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Current Affairs 13 September 2025

  1. Punjab Floods (Aug–Sept 2025)
  2. India’s Manuscripts Reflect the Journey of Humanity
  3. Denying Upward Mobility to Candidates with Disabilities
  4. Centre Clears Translocation of Tigers to Sahyadri Reserve
  5. Nepal’s ‘Nepo Babies’ and the Nepotism Debate


Why in News

  • Punjab floods (Aug–Sept 2025) killed 55 people, displaced ~4 lakh residents across 2,200 villages, and caused agricultural devastation across 1.91 lakh hectares in 18 of 23 districts.
  • Major rivers — Sutlej, Beas, Ravi — overflowed, inundating villages, farmland, and homes.
  • Relief operations ongoing, but concerns remain over crop loss, housing damage, cattle displacement, joblessness, and disease outbreaks.
  • Political tussle: Centre announced ₹1,600 crore package, criticised by Punjab government and Opposition as insufficient against losses exceeding 20,000 crore.

Relevance:

GS-I (Geography): Floodplains, monsoon variability, river hydrology (SutlejBeas basin).

GS-II (Governance): Disaster relief, CentreState coordination, inclusion in welfare schemes.

GS-III (Agriculture, Disaster Management): Crop loss, food security, climate-linked flood recurrence.

GS-III (Environment): Climate change impact on extreme rainfall, land-use change.

 

Basics

  • Punjab Agriculture Profile:
    • “India’s grain bowl,” dependent on paddy-wheat cycle.
    • Paddy (Kharif) and wheat (Rabi) highly sensitive to flooding and waterlogging.
  • Rainfall anomaly: Punjab received 253.7 mm rainfall in Aug 2025, 74% above normal (IMD).
  • Recurring floods: Previous major floods in 1988, 2019, 2013, 2010, 2008, 2004 show structural vulnerability.
  • Disaster Management Framework: Relief through NDRF, SDRF, State Disaster Management Authorities; compensation for crop loss and rehabilitation.

Overview

Humanitarian Impact

  • Casualties & displacement: 55 deaths, ~4 lakh affected, thousands in relief camps.
  • Housing loss: Entire villages submerged; ~270 houses destroyed in Jhangar Bhaini.
  • Livelihood disruption:
    • Farmers: Paddy submerged (3–4 ft), delayed wheat sowing, high re-sowing costs.
    • Labourers: Landless workers unemployed as fields remain waterlogged.
    • Others: Transport workers (school cab drivers) lost jobs due to damaged roads.
  • Cattle relocation: Shortages of fodder and veterinary services.

Agricultural & Economic Consequences

  • Paddy & Basmati crops ruined; delayed harvesting raised costs (combine with chains = ₹6,000/acre vs normal ₹2,000/acre).
  • Loss of future wheat cycle due to waterlogged fields.
  • Crop loss estimates ₹20,000 crore+, threatening farm incomes in a debt-ridden state.
  • Spillover risk: food security (as Punjab supplies grain to FCI) and farmer protests.

Disaster Management Challenges

  • Relief camps: 111 camps sheltering 4,600 people; ration kits, cattle feed distributed.
  • Inadequate infrastructure: Shortage of boats, life jackets, gas cylinders.
  • Health risks: Carcasses, stagnant water → fear of epidemics (diarrhoea, dengue, cholera).
  • Land rights issue: Post-Partition settlers without formal land titles risk exclusion from compensation.

Political Dimensions

  • Centre’s ₹1,600 crore package seen as insufficient; compared against ₹20,000 crore estimated losses.
  • Accusations over misuse/non-utilisation of ₹12,000 crore SDRF funds.

Environmental & Structural Factors

  • Climate anomaly: 74% excess rainfall due to erratic monsoon patterns, possibly linked to climate change.
  • River basin mismanagement: Lack of adequate floodplain zoning, embankments, and drainage systems.
  • Recurring floods: Shows failure to build resilience despite repeated disasters.

Long-term Implications

  • Economic: Threat to Punjab’s agrarian economy, farm debt, migration risk.
  • Social: Homelessness, psychological trauma, growing inequality (landless worst hit).
  • Governance: Need for accountability in disaster funds; coordination between Centre and State.
  • Environmental: Need for climate-resilient cropping, floodplain management, drainage modernisation.

Way Forward

  • Short-term:
    • Adequate compensation for farmers & landless workers.
    • Speedy crop damage assessment & insurance payouts.
    • Health camps, sanitation, fodder support.
  • Medium-term:
    • Scientific floodplain zoning & embankment strengthening.
    • Crop diversification away from water-intensive paddy.
    • Ensure land titling for settlers to access relief.
  • Long-term:
    • Climate-resilient agriculture policies.
    • Strengthened State Disaster Management Authority.
    • Integrate IMD early-warning with village-level preparedness.


Why in News

  • PM Narendra Modi addressed the International Conference on Reclaiming Indias Knowledge Legacy through Manuscript Heritage.
  • Launched the Gyan Bharatam Mission & Portal to digitize, preserve, and share India’s manuscripts.
  • Stressed manuscripts as a reflection of humanitys developmental journey and a safeguard against intellectual piracy.

Relevance:

GS-I (Culture & Heritage): Manuscripts as sources of Indias civilizational knowledge.

GS-II (Governance): Role of Ministry of Culture, schemes for preservation & accessibility.

  • GS-III (Science & Tech, IPR): Digitization, metadata, prevention of biopiracy.

Basics

  • Manuscripts in India:
    • Handwritten documents covering Vedas, Upanishads, Ayurveda, astronomy, mathematics, arts, philosophy, and law.
    • Preserved on materials like palm leaves, birch bark, and handmade paper.
  • Scale: India has ~1 crore manuscripts (largest globally).
  • Digitization status: Over 10 lakh manuscripts already digitized.
  • Institutional Framework:
    • National Mission for Manuscripts (2003) → identifies, preserves, and catalogues.
    • Now strengthened via Gyan Bharatam Mission.

Gyan Bharatam Mission & Portal

  • What it is: Gyan Bharatam Mission is a Central Sector Scheme under the Ministry of Culture, reviving and expanding the previous National Mission for Manuscripts (NMM).
  • Period & Allocation: Operative from 2024-31, with a budget of about ₹482.85 crore.
  • Targets: Aims to survey, document, conserve, digitise, publish and disseminate over 1 crore manuscripts from across India (institutions, libraries, private collections, etc.)
  • Portal Launch: “Gyan Bharatam Portal” launched Sept 2025 at an International Conference on Manuscript Heritage; serves as a digital platform for preservation, digitisation, and public access

Overview

Cultural and Civilizational Significance

  • Manuscripts = repository of Indias civilizational knowledge in sciences, medicine, philosophy, and arts.
  • Serve as primary sources for reconstructing ancient Indian history, culture, and scientific contributions.
  • Strengthen India’s soft power diplomacy, connecting with countries (Thailand, Vietnam, Mongolia) that share manuscript traditions.

 Intellectual Property & Piracy Concerns

  • Traditional knowledge (e.g., turmeric’s medicinal value, neem, yoga practices) often patented abroad without acknowledgment.
  • Digitization ensures documentation & prior art recognition, preventing misuse.
  • Supports India’s claim in WTO/TRIPS disputes over biopiracy.

Technological & Institutional Initiatives

  • Gyan Bharatam Portal: A digital repository for public access, research, and global collaboration.
  • Collaboration between government and private organizations enhances reach.
  • Contributes to Digital India and Atmanirbhar Bharat vision.

Educational & Research Impact

  • Provides authentic resources for Indology, Sanskrit studies, Ayurveda, astronomy, mathematics, and law.
  • Encourages interdisciplinary research bridging tradition and modern science.
  • Aligns with NEP 2020s emphasis on integrating traditional knowledge into mainstream education.

International & Strategic Dimension

  • Reinforces Indias cultural diplomacy with Buddhist and Indic civilization countries.
  • Enhances India’s image as a knowledge hub in global forums.
  • Serves as a counter to Western intellectual dominance by showcasing indigenous contributions.

Challenges

  • Conservation issues: Fragile palm-leaf manuscripts, ink fading, termite damage.
  • Accessibility: Many manuscripts remain with private families and mutts, outside institutional reach.
  • Standardization: Need for unified cataloguing, metadata, and translations for global access.
  • Capacity gaps: Trained conservators, digitization infrastructure, and funding are limited.


Why in News

  • Supreme Court (Sept 2025) directed the Union Government to clarify whether meritorious candidates with disabilities (PwDs) who qualify in the unreserved/general category are allowed upward mobility (shift to UR seats) or forced to remain in reserved PwD quota seats.
  • The Court called denial of such mobility hostile discrimination, defeating the intent of Section 34, Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016.
  • Union Government asked to respond by October 14, 2025 on corrective measures.

Relevance:

GS-II (Polity, Social Justice): Equality under Articles 14 & 16, RPwD Act, reservation jurisprudence.

GS-II (Judiciary): Role of SC in correcting discrimination.

  • GS-IV (Ethics): Dignity, fairness, inclusion of persons with disabilities.

Basics

  • Reservation Framework in India:
    • SC/ST/OBC/EWS candidates qualifying on merit in UR category seats are counted in UR, not in their reserved quota.
    • This ensures upward mobility and frees up reserved seats for others from the disadvantaged group.
  • PwD Reservation:
    • Governed by Section 34, RPwD Act, 2016 – 4% reservation in government jobs.
    • However, PwDs often forced to take up reserved category seats, even if qualifying on merit.

Overview

Judicial Standpoint

  • SC held that reservation for PwDs is about inclusion, not charity.
  • Denial of upward mobility = systemic discrimination against meritorious PwD candidates.
  • Differentiation between PwDs and OBC/SC/ST candidates in mobility is constitutionally unjustifiable.

Legal Framework

  • RPwD Act, 2016 Section 34: Mandates 4% job reservation in groups A, B, C, D.
  • Constitutional Backing:
    • Article 14 (Equality before law)
    • Article 16 (Equal opportunity in public employment)
    • Article 41 (Directive Principle – Right to work, education, assistance)

Implications of Current Practice

  • For PwDs:
    • Blocks their fair chance in UR seats → leads to stagnation.
    • Reduces dignity of reservation by treating it as fixed entitlement rather than enabler of equality.
  • For other PwD candidates:
    • Meritorious candidates “occupy” reserved seats → limits chances for weaker PwD aspirants who genuinely need quota.

Comparative Framework

  • Backward Classes (SC/ST/OBC): Enjoy upward mobility if they meet general cut-off.
  • PwDs: Currently denied similar treatment → creates a hierarchy of reservations, violating Article 14.

Larger Ethical & Social Perspective

  • Disability should be seen as a social construct, not an individual deficit.
  • Reservations are about level playing field, not charity or sympathy.
  • True inclusion demands removal of systemic barriers in employment and education.

Way Forward

  • Immediate: Clear government policy allowing upward mobility for PwD candidates qualifying in UR.
  • Medium-term:
    • Uniform guidelines across states, UPSC, SSC, and PSUs.
    • Digital monitoring to ensure compliance.
  • Long-term:
    • Enhance accessibility, skill training, and workplace inclusion.
    • Treat PwD reservation at par with other social group reservations in terms of benefits.


Why in News

  • Union Environment Ministry approved capture and translocation of 8 tigers from Tadoba-Andhari and Pench Tiger Reserves to the Sahyadri Tiger Reserve (STR), Maharashtra.
  • Aim: Revive tiger population in northern Western Ghats, where STR has rich forests but largely transient tigers.
  • NTCA (National Tiger Conservation Authority) gave approval in Oct 2023, after WII (Wildlife Institute of India) studies confirmed STR can sustain >20 tigers.

Relevance:

GS-III (Environment & Biodiversity): Tiger conservation, NTCA guidelines, ecosystem balance.

GS-I (Geography): Western Ghats as biodiversity hotspot & UNESCO site.

GS-III (Science & Tech in Ecology): Use of camera traps, radio-collaring, monitoring methods.

  • GS-III (Conservation Challenges): Humanwildlife conflict, poaching, prey-base management.

Basics

  • Tiger Translocation: Conservation practice of capturing and moving tigers to suitable but underpopulated reserves to restore balance, gene flow, and connectivity.
  • Sahyadri Tiger Reserve (STR):
    • Established: 2010
    • Spread: 1,165 sq km (Kolhapur, Sangli, Satara, Ratnagiri districts)
    • Formed by merging Chandoli National Park + Koyna Wildlife Sanctuary
    • Part of Western Ghats (UNESCO World Heritage Site)
  • Challenges: Poaching, habitat fragmentation, prey depletion, absence of breeding population.

Overview

Ecological Significance

  • STR hosts dense forests, rivers, watersheds (Koyna & Warna basins).
  • Revival of tiger population → ensures apex predator balance → controls herbivore populations → safeguards forest regeneration.
  • Strengthens corridor connectivity between northern Western Ghats and tiger habitats in Goa, Karnataka.

Scientific & Administrative Process

  • Conditions set by Ministry:
    • Veterinary care at all stages of capture & release.
    • Minimize trauma to tigers during capture.
    • Monitoring post-release through camera traps & radio collars.
  • First phase: habitat improvement, prey base strengthening.
  • Second phase: translocation of 8 tigers.

Past & Present Situation in STR

  • Historically, STR had transient tigers, no resident breeding population.
  • Recent camera traps recorded 3 males frequently.
  • Translocation expected to introduce females → encourage stable breeding population.

Wider Conservation Goals

  • Aligns with Project Tiger and India’s Tiger Recovery Plans.
  • Part of NTCA’s management effectiveness evaluation of tiger reserves.
  • Helps India maintain its global leadership in tiger conservation (India = home to ~75% of world’s wild tigers).

Challenges & Risks

  • Stress, mortality during capture/translocation.
  • Potential human-wildlife conflict in fringe villages.
  • Need for long-term monitoring and local community participation to prevent poaching.

Value addition – Indian Tiger

  • Scientific name: Panthera tigris tigris (Bengal Tiger).
  • India hosts the largest tiger population in the world – ~3,167 tigers (All India Tiger Estimation 2022).
  • Found across diverse habitats: Himalayan foothills, Terai, Gangetic plains, central India, Western Ghats, Sundarbans, and Northeast.

Conservation Milestones

  • 1973: Launch of Project Tiger – landmark conservation programme.
  • 1972: Wildlife Protection Act – legal backbone for tiger protection.
  • National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA): Apex body for policy, monitoring, and tiger reserve governance.
  • 50 Tiger Reserves across India today, covering ~75,000 sq km (~2.3% of India’s area).


Why in News

  • Youth-led protests erupted in Nepal (Sept 2025) against entrenched political dynasties and inequality, with slogans like No More Nepo Babies We Demand Fair Opportunities.”
  • The phrase “nepo babies” has gained global currency, denoting children of elites (politicians, actors, business families) who benefit disproportionately from inherited privilege.

Relevance:

GS-II (Polity): Dynastic politics, youth mobilization, democratic legitimacy.

GS-I (Society): Social mobility, inequality, inter-generational privilege.

Basics

  • Nepotism (origin): Derived from Latin nepos meaning nephew; first used in mid-17th century in context of Popes promoting nephews to power.
  • Concept: Granting unfair advantage to relatives/friends in jobs, politics, entertainment, and business.
  • Cultural Spread: Popularised in India after Bollywood debates in 2017, peaked during Sushant Singh Rajputs death (2020) when discussions on nepotism in film industry resurfaced.

Overview

Historical Roots

  • Papal Europe: Popes promoted nephews to cardinalships → coined the term.
  • Modern usage expanded to dynastic politics, business families, and entertainment industries worldwide.

Showbiz Connection

  • Bollywood: Triggered debates after Kangana Ranaut’s comments on “flagbearer of nepotism.”
  • Public anger intensified after Sushant Singh Rajput’s suicide in 2020, widely linked to industry bias against “outsiders.”
  • Google Trends: Spike in “nepo baby” searches in India from 2017, peak in 2020, showing cultural traction.

Politics and Power

  • India: Dynastic politics prominent across parties (INC, regional outfits, even BJP leaders promoting children).
  • Nepal: Anger against entrenched political dynasties; seen as blocking opportunities for ordinary youth.
  • Global Parallel: Bangladesh, Sri Lanka – corruption, dynastic elites, and contractors benefiting from state projects → public resentment.

Structural Inequalities

  • Limited opportunities for newcomers due to entrenched elite dominance.
  • Deepens inequalities in societies with fragile economies and high unemployment.
  • Covid-19 pandemic worsened structural barriers – many outsiders left industries like film, politics, or business.

Social and Political Consequences

  • Rising protests in Nepal reflect frustration of youth over elite privilege.
  • Public trust in democratic institutions erodes when nepotism dominates.
  • Creates sense of exclusion, discourages meritocracy, and fuels populist/anti-establishment movements.

Global Modern Context

  • “Nepo baby” discourse now transcends entertainment, covering politics, business, and governance.
  • Seen as a universal symbol of privilege vs merit, resonating with youth struggling against inequality.
  • In fragile democracies, unchecked nepotism can destabilise regimes, trigger corruption scandals, and fuel violent protests.

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