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Daily Current Capsules - 12th March 2020

Prelims Factoids
Annual festival of St Antony's Shrine in Katchatheevu Island held

Relevance IN - Prelims ( about the annual festival + about Katchatheevu island)
What's the NEWS
  • The annual festival of St Antony's Shrine in Katchatheevu Island, Sri Lanka begins
Know! more about it
  • More than 3,000 devotees from India are being transported in country boats from today morning. In all, 75 boats as well as 22 country boats are being used to ferry the devotees.
  • The citizens of India are not required to possess an Indian passport or Sri Lankan visa for visiting Kachchatheevu, according to an agreement between the two governments.
  • The mass and car procession in connection with the festival are conducted by priests from both India and Sri Lanka.
  • St Antony is worshiped as the patron saint of sea farers. The shrine is the only structure on the island and was built in the early years of the last century.
Miscellaneous
Govt to make sanitary napkin disposal bags mandatory from January 2021
Relevance IN - Prelims ( about swachhta sevaks + about the decision taken by the environment ministry
What's the NEWS
  • Union Environment Minister said that Sanitary napkin makers will be asked to supply a biodegradable bag with each napkin from January 2021.
  • The possibility of getting infected because of handling used Sanitary Napkins thrown in the garbage was brought to notice by many of the women garbage collectors.
  • The Minister interacted with the members of the women garbage collectors organization who he said should be referred to as "swachhta sevaks".
  • Environment Ministry has taken the decision to ask Makers of Sanitary Napkins to provide biodegradable bags so that Napkins can be wrapped in these bags before being thrown in the garbage.
  • The Environment Minister announced that the sanitation and cleanliness norms for Corporations and municipalities will now be applied to villages with a population of more than three thousand.
Miscellaneous
USA and France dramatically increase major arms exports; Saudi Arabia is largest arms importer, says SIPRI

Relevance IN - Prelims ( about SPIRI and its report findings)
What's the NEWS
  • The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) has released the annual "Trends in international arms transfers 2019" report
  • The largest exporters of arms during the past five years were the United States, Russia, France, Germany and China.
  • The new data shows that the flow of arms to the Middle East has increased, with Saudi Arabia clearly being the world's largest importer.
  • India retained its position as the world's second largest arms importers during 2015-19, with Russia remaining the largest supplier even though its share of Indian weapons purchases declined from 72% to 56%
Know! about the findings of the report
  • The five largest arms importers during the five-year period were Saudi Arabia, India, Egypt, Australia and China, which together accounted for 36% of all arms imports.
  • The report listed India in the 23rd slot among the world's 25 largest arms exporters, with its main clients being Myanmar, Sri Lanka and Mauritius.
  • The report said India's arms imports from both Russia and the US fell during the five-year period, though the decline was more pronounced in the case of Russian arms deals. India accounted for 25% of total Russian arms exports.
  • Russia was the largest supplier to India in 2010-14 and 2015-19, but deliveries fell by 47 per cent and its share of total Indian arms imports went from 72 to 56 per cent
  • Arms imports from Israel and France increased, by 175% and 715% respectively, making them the second- and third-largest suppliers during 2015-19.
Know! about SIPRI
  • SPIRI is an independent international institute dedicated to research into conflict, armaments, arms control and disarmament.
  • Established in 1966, SIPRI provides data, analysis and recommendations, based on open sources, to policymakers, researchers, media and the interested public. Based in Stockholm, SIPRI is regularly ranked among the most respected think tanks worldwide.
Social Issues
Female Labour-force Participation in India Dropped from 34% in 2006 to 24.8% in 2020
Relevance IN - Prelims ( about the findings of the report) + Mains (GS II Social issues)
What's the NEWS
  • Female labour-force participation in India has declined from 34% in 2006 to 24.8% in 2020, according to a new study.
  • According to the United Nations Global Compact (UNGC) India study, India is the only country among the 153 surveyed countries where the economic gender gap is larger than the political gap.
Know! more about the report findings
  • The study found that raising women's participation in the labour force to the same level as men can boost India's GDP by 27%. The female labour-force participation in India has declined from 34% in 2006 to 24.8% in 2020
  • Globally, 38.7% of employed women are working in agriculture, forestry and fisheries, but only 13.8% of landholders are women
Know! the reasons and suggestive measures
  • Gender stereotypes and lack of infrastructure has traditionally sidelined women from core manufacturing functions.
  • Companies need to ensure policies and procedures are made to adapt to various life changes in their employees, including maternity, changing care needs, dual career couples and continuity
  • The public policy and corporate policies should incorporate various gender related barriers in India to ensure effective solutions
  • Developing separate women's projects within work programmes or women's components within existing activities in the work programmes.
Environment Conservation
Gaur back in Valmiki Reserve thanks to increase in grassland cover

Relevance IN - Prelims( about gaur + about Valmiki reserve)
What's the NEWS
  • Gaur (Bos Gaurus), the largest extant bovine in the world, have not only returned to Bihar's Valmiki Tiger Reserve (VTR), but are also breeding there due to an increase in grassland cover
Know! more about it ( VTR and Gaur)
  • A large numbers of gaur had been spotted in camera traps - a sign of improving biodiversity and a positive development for VTR
  • Gaur have been attracted to VTR due to the increase in grassland cover. Gaur are grassland specialists and their main food is grass
  • VTR was set up in the early 1990s. It is spread over 899 square kilometres in Bihar's West Champaran district, bordering Nepal's Chitwan National Park to its north and Uttar Pradesh to its west.
  • Gaur, which are native to south and southeast Asia, had shifted to Chitwan a few years back due to grassland destruction in VTR.
  • The species is listed as ‘vulnerable' on the International Union for Conservation of Nature's Red List of Threatened Species since 1986. They are heavily built, with body weight varying between 400 and 1,200 kilogram.
  • In the last one decade, VTR had increased its grassland cover to 15 per cent from four per cent and had created 22 water holes to provide easy sources of water for wild animals within the reserve area
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