4) Semeru Volcano – Why Eruptions Differ
What happened
• Mount Semeru in Indonesia erupted, spewing large ash clouds and debris.
Issue raised
• Why some eruptions are gentle (Hawaiian type) while others are explosive (Semeru type).
Current context
• Magma composition determines explosivity:
– Runny magma lets gases escape → mild eruptions
– Thick magma traps gases → violent explosions and tephra blasts
Why it matters
• Helps understand volcanic hazards in the Ring of Fire region.
• Supports disaster preparedness in vulnerable Asian populations.
5) Expansion of Stone Quarries in Kerala
What happened
• After Kerala banned river-sand mining in 2016, stone quarrying increased sharply.
• New research shows quarry areas expanded by over 170 percent in one year.
Issue raised
• Quarrying now happens near ecological hotspots and protected areas.
• Concerns about biodiversity loss and river-basin instability.
Current context
• M-sand made from crushed rock became the dominant construction material after river sand ban.
• Demand for sand keeps rising with urbanisation.
Why it matters
• Quarry expansions threaten sensitive Western Ghats ecology.
• Highlights trade-off between development and environmental protection.
6) Pharmacogenomics – Tailored Prescriptions
What happened
• Article explains how genetic testing allows doctors to personalise medication based on individual metabolic differences.
Issue raised
• Standardised “one-dose-fits-all” prescribing causes adverse reactions, ineffective dosing and avoidable hospitalisations.
Current context
• Genetic variations affect how patients metabolise drugs like antidepressants, anti-clotting agents, and pain medicines.
• Some countries already integrate pharmacogenomics into routine care.
• India is beginning to explore adoption.
Why it matters
• Can reduce adverse drug reactions and improve treatment success.
• Represents the shift from population-based to precision-based medicine.
What happened
• Mount Semeru in Indonesia erupted, spewing large ash clouds and debris.
Issue raised
• Why some eruptions are gentle (Hawaiian type) while others are explosive (Semeru type).
Current context
• Magma composition determines explosivity:
– Runny magma lets gases escape → mild eruptions
– Thick magma traps gases → violent explosions and tephra blasts
Why it matters
• Helps understand volcanic hazards in the Ring of Fire region.
• Supports disaster preparedness in vulnerable Asian populations.
5) Expansion of Stone Quarries in Kerala
What happened
• After Kerala banned river-sand mining in 2016, stone quarrying increased sharply.
• New research shows quarry areas expanded by over 170 percent in one year.
Issue raised
• Quarrying now happens near ecological hotspots and protected areas.
• Concerns about biodiversity loss and river-basin instability.
Current context
• M-sand made from crushed rock became the dominant construction material after river sand ban.
• Demand for sand keeps rising with urbanisation.
Why it matters
• Quarry expansions threaten sensitive Western Ghats ecology.
• Highlights trade-off between development and environmental protection.
6) Pharmacogenomics – Tailored Prescriptions
What happened
• Article explains how genetic testing allows doctors to personalise medication based on individual metabolic differences.
Issue raised
• Standardised “one-dose-fits-all” prescribing causes adverse reactions, ineffective dosing and avoidable hospitalisations.
Current context
• Genetic variations affect how patients metabolise drugs like antidepressants, anti-clotting agents, and pain medicines.
• Some countries already integrate pharmacogenomics into routine care.
• India is beginning to explore adoption.
Why it matters
• Can reduce adverse drug reactions and improve treatment success.
• Represents the shift from population-based to precision-based medicine.
❤7👍2
Implications of implementation of 4 Labor Codes
• Legal social security for gig workers (Swiggy, Zomato, Uber)
• 1-2% of such platforms’ annual turnover to be contributed to Social Security Fund
• Benefits: health cover, accident insurance, disability cover, old age protection etc
• India is among first major economies to mandate social security for gig economy at national level
• 80mn people to benefit
Expect your Swiggy/Zomato orders to be 3-6% expensive
• Legal social security for gig workers (Swiggy, Zomato, Uber)
• 1-2% of such platforms’ annual turnover to be contributed to Social Security Fund
• Benefits: health cover, accident insurance, disability cover, old age protection etc
• India is among first major economies to mandate social security for gig economy at national level
• 80mn people to benefit
Expect your Swiggy/Zomato orders to be 3-6% expensive
❤12
@CSEWhy Times – Nov 22, 2025
1. Humboldt Penguin Decline
What happened
• Chile declared Humboldt penguins “endangered” as their numbers dropped below 20,000 from ~45,000 in the late 1990s.
Issue raised
• Sharp population decline due to fishing competition, habitat loss, climate change, pollution, and bird flu.
Current context
• Chilean scientists warn the species may soon move from “endangered” to “critically endangered” if threats persist.
Why it matters
• 80% of the world’s Humboldt penguins live along Chile’s Pacific coast; their disappearance would be a major ecological loss.
2. Guidelines on ‘Obscenity’ in Online Content
What happened
• Union government proposed amendments defining “obscene digital content” under IT Rules, 2021.
Issue raised
• Current laws lack clear definition, leading to inconsistent enforcement and multiple court stays on IT Rules.
Current context
• The amendment seeks to add a specific definition of obscene digital content and link it to existing laws—IT Act, Cable TV Act, and IPC.
Why it matters
• Would expand the scope of regulation over social media, OTT platforms, and curated content providers; may raise concerns on free speech and overregulation.
Indian Express🗞
1. Labour laws poisonous regulatory cholesterol, new codes clean up, usher in regime of trust
(read for basic awareness)
2. How India's agri exports posted massive growth
(read for GS3 Economy x Agri)
The Hindu 📰
None today
Subscribe to my free blog CA: blog.csewhy.com
Pre & Mains Notes
1. Humboldt Penguin Decline
What happened
• Chile declared Humboldt penguins “endangered” as their numbers dropped below 20,000 from ~45,000 in the late 1990s.
Issue raised
• Sharp population decline due to fishing competition, habitat loss, climate change, pollution, and bird flu.
Current context
• Chilean scientists warn the species may soon move from “endangered” to “critically endangered” if threats persist.
Why it matters
• 80% of the world’s Humboldt penguins live along Chile’s Pacific coast; their disappearance would be a major ecological loss.
2. Guidelines on ‘Obscenity’ in Online Content
What happened
• Union government proposed amendments defining “obscene digital content” under IT Rules, 2021.
Issue raised
• Current laws lack clear definition, leading to inconsistent enforcement and multiple court stays on IT Rules.
Current context
• The amendment seeks to add a specific definition of obscene digital content and link it to existing laws—IT Act, Cable TV Act, and IPC.
Why it matters
• Would expand the scope of regulation over social media, OTT platforms, and curated content providers; may raise concerns on free speech and overregulation.
@CSEWhy Newspaper Recos
Indian Express🗞
1. Labour laws poisonous regulatory cholesterol, new codes clean up, usher in regime of trust
(read for basic awareness)
2. How India's agri exports posted massive growth
(read for GS3 Economy x Agri)
The Hindu 📰
None today
Subscribe to my free blog CA: blog.csewhy.com
❤8
@CSEWhy Times – Nov 23, 2025
1. Cloudflare Outage
What happened
* Global outage at Cloudflare, a key internet infrastructure provider, briefly shut down many online services.
* The incident highlighted the web’s dependence on a single network provider.
Issue raised
* A failure in Cloudflare’s internal bot-management and traffic routing system disrupted global internet traffic.
* Shows how large parts of the internet rely on a “central choke point”.
Current context
* Cloudflare operates hundreds of data centres in 100+ countries, handling ~81 million HTTP requests per second.
* Used by 20%+ of all websites and 80%+ of high-traffic platforms.
* Indian firms like HDFC, Air India, Titan, etc., also rely on it.
Why it matters
* Outages can impact not just websites but financial services, CDNs, DNS, security systems and major apps.
* Creates systemic risk: when one provider fails, ripple effects spread across global online infrastructure.
* Highlights need for internet redundancy, diversified providers, and resilient backend systems.
Indian Express🗞 none today
The Hindu 📰
1. Entire FAQ Page, understand the basics
2. The guns fall silent (one of the best articles recently written)
Pre & Mains Notes
1. Cloudflare Outage
What happened
* Global outage at Cloudflare, a key internet infrastructure provider, briefly shut down many online services.
* The incident highlighted the web’s dependence on a single network provider.
Issue raised
* A failure in Cloudflare’s internal bot-management and traffic routing system disrupted global internet traffic.
* Shows how large parts of the internet rely on a “central choke point”.
Current context
* Cloudflare operates hundreds of data centres in 100+ countries, handling ~81 million HTTP requests per second.
* Used by 20%+ of all websites and 80%+ of high-traffic platforms.
* Indian firms like HDFC, Air India, Titan, etc., also rely on it.
Why it matters
* Outages can impact not just websites but financial services, CDNs, DNS, security systems and major apps.
* Creates systemic risk: when one provider fails, ripple effects spread across global online infrastructure.
* Highlights need for internet redundancy, diversified providers, and resilient backend systems.
@CSEWhy Newspaper Recos
Indian Express🗞 none today
The Hindu 📰
1. Entire FAQ Page, understand the basics
2. The guns fall silent (one of the best articles recently written)
❤9
@CSEWhy Times – Nov 24, 2025
see next text
Indian Express🗞
1. Entire explained page (Hasina, Labor Codes)
2. If you're health conscious, checkout YOUR HEALTH page
3. Idea Exchange page has an ex-officer interview, MUST READ for GS3 Internal Security
The Hindu 📰
1. Safe processing matters more than zesty flavours
(GS3: Food processing)
2. How can state PSCs be reformed?
(Article 312, GS2 related)
Pre & Mains Notes
see next text
@CSEWhy Newspaper Recos
Indian Express🗞
1. Entire explained page (Hasina, Labor Codes)
2. If you're health conscious, checkout YOUR HEALTH page
3. Idea Exchange page has an ex-officer interview, MUST READ for GS3 Internal Security
The Hindu 📰
1. Safe processing matters more than zesty flavours
(GS3: Food processing)
2. How can state PSCs be reformed?
(Article 312, GS2 related)
❤5
1) Moss Spores Survive Nine Months in Space
Key Points
* Moss spores survived 283 days outside the International Space Station and retained 80% viability upon return.
* Multiple spore wall layers enabled protection against radiation and space-induced stresses.
* Around 11% had already germinated after returning to the lab.
Why in News
* Findings published in *iScience* highlight moss resilience under extreme environments.
Relevance for Mains
* Insights into developing sustainable life-support systems for long-duration space missions.
* Potential applications in oxygen generation, humidity control, and soil formation in space habitats.
Prelims Pointers
* Moss is an early land plant found in damp and shady environments.
* Spore walls act as passive shielding against radiation.
* Study involved exposing 20,000 spores outside the ISS.
2) Tamil Nadu’s Record Paddy Harvest Turns Into a Storage Crisis
Key Points
* Tamil Nadu’s Kuruvaí season saw acreage rise to 6.09 lakh acres, 40% above normal.
* Nearly 8 lakh tonnes of paddy were procured by Feb 1, 2025; final 2024–25 estimates touched ~47 lakh tonnes.
* Bumper harvest coincided with the Northeast monsoon, causing delayed harvesting and crop bunching.
Why the System Buckled
* Heavy monsoon showers hit when paddy was still in the field or stacked in procurement centres.
* Farmers reported germination in stored paddy bags and inadequate evacuation from district procurement centres.
* Chronic infrastructure gaps: overloaded godowns, insufficient drying yards, and staff shortages.
Moisture Content Issue
* Fair Average Quality (FAQ) norms impose a 17% moisture cap.
* Farmers argue it is unrealistic in humid monsoon conditions.
* FAQ norms designed for North Indian kharif conditions, not delta-specific climatic realities.
Delta Conditions
* Experts recommend paddy varieties suited to delta flood patterns.
* Infexible FAQ norms penalise harvest under monsoon skies.
* Dependence on intermediaries and “proxy tenders” affects small farmers.
Prelims Pointers
* Kuruvaí: short-term paddy season in Tamil Nadu, dependent on Cauvery water.
* FAQ norms determine procurement eligibility.
* Thanjavur, Tiruvavur, Mayiladuthurai, Cuddalore major procurement districts.
3) Random Forest: Branching Possibilities
Key Points
* Random forest is a machine-learning method combining multiple decision trees for prediction.
* Each tree is trained on a different sample of the same dataset to reduce overfitting.
* For classification, the majority vote becomes the final output; for regression, it averages predictions.
Why in News
* *PNAS* study trained random forests to detect chemical fingerprints in fossils, helping identify ancient organic molecules.
Relevance for Mains
* Machine learning tools improving scientific inference in geology, palaeobiology, and natural process modelling.
* Reduces errors from overfitting common in single decision-tree models.
Prelims Pointers
* Decision tree: hierarchical model making decisions at nodes until a final leaf is reached.
* Ensemble learning reduces variance and increases generalisation.
* Study reported evidence of photosynthetic microbes from 2.5 billion years ago using random forest analysis.
Key Points
* Moss spores survived 283 days outside the International Space Station and retained 80% viability upon return.
* Multiple spore wall layers enabled protection against radiation and space-induced stresses.
* Around 11% had already germinated after returning to the lab.
Why in News
* Findings published in *iScience* highlight moss resilience under extreme environments.
Relevance for Mains
* Insights into developing sustainable life-support systems for long-duration space missions.
* Potential applications in oxygen generation, humidity control, and soil formation in space habitats.
Prelims Pointers
* Moss is an early land plant found in damp and shady environments.
* Spore walls act as passive shielding against radiation.
* Study involved exposing 20,000 spores outside the ISS.
2) Tamil Nadu’s Record Paddy Harvest Turns Into a Storage Crisis
Key Points
* Tamil Nadu’s Kuruvaí season saw acreage rise to 6.09 lakh acres, 40% above normal.
* Nearly 8 lakh tonnes of paddy were procured by Feb 1, 2025; final 2024–25 estimates touched ~47 lakh tonnes.
* Bumper harvest coincided with the Northeast monsoon, causing delayed harvesting and crop bunching.
Why the System Buckled
* Heavy monsoon showers hit when paddy was still in the field or stacked in procurement centres.
* Farmers reported germination in stored paddy bags and inadequate evacuation from district procurement centres.
* Chronic infrastructure gaps: overloaded godowns, insufficient drying yards, and staff shortages.
Moisture Content Issue
* Fair Average Quality (FAQ) norms impose a 17% moisture cap.
* Farmers argue it is unrealistic in humid monsoon conditions.
* FAQ norms designed for North Indian kharif conditions, not delta-specific climatic realities.
Delta Conditions
* Experts recommend paddy varieties suited to delta flood patterns.
* Infexible FAQ norms penalise harvest under monsoon skies.
* Dependence on intermediaries and “proxy tenders” affects small farmers.
Prelims Pointers
* Kuruvaí: short-term paddy season in Tamil Nadu, dependent on Cauvery water.
* FAQ norms determine procurement eligibility.
* Thanjavur, Tiruvavur, Mayiladuthurai, Cuddalore major procurement districts.
3) Random Forest: Branching Possibilities
Key Points
* Random forest is a machine-learning method combining multiple decision trees for prediction.
* Each tree is trained on a different sample of the same dataset to reduce overfitting.
* For classification, the majority vote becomes the final output; for regression, it averages predictions.
Why in News
* *PNAS* study trained random forests to detect chemical fingerprints in fossils, helping identify ancient organic molecules.
Relevance for Mains
* Machine learning tools improving scientific inference in geology, palaeobiology, and natural process modelling.
* Reduces errors from overfitting common in single decision-tree models.
Prelims Pointers
* Decision tree: hierarchical model making decisions at nodes until a final leaf is reached.
* Ensemble learning reduces variance and increases generalisation.
* Study reported evidence of photosynthetic microbes from 2.5 billion years ago using random forest analysis.
❤17👍1
funny how very few people are engaging with Daily CA Telegram message
It'll be funnier when I'd post details on how direct Qs from these telegram messages are seen in Pre26 (just like Pre24 & Pre25)
It'll be funnier when I'd post details on how direct Qs from these telegram messages are seen in Pre26 (just like Pre24 & Pre25)
❤32
1) Chandigarh Under Article 240: What It Means
Key Points
* Article 240 empowers the President to make regulations for Union Territories.
* Bringing Chandigarh under Article 240 would give the Centre sweeping powers over the UT.
* It would allow creation of an independent administrator (like a Lieutenant Governor).
Why in News
* Discussions revived on altering Chandigarh’s administrative structure and reducing Punjab–Haryana influence.
Mains Relevance
* Implications for federalism and Centre–State relations.
* Could dilute Punjab’s and Haryana’s control over service rules and applicable laws in Chandigarh.
Prelims Pointers
* UTs covered under Article 240: Andaman & Nicobar Islands, Lakshadweep, Daman & Diu, Dadra & Nagar Haveli (when their Legislature is dissolved).
* Chandigarh currently administered by the Governor of Punjab.
2) COP30 Brazil and the Concept of “Mutirão”
Key Points
* COP30 concluded in Belem, Brazil, emphasising “mutirão”—a Brazilian term for collective action.
* Aim: participatory climate governance involving governments, youth, Indigenous groups, civil society.
Why in News
* Brazil’s COP30 presidency showcased Indigenous-led mobilisation and Amazon-focused climate action.
Mains Relevance
* Highlights role of Indigenous communities in conservation and land management.
* Reflects shift towards inclusive, bottom-up climate governance.
Prelims Pointers
* “Mutirão”: concept rooted in Tupi-Guarani language.
* Belem’s location underscores global focus on rainforest preservation.
3) Persistent Infant Deaths in Melghat
Key Points
* Bombay High Court criticised State and Centre for neglect despite decades of interventions.
* 65 infants (0–6 months) died since June 2025; >220 children in Severe Acute Malnutrition category.
* Deaths linked to malnutrition, anaemia, pneumonia, poor healthcare access.
Why in News
* Court pulled up the government for “extremely casual” approach to tribal-region malnutrition.
Mains Relevance
* Governance failures in tribal health; weak primary healthcare, poor monitoring, infrastructure gaps.
* Maharashtra has 35% underweight and 35% stunted children (under 5).
Prelims Pointers
* Melghat: tribal-dominated region in Amravati.
* IMR: Melghat 16.5 vs Maharashtra 15 (SRS 2024-25).
4) How Passenger Internet Works on Aircraft
Key Points
* In-flight internet uses air-to-ground (ATG) networks or satellites.
* Aircraft acts as a Wi-Fi hub; antenna beams data to satellites or ground towers.
Why in News
* Rising demand for seamless air connectivity and associated regulatory/technical constraints.
Mains Relevance
* Spectrum constraints, aviation safety rules, and bandwidth sharing explain slow speeds.
* Geostationary satellites cause latency; low-earth-orbit satellites reduce delay.
Prelims Pointers
* ATG connects aircraft to cellular-like ground towers.
* Satellite internet relays via fuselage-mounted phased-array antennas.
Key Points
* Article 240 empowers the President to make regulations for Union Territories.
* Bringing Chandigarh under Article 240 would give the Centre sweeping powers over the UT.
* It would allow creation of an independent administrator (like a Lieutenant Governor).
Why in News
* Discussions revived on altering Chandigarh’s administrative structure and reducing Punjab–Haryana influence.
Mains Relevance
* Implications for federalism and Centre–State relations.
* Could dilute Punjab’s and Haryana’s control over service rules and applicable laws in Chandigarh.
Prelims Pointers
* UTs covered under Article 240: Andaman & Nicobar Islands, Lakshadweep, Daman & Diu, Dadra & Nagar Haveli (when their Legislature is dissolved).
* Chandigarh currently administered by the Governor of Punjab.
2) COP30 Brazil and the Concept of “Mutirão”
Key Points
* COP30 concluded in Belem, Brazil, emphasising “mutirão”—a Brazilian term for collective action.
* Aim: participatory climate governance involving governments, youth, Indigenous groups, civil society.
Why in News
* Brazil’s COP30 presidency showcased Indigenous-led mobilisation and Amazon-focused climate action.
Mains Relevance
* Highlights role of Indigenous communities in conservation and land management.
* Reflects shift towards inclusive, bottom-up climate governance.
Prelims Pointers
* “Mutirão”: concept rooted in Tupi-Guarani language.
* Belem’s location underscores global focus on rainforest preservation.
3) Persistent Infant Deaths in Melghat
Key Points
* Bombay High Court criticised State and Centre for neglect despite decades of interventions.
* 65 infants (0–6 months) died since June 2025; >220 children in Severe Acute Malnutrition category.
* Deaths linked to malnutrition, anaemia, pneumonia, poor healthcare access.
Why in News
* Court pulled up the government for “extremely casual” approach to tribal-region malnutrition.
Mains Relevance
* Governance failures in tribal health; weak primary healthcare, poor monitoring, infrastructure gaps.
* Maharashtra has 35% underweight and 35% stunted children (under 5).
Prelims Pointers
* Melghat: tribal-dominated region in Amravati.
* IMR: Melghat 16.5 vs Maharashtra 15 (SRS 2024-25).
4) How Passenger Internet Works on Aircraft
Key Points
* In-flight internet uses air-to-ground (ATG) networks or satellites.
* Aircraft acts as a Wi-Fi hub; antenna beams data to satellites or ground towers.
Why in News
* Rising demand for seamless air connectivity and associated regulatory/technical constraints.
Mains Relevance
* Spectrum constraints, aviation safety rules, and bandwidth sharing explain slow speeds.
* Geostationary satellites cause latency; low-earth-orbit satellites reduce delay.
Prelims Pointers
* ATG connects aircraft to cellular-like ground towers.
* Satellite internet relays via fuselage-mounted phased-array antennas.
❤14🥰1
@CSEWhy Times – Nov 26, 2025
see next text
Indian Express🗞
1. Trump's Ukraine plan is audacious, India has a stake
(GS2: IR, imp. since PM'd "not an era of war")
2. On the journey to Viksit Bharat, our ideal guide is the constitution
(GS2: Constitution)
3. Hayli Gubbi: Why volcanic ash is dangerous for aircraft?
(GS3: Disaster & Aviation)
The Hindu 📰
1. What does the draft Seeds Bill entail?
(GS2: Policy & GS3: Agri)
Pre & Mains Notes
see next text
@CSEWhy Newspaper Recos
Indian Express🗞
1. Trump's Ukraine plan is audacious, India has a stake
(GS2: IR, imp. since PM'd "not an era of war")
2. On the journey to Viksit Bharat, our ideal guide is the constitution
(GS2: Constitution)
3. Hayli Gubbi: Why volcanic ash is dangerous for aircraft?
(GS3: Disaster & Aviation)
The Hindu 📰
1. What does the draft Seeds Bill entail?
(GS2: Policy & GS3: Agri)
❤1👌1🏆1
1) Ethiopia Volcano Ash Reaches India
Key Points
* Volcanic ash from the Hayli Gubbi volcano in Ethiopia entered Indian airspace on Monday.
* Ash plume travelled at cruise-flight heights (10–14 km) due to strong upper-level air currents.
* Expected to clear by Tuesday evening as the plume moves towards China.
Why in News
* Rare eruption; significant long-distance transport of ash via westerly winds.
Mains Relevance
* Demonstrates impact of transboundary natural events on aviation and airspace management.
* Short-term hazard for aircraft engines and visibility; not a major health threat at high altitudes.
Prelims Pointers
* Volcanic plumes rise 15–40 km depending on particle size and gas content.
* IMD monitors volcanic ash movement in coordination with global alert centres.
2) How Pigeons Navigate Long Distances
Key Points
* Pigeons detect Earth’s magnetic field through tiny electrical currents in their inner ear.
* The vestibular nuclei (brainstem area) activate in response to magnetic fields.
* Study in *Science* used brain-activity mapping and single-cell sequencing.
Why in News
* New findings explain biological magnetoreception in birds.
Mains Relevance
* Understanding animal navigation enhances behavioural ecology and neuroscience studies.
* Could inform biomimetic navigation technologies.
Prelims Pointers
* Magnetoreception: ability to detect magnetic fields for orientation.
* Inner-ear loops in pigeons provide magnetic field data to the brain.
3) Assam Proposes Jail Term, Fines for Polygamy
Key Points
* Assam Prohibition of Polygamy Bill, 2025 proposes up to 7 years’ imprisonment and fines for entering or hiding a second marriage.
* Covers residents engaging in polygamy outside the state as well.
* Does not apply to Scheduled Tribes and Sixth Schedule areas.
Why in News
* Bill tabled in the State Assembly; part of government’s move to regulate personal law violations.
Mains Relevance
* Debate on personal laws, women’s protection, and state intervention in marriage practices.
* Highlights conflict between customary laws and state-level criminalisation.
Prelims Pointers
* Timeline: Public opinion (Aug 21), Cabinet approval (Nov 9), Bill tabled (Nov 25).
* Usual customary laws in some tribes of Assam permit multiple marriages.
4) TN Row Over Selection of DGP/HoPF
Key Points
* Tamil Nadu rejected a UPSC panel of three officers for DGP appointment, citing “unacceptable” names.
* State appointed an in-charge DGP instead of a regular DGP.
* UPSC had convened an Empanelment Committee on Sept 26, 2025.
Why in News
* Two contempt petitions filed alleging violation of Supreme Court guidelines.
Mains Relevance
* Centre–State friction in appointments of police chiefs; federal structure and administrative control.
* SC in *Prakash Singh vs Union of India (2006)* laid down procedures to depoliticise police appointments.
Prelims Pointers
* States must send proposals to UPSC 3 months before DGP vacancy.
* UPSC panel considers merit, seniority, and length of service.
Key Points
* Volcanic ash from the Hayli Gubbi volcano in Ethiopia entered Indian airspace on Monday.
* Ash plume travelled at cruise-flight heights (10–14 km) due to strong upper-level air currents.
* Expected to clear by Tuesday evening as the plume moves towards China.
Why in News
* Rare eruption; significant long-distance transport of ash via westerly winds.
Mains Relevance
* Demonstrates impact of transboundary natural events on aviation and airspace management.
* Short-term hazard for aircraft engines and visibility; not a major health threat at high altitudes.
Prelims Pointers
* Volcanic plumes rise 15–40 km depending on particle size and gas content.
* IMD monitors volcanic ash movement in coordination with global alert centres.
2) How Pigeons Navigate Long Distances
Key Points
* Pigeons detect Earth’s magnetic field through tiny electrical currents in their inner ear.
* The vestibular nuclei (brainstem area) activate in response to magnetic fields.
* Study in *Science* used brain-activity mapping and single-cell sequencing.
Why in News
* New findings explain biological magnetoreception in birds.
Mains Relevance
* Understanding animal navigation enhances behavioural ecology and neuroscience studies.
* Could inform biomimetic navigation technologies.
Prelims Pointers
* Magnetoreception: ability to detect magnetic fields for orientation.
* Inner-ear loops in pigeons provide magnetic field data to the brain.
3) Assam Proposes Jail Term, Fines for Polygamy
Key Points
* Assam Prohibition of Polygamy Bill, 2025 proposes up to 7 years’ imprisonment and fines for entering or hiding a second marriage.
* Covers residents engaging in polygamy outside the state as well.
* Does not apply to Scheduled Tribes and Sixth Schedule areas.
Why in News
* Bill tabled in the State Assembly; part of government’s move to regulate personal law violations.
Mains Relevance
* Debate on personal laws, women’s protection, and state intervention in marriage practices.
* Highlights conflict between customary laws and state-level criminalisation.
Prelims Pointers
* Timeline: Public opinion (Aug 21), Cabinet approval (Nov 9), Bill tabled (Nov 25).
* Usual customary laws in some tribes of Assam permit multiple marriages.
4) TN Row Over Selection of DGP/HoPF
Key Points
* Tamil Nadu rejected a UPSC panel of three officers for DGP appointment, citing “unacceptable” names.
* State appointed an in-charge DGP instead of a regular DGP.
* UPSC had convened an Empanelment Committee on Sept 26, 2025.
Why in News
* Two contempt petitions filed alleging violation of Supreme Court guidelines.
Mains Relevance
* Centre–State friction in appointments of police chiefs; federal structure and administrative control.
* SC in *Prakash Singh vs Union of India (2006)* laid down procedures to depoliticise police appointments.
Prelims Pointers
* States must send proposals to UPSC 3 months before DGP vacancy.
* UPSC panel considers merit, seniority, and length of service.
❤20🏆1
JK sharing @CSEWhy story on NE Pineapples is fun!
Did you read about Pineapple crop of NE from UPSC pov?
Learn here
Did you read about Pineapple crop of NE from UPSC pov?
❤12🔥3🥰1
@CSEWhy Times – Nov 28, 2025
1) NASA Rover Detects Electrical “Crackles” on Mars
Key Points
* NASA’s Perseverance rover detected mini-lightning discharges in Mars’ atmosphere.
* These are small static-like sparks, not high-voltage bolts like on Earth.
* Caused when dust storm particles rub and discharge.
Why in News
* Discovery reported in *Nature*, based on microphone data from Perseverance.
Mains Relevance
* Electrical sparks could influence chemical reactions, affect spacecraft electronics, and future human missions.
* Dust storms are major drivers of Martian weather and environmental hazards.
Prelims Pointers
* Mars’ cold, dry atmosphere allows electric charge build-up.
* Dust storms can rise 15–40 km; no visual lightning bolts detected yet.
2) INS Mahe Commissioned: Features & Strategic Role
Key Points
* INS Mahe is the first of the indigenous Mahe-class Anti-Submarine Warfare Shallow Water Craft (ASW-SWC).
* Built by Cochin Shipyard Ltd. with 80% indigenous content.
* Designed for underwater surveillance, search and rescue, and littoral operations.
Why in News
* Commissioned on November 27, strengthening India’s coastal defence.
Mains Relevance
* Fills Navy’s operational gap in detecting diesel-electric submarines near the coastline.
* Enhances India’s maritime security across 7,516 km coastline and major ports.
* Supports blue-water tasks and deters adversary’s undersea operations.
Prelims Pointers
* Specs: 78 m length, 11.36 m width, 25 knots speed, 1,800 nm range.
* Contracts for 16 vessels approved in 2013; Mahe-class built by CSL and GRSE.
3) Food Colouring Issue in India: Auramine O
Key Points
* States continue detecting illegal use of auramine O, a banned synthetic yellow dye.
* Industrial-grade dye enters the food chain due to low cost and availability.
* Linked to liver/kidney damage and potential carcinogenic effects.
Why in News
* Recent State inspections and FSSAI surveillance uncovered recurring adulteration.
Mains Relevance
* Demonstrates food safety governance weaknesses across States.
* Need for stronger lab capacity, rapid testing tools, enforcement, and vendor awareness.
Prelims Pointers
* Auramine O: synthetic dye used in leather, printing inks, paper, and microbiological staining.
* Banned under Indian food safety law; classified as “possibly carcinogenic” by IARC.
Indian Express🗞
1. GM Crops to Genome Editing: India's journey
(Very imp. topic)
2. Nellie Massacre: What's it & Assam govt. report
(read for awareness)
The Hindu 📰
1. Why India struggles to clear its air?
2. Why are Srinagar’s traditional livelihoods struggling to survive?
Pre & Mains Notes
1) NASA Rover Detects Electrical “Crackles” on Mars
Key Points
* NASA’s Perseverance rover detected mini-lightning discharges in Mars’ atmosphere.
* These are small static-like sparks, not high-voltage bolts like on Earth.
* Caused when dust storm particles rub and discharge.
Why in News
* Discovery reported in *Nature*, based on microphone data from Perseverance.
Mains Relevance
* Electrical sparks could influence chemical reactions, affect spacecraft electronics, and future human missions.
* Dust storms are major drivers of Martian weather and environmental hazards.
Prelims Pointers
* Mars’ cold, dry atmosphere allows electric charge build-up.
* Dust storms can rise 15–40 km; no visual lightning bolts detected yet.
2) INS Mahe Commissioned: Features & Strategic Role
Key Points
* INS Mahe is the first of the indigenous Mahe-class Anti-Submarine Warfare Shallow Water Craft (ASW-SWC).
* Built by Cochin Shipyard Ltd. with 80% indigenous content.
* Designed for underwater surveillance, search and rescue, and littoral operations.
Why in News
* Commissioned on November 27, strengthening India’s coastal defence.
Mains Relevance
* Fills Navy’s operational gap in detecting diesel-electric submarines near the coastline.
* Enhances India’s maritime security across 7,516 km coastline and major ports.
* Supports blue-water tasks and deters adversary’s undersea operations.
Prelims Pointers
* Specs: 78 m length, 11.36 m width, 25 knots speed, 1,800 nm range.
* Contracts for 16 vessels approved in 2013; Mahe-class built by CSL and GRSE.
3) Food Colouring Issue in India: Auramine O
Key Points
* States continue detecting illegal use of auramine O, a banned synthetic yellow dye.
* Industrial-grade dye enters the food chain due to low cost and availability.
* Linked to liver/kidney damage and potential carcinogenic effects.
Why in News
* Recent State inspections and FSSAI surveillance uncovered recurring adulteration.
Mains Relevance
* Demonstrates food safety governance weaknesses across States.
* Need for stronger lab capacity, rapid testing tools, enforcement, and vendor awareness.
Prelims Pointers
* Auramine O: synthetic dye used in leather, printing inks, paper, and microbiological staining.
* Banned under Indian food safety law; classified as “possibly carcinogenic” by IARC.
@CSEWhy Newspaper Recos
Indian Express🗞
1. GM Crops to Genome Editing: India's journey
(Very imp. topic)
2. Nellie Massacre: What's it & Assam govt. report
(read for awareness)
The Hindu 📰
1. Why India struggles to clear its air?
2. Why are Srinagar’s traditional livelihoods struggling to survive?
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1) Centre Mandates SIM Binding for Online Messaging Apps
Key Points
* DoT directed messaging platforms to bar users from accessing services if the SIM used for registration is not present in the device.
* Users must re-verify SIM–device binding every 90 days.
* Aimed at curbing anonymity, impersonation, cyber fraud, and misuse of over-the-top (OTT) communication services.
Why in News
* Part of the Telecom Cybersecurity Amendment Rules, 2024.
Mains Relevance
* Strengthens digital security, but raises concerns over user convenience, privacy, and friction for multi-device users.
* Increases traceability and accountability in communication platforms.
Prelims Pointers
* SIM binding: platform must disallow access if SIM is absent in device.
* Applies to major messaging apps such as WhatsApp, Telegram, Signal, iMessage, Snapchat, etc.
2) Tejas LCA: Safety Debate After Dubai Crash
Key Points
* A Tejas Mk1 crashed at Dubai Air Show on Nov 21, killing an IAF pilot.
* HAL and IAF reiterated Tejas’ strong safety record; only two crashes in 23 years.
* Tejas Mk1A features AESA radar, electronic warfare suite, aerial refuelling, and reduced radar signature.
Why in News
* Incident triggered debate over HAL’s capabilities and India’s indigenous defence manufacturing.
Mains Relevance
* Tejas is central to India’s fighter modernisation, replacing ageing MiG-21 fleet.
* Mk1A production lines scaling up; Mk2 expected around 2026.
* Indigenous LCA programme bolsters self-reliance and exports.
Prelims Pointers
* Tejas: delta-wing, digital fly-by-wire fighter; smallest and lightest in its class.
* First flight: 2001; first crash only in 2024.
3) The Durand Line: Renewed Tensions
Key Points
* Taliban accused Pakistan of air strikes inside Afghanistan near the Durand Line.
* The 2,600 km line, drawn in 1893 between British India and Afghanistan, is not recognised by Kabul.
* Historically shaped by Anglo-Afghan wars and colonial geopolitics.
Why in News
* Fresh hostilities in Paktika, Khost, and Kunar provinces.
Mains Relevance
* Boundary dispute fuels insurgency, cross-border militancy, and Pashtun territorial claims.
* Impacts regional security and India’s strategic interests.
Prelims Pointers
* 1893 Durand Agreement between Sir Mortimer Durand and Amir Abdur Rahman Khan.
* Treaty of Rawalpindi (1919) reaffirmed the line after the Third Anglo-Afghan War.
4) Why Govt is Reviving the Shipping Corporation of India (SCI)
Key Points
* Govt announced plans to buy over 200 merchant ships via joint ventures, reversing earlier privatisation direction.
* SCI had declined due to globalisation, liberalisation, and competition, especially after 1990s.
* Recent geopolitical shifts disrupted global shipping, making national shipping capacity strategic.
Why in News
* At India Maritime Week, Govt emphasised SCI’s role in supply-chain security and foreign trade resilience.
Mains Relevance
* National shipping capability reduces dependence on foreign carriers and freight volatility.
* Enhances India’s energy security, naval logistics, and global trade competitiveness.
Prelims Pointers
* SCI founded in 1961; operates crude carriers, container ships, gas carriers, product tankers.
* Post-pandemic freight spikes and delays highlighted vulnerability of relying on foreign fleets.\
Key Points
* DoT directed messaging platforms to bar users from accessing services if the SIM used for registration is not present in the device.
* Users must re-verify SIM–device binding every 90 days.
* Aimed at curbing anonymity, impersonation, cyber fraud, and misuse of over-the-top (OTT) communication services.
Why in News
* Part of the Telecom Cybersecurity Amendment Rules, 2024.
Mains Relevance
* Strengthens digital security, but raises concerns over user convenience, privacy, and friction for multi-device users.
* Increases traceability and accountability in communication platforms.
Prelims Pointers
* SIM binding: platform must disallow access if SIM is absent in device.
* Applies to major messaging apps such as WhatsApp, Telegram, Signal, iMessage, Snapchat, etc.
2) Tejas LCA: Safety Debate After Dubai Crash
Key Points
* A Tejas Mk1 crashed at Dubai Air Show on Nov 21, killing an IAF pilot.
* HAL and IAF reiterated Tejas’ strong safety record; only two crashes in 23 years.
* Tejas Mk1A features AESA radar, electronic warfare suite, aerial refuelling, and reduced radar signature.
Why in News
* Incident triggered debate over HAL’s capabilities and India’s indigenous defence manufacturing.
Mains Relevance
* Tejas is central to India’s fighter modernisation, replacing ageing MiG-21 fleet.
* Mk1A production lines scaling up; Mk2 expected around 2026.
* Indigenous LCA programme bolsters self-reliance and exports.
Prelims Pointers
* Tejas: delta-wing, digital fly-by-wire fighter; smallest and lightest in its class.
* First flight: 2001; first crash only in 2024.
3) The Durand Line: Renewed Tensions
Key Points
* Taliban accused Pakistan of air strikes inside Afghanistan near the Durand Line.
* The 2,600 km line, drawn in 1893 between British India and Afghanistan, is not recognised by Kabul.
* Historically shaped by Anglo-Afghan wars and colonial geopolitics.
Why in News
* Fresh hostilities in Paktika, Khost, and Kunar provinces.
Mains Relevance
* Boundary dispute fuels insurgency, cross-border militancy, and Pashtun territorial claims.
* Impacts regional security and India’s strategic interests.
Prelims Pointers
* 1893 Durand Agreement between Sir Mortimer Durand and Amir Abdur Rahman Khan.
* Treaty of Rawalpindi (1919) reaffirmed the line after the Third Anglo-Afghan War.
4) Why Govt is Reviving the Shipping Corporation of India (SCI)
Key Points
* Govt announced plans to buy over 200 merchant ships via joint ventures, reversing earlier privatisation direction.
* SCI had declined due to globalisation, liberalisation, and competition, especially after 1990s.
* Recent geopolitical shifts disrupted global shipping, making national shipping capacity strategic.
Why in News
* At India Maritime Week, Govt emphasised SCI’s role in supply-chain security and foreign trade resilience.
Mains Relevance
* National shipping capability reduces dependence on foreign carriers and freight volatility.
* Enhances India’s energy security, naval logistics, and global trade competitiveness.
Prelims Pointers
* SCI founded in 1961; operates crude carriers, container ships, gas carriers, product tankers.
* Post-pandemic freight spikes and delays highlighted vulnerability of relying on foreign fleets.\
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