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Current Affairs – September 10, 2025

{GS2 – Polity – IC – Elections} SC Allows Aadhaar as Identity

  • Context (IE): The Supreme Court directed the Election Commission to accept Aadhaar as an additional identity document during Bihar’s Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls.
  • The Court reiterated that Aadhaar is not a citizenship proof, but an identity proof under Section 23(4) of the Representation of the People Act 1950.
  • The Election Commission retains authority to verify Aadhaar’s genuineness before acceptance.

Read More About > Special Intensive Revision of Electoral Rolls

{GS2 – Polity – IC – FRs} Personality Rights in India **

  • Context (LM): Recently, Aishwarya Rai Bachchan moved the Delhi High Court to protect her personality rights and prevent unauthorised use of her name and image by unidentified defendants (“John Does”).

About Personality Rights

  • Personality rights allow individuals to control unauthorised use of personal attributes, like name, image, voice and distinct traits.
  • They are part of privacy and property rights and are also recognised as publicity or celebrity rights.
  • Legal Nature: Indian law lacks explicit statute; it relies on Article 21, Copyright Act, and Trademarks Act.
  • Personality vs Consumer Rights: Personality rights protect against identity misuse, while consumer rights regulate market fairness and protection.

About John Doe Injunctions

  • A John Doe order provides preventive relief by restraining unidentified infringers and permits courts to extend injunctions before legal identification.
  • In India, it has been used against piracy, non-fungible tokens (NFTs), and metaverse-based violations.

Read in Detail About > Personality Rights

{GS2 – Polity – IC – FRs} Rajasthan’s Anti-Conversion Bill

  • Context (TH): Rajasthan Assembly passed the Rajasthan Prohibition of Unlawful Conversion of Religion Bill, 2025, imposing stringent penalties on coercive religious conversions.
  • Expanded: Conversion now includes marriages undertaken solely for religious conversion purposes.
    • Annulled: Such marriages may be annulled by competent family courts.
  • Non-Bailable: All related offences are non-bailable, limiting courts’ bail discretion.
  • Penalty: Punishments range from seven years to life imprisonment with fines up to ₹25 lakh.
    • Property: Assets linked with unlawful conversions can be confiscated by authorities.
  • Notice: Converts must inform the District Magistrate before conversion, enabling prior oversight.
  • Significance: The law reinforces freedom of religion while preventing coercive conversions.
  • Concerns: Critics fear harassment, misuse, and constraints on genuine conversions.

Read More > Religious Conversions

{GS2 – Governance – Initiatives} Ceasefire Renewal and Inter-District Connectivity in Manipur

  • Context (IE): The Ministry of Home Affairs has renewed the Suspension of Operations (SoO) agreement and announced the “free movement” of NH-02 ahead of PM Modi’s visit to Manipur.

Suspension of Operations Agreement (SoO)

  • The SoO signed in 2008 is a tripartite ceasefire pact between the Centre, the Manipur government, and insurgent groups Kuki National Organisation (KNO) and United People’s Front (UPF).
  • It lapsed in 2024 after state withdrawal and ethnic violence in May 2023.
  • Renegotiated Terms: Respect for Manipur’s territorial integrity, relocation of camps, arms deposition, verification of cadres, direct stipend transfers, and monitoring by a Joint Group.
  • Kuki National Organisation (KNO) and United People’s Front (UPF) are umbrella organisations representing 24 Kuki-Zomi groups.

NH-02 Free Movement

  • NH-02 connects Imphal valley with hill districts, linking Kuki-Zo and Meitei-majority areas.
  • Reopened for commuters and essential goods, easing hardened inter-district boundaries.

Read More > President’s Rule in Manipur

{GS2 – Vulnerable Sections – Women} National Annual Report and Index 2025 *

  • Context (TH | TH): The National Commission for Women (NCW) released the National Annual Report and Index on Women’s Safety (NARI) 2025, India’s first perception-based safety index.
  • Objective: To capture unreported harassment and assess women’s safety perceptions beyond official crime statistics.
  • Methodology: Surveyed 12,770 women across 31 cities and assigned a benchmark safety score of 65%, categorising cities as above or below this threshold.

Key Findings

  • Safest Cities: Kohima, Visakhapatnam, Bhubaneswar, linked to stronger gender equity, infrastructure, and policing.
  • Least Safe Cities: Patna, Jaipur, and Delhi are associated with patriarchal norms, weak institutions, and poor infrastructure.
  • Perceived Safety: 60% of women felt safe overall, but only 65% felt safe during the day; 35% felt unsafe at night, with Delhi showing 8% safe during the day.
  • Education Spaces: Institutions felt safe by day, but safety perceptions declined after dark or off-campus.
  • Workplace: 91% felt safe at work, though half were unsure about POSH policy implementation.
  • Reporting Gap: Only one-third reported incidents; 22% were officially registered, and 16% addressed.
  • Harassment Pattern: 7% of women experienced harassment overall, rising to 14% among those under 24; neighbourhoods and transport were key hotspots.

{GS3 – IE – Urbanization} Building Climate-Resilient Cities in India **

  • Context (IE): With cities set to host nearly a billion people by 2050, rapid urbanisation brings rising climate risks, offering only a narrow window to build resilient infrastructure.

Key Challenges

  • Flooding: By 2030, two-thirds of urban dwellers risk pluvial flooding, with losses up to $30 bn by 2070.
  • Extreme Heat: Urban heat island effect raises city temperatures by 3-5°C above rural areas.
  • Vulnerable Housing: More than half of the housing stock required by 2070 has yet to be constructed.
  • Transport Risks: Even 10-20% road inundation can disrupt half the transport network.
  • Weak Municipal Services: Inefficient waste, drainage, water, and energy management.
  • Governance & Finance Gaps: Weak institutional capacity and limited private investment.

Way Forward

  • Smart Zoning: Enforce no-build zones in floodplains, coasts, and landslide-prone areas using GIS-based master plans.
  • Green Infra: Expand wetlands and green corridors to manage floods and heat.
  • Resilient Transport: Build elevated metro, flood-proof roads, and evacuation routes under Smart City Mission and Gati Shakti.
  • Climate Finance: Use Urban Climate Bonds and the PPPs model for drainage and green mobility.

Read More > India’s Urban Transition | Environmental Crisis in India | National Plan to Build New Cities

{GS3 – Envi – Species} Pallas’s Cat in Arunachal Pradesh *

  • Context (DH): A WWF-India survey in Arunachal Pradesh documented six wild cat species above 4,200 meters, including the first photographic evidence of the elusive Pallas’s cat.

About the Pallas’s Cat (Otocolobus manul)

  • The Pallas’s cat, also called the manul, is a small, solitary, elusive and crepuscular wildcat.
  • Appearance: Flattened face, high-set eyes, and low-set, rounded ears.
    • Fur: Dense silvery winter fur seasonally turns light brown in summer.
  • Habitat: Inhabits rocky montane steppes and cold deserts with sparse precipitation.
    • Crevices: Prefers rocky crevices offering camouflage, thermal refuge, and predator avoidance.
  • Global Distribution: Occurs across Central Asia, the Himalayas, the Tibetan Plateau, Iran, & Mongolia.
    • India Range: Confirmed in Ladakh, Sikkim, Himachal, and recently in Arunachal Pradesh.
  • Ecological Role: Mesopredator regulating rodents and pikas, maintaining ecosystem balance.
  • Threats: They include habitat degradation, prey decline from poisoning, hunting, and climate change.
  • Status: IUCN: Least Concern | CITES: Appendix II | CMS: Appendix II | WPA: Schedule I (Part I)

the Pallas’s Cat (Otocolobus manul)

Source: IUCN

{GS3 – Envi – CC} Offshore Aquifers and Water Scarcity **

  • Context (IE): Recently, scientists in the first systematic undersea drilling campaign collected ~50,000 litres of freshwater from the Atlantic Ocean.
  • Offshore aquifers are freshwater reserves stored in permeable rock or sediment beneath the sea floor, extending up to 90 km from the coast, and may hold volumes greater than many land-based aquifers.

Formation and Origin

  • Ice Age Hypothesis: Rainwater seeped underground when sea levels were lower.
  • Onshore Connection: Linked with land aquifers recharged by rainfall.
  • Protection Layer: Compact, clay-rich sediment can form an impermeable “cap” that prevents lighter fresh water from rising and mixing with seawater.

Significance for Water Security

  • Water Supplies: A Potential new source to ease freshwater scarcity for coastal regions.
  • Global Water Crisis: UN (2023) warns freshwater demand may exceed supply by ~40% by 2030, climate change, pollution and mismanagement worsen the crisis.
  • Climate resilience: Could provide strategic buffers during droughts and declining terrestrial groundwater recharge.

Challenges to Sustainable Utilisation

  • High cost: The recent extraction campaign cost ~$25 million, as offshore drilling and specialised infrastructure are expensive.
  • Technical hurdles: Need wells that prevent saltwater intrusion, safe subsea pumping and reliable onshore transfer systems.
  • Governance & rights: Questions on ownership, allocation, and the rights of indigenous, fishing and coastal communities remain unresolved.
  • Sustainability risk: If aquifers are palaeowater (non-renewable), exploitation could irreversibly deplete a finite store.

Way Forward

  • Scientific Audit: Fund multidisciplinary studies to map offshore aquifers, assess volumes, recharge rates and renewability.
  • Environmental Assessment: Mandatory, independent marine-impact and cumulative-effects studies before any withdrawal.
  • Cost–Benefit Analysis: Compare extraction costs with alternatives (desalination, inter-basin transfer, conservation) and prioritise potable use.

{GS3 – DM – Issues} Avalanche at Siachen Base Camp *

About Avalanches

  • Definition: An avalanche is a sudden, rapid flow of snow, ice, and debris down a mountainside.
  • Triggered by: Heavy snowfall, rapid temperature changes, vibrations (earthquakes, artillery fire).
  • Types:
    • Snow Avalanches: These include small slides of dry, powdery snow and slab avalanches (large, cohesive slabs of snow that break off and slide down).
    • Rock Avalanches: Consist of massive chunks of rock breaking off and sliding down steep slopes.
    • Ice Avalanches: Common around glaciers, where large ice masses break off and slide down slopes.
    • Debris Avalanches: Contain soil, loose stones, & a mix of materials that move downhill with force.

Read in Detail > Avalanches

About Siachen Glacier

  • Located in the eastern Karakoram Range of the Himalayas, stretching 76 km.
  • Lies immediately south of the great drainage divide, separating the Eurasian Plate from the Indian Plate, sometimes called the “Third Pole” due to massive glaciation.
  • World’s highest & coldest battlefield, with altitudes above 20,000 ft and temperatures as low as –60°C.
  • Source of the Nubra River, a key tributary of the Shyok River in Ladakh.

Siachen Glacier

Read More About > Siachen Glacier

{GS3 – S&T – Cybersecurity} Two-Factor Authentication (2FA)

  • Context (TH): With rising cyber threats, Two-Factor Authentication (2FA) has become essential for securing digital accounts.
  • Two-Factor Authentication (2FA) requires a password (first factor) and a time-based one-time password (TOTP) generated by an authenticator app or token synced with the server (second factor).

How TOTP Works?

  • Generates a one-time 6-digit password valid for ~30 seconds, rendering intercepted codes useless.
  • Server & user device share a secret key; cryptographic algorithms convert this into a time-based code.
  • Codes can be generated via authenticator apps (Google Authenticator, Authy) or hardware tokens.

Significance

  • India recorded 22.7 lakh cybercrime cases in 2024, highlighting the urgent need for 2FA.
  • Secure authentication supports Digital India initiatives, UPI payments, and ONDC transactions.
  • Low-cost 2FA methods like SMS OTPs provide protection to rural and semi-urban users.
  • Robust 2FA is essential for safeguarding government portals, defence systems, & critical infrastructure.

{GS3 – S&T – BioTech} Protein P47 *

  • Context (DD | PIB): Indian researchers have discovered that the protein p47 acts as a mechanical chaperone.
  • A “mechanical chaperone” is a protein that helps other proteins remain stable and functional under mechanical stress.

About P-47 Protein

  • A cofactor protein, traditionally known as a helper for p97, is involved in protein trafficking, degradation, and membrane fusion.
  • Previously considered only a supporting factor, it is now shown to stabilise and protect proteins under mechanical stress actively.

Key Findings of the Study

  • Using single-molecule magnetic tweezers, scientists simulated the mechanical forces proteins experience inside cells.
  • Found that p47 directly binds to stretched proteins, assisting their refolding even under constant pulling forces.
  • Significance: Provides the first single-molecule evidence of a cofactor protein exhibiting autonomous protective activity.
  • Opens new avenues for treating diseases linked to protein instability, including heart muscle disorders.

{Prelims – S&T – Tech} Cholesterol-Based Nanomaterials

  • Context (PIB): Scientists have demonstrated that cholesterol can be used to design novel nanomaterials for spintronics and quantum technologies.
  • Spintronics (Spin + Electronics) uses both the charge and spin of electrons to process and store information, enabling faster, smaller, and more energy-efficient devices than conventional electronics.

Key Findings

  • Cholesterol: Its chirality (molecular “handedness”) and flexibility make it apt for spintronic materials.
  • Spin Control: By combining cholesterol with metal ions, researchers created nanomaterials that selectively filter and control electron spins.
  • Chemical Tunability: Allows precise manipulation of spin information for quantum use.
  • Energy Efficiency: Potential for low-power, high-speed memory chips, aiding greener technologies.

{Prelims – Awards} Swachh Vayu Sarvekshan 2025 Awards *

  • Context (PIB): The top cities under Swachh Vayu Sarvekshan 2025, conducted under the National Clean Air Programme, were awarded by the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change.

Key Highlights

  • Award Categories: Three categories based on population honoured 11 best-performing cities.
    • Category 1 (>10 lakh): Indore ranked 1st (200/200), followed by Jabalpur, Agra, and Surat.
    • Category 2 (3–10 lakh): Amravati topped with 200/200, followed by Jhansi, Moradabad, and Alwar.
    • Category 3 (<3 lakh): Dewas ranked 1st, followed by Parwanoo and Angul.
  • PM10 Reduction: 103 cities improved air quality; 25 achieved at least a 40% reduction since 2017.

New Initiatives and Launches

  • Ward-Level Guidelines: Annual survey expanded to ward-level to enhance citizen participation.
  • Best Practices Compendium: Released to showcase replicable urban air quality strategies nationwide.

Swachh Vayu Sarvekshan

  • It is an annual Survey conducted across 130 cities under NCAP through multi-tier evaluation.
  • Objective: Foster competitive federalism, urging cities to adopt faster air quality measures.
  • Tracking Tool: PRANA digital portal enables progress monitoring and transparency of city actions.

{Prelims – In News} C. P. Radhakrishnan

  • Context (TH): National Democratic Alliance (NDA) candidate Chandrapuram Ponnusamy Radhakrishnan has been elected as the 15th Vice-President of India.
  • He served as Governor of Jharkhand in 2023 and was subsequently appointed Governor of Maharashtra in 2024.
  • A native of Tiruppur in Tamil Nadu, he was elected twice to the Lok Sabha from Coimbatore in 1998 & 1999, serving until 2004.

Read More > Vice President of India

{Prelims} One Liners

  • In News French PM Resigned (IE): French Prime Minister François Bayrou resigned after losing a confidence vote at the National Assembly (French lower house) over proposed austerity measures.
  • In News Japan PM to Resign (CNN): Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba is set to resign after the ruling coalition lost majorities in both houses of the National Diet (Japan’s bicameral legislature).
  • In News Bhupen Hazarika (TOI): 2025 marks the birth centenary of Bharat Ratna Bhupen Hazarika, who globalised Assam’s folk and Indian music traditions.

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