The Hindu Analysis 06 October 2023
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- Norway's Jon Fosse wins Nobel for literature - Page No. 1,
GS 2
- Defusing the ticking time bomb called diabetes - Page No.
10, GS 2
- India looking to engage with the new Maldives govt. on all
issues, says
- MEA - Page No. 14, GS 2
India expanding censorship regime, creating uneven playing field: study -
Page No. 16 , GS 2
- Services PM signals September boost - Page No.18 . GS 3
Norway's Jon Fosse wins Nobel for literature - Page No. 1, GS 2
- Norway's Jon Fosse, 64, whose plays are among the most widely staged of any
contemporary playwright in the world, won the Nobel Prize in literature on
Thursday.
- The Swedish Academy said the writer was honoured " for his innovative plays and
prose which give voice to the unsayable".
- His latest book, Septology, a semi-autobiographical magnum opus - seven parts
spread across three volumes - runs to 1,250 pages without a single full stop.
The third volume was shortlisted for the 2022 International
Booker Prize.
Defusing the ticking time bomb called diabetes - Page No. 10, GS 2
- In June 2023, a study conducted by the Madras Diabetes Research Foundation in
collaboration with the Indian Council of Medical Research and the Union Health
Ministry revealed that 11.4% of India's population or 10.13
crore people are living with diabetes and 15.3% of the population or an
additional 13.6 crore people are pre-diabetic.
- According to the World Health Organization, a major reason for this is the
consumption of unhealthy ultra-processed foods and beverages, which are
aggressively marketed displacing traditional diets.
- Such food includes carbonated drinks, instant cereals, chips, fruit flavoured
drinks, instant noodles, cookies, ice cream, bakery products, energy bars,
sweetened yogurts, pizzas, processed meat products, and powdered
infant formulas.
- A 10% increase in the consumption of ultra-processed food a day is associated
with a 15% higher risk of type-2 diabetes among adults. When food is
ultra-processed. its structure is destroved and cosmetic additives,
colours and flavours are added.
- The food industry does not want any restrictions on marketing; they offer
partnerships as well as arguments of economic development as 'stakeholders'. The
food industry also participates in programmes such as 'Eat Right',
making false promises.
- The only way the government can safeguard people from the manipulative
strategies of the food industry is through a legal framework or even an
ordinance (Article 123 of the Constitution) with the objective of
reducing/halting
the consumption of ultra-processed foods.
- It could also include defining 'healthy food', a warning label on unhealthy
food, and restrictions on the promotion and marketing tactics of unhealthy food
and beverages. The people must be informed of the risk of consuming
such food. In this process, there is no reason to partner with the food industry
that is responsible for ill health.
India looking to engage with the new Maldives govt. on all issues,
says MEA - Page No. 14, GS 2
- India looks forward to engaging the new Maldives government on "all issues", the
Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) said on Thursday, responding to the Maldivian
President-elect Mohamed Muizzu's statement that Indian
military personnel would be asked to leave the islands.
- In November 2021, the Maldives National Defence Force told a Parliamentary
Committee that a total of 75 Indian military personnel were stationed in the
Maldives.
- In February 2021, the Maldivian opposition protested an MoU or draft agreement
on maritime security signed by External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar with the
Maldives Defence Minister, in order to constr Coast Guard
harbour base at the Uthuru Thila Falhu atoll. The construction was inaugurated
during a visit by Defence Minister I Singh in May this year, and this has been
the focus of the PPM's ' Out" protests.
India expanding censorship regime, creating uneven playing field: study - Page No.
16 , GS 2
- The environment for human rights online has deteriorated in 29 countries, with
only 20 countries registering net gains.
- The report, titled "Freedom on the Net 2023: The Repressive Power of Artificial
Intelligence", has raised a red flag on the increasing use of artificial
intelligence by governments for censorship and spread of disinformation.
- The report, the 13th edition of an annual study of human rights online, covers
developments between June 2022 and May 2023. It evaluates Internet freedom in 70
countries
- As per the report, the sharpest rise in digital repression was witnessed in
Iran, where authorities shut down Internet service, blocked WhatsApp and
Instagram, and increased surveillance in a bid to quell anti-government
protests. China, for the ninth straight year, was ranked as the world's worst
environment for Internet freedom, with Myanmar the world's second most
repressive for online freedom.
Services PM signals September boost - Page No.18 . GS 3
- In Focus: Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI)
- Purchasing Managers' Index (PI) is an economic indicator, which is derived after
monthly surveys of different companies.
- It measures activity at the purchasing or input stage.
- In this sense, it is very different from industrial production which is
indicative of actual production.
- E.g., the Index of Industrial Production (IIP) measures output.
- There are two types of PMI - Manufacturing PMI and Services PMI.
- The index shows trends in both the manufacturing and services sector.
- PMI does not capture informal sector activity.
- Institution responsible for releasing PM for India
- PMI data for India is released by S& Global - a global major in financial
information and analytics.
- Earlier PMI data is India was released by IHS Markit before its merger with S&P.
- The Manufacturing PMI measures the performance of India's manufact u Theater
sector and is derived after a survey of approx. 500 manufacturing companies.