risks

  • Rising trend of:
    • Off-label use for cosmetic weight loss
    • Unmonitored consumption
    • Counterfeit injectables

Guidance by Indian Experts

  • Anoop Mishra: Need insurance coverage + generics for real impact.
  • V. Mohan: GLP-1 is not a magic injection; diet + exercise remain primary.

Why GLP-1 Is a Global Public Health Turning Point ?

  • Obesity now affects 1 in 8 people worldwide.
  • Conventional lifestyle treatment works only for 10–15% long-term.
  • GLP-1 therapies offer:
    • Clinically significant weight reduction
    • Improvements in metabolic syndrome
    • Reduced long-term healthcare expenditure

GLP-1 + Equity: Core Challenge

  • Without systemic action:
    • Rich countries and wealthy individuals dominate access.
    • LMICs (like India) face supply and affordability barriers.
  • WHO stresses that GLP-1 must not become a luxury therapy.

Policies Needed Globally

  • Public insurance coverage
  • Regulation of prices
  • Support for local manufacturing
  • Integration into national obesity guidelines
  • Continued investment in prevention and lifestyle interventions

Conclusion

  • WHO’s recognition is a major milestone in global obesity management.
  • GLP-1 drugs are effective and transformative but:
    • Not a standalone solution
    • Not universally accessible
    • Not yet proven long-term
  • The guidelines emphasise:
    • Safety
    • Equity
    • Integrated care
  • For India and other LMICs, affordability and insurance coverage will determine real-world impact.


Why is it in News?

  • Recent analysis highlights repeated breaches of Kosi embankments (latest in 2024), reviving debate on whether embankments worsen floods instead of preventing them.
  • New studies and expert committees point to 120 km westward shift of the Kosi in 250 years due to sedimentation and engineering interventions.
  • NDA’s “Flood to Fortune” promise and the Kosi-Mechi river-linking project have brought embankment policy back into political and ecological focus.

Relevance

GS-I: Geography

  • River morphology; meandering rivers; sediment load; avulsion dynamics.
  • Himalayan rivershydrology and shifting channels.

GS-III: Disaster Management

  • Embankment breaches increasing flood intensity; risk amplification.
  • Structural vs non-structural flood mitigation approaches.

GS-III: Environment

  • Human interventions altering natural river behaviour.
  • Siltation, upstream catchment changes, climate variability impacts.

Understanding the Kosi River

  • Origin: Tibet & Nepal; joins Ganga in Bihar.
  • Called Sapta Kosi due to seven tributaries.
  • Highly dynamic, one of world’s most sediment-loaded rivers.
  • Known as River of Sorrow due to catastrophic floods and course shifts.
  • Has shifted course ~120 km west over the last 250 years (People’s Commission on Kosi Basin).

Why Kosi Causes Extreme Flood Vulnerability ?

  • High sediment load → riverbed aggradation.
  • Dynamic course → frequent channel shifts.
  • Low-gradient plains → sluggish flow, high inundation.
  • Monsoon-fed system → sudden surge in discharge.
  • Flood peaks: ~6 lakh cusecs (2024 flood).

Embankments: Intended Role

  • Artificial levees to contain floodwaters.
  • Aim: protect settlements, stabilize agriculture, allow development.
  • Built extensively since 1950s in Bihar and Assam.

Issues with Embankments

Increased Siltation

  • Embankments trap silt inside the confined channel → riverbed rises continually.
  • Over time, river flows at a higher elevation than surrounding land, making breaches catastrophic.
  • G.R. Garg Committee (1951) warned embankments are risky for silt-heavy rivers.

Frequent Breaches

  • Kosi breached embankments in 1963, 1968, 1971, 1980, 1984, 1987, 1991, 2008, 2024.
  • Breaches create sudden, unpredictable inundation over vast areas.

Water Logging Outside Embankments

  • Poor drainage → stagnant water in villages trapped between embankments.
  • Creates chronic flooding even without major river spillage.

Loss of Ecological Function

  • Rivers lose:
    • natural drainage roles
    • floodplain recharge
    • sediment redistribution
    • wetland replenishment
  • Leads to biodiversity loss and groundwater decline.

Short-term protection, long-term vulnerability

  • Embankments need continuous raising as silt accumulates.
  • High maintenance costs; frequent failures.
  • “False sense of security” leads to unsafe development in floodplains.

Impact on Agriculture

  • Deposition of coarse silt/sand during breaches (seen in Assam & Kosi belt).
  • Loss of fertile topsoil → agrarian distress.

Himalayan Context: Why East is More Vulnerable

  • Eastern Himalayan rivers (Kosi, Brahmaputra): affluent rivers
    • precipitation increases downstream
    • high sediment → higher breach probability
    • geologically weak terrain → landslides, river shifts
  • Western Himalayan rivers: influent rivers
    • rainfall decreases downstream
    • more stable → embankments relatively safer

Key Expert Views

  • E. Somanathan: Embankments initially help but later turn dangerous due to rising riverbed; recommends floodplain-based resilience and removal where feasible.
  • Rahul Yaduka: Embankments serve development aims but cause waterlogging; suggests improving palaeochannels for natural water distribution.
  • Bindhy W. Pandey: Embankments unsuitable for eastern Himalayan rivers; require strict monitoring & rehabilitation if used.
  • Mahendra Yadav (Kosi Nav Nirman Manch): Advocates “living with floods” + rehabilitating people outside embankments.

Case Study: 2008 Kosi Catastrophe

  • Breach at Kusaha (Nepal).
  • Deaths: 400+
  • People affected: 33 lakh
  • Caused by silt accumulation, embankment ageing, and altered flow due to barrage.

Kosi–Mechi River-Linking Debate

Governments Argument

  • Provide irrigation to Mahananda basin.
  • Promote fisheries and agriculture.
  • NDA’s “Flood to Fortune” political pitch.

Expert Counterpoints

  • Kosi peak flow: ~6 lakh cusecs
  • Diversion through project: 5,247 cusecs → negligible impact on flood moderation.
  • Linking won’t reduce flood peaks; may worsen siltation and cross-basin flooding.

Economic Concerns

  • Embankments require rising annual expenditure.
  • Bihar’s embankment-related spending has increased multiple times since 1950s.
  • High budget consumption with low resilience gain.

Global Lessons

United States

  • Actively removing embankments in many basins.
  • Allowing controlled flooding to restore:
    • floodplains
    • wetlands
    • ecosystem integrity
  • Result: milder floods, better ecological recovery.

Alternatives & Way Forward

1. Living with Floods

  • Restore natural floodplains.
  • Zoned habitation.
  • Seasonal cropping patterns aligned with flood cycles.

2. Reviving Palaeochannels

  • Use abandoned channels to redistribute floodwaters.
  • Reduce pressure on main embankment.

3. River Basin Governance

  • Basin-wide planning
  • Cross-border coordination with Nepal
  • Sediment management strategy

4. Early Warning & Evacuation

  • Training communities inside embankment belts.
  • Improving forecasting systems.

5. Scientific Desiltation

  • Targeted removal at critical nodes.
  • Must be ecology-sensitive; avoid indiscriminate sand mining.

December 2025
M T W T F S S
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031  
Categories