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PIB Summaries 27 September 2025

  1. India Welcomes the World: Para Athletics Championships 2025 in New Delhi
  2. World Tourism Day 2025 – Tourism and Sustainable Transformation


What is the News?

  • India is hosting the 12th World Para Athletics Championships (27 Sept – 5 Oct 2025) in New Delhi at Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium.
  • First time India is hosting this global para-athletics event.
  • Participation: 100+ nations, 1000+ athletes, 186 medal events.
  • Major Indian medal hopes: Sumit (javelin), Preeti Pal (sprints), Praveen Kumar (high jump), Dharambir (club throw), Navdeep (javelin).
  • Live telecast: DD Sports, Waves app (Prasar Bharati).

Relevance

  • GS Paper II (Social Justice): Rights and empowerment of Persons with Disabilities (PwDs).
  • GS Paper I (Society): Changing social attitudes towards disability, inclusivity in public life.
  • GS Paper II (Governance): Role of state + international institutions in sports development.
  • GS Paper III (Sports + Soft Power): National sports policy, para-sports as a tool of diplomacy.

Why is it Important?

  • Sports + Social Justice Angle: Showcases inclusivity, accessibility, and empowerment of differently-abled persons.
  • Global Standing: India now part of the elite list of nations hosting para-sport mega-events.
  • Sports Diplomacy: Enhances India’s global image as an inclusive sporting nation.
  • Soft Power: Boosts India’s credibility in the Paralympic movement.

India’s Para-Sports Performance (Trend)

  • Doha 2015: 2 Silver.
  • Dubai 2019: 9 Medals.
  • Kobe 2024: 17 Medals (6 Gold).
  • Paris Paralympics 2024: 84 Medals (17 in Para-Athletics).
  • Since debut at Tel Aviv 1968 Paralympics → 8 Golds in para-athletics.

Trend Analysis:

  • Steady growth = result of institutional support (Paralympic Committee of India, govt schemes, private sponsorships).
  • Home soil advantage in 2025 could yield record performance.

Institutional and Policy Framework

  • Paralympic Committee of India (PCI) – governs para-athletics in India.
  • Schemes aiding para-athletes:
    • Target Olympic Podium Scheme (TOPS) – extended to para-athletes.
    • Khelo India Scheme – includes differently-abled categories.
    • Scholarships + job quotas under Dept. of Empowerment of Persons with Disabilities.
  • Infrastructure upgrades: Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium fitted with MONDO track, accessibility-friendly facilities.

History of Para-Athletics

  • 1950s – Stoke Mandeville Games
    • Started by Sir Ludwig Guttmann (UK) for WWII veterans.
    • Sports (archery, javelin) used for rehabilitation → birth of para-sport.
  • 1960 – Rome Paralympics (Formal Debut)
    • First Paralympic Games, 25 medal events in athletics.
  • Expansion Phase
    • 1964 Tokyo → Wheelchair racing introduced.
    • 1972 Heidelberg → Events for visually impaired athletes.
    • 1976 Toronto → Amputee athletes included.
    • 1980s – Inclusivity & Endurance
      • Classification system developed.
    • 1984 → Marathon debut.
      • Athletes with cerebral palsy included.
    • 1990s – Globalisation
    • 1994: First World Para Athletics Championships (Berlin).
      • Para-athletics became the largest Paralympic sport.
  • Governing Body
    • World Para Athletics, under International Paralympic Committee (IPC), Bonn, Germany.
  • Today
    • Events for athletes with spinal, limb, visual, cerebral, and intellectual impairments.
    • High-tech prosthetics & wheelchairs enhanced performance.

Broader Implications

  • Social: Normalises disability → inspires youth, breaks stereotypes.
  • Economic: Boost to sports economy, infrastructure, tourism.
  • Political/Diplomatic: Enhances India’s global brand as an inclusive democracy.
  • Legal: Aligns with Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act 2016 and India’s obligations under UNCRPD.

Conclusion

The World Para Athletics Championships 2025 is not just a sporting event but a symbol of inclusivity, resilience, and global integration. For India, it reinforces the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016, demonstrates soft power, and strengthens the ecosystem of para-sports. The long-term legacy lies not in medal counts alone but in mainstreaming inclusivity into society, aligning sports with the constitutional goal of justice, equality, and dignity for all.



Basics

  • Date: 27th September (since 1980).
  • Significance: Marks adoption of UNWTO statutes (1970).
  • Theme (2025): “Tourism and Sustainable Transformation”.
  • Host (2025): Malaysia (Melaka, Sept 27–29).
  • Global Relevance: Tourism as a tool for cultural exchange, economic growth, SDGs, and sustainability.

Relevance

  • GS Paper II (Governance): Tourism policies, inter-ministerial coordination (Tourism + Tribal Affairs), policy support for rural & tribal livelihoods.
  • GS Paper III (Economy): Tourism as a driver of growth, MICE sector expansion, infrastructure push, employment generation.
  • GS Paper I (Society & Culture): Promotion of tribal & rural homestays, preservation of cultural heritage, inclusivity in tourism.
  • GS Paper II/III (Social Justice & Inclusive Growth): Financial support (Mudra loans, funding for tribal households), empowerment of marginalized communities through tourism.

Historical Context

  • 1970: UNWTO statutes adopted.
  • 1980: First WTD observed.
  • Purpose: Highlight tourism’s role in socio-economic development and global peace.
  • Now: Strong alignment with Agenda 2030 (SDGs) → jobs, inclusivity, climate action, gender empowerment.

Tourism in India

  • Domestic Visits (Jan–Aug 2025): 303.59 crore.
  • Foreign Tourist Arrivals (FTAs): ~56 lakh (up to Aug 2025).
  • Medical Tourism (Jan–Apr 2025): 1.31 lakh (4.1% of FTAs).
  • Outbound Tourism (till June 2025): 84.4 lakh.
  • Inbound Tourism (till June 2025): 16.5 lakh.
  • Contribution to GDP (2023–24): ₹15.73 lakh crore (5.22%).
  • Employment: 36.9 million (direct) + 47.7 million (indirect) = 13.34% of workforce.
  • Forex Earnings (2025): ₹51,532 crore.

Flagship Schemes & Initiatives

  1. Swadesh Darshan (2014)
    1. Thematic circuits: Ramayana, Buddhist, Coastal, Tribal, Himalayan, Heritage.
    1. 76 projects sanctioned; 75 completed.
  2. Swadesh Darshan 2.0 (2023)
    1. Focus: sustainable destinations (tourist + destination centric).
    1. 52 projects, ₹2108.87 crore sanctioned.
    1. Challenge-Based Destination Development (CBDD) → 42 destinations, 36 approved projects by 2026.
  3. PRASHAD (2014)
    1. Pilgrimage infrastructure & spiritual heritage.
    1. 54 projects in 28 states/UTs worth ₹1168+ crore.
    1. Examples: Tripura Sundari Temple, Somnath Promenade, Hazratbal Shrine, Patna Sahib.
  4. Dekho Apna Desh (2020)
    1. Promotes domestic tourism via campaigns, roadshows, webinars.
    1. ‘People’s Choice’ poll → citizen engagement.
  5. Vibrant Villages Programme (VVP-I 2023, VVP-II 2025)
    1. Tourism as tool for border area development.
    1. VVP-I: 46 blocks (19 districts) in northern border states.
    1. VVP-II: Budget ₹6839 crore till 2028–29; expands to ILB villages in 15+ states.
  6. SASCI (2025)
    1. Special Assistance to States for Capital Investment.
    1. 40 projects worth ₹3295.76 crore with 100% central funding.
    1. Aim: develop iconic global tourist centres.
  7. Capacity Building for Service Providers (CBSP)
    1. Skill training for local communities, women, tribals.
    1. Paryatan Mitra / Paryatan Didi initiative.
  8. Digital Initiatives
    1. Incredible India Digital Portal & Content Hub (revamped 2024).
    1. AI-powered chatbot, booking integration.
    1. 294.76 crore domestic tourist visits logged (2024).
  9. One India, One Registration (NIDHI portal, 2025)
    1. Objective: Improve service quality in domestic & international tourism.
    1. Homestay Classification:
      1. Gold Category & Silver Category under Incredible India Homestay Establishments.
      1. Covers rural and tribal areas.
    1. Funding Support:
      1. States/UTs can get up to ₹5 crore for 5–10 homestays per village (cluster of 5–6 villages).
    1. Budget 2025-26: Collateral-free Mudra Loans for Homestays announced → encourages rural/tribal tourism, boosts local entrepreneurship.
  10. Tribal Tourism Circuits
    1. Funding for tribal homestays: up to ₹5 lakh for new rooms, ₹3 lakh renovation.
  11. MICE Tourism (Meetings, Incentives, Conferences, Exhibitions)
    1. Bharat Mandapam, Yashobhoomi positioned as hubs.
    1. India targets 5%+ share of $1.4 trillion global MICE industry by 2030.
  12. Other Sub-sectors
    1. Festival Tourism: Utsav Portal.
    1. Adventure Tourism: 120+ new peaks opened.
    1. Wedding Tourism: “India Says I Do”, “Wed in India”.
    1. Cruise Tourism: Cruise Bharat Mission (2024–29), 51 circuits planned.
    1. Pilgrimage Tourism: Budget 2024–25 → 50 new destinations.
    1. Medical Tourism: “Heal in India” initiative, Ayurveda + Yoga integration.

Opportunities:

  • Cultural diplomacy & soft power booster.
  • Major forex earner & job creator (esp. women/youth).
  • Growth driver for border villages & tribal regions.
  • Synergy with Digital India, Skill India, Atmanirbhar Bharat.

Challenges:

  • Overtourism & carrying capacity issues (Himalayan states, coastal belts).
  • Environmental degradation (waste, water stress, fragile ecosystems).
  • Uneven regional spread → over-focus on iconic sites.
  • Need for last-mile connectivity (roads, rail, airstrips).
  • Skilling gaps in hospitality workforce.
  • Dependence on global shocks (pandemics, conflicts, climate).

Way Forward:

  • Sustainability first: eco-certifications, green transport, waste management.
  • Community-driven tourism: tribal, women-led initiatives.
  • Diversification: MICE, wedding, cruise, adventure, medical tourism.
  • Digital & Smart Tourism: AI-driven itineraries, immersive VR/AR experiences.
  • Regional balance: promote NE, border, rural, eco-sensitive sites.
  • Strengthen India’s global tourism brand through credible governance + PPP models.

 

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