Newsletter 12 July
Important Picks of the Day
NATIONAL
Indian Navy's 6 new indigenous submarines won't have indigenous AIP for prolonged underwater stay (↓)
The Indian Navy would soon come out with the tender for over Rs 50,000 crore project to build 6 indigenous conventional submarines but they would not be fitted with the indigenous Air Independent Propulsion system (AIP) that is being developed by the DRDO.
UP launches population policy: Here's what it aims to achieve
The state is aiming for stability by 2050 and the government is trying to reduce the population growth rate to 2.1% (↓)
India closely monitoring the security situation in Afghanistan, says MEA after the evacuation of staff from Kandahar
After India evacuated staff posted in its consulate in Kandahar given the deteriorating security situation in Afghanistan, the MEA on Sun said safety and security of Indian personnel are paramount, adding that the consulate general has not been closed in the war-torn country. As many as 50 Indian diplomatic staff came back late Sat night on evacuation flights.
The Monsoon Session of Parliament will take place from July
19 to Aug 13. Will have 19 business days: Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla
Delta variant of ‘great concern’, aggressive vaccine drive needed in India, ICMR journal says
An article in the Indian Journal of Medical Research notes that vaccination and tracking are the two important strategies needed to combat the Delta variant.
Nibri reaches 95.7, indicates sharp recovery in economic activity
The latest Nomura India Business Resumption Index (Nibri) value suggests that economic activity has seen a V-shaped recovery with the removal of restrictions, which were put in place after the second wave of Covid-19 infections. The Nibri, has reached 95.7 in the week ending July 11, indicating a sharp recovery in economic activity; a value of 100 captures the pre-pandemic level.
Assam CM Himanta Biswa Sarma tables cow protection legislation in the assembly
Assam chief minister Himanta Biswa Sarma tabled legislation to protect cattle in the state on the first day of the budget session of the assembly that started on Monday.
An extended range version of Indo-Russian joint venture supersonic cruise missile BrahMos test-fired from a defense facility off Odisha coast. Developed by Brahmos Aerospace the missile can strike targets 450 km away
NEIGHBORHOOD
Nepal’s Supreme Court has ordered to appoint Sher Bahadur Deuba as PM within 28 hours (↓)
Nepal’s Supreme Court has ordered to appoint Sher Bahadur Deuba as Prime Minister within the next 28 hours. SC has said the dissolution of the House of Representatives by KP Oli is unconstitutional and has ordered appoint Nepali Congress President Sher Bahadur Deuba as the PM within 2 days.
China builds its own Area 51 in the outback as the arms race continues (↓)
In the depths of “outback” China, there are two secret test facilities likened to America’s mysterious Area 51.
At UNSC, India exempted Taliban leaders from the travel ban to stay relevant in the Afghan crisis
In late June, India, as head of the Taliban Sanctions committee at the UNSC, assented to a US request to exempt 14 Afghan Taliban leaders like Mullah Baradar and Sher Abbas Stanekzai for 3 more months is one step from a travel ban, thereby allowing them to join in “peace and reconciliation” discussions abroad in a complex web of initiatives, New Delhi is planning to keep itself relevant in the fast-evolving Afghanistan situation.
Afghan security forces have arrested a Pakistani national on charges of destroying the India-built Salma dam in Chishti Sharif district of Herat province yesterday, according to Afghan media reports. Pak spy agencies trying to destroy India built infrastructure projects in Afghanistan.
If Afghanistan descends into war, govt won't let fallout affect Pakistan: Fawad
Federal Information and Broadcasting Minister Fawad Chaudhry tweeted on Mon “[We] are monitoring the changing situation in Afghanistan. trying our best for a way forward in Afghanistan through a peaceful regime that is [formed] based on suggestions from all [stakeholders],” he added.
'Institutions' must follow Nawaz’s narrative if Pakistan has to progress: Maryam
PML-N Vice President Maryam Nawaz on Mon called upon “institutions” to follow the narrative of former prime minister Nawaz Sharif “if Pakistan has to progress”. Addressing a rally in Azad Jammu and Kashmir’s Leepa Valley as part of her party’s campaign for the upcoming AJK elections on July 25.
Indian Navy's 6 new indigenous submarines won't have indigenous AIP for prolonged underwater stay
- The Indian Navy would soon come out with the tender for over Rs 50,000 crore project to build 6 indigenous conventional submarines but they would not be fitted with the indigenous Air Independent Propulsion system (AIP) that is being developed by the DRDO.
- The AIP enhances the underwater endurance and stealth of conventional submarines who otherwise have to come on the surface to use oxygen to recharge their batteries.
- The Defence Acquisition Council headed by Rajnath Singh recently cleared around Rs 50,000 crore project alias P-75 India for the Indian Navy to move ahead with the construction of 6 new conventional diesel-electric submarines within the country.
- As per sources, the Indian Navy has asked the DRDO to prove the AIP on a platform before it is allowed to be put on the Scorpene-class submarines when they start coming for their scheduled refits, they said.
- It is learned that the Navy would allow the contenders for its project to use the currently operational AIP systems which would be available with foreign original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) only.
- The project is expected to take at least two years before the Navy can find out the winner for the program which would include Larsen and Toubro along with the Mazagon Dockyards Limited as the strategic partners and 5 foreign firms as the original equipment manufacturers who would partner with these 2 to offer their systems in the competition.
- The DRDO in March this year had stated that it has achieved an important milestone” in the development of the indigenous AIP system by proving its land-based prototype. Developed by the Naval Materials Research Laboratory (NMRL) of DRDO with the support of industry partners L&T and Thermax, the AIP system was operated in endurance mode for 14 days and maximum power mode for two days.
- The 270 KW fuel cell-based AIP system will begin to be fitted on the Scorpene submarines.
UP launches population policy: Here's what it aims to achieve
- On World Population Day, Uttar Pradesh chief minister Yogi Adityanath launched a population policy, which aims to incentivize couples who do not have more than two babies.
- Stating that population control is related to awareness among masses and poverty, Adityanath said every community has been taken care of in Population Policy 2021-2030.
- As per the state Health Minister, UP is aiming for stability by 2050 and the Govt is trying to reduce the population growth rate to 2.1%.
- Besides, UP, Assam is pushing for a similar move with its chief minister Himanta Biswa Sarma stating last week that population norms will be slowly implemented for Govt schemes. Here’s more on the population control measures being introduced by governments.
Two-child policy
- As reported a month back, Ex-Chief justice AN Mittal was assigned to formulate the new population bill. The UP law commission that has formulated a population control bill said the policy would be voluntary and nobody would be forced to follow any rule.
- However, if any person decides to on his or her own to not have more than two babies, they will be eligible for Govt schemes, while those who do not follow the policy will face restrictions in govt jobs, availing ration, and other benefits.
- Meanwhile, the BJP-led government in Assam may soon give effect to a 2017 resolution titled ‘Population and Women Empowerment Policy of Assam’ that proposed a bar on people with more than two children from getting government jobs and other benefits.
- There is already a rule in place in the north-eastern state wherein an individual with more than two children is not allowed to contest local body elections.
- Over the years, several other states like Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, and Maharashtra have introduced such measures to bring down the population, but the success has not been equally spreading. While states like Bihar and UP continue to register high population growth, others have been able to control the fertility rate.
Two terror suspects arrested in UP's Lucknow ANI
- Two terror suspects have been arrested by the Anti-Terror Squad (ATS) in Lucknow’s Kakori on Sun, informed police sources. A huge amount of explosive material was also recovered from them. They said that the ATS had received information that the arrested terror suspects were planning to carry out some major terror incidents in the state.
- According to sources, the detained persons were in touch with people across the border. According to police sources, a search operation was started by the ATS on the information of two suspects in Faridipur, Kakori.
- They were present at the Kakori’s Dubagga area. ATS commandos and bomb disposal squad are currently present at the spot, they said.
- Police sources said that a search operation is underway and the ATS is tracing their contact traces and motives. “They were in touch with people across the border, suspicious material found; ATS commandos present at the spot, search operation underway,” said sources.
China builds its own Area 51 in the outback as the arms race continues
- The government’s new defense spending indicates a military urgency not seen in decades.
- It’s big. It’s remote. It’s mysterious. It’s an enormous radioactive desert in “outback” China. And Beijing is building its equivalent to Area 51 there. Two of them.
- The arms race between East and West is once again heating up. Stealth is old news. As are cruise missiles and high-flying spy planes.
- The “black” projects of the 2020s are all about drones, artificial intelligence, and 6th-generation combat aircraft.
- The US has had its “Area 51” lost among the dunes of Nevada since the end of World War II. Though it never officially existed before 2013. It’s been called Dreamland. Watertown. The Nevada Training Range. Paradise Ranch. Groom Lake.
But, mostly, it’s known as Area 51: Aircraft such as the ultra-fast, ultra-high flying SR-71 Blackbird was born there. Secret breakthroughs such as the F117 Nighthawk stealth fighter were based there. Many other weird and wonderful design concepts were tested there.
Now China’s in the arms race business. So it’s building its own.
- It appears to have chosen a former nuclear test range in a dry corner of Xinjiang province as its secret testing facility. With the local Uighur population imprisoned or intimidated into submission, its remoteness makes it easy to spot strangers. And if its scorching heat and parched sands don’t discourage ‘accidental’ intrusions, the radioactivity probably will.
- But, in the era of commercial satellite surveillance, hiding what’s happening at its expanding airfields is proving to be problematic. (1)
Malan Air Base, Xinjiang: The Malan military air facility is close to Xinjiang’s Bostun Lake amid some of the region’s handful of Uighur and Mongol communities. It’s also on the northwestern edge of the Lop Nur nuclear test facility.
- Established with the help of the Soviet Union in 1959, some 45 nuclear tests were conducted in this desert wasteland before it ceased operations in 1996. Aircraft dropped atomic bombs. Experimental devices were exploded on towers. Missiles delivered warheads. And large-scale weapons were detonated underground.
- Satellite photos reveal this airbase to be at the heart of Beijing’s drone development program.
- The Warzone’s Tyler Rogoway analyzed fresh images from Planet Labs. He spotted an exotic line-up of People’s Liberation’s Army Air Force drone prototypes, with a manned J-16 Flanker fighter alongside them.
- It’s something Australia has been actively pursuing with its Loyal Wingman drone project. The large artificial-intelligence-controlled multi-role drones are intended to fly under the watchful eye of an F-35 Stealth Fighter, each helping the other reach and destroy its target.
- The US is working on a similar “Skyborg” project. Other nations, such as the UK and Russia, are also on the bandwagon.
- Beijing is believed to call its project “Intelligence Victory”.
Lop Nur Air Base, Xinjiang: Malan airbase isn’t the most mysterious feature of Lop Nur. About 200km southeast is an even more unusual facility.
It’s enormous. It’s in the middle of nowhere. It’s hardly been used. But it’s undergoing some heavy expansion work. The first signs of construction were noticed in 2016.
What it’s for remains largely unknown. It’s believed to have been the landing site of China’s first uncrewed spaceplane flight in September last year. But its landing and transfer to sheltered facilities went unobserved. And Beijing hasn’t released any footage of the winged craft, which probably serves a similar role to the secretive Boeing X-37B.
Hiding and Finding: China is developing its strategic stealth bomber, the H-20. Like the 1990s vintage B-2 Spirit and its B-21 Raider replacement, this large aircraft is intended to range far across the planet – delivering nuclear or conventional warheads without being observed.
It’s also developing new fighter aircraft for its rapidly expanding aircraft carrier fleet. And then there’s a probable replacement project for the J-20 stealth fighter.
This is before its enormous array of experimental drone designs are taken into consideration.
Keeping such projects secret has become incredibly difficult.
“An important component of security competition over the next decade will be the challenge of ‘hiding and finding,’ especially the struggle to identify the locations and activities of adversaries such as China and Russia,” a recent Center for Strategic & International Studies report states.
The world’s great powers have taken note.: The US has expanded the size of the hangars at its Area 51 testing facility to keep its projects out of sight. Putting them on the runway is restricted to the increasingly narrow windows between photographic satellites passing overhead.
But much more may be needed.: Such is the quantity and quality of commercial satellite imagery that a whole new realm of open-source intelligence (OSINT) has been harassing international powers. And new means of deception – or interference – are likely to appear soon.”
Nepal SC orders to appoint Sher Bahadur Deuba as PM within next 28 hours
Nepal’s Supreme Court on Mon reinstated the dissolved House of Representatives for a second time in nearly five months, delivering a major blow to Prime Minister K P Sharma Oli who is currently heading a minority Govt after losing a trust vote in the House.
- A five-member Constitutional Bench of the Supreme Court on Mon also ordered the appointment of Nepali Congress President Sher Bahadur Deuba as prime minister within two days.
- The bench led by Chief Justice Cholendra Shumsher Rana had concluded hearings in the case last week. The bench comprised four other senior-most justices — Dipak Kumar Karki, Mira Khadka, Ishwar Prasad Khatiwada, and Dr. Ananda Mohan Bhattarai — at the apex court.
- President Bidya Devi Bhandari had dissolved the 275-member lower house for the second time in five months on May 22 at the recommendation of Prime Minister Oli and announced snap elections on November 12 and November 19.
- Last week, the Election Commission had announced the schedule for mid-term elections despite the uncertainty over polls.
- As many as 30 petitions, including one by the opposition alliance led by the Nepali Congress, were filed against the dissolution of the House by the President.
- Nepal plunged into a political crisis on December 20 last year after President Bhandari dissolved the House and announced fresh elections on April 30 and May 10 at the recommendation of Prime Minister Oli, amidst a tussle for power within the ruling Nepal Communist Party (NCP).
- On Feb 23, the apex court reinstated the dissolved House of Representatives, in a setback to embattled Prime Minister Oli who was preparing for snap polls.
Sher Bahadur Deuba (born Sept 12, 1946) has served as the PM of Nepal on four occasions; first from 1995 to 1997, then from 2001 to 2002, again from 2004 to 2005, and from 2017 to 2018. He has been a Member of Parliament for Dadeldhura–1 since 1991. Deuba currently serves as the Leader of the Opposition since the 2017 general elections. He is also the current president of the Nepali Congress, having been elected to the position in 2016. Deuba was appointed PM in 1995 and led a coalition government with the Rastriya Prajatantra Party. His administration, which witnessed the beginning of the Maoist insurgency, fell in March 1997 and he was succeeded by Lokendra Bahadur Chand who led a minority coalition government.
His second stint as PM began shortly after the royal massacre and during the heights of the Maoist insurgency, and Deuba’s primary task was to hold negotiations with the rebels. After the Maoists pulled out of talks and attacked the army in Nov 2001, Deuba’s handling of the crisis came under fire. In early 2002, the central committee of the Nepali Congress instructed Deuba not to renew the state of emergency. In Oct 2002, when Deuba sought the postponement of the elections, King Gyanendra dismissed him for being incompetent.
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