Category Archives: Uncategorized

ITBP to establish 10 all-women border outposts along India-China LAC

The ITBP, with a manpower of more than one lakh personnel, has its border posts ranging between the height of 9,000 feet and over 14,000 feet, affected by inclement weather and low levels of oxygen.

The Indo-Tibetan Border Police force, which guards the 3,488 km-long India-China LAC, is establishing 10 all-women border posts along this arduous and icy frontier, the director general of the paramilitary said.

The force, as part of its ambitious “forwardisation” plan, initiated post the 2020 military clash in Ladakh, has also moved its 215 border posts forward along the front on India’s north and eastern flank so far.

Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP) DG Praveen Kumar said this during the 64th Raising Day parade of the force held in Jammu on Saturday (November 22, 2025).

“We have worked on the forwardisation plan and, as a result, the number of forward-deployed BOPs (border outposts) is now 215 as compared to 180.

“The establishment of seven new battalions and a sector headquarters has not only strengthened this plan (forwardisation) but has also enhanced our reach and supervision of the forward areas…,” the DG said.

The Centre had sanctioned seven more battalions and a sector office comprising about 9,400 personnel for the ITBP in 2023.

The DG said the force will establish 41 more such forward bases along the India-China Line of Actual Control (LAC) in the near future in order to “strengthen security and coordination”.

As part of enhancing the role of women combatants, the ITBP is in the process of establishing two all-women BOPs in Ladakh’s Lukung and Thangi in Himachal Pradesh.

Eight more all-women BOPs will be made operational on this front, the DG said.

The ITBP chief said the training institutions of the force have been “reorganised” and five new skilling modules have been launched for the troops, including on subjects like mountain warfare and tactical survival.

The ITBP, with a manpower of more than one lakh personnel, has its border posts ranging between the height of 9,000 feet and over 14,000 feet, affected by inclement weather and low levels of oxygen.

The force, raised in 1962, functions under the command of the Union Home Ministry.

source/content: thehindu.com (headline edited)

New ships: Navy to break own records

At present, the duration of warship construction has been reduced to 31 months as opposed to 55-60 months in the past.

On May 10, the Indian Navy was told to stand down, 200 nautical miles short of Karachi, after India and Pakistan ceased hostilities. It is believed that in a review meeting soon after, Prime Minister Narendra Modi told the Navy that its time would come.

On Diwali, Modi spent more than 17 hours on Indian aircraft carrier INS Vikrant watching night-fighter operations and live firing off the coast of Goa. But there’s more to New Delhi’s renewed focus on its Navy than statements of intent.India’s focus on enhancing its maritime military capabilities and power projection in the Indo-Pacific, has meant that the Indian Navy has set a record by launching no less than 12 (11 warships, one submarine) since December 2024.

Today, the duration of warship construction (from keel laying to commissioning) has been reduced to 31 months as opposed to 55-60 months in the past. Guided missile destroyer INS Surat, commissioned by PM Modi, on January 15, was constructed in a mere 31 months. If 12 surface and sub-surface combatants is a record — it is — it won’t last long with the Indian Navy planning to add 17 ships in 2026. This includes guided missile frigates, next generation off-shore patrol vessels, multi-purpose vessels, and anti-submarine warfare vessels .

The Indian Navy is now commissioning one ship in 40 days but the numbers pale in comparison to the US, which does one ship in 18 days, and China, which does one in a week’s time.Besides building warships, the Indian Navy is acquiring submarine deterrence with Project 75 I (air-independent propulsion or AIP) submarine set to sign this financial year. Price negotiations are currently underway and the government has set aside some ₹42,968 crore for acquisition of six submarines to be constructed at Mazagon Dockyards Limited with AIP being provided by German firm ThyssenKrupp Maritime Systems under a joint venture.China commissioned its state of the art 80,000 ton Fujian aircraft carrier on November 5, and India is concerned about Beijing helping Islamabad build its Navy with new frigates and submarines.

As of now Pakistan has 53 combatants in its Navy with five submarines (Agosta 90B and Agosta 70), four Zulfiquar and four Tughril class frigates. Four Yuan (Hangor) class submarines are being built in Wuhan for delivery to Pakistan in December 2025 and January 2026. Four more Hangor classes will be constructed in Karachi and delivered end-December 2026 onwards. And Pakistan will get delivery of its Jinnah class frigates in June 2030.Apart from monitoring the Pakistan Navy, India is noting maritime developments in the Indo-Pacific with the Chinese PLAN expanding its area of influence all the way up to Gulf of Aden.

On November 12-14, Indian Navy Chief Admiral Tripathi visited INDO-PACOM headquarters in Hawaii and met the US Indo-Pacific fleet commander Admiral Samuel J Paparo. The two navies have decided to increase the complexity of bilateral exercises, training and port visits keeping the Indo-Pacific in mind. With Indian Navy set to acquire a nuclear attack submarine from Russia in 2028 and 26 Rafale-Marine jets a year later, India’s power projection on high seas is set to increase manifolds this decade.

source/content: hindustantimes.com (headline edited)

L&T to produce armoured vehicle BvS10 Sindhu for Indian Army at Hazira facility

The contract also includes a comprehensive integrated logistics support package for initial deployment, maintenance, and life-cycle sustainment, L&T said in a filing to BSE.

Infrastructure major Larsen & Toubro Ltd. (L&T) and BAE Systems have bagged a contract from the Indian Army for supply of BvS10 Sindhu – a specialised all-terrain armoured vehicle, according to a regulatory filing.

Under the contract, L&T will indigenously produce the BvS10 Sindhu at its Armoured Systems Complex in Hazira with technical and design support from BAE Systems Hägglunds, the original manufacturer of the BvS10 platform.

The contract also includes a comprehensive integrated logistics support package for initial deployment, maintenance, and life-cycle sustainment, L&T said in a filing to BSE.

The BvS10 Sindhu is an upgraded variant of the proven BvS10 all-terrain vehicle with adaptations tailored specifically for high altitude, desert, marshland, and amphibious environments, the filing said.

source/content: thehindu.com (headline edited)

Now, desi gene editing technology to aid cheaper, commercial GE crop breeding

The new GE technology — for which the Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR) has recently been granted a patent — deploys the so-called TnpB or Transposon-associated proteins.

In a boost to indigenous efforts at genome-edited (GE) crop breeding, Indian scientists have developed what is claimed to be a “miniature alternative” to the proprietary CRISPR-Cas proteins-based technology to precisely cut and tweak the DNA of plants.

The new GE technology — for which the Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR) has recently been granted a patent — deploys the so-called TnpB or Transposon-associated proteins. These, just like the most widely used CRISPR-associated Cas9 and Cas12a proteins, act as “molecular scissors” to cleave the DNA of a gene at a predetermined target site and change its sequence. Such editing is aimed at bringing forth desirable alterations in that gene’s expression and function.

“What we have developed is a new GE system based on TnpB, instead of Cas proteins. It offers an alternative, yet highly effective next-generation tool for genome editing in plants,” said Kutubuddin Ali Molla, senior scientist at ICAR’s Central Rice Research Institute (CRRI) in Cuttack, Odisha and lead inventor of the technology.

The CRISPR-Cas technologies are controlled mainly by the Broad Institute (a partnership between the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University) and the US seeds-cum-crop protection chemicals giant Corteva Agriscience. While Broad Institute owns the patents for CRISPR-Cas12a, Corteva has a joint licencing agreement with the former to offer access to CRISPR-Cas9 technology for agricultural applications.

While scientists have developed rice varieties using CRISPR-Cas technology, they face a major hindrance in commercial cultivation since the intellectual property (IP) rights are with global companies/institutions that may demand license fees. Here’s where indigenous genome-edited crop breeding tools will help.

The advantage with the TnpB proteins used by Dr Molla’s team is their compactness: They are much smaller, having 400-500 amino acids per molecule, compared with 1,000-1,400 for Cas9 and about 1,300 for Cas12a.

source/content: indianexpress.com (headline edited)

IIT Delhi secures top spot as India’s best university in QS sustainability rankings 2026

IIT Delhi retained top position as India’s best sustainable university in QS rankings for the second conecutive year, followed by IIT Bombay and IIT Kharagpur.

The Indian Institute of Technology Delhi (IIT-D) has once again achieved the top spot as India’s best performing institution for the second straight year, according to Quacquarelli Symonds (QS) university sustainability rankings 2026.

Securing a rank of 205, IIT-D was placed at the spot of the most sustainable university of India this year, with an impressive score of 83.1. It was followed by Indian Institute of Technology Bombay (IIT-B), ranked at 235 and Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur (IIT-KGP), ranked at 236, according to the report released on Tuesday.

Making in to the top 100 global institutions for employability and outcomes, IIT Delhi bagged the 93rd rank followed by IIT Kharagpur which ranked 96th. IIT Bombay was ranked 100th under the environmental impact category.

With 26 new entries this year, India is one of only four higher education systems that have more than 100 universities feature in the rankings.

“Of the 103 universities from India, 32 improve their ranking this year, 15 retain the same rank as last year and 30 drop. Indian Institute of Technology Delhi is once again India’s best performing institution, this year appearing at 205th,” London-based QS said in a statement.

Among the 15 IITs that feature in the ranking this year, six have improved their ranking in 2026 compared to that of 2025. “IIT Delhi is one of six IITs that has made significant progress since the inaugural ranking three years ago,” it added.

Other Indian universities that made it to the list

IIT Madras, IIT Kanpur, IIT Roorkee, Vellore Institute of Technology, Indian institute of science (IISc) Bangalore, Manipal Academy of Higher Education, IIT BHU Varanasi, and IIT (Indian School of Mines), Dhanbad were the other universities to make it to the top 700.

“Overall, Indian universities excel in knowledge exchange and environmental sustainability. The higher education system also boasts some outstanding individual performances, especially among the IITs and institutions such as the university of Delhi. The role of higher education in the fight against climate change is highlighted in these rankings. India’s role in sustainable development can neither be understated,” said Jessica Turner, CEO of QS.

source/content: hindustantimes.com (headline edited)

Navy to commission ‘Mahe’, first of new ASW craft, marking milestone in indigenous shipbuilding

The first of the eight Anti-submarine warfare shallow water craft (ASW SWC) being built by the Cochin Shipyard Limited (CSL) is named after Mahe, the historic port town in Puducherry, and symbolises India’s rich maritime heritage.

Anti-submarine warfare shallow-water craft Mahe, armed with torpedoes, multi-functional anti-submarine rockets and advanced radars and sonars, will be commissioned into the Indian Navy on November 24, officials said on Sunday.

The first of eight ASW-SWC vessels built by Cochin Shipyard Limited and named after the historic port town in Puducherry, Mahe reflects what the Navy calls India’s maritime heritage.

Anti-submarine warfare shallow-water craft Mahe, armed with torpedoes, multi-functional anti-submarine rockets and advanced radars and sonars, will be commissioned into the Indian Navy on November 24, officials said on Sunday.

The first of eight ASW-SWC vessels built by Cochin Shipyard Limited and named after the historic port town in Puducherry, Mahe reflects what the Navy calls India’s maritime heritage.

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“With her blend of firepower, stealth and mobility, the ship is designed to hunt submarines, conduct coastal patrols, and secure India’s vital maritime approaches,” a Navy spokesperson said.

Delivered to the Navy on October 23, the vessel marks another milestone in indigenous shipbuilding under Aatmanirbhar Bharat, with the service describing the compact platform as agile, precise and built for endurance.

With more than 80 per cent indigenous content, the Mahe-class showcases India’s growing mastery in warship design, construction and integration, it said.

Named after the historic coastal town on the Malabar Coast, the ship’s crest features an ‘Urumi’, the flexible sword of ‘Kalarippayattu’, a martial art from Kerala, symbolising agility, precision, and lethal grace, the Navy said.

“The commissioning of ‘Mahe’ will mark the arrival of a new generation of indigenous shallow-water combatants — sleek, swift, and resolutely Indian,” it said.

source/content: telegraphindia.com (headline edited)

New gecko in Eastern Ghats: Species named after Lord Vishnu and Venkatadri Hills

It has been named Hemiphyllodactylus venkatadri after the Venkatadri Hills in Tirumala

Scientists at the Zoological Survey of India have identified a new species of slender gecko in the Eastern Ghats.

The species, classified under the genus Hemiphyllodactylus, was recorded in the Tirumala Hill ranges of the Seshachalam Biosphere Reserve in Andhra Pradesh. It has been named Hemiphyllodactylus venkatadri after the Venkatadri Hills in Tirumala.

The name draws on the Sanskrit words “Venkata,” associated with Lord Vishnu, and “Adri,” meaning mountain.

The findings appear in the 2025 volume of Herpetozoa. The work was carried out by scientists from the Freshwater Biology Regional Centre in Hyderabad, the Reptilia Section in Kolkata, and Fakir Mohan University in Odisha.

Molecular analysis shows that the new species differs from related geckos found in peninsular India.

The researchers documented several morphological traits that separate the gecko from its close relatives.

These include 12 to 16 chin scales; 6 to 8 precloacal pores and 5 to 7 femoral pores with poreless scales between them; and a lamellar pattern of 2-2-2-2 on all limbs.

The animal was found under tree bark in a sandalwood plantation within tropical dry deciduous forest at an elevation of about 881 meters.

This is the second member of the genus reported from Andhra Pradesh. The first, H. arakuensis, was identified earlier from a different part of the state.

The new discovery, researchers say, points to the need for further field studies in the Eastern Ghats.

Dr. Dhriti Banerjee, director of the Zoological Survey of India, said the find highlights how much of the region’s diversity remains undocumented. “Discoveries like the Venkatadri Slender Gecko strongly reiterate the need for continued systematic exploration and molecular research in the Eastern Ghats,” she said. “This region remains one of India’s most underexplored biogeographic areas, yet it continues to yield a rich and growing list of new reptile species.”

source/content: telegraphindia.com (headline edited)

Mumbai-led team helps reveal mysterious twin rings around galaxy

Most members of the RAD@home initiative, launched in 2013 by Ananda Hota, are not professional astronomers, yet after a little training, they help spot unusual astronomical phenomena.

Imagine you’re playing football on a large, grassy ground. The game ends and you take a break, and that’s when you notice a coin you’d had in your pocket fell out somewhere. If you set out trying to find it by yourself, you’ll take a long time and you probably won’t even succeed. But if you recruit all your friends for the task and split up to different parts of the field, you’ll find it soon enough.

This is an analogy that University of Mumbai professor Ananda Hota gives to his Facebook group when they’re scanning the sky together to find rare celestial objects.

Dr. Hota and his collaborators have been running the RAD@home group since 2013. Today it boasts of around 4,700 members. Most of them are not professional astronomers yet they essay important roles in making real astronomical discoveries.

For instance, on October 2, the group reported a highly unusual object first identified only in 2019 — an odd radio circle (ORC) — using data from the LOFAR telescope network in Europe. ORCs are very large but very faint circular radio sources typically surrounding a distant galaxy. Prevailing theories suggest ORCs are the remnants of supermassive black hole mergers or enormous galactic shockwaves, and are among the least understood objects in deep space.

Beyond this headline discovery, the team regularly unearths significant information on new galaxies and transient astronomical phenomena. RAD@home thus showcases the power of research driven with the help of citizen science, plus the able assistance of one of the world’s most powerful radio telescopes, the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope (GMRT) near Pune.

Coming full circle

Depending on their shape and structure, galaxies come in one of four main types: spiral, elliptical, irregular, and lenticular. Spiral galaxies like the Milky Way, with their characteristic winding arms, contain many hot, young, bluer stars — while elliptical galaxies, which are characteristically more oblong, are dominated by older, cooler, redder stars.

Most massive galaxies also host a supermassive black hole millions to billions of times the mass of our sun, at their centre. And while in most galaxies these monsters are quiet, in some they’re extraordinarily active. They feed on the gas, dust, and other debris surrounding them, releasing enormous amounts of energy. Such galaxies are said to be active. And when their black holes launch jets of plasma that shine brightly in the radio frequency, they’re called radio galaxies.

These jets can extend for millions of lightyears on either side of the galactic plane. At the ends of these jets there are two vast ‘radio lobes’. The appearance is not unlike two balloons tethered by slender threads to either side of a sphere.

Because these jets typically form in massive, elliptical galaxies, astronomers long believed that spiral galaxies couldn’t host them. That assumption was upended when Hota et al. discovered an exception during his postdoc: a rare case of a spiral galaxy producing large radio lobes.

“It was an accidental discovery,” he said.

It was 2011, and the internet was starting to penetrate everyday life through social media. Citizen science projects like ‘Zooniverse’ were gaining traction with their scientific discoveries. When Dr. Hota shared news of his discovery on a social media platform, he was surprised by the questions and comments his post elicited.

“When you do science, it becomes technically so difficult for the common man to understand that we astronomers sometimes feel we are almost not useful to the public,” Dr. Hota said.

His own interest in science and astronomy developed in high school as he listened to radio shows and read about galaxies, black holes, and powerful telescopes.

“It was time to give back,” he said, so he started a Facebook group and invited students to join, learn astronomy, and contribute to research.

Rare things

Each search begins with virtual lectures over a weekend, where Dr. Hota and other researchers train participants to recognise the standard colour and structures of galaxies in ultraviolet, optical, infrared, and radio images.

Radio galaxies can be classified by their shape and brightness. In the widely used Fanaroff–Riley (FR) classification, FR I sources are less luminous, with jets that fade as they move outward, and FR II sources are more powerful, with bright hotspots at the ends of their lobes. Astronomers also identify special subtypes such as X-shaped, double-double or giant radio galaxies, each revealing distinct episodes of jet activity.

Once participants understand what a typical radio galaxy looks like, they’re encouraged to look for sources that buck expectations.

“Anything that looks faint and fuzzy and irregular in the data is a sign of past black hole activity,” Dr. Hota said.

Their latest discovery, a rare ‘double ORC’, was published months after Prasun Machado, a RAD@home student participant, spotted two faint, circular structures in a non-standard radio galaxy in LOFAR data. These circles, far larger than the galaxies themselves, turned out to be a pair of ORCs, only the second known instance of such a twin. It was soon found to be one the farthest, most powerful ORCs ever recorded.

“When you find something extremely rare or very different from the normal, you suddenly get an opportunity to start a new investigation into the unknown,” Dr. Hota said.

Over the following months, Dr. Hota and his collaborators investigated the finding further using archival data from various radio and optical telescopes.

Anyone an astronomer

There is still no widely accepted definition of ORCs. Their true nature remains uncertain, and astronomers are exploring several possibilities.

Dr. Hota said one idea is that when galaxies collide, they can generate powerful shockwaves that propagate outward into intergalactic space. Over a billion years, these waves could form large circular structures, visible only at radio wavelengths. Another possibility is that ORCs are the aftereffects of powerful outbursts, perhaps when  two supermassive black holes merge.

In the case of the twin ORCs, Dr. Hota speculated that plasma rings might be expanding in opposite directions, forming two large circles located on either side of the galaxy.

“We need to discover and characterise many more such objects,” Dr. Hota said. “Only then can we begin to understand their true nature.”

For now, he and his collaborators aim to take advantage of the immense trove of data collected by the world-class GMRT facility, which is one of the largest and most sensitive low-frequency radio telescopes in the world.

“Our own GMRT is free for anyone to use, but that power is being underutilised,” according to Dr. Hota. “People still think education and research are two separate stages: you first study, then do research. That model is over. At any stage in your career, you can join research if you find a good mentor and a good project. Once we create this combined model of learning and discovery through various citizen science projects, Indian astronomy  will grow faster.”

Monika Mondal is a freelance science and environment journalist.

source/content: thehindu.com (headline edited)

Reliance HR chief Ira Bindra named among world’s top CHROs

Reliance is the only Indian firm on the list and Ms. Bindra the first Indian woman executive of an Indian firm to be featured on the list.

Reliance Industries Ltd’s Human Resources chief Ira Bindra has been named among the world’s top CHROs, making Reliance the only Indian company represented on the list.

N2Growth, a global leader in executive search and leadership advisory, announced the 2025 Leaders40 Top Chief Human Resources Officers (CHRO) Award late on Friday (November 14, 2025).

This year’s list includes leading CHROs at some of the world’s largest and most influential companies, such as Lisa Buckingham (Vialto Partners), Matthew Breitfelder (Apollo Global Management), Robin Leopold (JPMorganChase), Christy Pambianchi (Caterpillar Inc.), Trisha Conley (LyondellBasell), Maral Kazanjian (Moody’s), and Donna Morris (Walmart), it said.

Reliance is the only Indian firm on the list and Ms. Bindra the first Indian woman executive of an Indian firm to be featured on the list.

She has been ranked 28th on the list.

“Ira is a global Human Resources and business transformation leader with over two decades of experience driving growth, innovation, and organisational excellence across Fortune 100 companies and high-growth enterprises.”

“Her career spans multiple industries, geographies, and business lifecycles, where she has led integrated business, people, and culture strategies that enable high performance and sustainable transformation,” her citation read.

As President – People & Talent at Reliance Industries Limited, India’s largest private enterprise and a Fortune Global 500 (#88) company with revenues over $119 billion, Ira partners with the Chairman, Executive Committee, and business leadership to shape the company’s people and culture agenda.

“She is leading enterprise-wide talent and culture transformation for Reliance’s 360,000-strong workforce spanning energy, retail, telecommunications, media, and green technologies,” it added.

Before joining Reliance, Ms. Bindra held several senior global HR leadership roles at Medtronic, the world’s largest medical device company. Previously, she spent 19 years with General Electric, holding diverse HR leadership roles across Healthcare, Oil & Gas, Technology Infrastructure, Corporate and GE Capital in both developed and developing markets.

She holds an MBA from the Maastricht School of Management, Netherlands, and a BA (Hons.) in History from Lady Shri Ram College, Delhi University.

First launched on Forbes in 2015 by N2Growth Founder Mike Myatt, the Top CHRO List quickly became one of the most respected and anticipated rankings in the human resources profession.

In 2020, N2Growth partnered with the Stanford Graduate School of Business to formalize the list as the Leaders40 Award. Since then, N2Growth has been pleased to issue the preeminent industry recognition of the leading CHROs globally.

“Over the last decade, we’ve watched the CHRO role transform,” said Tony Morales, Co-Chairman of N2Growth and head of the Leaders40 Selection Committee. “The CHROs of today are no longer only people leaders, but have become strategic partners to CEOs and boards, driving performance, culture, and transformation at the highest level.”

The Leaders40 Selection Committee evaluates thousands of nominations, conducts over a hundred in-depth interviews, and ultimately names the top 40 CHROs who set the standard of excellence in human capital management.

source/content: thehindu.com (headline edited)

DRDO unveils autonomous underwater vehicles with drones, cameras: Report

The DRDO has developed lightweight autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) equipped with advanced sonar units and cameras.

In a fresh development, the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) has created a new class of lightweight autonomous underwater vehicles that can be carried and deployed by personnel. The defence ministry announced the achievement on Friday.

What are the features of this vehicle?

This next-generation system features several underwater drones fitted with side-scan sonar units and sub-surface cameras, allowing them to identify suspicious, mine-like objects in real time, said a report by news agency PTI.

How does the vehicle work?

According to the defence ministry, these autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) use advanced deep-learning algorithms onboard to automatically recognise and categorise underwater targets. This capability cuts down the need for constant human monitoring and shortens overall mission duration, the report said.

The man-portable AUVs were designed and produced by the Naval Science and Technological Laboratory (NSTL), a DRDO facility based in Visakhapatnam, the report added.

DRDO to integrate Chinese PL-15 missile’s features into Astra Mark-2 programme

Previously, the DRDO was in the news when it had decided to integrate sophisticated capabilities observed in China’s PL-15 air-to-air missile into the Astra Mark-2 project. The decision came after experts conducted an in-depth examination of a PL-15 that failed to detonate when it was launched by a Pakistani aircraft during Operation Sindoor in May. The PL-15E missile was found completely undamaged in a field near Hoshiarpur in Punjab on May 9.

HT.com has not independently verified the authenticity of this information.

(With inputs from PTI)

source/content: hindustantimes.com (headline edited)