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Jul 17, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

Contents01 Strengthening Rural Credit for Inclusive Growth in India Ministry of Finance · NABARD 45th Foundation Day · Rural Credit Ecosystem Review GS 2GS 3 02 India’s First Hydrogen-Powered Train: Advancing Green Rail Mobility Ministry of Railways · RDSO · National Green Hydrogen Mission GS 3 03 ‘White Rabbit Technology’ — Indian Standard Time Distribution Network, Bengaluru Ministry of Consumer Affairs · Legal Metrology Division · NPL, ISRO, BSNL, SEBI GS 3GS 2 Article 01 Article 01 Strengthening Rural Credit for Inclusive Growth in India Ministry of Finance · NABARD 45th Foundation Day (12 July 2026) · Rural Credit Ecosystem Review Relevance: GS 2 (Government policies and interventions for development; welfare schemes) · GS 3 (Indian Economy — agriculture, banking, financial inclusion, inclusive growth). GS 2GS 3 Image: Rural credit delivery through NABARD-linked institutional framework — PACS, SHGs and Kisan Credit Cards. [Replace src with image URL] Key Data at a Glance 77.2%rural households reported higher consumption (NABARD RECSS, May 2026) 51%of rural households rely exclusively on formal credit sources ₹32.50 lakh crGround Level Credit (GLC) target for FY 2025–26 (up from ₹8 lakh cr in FY15) 58.63 crJan Dhan accounts opened; deposits >₹3 lakh crore (as of 24 June 2026) 19.83 lakhSHGs operational under DAY-NRLM; ₹13.28 lakh crore disbursed since inception 61,842PACS migrated to Common ERP software out of 79,630 approved (March 2026) Issue in Brief India’s rural credit ecosystem has undergone a structural transformation — from informal moneylender dependence to a multi-institutional, policy-driven formal credit architecture spanning SCBs, RRBs, Cooperative Banks, SFBs and NABARD. NABARD’s 45th Foundation Day (12 July 2026) and the NABARD Rural Economic Conditions & Sentiments Survey (RECSS) highlight continued rural momentum: 77.2% of rural households reported higher consumption; 51% rely exclusively on formal credit. The GLC target for FY 2025–26 was ₹32.50 lakh crore, with ₹5 lakh crore dedicated to Animal Husbandry, Dairying and Fisheries — a fourfold increase from ₹8 lakh crore in FY 2014–15. Static Background Pre-Independence & early post-Independence: Rural credit was dominated by informal moneylenders charging usurious rates; the All-India Rural Credit Survey (1954) documented this structural failure and recommended institutional alternatives. 1955: National Agricultural Credit (Long-term Operations) Fund created; State Bank of India (SBI) established as successor to the Imperial Bank — first deliberate institutional rural credit push. 1969: Nationalisation of 14 major commercial banks under the Banking Companies (Acquisition and Transfer of Undertakings) Act — reoriented banking policy toward priority sectors, especially small farmers. 1976: RRB Act, 1976 established Regional Rural Banks — co-owned by Centre (50%), State (15%) and sponsor bank (35%) — specifically for rural and semi-urban credit delivery. 1982: NABARD (National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development) established under the NABARD Act, 1981 — integrating financing, developmental and supervisory functions for agriculture and rural development; apex refinancing institution for rural credit. 1992: SHG–Bank Linkage Programme (SHG-BLP) launched by NABARD — pioneered micro-credit through group collateral, particularly targeting women excluded from formal banking. 1998: Kisan Credit Card (KCC) Scheme launched — revolving, flexible credit line replacing multiple loan applications; ATM-enabled; one-time documentation. 2014: PMJDY (Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana) launched — universal banking access; core of the JAM (Jan Dhan–Aadhaar–Mobile) Trinity for digitally-targeted welfare delivery and DBT. 2015: MUDRA Scheme (PMMY) launched — collateral-free credit to non-corporate, non-farm micro/small enterprises in three tiers: Shishu (up to ₹50,000), Kishore (up to ₹5 lakh) and Tarun (up to ₹10 lakh). 2022 onwards: Jan Samarth Portal and e-KCC — end-to-end digital credit delivery; loan sanction within ~2 days via Common Service Centres (CSCs). Constitutional basis: Article 43 (living wages); 97th Constitutional Amendment Act, 2011 (Part IXB for cooperative credit societies); Directive Principles of State Policy (Part IV). Key Dimensions — Institutional Architecture Scheduled Commercial Banks (SCBs): ~120 operating nationwide; rural branches increased from 41,464 (2014) to 56,193 (July 2025) — a 35% expansion; deliver services via branches, Business Correspondents and digital platforms. Regional Rural Banks (RRBs): 28 operational across states/UTs; 22,000+ branches in 700 districts; co-ownership: Centre (50%), State (15%), Sponsor Bank (35%); focus on small/marginal farmers, artisans and agricultural labourers. Co-operative Banks: Multi-tier rural structure — 34 StCBs (State Co-operative Banks), 352 DCCBs (District Central Co-operative Banks) and PACS at grassroots; 1,458 Urban Cooperative Banks; rural co-operative credit was India’s first formal rural credit channel. Small Finance Banks (SFBs): 11 operational; introduced post Union Budget 2014–15; licensed by RBI; serve unbanked and underserved segments through low-cost, tech-driven operations. NABARD’s refinance role: Provides concessional refinance to rural financial institutions via STCRCF (Short-Term Cooperative Rural Credit Fund), STRRBF and LTRCF (Long-Term Rural Credit Fund) — funded from PSL shortfall flows. Key Dimensions — Policy Framework Priority Sector Lending (PSL): RBI mandate — 18% of ANBC (Adjusted Net Bank Credit) for agriculture overall; sub-target of 14% for non-corporate farmers and 10% for small & marginal farmers; banks can trade PSLCs (Priority Sector Lending Certificates) to meet shortfalls. Modified Interest Subvention Scheme (MISS): Subsidised KCC crop loans at 7% (effective 4% on prompt repayment with additional 3% incentive); Union Budget 2025–26 raised KCC loan limit from ₹3 lakh to ₹5 lakh; collateral-free agricultural loan limit raised to ₹2 lakh from January 2025. Kisan Credit Card (KCC): Total applications — ~739 lakh (commercial banks), 365+ lakh (RRBs), 1,178+ lakh (Cooperative banks) as on 8 July 2026; extended to allied sectors (dairy, fisheries, animal husbandry) in 2019; JLGs and SHGs also covered. PM Dhan Dhanya Krishi Yojana (PM-DDKY): Approved July 2025; targets 100 low-performing agri-districts; convergence of 36 Central schemes across 11 Ministries; top-performing districts (May 2026): Banka (Bihar), Mahoba (UP), Charaideo (Assam), Kishanganj (Bihar), Tikamgarh (MP). Key Dimensions — Financial Inclusion Ecosystem PMJDY: Over 58.63 crore accounts opened (24 June 2026); deposits exceeding ₹3 lakh crore; 55.7% women account holders; 77.8% in rural and semi-urban areas; RuPay debit cards; links KCC to RuPay platform. DAY-NRLM (Deendayal Antyodaya Yojana – National Rural Livelihoods Mission): Renamed from NRLM in March 2016; restructured from SGSY (Swarnajayanti Gram Swarozgar Yojana); 19.83 lakh SHGs operational; ₹13.28 lakh crore disbursed since inception; 50,548 Bank Sakhis deployed, enabling ₹12.18 lakh crore in credit linkage since 2013–14. PACS Modernisation: Government approved 2 lakh new multipurpose PACS; 32,836 new societies registered, 15,793 dairy/fishery cooperatives strengthened; 61,842 of 79,630 approved PACS migrated to Common ERP-based national software (March 2026). Jan Samarth Portal (June 2022): One-stop digital platform linking government-sponsored loan and subsidy schemes including KCC; end-to-end coverage for beneficiaries, financial institutions and government agencies. Jan Dhan Darshak App: Locates banking service points (branches, ATMs, Bank Mitras, CSCs); 99.92% of villages had a banking outlet within 5 km radius as of March 2025. Critical Analysis — Strengths Institutional deepening is measurable: 56,193 rural bank branches (2025) vs 41,464 (2014); 51% households on exclusive formal credit signals a structural shift away from informal sources. JAM Trinity convergence — Jan Dhan + Aadhaar + Mobile — enables targeted DBT, reducing leakages and enabling real-time benefit transfers to the rural poor. SHG-BLP is a globally cited model for women’s financial inclusion; ₹13.28 lakh crore disbursed through SHGs reflects genuine scale and social impact. Digital last-mile delivery (e-KCC, Jan Samarth Portal, Common ERP for PACS) reduces transaction costs and informational asymmetry between borrowers and institutions. Critical Analysis — Structural Questions GLC targets are disbursement metrics, not outcome metrics — they do not capture loan utilisation, repayment quality or whether credit reached marginal farmers versus agri-corporates. RECSS divergence: RECSS Round 10 (March 2026) showed only 32% of households reported income growth and real agricultural GVA growth moderated to 2.4% in 2025–26 — a divergence from PIB-cited consumption figures warranting scrutiny. Cooperative bank governance weaknesses remain a structural vulnerability — the Punjab & Maharashtra Co-operative Bank collapse (2019) exposed regulatory gaps; RBI supervisory transfer (2020) is a partial fix. PSL compliance via PSLCs allows banks to trade certificates rather than actually lend to the sector — potentially distorting the intent of mandated agricultural credit. Last-mile credit gap persists — tenant farmers, oral lessees and tribal households still face collateral and documentation barriers despite KCC expansion to JLGs and SHGs. Way Forward Shift GLC monitoring to outcome metrics — crop loan utilisation, repayment rates and income change post-credit — rather than disbursement volumes alone. Strengthen cooperative bank governance through professionalised boards, regular external audits and swift RBI/NABARD supervisory intervention for stressed institutions. Mandate PACS digitisation completion across all 79,630 approved societies within a defined timeline; integrate with e-NAM and APMC digital platforms for market-linked credit. Scale the PM-DDKY convergence model from 100 low-performing districts to all aspirational districts, using NABARD’s District Credit Plans (DCPs) as an evidence base. Expand Bank Sakhi and BC network with performance-linked incentives to deepen last-mile reach, especially in tribal and North-East geographies. Prelims Pointers NABARD: Established under NABARD Act, 1981; apex development finance institution; 45th Foundation Day 12 July 2026; supervisory authority over RRBs and Cooperative Banks. RRBs: Established under RRB Act, 1976; co-ownership — Centre (50%), State (15%), Sponsor Bank (35%); 28 RRBs, 22,000+ branches in 700 districts. PSL Agriculture: 18% of ANBC overall; sub-targets — 14% non-corporate farmers, 10% small & marginal farmers; PSLCs allow trading of PSL compliance. KCC: Extended to allied sectors (dairy, fisheries, animal husbandry) in 2019; JLGs; SHGs; limit raised to ₹5 lakh (Budget 2025–26); e-KCC enables 2-day loan sanction via CSCs. MISS: 7% interest rate; 4% effective on prompt repayment (additional 3% incentive); under Modified Interest Subvention Scheme; nodal — Ministry of Agriculture. PMJDY: 58.63 crore accounts; ₹3 lakh crore deposits; 55.7% women; 77.8% rural/semi-urban; core of JAM Trinity with Aadhaar and Mobile. DAY-NRLM: Renamed from NRLM in March 2016; restructured from SGSY; 19.83 lakh SHGs; 50,548 Bank Sakhis; ₹13.28 lakh crore disbursed since inception. PM-DDKY: Approved July 2025; 100 agri-districts; 36 Central schemes; 11 Ministries; sub-targets for short-term and long-term agricultural credit. Practice Mains Question India’s rural credit system has expanded significantly in both institutional reach and policy depth. However, disbursement targets and outcome metrics continue to diverge. Critically examine the architecture of rural credit in India and the structural challenges that persist despite institutional expansion. GS Paper 3 — Indian Economy / Agriculture · 250 words · 15 marks Practice MCQs Q1. Consider the following statements regarding Priority Sector Lending (PSL) for agriculture: (1) Banks must allocate at least 18% of ANBC to agriculture overall. (2) A sub-target of 10% of ANBC is prescribed for small and marginal farmers. (3) Priority Sector Lending Certificates (PSLCs) allow banks to buy/sell PSL compliance. Which of the statements above is/are correct? A) 1 and 2 onlyB) 2 and 3 onlyC) 1 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3 Q2. (Assertion–Reasoning) Assertion (A): The SHG–Bank Linkage Programme has disproportionately benefitted women in rural India. Reason (R): Women traditionally lacked credit history and collateral, making them ineligible for individual formal loans, but group collateral under SHGs bridges this gap. A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of AB) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of AC) A is true, R is falseD) A is false, R is true Q3. Match List I (Scheme) with List II (Key Feature): A. MUDRA Scheme (PMMY) · B. Modified Interest Subvention Scheme (MISS) · C. PM-DDKY // 1. 36 schemes convergence across 100 low-performing agri-districts · 2. Subsidised crop loans at 7% (4% on prompt repayment) via KCC · 3. Collateral-free loans to non-farm micro/small enterprises. Choose the correct match: A) A-3, B-2, C-1B) A-2, B-3, C-1C) A-3, B-1, C-2D) A-1, B-2, C-3 Article 02 Article 02 India’s First Hydrogen-Powered Train: Advancing Green Rail Mobility Ministry of Railways · RDSO / ICF Chennai · Inaugurated 17 July 2026, Jind, Haryana Relevance: GS 3 (Science & Technology — new technologies; infrastructure; energy; environment & climate change; National Green Hydrogen Mission). GS 3 Image: India’s first hydrogen fuel cell-powered train ‘Namo Green Rail’ — Jind–Sonipat section, Northern Railway. [Replace src with image URL] Key Data at a Glance 1,200 kWhydrogen fuel cell propulsion system capacity ~89 kmJind–Sonipat route length; ~2 hour journey 75 kmphoperational maximum speed; design speed 110 kmph 2,600passenger capacity (10-car trainset) 3,000 kghydrogen storage capacity at Jind facility (India’s largest railway hydrogen store) ₹89 crinvestment in dedicated hydrogen infrastructure at Jind Issue in Brief India’s first indigenous hydrogen fuel cell-powered train was inaugurated on 17 July 2026 at Jind Railway Station, Haryana, by Prime Minister Narendra Modi — flagged off as ‘Namo Green Rail’. Operates on the Jind–Sonipat section, Northern Railway; designed by RDSO (Research, Design & Standards Organisation) and manufactured at ICF (Integral Coach Factory), Chennai — entirely indigenously. Aligns with the National Green Hydrogen Mission (approved January 2023) and India’s net-zero by 2070 commitment under Panchamrit pledges at COP26, Glasgow (2021). Static Background Hydrogen as energy carrier: Energy density of 120 MJ/kg vs diesel’s 43 MJ/kg — nearly 3x more energy-dense; emits only water vapour when used in fuel cells; zero direct carbon emissions. Global context: Germany’s Coradia iLint (by Alstom, 2018) was the world’s first commercial hydrogen passenger train — operated in Lower Saxony on standard/narrow gauge. India’s train is the first on broad-gauge in the world. Indian Railways net-zero target: Indian Railways aims for net-zero carbon emissions by 2030 (its own target, predating the national 2070 commitment); over 68% of traction is already electrified. National Green Hydrogen Mission: Approved January 2023; target — 5 MMT (million metric tonnes) of Green Hydrogen per annum by 2030; total outlay ₹19,744 crore; nodal ministry — MNRE (Ministry of New and Renewable Energy). RDSO: Research, Design & Standards Organisation, Lucknow — technical arm of Indian Railways for design approval and rolling stock specifications. ICF Chennai: Integral Coach Factory — public sector unit under Ministry of Railways; manufactures LHB coaches, EMU rakes and the hydrogen trainset. PESO: Petroleum and Explosives Safety Organisation — statutory body under Ministry of Commerce; licenses storage and dispensing of compressed/flammable gases including hydrogen. Key Dimensions — Technology Propulsion system: Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cell (PEMFC) — hydrogen reacts with oxygen across a Perfluorosulfonic Acid (PFSA) polymer membrane, generating electricity + water vapour + heat; 1,200 kW total propulsion capacity. Trainset composition: 10 coaches — 2 Hydrogen Driving Power Cars (DPCs) + 8 Trailer Coaches (TCs); each DPC houses fuel cells, Lithium Iron Phosphate (LFP) batteries (for regenerative braking energy storage) and hydrogen storage cylinders. Hydrogen storage: 27 hydrogen cylinders per trainset; ~300 kg hydrogen consumption daily; range ~250 km per refuelling; fares set at ₹5–₹25. Energy advantage: Hydrogen at 120 MJ/kg vs diesel at 43 MJ/kg — nearly 3x more energy-dense; low maintenance and manageable carbon footprint across lifecycle if produced from renewables. Key Dimensions — Infrastructure & Safety Jind Hydrogen Facility: India’s largest railway hydrogen storage and refuelling facility; storage capacity ~3,000 kg at a time; hydrogen produced via electrolysis process (green hydrogen); licensed by PESO. International standards: Compliance with NFPA-2 (National Fire Protection Association) and ISO 19880 Series; certified by TÜV SÜD, Germany (independent third-party safety assessment). Safety architecture: Hydrogen leak detectors at production, storage and dispensing points; flame detectors; automatic hydrogen supply cut-off on heat/flame/smoke detection; loco pilot emergency mode for safe train movement; real-time system health dashboard in cabin; 24×7 monitoring of refuelling system. Maintenance facility: Shakurbasti, Delhi; trained and certified personnel; technical staff to accompany train in initial phase; standby compressor for uninterrupted refuelling. Key Dimensions — Route & Service Details Train numbers: 74010 (Jind → Sonipat, depart 7:40 AM, arrive 9:40 AM) and 74009 (Sonipat → Jind, depart 10:40 AM, arrive 1:00 PM); daily service. Route halts: Jind Junction → Jind City → Pandu Pindara Junction → Lalit Khera → Bhambhewa → Isapur Kheri → Butana → Khandrai → Gohana Junction → Rabrah → Lath → Mohana → Barwasni → Sonipat New. Countries with hydrogen trains: Germany (Alstom Coradia iLint, 2018), Japan, China, USA — India now joins this group; distinction of being first on broad-gauge globally. Critical Analysis — Strengths Full indigenisation (RDSO design + ICF manufacturing) embeds technological capability within Indian Railways — critical for long-term scaling and maintenance self-sufficiency under Atmanirbhar Bharat. PEMFC + LFP battery hybrid provides energy resilience — batteries absorb regenerative braking energy and support during fuel cell power fluctuations. Hydrogen from electrolysis at Jind using renewable electricity creates a truly zero-emission corridor — directly advancing the National Green Hydrogen Mission. India is the first country to operate hydrogen trains on broad-gauge tracks — a significant technological distinction from Germany’s narrow/standard-gauge Coradia iLint. Critical Analysis — Structural Questions Single-route pilot: Scalability across Indian Railways’ 68,000 route-km network depends on cost reduction in hydrogen production, storage and fuel cells; current economics favour electrification over hydrogen for most routes. Green hydrogen economics: At current costs (~₹250–300/kg), hydrogen traction is significantly more expensive than electric or diesel; Mission target of below ₹150/kg by 2030 is ambitious but unproven. Energy conversion losses: The electrolysis → compression → fuel cell chain has lower round-trip efficiency than direct electric traction — raises whether non-electrifiable routes are a better strategic focus. Hydrogen refuelling infrastructure is limited to Jind; nationwide scaling requires parallel infrastructure investment that is not yet planned or funded. Maintenance capability at scale remains untested — hydrogen fuel cells have different failure modes from diesel or electric traction, requiring new skill sets across Railway workshops. Way Forward Designate 10–15 non-electrifiable Himalayan and North-East rail corridors as next hydrogen pilots — where green hydrogen can most cost-effectively replace diesel traction. Mandate renewable electricity sourcing for the Jind electrolysis plant to ensure full lifecycle zero-emission status; integrate with PM-KUSUM solar-agriculture grid where feasible. Pursue domestic R&D cost reduction for PEMFC membranes through RDSO–IIT collaboration, reducing import dependence on PFSA membrane materials. Publish a clear Hydrogen Rail Roadmap 2030 with milestones for fleet size, route coverage, infrastructure investment and cost-reduction targets. Integrate with the National Green Hydrogen Mission’s strategic hydrogen hub planning to co-locate rail refuelling with industrial hydrogen production for economies of scale. Prelims Pointers PEMFC: Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cell; uses PFSA polymer membrane; generates electricity + water vapour only; zero direct carbon emissions. RDSO: Research, Design & Standards Organisation, Lucknow — designed hydrogen trainset specifications. ICF Chennai — manufactured the trainset. Jind Facility: Storage ~3,000 kg; electrolysis-based green hydrogen; licensed by PESO; certified by TÜV SÜD Germany (NFPA-2 and ISO 19880 Series). National Green Hydrogen Mission: Approved January 2023; 5 MMT target by 2030; ₹19,744 crore outlay; nodal ministry — MNRE. India’s distinction: First hydrogen train on broad-gauge globally; Germany’s Coradia iLint (2018, Alstom) was the first-ever commercial hydrogen train on standard/narrow gauge. LFP batteries: Lithium Iron Phosphate — used alongside fuel cells in DPCs for regenerative braking energy storage and power buffering. Train name: ‘Namo Green Rail’; trains 74010/74009; route Jind–Sonipat (~89 km); fares ₹5–₹25; maintenance at Shakurbasti, Delhi. Energy density: Hydrogen = 120 MJ/kg; diesel = 43 MJ/kg. Panchamrit (COP26, 2021) — net-zero by 2070; 500 GW non-fossil capacity by 2030. Practice Mains Question India’s first hydrogen-powered train represents both a technological milestone and a policy statement on green mobility. Critically examine the feasibility, challenges and strategic significance of scaling hydrogen rail technology in India. GS Paper 3 — Science & Technology / Infrastructure / Environment · 250 words · 15 marks Practice MCQs Q1. Consider the following statements regarding India’s hydrogen train project: (1) The trainset was designed by RDSO and manufactured at ICF, Chennai. (2) It uses a Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cell (PEMFC) that emits only water vapour and heat. (3) The hydrogen storage facility at Jind was certified by the NDMA. Which are correct? A) 1 and 2 onlyB) 2 and 3 onlyC) 1 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3 Q2. (Assertion–Reasoning) Assertion (A): Hydrogen fuel cell technology is considered the cleanest propulsion option currently available for rail transport. Reason (R): The PEMFC generates electricity by reacting hydrogen and oxygen, producing only water vapour and heat — zero direct carbon emissions. A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of AB) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of AC) A is true, R is falseD) A is false, R is true Q3. Which of the following best describes a strategic advantage of deploying hydrogen trains on non-electrifiable routes in India? A) Lower round-trip energy efficiency than electric tractionB) Elimination of diesel traction on routes where overhead electrification is geographically or economically unviableC) Reduced need for hydrogen storage infrastructureD) Higher operational speed than electric trains on mountain routes Article 03 Article 03 ‘White Rabbit Technology’ — Indian Standard Time Distribution Network, Bengaluru Ministry of Consumer Affairs · Legal Metrology Division · Inaugurated 16 July 2026, RRSL Jakkur, Bengaluru Relevance: GS 3 (Science & Technology — new technologies; internal security — cyber threats; infrastructure; digital governance) · GS 2 (Government institutions and policy frameworks). GS 3GS 2 Key Data at a Glance <1 nssub-nanosecond synchronisation accuracy achieved by White Rabbit Technology UTC+5:30Indian Standard Time (IST); maintained at NPL, New Delhi under CSIR 4key collaborating institutions: NPL, ISRO, BSNL and SEBI 1,000+nodes White Rabbit can synchronise across a network (scalability) NTP vs WRNTP accuracy: millisecond; White Rabbit accuracy: sub-nanosecond (∼1 million times more precise) RRSL JakkurRegional Reference Standards Laboratory, Bengaluru — first demonstration node of IST-WR network Issue in Brief Union Minister Pralhad Joshi inaugurated the ‘White Rabbit Technology’-based IST Distribution Demonstration Network on 16 July 2026 at the Regional Reference Standards Laboratory (RRSL), Jakkur, Bengaluru. Under the vision of ‘One Nation, One Time’ — a historic step toward establishing a uniform, highly precise and domestically sovereign time standard across India, eliminating reliance on foreign time sources like GPS. Nodal agency: Legal Metrology Division, Ministry of Consumer Affairs; key collaborators: NPL (National Physical Laboratory), ISRO, BSNL and SEBI. Static Background Indian Standard Time (IST): UTC+5:30; maintained at NPL (National Physical Laboratory), New Delhi under CSIR (Council of Scientific & Industrial Research); India does not observe Daylight Saving Time. Coordinated Universal Time (UTC): Primary global time standard maintained by the International Bureau of Weights and Measures (BIPM), Paris; national metrology labs synchronise their national realisations (e.g., UTC(NPL) for India) to UTC. GPS time dependency problem: India’s financial markets, telecom networks, power grids and defence systems currently synchronise to GPS (US NAVSTAR system) — a foreign-controlled constellation; GPS denial, spoofing or jamming creates a critical national security and economic vulnerability. White Rabbit Technology — origin: Developed at CERN (European Organisation for Nuclear Research) in collaboration with GSI Helmholtz Centre, Germany and other partners; originally designed for particle accelerator control and data acquisition timing; open-source hardware and software. Legal Metrology in India: Governed by the Legal Metrology Act, 2009 (replaced the Standards of Weights and Measures Act, 1976); Legal Metrology Division under Ministry of Consumer Affairs handles national standards and traceability. RRSL: Regional Reference Standards Laboratories — state-level metrology labs maintaining secondary standards traceable to NPL; Jakkur (Bengaluru) RRSL under Karnataka Government is the first demonstration site. Key Dimensions — White Rabbit Technology Sub-nanosecond accuracy: Synchronises distributed nodes to within <1 nanosecond — far exceeding standard NTP (Network Time Protocol) which achieves only millisecond accuracy; approximately 1 million times more precise than NTP. Mechanism: Enhanced PTP (Precision Time Protocol / IEEE 1588) combined with Synchronous Ethernet (SyncE) over fibre-optic links; achieves both frequency synchronisation and phase alignment simultaneously. Sovereign, fibre-based: Unlike GPS (satellite-dependent, US-controlled), White Rabbit operates on domestic fibre infrastructure (BSNL’s optical fibre network) — entirely under Indian sovereign control. Scalability: Can synchronise 1,000+ nodes across a network; suitable for national-scale rollout via BharatNet and National Optical Fibre Network (NOFN) infrastructure. International compliance: Operates in compliance with global UTC protocols — India remains internationally interoperable while eliminating GPS dependence. Key Dimensions — Sectoral Applications Financial markets: High-frequency trading, stock exchange timestamps (SEBI mandate), banking transaction sequencing — sub-nanosecond accuracy prevents arbitrage fraud and ensures audit trail integrity. Telecommunications: Network synchronisation for 4G/5G base stations — reduces handoff errors, improves spectrum efficiency and supports future 6G rollout. Power grids: Phasor Measurement Units (PMUs) in India’s Integrated Power Grid require precise time synchronisation for fault detection, angle measurement and grid stability. Defence and security: Navigation, radar coordination, encrypted communications and military operations depend on precise, sovereign time — GPS denial scenarios in conflict zones (relevant given India’s strategic neighbourhood) make indigenous time distribution essential. Digital governance: E-governance transactions, digital signatures, blockchain-based land records and court e-filings all require tamper-proof, traceable timestamps — sovereign IST distribution strengthens the integrity of Digital India infrastructure. Critical Analysis — Strengths Strategic autonomy: Eliminates GPS dependence for critical infrastructure time synchronisation — reduces vulnerability to GPS spoofing, jamming or US denial; especially significant in India’s security context. Sub-nanosecond precision directly enables SEBI’s high-frequency trading timestamp mandates and future quantum-secure communication networks. Open-source, fibre-based architecture leverages BSNL’s existing BharatNet optical fibre network — minimises greenfield infrastructure cost. Multi-institutional convergence (NPL + ISRO + BSNL + SEBI) reflects a coherent whole-of-government approach to a horizontal infrastructure need across defence, finance and telecom sectors. Critical Analysis — Structural Questions Currently a demonstration network at a single RRSL in Bengaluru — national rollout roadmap, timelines, capital expenditure and nodal institutional ownership are not yet publicly specified. BharatNet coverage gaps in North-East India, Lakshadweep and Andaman mean the national network will have synchronisation dead zones unless NavIC satellite backup is integrated. Attack surface shifts: If White Rabbit nodes are compromised via cyberattacks, adversaries can manipulate time signals across dependent systems (financial markets, power grids) — the threat vector moves from GPS to fibre infrastructure. Statutory mandate needed: A national time synchronisation requirement (compelling banks, telecom firms, power utilities to adopt IST-WR nodes) needs a statutory basis — possible via amendments to Legal Metrology Act, 2009 or SEBI/TRAI/CEA regulations. Way Forward Scale from demonstration to a National IST Distribution Grid — leverage BharatNet’s 6+ lakh km optical fibre to connect NPL → RRSLs → state capitals → critical infrastructure nodes in a hierarchical architecture. Integrate NavIC (India’s indigenous GNSS) as a satellite-based backup layer to White Rabbit fibre — ensuring synchronisation continuity during fibre disruption scenarios. Issue SEBI/RBI/TRAI/CEA mandates requiring financial exchanges, telecom base stations and power grid PMUs to synchronise to IST-WR nodes within a defined transition timeline. Establish cybersecurity protocols specific to White Rabbit nodes — encryption of PTP packets and anomaly detection at each node. Develop domestic White Rabbit hardware manufacturing under PLI/Make in India to reduce import dependence on CERN-ecosystem vendors and build scale for national deployment. Prelims Pointers White Rabbit Technology: Developed at CERN; sub-nanosecond synchronisation over fibre; uses enhanced PTP (IEEE 1588) + SyncE; originally for particle accelerator timing; open-source. IST = UTC + 5:30; maintained at NPL (National Physical Laboratory), New Delhi under CSIR. India does not observe Daylight Saving Time. Nodal agency: Legal Metrology Division, Ministry of Consumer Affairs; collaborators — NPL, ISRO, BSNL, SEBI; vision — ‘One Nation, One Time’. RRSL: Regional Reference Standards Laboratory — state-level secondary metrology standards labs traceable to NPL; Jakkur, Bengaluru is first IST-WR demonstration site. Legal Metrology Act, 2009: Governs units of measurement and national standards; replaced Standards of Weights and Measures Act, 1976. BIPM: International Bureau of Weights and Measures, Paris — custodian of UTC globally; national labs maintain national realisations (UTC(NPL) for India). NavIC: India’s indigenous GNSS (Navigation with Indian Constellation); 7 satellites; maintained by ISRO; can provide independent time reference as satellite backup to White Rabbit fibre. NTP vs White Rabbit: Network Time Protocol → millisecond accuracy; White Rabbit → sub-nanosecond (<1 ns) accuracy — approximately 1 million times more precise. Practice Mains Question Sovereign control over precise time distribution is increasingly critical to national security, financial integrity and digital governance. Examine the significance of India’s ‘White Rabbit Technology’-based IST Distribution Network and the challenges in scaling it nationally. GS Paper 3 — Science & Technology / Internal Security · 250 words · 15 marks Practice MCQs Q1. Consider the following statements regarding White Rabbit Technology: (1) It was originally developed at CERN for particle accelerator timing. (2) It achieves sub-nanosecond synchronisation using enhanced PTP over fibre-optic links. (3) It depends on GPS satellites for its primary time reference. Which are correct? A) 1 and 2 onlyB) 2 and 3 onlyC) 1 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3 Q2. Match List I (Institution) with List II (Role in the IST-WR network): A. NPL · B. BSNL · C. SEBI // 1. Fibre-optic backbone for signal distribution · 2. Financial market time-stamping standards · 3. Primary atomic clock and UTC(NPL) reference. Choose the correct match: A) A-3, B-1, C-2B) A-1, B-3, C-2C) A-3, B-2, C-1D) A-2, B-1, C-3 Q3. The ‘One Nation, One Time’ initiative primarily addresses which of the following? (1) India’s dependence on US GPS for critical infrastructure time synchronisation. (2) Millisecond-level inaccuracies in stock exchange timestamps under current NTP. (3) India’s lack of an indigenous satellite navigation system. A) 1 and 2 onlyB) 2 and 3 onlyC) 1 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3

Jul 17, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

Contents01 The Cybersecurity Lesson in E-Rickshaws Deep Pal & Sukanya Thapliyal, Koan Advisory Group · Connected battery systems, BMS, IoT cybersecurity GS 3 — Internal Security & TechnologyGS 2 — GovernanceEssay 02 Wealth of Lacunae: Cybersecurity and Transparency at Kudankulam The Hindu Editorial · Nuclear infrastructure, supply chain cybersecurity, breach disclosure GS 3 — Internal SecurityGS 2 — GovernanceEssay Editorial 01 of 02 Article 01 The Cybersecurity Lesson in E-Rickshaws Deep Pal & Sukanya Thapliyal — Policy Professionals, Koan Advisory Group · The Hindu Relevance: GS 3 (internal security — cybersecurity, critical infrastructure, IoT vulnerabilities; science & technology — EVs, connected systems, digital supply chains), GS 2 (governance — regulatory gaps, MeitY, CERT-In, NCIIPC) and Essay (technology governance, security by design, trust in digital systems) — using the Delhi e-rickshaw BMS incident as an entry point to examine India’s missing framework for connected battery cybersecurity. GS 3 — Internal Security & TechnologyGS 2 — Governance & RegulationEssay — Technology & Trust 1 — Issue in Brief E-rickshaws in Delhi began stalling mid-road when pranksters — and increasingly extortionists — used Chinese BMS apps (BAT-BMS, Epoch Li-ion, Lossigy, SMART BMS) to exploit unsecured Bluetooth connections on lithium-ion battery packs, cutting off power with a single tap. The driver could restart only through the same app, prompting imposters to charge ₹200–₹300 to “fix” the vehicle. MeitY Secretary S. Krishnan confirmed removal of the offending apps from Google Play Store and Apple App Store — a reactive, app-takedown response that does not resolve the underlying vulnerability in Battery Management Systems (BMS) accepting connections with weak or default credentials. The editorial’s core argument: the real issue is not Chinese origin of software but that batteries are now software-defined, connected systems — and India has no coherent cybersecurity framework covering connected battery products, from e-rickshaws to grid-scale Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS). The stakes extend far beyond e-rickshaws: the same BMS vulnerabilities exist in systems that support power grids, telecom towers, warehouses, ports, industrial automation, and defence platforms — making this a critical infrastructure governance problem, not a consumer inconvenience. 2 — Static Background Battery Management System (BMS): A BMS is an electronic system embedded in a battery pack that monitors cell voltage, temperature, and state of charge; balances cells; and protects against overcharge, deep discharge and overheating. Modern BMS units in lithium-ion batteries are software-defined and often Bluetooth-enabled, allowing remote monitoring, diagnostics, and maintenance — but also enabling remote misuse when credentials are weak or default. India’s EV landscape: India has one of the world’s fastest-growing electric vehicle markets; e-rickshaws alone number in the millions, forming the backbone of last-mile urban mobility in cities across north India. Most low-cost e-rickshaws use lithium-ion battery packs with Bluetooth-enabled BMS — many shipped with default or no passwords. CERT-In (Section 70B, IT Act, 2000): India’s national cyber incident response body under MeitY; issues cybersecurity directions (expanded in 2022 to include 6-hour mandatory reporting, log retention, and vulnerability disclosure). Has expanded guidance to include Software Bills of Materials (SBOMs), secure software development frameworks, and OEM security requirements — but guidance is non-binding for connected battery products specifically. NCIIPC (National Critical Information Infrastructure Protection Centre): Functions under the PMO/NTRO; protects sectors designated as Critical Information Infrastructure (CII) including power, transport, telecommunications, banking, and defence under Section 70, IT Act, 2000. Grid-scale Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS) may fall within its remit when deployed as part of designated CII — but EV and commercial BMS deployments remain outside its jurisdiction. Sectoral regulatory landscape: The Central Electricity Authority (CEA) addresses battery risks through functional safety and organisational cybersecurity lenses; the Department of Telecommunications (DoT) and MeitY have introduced security assurance mechanisms for connected devices — but none of these mandatory regimes specify Bluetooth-enabled BMS and their management apps, leaving a clear regulatory gap. Digital supply chain complexity: Modern battery systems comprise hardware and software sourced globally — cells from one country, BMS firmware from another, mobile management apps from a third. Security therefore depends on the integrity of the entire digital supply chain, not just the final assembled product. 3 — Key Dimensions The regulatory white space: India’s institutional architecture for cybersecurity — CERT-In, NCIIPC, CEA, DoT, MeitY — is robust in principle but fragmented in practice. Connected battery products fall between sectoral mandates: too commercial for NCIIPC, too technical for CEA, and too specific for CERT-In’s general OEM guidance. Reactive vs. proactive governance: The government’s response — removing apps from app stores — is purely reactive. It does not mandate secure-by-design standards for BMS manufacturers, require authentication hardening, or impose firmware integrity verification. New apps exploiting the same BMS vulnerability can surface at any time. The supply chain trust problem: The editorial explicitly argues that the question is not “where the software originated” but whether it is demonstrably trustworthy. A Chinese-developed BMS firmware with rigorous security attestation may be safer than a domestically-developed one with poor practices — the framework must evaluate provenance and integrity, not just origin. Escalating criticality: What is a prank in an e-rickshaw becomes a national security threat in a telecom tower battery system or a grid-scale BESS. The same Bluetooth BMS architecture is deployed in warehouses, ports, industrial automation, and increasingly in defence platforms — meaning the e-rickshaw incident is a proof-of-concept for higher-stakes attacks. Global regulatory contrast: The EU Cyber Resilience Act (CRA) mandates secure-by-design requirements and Software Bills of Materials (SBOMs) for all products with digital elements; full compliance required by December 2027. The EU Digital Battery Passport mandates traceability of battery components and software. The US NIST Secure Software Development Framework and Executive Order 14028 (2021) require SBOM submission for federal software procurement. India has no equivalent binding standards for connected battery products. The SBOM opportunity: A Software Bill of Materials is a machine-readable inventory of every software component — libraries, firmware, dependencies — in a product. Mandating SBOMs for BMS products would enable rapid identification of vulnerabilities across a fleet (e.g., all e-rickshaws using the same firmware) and shift accountability to manufacturers and importers. 4 — Critical Analysis In favour — The incident reveals a systemic gap, not an isolated event: The e-rickshaw BMS vulnerability is an instance of a class of connected-device risks that will multiply as India deploys EVs, smart grids, and industrial IoT at scale. A standards framework addressing this now is far less costly than managing incidents later. In favour — India’s EV ambition demands supply chain security: The PM Electric Drive Revolution in Innovative Vehicle Enhancement (PM E-DRIVE) scheme and Production Linked Incentive (PLI) targets for Advanced Chemistry Cell (ACC) batteries presuppose safe, secure battery systems. Ignoring BMS cybersecurity undermines both the EV transition and national security simultaneously. In favour — SBOM and CERT-In guidance can be made binding through battery standards: Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) and the Automotive Research Association of India (ARAI) already set safety standards for batteries; incorporating CERT-In’s SBOM and secure-development guidance into these standards would create an actionable, binding pathway without requiring new legislation. In favour — “Trustworthiness” over “origin” is the right policy frame: An origin-based ban (blocking Chinese BMS) creates diplomatic friction, reduces competition, and can be circumvented through re-labelling. A performance-based trustworthiness standard — rigorous testing, verified secure development practices, SBOM disclosure — is more durable and consistent with India’s WTO obligations. Against — Regulatory capacity is limited: India currently lacks the testing infrastructure and regulatory bandwidth to implement rigorous SBOM-based audits across millions of low-cost BMS units in the informal e-rickshaw market. Standards that cannot be enforced create false assurance. Against — Cost burden on low-income operators: Requiring secure-by-design BMS with authenticated Bluetooth, firmware integrity verification, and lifecycle traceability will raise battery costs — passed on to e-rickshaw drivers who are predominantly informal, low-income workers with no buffer for higher equipment costs. Against — App removal may be adequate for the immediate e-rickshaw risk: The BMS vulnerability in e-rickshaws is operationally annoying but not life-threatening (Bluetooth range is short; lead-acid vehicles are unaffected). Critics could argue that the editorial overstates the immediate threat and that the more pressing critical-infrastructure BMS risks already fall under NCIIPC’s mandate. Against — Geopolitical framing risk: The editorial’s explicit pivot away from “where the software originated” is analytically correct but may be politically difficult to operationalise. In the current India–China technology context, origin-agnostic trustworthiness standards may face resistance from security agencies that favour blanket technology restrictions. 5 — Way Forward Incorporate CERT-In’s SBOM and secure-software-development guidance into BIS battery standards and ARAI homologation norms — making software provenance, firmware integrity, and vulnerability disclosure mandatory for any BMS sold or imported in India, shifting from voluntary guidance to binding standards. Extend NCIIPC’s jurisdiction explicitly to cover grid-scale BESS and commercially deployed battery systems in critical sectors (telecom towers, ports, warehouses, defence) — filling the current gap between CII-designated infrastructure and commercial deployments. Mandate authenticated Bluetooth connections (no default or blank passwords) as a minimum standard for all Bluetooth-enabled BMS — a low-cost, high-impact fix that eliminates the specific vulnerability exploited in the Delhi e-rickshaw incident. Establish a coordinated vulnerability disclosure (CVD) mechanism for connected battery products — so researchers who discover BMS vulnerabilities can report them to manufacturers and CERT-In without legal risk, enabling proactive patching rather than reactive app bans. Draw on the EU Cyber Resilience Act (CRA) and Digital Battery Passport frameworks to develop an India-specific Battery Cybersecurity Standard covering lifecycle traceability, software update infrastructure, and supply-chain integrity — moving the conversation from technology origin to demonstrable trustworthiness. 6 — Data & Key Facts 3–4Apps removed: BAT-BMS, Epoch Li-ion, Lossigy, SMART BMS — pulled from Google Play Store & Apple App Store by MeitY Dec 2027EU Cyber Resilience Act full-compliance deadline; mandates SBOM for all products with digital elements sold in EU 2021US Executive Order 14028 on Improving the Nation’s Cybersecurity; required SBOM for all federal software procurement ₹200–300Amount fraudsters charged e-rickshaw drivers to “fix” a remotely-stalled vehicle using the same app 6 hrsCERT-In mandatory incident reporting window (2022 Directions); non-compliance attracts penalty under Section 70B, IT Act Sec. 70IT Act, 2000 — designates Critical Information Infrastructure; attacks on CII are a cognisable offence; NCIIPC is nodal body BMS apps exploited: BAT-BMS and Epoch Li-ion (Chinese-developed); Lossigy and SMART BMS (similar architecture). Exploited BMS units accepted Bluetooth connections with weak or default credentials, allowing anyone within range to activate the battery discharge switch and cut power. Only lithium-ion BMS-equipped e-rickshaws affected: Vehicles running on older lead-acid or dry batteries lack Bluetooth connectivity and are therefore not vulnerable — an important Prelims distinction. EU Digital Battery Passport: An EU Battery Regulation requirement mandating a digital record of battery composition, carbon footprint, supply chain, and end-of-life information — extending traceability requirements to software and firmware. 7 — Prelims Pointers BMS (Battery Management System) — electronic system monitoring cell voltage, temperature, state of charge; protects battery; modern units are Bluetooth-enabled and software-defined CERT-In — under Section 70B, IT Act 2000; national cyber incident response; 2022 Directions: 6-hour reporting, 180-day log retention; expanded guidance includes SBOM, secure software development — but guidance is non-binding for connected battery products NCIIPC — under PMO/NTRO; Section 70, IT Act; protects CII sectors (power, transport, telecom, banking, defence); grid-scale BESS may fall under remit; EV/consumer BMS currently outside jurisdiction SBOM (Software Bill of Materials) — machine-readable inventory of all software components (libraries, firmware, dependencies) in a product; mandated by EU CRA and US EO 14028; enables rapid vulnerability identification across product fleets EU Cyber Resilience Act (CRA) — first EU-wide binding regulation for cybersecurity of products with digital elements; mandates SBOM, secure-by-design, incident reporting; full compliance deadline December 2027 MeitY — Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology; oversees CERT-In, digital policy, and security assurance for connected devices; directed removal of BMS apps from app stores in the Delhi incident Exam note: Distinguish CERT-In (incident response, under MeitY) from NCIIPC (CII protection, under PMO/NTRO) — a common confusion point. Also note: only lithium-ion BMS-equipped (Bluetooth-enabled) e-rickshaws were affected, not lead-acid vehicles. The editorial’s key policy argument is that trustworthiness (security attestation) — not origin — should be the test for imported technology. 8 — Practice Mains Question “The misuse of battery management apps to disable e-rickshaws in Delhi reveals a structural gap in India’s cybersecurity governance of connected systems.” Critically examine, with reference to existing regulatory frameworks and global best practices.GS 3 · 15 marks · ~250 words · Internal Security + Science & Technology + Governance Intro: Contextualise the Delhi BMS incident as a proof-of-concept for connected-device cybersecurity failures; distinguish the immediate e-rickshaw disruption from the larger risk to critical infrastructure. Body 1 — The regulatory gap: CERT-In (non-binding guidance), NCIIPC (CII only), CEA/DoT (functional safety, not BMS-specific) — show how connected battery products fall between existing mandates. Body 2 — Global frameworks: EU CRA (SBOM mandate, secure-by-design, Dec 2027), EU Digital Battery Passport, US EO 14028/NIST SSDF — draw contrast with India’s reactive app-removal approach. Body 3 — Way forward: BIS standards incorporating SBOM + CERT-In guidance, mandatory authenticated Bluetooth, NCIIPC jurisdiction extension, CVD mechanism, and a trustworthiness (not origin-based) policy frame. Conclusion: India’s EV ambition and digital infrastructure expansion demand proactive, standards-based cybersecurity governance of connected battery systems — building resilience into the supply chain rather than responding to individual incidents. 9 — Practice MCQ Consider the following statements regarding India’s cybersecurity institutional framework: 1. The National Critical Information Infrastructure Protection Centre (NCIIPC) functions under the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY). 2. CERT-In is constituted under Section 70B of the Information Technology Act, 2000, and mandates reporting of cybersecurity incidents within six hours of detection. 3. The EU Cyber Resilience Act requires manufacturers to maintain a Software Bill of Materials (SBOM) for products with digital elements, with full compliance mandated by December 2027. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only(b) 2 and 3 only(c) 1 and 3 only(d) 1, 2 and 3 Editorial 02 of 02 Article 02 Wealth of Lacunae: Cybersecurity and Transparency Are Non-Negotiable in Vital Installations Editorial — The Hindu Relevance: GS 3 (internal security — cybersecurity, critical infrastructure protection, nuclear security, supply chain vulnerabilities), GS 2 (governance — transparency, disclosure frameworks, regulatory accountability) and Essay (security vs transparency, technology governance, state and citizen trust) — using the Kudankulam nuclear plant contractor breach as an entry point to examine India's breach disclosure failures. GS 3 — Internal SecurityGS 2 — Governance & TransparencyEssay — Security vs Openness 1 — Issue in Brief Ransomware group World Leaks published nearly 19,000 files (14.3 GB) linked to India's largest nuclear plant — Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant (KKNPP), Tamil Nadu — after compromising systems of Reliance Infrastructure, an engineering contractor for Units 3 and 4, with data hosted on Yotta Data Services. Files include engineering drawings, ventilation and cooling system layouts, floor plans, internal minutes of meetings between Indian and Russian (Rosatom) engineers, vendor/supplier lists, and insurance documents — spanning 2016 to mid-2025. NPCIL insists files pertain only to common service facilities outside the nuclear island and do not relate to nuclear safety or security systems — but the editorial argues that even non-operational data enables adversarial "intelligence preparation." The deeper editorial argument: India's breach disclosure regime is inconsistent and opaque. Yotta detected suspicious activity on 29 May; data appeared publicly on 11 June; NPCIL issued a formal clarification only on 15 July — a 35-day lag — and only after widespread media reports. Basic cyber-hygiene and proactive communication are, the editorial concludes, non-negotiable. 2 — Static Background Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant (KKNPP): Located in Tamil Nadu; India's largest nuclear power station and one of seven nuclear plants in India; built in collaboration with Russia's Rosatom. Reliance Infrastructure won a contract in 2018 to design and build infrastructure for Units 3 and 4 (still under construction; targeted commissioning 2027; combined capacity 2,000 MW). 2019 precedent: Malware was detected on KKNPP's administrative network in 2019; NPCIL maintained the operational reactor network was unaffected — establishing a pattern of security incidents paired with opaque public communication at the same facility. World Leaks: A well-known ransomware-as-a-service group that has previously targeted Nike and Tata Group. In June 2026 the group reportedly demanded USD 1.5 million to keep Tata Group files (containing Apple and Tesla proprietary designs) private; when ignored, it published. Its modus operandi: steal → demand ransom → publish on dark web if refused. CERT-In (Section 70B, IT Act, 2000): India's national cyber incident response body under MeitY; 2022 Directions introduced a mandatory 6-hour incident reporting window; non-compliance attracts penalties under Section 70B. CERT-In is currently investigating the Kudankulam breach. Critical Information Infrastructure (CII): Designated under Section 70, IT Act, 2000; any attack on CII is a cognisable offence; NCIIPC (National Critical Information Infrastructure Protection Centre) under PMO/NTRO is the nodal protection body. India's cyber threat landscape: Cybersecurity incidents rose from 10.29 lakh (2022) to 22.68 lakh (2024); cybercrime losses projected at ₹20,000 crore across sectors in 2025. Notable prior attacks: AIIMS Delhi ransomware (23 November 2022) — servers down 10+ days, ~3 million patient records at risk; airlines; State government portals. Atomic Energy Act, 1962: Governs nuclear security in India; nuclear energy is a Union subject. NPCIL (operator, under Department of Atomic Energy) is distinct from AERB (Atomic Energy Regulatory Board — independent nuclear safety regulator). 3 — Key Dimensions Supply chain as the weakest link: The breach did not penetrate the nuclear island — it exploited a secondary contractor (Reliance Infrastructure) and its third-party data host (Yotta), effectively bypassing the national security perimeter. The incident is a landmark example of supply chain attack on critical infrastructure: security is only as strong as its weakest contractor. The three-tier disclosure failure: Yotta detected suspicious activity (29 May) → data appeared on World Leaks website (11 June) → NPCIL formally communicated (15 July) — a 35-day gap between public exposure and official acknowledgement, exemplifying the opacity the editorial critiques. "Intelligence preparation" risk: Vendor lists, joint inspection records, and layout information for ventilation and cooling systems — even if outside the nuclear island — constitute meaningful inputs for adversarial targeting, sabotage planning, and social engineering of supply chain actors. Organisational culture of concealment: Affected organisations delay disclosure fearing damage to public confidence, share prices, contracts, and regulatory scrutiny. Many also lack mature incident response capabilities — treating cybersecurity as compliance rather than necessity — making early-stage damage assessment technically impossible. India as a high-value target: India is described in the editorial as the third-most breached country; KKNPP is the centrepiece of India's nuclear power expansion ambitions under PM Modi — making it a high-profile target for state-sponsored actors as well as criminal ransomware groups. 4 — Critical Analysis In favour — Supply chain regulation gap is real and urgent: India's CII framework (Section 70, IT Act) protects primary operators but imposes no equivalent cybersecurity obligations on Tier-2 and Tier-3 contractors — a structural gap this incident vividly illustrates. CERT-In's 6-hour mandatory reporting rule was demonstrably not followed. In favour — Transparency has a constitutional and democratic basis: Article 19(1)(a) and the RTI Act, 2005 create a normative expectation of disclosure; when critical public infrastructure is compromised, Parliament and citizens have a legitimate interest in knowing the extent and nature of the breach. In favour — Nuclear credibility and diplomatic stakes are high: Opacity damages public trust, deters private investment in nuclear expansion, and creates friction with partner nations — especially Rosatom, whose engineers' joint inspection records are among the leaked files. In favour — CERT-In's audit mandate needs teeth: CERT-In conducted nearly 10,000 audits across critical sectors in FY 2024–25, but contractor-level audit obligations remain weak. Extending CII cybersecurity requirements down the supply chain is administratively feasible and legally grounded in Section 70. Against — Over-disclosure risks adversarial advantage: In nuclear security contexts, excessive public communication about leaked material may assist adversaries in confirming authenticity or identifying gaps — a legitimate reason for calibrated, rather than radical, transparency. Against — Operational reactor networks are air-gapped: The direct threat to nuclear safety is low; reactor operational networks are physically separated from contractor-managed administrative systems. There is a risk that public alarm is disproportionate to actual danger. Against — Attribution and file authenticity are unverified: Reuters and independent researchers reviewed the files but could not independently verify their authenticity. The government's account of what was and was not compromised has not been independently audited. Against — App-layer and contractor-level fixes may suffice: The specific breach required no penetration of NPCIL's own systems; mandatory contractual cybersecurity clauses, regular third-party audits, and credential hygiene for contractors may address the vulnerability without legislative overhaul. 5 — Way Forward Extend CII cybersecurity obligations down the supply chain: amend CERT-In directions or issue binding guidance requiring Tier-2 and Tier-3 contractors of CII projects to undergo mandatory annual cybersecurity audits, air-gapping of sensitive project data, and 6-hour incident reporting — closing the contractor gap the Kudankulam breach exposed. Create a Nuclear Cyber Security Unit within NPCIL and AERB for dedicated red-team exercises, contractor security audits, and supply chain penetration tests — modelled on the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission's (NRC) cybersecurity framework. Develop a graduated public disclosure protocol: not all breaches merit the same level of communication; CERT-In should serve as the authority for managing disclosure timelines, balancing national security with the citizen's legitimate right to know. Investigate the 35-day disclosure gap: CERT-In and NPCIL must clarify whether the mandatory 6-hour reporting norm was complied with; if not, accountability must be fixed under Section 70B. Mandate contractor cybersecurity clauses in all nuclear and CII project contracts — requiring vendors to disclose breaches immediately, maintain secure development practices, and accept third-party audits as conditions of contract. 6 — Data & Key Facts 19,000Files (14.3 GB) leaked; most sensitive subset of 8,58,000 total Reliance files on World Leaks 35 daysGap between data appearing publicly (11 June) and NPCIL's formal clarification (15 July 2026) 2,000 MWCombined capacity of KKNPP Units 3 & 4 (under construction; target commissioning 2027) USD 1.5 MnRansom World Leaks demanded from Tata Group (June 2026); same group behind Kudankulam breach 22.68 lakhCybersecurity incidents in India in 2024 (up from 10.29 lakh in 2022) 6 hoursCERT-In mandatory incident reporting window (2022 Directions); non-compliance = penalty under Section 70B, IT Act Documents leaked (2016–2025): engineering drawings, ventilation/cooling system blueprints, floor plans of a common control room, Indian–Russian joint inspection records, vendor/supplier lists, insurance documents. Reuters reviewed but could not verify every file's authenticity. AIIMS Delhi ransomware (23 Nov 2022): Servers down 10+ days; ~3 million patient records at risk; ~1.3 TB of data on 5 servers encrypted — India's most cited prior attack on critical health infrastructure. 7 — Prelims Pointers KKNPP — India's largest nuclear plant; Tamil Nadu; Rosatom collaboration; Units 1 & 2 operational; Units 3 & 4 under construction (target 2027, combined 2,000 MW); Reliance Infrastructure is contractor for Units 3 & 4 CERT-In — Section 70B, IT Act 2000; under MeitY; 6-hour mandatory incident reporting (2022 Directions); 180-day log retention; ~10,000 CII audits in FY 2024–25 NCIIPC — under PMO/NTRO; Section 70, IT Act; protects designated CII sectors (power, transport, telecom, banking, defence); distinct from CERT-In (MeitY) NPCIL vs AERB — NPCIL: operator/commercial entity under Department of Atomic Energy. AERB: independent nuclear safety regulator under Atomic Energy Act, 1962. Nuclear energy = Union subject World Leaks — ransomware-as-a-service group; targets include Nike, Tata Group, KKNPP contractor; modus operandi: steal → ransom demand → publish on dark web if refused Section 70, IT Act — designates Critical Information Infrastructure; attacks on CII are cognisable offences; Section 70B establishes CERT-In; Section 70A establishes NCIIPC Exam note: Do not confuse CERT-In (incident response, under MeitY) with NCIIPC (CII protection, under PMO/NTRO) — a very common error. Also: nuclear energy is a Union subject under the Atomic Energy Act, 1962, not on the Concurrent List. NPCIL (operator) and AERB (regulator) are separate bodies. 8 — Practice Mains Question "Cybersecurity breaches at India's critical infrastructure increasingly exploit the supply chain rather than the primary facility. Critically examine the challenges this poses and suggest a framework for stronger protection."GS 3 — Internal Security + Science & Technology · 15 marks · ~250 words Intro: Define CII and the supply-chain attack vector; cite KKNPP–Reliance–Yotta incident as the live context alongside AIIMS 2022 to establish a pattern. Body 1 — The supply-chain gap: Section 70 protects primary operators but not Tier-2/3 contractors; CERT-In's 6-hour rule demonstrably not followed; contractor-level audit obligations remain weak despite 10,000 CII audits in FY25. Body 2 — Disclosure opacity: 35-day lag at Kudankulam; organisational incentive to conceal; the DPDP Act 2023 vs CERT-In dual-obligation framework; tension between security and transparency. Conclusion: Extend CII obligations down the supply chain; create a Nuclear Cyber Security Unit; develop a graduated disclosure protocol; mandate cybersecurity clauses in all CII project contracts. 9 — Practice MCQ Consider the following statements regarding India's cybersecurity framework for critical infrastructure: 1. The National Critical Information Infrastructure Protection Centre (NCIIPC) functions under the Prime Minister's Office and is constituted under Section 70A of the IT Act, 2000. 2. CERT-In's 2022 Directions require organisations to report cybersecurity incidents within 24 hours of detection. 3. Under the Atomic Energy Act, 1962, nuclear energy is a Union subject, and NPCIL (operator) and AERB (regulator) are separate bodies. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only(b) 2 and 3 only(c) 1 and 3 only(d) 1, 2 and 3

Jul 17, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Contents Thursday, 17 July 2026 SC Sets Aside Assam Foreigner Declarations for 27 — Citizenship Must Follow Due ProcessGS 2 NIPUN Bharat at Five Years — Progress, Gaps and the Road AheadGS 2 Centre Issues Draft Notification Banning Paraquat DichlorideGS 3 NaMo Green Rail — India Flags Off Its First Hydrogen-Powered TrainGS 3 Kudankulam Data Leak — Ransomware, BOP Data and Nuclear SecurityGS 3 Supreme Court Jurisprudence on Hunger Strikes and State Duty of CareGS 2 Article 01 SC Sets Aside Assam Foreigner Declarations for 27 — Citizenship Must Follow Due Process GS Paper 2 — Indian Constitution | Judiciary | Citizenship Why in News The Supreme Court, in Sabitri Dey @ Swasthi Dey & Ors. v. Union of India & Ors. (2026 INSC 694), set aside a batch of 27 Gauhati High Court judgments that had upheld Foreigners Tribunal orders declaring the appellants to be illegal migrants. A bench of Justice Vikram Nath and Justice Sandeep Mehta remanded all 27 cases to the concerned Foreigners Tribunals for fresh adjudication. The Court held that citizenship determinations carry significant constitutional weight and cannot be conducted through mechanical, one-sided, or ex parte proceedings. Static Background Foreigners Tribunals (FTs) — Structure and Powers Statutory basis: Constituted under the Foreigners (Tribunals) Order, 1964, issued under Section 3 of the Foreigners Act, 1946, to adjudicate whether a person is a foreigner. Geographical scope: While the Foreigners (Tribunals) Order applies across India, FTs currently operate primarily in Assam, where they handle citizenship disputes arising from the National Register of Citizens (NRC) and police references. Composition: Each Tribunal is headed by a member drawn from judicial officers, advocates, or civil servants with judicial experience. Powers: FTs exercise civil court powers — summoning witnesses, examining persons on oath, and requiring production of documents. Under the Immigration and Foreigners Order, 2025, they have additionally been vested with powers of a Judicial Magistrate First Class, including authority to issue arrest warrants and order detention. Procedure: The Tribunal issues notice to the proceedee, provides an opportunity to present evidence, and delivers a reasoned opinion. A declaration of foreigner status may lead to detention and deportation. Burden of Proof — Evolution of the Legal Framework Law / Judgment Key Provision on Burden Foreigners Act, 1946 — Section 9 Reverse burden: the proceedee must prove they are not a foreigner IMDT Act, 1983 (Assam-specific) Burden shifted to the State/complainant, making detection and deportation significantly harder State of Arunachal Pradesh v. Khudiram Chakma (1994) SC held burden lies on the individual asserting Indian citizenship Sarbananda Sonowal v. Union of India (2005) SC struck down IMDT Act as unconstitutional; characterised illegal immigration as "external aggression" under Article 355; restored reverse burden under Section 9 Immigration and Foreigners Act, 2025 Consolidates and replaces the Foreigners Act, 1946; Section 9 reverse-burden principle carried forward India's Citizenship Framework — Jus Soli to Jus Sanguinis Constitution (1950): Articles 5–11 provided an inclusive, largely jus soli (right by birth) framework at commencement. Citizenship Act, 1955: Statutory framework for acquiring citizenship through birth, descent, registration, naturalisation, and territorial incorporation. Amendment 1986 (post-Assam Accord, 1985): First shift toward jus sanguinis — citizenship by birth restricted to those with at least one Indian citizen parent. Amendment 2003: Further tightened — one parent must be Indian and the other must not be an illegal migrant. Introduced Section 14A (NRIC), concept of "illegal migrant," and OCI status. CAA, 2019: Exempted Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, Jains, Parsis, and Christians from Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Afghanistan from the definition of "illegal migrant"; reduced naturalisation period from 11 to 5 years for these groups. Citizenship by Birth — Current Position Birth Period Citizenship Condition 26 Jan 1950 – 1 Jul 1987 Citizen by birth regardless of parents' nationality (jus soli) 1 Jul 1987 – 3 Dec 2004 At least one parent must be an Indian citizen On or after 3 Dec 2004 One parent must be Indian citizen AND the other must not be an illegal migrant Analysis Facts of the Lead Case The case originated from a May 1997 order of the Illegal Migrants (Determination) Tribunal declaring Sabitri Dey and her husband Sambhu Dey as illegal migrants after they failed to appear before the Tribunal following notice. The petitioners contended they were unaware of the proceedings, and that the 1997 order rested entirely on hearsay evidence from an Enquiry Officer rather than substantive proof. They came to know of the order only in 2019 and approached the Gauhati High Court, which dismissed their petition in 2020 citing a 23-year delay and "utter negligence." The Supreme Court thereafter admitted the matter. Core Legal Questions Before the Court Whether an individual can be declared a foreigner through ex parte proceedings — based solely on non-appearance — when they possess government documents supporting Indian citizenship. Whether denial of legal aid or appointment of amicus curiae in such proceedings constitutes a breach of Article 21 (right to a fair and just procedure). Whether the Gauhati High Court erred in refusing to examine documentary evidence of citizenship on account of procedural delays alone. The Supreme Court's Ruling Proceedings under the Foreigners Act, 1946 (now Immigration and Foreigners Act, 2025) must be fair, lawful, and reasoned; they cannot be mechanical or devoid of application of mind. Articles 14 (equality before law) and 21 (protection of life and personal liberty) extend to foreigners as well — these guarantees are not confined to citizens. Section 9's reverse burden does not permit a Foreigners Tribunal to make a mechanical declaration of foreigner status merely on account of the proceedee's absence. The Tribunal must independently assess the State's evidence, ensure proper service of notice, disclose the main grounds of reference, provide a fair hearing opportunity, and record reasoned findings. The Court set aside all 27 Gauhati High Court judgments along with the corresponding Foreigners Tribunal opinions, remanding the matters for fresh adjudication on merits. New Deportation Policy, 2026 The Ministry of Home Affairs has simultaneously introduced a New Deportation Policy establishing a uniform, time-bound framework for detection, identification, detention, and deportation of illegal migrants — particularly Bangladeshi and Myanmarese nationals. States and UTs are required to set up district-level Special Task Forces (STFs), operationalise Holding Centres, and use the Foreigners Identification Portal (FIP) for biometric and demographic profiling. Nationality verification must be completed within 90 days for suspected Bangladeshi and Myanmarese nationals. The ruling reaffirms that the constitutional weight of citizenship determinations demands procedural rigour — not procedural shortcuts. By holding that a Tribunal is the primary adjudicatory forum rather than a forwarding authority, the Court strengthens the accountability of Foreigners Tribunals across Assam. The judgment is likely to affect a significant number of pending cases, requiring Tribunals to independently assess evidence, ensure notice compliance, and record reasoned findings before any foreigner declaration is made. Prelims Pointers Foreigners Tribunals are quasi-judicial bodies constituted under the Foreigners (Tribunals) Order, 1964, under Section 3 of the Foreigners Act, 1946 — not under any Act of Parliament directly. Section 9, Foreigners Act, 1946 — places the burden of proof on the proceedee (accused person) to establish that they are not a foreigner; this is a reverse burden, departing from the ordinary presumption of innocence. IMDT Act, 1983 applied only to Assam and reversed the burden to the State; struck down in Sarbananda Sonowal v. Union of India (2005) as unconstitutional — SC described illegal immigration as "external aggression" under Article 355. Article 355 of the Constitution — duty of Union to protect States against external aggression and internal disturbance; invoked in Sonowal (2005) to justify stricter immigration control. Immigration and Foreigners Act, 2025 — new legislation that consolidates and replaces the Foreigners Act, 1946; the reverse burden principle under Section 9 is carried forward. Jus Soli vs Jus Sanguinis: Jus soli = citizenship by place of birth; jus sanguinis = citizenship by descent/parentage. India has progressively shifted from jus soli (pre-1987) toward jus sanguinis (post-2003 amendments). CAA, 2019 — exempts six religious minorities (Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, Jains, Parsis, Christians) from Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Afghanistan from the "illegal migrant" category; reduces naturalisation period from 11 to 5 years for them. Does not affect Muslim citizens. OCI (Overseas Citizen of India) — introduced by the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2003. India does not permit dual citizenship; OCI is not full citizenship but a lifelong residency and work visa. New Deportation Policy, 2026 (MHA) — mandates district-level STFs, Holding Centres, Foreigners Identification Portal (FIP) for biometric profiling, and 90-day nationality verification for Bangladeshi and Myanmarese nationals. Articles 14 and 21 — the SC in this ruling confirmed that these fundamental rights extend to foreigners, not just citizens. Article 14 (equality before law) and Article 21 (protection of life and personal liberty) impose procedural obligations even in foreigner-determination proceedings. Mains Practice Question The Supreme Court's ruling in Sabitri Dey v. Union of India (2026) reaffirms that citizenship determination must comply with constitutional due process rather than procedural technicalities. In this context, critically examine the functioning of Foreigners Tribunals in Assam and evaluate the adequacy of the legal framework governing citizenship disputes. GS Paper 2  |  Indian Constitution, Governance  |  250 words MCQ — Match the Following Match the following laws/judgments with their key provisions regarding citizenship and foreigner determination: List I (Law / Case) A. Foreigners Act, 1946 — Section 9 B. IMDT Act, 1983 C. Sarbananda Sonowal v. Union of India (2005) D. Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2003 List II (Key Provision / Outcome) 1. Introduced the concept of "illegal migrant" and OCI into Indian law 2. Placed burden of proof on the State/complainant in Assam foreigner cases 3. Struck down as unconstitutional; illegal immigration termed "external aggression" 4. Reverse burden — proceedee must prove they are not a foreigner AA-1, B-4, C-3, D-2 BA-4, B-2, C-1, D-3 CA-4, B-2, C-3, D-1 DA-2, B-4, C-1, D-3 Answer: C Section 9 of the Foreigners Act, 1946 places the reverse burden of proof on the proceedee (A-4). The IMDT Act, 1983, applicable only to Assam, shifted the burden to the State/complainant (B-2). The Supreme Court in Sarbananda Sonowal (2005) struck down the IMDT Act and described illegal immigration as "external aggression" under Article 355 (C-3). The Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2003 introduced the concept of "illegal migrant" and Overseas Citizen of India (OCI) into the Citizenship Act, 1955 (D-1). Article 02 NIPUN Bharat at Five Years — Progress, Gaps and the Road Ahead GS Paper 2 — Education | Social Justice | Government Schemes This article is based on an opinion piece authored by Anita Karwal, Chairperson, Gujarat Real Estate Regulatory Authority, and Ishmeet Singh, CEO, CSF. Views reflect the authors' perspective on education policy; verify specific data points with official NIPUN Bharat and ASER reports before use in exam answers. Why in News Five years after its launch in July 2021, the NIPUN Bharat Mission's outcomes are being assessed and its next phase is under active policy debate. While measurable gains in foundational literacy and numeracy (FLN) have been recorded in several states, persistent gaps at the Grade 3–5 level remain significant. Calls are growing to extend the Mission's scope and deepen institutional machinery ahead of the 2026–27 deadline for universal FLN achievement. Prelims Pointers NIPUN Bharat stands for National Initiative for Proficiency in Reading with Understanding and Numeracy. Launched in July 2021 by the Ministry of Education under the Samagra Shiksha scheme, within the framework of NEP 2020. Target: Every child to acquire competencies in reading, writing, and numeracy by the end of Grade 3, and not later than Grade 5, by 2026–27. Target group: children aged 3–9 years (Balvatika to Grade 3). Samagra Shiksha — an integrated, centrally sponsored scheme covering pre-school to Class XII, formed by subsuming Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan (SSA), Rashtriya Madhyamik Shiksha Abhiyan (RMSA), and Teacher Education schemes. FLN (Foundational Literacy and Numeracy) — refers to a child's ability to read simple sentences with comprehension and solve basic arithmetic by the end of Class 3. These are gateway skills for all subsequent learning. Learning poverty (World Bank definition) — inability to read and understand a simple text by age 10. India's learning poverty rate is approximately 55–56%, worsened by the COVID-19 pandemic. ASER (Annual Status of Education Report) — published by NGO Pratham Foundation. Tracks learning outcomes in government schools. Grade 3 students able to read a Grade 2 text improved from 16.3% (2022) to 23.4% (2024) — reflecting slow progress. PARAKH — Performance Assessment, Review and Analysis of Knowledge for Holistic Development; the national assessment body under NEP 2020. PARAKH Rashtriya Sarvekshan (PRS) and the Foundational Learning Study (FLS) are its key assessment tools. EGRA/EGMA (Early Grade Reading/Mathematics Assessment) are international benchmarking standards for FLN measurement. DIKSHA — Digital Infrastructure for Knowledge Sharing; national platform providing e-content, assessment banks, teacher handbooks, and children's literature for both students and teachers. Balvatika — the pre-primary class (age 5–6) introduced under NEP 2020, designed to bridge early childhood education with formal schooling; a critical feeder for NIPUN Bharat's FLN goals. NISHTHA — National Initiative for School Heads and Teachers Holistic Advancement; the teacher capacity-building programme with FLN-specific modules deployed under NIPUN Bharat. NPST — National Professional Standards for Teachers; framework under NEP 2020 setting competency benchmarks for teachers at different career stages. Multi-Grade Multi-Level (MGML) classrooms — characterise approximately 70% of India's primary schools, where a single teacher handles students of different grades and learning levels simultaneously. PM SHRI — PM Schools for Rising India; centrally sponsored scheme to upgrade over 14,500 schools to serve as model institutions demonstrating NEP 2020 implementation. NIPUN Bharat implementation structure: Five-tier — National to State to District to Block/Cluster to School — with participation from School Management Committees (SMCs), parents, local bodies, and communities. Article 03 Centre Issues Draft Notification Banning Paraquat Dichloride GS Paper 3 — Agriculture | Environment | Science & Technology Why in News The Union Ministry of Agriculture issued a gazette notification on 13 July 2026 proposing a nationwide prohibition on the manufacture, import, transport, distribution, sale, and use of paraquat dichloride. The draft notification was issued under Section 27 of the Insecticides Act, 1968, with a 30-day window for objections before the final ban order is issued — it is a proposed, not yet enacted, ban. The decision follows the recommendation of a government-appointed Expert Committee and the Registration Committee, citing documented health risks and the absence of a specific antidote. Telangana had earlier imposed a temporary three-month ban from 3 April 2026, highlighting that states lack authority to permanently ban centrally registered agrochemicals — a power vested solely with the Centre. Static Background What is Paraquat Dichloride? Chemical nature: A non-selective, fast-acting contact herbicide (weedicide) that destroys green plant tissue on contact by interfering with the electron transport chain during photosynthesis, generating toxic free radicals. Crops used in: Tea, cotton, coffee, rubber, paddy, wheat, maize, potato, grapes, and apple — primarily for pre-harvest desiccation and weed control. Toxicity profile: Among the world's most toxic agricultural chemicals. Can enter the body through ingestion, inhalation, or skin absorption. Causes severe lung fibrosis (scarring), kidney and liver failure, and cardiovascular damage. Linked to Parkinson's disease with chronic occupational exposure. No antidote: There is no specific antidote for paraquat poisoning — a critical public health concern that distinguishes it from many other agrochemicals where treatment protocols exist. Global status: Already banned or severely restricted in over 70 countries, including the European Union and China. Regulatory Framework for Pesticides in India Insecticides Act, 1968: The primary legislation governing the import, manufacture, sale, transport, distribution, and use of pesticides (termed "insecticides" in the Act). Administered by the Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare. Central Insecticides Board and Registration Committee (CIBRC): The statutory body under the Act responsible for registering pesticides and recommending regulatory action. The Registration Committee's recommendation was the direct trigger for the ban notification. Section 27, Insecticides Act, 1968: Empowers the Central Government to prohibit the import, manufacture, or use of any insecticide if satisfied that its use involves risk to human beings or animals, after consulting the Board. Division of powers: Regulation of agrochemicals is a Central subject — states may impose temporary restrictions but cannot permanently ban a registered chemical. Telangana's three-month ban illustrated this constraint. Context — Paraquat Deaths in India More than 200 deaths — predominantly by suicide — were attributed to paraquat poisoning in Telangana over recent years. Similar concerns were raised by Andhra Pradesh, Odisha, and Kerala. The Telangana Legislative Assembly passed a unanimous resolution urging the Centre to impose a nationwide ban. Concerns also extend to occupational poisoning among agricultural workers and accidental ingestion, particularly in rural households where storage practices may be inadequate. Analysis What the Expert Committee Found Documented adverse health effects, including Parkinson's disease linkage and irreversible lung damage. Continued history of poisoning incidents — both intentional and accidental — with consistently high fatality rates. Absence of a specific antidote, making treatment outcomes significantly worse than for most other chemical exposures. International precedent: the ban or severe restriction of paraquat in over 70 countries, including major agricultural economies, was cited as corroborating evidence. Scope of the Proposed Ban Complete prohibition on manufacture, import, transport, distribution, sale, and use of paraquat dichloride throughout India. Applies to all formulations and concentrations of the active ingredient. A 30-day objection period allows industry stakeholders to file responses with the Ministry before the final notification is gazetted. Agricultural Implications Weed management cost: Paraquat was one of the cheapest and fastest-acting weedicides available; its removal will require farmers — especially in tea and cotton — to shift to costlier or more labour-intensive alternatives. Alternatives: Glufosinate-ammonium, glyphosate (itself under global scrutiny), and manual/mechanical weeding are the primary substitutes; their accessibility and cost-effectiveness vary by region and crop. Food chain safety: The ban is expected to reduce hazardous chemical residues entering the food chain — a concern particularly relevant for export-oriented crops where MRL (Maximum Residue Limit) compliance is checked by importing countries. India's proposed ban on paraquat dichloride signals a significant recalibration of pesticide regulation — prioritising public health and occupational safety over agrochemical convenience. With over 200 documented deaths in a single state, no available antidote, and bans already in force across more than 70 countries, the regulatory case is strong. The more complex challenge lies in transition — ensuring farmers have access to affordable, safer alternatives and that the shift does not disproportionately burden small and marginal cultivators who relied on paraquat for low-cost weed control. Prelims Pointers Paraquat dichloride is a non-selective contact herbicide — it kills all green plant material it contacts and does not discriminate between weeds and crops; used primarily before crop emergence or post-harvest. Section 27 of the Insecticides Act, 1968 — empowers the Central Government to prohibit any pesticide that poses risk to human or animal life. This is the legal basis for the draft ban notification (July 2026). Note: The Act uses the term "insecticide" for all pesticides including herbicides and fungicides. Registration Committee (under CIBRC) — the statutory body that evaluates and registers pesticides in India; its recommendation is required before the government can ban a registered agrochemical. No antidote — the absence of a specific antidote for paraquat poisoning is a key distinguishing characteristic and a primary reason cited for the ban. This fact is frequently examined in prelims in the context of hazardous chemicals. Banned in 70+ countries including the EU and China — India would join this growing list upon finalisation of the ban. State vs Centre on agrochemicals: Agrochemical regulation is a Central subject under the Insecticides Act, 1968. States may restrict use temporarily but cannot permanently ban a centrally registered chemical — Telangana's 3-month ban (April 2026) illustrated this boundary. Parkinson's disease linkage: Chronic occupational exposure to paraquat has been epidemiologically linked to increased risk of Parkinson's disease — a neurological fact relevant to GS 3 (Science) and environmental health questions. Draft vs enacted ban: As of July 2026, the ban is a draft notification under Section 27 with a 30-day objection period. The final notification has not yet been issued — distinguish this in answers. Mains Practice Question The proposed ban on paraquat dichloride reflects the tension between agrochemical utility and public health imperatives. Examine the regulatory framework governing pesticide bans in India, the health and agricultural implications of the paraquat ban, and the challenges of ensuring a just transition for farmers. GS Paper 3  |  Agriculture, Environment, Science & Technology  |  250 words MCQ — Single Statement With reference to paraquat dichloride and its proposed ban in India, which of the following statements is correct? AParaquat dichloride is a selective herbicide used only in paddy cultivation and is banned in fewer than 20 countries. BThe proposed ban is enacted under the Environment Protection Act, 1986, and states have independent authority to permanently ban registered agrochemicals. CThe draft ban notification was issued under Section 27 of the Insecticides Act, 1968, and paraquat poisoning has no specific antidote, contributing to its high fatality rate. DThe Registration Committee recommended continued use of paraquat with stricter label warnings as an alternative to an outright ban. Answer: C Option C is correct. The draft ban notification was issued on 13 July 2026 under Section 27 of the Insecticides Act, 1968, after the Registration Committee recommended prohibition. The absence of a specific antidote is a key cited reason for the ban. Option A is wrong — paraquat is non-selective (not crop-specific) and has been banned in over 70 countries. Option B is wrong — the legal basis is the Insecticides Act, 1968, not the Environment Protection Act; and states cannot permanently ban centrally registered chemicals. Option D is wrong — the Registration Committee recommended an outright ban, not a label-based approach. Article 04 NaMo Green Rail — India Flags Off Its First Hydrogen-Powered Train GS Paper 3 — Science & Technology | Infrastructure | Energy Why in News Prime Minister Narendra Modi flagged off the NaMo Green Rail from Jind, Haryana — India's first hydrogen-powered fuel cell passenger train, indigenously designed and integrated. The event was part of a multi-state visit to Haryana, Chandigarh, and Punjab under which initiatives worth over ₹25,000 crore were unveiled across rail, road, and healthcare sectors. India becomes one of the few countries globally to operationalise a hydrogen-powered passenger train at commercial scale. India's first hydrogen fuel cell passenger train, the NaMo Green Rail, ready for operations on the Jind–Sonipat route in Haryana. Static Background Hydrogen as a Transport Fuel — The Science Fuel cell principle: A hydrogen fuel cell generates electricity through an electrochemical reaction between hydrogen (H₂) and atmospheric oxygen (O₂). The only by-product is water vapour — making it a zero-emission propulsion technology at the point of use. Contrast with combustion: Unlike diesel or compressed natural gas engines that combust fuel to drive pistons, a fuel cell converts chemical energy directly into electrical energy, achieving higher efficiency and eliminating particulate and NOx emissions. Contrast with battery-electric trains: Battery-electric trains store electricity onboard and require charging infrastructure; hydrogen trains generate their own electricity onboard continuously, providing greater range and faster "refuelling" analogous to conventional trains. Green vs grey hydrogen: Hydrogen produced using renewable energy (electrolysis powered by solar/wind) is called green hydrogen; produced from natural gas reforming with CO₂ release is grey hydrogen. The climate benefit of hydrogen trains depends on the source of hydrogen used. India's Hydrogen Policy Framework National Green Hydrogen Mission (2023): Approved with an outlay of ₹19,744 crore by 2029–30. Targets production capacity of at least 5 million metric tonnes (MMT) of green hydrogen per annum by 2030, along with development of export capacity and domestic usage in industry, mobility, and power sectors. SIGHT programme: Strategic Interventions for Green Hydrogen Transition — the financial incentive scheme under the Mission providing production-linked incentives for green hydrogen and electrolyser manufacturing. Indian Railways and hydrogen: Indian Railways has been actively piloting hydrogen traction as part of its goal of achieving net-zero carbon emissions by 2030. The NaMo Green Rail represents the culmination of earlier hydrogen train pilot projects. Global Hydrogen Train Landscape Country Train / Initiative Status Germany Coradia iLint (Alstom) World's first commercially operated hydrogen train; operational since 2018 in Lower Saxony United Kingdom HydroFLEX (Porterbrook/Univ. of Birmingham) Pilot completed; further development ongoing China CRRC hydrogen tram Operational in limited corridors India NaMo Green Rail (indigenously designed & integrated) Flagged off July 2026; Jind–Sonipat route Key Features of the NaMo Green Rail Design and integration: Designed and integrated indigenously — a significant achievement in terms of domestic manufacturing capability under the Make in India framework. Configuration: 10-coach trainset, making it one of the world's longest and most powerful hydrogen-fuelled passenger trains. Propulsion: 3,200 horsepower (HP) hydrogen fuel cell propulsion system. Emission profile: Generates its own electricity onboard through the reaction of hydrogen with atmospheric oxygen; the only emission is water vapour. Route: Jind–Sonipat corridor in Haryana, for initial operations. Other Infrastructure Announced — Multi-State Visit Delhi–Amritsar–Katra Expressway: A 157.92 km, four-lane access-controlled stretch built at ₹9,680 crore; will reduce Delhi–Katra travel time from 14 hours to approximately 6 hours. Jind–Gohana Greenfield Highway (NH-352A): Will cut travel time on this corridor from 2 hours to 40 minutes. National highway projects (Jind): Foundation stones and dedications totalling ₹12,470 crore. PGIMER Advanced Mother and Child Centre (Chandigarh): 300-bed tertiary care facility for high-risk pregnancies and intensive newborn care; part of ₹4,700 crore in healthcare infrastructure. Advanced Neurosciences Centre (Chandigarh): Integrated hub for neurology, neurosurgery, and neuro-critical care under one roof. PM-ABHIM Critical Care Block: 150-bed emergency response and disaster backup facility. Sikh Museum, Kurukshetra: Foundation stone laid to document the legacy of the Sikh Gurus. Jalandhar rail and road projects: ₹5,470 crore in infrastructure dedications. IT City–Kurali (Mohali) six-lane greenfield highway: To streamline inter-state transit between Punjab, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, and Jammu & Kashmir. The NaMo Green Rail is more than a transportation milestone — it is a demonstration of India's ability to indigenously design and deploy green mobility technology at scale. As Indian Railways pursues its 2030 net-zero target, hydrogen traction offers a viable solution for non-electrified routes where overhead catenary infrastructure is impractical. The critical challenge going forward is ensuring that the hydrogen powering these trains is sourced from renewable processes rather than fossil fuels, so that the zero-emission promise at the point of use translates into a genuinely lower lifecycle carbon footprint. Prelims Pointers NaMo Green Rail — India's first hydrogen-powered fuel cell passenger train; 10-coach, 3,200 HP propulsion system; indigenously designed and integrated; flagged off from Jind, Haryana; operational on the Jind–Sonipat route. Hydrogen fuel cell operation: Electricity generated onboard through a chemical reaction between hydrogen and atmospheric oxygen; by-product is water vapour only — zero pollutant emissions at point of use. World's first commercial hydrogen train: Germany's Coradia iLint by Alstom, operational since 2018 in Lower Saxony — frequently examined as a reference point. Green hydrogen vs grey hydrogen: Green = electrolysis using renewable energy (no CO₂); Grey = steam methane reforming from natural gas (CO₂ emitted). Green hydrogen is the climate-beneficial variant. Blue hydrogen = grey hydrogen with carbon capture. National Green Hydrogen Mission (2023): Outlay of ₹19,744 crore by 2029–30; target of 5 MMT/year green hydrogen production capacity by 2030. Includes SIGHT (Strategic Interventions for Green Hydrogen Transition) as the financial incentive instrument. Indian Railways net-zero target: Indian Railways aims to achieve net-zero carbon emissions by 2030 — one of the most ambitious commitments by any railway network globally. Hydrogen trains are one pathway alongside solar-powered stations and electric traction. Delhi–Amritsar–Katra Expressway: 157.92 km, four-lane access-controlled; cost ₹9,680 crore; reduces Delhi–Katra travel time from 14 hours to ~6 hours. PM-ABHIM — Pradhan Mantri Ayushman Bharat Health Infrastructure Mission; the Critical Care Block inaugurated in Chandigarh is a 150-bed emergency and disaster backup facility under this scheme. Mains Practice Question India's first hydrogen-powered passenger train represents a convergence of green energy policy and transport decarbonisation. Critically examine the potential and challenges of hydrogen traction technology in the context of Indian Railways' net-zero carbon goal, and evaluate India's National Green Hydrogen Mission as a policy enabler. GS Paper 3  |  Science & Technology, Infrastructure, Energy  |  250 words MCQ — Direct Factual Which of the following correctly describes the NaMo Green Rail flagged off in July 2026? AA battery-electric trainset developed in partnership with the German firm Alstom; it runs on the Delhi–Amritsar corridor and has an 8-coach configuration. BA hydrogen fuel cell train that emits water vapour as its only by-product; it draws power from overhead catenaries charged by solar energy. CAn indigenously designed 10-coach hydrogen fuel cell trainset with a 3,200 HP propulsion system; it generates electricity onboard through the reaction of hydrogen with atmospheric oxygen. DA compressed natural gas-powered train developed under the National Green Hydrogen Mission with a 5,000 HP engine, initially operated on the Jind–Delhi route. Answer: C Option C is correct. The NaMo Green Rail is an indigenously designed and integrated 10-coach trainset powered by a 3,200 HP hydrogen fuel cell propulsion system. It generates electricity onboard through the electrochemical reaction between hydrogen and atmospheric oxygen, producing only water vapour. Option A is wrong — it is not battery-electric, not developed with Alstom, and the coach count is incorrect. Option B is wrong — hydrogen fuel cell trains do not draw power from overhead catenaries; they generate power onboard. Option D is wrong — it runs on hydrogen, not CNG; the HP figure and route are incorrect. Article 05 Kudankulam Data Leak — Ransomware, BOP Data and Nuclear Security GS Paper 3 — Internal Security | Cybersecurity | Nuclear Energy Why in News Approximately 14.3 GB of data pertaining to operations at the Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant (KKNPP), Tirunelveli, Tamil Nadu, was leaked online as part of a ransomware attack. The breach originated from an infiltration of infrastructure belonging to Reliance Infrastructure Limited (Reliance ADAG Group), hosted on servers managed by third-party data centre provider Yotta Data Services Private Limited. The leaked data was published on World Leaks, a dark web platform operated by ransomware groups that publicly release data when victims decline to pay the ransom. NPCIL clarified that the data relates only to Balance of Plant (BOP) common service facilities — not to reactor operations, nuclear safety systems, or nuclear security-related information. The Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant in Tirunelveli district, Tamil Nadu — India's largest nuclear power station with two 1,000 MWe VVER reactors currently commissioned. Static Background Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant — Key Facts Location: Tirunelveli district, Tamil Nadu — on India's southern tip, close to Kanyakumari. Capacity: Two 1,000 MWe VVER reactors currently commissioned, providing up to 2 GW (2 gigawatts) of installed power generation capacity. Technology and partner: Built in collaboration with Russian state nuclear corporation Rosatom. The VVER (Water-Water Energetic Reactor) is a pressurised water reactor design developed in the Soviet Union. Expansion: The Government of India is planning four more VVER units at the site, which would triple the installed capacity to approximately 6 GW — making it one of the largest nuclear power complexes in Asia. Operator: Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited (NPCIL), a public sector undertaking under the Department of Atomic Energy. Balance of Plant (BOP): Refers to all supporting systems of a power plant outside the core nuclear reactor — including cooling water systems, turbines, generators, electrical systems, and common service infrastructure. BOP systems are important for plant operations but do not directly involve nuclear materials or fission processes. Ransomware and Dark Web — Operational Context Ransomware: A category of malicious software that encrypts victims' data and demands payment for decryption. A separate but growing variant — data extortion ransomware — exfiltrates data and threatens public release if the ransom is not paid, even without encrypting the victim's systems. World Leaks: A dark web platform operated by ransomware groups that publicly hosts data from organisations that declined to pay the demanded ransom, serving as a pressure mechanism and a criminal marketplace. Dark web: Portions of the internet not indexed by conventional search engines, accessible only through specialised software (typically Tor). Used for both legitimate privacy purposes and criminal operations including ransomware infrastructure. Data centre liability: Third-party data centre providers hold infrastructure but may not bear direct regulatory liability for the data stored by their customers — a legal and operational ambiguity that this incident has highlighted. India's Cybersecurity Framework — Relevant Institutions CERT-In (Indian Computer Emergency Response Team): Nodal agency for cybersecurity incident response under the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY). Mandates reporting of cyber incidents by organisations within 6 hours of detection under 2022 rules. NCIIPC (National Critical Information Infrastructure Protection Centre): Under the National Technical Research Organisation (NTRO), designated as the nodal agency for protecting Critical Information Infrastructure (CII) — which includes power, nuclear, banking, and defence sectors. Information Technology Act, 2000 (amended 2008): Governing legislation for cybercrimes and data protection; Section 70 designates "Protected Systems" that attract enhanced penalties for unauthorised access. Personal Data Protection framework: India's Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 is the current data protection legislation; enforcement and rules are being progressively implemented. Analysis What Was and Was Not Compromised NPCIL confirmed that the leaked data pertains only to Balance of Plant (BOP) common service facilities — not to the core reactor operations, nuclear safety systems, or nuclear security-related information. The 14.3 GB tranche is part of a larger 1.2 TB dataset on World Leaks linked to Reliance Infrastructure's operations. It reportedly includes plant blueprints, supplier details, meeting and inspection records, equipment reviews, and a $112 million insurance policy against terrorist attacks. Yotta Data Services confirmed that it detected suspicious activity on 29 May 2026, terminated the suspicious process, and isolated the affected server before ransomware encryption could execute. No lateral movement to other servers or Yotta customers was detected. Reliance stated in a stock exchange filing that "no ransomware execution, data loss or lateral movement occurred" — though the contradiction with the confirmed data publication on World Leaks has raised questions about the scope of that characterisation. Why the Leak Matters Despite BOP-Only Scope Sensitive metadata: Supplier lists, contractor details, and insurance documents can enable adversaries to map the plant's supply chain and identify potential points of physical or cyber vulnerability. Blueprint risk: Engineering drawings of support infrastructure, even non-nuclear systems, can inform attack planning targeting turbines, cooling infrastructure, or electrical systems — components that, if disrupted, could force a reactor shutdown. Supply chain intelligence: Knowledge of which vendors supply what equipment — including security-relevant systems — enables targeted compromise of supplier networks as a vector for future attacks. Third-party cloud risk: The fact that sensitive infrastructure data was hosted on a commercial third-party data centre cloud environment (Yotta's servers) rather than air-gapped, government-managed infrastructure raises governance questions about data classification and storage policies for critical sector entities. Insider and OSINT risk: Even without direct nuclear data, the combination of plant layouts, personnel structures, and insurance coverage creates an intelligence picture that adversarial state actors or non-state actors could exploit. Gaps Exposed — Policy and Regulatory Dimensions Absence of clear, mandatory standards for data classification and storage by Critical Information Infrastructure (CII) entities and their service providers. Ambiguity in responsibility: Yotta (infrastructure provider), Reliance Infrastructure (data owner), and NPCIL (plant operator) each describe limited liability — creating accountability gaps in the event of a breach with serious consequences. The Cyber Security Framework for the Power Sector (2021) mandates cybersecurity audits and incident reporting, but enforcement and compliance levels in third-party supply chains remain uneven. The Kudankulam incident underscores a structural vulnerability that extends well beyond this single event: as critical infrastructure entities increasingly rely on commercial cloud and data centre providers, the attack surface for adversarial actors widens. The BOP-only nature of the leaked data prevents this from being a nuclear safety crisis — but it is a serious cybersecurity governance failure. India's framework for protecting Critical Information Infrastructure must extend to the entire data custody chain, including third-party providers, with mandatory air-gapping or enhanced security controls for nuclear sector data. Prelims Pointers Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant (KKNPP): Located in Tirunelveli district, Tamil Nadu. Two commissioned units of 1,000 MWe each (total 2 GW). Built with Russian Rosatom under the VVER (pressurised water reactor) technology. Operator: NPCIL (Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited), under Department of Atomic Energy. Four additional VVER units planned, which would triple capacity. Balance of Plant (BOP) — all supporting systems of a power station outside the nuclear reactor core: turbines, generators, cooling systems, electrical switchgear, and common service infrastructure. NPCIL confirmed that only BOP data was leaked — no nuclear safety or security-related systems were affected. VVER reactor (Vodo-Vodyanoi Energetichesky Reaktor) — a Soviet/Russian-designed pressurised water reactor (PWR). Water is used both as coolant and moderator. Among the most widely deployed reactor types globally. Ransomware — malware that encrypts data and demands payment. Data extortion ransomware (as in this case) exfiltrates data and publishes it on dark web platforms if ransom is not paid, even without encrypting the victim's systems. World Leaks is one such dark web publication site. CERT-In (Indian Computer Emergency Response Team) — nodal cybersecurity incident response agency under MeitY. Under 2022 rules, organisations must report cyber incidents within 6 hours of detection. NCIIPC (National Critical Information Infrastructure Protection Centre) — under NTRO (National Technical Research Organisation), PMO. Designated nodal agency for protecting Critical Information Infrastructure (CII) under Section 70A of the IT Act, 2000. Power, nuclear, banking, defence, and telecom sectors are designated CII. Section 70, IT Act, 2000 — designates "Protected Systems" (critical government computer resources); unauthorised access attracts imprisonment up to 10 years. This is distinct from NCIIPC's broader CII mandate under Section 70A. Rosatom — Russia's state nuclear energy corporation; one of the world's largest nuclear energy companies, involved in reactor construction, fuel supply, and nuclear services globally. India-Russia civil nuclear partnership covers Kudankulam construction and operations. Mains Practice Question The Kudankulam data breach highlights the cybersecurity vulnerabilities arising from India's critical infrastructure sector's increasing dependence on third-party commercial cloud services. Examine the existing legal and institutional framework for protecting Critical Information Infrastructure (CII) in India and suggest measures to address the gaps exposed by this incident. GS Paper 3  |  Internal Security, Cybersecurity  |  250 words MCQ — Assertion-Reason Assertion (A): NPCIL confirmed that the Kudankulam data breach did not compromise any nuclear safety or reactor security-related systems. Reason (R): The leaked data pertained only to Balance of Plant (BOP) common service facilities, which are support systems outside the core reactor operations, and are managed separately from nuclear-classified infrastructure. Choose the correct option: ABoth A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A. BBoth A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A. CA is true, but R is false. DA is true and R is true, and R correctly explains why nuclear safety systems were unaffected — but the breach remains significant due to supply chain intelligence, engineering blueprints, and third-party data governance risks. Answer: D Both the Assertion and Reason are factually accurate, and R does correctly explain A — NPCIL's confirmation that nuclear safety systems were unaffected rests precisely on the BOP-only nature of the leak. However, the standard A-R options (A or B) do not capture the full picture: even with BOP-only scope, the breach is significant because supplier details, engineering blueprints, and insurance documents create exploitable intelligence for adversaries. Option D best reflects this nuance. In standard UPSC format, the answer would be A (both true, R explains A) — candidates should use contextual judgment. This question tests the ability to distinguish between nuclear safety risk and broader cybersecurity/intelligence risk. Article 06 Supreme Court Jurisprudence on Hunger Strikes and the State's Duty of Care GS Paper 2 — Indian Constitution | Fundamental Rights | Judiciary Why in News Activist Sonam Wangchuk's indefinite fast at Jantar Mantar, New Delhi crossed 19 days without any government response, drawing judicial attention. The Delhi High Court asserted on 16 July 2026 that the "life of any citizen is precious," flagging concern over the executive's silence toward a protester whose health was at risk. The case has revived attention to a series of Supreme Court orders from 2024 — passed in the Jagjit Singh Dallewal hunger strike case — in which a bench headed by (then Justice, now CJI) Justice Surya Kant articulated the State's constitutional duty of care toward a person on an indefinite fast. Static Background Constitutional Status of Hunger Strikes Hunger strikes are neither unconstitutional nor prohibited under any Indian law. The Supreme Court has held that they constitute a form of protest "accepted both historically and legally in our constitutional jurisprudence." The right to protest — including through fasting — flows from Article 19(1)(a) (freedom of speech and expression) and Article 19(1)(b) (right to assemble peaceably without arms), subject to reasonable restrictions under Articles 19(2) and 19(3). The State may not disrupt this right of expression unless there is a "genuine threat or reasonable basis of communal disharmony, social disorder, or public tranquillity" — a high threshold that mere political inconvenience does not meet. The State's Duty of Care — SC's Position Multiple Supreme Court orders — passed during periodic hearings in the Dallewal case (2024) — held that both the Union of India and the State of Punjab have a "bounden duty" to take all necessary measures to provide immediate and adequate medical aid to a person on an indefinite fast, without forcing them to break the fast unless it is imperative to save their life. The Court emphasised that the age, health condition, and standing of the individual must be taken into account by the State in discharging this duty. This position reflects a paternal duty of care — the State, as custodian of life under Article 21, is obligated to protect the physical wellbeing of a protester even while respecting their political choice to fast. Precedents and Key Cases Case / Event Key Principle / Observation In Re: Ramlila Maidan Incident (SC) SC documented the UPA government's proactive outreach to Baba Ramdev in 2011 — four senior Ministers met him at the airport; PM Manmohan Singh wrote to him on May 19, 2011 assuring action on black money and requesting him to call off the fast. Court noted this as the expected standard of State engagement with a fasting protester. Jagjit Singh Dallewal Hunger Protest (2024) SC bench (headed by then-Justice Surya Kant, now CJI) held it was the duty of the State of Punjab and Union of India to provide medical aid to Mr. Dallewal without forcing him to break his fast; court took cognisance of his age, health, and prominence. Sonam Wangchuk Fast (2026 — ongoing) Delhi HC (July 16, 2026) affirmed the preciousness of every citizen's life; government silence on the 19-day fast drew judicial attention but no SC intervention had been reported as of date of article. Analysis The Tension Between State Power and Dissent The judicial position creates an important asymmetry: the State must protect life while simultaneously having no authority to forcibly end a hunger strike that does not threaten public order. This limits the executive's ability to use either force or indifference as a response tool. The Court has explicitly discouraged the executive from taking a "hostile view" of hunger strikers. A hostile or indifferent response — such as allowing a fasting individual to deteriorate without medical outreach — may itself constitute a constitutional failure. The Ramlila Maidan precedent places an implicit obligation on governments to engage politically — to at minimum make credible outreach attempts — when a respected public figure undertakes an indefinite fast on a matter of public concern. Article 21 and the Right to Protest Article 21 (right to life and personal liberty) has been expansively interpreted by the Supreme Court to include the right to a dignified life, the right against arbitrary detention, and procedural due process guarantees. In the context of hunger strikes, it imposes a positive obligation on the State to ensure no preventable harm comes to a protester's life. The courts have drawn a distinction between the State's legitimate interest in maintaining public order (which may justify regulating the venue or manner of protest) and the State's impermissible interest in suppressing the content of dissent. Sonam Wangchuk — Context Sonam Wangchuk is a Ladakh-based activist and innovator known for his educational and environmental work. His fast is understood to be centred on demands related to constitutional protections and statehood for Ladakh following its reorganisation in 2019 under the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation Act. The government's 19-day silence stands in contrast to the standard of proactive engagement documented in the Ramlila Maidan case and the Dallewal orders. The Supreme Court's jurisprudence on hunger strikes occupies a careful constitutional space: it upholds the right to fast as a legitimate form of dissent while simultaneously imposing a duty of care on the State that cannot be discharged through silence or hostility. For UPSC purposes, the key doctrinal contribution of these cases is the affirmation that Article 21's positive dimensions extend to the State's obligation to protect the life of a dissenting citizen — even one who has voluntarily chosen to fast — and that political engagement, not just medical response, is part of what the Constitution demands. Prelims Pointers Constitutional status of hunger strikes: Neither unconstitutional nor illegal. The SC has explicitly held them to be a form of protest accepted in India's constitutional jurisprudence. They derive legitimacy from Articles 19(1)(a) and 19(1)(b) — freedom of speech and expression, and peaceful assembly. In Re: Ramlila Maidan Incident — suo motu SC case arising from the 2011 midnight police action against Baba Ramdev's fast at Ramlila Maidan, New Delhi. SC documented the expected standard of State engagement with hunger strikers and upheld the right to protest through fasting. Jagjit Singh Dallewal — septuagenarian Punjab farmer leader who undertook a prolonged hunger strike against farm laws in 2024. SC orders in his case established the clearest articulation of the State's medical duty of care toward hunger strikers. Sonam Wangchuk — Ladakh-based engineer, innovator, and activist; known for establishing the Himalayan Institute of Alternatives, Ladakh (HIAL). His 2026 fast at Jantar Mantar concerns constitutional protections for Ladakh, including demands under the Sixth Schedule. The Sixth Schedule provides autonomous district council governance arrangements for tribal areas — sought by Ladakhi groups as a safeguard. Sixth Schedule of the Constitution — provides for autonomous district councils with legislative, judicial, and executive powers in tribal areas of Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, and Mizoram. Ladakh's demands relate to extending similar protections to the UT, which currently does not have a legislature. Article 21 — protection of life and personal liberty. Interpreted broadly by the SC to include: right to livelihood, right to health, right to dignified life, right against arbitrary detention. In the hunger strike context, it generates a positive state obligation to protect life even of a voluntary faster. CJI Justice Surya Kant — 53rd Chief Justice of India (since 24 November 2025). The bench he headed as a Supreme Court judge in 2024 passed the Dallewal orders; the article references these orders in the context of the Wangchuk fast. Jantar Mantar, New Delhi — a historic astronomical observatory (18th century, Maharaja Jai Singh II) that has become a designated protest site in central Delhi. Protests at Jantar Mantar are subject to specific permissions under Delhi Police regulations and court-supervised guidelines. Mains Practice Question The Supreme Court has held that the State bears a constitutional duty to protect the life of a person on an indefinite hunger strike without forcing them to abandon their right to dissent. Analyse the constitutional basis of this duty, the limits it places on executive power, and the implications of government silence in such situations. GS Paper 2  |  Indian Constitution, Fundamental Rights, Governance  |  250 words MCQ — Which is NOT Correct With reference to the Supreme Court's jurisprudence on hunger strikes and the State's duty of care, which of the following statements is NOT correct? AHunger strikes are a constitutionally recognised form of protest in India, deriving legitimacy from Articles 19(1)(a) and 19(1)(b). BThe State may not disrupt the right to expression through fasting unless there is a genuine threat of communal disharmony, social disorder, or breach of public tranquillity. CThe Supreme Court has held that the State must compel a hunger striker to break their fast after 15 days to discharge its duty of care under Article 21. DIn the Dallewal case (2024), the SC held that providing medical aid to the hunger striker was a "bounden duty" of both the State of Punjab and the Union of India. Answer: C Option C is the incorrect statement. The Supreme Court has explicitly held the opposite — the State must provide medical aid and support without forcing the hunger striker to break their fast, "unless it is imperative to do so to save their life." There is no 15-day compulsory break rule; the intervention threshold is imperilling of life, not an arbitrary time limit. Options A, B, and D are all accurate reflections of the SC's jurisprudence as established in In Re: Ramlila Maidan Incident and the Dallewal case orders.