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PIB Summaries 18 April 2025

  1. Ministry of Tribal Affairs Reviews Tribal Welfare Schemes in Delhi
  2. Mission Amrit Sarovar


In a bid to ensure inclusive growth and empowerment of tribal communities, the Ministry of Tribal Affairs held a comprehensive three-day national review in Delhi. The focus was on assessing ground-level progress and strengthening key initiatives like PM-JANMAN and DAJGUA for holistic tribal development.

Relevance : GS 1(Society) , GS 2(Governance)

PM-JANMAN: Last-Mile Delivery for PVTGs

  • Launched: 15 Nov 2023, from Khunti, Jharkhand (birthplace of Bhagwan Birsa Munda).
  • Focus: 75 PVTGs, covering 30,000 habitations, targeting ~45 lakh beneficiaries.
  • Comprehensive coverage: Housing, sanitation, water, health, education, nutrition, digital access.
  • Goal: Full saturation by 15 Nov 2025 (150th birth anniversary of Birsa Munda).
  • States directed to:
    • Implement village-wise tracking.
    • Ensure Gram Sabha certification post-completion.
    • Report quarterly progress till June 2025.

DAJGUA (DhartiAabaJanjatiya Gram Utkarsh Abhiyan)

  • Convergence initiative across 17 Union Ministries.
  • Targets 63,843 tribal villages in 549 districts, impacting 5.5 crore+ tribal citizens.
  • Involves 25 integrated interventions—health, education, skill development, livelihoods, etc.
  • States asked to:
    • Fast-track intervention sanctioning.
    • Launch IEC Campaigns & Benefit Saturation Camps.
    • Ensure knowledge-sharing from best-performing districts.

EMRS: Elevating Tribal Education Standards

  • Vision: Make Eklavya Model Residential Schools hubs of academic excellence.
  • Key action areas:
    • Qualified teacher recruitment and ongoing training.
    • Infrastructure upgrades: Smart classrooms, libraries, labs.
    • Emphasis on experiential & 21st-century learning.
    • Enhance student welfare and staff support.
  • Progress of EMRS projects in states reviewed closely.

Scholarships: Access and Timely Disbursal

  • States directed to:
    • Ensure timely disbursal of pre- and post-matric scholarships.
    • Remove bureaucratic delays.
    • Integrate with National Scholarship Portal (NSP) or link state portals via API.
    • Aim for disbursal at academic year start to maximize impact.

Janjatiya Gaurav Varsh (2025): Celebrating Tribal Pride

  • Thematic focus areas:
    • Education & Skill Development
    • Health & Nutrition
    • Entrepreneurship & Livelihoods
    • Tribal Culture, Art, and Language Preservation
    • Infrastructure and Service Delivery
  • Emphasis on a “Whole-of-Government” approach:
    • Inter-ministerial coordination
    • Collaboration with NGOs, TRIs, Corporates, Line Ministries

Adi Sanskriti & Adi Vaani: Preserving Tribal Heritage

  • Adi Sanskriti:
    • Creation of Tribal Art Academy, Digital Repository, Tribal Haat.
    • Promotion of tribal arts, rituals, cuisines, and folklore.
  • Adi Vaani:
    • AI-based multilingual translation platform.
    • Aimed at breaking language barriers in governance and education.
    • Focus on low-resource tribal languages for documentation & revitalization.

Tackling Sickle Cell Anaemia

  • Mission to eliminate Sickle Cell Disease in tribal areas.
  • Establishment of Centers of Competency:
    • Screening, treatment, capacity building, awareness generation.

Way Forward :

  • Ground-Level Execution: District and block-level capacity building prioritized.
  • Saturation Approach: All tribal beneficiaries to receive entitlements.
  • Institutional Mechanism Strengthening: Feedback loops, audits, Gram Sabha verifications.
  • Inter-Ministerial Convergence: Alignment across 17 ministries.
  • Technology Integration: AI (Adi Vaani), digital monitoring (NSP), smart classrooms.
  • Community Participation: Tribal ownership in design, monitoring, and outcomes.

 Conclusion

This review underscores the transformational shift from schemecentric to citizen-centric tribal development. The focus is now on:Inclusivity, Technology-enabled governance ,Heritage preservation and outcome-based delivery



Context :

  • India faces acute water stress, particularly in rural areas, due to over-extraction of groundwater and degradation of traditional water bodies.
  • Mission Amrit Sarovar (2022) was launched under Azadi Ka Amrit Mahotsav as a community-driven initiative to revive water heritage and ensure sustainability.

Relevance : GS 2(Governance) , GS 3(Environment and Ecology)

Core Objectives

  • Construct/rejuvenate at least 75 water bodies per district (~50,000 nationwide).
  • Promote community-led water conservation, integrate with livelihood generation.
  • Enhance surface and groundwater availability while reviving traditional water structures.
  • Foster social cohesion and national pride by linking with freedom fighters and national celebrations.

Strategic Vision

  • Blend of traditional wisdom and modern technology (remote sensing, GIS).
  • Convergence of ecological restoration, rural development, and cultural revitalization.
  • Develop long-term water assets to ensure resilience against climate-induced water scarcity.

Institutional Framework

  • Anchored by Ministry of Rural Development with convergence from 6 other ministries:
    • Jal Shakti, Panchayati Raj, Environment & Climate Change, Railways, Culture, Road Transport.
  • Supported technically by BISAG-N and digitally monitored via amritsarovar.gov.in.
  • Integration with schemes like MGNREGS, 15th Finance Commission grants, PMKSY, etc.

Implementation Mechanism

  • Two Prabharis per Sarovar: Panchayat Pratinidhi (citizen supervisor) + Panchayat Officer (monitoring & documentation).
  • Formation of User Groups for ongoing management and maintenance.
    • Representation from SHGs, VWSCs, Van Samitis, Aquaculture practitioners, etc.
  • Users responsible for de-silting, plantation, conservation, and equitable water use.

Technological Integration

  • Geo-informatics used in site identification, planning, progress monitoring.
  • Integration of real-time dashboards and mobile-based monitoring at grassroots level.

Achievements: Phase I (Apr 2022 – Aug 2023)

  • Target: 50,000; Achieved: 59,492 Amrit Sarovars (ahead of schedule).
  • Participation of:
    • 79,080 Panchayat Pratinidhi, 92,359 Panchayat Officers.
    • 2,203 freedom fighters, 385 martyrs’ families, 69 Padma Awardees.
  • Tree Plantation: 23.5 lakh+ trees (Neem, Peepal, Bargadh, native species).
  • Cultural activities and national celebrations institutionalized at sites.

Phase II (Sept 2023–Present)

  • Renewed focus on climate resilience, ecological balance, and inter-generational benefit.
  • 3,182 new sites identified as of April 2025.
  • Emphasis on community engagement and CSR/crowd-sourced participation.

State-Wise Performance (Top 5 by March 2025)

RankStateNo. of Amrit Sarovars Completed
1Uttar Pradesh16,630
2Madhya Pradesh5,839
3Karnataka4,056
4Rajasthan3,138
5Maharashtra3,055

Community Participation (Jan Bhagidari)

  • 65,285 User Groups formed.
  • People involved from site feasibility to post-use maintenance.
  • Contributions encouraged via:
    • Shramdaan, donation of material, CSR funding.
    • Flag hoisting, event celebrations, and naming after freedom fighters.

Economic & Ecological Impact

  • Boosts rural livelihood through:
    • Irrigation, fisheries, duckery, water chestnut cultivation, animal husbandry.
  • Groundwater recharge significantly improved:
    • From 13.98 BCM (2017) to 25.34 BCM (2024).
  • Demonstrates success of community-led conservation in reversing ecological degradation.

Case Study Highlight

  • Satellite Basti Pond, Great Nicobar:
    • Rejuvenated for community use, benefitting 200+ villagers.
    • 24 households got employment.
    • Plantation of Neem and native species around the pond.

Challenges and Way Forward

  • Ensuring sustainability of Sarovars post-implementation.
  • Need for stronger inter-departmental convergence and capacity building at local levels.
  • Expansion of digital monitoring tools and climate adaptive design in newer phases.
  • Replication of best practices across lagging districts.

 

May 2025
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