Category Social Sciences

What is the meaning of term ‘Refugees’?

Imagine fleeing your home leaving everything behind and carrying only what you can. Yes, that’s the plight of refugees all over the world. The term ‘refugee’ has been used to describe the millions worldwide displaced either on account of conflict, persecution or war. When people leave their country to seek protection in neighbouring countries crossing international borders, they are called refugees. While immigrants choose to move to another country for various reasons, refugees are forced to flee their country in the face of violence. With uncertainty staring at them, refugees face several challenges, such as severe hunger, poverty and loss of dear ones, in search of a safe haven and a better life. You might have heard about the refugees from Syria, Myanmar, Ukraine and Afghanistan. While some countries take them in with open arms, others turn them away. Nevertheless, the number of people displaced worldwide has continued to grow at an alarming rate. According to the UNHCR, the UN refugee agency, over 89 million people worldwide were forcibly displaced till the end of 2021, of which over 27 million are refugees. Didn’t the photos of Syrian refugee Alan Kurdi’s lifeless body on the Turkey shore and Afghans struggling to hang on to the aircraft about to take off move us to tears?

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What is the NHRC?

The NHRC India coordinates with the NHRIS of other countries to enhance awareness on human rights.

The International Human Rights Day is observed every year on December 10, which is the day the United Nations General Assembly adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) in 1948. The Indian government established the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) on October 12 in 1993 to promote and protect human rights. But do you know what NHRC is?

What is NHRC?

The NHRC was established under the Protection of Human Rights Act (PHRA), 1993. It was set up in conformity with the Paris Principles, which was adopted at the first international workshop on national institutions for the promotion and protection of human rights held in Paris in October 1991.

According to Section 2(1)(d) of the PHRA, Human Rights is the rights relating to life, liberty, equality and dignity of the individual guaranteed by the Constitution or embodied in the International Covenants and enforceable by courts in India.

Roles

One of the responsibilities of the NHRC is to inquire into complaints of violation of human rights or abetment or negligence in the prevention of such violations, by a public servant.

It intervenes in proceedings involving any allegation of violation of human rights pending before a court, with the approval of the court.

The Commission also studies treaties and international instruments on human rights and makes recommendations for their effective implementation to the Government.

It spreads human rights literacy and promotes awareness amongst the masses. It also encourages the efforts of all stakeholders in the field of human rights literacy not only at the national level but at the international level too.

The NHRC India plays an active role in coordinating with the National Human Rights Institutes (NHRIS) of other countries to enhance awareness from the perspective of human rights.

It has hosted delegations from United Nations bodies and other NHRC as well as members of civil society, lawyers, and political and social activists from many countries.

Organisation

The unique feature of NHRC India is that it is one of the few NHRIS in the world whose Chairperson is the former Chief Justice of the country. The Chairperson and members of the Commission are appointed by the President on the basis of recommendations by a panel headed by the Prime Minister. The current Chairperson is Justice Arun Kumar Mishra.

The Commission has its own investigating staff headed by a Director General of Police for investigation into complaints of human rights violations.

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What are the solutions for a warming world?

With a warming planet searing us, we are desperate to find cool solutions. In a seeming paradox what contributed to the climate change crisis such as coal plastic and oil rigs also hold the key to eco-friendly solutions. But how? Let’s find out…

Coal is a fossil fuel that is largely blamed for the current climate change crisis. Now, in a seeming paradox, energy experts are turning to long-abandoned coal mines as a source of carbon-free power! These mines are estimated to contain millions of gigawatt hours or GWh of heat, with the potential to store more. Today, there are many ongoing projects across the UK and in Europe to tap this energy source, especially in places where plants that treat toxic mine water from closed mines already exist.

Once a mine is shut down, the shafts fill with water. The water may be surface water (from rainfall or flooding), or groundwater that seeps up from below. The water is naturally warm as it is deep underground, with temperatures ranging from 15 degrees C to 20 degrees C. It is hot enough to heat homes in winter and cool enough to keep them mild in summer. Mine water energy is also 10 per cent cheaper.

It is not a new idea. In 1989, a packaging firm in the town of Springhill, in the Canadian province of Nova Scotia, dug the world’s first borewell to draw up water from dormant coal mines near it to heat its office building.

Futuristic fabric

An American apparel startup called LifeLabs Design set up by a research team from Stanford University, has created clothing from polyethylene (PE) that keeps the wearer’s skin cool in the heat and warm in the cold. The first is called Cool life and the second, you guessed it, WarmLife!

Polyethylene is the type of plastic found in cling wrap and the thin, transparent bags used by grocery stores to pack items. The inventors discovered that the plastic allowed infrared radiation to pass right through it. Most fabrics trap infrared radiation or heat generated by the skin. CoolLife fabric lowers the wearer’s skin temperature by at least 1 degree Celsius when compared to cotton.

The company’s WarmLife fabric works on the principle of reflectivity. The side that touches the skin has a ‘nano coat’ or a microscopic aluminium layer that reflects the body’s infrared radiation and traps that heat inside an inch-thick layer of insulation. The fabric is 30 per cent warmer than clothing of similar weight and bulk.

The company’s WarmLife fabric works on the principle of reflectivity. The side that touches the skin has a ‘nano coat or a microscopic aluminium layer that reflects the body’s infrared radiation and traps that heat inside an inch-thick layer of insulation. The fabric is 30 per cent warmer than clothing of similar weight and bulk.

Polyethylene is the most sustainable among synthetic and natural textiles. The fabrics made from PE are ecologically friendlier than other synthetic and even natural fabrics. Polyester, wool and cotton use large amounts of fuel and water in their entire production process. WarmLife jackets and vests use much less fuel and water in their manufacture. The fabric is 97 per cent recycled material from single-use plastics.

Rigs to reefs

There are more than 12,000 offshore oil and gas platforms worldwide. There comes a time when the rigs produce too little oil and gas for extraction to be profitable. The well is sealed off, but it is too expensive to dismantle the massive structure entirely. The platform which is above the surface is easier to cart away, but the huge steel pylons below it are not. One would expect these rusting hulks to damage marine ecosystems, but surprisingly, they have had the opposite effect!

Offshore oil and gas rigs that have been decommissioned have become safe havens for a variety of marine life! The subsurface rig (the part below the water) provides the ideal skeleton for coral reefs to build on! Decommissioned oil rigs in America are the most productive man-made marine habitats in the world. They provide marine wildlife with food, shelter from predators and a safe breeding ground.

Since 1984, the U.S. government has encouraged states to turn defunct rigs into reefs. Oil companies on the east coast in Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas, have converted more than 500 rigs into artificial reefs. In fact, the rigs in the Gulf of Mexico have become hotspots for diving, snorkelling and recreational fishing.

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Who is known as pepper queen of India?

Rani Chennabhairadevi is known as “The Pepper Queen’ (Raina da Pimenta) of India. Her reign lasted 54 years, the longest by an Indian queen. She ruled from Gerusoppa, capital of the Saluva dynasty, between the 15th and 16th centuries. Her kingdom extended from Goa to Bhatkal and Karwar, up to Malabar. This belt was known as pepper country, as the spice grew in the virgin forests. Shiploads of pepper, betel nut, timber and sandalwood were traded with the Portuguese, British, Dutch and Africans in exchange for precious metals and stones. Most of the trade happened through Mirjan port in Uttara Kannada. The queen resided at and controlled the pepper trade from Mirjan Fort on River Aganashini. The Portuguese and the Keladi kings tried to capture Gerusoppa which Chennabhairadevi thwarted twice. The Keladi kings joined with the Bilagi chieftains to defeat her; she was imprisoned and died in captivity at Keladi.

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What is Enforcement Directorate?

The Enforcement Directorate is India’s premier central financial probe agency

The Centre has allowed the Enforcement Directorate (ED) to share information about financial offenders with 15 more agencies, including Serious Fraud Investigation Office (SFIO), the Competition Commission of India (CCI), and the National Investigation Agency (NIA). Earlier, the ED used to share its data with 10 agencies.

Origin

The Enforcement Directorate’s origins go back to 1956. The Directorate began on May 1, 1956 in New Delhi (headquarters) as ‘Enforcement Unit, as part of the Department of Economic Affairs for handling Exchange Control Laws violations under Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, 1947.

The unit’s name was changed to Enforcement Directorate in 1957. Another branch was opened in Madras (now Chennai).

In 1960, the administrative control of the Directorate was transferred from the Department of Economic Affairs to the Department of Revenue.

What is ED?

The Enforcement Directorate is a multi-disciplinary organisation mandated with the investigation of offences of money laundering and violations of foreign exchange laws.

It is responsible for the enforcement of the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 (FEMA) and certain provisions under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PML).

The Directorate is under the administrative control of the Department of Revenue for operational purposes; the policy aspects of the FEMA, its legislation and amendments are within the purview of the Department of Economic Affairs. Policy issues pertaining to the PML Act, however, are the responsibility of the Department of Revenue.

Sanjay Kumar Mishra is the current chief of the Enforcement Directorate. The Directorate has 10 zonal offices, each of which is headed by a Deputy Director, and 11 sub-zonal offices, each of which is headed by an Assistant Director.

The Enforcement Directorate, India’s premier central financial probe agency, has always been in the limelight for probing some of the most high profile cases of the country, involving business houses, top politicians, and industrialists.

SOME OF THE AGENCIES WITH WHOM THE ED CAN SHARE DATA

  • Serious Fraud Investigation Office
  • Competition Commission of India
  • National Investigation Agency
  • State Police Department
  • Special Investigation Team
  • Directorate General of Foreign Trade
  • Ministry of External Affairs
  • National Investigation Agency
  • Central Vigilance Commission
  • Military Intelligence directorate
  • Central Bureau of Investigation
  • National Technical Research Organisation
  • Reserve Bank of India
  • Securities and Exchange Board of India
  • Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India
  • Intelligence Bureau Financial Intelligence Unit
  • Department of Company Affairs
  • Cabinet Secretariat (Research and Analysis Wing)
  • Director (Financial Intelligence Unit)
  • National Intelligence Grid
  • Defence Intelligence Agency

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Which is the largest desert in India?

India’s largest desert is the Thar Desert, which is also famously known as the Great Indian Desert. Even though most of the Thar Desert is in India, around 15 percentage of its area is in Pakistan. It is the world’s 20th- largest desert and is also the world’s 9th-largest hot subtropical desert. Of its presence in India, more than 60 per cent is confined to Rajasthan.

Like most other deserts, the Thar Desert also has extreme temperatures. Thar witnesses unpredictable and variable amounts of rain, which falls between 100-500 mm during July and September. This vast desert is also home to rich biodiversity, which includes many large mammals like the blackbuck, blue bull, and the Indian gazelle or chinkara.

The Thar Desert accommodates around 40 per cent of Rajasthan’s population, making it one of the richest and most vibrant cultural centres of the state. The people living here do agriculture and animal husbandry for a living and are famous for their passion for folk music and folk poetry. Jodhpur is the largest city in the region and is located in the scrub forest zone at the perimeter of the desert. Bikaner and Jaisalmer are confined completely in the desert and are the largest cities of their kind in the Thar Desert.

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