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May 30, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

Content National Family Health Survey-6 (NFHS-6) (2023–24) Goa Statehood Day National Family Health Survey-6 (NFHS-6) (2023–24) Why in News? The Union Ministry of Health & Family Welfare released NFHS-6 (2023–24), India’s most comprehensive household health survey, covering nearly 6.79 lakh households across 715 districts, providing critical evidence for public policy, welfare delivery, and SDG monitoring. Conducted by International Institute for Population Sciences, NFHS-6 is the first round implemented without external financial or technical assistance, reflecting India’s growing institutional and statistical capability in large-scale public health governance. Relevance GS-II: Health, Governance, Welfare Schemes, Social Justice, Women & Child Development. GS-III: Human Resource Development, Demographic Dividend, Nutrition Security, Digital Inclusion. Practice Question Q1.“NFHS-6 reflects India’s transition from an access-centric healthcare system toward a multidimensional public health challenge.” Examine. (250 words) Constitutional & Governance Significance Article 21 strengthens the constitutional basis for healthcare by interpreting the Right to Life as including nutrition, maternal care, disease prevention, and access to dignified healthcare services for vulnerable populations. Directive Principles of State Policy, particularly Articles 39, 42 and 47, obligate the State to improve public health, maternity relief, nutrition levels, and child welfare, making NFHS a critical accountability instrument for welfare governance. NFHS-6 directly measures India’s progress toward SDGs 2, 3, 5 and 10, especially concerning malnutrition reduction, universal healthcare, gender empowerment, and social equity, thereby linking domestic governance with global developmental commitments. 1. Maternal & Child Health: Significant Progress Major Improvements Institutional deliveries increased from 88.6% to 90.6%, indicating expanded healthcare access, improved trust in public health systems, and deeper penetration of maternal welfare schemes into rural and aspirational districts. Coverage of antenatal care (ANC) improved substantially from 92.6% to 95.9%, while women receiving at least four ANC visits increased from 58.5% to 65.2%, showing enhanced continuity in maternal healthcare delivery. Postnatal care within two days of childbirth improved from 79.1% to 85.3%, reflecting stronger frontline health worker networks, institutional follow-up systems, and better awareness regarding neonatal healthcare practices. Governance Drivers Improvements were driven by flagship interventions such as Janani Suraksha Yojana, JSSK, SUMAN, PMMVY, and the strengthened National Health Mission, which collectively enhanced maternal health outreach and institutional support systems. Critical Analysis Despite rising institutional deliveries, the rapid increase in caesarean-section deliveries, especially in private facilities where rates exceed 54%, raises concerns regarding commercialization, medical ethics, and inadequate regulatory oversight within India’s healthcare system. 2. Fertility Transition & Demographic Shift India’s Total Fertility Rate (TFR) remained at 2.0, indicating that the country has broadly achieved replacement-level fertility and entered an advanced stage of demographic transition with slowing population growth. The decline in child marriage among women aged 20–24 years from 23.3% to 20.1% reflects gradual improvements in female education, social awareness, and delayed marriage patterns across several states. India’s demographic challenge is shifting from population stabilization toward ageing, workforce productivity, pension security, and healthcare preparedness, particularly as southern states begin experiencing advanced demographic ageing patterns earlier than northern states. 3. Immunisation: Public Health Success Story Full immunisation coverage among children aged 12–23 months increased from 83.8% to 87.1%, indicating improved last-mile delivery, vaccine confidence, and strengthened public health logistics after the COVID-19 pandemic experience. Coverage of the rotavirus vaccine dramatically increased from 36.4% to 85.4%, reflecting successful integration of newer vaccines into India’s Universal Immunisation Programme and improved cold-chain management systems. Nearly 95.6% of vaccinations were administered through public health facilities, demonstrating strong community reliance on government healthcare infrastructure and the effectiveness of India’s frontline public health architecture. Digital tools such as U-WIN, combined with ASHA and ANM outreach networks, strengthened immunisation tracking, beneficiary identification, and real-time monitoring of vaccine coverage across districts and states. 4. Nutrition Indicators: Improvement but Persistent Burden Stunting among children under five declined significantly from 35.5% to 29.3%, indicating long-term improvements in nutrition, sanitation, maternal care, and public welfare interventions under convergent nutrition governance. Severe wasting declined from 7.7% to 5.2%, reflecting better management of acute malnutrition through interventions like POSHAN Abhiyaan, Nutrition Rehabilitation Centres, and improved maternal-child feeding practices. Despite progress, India continues to carry one of the world’s largest burdens of child malnutrition, with nearly one-third of children still underweight, revealing persistent structural poverty and dietary deficiencies. Only 15.3% children aged 6–23 months received an adequate diet, highlighting serious deficiencies in dietary diversity, protein intake, and awareness regarding complementary feeding practices among households. 5. Double Burden of Malnutrition NFHS-6 highlights India’s emerging double burden of malnutrition, where undernutrition coexists alongside rising obesity and lifestyle-related disorders, particularly among urban and middle-income populations. Nearly 30.7% women and 27.3% men were found overweight or obese, reflecting increased sedentary lifestyles, processed food consumption, urban stress, and declining physical activity levels. Simultaneously, almost 19.7% adults remain underweight, indicating persistent inequality in food security, nutrition access, and socio-economic development across rural and vulnerable populations. India therefore faces a triple nutritional challenge involving undernutrition, micronutrient deficiency, and obesity-linked non-communicable diseases, requiring differentiated and region-specific nutrition policies. 6. Rising Burden of Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs) NFHS-6 recorded a sharp increase in adults with high blood sugar levels, with prevalence among men rising from 15.6% to 20.9%, signalling India’s rapidly expanding diabetes burden. Rising obesity, unhealthy diets, urbanisation, stress, and sedentary behaviour are accelerating India’s transition toward an NCD-dominated epidemiological profile, increasing pressure on healthcare infrastructure and insurance systems. India’s health system historically evolved around communicable diseases and maternal-child healthcare; however, future policy priorities must increasingly focus on preventive healthcare, early screening, and chronic disease management. The economic consequences of rising NCDs include productivity losses, increased household medical expenditure, premature mortality, and a growing burden on public health financing mechanisms. 7. Women’s Empowerment & Digital Inclusion Women who had ever used the internet nearly doubled from 33.3% to 64.3%, reflecting the expanding reach of digital infrastructure, smartphones, and online public service delivery systems. Women operating their own bank accounts increased from 78.6% to 89%, indicating the success of Jan Dhan Yojana, DBT architecture, and financial inclusion initiatives targeting women’s economic empowerment. Mobile phone ownership among women rose from 53.9% to 63.6%, strengthening access to digital payments, online services, telemedicine, e-governance, and educational resources. However, digital inclusion does not automatically translate into digital autonomy, as gendered barriers, cyber insecurity, low digital literacy, and patriarchal control still limit meaningful participation of women in the digital economy. 8. Gender-Based Violence: Persistent Social Challenge The proportion of women experiencing spousal violence declined from 29.2% to 22.3%, reflecting gradual improvements in awareness, legal literacy, and reporting mechanisms related to domestic violence. Despite improvement, nearly one in five women continues to face domestic violence, demonstrating the persistence of patriarchal norms, unequal power structures, and socio-cultural acceptance of gender violence in many regions. Violence during pregnancy and early marriage continues to adversely affect maternal health, mental well-being, child nutrition, and intergenerational human development outcomes. Stronger implementation of the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, legal aid services, shelter support, and gender-sensitive policing remain essential for addressing structural gender inequalities. 9. Financial Protection & Health Insurance Household coverage under health insurance/financing schemes increased substantially from 41% to 60.2%, indicating rapid expansion of financial protection mechanisms in healthcare. Schemes such as Ayushman Bharat-PMJAY significantly improved healthcare access among economically vulnerable populations and reduced the risk of catastrophic out-of-pocket expenditure for hospitalisation. However, insurance expansion alone cannot ensure universal healthcare unless accompanied by improved public health infrastructure, affordable medicines, quality primary care, and equitable specialist availability. India continues to face high out-of-pocket expenditure due to diagnostics, medicines, outpatient care, and uneven public healthcare quality across states and districts. 10. Demographic & Social Transition The proportion of population below 15 years of age declined from 26.5% to 25.5%, while the elderly population above 60 years increased from 11.8% to 12.9%, signalling gradual population ageing. Ageing populations will increase demand for geriatric healthcare, pension systems, social security, assisted living, and chronic disease management, requiring long-term institutional preparedness. India’s future demographic advantage will depend less on population size and more on investments in health, education, productivity, and human capital development. Key Challenges Significant inter-state disparities continue in nutrition, fertility, healthcare access, and women’s empowerment, indicating uneven administrative capacity and socio-economic development across India. Persistently high anaemia, undernutrition, obesity, and NCD prevalence reveal that healthcare challenges are becoming increasingly multidimensional and interconnected. Shortage of healthcare professionals in rural areas, and inadequate preventive healthcare continue to limit equitable health outcomes. National averages often conceal district-level inequalities, tribal vulnerabilities, urban slum deprivation, and regional social exclusion patterns requiring localized policy interventions. Way Forward India must transition from an access-centric healthcare model toward a quality-centric and preventive healthcare framework, focusing on primary care, family medicine, and early disease screening. Strengthening POSHAN 2.0, dietary diversification, millet-based nutrition strategies, and maternal nutrition interventions are essential for eliminating hidden hunger and improving child development outcomes. Public healthcare financing should prioritize primary healthcare infrastructure, human resource strengthening, and digital health systems instead of excessive tertiary-care dependence. India requires a comprehensive National Strategy on Ageing and Non-Communicable Diseases, integrating nutrition, urban planning, lifestyle regulation, mental health, and geriatric healthcare systems. Women’s empowerment policies must move beyond account ownership toward economic agency, digital literacy, cyber safety, and workforce participation, ensuring substantive rather than symbolic empowerment. Prelims Pointers NFHS-6 conducted during 2023–24. Nodal agency: International Institute for Population Sciences Institutional delivery: 90.6%. TFR: 2.0. Stunting: 29.3%. Full immunisation: 87.1%. Health insurance coverage: 60.2%. Women internet users: 64.3%. Exclusive breastfeeding declined from 63.7% to 55.8%, despite improvements in other nutrition indicators. Goa Statehood Day Why in News? The Prime Minister greeted citizens on Goa Statehood Day (30 May), reviving attention toward Goa’s unique political evolution involving Portuguese colonialism, military liberation, constitutional integration, linguistic identity, democratic federalism, and eventual attainment of full statehood within the Indian Union. Goa remains an extremely important UPSC topic because it connects themes of post-independence integration, anti-colonial struggles, constitutional amendments, regional identity movements, federalism, and Centre–State relations, which are frequently relevant for Prelims, GS-I, GS-II, Essay, and Interview. Relevance GS-I: Post-independence consolidation, regionalism, linguistic identity, decolonisation. GS-II: Federalism, constitutional amendments, Centre–State relations. Practice Question Q1.Goa’s integration into the Indian Union represents both a decolonisation process and a test of India’s democratic federalism. Analyse. (250 words) Historical Background of Portuguese Rule Goa, Daman and Diu remained under Portuguese control for nearly 451 years beginning in 1510, making Portuguese colonialism one of the longest European occupations in Asia and fundamentally shaping Goa’s administrative, cultural, religious, and legal systems. Portuguese rule began after the conquest of Goa by Afonso de Albuquerque, who transformed Goa into the capital of the Portuguese Estado da Índia and a major maritime-commercial centre connecting Europe, Africa, and Asia through Indian Ocean trade routes. The Portuguese administration pursued policies of religious conversion, Lusitanisation, and cultural assimilation, producing a distinct Indo-Portuguese civilisational identity visible in Goa’s architecture, cuisine, language influences, legal traditions, and social structure even today. After India attained independence in 1947, Portugal refused to transfer Goa, arguing that Goa was not a colony but an overseas province of Portugal under dictator Antonio Salazar’s authoritarian Estado Novo regime. Goa Liberation Movement Nature of the Struggle The Goa Liberation Movement combined elements of civil resistance, nationalist mobilisation, underground revolutionary activism, diplomatic pressure, and armed intervention, making it different from the integration of princely states like Hyderabad or Junagadh. Goa’s struggle was essentially a process of decolonisation, where independent India sought removal of a European colonial power from Indian territory to complete the unfinished agenda of national liberation and territorial sovereignty. Role of Nationalist Leaders Ram Manohar Lohia played a transformative role by launching civil disobedience movements in Goa during 1946, breaking Portuguese-imposed political silence and inspiring mass participation against colonial repression. Organisations such as: Azad Gomantak Dal Goa National Congress United Front of Goans mobilised resistance against Portuguese rule through protests, underground networks, and nationalist campaigns demanding integration with India. Portuguese authorities responded with severe repression involving censorship, arrests, torture, and restrictions on civil liberties, revealing the authoritarian and anti-democratic character of colonial administration in Goa. Operation Vijay (1961) Immediate Context Portugal repeatedly rejected India’s diplomatic appeals for peaceful transfer of Goa and continued military provocations, despite growing global support for decolonisation following the Second World War and United Nations anti-colonial resolutions. Domestic political pressure within India intensified because many citizens viewed continued Portuguese occupation as a direct challenge to India’s sovereignty, territorial integrity, and anti-colonial national identity. Military Intervention On 18 December 1961, India launched Operation Vijay, involving coordinated military action by the Indian Army, Navy, and Air Force to liberate Goa, Daman, and Diu from Portuguese colonial administration. Portuguese resistance collapsed within approximately 36 hours, and Governor-General Manuel António Vassalo e Silva formally surrendered to Indian forces on 19 December 1961, ending centuries of Portuguese colonial rule in India. Goa’s liberation represented the final major step in India’s territorial decolonisation process and reinforced India’s position that colonial occupation had no legitimacy in postcolonial international politics. Constitutional Integration of Goa 12th Constitutional Amendment Act, 1962 Constitutional Importance The 12th Constitutional Amendment Act, 1962 formally integrated Goa, Daman and Diu into the Indian Union as a Union Territory after Portuguese withdrawal and military liberation. The amendment inserted Goa, Daman and Diu into the First Schedule of the Constitution, thereby extending India’s constitutional sovereignty, parliamentary jurisdiction, and administrative authority over these territories. The amendment also modified Article 240, empowering the President to make regulations for the peace, progress, and good governance of the Union Territory until stable democratic institutions evolved. Administration as Union Territory Goa initially remained a Union Territory because policymakers believed the region required gradual administrative transition due to its unique colonial legal structure, linguistic complexity, and strategic maritime significance. During this period, India integrated Goa into: Parliamentary democracy Electoral governance Judicial institutions Federal administrative systems while carefully preserving aspects of Goa’s unique socio-cultural identity. Goa’s integration demonstrated India’s flexible federal approach, where political accommodation and gradual constitutional adaptation were preferred over immediate administrative homogenisation. Statehood Movement Rise of Statehood Demand During the 1970s and 1980s, demands for statehood intensified because many Goans believed Union Territory status inadequately protected Goa’s linguistic, cultural, and political identity. Regional movements argued that Goa possessed a unique civilisational character shaped by centuries of Portuguese influence, Konkani linguistic traditions, and distinct socio-cultural practices deserving constitutional recognition through statehood. The movement also reflected concerns regarding: Administrative autonomy Resource control Cultural preservation Political representation within India’s evolving federal framework. 56th Constitutional Amendment Act, 1987 Constitutional Significance The 56th Constitutional Amendment Act, 1987 granted full statehood to Goa, making it India’s 25th state, while Daman and Diu continued separately as a Union Territory. The amendment inserted Article 371-I into the Constitution, creating special provisions relating to Goa’s legislative assembly composition and institutional arrangements. Goa officially attained statehood on 30 May 1987, which is celebrated annually as Goa Statehood Day, symbolising democratic recognition of Goa’s separate identity within the Indian federal system. Article 371-I: Special Provision for Goa Article 371-I empowers Parliament to determine the minimum strength of Goa’s Legislative Assembly, ensuring administrative stability and functional governance despite Goa’s relatively small geographical and demographic size. Unlike several northeastern provisions under Article 371, Goa’s special provision does not grant extensive autonomy but symbolically acknowledges Goa’s distinctive historical and constitutional trajectory. The article reflects India’s willingness to constitutionally accommodate regional uniqueness while maintaining broader national unity and federal coherence. Linguistic & Cultural Identity The Official Language Act, 1987 recognised Konkani in Devanagari script as Goa’s official language, strengthening cultural identity and protecting regional linguistic heritage against assimilation pressures. Later, the 71st Constitutional Amendment Act, 1992 included Konkani in the Eighth Schedule, providing constitutional recognition and institutional support for the language’s preservation and promotion. Goa’s experience demonstrated how India balanced: National integration Linguistic pluralism Regional identity Democratic accommodation without weakening constitutional unity. Unique Features of Goa’s Integration Goa represents the only major instance where independent India used full-scale military action against a European colonial power to complete national territorial integration after independence. Unlike Hyderabad or Junagadh, Goa’s integration was fundamentally linked to decolonisation and anti-imperialism, rather than princely accession or partition-related territorial disputes. Goa uniquely retained elements of the Portuguese Civil Code, making it central to contemporary debates regarding the Uniform Civil Code, personal laws, and legal pluralism in India. Governance & Federalism Dimensions Goa’s integration highlighted the flexibility of Indian federalism in accommodating: Colonial legacies Linguistic diversity Regional aspirations Special constitutional arrangements within a democratic constitutional framework. The Goa model strengthened India’s nation-building philosophy based on: Democratic legitimacy Electoral participation Constitutional negotiation rather than rigid political centralisation. The peaceful functioning of Goa within India demonstrated that constitutional pluralism can strengthen rather than weaken national unity and territorial cohesion. Strategic & Geopolitical Importance Goa’s liberation enhanced India’s maritime security position along the western coast and strengthened strategic control over the Arabian Sea during the Cold War geopolitical environment. The liberation improved India’s standing among newly independent Asian and African nations by reinforcing India’s image as a committed anti-colonial and sovereignty-supporting state. Goa’s strategic ports and coastal location also contributed significantly to India’s maritime trade, naval positioning, and western coastal economic development. Contemporary Relevance Goa remains highly relevant in discussions relating to: Cooperative federalism Tourism governance Coastal ecology Heritage conservation Uniform Civil Code debates Sustainable development policies. Goa’s Indo-Portuguese heritage demonstrates India’s ability to absorb diverse historical experiences within a broader plural constitutional and civilisational framework. Rapid tourism-led growth has transformed Goa into an important case study concerning balancing economic development with environmental sustainability and local cultural preservation. Challenges After Integration Tourism-driven urbanisation has generated pressures on: Coastal ecosystems Water availability Waste management Traditional livelihoods thereby creating sustainability concerns for Goa’s long-term development model. Mining-related environmental degradation and land conflicts have intensified debates regarding balancing economic growth with ecological conservation and community rights. Periodic concerns arise regarding demographic changes, cultural commodification, and erosion of indigenous Goan identity due to large-scale tourism and migration-related pressures. Prelims Pointers Operation Vijay launched on 18 December 1961. Goa liberated on 19 December 1961. 12th Constitutional Amendment Act, 1962 integrated Goa into India. Goa Opinion Poll (1967) rejected merger with Maharashtra. 56th Constitutional Amendment Act, 1987 granted Goa statehood. Article 371-I contains special provisions for Goa. 71st Constitutional Amendment Act, 1992 added Konkani to the Eighth Schedule. Goa became India’s 25th state on 30 May 1987.

May 30, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

Content International law, ‘optional’ for powerful states Concrete fever International law, ‘optional’ for powerful states Why in News? Recent conflicts involving Russia–Ukraine, Israel–Iran, South China Sea disputes, and repeated violations of humanitarian norms have revived debate regarding the weakening credibility of the rules-based international order and the declining effectiveness of public international law. The article invokes Voltaire’s famous criticism of the Holy Roman Empire to argue that contemporary international law is increasingly neither genuinely “international”, nor consistently “law”, because enforcement ultimately depends upon geopolitical power rather than universal compliance. Relevance GS-II: International Relations, Global Governance, United Nations, International Institutions. GS-III: Security, Maritime Security, Cyber Governance, Nuclear Stability. Practice Question Q1.“The contemporary rules-based international order is increasingly becoming power-driven rather than law-driven.” Critically examine. (250 words) Understanding Public International Law Public International Law refers to the body of legal principles, treaties, conventions, customs, and judicial norms governing relations among sovereign states, international organisations, and increasingly non-state actors within the global system. Modern international law evolved to regulate: Use of force Maritime conduct Human rights Armed conflicts Environmental protection Trade and diplomacy thereby attempting to replace anarchy with rule-based global governance. Contemporary international law rests upon: State consent Treaty obligations Reciprocity Multilateral institutions rather than a centralised global sovereign authority capable of coercive enforcement. Evolution of Rules-Based International Order Over the last century, humanity gradually constructed an institutional architecture involving: UN Charter Geneva Conventions UNCLOS Human rights treaties Arms-control agreements aimed at restraining unregulated exercise of state power. The post-1945 international order sought to prevent recurrence of world wars by institutionalising: Sovereign equality Territorial integrity Peaceful dispute resolution Collective security through multilateral cooperation and legal obligations. Institutions such as: United Nations International Criminal Court International Court of Justice emerged as guardians of the international legal order. Core Argument: Erosion of International Law The article argues that international law is increasingly losing credibility because powerful states repeatedly violate fundamental norms without facing meaningful legal, diplomatic, or military consequences. This erosion reflects a transition from: Rule-based order toward Power-based order where geopolitical strength increasingly determines legality, accountability, and global responses. The weakening of international law has generated fears of a return to the “law of the jungle”, where military capability rather than legal legitimacy shapes international outcomes. Violation of UN Charter Principles Prohibition on Use of Force The UN Charter prohibits aggressive use of force except: In self-defence under Article 51 Through Security Council authorisation making sovereignty and territorial integrity foundational principles of international order. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022 represented one of the clearest violations of the post-1945 prohibition on aggressive war, severely undermining confidence in collective security mechanisms. The article also criticises the U.S.-Israeli military actions against Iran, arguing that unilateral military operations without broad international legitimacy weaken the norm against aggressive use of force. Earlier precedents such as the 2003 Iraq invasion damaged international law because military intervention occurred without explicit UN Security Council authorisation and was justified using disputed claims regarding weapons of mass destruction. Selective Application of International Norms The article highlights that powerful states often selectively interpret international law, applying legal principles inconsistently depending upon strategic interests rather than universal moral standards. Such selective enforcement weakens legitimacy because smaller states perceive international law as an instrument of powerful countries rather than an impartial system of global justice. The resulting credibility crisis encourages other regional powers to disregard norms relating to sovereignty, territorial integrity, and peaceful dispute resolution. Maritime Law & UNCLOS Violations South China Sea Disputes The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) forms the foundation of modern maritime governance by regulating: Territorial waters Exclusive Economic Zones Navigation rights Resource exploitation. China’s assertion of the “nine-dash line” claim in the South China Sea, despite rejection by the Permanent Court of Arbitration in 2016, is cited as a major challenge to maritime international law. Militarisation of artificial islands, coercive coast-guard tactics, and incursions into the EEZs of countries such as the Philippines and Vietnam undermine freedom of navigation and maritime stability. Strait of Hormuz Crisis Repeated tanker seizures, maritime interdictions, and threats of blockade in the Strait of Hormuz have weakened global confidence in legal protections governing international shipping and freedom of navigation. Since a significant proportion of global energy trade passes through the Strait, instability in the region carries major implications for: Energy security Global trade Maritime law Strategic stability. Crisis in International Humanitarian Law (IHL) International Humanitarian Law, especially the Geneva Conventions, seeks to protect civilians, prisoners of war, and non-combatants during armed conflicts by limiting methods and means of warfare. The Syrian civil war witnessed severe violations involving: Chemical weapons Indiscriminate bombing Siege warfare Targeting civilian infrastructure thereby exposing limitations of humanitarian enforcement mechanisms. In Yemen, both the Saudi-led coalition and Houthi rebels have faced allegations involving attacks on civilians, hospitals, and critical infrastructure, violating principles of distinction and proportionality. Reports from Ethiopia’s Tigray conflict involving starvation tactics, sexual violence, and mass killings further demonstrate the declining effectiveness of humanitarian legal norms during internal conflicts. Human Rights Violations The article argues that human rights treaties increasingly suffer from selective implementation and weak enforcement despite universal rhetoric regarding dignity, equality, and civil liberties. China’s treatment of Uyghur Muslims in Xinjiang, involving allegations of mass detention, forced labour, and cultural suppression, has been described by several governments and scholars as potential crimes against humanity. Israel’s military operations in Gaza have generated allegations of disproportionate force and indiscriminate civilian casualties, reviving debates regarding accountability under international humanitarian and human rights law. Myanmar’s military crackdown against the Rohingya population generated genocide allegations, demonstrating how ethnic persecution continues despite decades of international human rights institutionalisation. Even democratic states have faced criticism regarding: Torture during the “war on terror” Offshore detention of refugees Migrant pushbacks revealing that liberal democracies also violate international legal obligations when security concerns dominate policy. Collapse of Arms-Control Architecture The weakening of major arms-control treaties has revived fears of strategic instability and renewed nuclear competition among major powers. The collapse of the INF Treaty, erosion of the Open Skies Treaty, and uncertainty regarding the future of New START indicate weakening trust among nuclear powers. North Korea’s continued missile and nuclear programmes despite UN sanctions reveal the limited deterrent capacity of existing non-proliferation frameworks. The breakdown of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) accelerated tensions surrounding Iran’s nuclear programme and weakened diplomatic confidence in negotiated arms-control mechanisms. Environmental Law Under Stress International environmental law increasingly suffers from weak compliance, insufficient financing, and lack of enforceable accountability despite growing climate-related threats. Many countries continue missing commitments under the Paris Climate Agreement, while global emissions remain inconsistent with pathways necessary to limit dangerous climate change. Illegal deforestation in the Amazon, often enabled by weak state enforcement, undermines international biodiversity obligations and accelerates ecological degradation. Emerging activities such as deep-sea mining highlight regulatory gaps in governing global commons and protecting fragile marine ecosystems from irreversible environmental damage. Structural Weaknesses of International Law Dependence on State Consent International law fundamentally depends upon sovereign consent because there is no global government capable of imposing universal compliance through coercive enforcement mechanisms. States frequently comply with international law only when compliance aligns with national interest, strategic calculations, or reputational concerns. Weak Enforcement Mechanisms The United Nations Security Council often becomes paralysed due to veto politics and geopolitical rivalry among permanent members. The International Criminal Court faces accusations of bias and lacks jurisdictional authority over several major powers, limiting its effectiveness in ensuring accountability. Treaty-monitoring bodies largely depend upon voluntary compliance and moral persuasion rather than binding enforcement powers. Theoretical Perspective Realist Interpretation The article strongly reflects the Realist school of International Relations, which argues that states ultimately prioritise power, security, and survival over legal or moral obligations. The reference to Thucydides’ statement — “the strong do what they can and the weak suffer what they must” — highlights the enduring relevance of power politics in global affairs. Liberal Institutionalism Counterview Liberal theorists argue that despite violations, international law still shapes expectations, constrains behaviour, facilitates cooperation, and reduces uncertainty in international relations. Even imperfect compliance is considered preferable to complete absence of institutional norms because international law provides frameworks for diplomacy, conflict resolution, and accountability. Implications of Eroding International Law Weakening international law increases the probability of: Armed conflicts Arms races Humanitarian crises Refugee flows Maritime instability thereby threatening global peace and economic stability. Small and developing countries suffer disproportionately because they depend more heavily on legal protections and multilateral institutions than on military or economic power. Erosion of global trust reduces prospects for collective action on transnational issues such as: Climate change Cybersecurity Terrorism Pandemics which require coordinated international cooperation. India’s Perspective & Relevance India consistently supports: Strategic autonomy Rule-based international order Respect for sovereignty Peaceful dispute resolution especially in forums such as the UN and G20. India strongly supports UNCLOS, freedom of navigation, and territorial integrity because maritime stability and sovereign equality are crucial for India’s security and economic interests. Simultaneously, India remains cautious regarding excessive external intervention in domestic affairs, reflecting the balance between sovereignty and universal humanitarian principles. India’s aspiration for permanent membership in the UN Security Council is partly linked to demands for more representative and effective global governance institutions. Way Forward Strengthening international law requires reforming multilateral institutions, particularly the UN Security Council, to improve legitimacy, representation, and responsiveness to contemporary geopolitical realities. Greater emphasis must be placed on: Accountability mechanisms Independent investigations International judicial cooperation Enforcement consistency to restore confidence in global legal institutions. International law should increasingly adapt to emerging domains such as: Cyber warfare Artificial intelligence Climate security Space governance which remain inadequately regulated. Sustainable restoration of the rules-based order requires cultivating global political culture prioritising: Restraint Diplomacy Multilateralism Cooperative security over unilateral adventurism and militarised nationalism. Prelims Pointers UNCLOS governs maritime zones and navigation rights. Article 51 of UN Charter deals with self-defence. Permanent Court of Arbitration (2016) rejected China’s “nine-dash line” claim. INF Treaty related to intermediate-range nuclear missiles. JCPOA concerned Iran’s nuclear programme. Geneva Conventions regulate humanitarian conduct during war. ICC prosecutes genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity. Concrete fever Why in News? Severe heatwave conditions across India, with Sri Ganganagar in Rajasthan touching 48°C, have revived concerns regarding the intensifying interaction between climate change, urban heat islands, unplanned urbanisation, and labour vulnerability. The article argues that India’s deadly urban heat is not caused by atmospheric warming alone but also by “concrete fever” — excessive concretisation, declining green cover, sealed urban surfaces, and waste heat from energy-intensive cooling systems. Relevance GS-I: Urbanisation, vulnerable populations, climate-linked migration. GS-II: Urban governance, public health, labour welfare, disaster management. GS-III: Climate change, environment, sustainable cities, infrastructure, energy security. Practice Question Q1.Rapid urbanisation without ecological planning has intensified India’s vulnerability to heatwaves. Discuss. (250 words) Understanding “Concrete Fever” “Concrete fever” refers to excessive dependence on: Concrete Asphalt Glass structures Sealed surfaces during urbanisation, which absorb and retain heat, dramatically increasing urban temperatures relative to surrounding rural areas. Urban landscapes dominated by roads, buildings, parking areas, and reduced vegetation disrupt natural cooling processes such as evapotranspiration and shade generation, intensifying heat accumulation within cities. The phenomenon produces Urban Heat Islands (UHIs), where metropolitan temperatures become significantly higher than nearby rural regions due to anthropogenic modifications of land surfaces and energy consumption patterns. Urban Heat Island (UHI) Effect Definition An Urban Heat Island is a metropolitan area experiencing substantially higher temperatures than surrounding rural areas because of: Dense infrastructure Low vegetation Heat-absorbing materials Vehicular emissions Waste heat from appliances and industries. Indian Scenario Urban heat islands across Indian cities now reportedly remain 2°C–10°C hotter than adjacent rural areas, making heatwaves significantly more dangerous for urban populations. Delhi’s average humidity reportedly increased by nearly eight percentage points between 2015–19 and 2020–24, partly due to sealed urban surfaces disrupting natural water absorption and local climatic balance. Indian cities are especially vulnerable because rapid urbanisation often occurs without: Climate-sensitive planning Adequate green cover Heat-resilient infrastructure thereby magnifying climate risks. Climate Change & Heatwaves Climate change has increased the frequency, duration, and intensity of heatwaves globally through rising greenhouse-gas concentrations and altered atmospheric circulation patterns. According to the India Meteorological Department (IMD), heatwave frequency over India’s Core Heatwave Zone has increased by approximately 0.1 days per decade since 1961. Heatwave duration has increased by around 0.55 days per decade, indicating prolonged exposure to extreme heat and growing risks to public health, labour productivity, and urban infrastructure. The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) identifies the period between 2015–2025 as the warmest eleven-year interval recorded globally, highlighting accelerating planetary warming trends. Why Heat in India Becomes More Lethal Interaction of Climate & Urbanisation India’s heat becomes uniquely dangerous because climate change interacts with: High population density Informal employment Poor housing Urban concretisation thereby amplifying physiological stress and mortality risks. Large sections of India’s workforce, particularly: Construction workers Street vendors Delivery personnel Agricultural labourers work directly under extreme sunlight without protective infrastructure or adequate labour safeguards. Informal settlements and low-income housing clusters often lack: Ventilation Tree cover Cooling systems Reliable electricity making vulnerable populations disproportionately exposed to heat stress. Air-Conditioners: Technological Fix or Climate Trap? The article critiques excessive reliance on air-conditioners (ACs) as a technological solution because ACs transfer indoor heat outdoors, thereby increasing ambient urban temperatures through waste heat emission. Rapid AC adoption can produce a vicious cycle: Rising temperatures increase cooling demand Cooling systems release more waste heat Urban temperatures rise further thereby intensifying long-term heat vulnerability. Expanding AC usage also increases: Electricity demand Fossil-fuel consumption Carbon emissions unless energy systems rapidly transition toward renewable and energy-efficient infrastructure. Dependence on cooling technologies often benefits privileged urban populations while outdoor workers and poorer communities continue suffering direct exposure to dangerous heat conditions. Governance & Urban Planning Failures Indian urbanisation has historically prioritised: Real-estate expansion Road infrastructure Commercial construction over ecological planning, resulting in shrinking urban forests, disappearing water bodies, and reduced climate resilience. Building regulations in many Indian cities remain poorly aligned with contemporary climate realities, permitting: Heat-retaining materials Excessive glass facades Dense concretisation that intensify heat absorption and energy consumption. Urban local bodies frequently lack: Technical expertise Climate financing Integrated planning mechanisms required for long-term heat mitigation strategies. Encroachment and destruction of wetlands, lakes, and urban commons have weakened cities’ natural cooling systems and hydrological balance. Labour Rights & Heat Justice Existing labour laws already mandate restrictions on outdoor work under dangerous heat conditions, but enforcement remains weak, especially within the informal economy. Outdoor workers often continue labouring during extreme heat because: Income insecurity Lack of social protection Weak inspections Informal employment structures prevent effective implementation of occupational safety standards. Heatwaves increasingly represent a question of climate justice, because the populations contributing least to emissions often suffer the greatest physiological and economic consequences. Women workers, elderly populations, migrants, and urban poor face compounded vulnerability due to: Poor housing Water scarcity Healthcare inaccessibility Informal employment conditions. Public Health Implications Extreme heat can trigger: Heatstroke Dehydration Kidney stress Cardiovascular complications particularly among elderly individuals, children, and physically exposed workers. Rising night-time temperatures in cities reduce physiological recovery from daytime heat, increasing chronic stress and cumulative mortality risks. Heatwaves also affect: Mental health Sleep quality Productivity Learning outcomes especially in poorly ventilated schools and overcrowded urban settlements. India’s healthcare system remains inadequately prepared for large-scale climate-health emergencies involving simultaneous heat exposure across multiple urban centres. Economic Consequences Heat stress reduces labour productivity, especially in sectors dependent upon outdoor physical work such as: Construction Agriculture Transport Logistics thereby affecting economic growth. Increasing cooling demand raises electricity consumption, straining already stressed power grids and increasing risks of blackouts during peak summer periods. Urban heat also damages: Roads Rail tracks Water systems Energy infrastructure increasing maintenance expenditure and reducing infrastructure longevity. According to global climate studies, extreme heat may substantially reduce India’s future GDP through productivity loss, healthcare burdens, and climate adaptation costs. Environmental Dimensions Reduction in urban tree cover weakens: Carbon sequestration Air purification Groundwater recharge Natural cooling thereby intensifying both heat and pollution crises simultaneously. Excessive concretisation reduces rainwater absorption, increasing: Urban flooding Surface runoff Water scarcity particularly during delayed or erratic monsoon periods. Heat islands interact with air pollution by accelerating formation of ground-level ozone and worsening respiratory illnesses in densely populated cities. Existing Initiatives Several Indian cities have introduced Heat Action Plans (HAPs) aimed at: Early warning systems Public advisories Cooling shelters Emergency healthcare coordination. Ahmedabad’s Heat Action Plan is often cited as an important example of climate adaptation involving: Inter-agency coordination Public awareness campaigns Health-sector preparedness. National initiatives such as: Smart Cities Mission AMRUT National Clean Air Programme possess potential to integrate urban climate resilience measures more systematically. What India Needs: Structural Urban Transformation Climate-Sensitive Urban Design Indian cities require mandatory use of: Reflective roofing materials Cool pavements Permeable surfaces Climate-sensitive building designs to reduce heat absorption and improve urban thermal balance. Urban planning regulations should mandate minimum: Green cover Urban forests Biodiversity corridors Open spaces ensuring ecological resilience against extreme heat. Building codes must be redesigned according to contemporary climatic realities rather than outdated thermal assumptions developed before accelerated climate change. Heat Governance India requires a dedicated national framework for heat governance, including: Budgetary allocations Urban heat mapping Occupational safety protocols Heat-health surveillance systems. Heatwaves should increasingly be treated as recurring public-health disasters rather than temporary seasonal inconveniences requiring only emergency responses. Urban local bodies should integrate: Climate adaptation Water management Land-use planning Public transport into unified resilience-oriented governance strategies. International Perspective Global cities increasingly use: Cool roofs Green roofs Urban tree canopies Water-sensitive urban planning to mitigate urban heat island effects. International climate discussions now increasingly recognise extreme heat as one of the most underestimated consequences of climate change, especially for tropical developing countries. India’s urban heat challenge is globally significant because the country will host one of the world’s largest urban populations during the coming decades. Constitutional & Governance Dimensions Article 21 guarantees the Right to Life, which judicial interpretation increasingly links with: Safe environment Public health Climate resilience Dignified working conditions. Directive Principles, especially Article 47, obligate the State to improve public health and living conditions, making heat mitigation a constitutional governance responsibility. Heat adaptation also connects with: SDG 11 → Sustainable Cities SDG 13 → Climate Action SDG 3 → Good Health and Well-being. Way Forward India must move beyond short-term technological fixes toward long-term climate-sensitive urban transformation emphasising ecological restoration, sustainable construction, and heat-resilient planning. Labour protections during heatwaves should become legally enforceable through: Mandatory work stoppages Hydration facilities Cooling shelters Heat insurance mechanisms for vulnerable workers. Cities should expand: Urban forests Water bodies Reflective infrastructure Public transport reducing both urban heat and carbon emissions simultaneously. Heat management should become a permanent budgetary and governance priority at: Municipal State National levels rather than an ad hoc emergency response mechanism. Prelims Pointers Urban Heat Island (UHI) → Urban areas significantly hotter than surrounding rural areas. Core Heatwave Zone covers central, northwestern, and eastern coastal India. Reflective materials increase albedo and reduce heat absorption. Heat Action Plans focus on preparedness and early warning systems. WMO identifies 2015–2025 as the warmest eleven-year period globally.

May 30, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Content Assam Uniform Civil Code (UCC) Bill, 2026 German-Netherlands Corps to take NATO command role in Estonia, Latvia Eight lion cubs die from suspected Babesia infection in Gujarat 90% of Indian babies are born in hospitals: NFHS-6 Expanding Ghepan Lake & Himalayan Glacial Crisis Quad’s struggle to find momentum, as members pursue disparate objectives Assam Uniform Civil Code (UCC) Bill, 2026 Why in News? The Assam Legislative Assembly passed the Uniform Civil Code (UCC) Assam Bill, 2026, making Assam the first northeastern state and the third Indian state after Uttarakhand and Gujarat to adopt UCC legislation. The Bill seeks to establish a uniform civil framework governing: Marriage Divorce Inheritance Succession Live-in relationships while exempting Scheduled Tribes to preserve constitutional protections and customary practices. Relevance GS-II: Constitution, DPSPs, Fundamental Rights, Secularism, Judiciary, Social Justice. Practice Question “The Uniform Civil Code debate reflects the constitutional tension between gender justice and cultural pluralism.” Critically examine. (250 words) What is Uniform Civil Code (UCC)? The Uniform Civil Code (UCC) refers to a common set of civil laws applicable uniformly to all citizens irrespective of religion in matters relating to: Marriage Divorce Inheritance Adoption Maintenance Child custody. Currently, India follows a system of religion-based personal laws, where different religious communities are governed by separate legal frameworks concerning family and civil matters. The concept of UCC aims to replace differentiated personal laws with a: Gender-neutral Equality-oriented Secular legal framework consistent with constitutional values. Constitutional Basis of UCC The constitutional basis of UCC lies under Article 44 in the Directive Principles of State Policy, which directs the State to endeavour to secure a uniform civil code throughout India. Since Article 44 falls under DPSPs, it remains non-justiciable, meaning courts cannot compel the government to implement it despite repeated judicial observations favouring gradual adoption. The UCC debate reflects broader constitutional tensions between: Equality and diversity Reform and pluralism Individual rights and community autonomy. UCC discussions also intersect with: Article 14 → Equality before law Article 15 → Non-discrimination Article 21 → Dignity and liberty Article 25 → Freedom of religion. Key Provisions of Assam UCC Bill, 2026 Ban on Polygamy & Bigamy The Bill prohibits polygamy and bigamy across communities, aiming to establish monogamy as a universal civil norm within Assam’s legal framework. Violations may attract imprisonment up to seven years under provisions linked with the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), 2023, strengthening legal deterrence against multiple marriages. The provision is projected as a measure promoting: Gender justice Women’s dignity Marital equality within family-law governance. Mandatory Registration of Marriages & Divorces The Bill mandates compulsory registration of marriages and divorces within 60 days, aiming to strengthen legal documentation and reduce disputes regarding marital status and inheritance. It establishes: Uniform legal procedures Administrative transparency Legal accountability across religious communities regarding civil matrimonial matters. Registration requirements may also improve women’s access to: Maintenance claims Inheritance rights Legal remedies during marital disputes. Regulation of Live-in Relationships The Bill introduces a legal framework requiring mandatory registration of live-in relationships within one month, with non-compliance reportedly attracting penalties including imprisonment or fines. Children born from such relationships are recognised as legitimate, ensuring legal protection regarding identity, inheritance, and social recognition. Women deserted by live-in partners are granted rights relating to: Maintenance Financial support Legal protection thereby expanding social-security safeguards. However, mandatory registration has triggered concerns regarding: Privacy Surveillance State intrusion into consensual adult relationships. Standardisation of Marriage Laws The Bill standardises minimum marriage age at: 21 years for men 18 years for women across all applicable communities within Assam. The legislation allows marriages through: Religious ceremonies Traditional customs Cultural practices thereby attempting to preserve ceremonial diversity despite legal uniformity. The Bill also repeals the Assam Compulsory Registration of Muslim Marriages and Divorces Act, 2024, replacing religion-specific regulation with a common civil framework. Gender-Equal Inheritance The legislation introduces a uniform order of inheritance for intestate succession, ensuring equal rights among: Spouse Children Parents irrespective of religious identity. The provision seeks to eliminate gender discrimination embedded within several traditional inheritance systems and strengthen women’s economic security. Gender-equal inheritance is projected as a constitutional step toward: Substantive equality Economic justice Women’s empowerment within family law. Exemption for Scheduled Tribes The Bill explicitly exempts Scheduled Tribes (STs) residing in Assam, ensuring that tribal customary laws remain outside the UCC framework. The exemption reflects constitutional protections available under: Sixth Schedule Tribal autonomy provisions Customary governance frameworks applicable in northeastern India. Tribal societies often possess distinct unwritten customary laws concerning: Marriage Land ownership Inheritance Clan relations deeply linked with identity and self-governance. The exemption attempts to balance: Legal uniformity with Protection of cultural diversity and indigenous autonomy. Significance of Tribal Exemption The Sixth Schedule grants autonomy to tribal areas such as: Bodoland Karbi Anglong Dima Hasao protecting traditional institutions and customary governance. Constitutional provisions such as: Article 371A (Nagaland) Article 371G (Mizoram) protect customary laws and social practices of tribal communities in northeastern India. Exempting tribal communities reflects India’s broader constitutional philosophy of: “Unity in Diversity” where legal pluralism coexists with national integration. However, blanket exemptions may also create: Unequal citizenship structures Uneven gender rights particularly where patriarchal customs continue within tribal systems. Judicial Pronouncements on UCC In the Shah Bano Case (1985), the Supreme Court criticised the continued non-implementation of Article 44 and argued for a common civil framework promoting gender justice. In Sarla Mudgal v. Union of India (1995), the Court expressed concern regarding misuse of religious conversion for contracting multiple marriages under different personal laws. In John Vallamattom v. Union of India (2003), the Court again highlighted the desirability of implementing UCC for ensuring legal equality among citizens. In Shayara Bano v. Union of India (2017), the Supreme Court declared triple talaq unconstitutional, reinforcing constitutional principles of dignity and gender equality. In Jose Paulo Coutinho v. Maria Luiza Valentina Pereira (2019), the Court praised Goa as a “shining example” where a common civil code functions successfully across religious communities. Current Personal Law System in India Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, and Jains are governed through codified laws such as: Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 Hindu Succession Act, 1956 collectively known as the Hindu Code framework. Muslims are primarily governed by the Muslim Personal Law (Shariat) Application Act, 1937, while Christians and Parsis follow separate religion-specific civil laws. India’s current framework therefore represents a system of: “Differentiated citizenship” where civil rights and obligations vary according to religious identity. Goa remains the only Indian state continuously implementing a common civil framework known as the Goa Civil Code, inherited from Portuguese rule. Arguments in Favour of UCC Gender Justice Several personal laws contain patriarchal provisions relating to: Inheritance Divorce Guardianship Polygamy which often disadvantage women. A UCC seeks to establish a: Gender-neutral Equality-based Rights-oriented framework ensuring uniform protection irrespective of religion. Supporters argue that constitutional morality should prevail over discriminatory customary practices violating women’s dignity and equality. Secularism & National Integration Proponents argue that UCC strengthens positive secularism, where the State treats all citizens equally under common civil laws without privileging religion-based legal systems. A common civil framework may strengthen: National integration Constitutional identity Common citizenship by reducing legal fragmentation. Advocates also argue that legal uniformity is necessary in a modern constitutional democracy committed to equality before law. Protection of Modern Relationships Legal recognition of live-in relationships provides social-security protections to: Women Children Vulnerable partners who otherwise remain outside formal legal safeguards. Mandatory registration may reduce: Desertion Identity disputes Maintenance conflicts while improving legal accountability in modern family structures. Arguments Against UCC Religious Freedom Concerns Critics argue that personal laws are deeply intertwined with religious identity, making UCC potentially inconsistent with Article 25, which guarantees freedom of religion and religious practices. Minority communities often perceive UCC debates as attempts toward: Cultural homogenisation Majoritarianism Erosion of identity rather than genuine legal reform. Opponents argue that legal pluralism itself reflects India’s multicultural constitutional structure. Privacy Concerns Mandatory registration of live-in relationships raises concerns regarding: Privacy Individual autonomy State surveillance over consensual adult relationships. Critics argue that such provisions may violate principles established in the Puttaswamy Judgment (2017) recognising privacy as a fundamental right under Article 21. There are concerns that registration systems could become tools of: Harassment Social policing Administrative overreach. Prelims Pointers Article 44 → Uniform Civil Code under DPSPs. DPSPs are non-justiciable. Article 25 → Freedom of religion. Article 371A protects Nagaland customary laws. Article 371G protects Mizoram customary laws. Goa follows the Goa Civil Code. Shah Bano Case (1985) supported UCC implementation. Shayara Bano Case (2017) declared triple talaq unconstitutional. German-Netherlands Corps to take NATO command role in Estonia, Latvia Why in News? Recently, North Atlantic Treaty Organization announced restructuring of its eastern defence architecture by assigning the German-Netherlands Corps to command allied troops in Estonia and Latvia during any potential conflict involving Russia. The decision reflects NATO’s growing strategic focus on the Baltic region following: Russia’s invasion of Ukraine Rising European security concerns Fear of Russian expansionism Increasing militarisation along NATO’s eastern frontier. Relevance GS-II: International Relations, Global Groupings, Europe-Russia relations. GS-III: Security, Military Alliances, Geopolitics. Practice Question Analyse the strategic significance of NATO’s eastern expansion in the context of the Russia–Ukraine conflict. (250 words) What is the German-Netherlands Corps? The German-Netherlands Corps, headquartered in Muenster, Germany, is a multinational military formation involving personnel and operational participation from multiple NATO member countries. Around mid-2026, the corps is expected to function as a tactical headquarters responsible for defence coordination in Estonia and Latvia, strengthening NATO’s rapid deployment capability in the Baltic region. A fully operational military corps generally commands: Three divisions Nearly 40,000–60,000 troops including logistics, artillery, engineers, medical units, and air-defence systems. During peacetime, such corps largely function as skeleton command structures designed for rapid mobilisation during military emergencies or large-scale warfare. What is NATO? North Atlantic Treaty Organization was established in 1949 through the North Atlantic Treaty (Washington Treaty) to provide collective defence against security threats during the Cold War period. NATO headquarters is located in Brussels, Belgium, and the alliance currently consists of 32 member states, with Sweden becoming the newest member in 2024. Under Article 5 of the NATO Treaty, an armed attack against one member is considered an attack against all members, forming the core principle of collective defence. Under Article 10, membership remains open to European countries capable of upholding NATO principles and contributing to North Atlantic security architecture. What is NATO’s Eastern Flank? NATO’s eastern flank refers to alliance members located closest to Russia and Belarus, especially: Poland Estonia Latvia Lithuania Romania which are considered highly vulnerable to potential Russian military pressure. Since Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014 and invasion of Ukraine in 2022, NATO has significantly expanded troop deployment, surveillance, and military preparedness along its eastern frontier. The eastern flank has become strategically critical because these regions possess: Limited strategic depth Proximity to Russian territory High geopolitical sensitivity making rapid reinforcement essential during crises. Importance of the Baltic Region The Baltic region generally refers to the area surrounding the Baltic Sea in Northern Europe and includes: Estonia Latvia Lithuania all of which are NATO and European Union members. The Baltic States are strategically important because they directly border or lie close to: Russia Belarus Kaliningrad making them frontline states in NATO-Russia confrontation. These countries possess relatively small territories and limited military depth, increasing concerns that Russian forces could rapidly overwhelm them before large NATO reinforcements arrive. The region also remains important for: Energy routes Maritime trade Arctic access European security architecture within the broader Euro-Atlantic strategic framework. Why NATO is Restructuring Baltic Defence Previously, NATO forces across: Baltic States Northern Poland were managed under a single multinational headquarters located in Szczecin, Poland. NATO believes a single command structure may prove inadequate during large-scale conflict because simultaneous operations across multiple vulnerable regions require decentralised and faster military coordination. Creation of an additional command zone is expected to improve: Rapid deployment Operational flexibility Troop coordination Battlefield responsiveness during any future conflict scenario involving Russia. NATO military officials reportedly described the restructuring as essential for bringing: “Mass at speed” meaning rapid concentration of military forces before adversaries achieve battlefield advantages. Russia Factor Behind NATO Expansion Russia’s invasion of Ukraine fundamentally altered Europe’s post-Cold War security environment and revived fears regarding territorial aggression in Eastern Europe. NATO officials have repeatedly warned that Russia could potentially threaten NATO territory within coming years if deterrence and defence preparedness remain weak. Moscow, however, denies aggressive intentions and accuses NATO of: Encirclement Military expansionism Provoking regional instability through eastward enlargement. NATO expansion toward Russia’s borders remains one of the central geopolitical fault lines shaping contemporary European security politics. Strategic Importance of Estonia & Latvia Estonia and Latvia possess relatively small militaries and depend heavily on NATO’s collective defence guarantees for national security. Both countries share historical experiences of Soviet domination, making public opinion strongly supportive of NATO security arrangements and military deterrence against Russia. Their geographical proximity to Russia and Belarus creates vulnerability to: Hybrid warfare Cyberattacks Missile strikes Rapid troop mobilisation during regional crises. The Baltic region also contains the strategically sensitive Suwalki Gap, a narrow corridor connecting Poland with Lithuania between Belarus and Russia’s Kaliningrad enclave. European Strategic Autonomy The restructuring also reflects Europe’s growing efforts to assume greater responsibility for continental defence amid uncertainty regarding long-term American military commitment to Europe. U.S. President Donald Trump repeatedly criticised European NATO members for excessive dependence on American military protection and insufficient defence expenditure. Reports regarding possible reduction of U.S. troops stationed in Germany intensified European concerns regarding: Strategic dependence Defence self-reliance Burden-sharing within NATO. Consequently, European countries increasingly seek stronger indigenous defence capabilities while remaining within the NATO framework. Germany’s Expanding Military Role Germany has gradually abandoned its traditionally cautious post-World War-II military posture following the Ukraine war and is expanding: Defence spending Military modernisation Strategic leadership within NATO. Germany’s increasing defence role reflects broader transformation in European geopolitics where major continental powers are preparing for long-term confrontation with Russia. The German-Netherlands Corps arrangement also demonstrates growing military integration among European NATO members through: Joint command systems Shared logistics Interoperability frameworks. Broader Geopolitical Implications NATO’s eastern expansion and force restructuring may intensify: Russia-West tensions Military competition Arms races Strategic mistrust across Europe. Increasing militarisation of Eastern Europe raises risks of: Proxy conflicts Miscalculation Escalation especially amid ongoing Ukraine conflict and nuclear signalling. The situation reflects the gradual emergence of a renewed: “Cold War-like security environment” characterised by bloc politics and strategic confrontation. NATO’s strengthening also demonstrates how the Ukraine war revitalised an alliance that some observers previously considered strategically weakened after the Cold War. India’s Perspective India maintains close strategic relations with: Russia United States European powers requiring careful diplomatic balancing amid NATO-Russia tensions. India traditionally supports: Strategic autonomy Dialogue-based conflict resolution Respect for sovereignty while avoiding formal military alliances. Escalating NATO-Russia confrontation affects India through: Energy prices Defence supplies Fertiliser imports Global economic instability particularly due to prolonged geopolitical uncertainty. India also closely observes developments relating to: Military alliances European security Multipolarity because they influence emerging global power balances. Prelims Pointers NATO established in 1949. Headquarters → Brussels, Belgium. NATO currently has 32 members. Newest NATO member → Sweden (2024). Article 5 → Collective defence clause. Article 10 → Membership provision. Baltic States → Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania. Suwalki Gap connects Poland and Lithuania. Eight lion cubs die from suspected Babesia infection in Gujarat Why in News? Eight lion cubs reportedly died in Gujarat’s Gir Somnath and Amreli districts due to suspected Babesia infection, prompting emergency disease-containment measures, wildlife surveillance, tick-removal drives, and isolation of lions within affected forest zones. The incident is highly important for UPSC because it integrates themes of: Wildlife conservation Biodiversity management Zoonotic diseases Protected-area governance Climate change Human-wildlife interface Conservation genetics. Relevance GS-III: Environment, Biodiversity, Wildlife Conservation, Climate Change. Practice Question Wildlife diseases are emerging as major conservation challenges in India. Discuss with reference to the Gir lion ecosystem. (250 words) About Asiatic Lions The Asiatic Lion (Panthera leo persica) is a critically important flagship species found naturally only in and around the Gir landscape of Gujarat, making India the last surviving habitat of this subspecies globally. According to the 2025 lion census, Gujarat reportedly hosts nearly 891 Asiatic lions, distributed across: Gir National Park Girnar Coastal forests Revenue areas Agro-pastoral landscapes. Asiatic lions are classified as: IUCN Red List → Endangered Schedule I species under Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 receiving the highest degree of legal protection in India. Conservation success in Gir is globally recognised because lion numbers have increased significantly through: Community participation Habitat protection Anti-poaching measures Veterinary intervention over recent decades. What is Babesia Infection? Babesiosis is a parasitic disease caused by microscopic protozoans of the genus Babesia, which infect red blood cells and weaken the immune system of affected animals. The disease spreads primarily through tick vectors, making it highly relevant in dense wildlife habitats where parasites can spread rapidly among closely interacting animal populations. Symptoms in infected lions reportedly include: Weakness Fever Nasal discharge Respiratory stress Loss of appetite which can become fatal if untreated. Young cubs remain particularly vulnerable because: Immature immunity Nutritional stress Environmental exposure increase susceptibility to parasitic and infectious diseases. Why the Infection is Concerning Wildlife officials consider the infection a potential ecological threat because lions in Gir increasingly inhabit: Open forests Buffer zones Human-dominated landscapes enabling faster disease transmission. The Gir lion population is geographically concentrated within a relatively limited landscape, increasing the risk that infectious outbreaks may spread rapidly through genetically connected lion groups. Since Asiatic lions possess comparatively lower genetic diversity than African lion populations, disease outbreaks can potentially create large-scale population vulnerability. The deaths revive concerns previously raised during outbreaks such as: Canine Distemper Virus (CDV) Tick-borne diseases which affected Gir lions in earlier years. Containment Measures Taken The Gujarat Forest Department reportedly launched large-scale: Tick-removal operations Veterinary surveillance Emergency rescue preparedness to contain further spread of infection. Lions within nearly a 10-kilometre radius of affected areas are being isolated and continuously monitored to minimise potential transmission among prides. Veterinary experts from Junagadh Veterinary College are working alongside frontline forest staff for sample collection, clinical examination, and disease management. Biological samples from dead cubs were reportedly sent to Gujarat Biotechnology Research Centre for laboratory confirmation and epidemiological assessment. Emergency preparedness at Sasan Lion Hospital has reportedly been strengthened to ensure rapid rescue and treatment if additional infected lions are detected. Disease Ecology & Wildlife Conservation Wildlife diseases are increasingly emerging as major conservation challenges because habitat fragmentation, climate variability, and expanding human-animal interactions intensify pathogen transmission risks. Tick-borne diseases become particularly dangerous in ecosystems experiencing: Warmer temperatures Changing rainfall Habitat stress because such conditions often favour parasite proliferation. Climate change may indirectly influence wildlife diseases by altering: Tick distribution Vector survival Animal migration Water availability across forest ecosystems. Growing wildlife populations within limited habitats can increase: Intraspecies contact Competition Stress thereby enhancing disease vulnerability. Human-Wildlife Interface Concerns Asiatic lions increasingly move beyond protected forests into: Agricultural fields Villages Coastal areas due to population expansion and habitat pressure. Such movement increases interactions among: Domestic livestock Stray animals Wildlife potentially facilitating cross-species transmission of infectious diseases and parasites. Unregulated tourism, vehicular pressure, and habitat disturbance may further increase ecological stress within the Gir landscape. The Gir ecosystem demonstrates how conservation success without corresponding habitat expansion can create: Disease vulnerability Resource competition Human-wildlife conflict over time. Importance of Gir Landscape The Gir ecosystem represents one of India’s most successful examples of: Species recovery Community-based conservation Landscape-level wildlife management after the Asiatic lion population once declined drastically during colonial times. Maldhari pastoral communities historically played an important role in coexistence-based conservation through tolerance, traditional grazing systems, and cultural acceptance of lions. Gir also supports important biodiversity including: Leopards Hyenas Marsh crocodiles Chital Nilgai making it an ecologically significant dry deciduous forest landscape. Key Structural Conservation Concerns Conservation experts have long warned against concentrating the entire Asiatic lion population within a single geographical region because epidemics, natural disasters, or forest fires could threaten the species’ long-term survival. The Supreme Court earlier supported translocation of some lions to Kuno National Park in Madhya Pradesh to establish a second free-ranging population for species security. Delays in establishing alternative lion habitats increase: Genetic bottlenecks Epidemic vulnerability Habitat saturation thereby threatening long-term conservation resilience. Increasing dependence on veterinary intervention also reflects growing ecological imbalance within intensively managed wildlife landscapes. One Health Perspective The One Health approach recognises that: Human health Animal health Environmental health are deeply interconnected within shared ecosystems. Wildlife disease outbreaks may potentially evolve into broader ecological or zoonotic risks if surveillance and containment systems remain weak. Integrated monitoring of: Wildlife Livestock Parasites Environmental conditions is increasingly essential under climate-change conditions. Prelims Pointers Asiatic Lion scientific name → Panthera leo persica. Natural habitat → Gir landscape, Gujarat. IUCN Status → Endangered. Babesiosis is a tick-borne parasitic disease. Kuno National Park proposed as second Asiatic lion habitat. One Health integrates human, animal, and environmental health. 90% of Indian babies are born in hospitals: NFHS-6 Why in News? The Union Ministry of Health & Family Welfare released NFHS-6 (2023–24), India’s most comprehensive health and socio-economic survey covering nearly 6.79 lakh households across 715 districts, providing crucial evidence for governance, welfare delivery, public health planning, and SDG monitoring. NFHS-6 is highly important for UPSC because it provides authentic data for: GS-II Health GS-I Population GS-III Social Sector Essay Ethics Interview particularly regarding nutrition, healthcare, women’s empowerment, and demographic transition. Relevance GS-II: Health, Nutrition, Welfare Schemes, Women & Child Development. GS-I: Population and demographic transition. GS-III: Human capital and social-sector development. Practice Question NFHS-6 reflects India’s transition from survival-focused healthcare toward preventive and lifestyle-oriented public health governance. Examine. (250 words) Overall Trends Emerging from NFHS-6 India has recorded significant improvements in: Maternal healthcare Institutional deliveries Child immunisation Stunting reduction Financial inclusion reflecting stronger welfare-state capacity and deeper penetration of public-health programmes. Simultaneously, NFHS-6 highlights emerging structural concerns involving: Obesity Diabetes Lifestyle diseases Urban health stress Dual burden of malnutrition indicating India’s ongoing epidemiological transition. The survey reflects India’s transition from: “Survival-focused healthcare” toward “Preventive, nutrition-sensitive, and lifestyle-oriented healthcare governance” requiring major policy recalibration in coming decades. Maternal Health Improvements Institutional deliveries increased from 88.6% to 90.6%, reflecting improved healthcare accessibility, expansion of maternal welfare schemes, and growing trust in institutional childbirth facilities, particularly through government-supported public-health interventions. Coverage of antenatal care (ANC) increased from 92.6% to 95.9%, while women receiving ANC during the first trimester rose from 70% to 76.2%, indicating improved early-stage maternal health monitoring and outreach. Mothers receiving at least four ANC visits increased from 58.5% to 65.2%, demonstrating stronger continuity in maternal healthcare services and better integration of frontline health-worker networks within public-health systems. Consumption of Iron-Folic Acid (IFA) supplements for 100 days or more during pregnancy increased from 44.1% to 54.9%, indicating improved implementation of anaemia-control and maternal nutrition programmes. Women consuming IFA supplements for 180 days or more increased from 26% to 37.8%, reflecting greater awareness regarding maternal nutrition and enhanced public-health service delivery mechanisms. These improvements largely reflect the cumulative impact of: Janani Suraksha Yojana PMMVY PMSMA SUMAN National Health Mission across rural and urban India. Child Health & Nutrition Stunting among children under five declined sharply from 35.5% to 29.3%, indicating improvement in long-term nutritional outcomes, maternal healthcare, sanitation conditions, and child-development interventions. Severe wasting declined from 7.7% to 5.2%, reflecting stronger management of acute malnutrition through supplementary nutrition programmes and improved child-health monitoring systems. The percentage of underweight children declined only marginally from 32.1% to 31.8%, indicating persistent structural poverty, dietary inadequacy, and unequal nutrition access across vulnerable populations. Symptoms of acute respiratory infection (ARI) among children declined from 2.8% to 1.9%, reflecting improved immunisation, disease management, sanitation, and healthcare accessibility. Severe diarrhoea prevalence reportedly declined to 0.5%, highlighting improvements in: Drinking water access Sanitation Vaccination coverage Public-health awareness across several regions. Nearly 95.6% infants under six months were breastfed during the survey period, indicating stronger awareness regarding infant nutrition and early-childhood health practices. Immunisation Success Full vaccination coverage among children aged 12–23 months increased from 83.8% to 87.1%, demonstrating strengthening of India’s Universal Immunisation Programme and last-mile healthcare delivery systems. Nearly 95.6% children reportedly received most vaccinations through public healthcare facilities, reflecting significant public trust in government immunisation infrastructure and frontline healthcare networks. Rotavirus vaccination coverage increased dramatically from 36.4% to 85.4%, indicating successful integration of newer vaccines within India’s expanding immunisation framework. Coverage of the second dose of measles-containing vaccines increased from 58.6% to 71.8%, improving protection against vaccine-preventable diseases and strengthening child-health outcomes. The immunisation gains reflect improved: Cold-chain systems Digital monitoring ASHA outreach Public-health coordination especially after the COVID-19 pandemic experience. Fertility Transition & Population Stabilisation India’s Total Fertility Rate (TFR) remained stable at 2.0, below the replacement level threshold of 2.1, indicating continuing demographic transition and slowing population growth. The Contraceptive Prevalence Rate (CPR) increased from 66.7% to 69.1%, reflecting improved family-planning awareness and greater access to reproductive healthcare services. India’s demographic challenge is gradually shifting from: Population stabilisation toward Ageing population Human-capital development Productivity enhancement Elderly healthcare preparedness. Significant regional variations persist because southern states are entering advanced demographic ageing phases while several northern states continue experiencing relatively younger population structures. Rising Obesity & Lifestyle Diseases NFHS-6 highlights a major epidemiological transition with rapidly rising levels of: Obesity Diabetes Sedentary lifestyle disorders particularly among urban populations and middle-income households. The proportion of overweight or obese women increased from 24% to 30.7%, representing a sharp increase of nearly 6.7 percentage points within only five years. Urban women showed significantly higher obesity prevalence, with approximately 42.8% categorised as overweight or obese compared with 25.5% in rural areas. The percentage of overweight or obese men increased from 22.9% to 27.3%, indicating rapidly changing dietary and behavioural patterns among Indian adults. Urban male obesity prevalence reportedly reached nearly 36.3%, reflecting rising sedentary work culture, processed-food consumption, stress, and declining physical activity. NFHS-6 therefore reveals India’s growing double burden of malnutrition, where obesity coexists alongside persistent undernutrition and micronutrient deficiencies. Rising Diabetes Burden NFHS-6 reported increasing prevalence of high blood sugar levels, signalling rapidly expanding diabetes risks across both urban and rural populations. The rise in diabetes reflects broader structural transformations involving: Urbanisation Processed-food consumption Sedentary lifestyles Stress Reduced physical activity across Indian society. Rising non-communicable diseases threaten: Labour productivity Household finances Public-health expenditure Economic growth thereby creating long-term developmental concerns. India’s healthcare system historically focused on communicable diseases and maternal-child health, but future governance increasingly requires preventive and lifestyle-oriented healthcare strategies. Caesarean Section Concern Caesarean-section deliveries increased sharply from 21.5% to 27.2%, significantly exceeding the WHO-recommended optimal range of 10–15%. Urban areas reported caesarean rates approaching nearly 40%, while private healthcare facilities recorded substantially higher levels than public institutions. Rising C-section rates raise concerns regarding: Commercialisation of healthcare Profit-driven medical practices Defensive medicine Weak regulatory oversight within private healthcare systems. Excessive medicalisation of childbirth may increase: Maternal complications Financial burdens Long-term health risks particularly for economically vulnerable households. Women’s Health & Menstrual Hygiene Use of hygienic menstrual protection methods among women aged 15–24 years increased further, reflecting improved awareness, affordability, and accessibility of menstrual-health products. Improvements in menstrual hygiene reflect the impact of: Awareness campaigns School-health programmes Janaushadhi initiatives Women-centric welfare interventions across multiple states. However, menstrual-health disparities persist across: Rural regions Tribal areas Low-income households due to stigma, affordability barriers, and inadequate sanitation infrastructure. Key Structural Concerns Despite progress, nearly 29.3% children remain stunted, indicating persistent long-term nutritional deprivation and developmental inequality across vulnerable populations. India continues facing major challenges relating to: Anaemia Protein deficiency Dietary diversity Micronutrient deficiency despite improvements in calorie availability. Rising obesity alongside undernutrition indicates unequal nutrition transition where processed foods increasingly replace balanced diets without eliminating hunger or nutritional insecurity. Significant inter-state disparities persist in: Healthcare access Fertility Nutrition Women’s empowerment reflecting uneven governance capacity and socio-economic development. Prelims Pointers NFHS-6 conducted during 2023–24. Nodal agency: International Institute for Population Sciences Institutional deliveries: 90.6%. TFR: 2.0. Full immunisation: 87.1%. Stunting: 29.3%. Severe wasting: 5.2%. Women overweight/obese: 30.7%. Men overweight/obese: 27.3%. Caesarean delivery rate: 27.2%. Expanding Ghepan Lake & Himalayan Glacial Crisis Why in News? The rapidly expanding Ghepan Glacial Lake above Sissu village in Himachal Pradesh has emerged as a major climate-security concern due to rising risks of a Glacial Lake Outburst Flood (GLOF) threatening settlements, infrastructure, tourism, and fragile Himalayan ecosystems. The issue is highly important for UPSC because it integrates themes of: Climate change Himalayan ecology Cryosphere Disaster management Sustainable tourism Environmental governance Water security. Relevance GS-III: Climate Change, Disaster Management, Environment, Water Security. GS-I: Himalayan geography and fragile ecosystems. Practice Question Glacial Lake Outburst Floods (GLOFs) are emerging as major climate-security threats in the Himalayan region. Discuss. (250 words) Understanding Ghepan Lake Ghepan Lake is a high-altitude glacial lake located at nearly 4,068 metres above sea level near the retreating Ghepan Glacier in Himachal Pradesh’s Lahaul-Spiti region. The lake is named after Ghepan Devta, regarded locally as the protector deity of Lahaul, reflecting the close cultural and ecological relationship between Himalayan communities and mountain ecosystems. Located around 11 kilometres upstream from Sissu village, the lake has become increasingly unstable due to glacier retreat, rising temperatures, and changing precipitation patterns. What is a Glacial Lake Outburst Flood (GLOF)? A GLOF occurs when water stored in a glacial lake suddenly escapes because of failure of natural barriers such as moraine dams, ice dams, or debris structures. Moraine-dammed lakes are particularly dangerous because the dams consist of loose unconsolidated material vulnerable to: Heavy rainfall Avalanches Landslides Earthquakes Glacier collapse. GLOFs are highly destructive in Himalayan terrain because steep slopes accelerate floodwaters carrying: Rocks Ice Mud Boulders causing cascading downstream devastation. Why Ghepan Lake is Dangerous According to the National Remote Sensing Centre (NRSC), Ghepan Lake expanded from nearly 36.49 hectares in 1989 to approximately 101.30 hectares by 2022, almost tripling in size within three decades. Scientists warn that expanding water volume is increasing pressure on the fragile moraine dam restraining the lake, thereby sharply increasing GLOF vulnerability. The National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) has classified Ghepan Lake as “highly vulnerable”, while Sissu village reportedly falls in the red zone across all flood-risk modelling scenarios. In a worst-case scenario, floodwaters could reportedly reach Sissu within nearly 21 minutes, leaving extremely limited evacuation time for residents and tourists. Glacier Retreat & Climate Change Research published in the Journal of Glaciology (2025) found that the Ghepan Glacier has maintained a consistently negative mass balance between 2015–2023, meaning glacier melting exceeds snowfall accumulation. The glacier reportedly retreated by nearly 2.76 kilometres since 1962, shrinking at an average rate of around 53 metres annually, highlighting rapid cryospheric degradation in the western Himalayas. Himalayan warming has altered precipitation patterns, with many higher-altitude regions increasingly receiving rainfall instead of snowfall, accelerating glacier melt because rain transfers heat directly to glacier surfaces. Scientists describe this as a cumulative feedback process where: Glacier retreat enlarges lakes Larger lakes accelerate glacier melting Ice collapse further expands lake size creating a self-reinforcing cycle. Himalayan Cryosphere Crisis The Himalayas are often called the “Third Pole” because they contain one of the world’s largest freshwater ice reserves outside the Arctic and Antarctic regions. Himalayan glaciers sustain major river systems such as: Indus Ganga Brahmaputra supporting agriculture, hydropower, ecosystems, and water security for millions across South Asia. According to ICIMOD, nearly 12% of glacier area in the Hindu Kush Himalayan region disappeared between 1990–2020 due to accelerated warming. The Central Water Commission (2024) reported that India’s glacial lake area increased by approximately 29% compared with 2011, indicating rapid cryosphere transformation. Disaster Risks & Vulnerability Scientific modelling suggests a Ghepan GLOF could affect: 34 settlements 204 hectares of agricultural land 57 bridges 106 kilometres of roads across downstream Himalayan valleys. Critical infrastructure including: Atal Tunnel Manali–Leh Highway Tourism facilities Hydropower systems faces severe vulnerability from floodwaters and debris flows. Since the Chandra River joins the Chenab basin, flood impacts may extend beyond Himachal Pradesh into parts of Jammu & Kashmir, increasing interstate disaster implications. Himalayan disasters become especially dangerous because fragile slopes amplify: Landslides Debris flows River blockages creating cascading multi-hazard events. Tourism & Anthropogenic Pressure Since the opening of the Atal Tunnel in 2020, Sissu has transformed rapidly into a tourism hotspot, with vehicle inflow reportedly rising to nearly 5,000 vehicles daily during peak season. Scientists caution that tourism-related activities increase ecological pressure through: Construction Road widening Vehicular emissions Dust deposition weakening fragile Himalayan ecosystems. Dust particles settling on snow reduce glacier albedo (reflectivity), increasing heat absorption and accelerating glacier melting. Rapid expansion of: Hotels Homestays Adventure tourism without ecological carrying-capacity assessments intensifies environmental vulnerability. Governance & Preparedness Gaps Despite repeated scientific warnings, Ghepan Lake currently lacks a fully functional early warning system, exposing downstream communities to major disaster risks. Sissu reportedly lacks: Public siren systems Warning boards Real-time alerts Clearly marked evacuation routes limiting disaster preparedness capacity. A pilot monitoring system developed by Centre for Development of Advanced Computing remains under testing and has not yet evolved into a comprehensive operational warning network. The issue highlights persistent gaps between: Scientific assessment Institutional coordination Ground-level preparedness in India’s Himalayan disaster-management framework. Human & Livelihood Dimensions Local communities increasingly live under conditions of climate anxiety, balancing fear of disaster with economic dependence on tourism-related livelihoods. Many residents continue working in tourism because: Limited alternative employment Economic dependence Lack of relocation certainty reduce adaptive choices despite rising risks. Villagers also fear displacement because previous examples of delayed rehabilitation in Himalayan disaster zones have weakened trust regarding long-term state support. The issue reflects broader questions of: Climate justice Ecological displacement Mountain livelihoods Sustainable development. Broader Himalayan Concerns Similar GLOF risks exist across: Sikkim Uttarakhand Arunachal Pradesh Nepal where rapidly expanding glacial lakes threaten downstream settlements and infrastructure. The South Lhonak Lake GLOF in Sikkim (2023) demonstrated how glacial disasters can destroy: Hydropower projects Roads Bridges while causing large-scale casualties. Himalayan regions are increasingly witnessing interconnected crises involving: Glacier retreat Flash floods Landslides Cloudbursts Infrastructure instability. Prelims Pointers GLOF → Glacial Lake Outburst Flood. Moraine-dammed lakes are highly unstable. Himalayas are called the “Third Pole”. ICIMOD is headquartered in Kathmandu, Nepal. Atal Tunnel connects Manali with Lahaul-Spiti. Chenab River system may be affected by Ghepan flooding Quad’s struggle to find momentum, as members pursue disparate objectives Why in News? The recent foreign ministers’ meeting of the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue in New Delhi renewed debate regarding whether the Quad can evolve into a serious strategic framework or remain primarily a consultative diplomatic platform. The meeting gained significance amid: Rising China-US rivalry Indo-Pacific militarisation Maritime tensions Supply-chain vulnerabilities Emerging technological competition across the Indo-Pacific region. Relevance GS-II: International Relations, Indo-Pacific, Multilateral Groupings. GS-III: Maritime Security, Supply Chains, Strategic Affairs. Practice Question The Quad reflects the growing importance of maritime geopolitics and balance-of-power politics in the Indo-Pacific. Discuss. (250 words) What is the Quad? The Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad) is an informal strategic grouping comprising: India United States Japan Australia. The grouping originated after the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, when the four countries coordinated humanitarian assistance and disaster-relief operations in the Indo-Pacific region. The Quad formally emerged in 2007, but initially lost momentum due to: Chinese opposition Divergent strategic priorities Concerns regarding militarisation among participating states. The grouping was revived in 2017 amid growing concerns regarding China’s expanding military, technological, and maritime influence across the Indo-Pacific. Why is the Indo-Pacific Important? The Indo-Pacific region has emerged as the world’s principal: Strategic centre Economic hub Maritime trade corridor connecting the Indian and Pacific Oceans. More than 50% of global trade and energy flows reportedly pass through Indo-Pacific sea lanes, making regional stability critical for global economic security. The region hosts important maritime chokepoints such as: Malacca Strait South China Sea Lombok Strait which are crucial for energy transportation and global supply chains. Control over Indo-Pacific maritime routes increasingly shapes: Geopolitical influence Military projection Technological dominance within the emerging multipolar world order. Why the Quad Emerged The Quad emerged largely in response to concerns regarding China’s: Maritime assertiveness Territorial expansion Economic coercion Technological influence across the Indo-Pacific region. China’s activities in: South China Sea East China Sea Taiwan Strait alongside Belt and Road expansion intensified regional strategic anxieties. The Quad aims to promote a: Free Open Inclusive Rules-based Indo-Pacific resisting unilateral domination by any single power. Although the grouping avoids openly identifying China as an adversary, Beijing perceives the Quad as a strategic containment mechanism targeting Chinese influence. China’s Opposition to the Quad China strongly opposes the Quad, arguing that it represents: Bloc politics Strategic encirclement Cold War mentality undermining regional cooperation and stability. Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi earlier described the Quad as “sea foam” that would eventually dissipate, questioning its long-term relevance. Following the recent Quad meeting, China again criticised formation of: “Exclusive cliques” “Bloc confrontation” warning against military groupings directed toward regional containment. Beijing fears that deeper Quad coordination may constrain: Chinese naval expansion Maritime influence Technological ambitions in the Indo-Pacific. Different Objectives of Quad Members India’s Perspective India views the Quad as an important platform for balancing China amid: Border tensions Indo-Pacific competition Regional power asymmetry particularly after Galwan clashes. Simultaneously, India remains cautious about compromising its: Strategic autonomy Multi-alignment policy Independent foreign policy traditions through rigid alliance commitments. India prefers the Quad to remain: Flexible Non-militarised Issue-based rather than transforming into an Asian NATO-like military bloc. United States’ Perspective The United States considers the Quad a central pillar of its broader Indo-Pacific strategy aimed at balancing China without direct military confrontation. Washington increasingly sees the Quad as part of a wider: Networked security architecture Strategic coalition system preserving American influence in Asia. However, changing U.S. domestic politics and shifting administrations sometimes create uncertainty regarding: Long-term commitment Strategic consistency Burden sharing within Indo-Pacific partnerships. Under leaders such as Donald Trump, concerns emerged regarding possible bilateral accommodation with China instead of sustained multilateral balancing. Japan’s Perspective Japan views the Quad as a crucial security arrangement because of growing tensions involving: East China Sea Taiwan Strait South China Sea linked with China’s expanding military footprint. Japan strongly supports institutional strengthening of the Quad because: Maritime security Sea-lane protection Technological resilience are critical for its economic and strategic security. Tokyo also increasingly supports: Defence normalisation Military modernisation Regional security partnerships amid changing East Asian geopolitics. Australia’s Perspective Australia views the Quad as essential for countering strategic pressure from China, particularly after economic coercion and regional security tensions. However, Australia simultaneously remains economically dependent on China for: Trade Mineral exports Economic growth creating strategic balancing dilemmas. Canberra therefore supports stronger security cooperation while avoiding uncontrolled military escalation in the Indo-Pacific region. Why the Quad Struggles to Gain Momentum The Quad lacks a formal: Treaty structure Collective defence clause Integrated military command unlike NATO, limiting institutional depth and strategic cohesion. Members possess differing: Threat perceptions Economic dependencies Regional priorities preventing emergence of fully unified strategic objectives. India’s emphasis on: Strategic autonomy differs from U.S.-led alliance thinking creating limits on military integration. Economic interdependence with China continues influencing policy calculations of: Australia Japan United States complicating sustained confrontation strategies. The Quad also faces criticism that it often produces: Symbolic declarations Diplomatic rhetoric rather than concrete institutional outcomes. Key Outcomes of the Recent Quad Meeting The recent Quad foreign ministers’ meeting focused on: Maritime security Supply-chain resilience Critical minerals Energy security amid increasing geopolitical uncertainty. The grouping announced initiatives for enhanced: Maritime surveillance Technological coordination Critical-mineral cooperation aimed at reducing excessive dependence on Chinese supply chains. The Quad also announced its first joint infrastructure project involving development of port infrastructure in Fiji, signalling movement from dialogue toward practical regional engagement. These initiatives indicate gradual evolution of the Quad into a: Functional strategic platform rather than merely a diplomatic consultation mechanism. Maritime Security Dimension Maritime security remains central to Quad cooperation because Indo-Pacific waters increasingly witness: Naval competition Territorial disputes Grey-zone warfare particularly involving China’s maritime activities. The Quad promotes: Freedom of navigation UNCLOS principles Open sea lanes resisting unilateral militarisation of international waters. Cooperation increasingly includes: Naval exercises Maritime domain awareness Coast guard coordination strengthening regional deterrence capabilities. The annual Malabar naval exercise has become a major symbol of growing strategic interoperability among Quad members. Economic & Technological Dimension The Quad increasingly focuses on: Semiconductor supply chains Critical minerals Emerging technologies reducing strategic vulnerabilities linked with Chinese economic dominance. Critical minerals such as: Lithium Rare earths Cobalt are essential for: Electric vehicles Defence systems Renewable technologies making supply-chain diversification strategically important. The grouping also cooperates on: Cybersecurity AI governance Telecommunications reflecting growing techno-strategic competition globally. Is the Quad Becoming an Asian NATO? The Quad currently lacks essential NATO-like features such as: Collective defence obligations Mutual military guarantees Binding treaty commitments making direct comparison with NATO inaccurate. India strongly opposes transforming the Quad into a formal military alliance because alliance politics may restrict: Strategic flexibility Diplomatic autonomy within India’s foreign policy framework. The Quad therefore functions more as a: Strategic partnership Flexible coalition Issue-based platform rather than a conventional military bloc. India’s Strategic Interests in the Quad The Quad strengthens India’s role as a major Indo-Pacific power and enhances its: Maritime presence Diplomatic leverage Strategic partnerships within Asia-Pacific geopolitics. Participation allows India to balance China without formally abandoning: Non-alignment traditions Strategic autonomy Multi-vector diplomacy. The Quad also supports India’s objectives relating to: Blue economy Connectivity Supply-chain diversification Regional stability. Simultaneously, India carefully avoids being drawn into: Anti-China military blocs Great-power rivalry escalation that may undermine independent strategic decision-making. Key Analytical Themes for UPSC The Quad reflects resurgence of: Balance-of-power politics Maritime geopolitics Strategic coalitions within the Indo-Pacific region. It demonstrates the shift from: Unipolarity toward Multipolar strategic competition involving the U.S., China, and regional middle powers. The grouping highlights growing importance of: Economic security Technological resilience Supply-chain geopolitics in contemporary international relations. The Quad also reflects how modern partnerships increasingly combine: Security cooperation Technology governance Infrastructure diplomacy rather than traditional military alliances alone. Way Forward The Quad requires greater: Strategic clarity Institutional depth Policy coordination to maintain long-term relevance and credibility. Members should strengthen cooperation in: Maritime capacity-building Critical technologies Disaster relief Infrastructure financing where common interests remain strongest. The grouping should avoid rigid militarisation while promoting: Inclusive regionalism ASEAN centrality Rules-based order to reduce perceptions of bloc confrontation. Sustainable success of the Quad ultimately depends on whether diverse democracies can maintain: Strategic convergence despite differing economic interests and geopolitical compulsions. Prelims Pointers Quad members → India, U.S., Japan, Australia. Quad formally emerged in 2007. Revived in 2017. Malabar Exercise → Naval exercise involving Quad countries. Indo-Pacific carries over 50% of global trade. Quad is not a military alliance. NATO has collective defence under Article 5; Quad has no equivalent provision.