Daily Current Affairs

December 10, 2025

Current Affairs

World AIDS Day 2025: Overcoming Disruption, Transforming the AIDS Response

Context: World AIDS Day is observed every year on 1 December, and the 2025 global theme is “Overcoming disruption, transforming the AIDS response.” The theme underscores the need to rebuild resilient HIV services disrupted by pandemics, inequalities, and funding constraints, while accelerating progress toward global elimination targets.

About World AIDS Day

World AIDS Day was established in 1988 by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and later guided by UNAIDS, becoming the first international health awareness day.
Its key objectives include:

  • Raising awareness about HIV prevention, testing, and treatment
  • Combating stigma and discrimination
  • Mobilising global solidarity toward ending AIDS as a public health threat

The observance aligns with the UNAIDS 95-95-95 target and SDG 3.3, which aims to end AIDS by 2030.

UNAIDS 95-95-95 Goal

  • 95% of people living with HIV diagnosed
  • 95% of those diagnosed on antiretroviral therapy (ART)
  • 95% of those on ART achieving viral suppression

India’s AIDS Response

India’s AIDS programme is led by the National AIDS Control Organisation (NACO) under the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare.

Institutional and Policy Framework

  • Implemented through National AIDS and STD Control Programme (NACP) Phases I–V
  • Focus areas: awareness, prevention, testing expansion, free ART, and targeted interventions
  • HIV & AIDS (Prevention and Control) Act 2017:
    • Prohibits discrimination
    • Ensures confidentiality
    • Mandates informed consent for HIV testing and treatment

Key Initiatives

  • Test & Treat Policy (ART for all diagnosed patients)
  • Mission Sampark to re-engage patients lost to follow-up
  • Expansion of Integrated Counselling and Testing Centres (ICTCs) and ART centres nationwide

Impact

Between 2010 and 2021:

  • New HIV infections fell by ~46%
  • AIDS-related deaths dropped by ~77%

These improvements reflect enhanced treatment access, targeted outreach, and community-led approaches.

Understanding HIV–AIDS

Cause

  • HIV attacks CD4+ T-cells, progressively weakening immunity.
  • Untreated infection may progress to Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS).

Transmission

  • Unprotected sexual contact
  • Contaminated needles
  • Unsafe blood transfusion
  • Mother-to-child transmission

Treatment

  • Antiretroviral Therapy (ART) reduces viral load, prevents progression to AIDS, and lowers transmission risk—forming the basis of the “treatment-as-prevention” model.

India Status

  • India has an estimated 2.4 million people living with HIV.
  • The epidemic is concentrated among high-risk groups:
    • Sex workers
    • Men who have sex with men (MSM)
    • People who inject drugs (PWID)
    • Transgender persons
    • Migrant labour
    • Truckers

Conclusion

World AIDS Day 2025 reinforces the global commitment to restore disrupted services, advance equity, and strengthen community-led interventions as India moves toward eliminating AIDS as a public health threat. With legal safeguards, expanded ART access, and strong institutional frameworks, India continues to make significant strides in prevention and treatment.

India’s Shift from GM to Genome-Edited Crops

Context: India’s genetically modified (GM) crop progress has remained stagnant since the approval of Bt cotton in 2006. However, genome-edited (GE) crops have advanced rapidly due to regulatory relaxation, indigenous scientific tools, and rising public acceptance. This marks a major policy and technological shift in India’s approach to agricultural biotechnology.

Understanding Gene Editing

Gene editing modifies native genes within a plant without inserting foreign DNA.
It uses two key components:

  • Protein “scissors” to cut DNA at a targeted site
  • Guide RNA to direct the scissors precisely

This method mimics natural mutations and is therefore seen as safer, faster, and more predictable than traditional genetic modification.

How Gene Editing Differs from GMOs

1. Foreign DNA vs Native DNA

  • GMOs introduce genes from other species (transgenic).
  • GE crops alter only the plant’s own genes; no foreign DNA is added.

2. Regulatory Burden

  • GMOs require extensive biosafety, environmental, and GEAC-level approvals.
  • GE crops undergo simpler clearance through Institutional Biosafety Committees (IBCs), provided no foreign DNA remains.

3. Technological Pathway

  • GMOs rely on gene insertion into random genome locations.
  • GE techniques like CRISPR–Cas9, Cas12a, and TnpB create precise, site-specific edits.

4. Market Landscape

  • GM technology is dominated by large multinational corporations.
  • Gene editing democratises innovation, enabling public research institutions and small biotech labs to develop new varieties.

India’s Progress in Genome-Edited (GE) Crops

Indian research institutions have developed multiple GE lines:

1. GE Rice

  • Samba Mahsuri (High Yield)
  • MTU-1010 (Alkalinity Tolerance)

2. GE Mustard

  • Low-pungency, canola-quality mustard developed through targeted gene edits.

3. Editing Tools in Use

  • CRISPR–Cas9: drought and salinity tolerance
  • CRISPR–Cas12a: editing Gn1a gene for spikelet proliferation and higher yields
  • TnpB Miniature Gene Editor: an indigenous, patent-free, low-cost precision tool

Why GE Crops Are Succeeding Faster in India

1. Simplified Regulation

  • GE crops bypass GEAC if proven free of foreign DNA, reducing delays and costs.

2. Higher Public Acceptance

  • Absence of external genes reduces the controversy associated with GMOs.

3. Lower R&D Costs

  • CRISPR-based edits are economical and accessible to Indian labs.

4. Indigenous Innovation

  • India’s TnpB-based editor reduces reliance on expensive foreign technologies.

5. Targeted Government Support

  • The government allocated ₹500 crore (2023–24) exclusively for GE crop research.

6. Export Benefits

  • Countries like Japan and Australia allow GE food imports without GM labelling, supporting India’s agri-export potential.

Key Regulatory Bodies

Genetic Engineering Appraisal Committee (GEAC)

  • Apex body under MoEFCC for environmental release of GM organisms.

Institutional Biosafety Committee (IBC)

  • Verifies that gene-edited crops contain no foreign DNA and ensures biosafety compliance under DBT norms.

Conclusion

India’s transition from GM to genome-edited crops marks a strategic evolution in agricultural biotechnology. With regulatory clarity, indigenous tools, and strong research momentum, GE crops offer the potential for higher yields, climate resilience, and reduced input costs—positioning India for the next phase of sustainable agricultural innovation.