Jiyo Parsi Scheme
Syllabus: GS1/ Society, GS2/ Social Justice
Context
- The Ministry of Minority Affairs (MoMA), organised a comprehensive Advocacy and Outreach Workshop in Mumbai to promote and amplify the Jiyo Parsi Scheme.
Parsi Community in India
- According to the 2011 Census of India, the Parsi population in the country was 57,264.
- This represented a significant decrease of approximately 22% from the 2001 census figure of 69,601.
About the scheme
- The Jiyo Parsi scheme was launched in 2013-14 with the objective to reverse the declining trend of Parsi population by adopting a scientific protocol and structured interventions, stabilize their population and to increase the population of Parsis in India.
- The scheme has three components:
- Medical Assistance: Provides financial aid for infertility treatments such as IVF, ICSI, surrogacy, and post-conception care.
- Advocacy: Provides for counselling of couples with fertility issues and publicity including workshops; and
- Health of the Community: Offers monthly financial support to Parsi couples with children as well as to dependent elderly members.
Source: PIB
Global Indices for Reforms and Growth (GIRG) Framework
Syllabus: GS2/ Governance, GS3/ Economy
Context
- The Government of India has undertaken the Global Indices for Reforms and Growth (GIRG) initiative to benchmark national performance against international indices and guide evidence-based policy reforms.
About
- The Global Indices for Reforms and Growth (GIRG) is an inter-ministerial mechanism for monitoring progress across 26 global indices published by 16 international agencies.
- These Indices are spanning four broad themes: economy, development, governance, and industry.
- Each index has been assigned to a specific nodal ministry, responsible for reviewing methodologies, engaging with publishing organisations and ensuring that India’s latest official data is used in the computations.
- The Development Monitoring and Evaluation Office (DMEO) at NITI Aayog will serve as the central coordinating body for this exercise.
Why Is GIRG Needed?
- India’s national indicators such as GDP, CPI, and IIP already follow internationally aligned methodologies and undergo base-year revisions to reflect economic changes.
- However, global ranking ecosystems often suffer from opaque methodologies, inconsistent data use, and lack of country-specific contextualisation. Hence the GIRG aims to,
- Ensure use of accurate and updated government data in global indices.
- Enhance India’s global competitiveness and credibility.
Source: PIB
U.P. reported maximum complaints over Jal Jeevan Mission projects
Syllabus:GS2/Governance
In News
- Uttar Pradesh reported the highest number of complaints and constituted about 84% of the total complaints received over financial irregularities and poor quality of work under the Jal Jeevan Mission.
About Jal Jeevan Mission (JJM)
- Launch Year: 2019
- Type: Centrally Sponsored Scheme
- Nodal Ministry: Department of Drinking Water & Sanitation (DDWS), Ministry of Jal Shakti
- Background: The National Rural Drinking Water Programme (NRDWP) was restructured and subsumed into JJM.
- Objective: Ensure Functional Household Tap Connection (FHTC) to every rural household with 55 litres per capita per day (lpcd) of potable water.
- Funding Pattern: 90:10 (Himalayan States (Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh) & North-Eastern States)
- 100% (Union Territories) & 50:50 (other states)
- Progress: Tap water access in rural India has expanded rapidly, rising from 3.23 crore households (16.7%) to an additional 12.48 crore households connected since then.
Source :TH
Domestic Systemically Important Banks (D-SIBs)
Syllabus: GS3/ Economy
In News
- RBI’s 2025 list confirms that State Bank of India, HDFC Bank, and ICICI Bank continue as Domestic Systemically Important Banks (D‑SIBs).
About D-SIBs
- D-SIBs are banks considered “too big to fail.”
- Their collapse can trigger system-wide financial instability, so they are placed under special regulation and higher supervision.
- Concept introduced globally after the 2008 Global Financial Crisis.
- Based on Basel-III guidelines, RBI released the D-SIB framework in 2014, it identifies banks based on: Size (Total exposures), interconnectedness, substitutability (difficulty of replacing services) & complexity.
- Banks are placed in different buckets (0 to 4) depending on systemic importance.
- Higher the bucket means higher additional Common Equity Tier 1 (CET-1) capital requirement.
Source: TH
DRDO Conducts High Speed Test of Indigenous Fighter Escape System
Syllabus: GS3/ Defence
Context
- Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) has successfully conducted a high-speed test of a fighter aircraft escape system, validating a critical safety capability for combat pilots.
About
- The rocket-sled trial achieved a precisely controlled velocity of 800 km/h at DRDO’s Rail Track Rocket Sled (RTRS) facility at the Terminal Ballistics Research Laboratory (TBRL) in Chandigarh.
- The test was conducted in collaboration with Aeronautical Development Agency (ADA) and Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL).
- The test validated three key elements of the emergency escape chain: canopy severance, ejection sequencing and complete aircrew recovery.
- This complex dynamic test places India in an elite club of nations with advanced in-house escape system testing capability.
- Dynamic ejection tests are more complex than static tests (e.g., Net Test, Zero-Zero Test) because they replicate real-flight conditions.
Source: PIB
Navy’s new category in Indian Maritime Doctrine 2025
Syllabus: GS3/Defence
In News
- The Indian Navy’s Maritime Doctrine 2025, released by Chief of Naval Staff Admiral Dinesh Tripathi.
Indian Maritime Doctrine
- It is the Navy’s apex guidance document, laying down the principles that govern its strategy, roles and employment across the full spectrum of conflict.
- It was First released in 2004, revised in 2009 and amended in 2015.
Features of 2025 edition
- It reflects major shifts in India’s maritime environment and strategic outlook over the past decade.
- It formally recognises “no-war, no-peace” as a distinct operational category for the first time, reflecting modern grey-zone maritime challenges like coercion and hybrid tactics.
- It prioritises jointmanship by aligning with tri-service joint doctrines towards ensuring interoperability across the armed forces.
Relevance
- The updated doctrine incorporates major shifts in India’s maritime environment since 2015 .
- It aligns with national visions such as Viksit Bharat 2047, Sagarmala, PM Gati Shakti, Maritime India Vision 2030, Maritime Amrit Kaal Vision 2047 and MAHASAGAR.
Source :IE
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