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Daily UPSC Current Affairs and Latest Daily News on IAS Prelims Bits

G.S II - Governance

Digitalizing the SIR Process


Mains: GS II – Salient Features of the Representation of People’s Act

Why in News?

Recently, the Election Commission is facing criticism for its Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls as reliance on outdated data threatens voter inclusion and the integrity of upcoming elections.

What is the problem with SIR?

  • Entirely paper process – This is precisely the problem with the ongoing Special Intensive Revision (SIR), which relies on the legacy rolls of 2002 to 2004 which were created entirely on paper through manual, error-prone processes when India was entering its digital era.
  • Depending on outdated record – It is astonishing that the Election Commission of India (EC) still relies on these outdated records today.
  • This regression has erased decades of digital progress, forcing SIR 2.0 to operate on outdated methods and unreliable, unverifiable data.
  • An exercise meant to produce clean and updated voter rolls has instead pushed the country into a prolonged crisis lasting months.
  • Legacy of SIR – The past SIRs functioned mainly as routine summary revisions, focusing on deletions such as removing voters who had shifted, died, or become ineligible, and adding those who had moved or reached voting age.
  • It was executed casually, with little effort to update or correct records.
  • Therefore, the resulting rolls contain incomplete, ambiguous, and missing information, with standards varying across States and constituencies.
  • Common errors – These include entries showing only first and middle names without last names, missing EPIC or house numbers, and widespread spelling errors. 
    • For example, Agarwal/Agraval, Rakesh/Rakeash, Sangal/Sahgal, and Veer/Vir.
  • Anomalies – Random inspections of the rolls reveal alarming anomalies, such as entries implying polygamy.
    • For instance, some people after days of manually scanning hundreds of thousands of entries in Hindi, English, and Bengali, could not find their own record — despite having voted in every general election.
  • Difficulties in verification – Moreover, as the rolls exist only in paper form, a database of more than 600 million entries cannot undergo verification or consistency checks.
  • The EC’s search interface is essentially non-functional, typically returning “no details found” or “error” when queries are made.
  • The search page also includes a disclaimer that the rolls are published exactly as received from State Chief Electoral Officers (CEOs).
  • These incomplete, non-searchable legacy records form the foundation of today’s SIR —leaving countless genuine voters unable to find their names anywhere.
  • Underutilisation of resources – ECINet allows voters to search the current one-billion–record database using mobile numbers, EPIC numbers, names, dates of birth, addresses, and family relations.
  • Detection of errors – It detects duplicate or missing entries and supports services such as registration, deletion, corrections, Aadhaar linking, locating constituencies and polling booths, contacting BLOs, downloading EPIC cards, filing complaints, and tracking their status.
  • These functions are comprehensive and typically work flawlessly, enabling even online submission of Enumeration Forms (EFs) through Aadhaar-based verification.
  • Issues with the BLOs – Most function mainly as distributors and collectors of paper EFs.  
  • Lacking past polling records, many demand birth certificates and extra address proofs despite EC rules requiring none.
  • Many also lack data-entry skills, resulting in piles of undigitised EFs.
    • For instance, over half of Uttar Pradesh’s EFs remain undigitised as per an EC press release on November 27.
  • Paper EFs double the workload: forms are filled by hand and then digitised, and photo-pasting forces poor voters to pay for photographs while BLOs re-digitise them.
  • This digital-to-paper-to-digital loop is inefficient and error-prone.

How ECINet could help?

  • ECINet – It enables fast, error-free online EF submission with no digitisation, paper-photos, signatures, or documents.
  • Forms 6, 7, and 8 facilitate online insertion, deletion, correction, and Aadhaar linking — separate from BLOs.
  • Aadhaar verification makes the process smooth and reliable.
  • Accessibility and inclusion – For non-tech-savvy citizens, the EC could have deployed mobile digital kiosks with handheld devices and trained staff to help them file EFs online, thereby easing pressure on BLOs and eliminating the need for paper forms.

How to make the SIR fully digital?

  • Searchability through digitisation – Convert all State/UT rolls into a fully searchable digital format, using English as the standard for searchable data and metadata, with regional languages retained as non-searchable fields.
  • Data integration – Fuse old records with reliable datasets — Aadhaar, PAN/Income Tax, driving licence, and local body records — using robust APIs and consistency checks. Aadhaar must be strengthened as the anchor for identity verification.
  • Differentiate voter categories – Classify voters into three groups:
    •  Stable-address voters,
    •  Frequent movers, 
    • Those with immigration/nationality issues.
  • Submission of EFs online – Ensure EFs are submitted entirely online, supported by mobile digital kiosks operated by trained personnel.
  • India has an ample supply of tech-savvy workers who can assist efficiently, while electoral officials handle ground verification.
  • Digitise all steps – Complete document verification, uploads, and post-validation checks entirely online, with transparent workflows.
  • With these reforms, SIR 2026 can transition from its dependence on outdated paper records to a modern, trusted, technology-driven national exercise.

What lies ahead?

  • A fully digital system, as outlined above, would eliminate the long-standing flaws of legacy SIR and enable seamless integration of all processes through ECINet.
  • These reforms are straightforward, feasible, and implementable within the extended timelines of the ongoing SIR.
  • Most steps require minimal effort; only data integration may be deferred beyond SIR 2.0.
  • Once adopted, every component of the SIR will become simpler, faster, and more reliable, with grievances addressed in real time preventing panic, confusion, and unnecessary stress.
  • A digital SIR is not optional; it is indispensable — there is no alternative.
  • SIR 2026 must become a trust revolution powered by technology, transparency, verification, and integrity.

Reference

The Hindu| Digitalizing the SIR

 

 

Environment Pollution and Degradation

Bioremediation - Need of the Hour


Mains: GS III – Environment pollution and degradation

Why in News?

Recently, the Bioremediation process has gained attention and importance due to ever increasing pollutions in many waterbodies in India.

What is bioremediation?

  • Bioremediation – It literally means “restoring life through biology.”
  • It harnesses microorganisms such as bacteria, fungi, algae and plants to sequester or transform toxic substances such as oil, pesticides, plastics, or heavy metals.
  • These organisms metabolise these pollutants as food, breaking them down into harmless by-products such as water, carbon dioxide, or organic acids.
  • In some cases, they can convert toxic metals into less dangerous forms that no longer leach into the soil or groundwater.
  • Types – There are two broad types:
    • In situ bioremediation, where treatment happens directly at the contaminated site — think oil-eating bacteria sprayed on an ocean spill.
    • Ex situ bioremediation, where contaminated soil or water is removed, treated in a controlled facility, and returned once cleaned.
  • Modern bioremediation combines traditional microbiology with cutting-edge biotechnology.
  • First, new biotechnologies are enabling humans to gain unprecedented insight into biology, allowing them to identify biomolecules with useful characteristics.
  • Second, these technologies allow humans to replicate these biomolecules under desired conditions of use, such as sewage plants or agricultural lands.
    • For example, genetically modified (GM) microbes are designed to degrade tough chemicals like plastics or oil residues that natural species struggle with.
  • Biosensing – Synthetic biology also allows for “biosensing”, organisms that change colour or fluorescence when they detect toxins, providing early warnings of contamination.

Why does India need bioremediation?

  • Heavy industrialization in India – India’s rapid industrialisation has come at a heavy environmental cost.
  • Although pollution has been reducing, rivers such as the Ganga and Yamuna receive untreated sewage and industrial effluents daily.
  • Oil leaks, pesticide residues, and heavy-metal contamination threaten both ecosystems and public health.
  • Issues with traditional methods – Traditional clean-up technologies are expensive, energy-intensive, and often create secondary pollution.
  • Potential of Bioremediation – It offers a cheaper, scalable, and sustainable alternative, especially in a country where vast stretches of land and water are affected but resources for remediation are limited.
  • Advantage of India’s diverse biodiversity – Indigenous microbes adapted to local conditions, such as high temperatures, salinity, or acidity, can outperform imported strains in environmental recovery.

Bioremediation

Where does India stand today?

  • The Department of Biotechnology (DBT) – It has supported several projects through its Clean Technology Programme, encouraging partnerships between universities, public research institutions, and industries.
  • CSIR-National Environmental Engineering Research Institute – It has a mandate to propose and implement programmes related to bioremediation.
  • IITs – Researchers at the Indian Institute of Technology have experimented with a nanocomposite material synthesised from cotton that can be used to mop up oil spills and others have identified bacteria that can consume toxic pollutants in soils.
  • Startups – Firms like Biotech Consortium India Limited (BCIL) and Econirmal Biotech offer microbial formulations for soil and wastewater treatment.
  • Challenges – Widespread adoption faces several challenges
    • Technical ones such as a lack of site-specific knowledge and the complex nature of pollutants, and
    • Regulatory ones such as a lack of unified bioremediation standards.

What are other countries doing?

  • Japan – It integrates microbial and plant-based cleanup systems into its urban waste strategy.
  • The European Union – It funds cross-country projects that use microbes to tackle oil spills and restore mining sites.
  • China – It has made bioremediation a priority under its soil pollution control framework, using genetically improved bacteria to restore industrial wastelands.

What are the opportunities and risks?

  • Ecology restoration – Bioremediation can help restore rivers, reclaim land, and clean industrial sites, while creating jobs in biotechnology, environmental consulting, and waste management.
  • Integration of schemes – It can also integrate with the government’s Swachh Bharat Mission, Namami Gange, and other green technology initiatives.
  • Concerns with GMOs – The introduction of genetically modified organisms (GMOs) into open environments need to be strictly monitored to prevent unintended ecological effects.
  • Lack of monitoring – Inadequate testing or poor containment or monitoring can create fresh problems while solving old ones.

What needs to be done?

  • National standards – There is a need to develop national standards for bioremediation protocols and microbial applications.
  • India will need new biosafety guidelines, certification systems, and trained personnel to scale this technology responsibly.
  • Building regional bioremediation hubs – Linking universities, industries, and local governments would enable better understanding of local issues and identifying appropriate technologies for their resolution.
  • This can be implemented through support for local startups and community projects through the DBT–BIRAC ecosystem.
  • Public engagement – It would raise awareness that microbes can be allies, not threats, in environmental restoration

Reference

The Hindu| Bioremediation

Prelim Bits

Law Commission of India (LCI)


Prelims: Current events of national and international importance | Polity & Governance

Why in news?

The 23rd Law Commission (LC) says the simultaneous polls bill can become law with just Parliament’s approval, without needing states to ratify it by at least 50% of the state legislatures.

  • 1st Law Commission of independent India Established in - 1955 for a 3-year term under the chairmanship of M. C. Setalvad (former Attorney General for India).
  • Law Commission – It is a non-statutory advisory body, established by a notification from the Ministry of Law and Justice for a specific tenure to conduct legal research for reforms. 
  • Established in - 1834, under the Charter Act of 1833, with Lord Macaulay serving as its chairman.
  • Tenure – It is reconstituted for a fixed period, typically 3 years, with its terms of reference defined in the notification.
  • Composition – It includes a full-time chairperson, full-time members, ex-officio members (like the Secretary of the Department of Legal Affairs), and part-time members.
  • Function – The Law Commission functions as India’s legal think tank, combining research, consultation, and drafting to recommend reforms that strengthen the rule of law and modernize statutes.

Quick Fact

23rd Law Commission

  • Composition - Chairman, 4 full-time members (including the Member-Secretary), 2 ex-officio members (Secretaries of Legal Affairs and Legislative Departments), and up to 5 part-time members.
      • Chairman – Justice Dinesh Maheshwari (retd).
  • Opinion For holding simultaneous polls – It does not require ratification by at least 50% of the state legislatures – Because
    • The bill falls under Parliament's power to make laws which does not entail ratification by States.
    • Also, the proposed amendment does not disturb the basic structure of the Constitution in any way.
    • Any curtailment of the term of the House(s) by the proposed amendment does not violate the basic structure of the Constitution.
    • Indian federalism is not compartmentalized but designed as a “weaving together” of units with a strong Centre as pivot.

References

  1. The Hindu |LC to brief joint committee of Parliament on simultaneous polls
  2. Law Commission of India | Law Commission

Prelim Bits

International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance


Prelims: Current events of national and international relations | International Organization

Why in news?

Chief Election Commissioner Gyanesh Kumar assumed charge as Chairman of the Council of Member States of the International IDEA for 2026.

  • IIDEA – It is an intergovernmental organization that supports to strengthen democratic institutions and electoral processes worldwide.
  • Established in – 1995.
  • UN Observer - It has been granted UN observer status in 2003.
  • Mandate – It is explicitly tasked with supporting democracy globally, backed by diverse membership that reinforces legitimacy.
  • Membership – Began with 14 founding states in 1995; now has 35 Member States and 2 Observers (US, Japan) from all regions of the world.
    • India joined International IDEA in 1995 as a founding member.
  • Secretariat – Stockholm, Sweden.
  • Governance – Consists of a Council of Member States, a Steering Committee, a Finance and Audit Committee, a Board of Advisers and a Secretariat.
  • Chairmanship – Each December, Member States elect new Chairs and Vice Chairs, as the Council’s Chairmanship rotates annually by region.
  • Focus areas
    • Electoral Processes
    • Constitution-Building
    • Democracy Assessment
    • Political Participation & Representation
    • Climate Change & Democracy
    • Digitalization & Democracy
    • Gender equality, inclusion
    • Money in politics
  • Partnerships – Works with organizations such as UNDP, European Commission, African Union, Human Rights Watch, and universities like Gothenburg, etc.

International IDEA, 2026

  • Chairmanship - India
  • Vice Chairs - Mauritius & Mexico.
  • Theme, 2026 – Democracy for an inclusive, peaceful, resilient and sustainable world.
  • 2 key pillars – Reimagining democracy for the future & independent and professional election management bodies for sustainable democracy.
  • Key aspects of India's Chairship
    • Global Recognition - This chairship is a significant acknowledgment of India's reputation for conducting free, fair, and transparent elections on a massive scale.
    • Priorities - The focus will be on promoting democratic innovation, strengthening global partnerships, and advancing inclusive and resilient democratic systems worldwide.
    • Knowledge Sharing - India plans to share best practices and innovations in electoral administration with other Election Management Bodies (EMBs) globally.
    • Key Activities - Hosting EMB Leaders Summits, policy dialogues, joint research projects, and capacity-building initiatives through collaborations with the India International Institute of Democracy and Election Management (IIIDEM).

References

  1. The Hindu | Gyanesh Kumar appointed as head of IIDEA council
  2. International IDEA | IIDEA

Prelim Bits

National Commission for Minorities (NCM)


Prelims: Current events of national and international importance | Polity & Governance

Why in News?

Over a month after the Delhi High Court sought the Centre’s response on delayed appointments in the National Commission for Minorities, Union Ministry for Minority Affairs remained non-committal.

  • It is established to safeguard and protect the interests of the country's minority communities.
  • Established in –1978 under a Ministry of Home Affairs resolution.
  • Headquarters - New Delhi.
  • Purpose – To address feelings of inequality and discrimination among minorities despite constitutional safeguards.
  • Statutory Status – By enacting the National Commission for Minorities Act, 1992, the commission became a statutory body.
  • In 1988, its jurisdiction was narrowed; linguistic minorities excluded by resolution of Ministry of Welfare.
  • Constitutional Provisions – To safeguard the interests of minorities are mandated under
    • Preamble,
    • Fundamental Rights (Article 14, 15, 16, 25–30), 
    • DPSP (Article 38, 46),
    • Fundamental duties, and
    • Other articles - Article 347, 350A, 350B.
  • Notified Minority Communities –

National Commission for Minorities (NCM)

  • Composition – As per NCM Act, 1992, a total of 7 members - Chairperson, Vice-Chairperson, 5 Members were nominated by the Central Government.
    • All the members are drawn from diverse minority communities.
  • Tenure – Each member serves 3 years term.
  • Removal – The Chairperson and members are removed by  the Central Government if they -
    • Are adjudged insolvent, 
    • Take up paid employment outside their duties, 
    • Refuse or become incapable of acting, 
    • Are declared of unsound mind by a court, 
    • Abuse their office, or 
    • Are convicted of an offence involving moral turpitude.
  • Powers – It has quasi-judicial power and enjoys powers equivalent to a civil court under the Code of Civil Procedure.
  • Functions – It acts as an advisor, and researcher by evaluating progress, monitoring safeguards, addressing complaints, suggesting policies, and reporting to the government to protect minority rights.
  • Complaints handled – Common complaints includes police atrocities, service matters, minority educational institutions and encroachments on religious properties.

References

  1. The Hindu | Delay in appointments to NCM
  2. NCM | National Commission for Minorities

Prelim Bits

ICGS Vigraha


Prelims: Current events of national and international importance | Defense

Why in News?

As part of its overseas deployment to ASEAN countries, Indian Coast Guard Ship (ICGS) Vigraha is undertaking an operational visit to Jakarta, Indonesia, from December 02-05, 2025.

  • Vigraha – It is the Offshore Patrol Vessel (OPV) of Indian Coast Guard.
  • Builder – Indigenously by M/s Larsen & Toubro Ship Building Ltd.
  • Commissioned in – August 2021.
  • Length 98 meters.
  • Displacement – Approximately 2200 tons.
  • Propulsion – Two 9100 KW diesel engines, max speed 26 knots, endurance 5000 nm.
  • Armament – 40/60 Bofors gun, two 12.7 mm stabilized remote-control guns.
  • Capacity – Designed to carry One twin-engine helicopter, four high-speed boats, limited oil-spill response equipment.
  • Deployment – Based at Visakhapatnam, operating on the Eastern Seaboard.
  • Equipped with –
    • Integrated Bridge System (IBS), Integrated Platform Management System (IPMS), Automated Power Management System (APMS), firefighting system, and
    • Advanced Radars, Navigation and Communication Equipment, Sensor and Machinery capable of operating in tropical sea conditions.
  • Role – Primarily for Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) surveillance, maritime law enforcement, and search and rescue operations.
  • Impact – With Vigraha, the Coast Guard fleet reached 157 ships and 66 aircraft and reinforces India’s maritime security and EEZ surveillance.
  • Significance – It is the 7th and final OPV in a series, highlighting indigenous shipbuilding capabilities.

References

  1. PIB |  ICGS Vigraha undertakes operational visit to Indonesia
  2. PIB | ICGS 'Vigraha'

Prelim Bits

National Forensic Infrastructure Enhancement Scheme (NFIES)


Prelims: Current events of national and international importance | Schemes

Why in news?

The Union Cabinet chaired by Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi Recently approved the proposal for National Forensic Infrastructure Enhancement Scheme (NFIES) with a total financial outlay of Rs. 2254.43 crore.

  • Aim – To bolster forensic capabilities nationally through modern infrastructure and skilled manpower.
  • Nodal Ministry – It is a Central Sector Scheme under the Ministry of Home Affairs.
  • Approved in–2024.
  • Implementation – For a period from 2024–25 to 2028–29.
  • Objectives
    • Build a sound forensic laboratory infrastructure across India.
    • Prepare world-class trained forensic professionals.
    • Ensure timely and scientific forensic examination of evidence.
  • 3 components –
    • Establishment of new campuses of the National Forensic Sciences University (NFSU) across the country.
    • Setting up new Central Forensic Science Laboratories
    • Enhancing the existing infrastructure of NFSU's Delhi campus
  • Need for NFIES
    • Enactment of new criminal laws - mandates forensic investigation for offences with punishment of 7 years or more,
    • Significant increase in workload for forensic labs due to expanded legal requirements.
    • Current shortage of trained forensic manpower in Forensic Science Laboratories (FSLs).
    • High pendency of cases due to limited infrastructure.
  • Strategic Goal – To strengthen the criminal justice system by improving conviction rates and align with the Government’s target of achieving a conviction rate above 90%.

Measures taken so far

  • Infrastructure expansion – Establishment of 8 new Central Forensic Science Laboratories (CFSLs) approved in 2023–24,
    • Establishment of 9 additional National Forensic Sciences University (NFSU) campuses.
  • Manpower & Recruitment – Vacancy review undertaken by Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA).
  • Capacity Building –
    • Upgradation of the National Forensic Sciences University (NFSU) Delhi campus, NFSU established in 2020 to provide skilled manpower.
    • Conducts Forensic Aptitude and Calibre Test (FACT) annually to identify suitable candidates for FSLs.

References

  1. PIB | National Forensic Infrastructure Enhancement Scheme
  2. PIB | National Forensic Infrastructure Enhancement Scheme
  3. Ministry of Home Affairs | NFIES
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