Current Affairs for IAS Exams - 24 February 2017
:: National ::
BJP continued its dominaance on Maharashtra
The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) continued its political dominance in Maharashtra with resounding electoral victories in key municipalities and zilla parishads across the State.
It won eight of the 10 municipal elections that were held on February 21. The Shiv Sena, its erstwhile ally, won in Mumbai and Thane.
In the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC), it was a close call, with the Sena winning 84 out of the 227 seats and the BJP 82.
In Thane, the Sena won 67 of the 131 seats, while the BJP won only 23, fewer than the Sharad Pawar-led Nationalist Congress Party (NCP), which bagged 34 seats.
In eight other municipal zones, the BJP swept the elections, giving Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis a major image boost as well as an upper hand against the Sena, a party that is a part of the government.
In Pune, the BJP won 98 of the 162 seats, with the NCP coming a distant second with 40 seats and the Sena bagging a mere 10.
Kerala will soon have a sex offenders’ register
In a first in the country, Kerala will soon have a sex offenders’ register and a comprehensive victim relief fund.
Announcing this in the course of his customary policy address to the Assembly, Governor P. Sathasivam said the register, to be kept in the public domain, would contain all identification details of sex offenders.
Interim relief would be provided to the survivors of sex crimes, both children and adults, from the proposed relief fund.
Although some of the survivors of sex crimes do receive some amount of money, the relief due to them for the damages they suffer are delayed for want of a comprehensive victim relief fund, the Governor pointed out.
The State government would also set up all-women police stations at the taluk level and would make visit of a woman police officer to the panchayat on a pre-announced date and time mandatory.
The Nirbhaya cells functioning under the Social Justice Department would be modernised and upgraded to ensure minimum standards of care.
The government, he said, would also soon come out with a comprehensive law covering citizens charter, transparency, accountability and social audit, the core of which would be public service delivery.
Massive reforms would be initiated to put the State at the top in ‘ease of doing business’. Kerala would stick to the Five Year Plan mode with special component plan and tribal subplan components.
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:: International ::
UN Secretary-General raised the alarm about famine in Africa
In a world filled with excess food, 20 million people are on the brink of famine, including 1.4 million children at imminent risk of death.
In the face of such grim numbers, a stark question confronts the world’s most powerful: Why in 2017 can’t they avert such a catastrophe?
UN Secretary-General António Guterres raised the alarm about the risk of famine in northern Nigeria, Somalia and Yemen. And this week, the United Nations declared famine in a patch of South Sudan.
Famine is declared after three criteria are met: when one in five households in a certain area face extreme food shortages; more than 30% of the population is acutely malnourished; and at least two people for every 10,000 die each day.
Famine was last declared in Somalia in July 2011, after an estimated 260,000 people had died, mostly in a two-month period.
Mr. Guterres cited two reasons for the crisis. First, he said, there is not enough money; the UN needs $5.6 billion to address the needs. Barely 2% of that money is in hand.
Second, all four countries facing the threat of famine are reeling from conflict, and in many instances, the leaders of warring parties are blocking aid workers from delivering relief where it is most needed.
The situation in Somalia today is different from what it was in 2011. The government is functioning, although there are vast pockets where al-Shababthrives.
But Somalia has already had two consecutive years of drought. In South Sudan, 100,000 people are affected by famine in a part of the country that is most troubled by the civil war.
In northern Nigeria, where the military is battling Boko Haram, there was probably a famine in two towns, called Bama and Banki, according to an early warning system funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development.
The biggest crisis is in Yemen, where a coalition led by Saudi Arabia and backed by the U.S. is battling Houthi rebels.
More than seven million people need urgent food aid, according to the UN . Among them, 462,000 children face “severe acute malnutrition,” which means that even if they survive, they will probably have developmental disabilities.