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Jul 9, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

Contents01 Prambanan Temple Complex: India-Indonesia Heritage Diplomacy in Action PM Modi & President Prabowo Subianto, Yogyakarta · Archaeological Survey of India GS 1GS 2 02 Pinaka Long Range Guided Rocket: Boosting Indigenous Precision-Strike Capability Defence Research & Development Organisation (DRDO) GS 3 Article 01 Article 01 Prambanan Temple Complex: India-Indonesia Heritage Diplomacy in Action Visit to Prambanan Temple Complex, Yogyakarta · 8 July 2026 Relevance: GS 1 (Indian culture, art forms, shared civilisational heritage) · GS 2 (India and its neighbourhood, bilateral relations, cultural diplomacy). GS 1GS 2 Image: PM Modi and President Prabowo Subianto at the Prambanan Temple Complex, Yogyakarta. [Replace src with image URL] Key Data at a Glance 9th cent.Century in which the Prambanan Temple Complex was built 3Deities of the Trimurti honoured — Brahma, Vishnu, Shiva ~1,200 yrsApproximate age cited by PM Modi during the visit 2025Year of President Prabowo's State Visit to India that led to this understanding 1Nodal Indian agency — Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) 47 mHeight of the central Shiva shrine, tallest at Prambanan Issue in Brief Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited the UNESCO World Heritage Prambanan Temple Complex in Yogyakarta, accompanied by President H.E. Mr. Prabowo Subianto of Indonesia. The two leaders unveiled a plaque marking the commencement of the Archaeological Survey of India's (ASI) conservation and restoration project at the temple complex. Static Background Prambanan, built in the 9th century, is the largest temple complex in Indonesia dedicated to the Trimurti — Lord Brahma, Lord Vishnu and Lord Shiva — and stands as a symbol of shared India-Indonesia civilisational heritage. The Archaeological Survey of India (ASI), functioning under the Ministry of Culture, is India's premier body for archaeological research, excavation and heritage conservation, both within India and through cultural-diplomacy projects abroad. India's engagement in Southeast Asian heritage sites is not new — ASI has earlier undertaken extensive documentation of the Borobudur Temple Compounds, a Buddhist UNESCO site, also in Indonesia. Such heritage-conservation initiatives form part of India's Act East Policy, which emphasises deeper economic, strategic and cultural engagement with Southeast Asia. Key Dimensions — The Conservation Project The project follows the understanding reached during President Prabowo's State Visit to India in 2025, when both leaders agreed to explore India's assistance in restoring the Prambanan temples. The visit and plaque-unveiling formalise ASI's role as the lead Indian agency for the conservation and restoration work at the complex. India's track record includes a successful history of heritage restoration across several World Heritage Sites in Southeast Asia, reinforcing confidence in ASI's technical capacity for this project. Key Dimensions — Cultural Diplomacy Dimension The Prambanan complex is described as an enduring symbol of shared civilizational and cultural heritage between India and Indonesia, anchoring a bilateral relationship increasingly built on cultural as well as strategic ties. The initiative reflects India's enduring commitment to preserving shared civilizational heritage across the wider Indo-Pacific and Southeast Asian region. Critical Analysis — Strengths Builds on ASI's demonstrated regional expertise, including prior documentation work at Borobudur, lending technical credibility to the restoration mandate. Strengthens civilisational soft power and people-to-people ties, complementing India's economic and strategic outreach under the Act East Policy. High-level leadership involvement — a joint plaque-unveiling by both Heads of State — signals strong political commitment to the project's continuity. Critical Analysis — Structural Questions The publicly available information covers the project's launch and intent; detailed aspects such as funding structure, timeline and technical scope are Verification Required. Long-term success of such cross-border conservation efforts depends on sustained bilateral coordination and continued institutional support beyond the ceremonial launch. Way Forward Formalise a detailed project framework specifying ASI's technical scope, funding arrangement and monitoring mechanism for transparent implementation. Use the Prambanan initiative as a template to expand India's heritage-diplomacy footprint across other Southeast Asian sites with shared Hindu-Buddhist heritage. Link the restoration effort with tourism and cultural-exchange promotion to deepen bilateral engagement beyond the conservation project itself. Prelims Pointers Prambanan Temple Complex: built 9th century; largest temple complex in Indonesia dedicated to the Trimurti (Brahma, Vishnu, Shiva); UNESCO World Heritage Site, Yogyakarta. ASI: Archaeological Survey of India; functions under the Ministry of Culture; lead agency for the Prambanan restoration project. Borobudur Temple Compounds: Buddhist UNESCO site in Indonesia earlier documented extensively by ASI. Understanding basis: reached during President Prabowo Subianto's State Visit to India in 2025. Trimurti: the Hindu triad of Brahma (creation), Vishnu (preservation) and Shiva (destruction). Act East Policy: India's framework for deepened engagement with Southeast Asia; underpins this heritage-diplomacy initiative. Practice Mains Question "Heritage diplomacy has become an important instrument of India's Act East Policy." Discuss with reference to India's recent conservation initiatives in Southeast Asia. GS Paper 2 · 150 words · 10 marks Practice MCQs Q1. Consider the following statements regarding the Prambanan Temple Complex: (1) It is dedicated to the Trimurti — Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva. (2) It was built in the 9th century. (3) ASI is undertaking its conservation project for the first time in Indonesia. Which of the statements given above are correct? A) 1 and 2 onlyB) 2 and 3 onlyC) 1 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3 Q2. The Archaeological Survey of India functions under which of the following Ministries? A) Ministry of External AffairsB) Ministry of TourismC) Ministry of CultureD) Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs Article 02 Article 02 Pinaka Long Range Guided Rocket: Boosting Indigenous Precision-Strike Capability Defence Research & Development Organisation (DRDO) · Integrated Test Range, Chandipur · 8 July 2026 Relevance: GS 3 (science & technology, indigenisation of technology, defence production, internal & external security). GS 3 Image: Flight-test of the Pinaka Long Range Guided Rocket at the Integrated Test Range, Chandipur. [Replace src with image URL] Key Data at a Glance 60 kmUser-defined minimum range tested for the LRGR 8 Jul 2026Date of the successful flight-test 1In-service Pinaka launcher used, without modification 4DRDO labs involved — ARDE, HEMRL, DRDL, RCI 1999Year Pinaka Mk-I was first used operationally (Kargil War) ITRIntegrated Test Range, Chandipur, Odisha — trial site Issue in Brief DRDO conducted a successful flight-test of the Pinaka Long Range Guided Rocket (LRGR) at the Integrated Test Range (ITR), Chandipur, on 8 July 2026. The rocket was tested for a user-defined minimum range of 60 km, demonstrating all in-flight manoeuvres as planned and impacting the target with precision along the predicted trajectory. Static Background The Pinaka Multi-Barrel Rocket Launcher (MBRL) system, developed by DRDO, has been a mainstay of Indian Army artillery since its first operational use in the 1999 Kargil War. Successive variants — Guided Pinaka and Enhanced Pinaka — progressively extended range and introduced precision-guidance kits, converting unguided rockets into precision-strike munitions. LRGR is the latest, longer-range guided evolution of this family, intended to bridge the operational gap between conventional artillery and tactical missile systems. Key labs involved: Armament Research and Development Establishment (ARDE) — lead design agency; High Energy Materials Research Laboratory (HEMRL); Defence Research and Development Laboratory (DRDL); and Research Centre Imarat (RCI). The trial was coordinated by ITR and the Proof & Experimental Establishment (PXE). Key Dimensions — Test Performance The rocket was tested for a user-defined minimum range of 60 km; the maximum range figure was not disclosed — Verification Required. The LRGR demonstrated all planned in-flight manoeuvres and impacted the target with textbook precision, following the predicted trajectory exactly. All deployed range instruments tracked the flight throughout its trajectory, confirming guidance and navigation performance. Key Dimensions — Launcher Versatility & Leadership Response The rocket was launched from the in-service Pinaka launcher, demonstrating that Pinaka variants of different ranges can be fired from the same launch platform — a key logistics and interoperability benefit for artillery units. Raksha Mantri Shri Rajnath Singh congratulated DRDO, the Indian Army and industry, describing the test as a major milestone in indigenous design and development capability for long-range guided rockets. Defence Secretary and DRDO Chairman Shri Rajesh Kumar Singh closely monitored the trial and complimented the teams involved. Critical Analysis — Strengths Reinforces indigenous precision-strike capability, reducing dependence on imported guided-munition systems in line with Atmanirbhar Bharat objectives in defence. Launcher commonality across Pinaka variants lowers lifecycle costs and simplifies logistics for the Indian Army. Continues a track record of sequential successful DRDO trials, indicating sustained indigenous R&D momentum in guided-artillery development. Critical Analysis — Structural Questions As a single flight-test, this establishes proof of one performance parameter (minimum range); full operational induction typically requires repeated trials across range and payload conditions — the induction timeline is Verification Required. Precise maximum range, warhead type and guidance-kit specifications have not been publicly disclosed, limiting full assessment of the capability gain. Way Forward Undertake repeat trials across the full range envelope before user (Army) evaluation trials and formal induction. Continue indigenisation of guidance and seeker components to reduce reliance on any imported sub-systems in future variants. Institutionalise DRDO-industry-Army collaboration frameworks to shorten the trial-to-induction cycle for guided artillery systems. Prelims Pointers Pinaka MBRL: indigenous Multi-Barrel Rocket Launcher; first used operationally in the 1999 Kargil War. LRGR: Long Range Guided Rocket; latest guided variant, tested for a minimum range of 60 km on 8 July 2026 at ITR, Chandipur. Lead designer: ARDE (Armament Research and Development Establishment); supporting labs — HEMRL, DRDL, RCI. Trial coordination: Integrated Test Range (ITR) and Proof & Experimental Establishment (PXE). Key feature: launched from the existing in-service Pinaka launcher, enabling multi-variant, multi-range firing from one platform. Oversight: Raksha Mantri Rajnath Singh; Defence Secretary & DRDO Chairman Rajesh Kumar Singh. Practice Mains Question Discuss the significance of indigenous guided rocket artillery systems like the Pinaka Long Range Guided Rocket for India's long-range precision-strike capability and defence self-reliance. GS Paper 3 · 150 words · 10 marks Practice MCQs Q1. With reference to the Pinaka Long Range Guided Rocket (LRGR), consider the following statements: (1) It was tested at the Integrated Test Range, Chandipur. (2) It was launched from a dedicated new launcher built specifically for the LRGR. (3) The Armament Research and Development Establishment (ARDE) is its lead design agency. Which of the statements given above are correct? A) 1 and 2 onlyB) 1 and 3 onlyC) 2 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3 Q2. The Pinaka Multi-Barrel Rocket Launcher system was first used operationally by the Indian Army during: A) The 1971 Indo-Pak WarB) The 1999 Kargil WarC) Operation Parakram (2001–02)D) The 1962 Sino-Indian War

Jul 9, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

Contents01 How India Withstood the Crisis in West Asia Sachin Kumar Sharma, Director General, RIS, New Delhi · Energy security, external sector GS 3 — Energy SecurityGS 2 — GovernanceEssay 02 The Indian Diaspora as Australia's Identity, Its Future Teesta Prakash & Hiya Harinandini, Australia India Institute · Diaspora, Indo-Pacific relations GS 2 — International RelationsGS 1 — Migration & SocietyEssay Editorial 01 of 02 Article 01 How India Withstood the Crisis in West Asia Sachin Kumar Sharma — Director General, RIS, New Delhi · The Hindu Relevance: GS 3 (energy security, external sector, inflation management), GS 2 (whole-of-government governance, institutional coordination) and Essay (strategic foresight, resilience as a policy dividend) — examined through India's management of the West Asia energy shock. GS 3 — Energy SecurityGS 2 — Institutional CoordinationEssay — Strategic Foresight 1 — Issue in Brief India imports almost 90% of its crude oil and remains heavily dependent on the Gulf for oil, gas and fertilizers — making it, on paper, highly vulnerable to a Strait of Hormuz disruption. Despite fears of a 1973-style oil shock or a 1991-style balance-of-payments crisis, and the Indian crude basket crossing $120 per barrel with LPG import costs surging past ₹1,600/cylinder at the peak, India contained retail fuel and cooking-gas inflation far better than most peers. The author frames this as the payoff of deliberate policy choices, institutional learning, and strategic preparation — not luck. The central question posed: was India's resilience during the crisis a matter of chance, or the result of a decade of quiet, structural preparation across energy, diplomacy and governance? 2 — Static Background India is the world's third-largest oil importer, with heavy dependence on imported crude and LPG combined with rising freight costs and maritime risk during the crisis. Historical precedents of energy-driven macroeconomic instability in India: the 1973 oil shock and the 1991 balance-of-payments crisis — both invoked by the author as the fears this crisis initially revived. India imports ~60% of its LPG requirement, making cooking-gas affordability a direct channel for imported-inflation transmission to households. State-run Oil Marketing Companies (OMCs) absorbed ₹74,781 crore in losses on petrol, diesel and LPG sales up to June 30, 2026, as global crude prices surged — rather than passing the full shock onto consumers. The crisis unfolded against the backdrop of the wider 2026 West Asia war involving the US, Israel and Iran, with the Strait of Hormuz — a chokepoint for a large share of global seaborne oil trade — at the epicentre of global anxiety. 3 — Key Dimensions Retail price resilience (author-cited comparative data): Indian petrol prices rose just 7.5% during the crisis versus ~14% in Germany, 19% in the UK, 45% in the US, over 50% in Pakistan and the Philippines, and almost 90% in Myanmar. Diesel prices rose just 8% in India against ~85% in the UAE. LPG affordability: a domestic cylinder held at ₹942 (₹642 for Ujjwala beneficiaries), cheaper than Pakistan, Nepal and Sri Lanka, and far below prices in the US, Australia and Canada — despite India importing nearly 60% of its LPG needs. Strategic relationships as energy security: decades of engagement with Iran and Gulf partners kept communication channels open at the height of tensions; Iran facilitated the movement of Indian ships, and Gulf producers continued supplying energy. Supplier diversification: energy partnerships spanning Russia, the US, Africa and Latin America gave India flexibility to absorb disruption far better than in previous crises — described as not "putting all energy eggs in one basket." A decade of energy planning: higher ethanol blending, an expanding renewable energy base, larger strategic reserves, and stronger refining capacity built resilience well before the crisis hit. Whole-of-government coordination: the Ministries of External Affairs, Petroleum and Natural Gas, Ports, Shipping and Waterways, the Indian Navy, and the National Security Council Secretariat worked jointly to monitor risks, manage logistics and protect supplies. 4 — Critical Analysis In favour — Comparative price data is striking: India's petrol and diesel price increases were consistently lower than large advanced and developing economies alike, supporting the claim of genuine relative resilience rather than a marginal statistical difference. In favour — Diversification is structurally real: the pivot toward diversified crude sourcing, including discounted supplies from non-traditional partners, is a well-documented shift that plausibly explains part of the cushioning effect. In favour — Institutional coordination reflects a broader trend: the whole-of-government model aligns with India's evolving crisis-management architecture seen in other recent emergencies, lending credibility to the author's institutional-learning argument. Against — Resilience was not costless: the ₹74,781 crore in OMC losses shows this was a fiscal and quasi-fiscal transfer, raising unanswered questions about OMC balance-sheet health and the eventual pass-through or subsidy burden on the exchequer. Against — Cross-country comparisons carry caveats: differing tax structures, subsidy regimes and currency movements across countries affect retail fuel prices independent of "energy security," so some of India's apparent advantage may reflect pre-existing price administration rather than crisis-specific strategy. Against — Some resilience factors pre-date the crisis: ethanol blending, reserve capacity and refining gains are gradual, decade-long investments; the article's framing slightly overstates them as purpose-built for this specific shock. Against — Durability of goodwill is uncertain: continued Iranian and Gulf cooperation assumes a stable regional environment; renewed flare-ups around the Strait of Hormuz could still test this resilience further. 5 — Way Forward Institutionalise the whole-of-government crisis-response model (MEA–Petroleum–Shipping–Navy–NSCS coordination) as a standing mechanism rather than an ad hoc crisis response. Continue expanding strategic reserves, ethanol blending, and renewable capacity as structural hedges against future energy shocks. Address the OMC under-recovery problem transparently — sustained losses without a clear compensation mechanism risk undermining the very resilience being celebrated. Deepen diversification of crude and LPG sourcing further, and treat foreign-policy engagement with Iran and the Gulf as a core, not peripheral, energy-security tool. Build in early-warning and stress-testing mechanisms for future chokepoint disruptions, given that the Strait of Hormuz risk has not fully receded. 6 — Data & Key Facts ~90%India's crude oil import dependence ~60%India's LPG import dependence $120/bblPeak level crossed by the Indian crude basket during the crisis 7.5%Rise in Indian petrol prices during the crisis (vs 45% US, ~90% Myanmar) ₹74,781 CrOMC losses absorbed on petrol, diesel and LPG sales up to 30 June 2026 ₹942 / ₹642LPG cylinder price — general / Ujjwala beneficiary rate Strategic Petroleum Reserves: India's underground reserve facilities are located at Visakhapatnam, Mangalore and Padur, managed by the Indian Strategic Petroleum Reserves Limited (ISPRL) under the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas. Whole-of-government coordination: Ministry of External Affairs, Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas, Ministry of Ports, Shipping and Waterways, the Indian Navy, and the National Security Council Secretariat jointly managed risk monitoring and logistics during the crisis. 7 — Prelims Pointers India's crude import dependence — approximately 90%; India is the world's third-largest oil importer 1973 oil shock & 1991 BoP crisis — historical precedents of oil-price-driven macroeconomic instability in India National Security Council Secretariat (NSCS) — apex body coordinating India's national security policy Ethanol blending programme — part of India's biofuel policy to reduce crude oil import dependence Strategic Petroleum Reserves — underground storage facilities at Visakhapatnam, Mangalore and Padur ISPRL — Indian Strategic Petroleum Reserves Limited; special purpose vehicle managing India's SPRs Exam note: Do not confuse India's Strategic Petroleum Reserves (crude oil, managed by ISPRL) with the Public Distribution System buffer stocks (foodgrains, managed by FCI) — these are distinct reserve mechanisms for different commodities. 8 — Practice Mains Question "India's energy resilience during the recent West Asia crisis has been described as the outcome of 'strategic foresight' rather than luck." Critically evaluate this claim with reference to India's energy diversification and institutional coordination mechanisms.GS 3 · 15 marks · ~250 words · Energy Security + Governance Intro: Frame India's high import dependence on crude and LPG against the backdrop of the West Asia crisis and the fears it revived of a 1973- or 1991-style shock. Body 1 — Evidence of resilience: comparative retail price data (petrol, diesel, LPG) against peer economies; the scale of OMC losses absorbed to protect consumers. Body 2 — Structural preparation: supplier diversification, strategic reserves, ethanol blending, refining capacity, and whole-of-government coordination — balanced against caveats on fiscal cost and durability of regional goodwill. Conclusion: Genuine resilience rests on sustained investment in diversification and institutional coordination, but the fiscal cost of price stabilisation and the fragility of regional stability mean this resilience cannot be taken for granted going forward. 9 — Practice MCQ Consider the following statements regarding India's Strategic Petroleum Reserves (SPR): 1. They are maintained at Visakhapatnam, Mangalore, and Padur. 2. They are managed by the Indian Strategic Petroleum Reserves Limited (ISPRL), a special purpose vehicle. 3. They are primarily built to cushion against short-term global crude oil supply disruptions. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only(b) 2 and 3 only(c) 1 and 3 only(d) 1, 2 and 3 Editorial 02 of 02 Article 02 The Indian Diaspora as Australia's Identity, Its Future Teesta Prakash & Hiya Harinandini — Research Fellows, Australia India Institute, University of Melbourne · The Hindu Relevance: GS 2 (India's bilateral relations, diaspora diplomacy, Indo-Pacific strategy), GS 1 (migration, social cohesion in multicultural societies) and Essay (identity, belonging, backlash to globalisation) — built around the Indian diaspora becoming Australia's largest overseas-born community. GS 2 — India-Australia RelationsGS 1 — Migration & SocietyEssay — Identity & Belonging 1 — Issue in Brief The Indian diaspora has become Australia's largest overseas-born community, overtaking the England-born population for the first time — a genuine demographic and identity inflection point for a country long anchored by a British-derived majority. This shift forms the backdrop to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's third visit to Australia, where a large public diaspora event ("Melbourne Meets Modi") is expected to draw more attention than the formal bilateral agenda. The authors argue the India-Australia relationship has evolved from the shallow 'three Cs' — Cricket, Curry and Commonwealth — to a substantive 'four Ds' — Democracy, Defence, Diaspora and Dosti — built on a decade of institution-building, including the Quad. Central argument: the diaspora must be treated as a constituency with its own voice and lived experience, not merely a symbol of bilateral partnership or a statistic in trade and education discourse. 2 — Static Background Indian-born residents in Australia reached 971,020 (as of 30 June 2025), narrowly overtaking England-born residents at 970,950 — the first time since 1901 that England has not held the top spot among overseas-born groups. Significant Indian professional migration to Australia only began in the 1960s–70s, after the dismantling of the White Australia Policy — an explicitly race-based immigration regime that had excluded all but European migrants — making the Australian-Indian diaspora comparatively young relative to its US or UK counterparts. A large share of recent arrivals migrated during the "New India" years since 2014, driven by a mix of economic ambition and, for some, disillusionment with domestic democratic institutions — creating a cohort more tightly bound to India through family, business, remittances, and nationalist identity. The Quad — the informal security grouping of India, Australia, the United States and Japan — anchors the "Defence" pillar of the "four Ds" framework and is central to both countries' Indo-Pacific strategy. Rising backlash: nationalist street movements such as "March for Australia" have gathered pace over the past year, and the right-wing populist One Nation party is emerging as the main opponent to the governing Labor party. 3 — Key Dimensions From symbol to constituency: both governments have long treated the diaspora as a talking point — income, education and trade statistics — rather than as a lived, internally diverse community stratified by class, caste, language, religion and visa status. Asset and target simultaneously: the same community celebrated for its economic contribution is being recast by nationalist movements as "too large, too fast, too visible" — showing how a strategic asset can double as a political liability in domestic discourse. Modi's visit as a stress test: a high-visibility diaspora showcase lands directly within this polarised landscape, and could be read either as a celebration of ties or, by critics, as validating anti-immigrant narratives about the community's scale. The evidence gap: the authors highlight the absence of serious, evidence-based research into how the diaspora actually settles, trusts institutions, and participates in civic life — a blind spot on both the Indian and Australian sides. A permanent identity shift for Australia: the demographic change is framed as reshaping Australia's national self-understanding, from a predominantly British-derived "antipodean" identity toward one more entangled with India and the wider Indo-Pacific. 4 — Critical Analysis In favour — Grounding policy in lived experience: understanding the diaspora beyond headline statistics would let both governments anticipate and manage social friction rather than being caught off guard by backlash movements. In favour — Recognising internal diversity: distinguishing recent economic migrants, established professionals, and Australian-born Indians avoids treating a large, heterogeneous community as a monolith — a more analytically honest approach to policy. In favour — Institutional depth beyond symbolism: the "four Ds" framing (Democracy, Defence, Diaspora, Dosti) reflects real institutional depth, including the Quad and defence cooperation, beyond the earlier superficial "three Cs" cultural framing. Against — The backlash narrative may be overstated: whether "March for Australia" and the One Nation party reflect a durable political shift or a cyclical anti-immigration mood is not conclusively established by the authors. Against — The call for research remains aspirational: the authors do not specify what data, institutions, or funding mechanisms would actually close the diaspora research gap they identify. Against — An unresolved tension: there is friction between framing the diaspora as vital to strategic partnership while also warning against "instrumentalising" it — a balance the authors flag but do not fully resolve. Against — The visit's risk may be overstated: treating Modi's visit as inherently risky for feeding nationalist backlash assumes optics outweigh the substantive Quad, defence and trade agenda, which may understate the visit's other dimensions. 5 — Way Forward Invest in sustained, disaggregated research on diaspora settlement, trust, and civic participation, rather than relying on aggregate income, education and trade statistics. Strengthen engagement with civil society organisations representing different diaspora segments — recent migrants, established professionals, and second-generation Australians — instead of treating the community as homogeneous. Build social cohesion policy proactively, rather than assuming it as a given, especially as anti-immigration sentiment finds an increasingly organised political voice. Treat the "four Ds" — Democracy, Defence, Diaspora and Dosti — as genuinely co-equal pillars, ensuring the Diaspora pillar is backed by institutional investment, not just symbolic events. Encourage bilateral research partnerships between Indian and Australian institutions to generate the evidence base needed for durable, trust-based diaspora policy. 6 — Data & Key Facts 971,020Indian-born residents in Australia (30 June 2025), now the largest overseas-born group 970,950England-born residents, now Australia's second-largest overseas-born group 1901Last year England did not hold the top spot before this 2026 shift ~32%Overseas-born share of Australia's total population (2025) 2014Start of the "New India" era migration wave to Australia 522,000+Growth in Australia's Indian-born population since 2015 Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) data, released April 2026: confirms Indian-born residents (971,020) narrowly overtook England-born residents (970,950) for the first time since 1901; China, New Zealand and the Philippines follow as the next-largest overseas-born groups. Quad: informal strategic dialogue among India, Australia, the United States and Japan, central to the Indo-Pacific security architecture referenced under the "Defence" pillar of the "four Ds." 7 — Prelims Pointers India overtakes England (2026) — Indian-born residents (971,020) surpass England-born (970,950) as Australia's largest overseas-born group for the first time since 1901 White Australia Policy — race-based immigration policy restricting non-European migration, progressively dismantled from the 1960s–70s Quad — informal strategic dialogue: India, Australia, United States, Japan "Four Ds" — Democracy, Defence, Diaspora, Dosti — the current framing of India-Australia ties, replacing the older "three Cs" (Cricket, Curry, Commonwealth) One Nation party — Australian right-wing populist party, emerging as principal opposition voice in the anti-immigration debate Overseas-born share — approximately 32% of Australia's population as of mid-2025, nearing the historical peak of 32.4% recorded in 1891 Exam note: Do not confuse the "four Ds" (Democracy, Defence, Diaspora, Dosti — describing India-Australia ties) with any other regional grouping acronym. Also recall that the Quad includes Japan and the United States alongside India and Australia — it is not a bilateral India-Australia arrangement. 8 — Practice Mains Question "The Indian diaspora in Australia has become both a strategic asset and a site of political contestation." Discuss the implications of this dual dynamic for India-Australia relations.GS 2 · 15 marks · ~250 words · International Relations + Migration + Social Cohesion Intro: Note the Indian diaspora's demographic overtaking of the England-born population in Australia, and situate it within the evolving "four Ds" framing of the bilateral relationship. Body 1 — The diaspora as asset: economic contribution, cultural links, Quad-anchored strategic cooperation, and the diaspora's role as connective tissue between the two countries. Body 2 — The diaspora as contested terrain: rising anti-immigration movements, political backlash, and the risk of the community being recast as a liability in domestic discourse; the evidence gap in understanding diaspora experience. Conclusion: Sustained, evidence-based engagement — not symbolic events alone — is needed to ensure the diaspora remains a durable pillar rather than a flashpoint in the relationship. 9 — Practice MCQ Consider the following statements regarding the Indian diaspora in Australia: 1. Indian-born residents overtook England-born residents as Australia's largest overseas-born community for the first time since 1901. 2. The Quad grouping comprises India, Australia, the United States, and Japan. 3. Large-scale Indian professional migration to Australia began in the 19th century following British colonial labour recruitment. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only(b) 2 and 3 only(c) 1 and 3 only(d) 1, 2 and 3

Jul 9, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Contents Daily Current Affairs — 09 July 2026 India–Indonesia Comprehensive Strategic Partnership: Outcomes of the State VisitGS 2 & 3 World Bank Country Income Classification, FY2027GS 3 BHAVYA Industrial Parks Scheme and the Board of Trade AgendaGS 3 The Right to Be Forgotten: The Delhi High Court FrameworkGS 2 War Crimes, Universal Jurisdiction and the Geneva Conventions ActGS 2 AISHE 2022-24: Rising Female and Social-Group Enrolment in Higher EducationGS 2 Article 01 India–Indonesia Comprehensive Strategic Partnership: Outcomes of the State Visit GS Paper 2 & GS Paper 3 — International Relations / Defence & Security India-Indonesia Comprehensive Strategic Partnership Why in News The Prime Minister of India concluded a State Visit to Indonesia, advancing the India-Indonesia Comprehensive Strategic Partnership established in 2018. During the visit, the Prime Minister was conferred the Bintang Adipurna, Indonesia's highest national honour, becoming only the second Indian Prime Minister after Jawaharlal Nehru to receive it. The visit produced a wide set of agreements spanning defence, maritime security, critical minerals, technology, health, agriculture and cultural diplomacy. Static Background India and Indonesia share civilizational links, with Hindu, Buddhist and Islamic traditions historically transmitted from the Indian coastline to the Indonesian archipelago. Both countries played a leading role in the Bandung Conference (1955), which laid the groundwork for the Non-Aligned Movement (1961). Bilateral ties progressed through India's Look East Policy (1991) and the upgraded Act East Policy (2014); the two countries marked 75 years of diplomatic relations in 2024. The relationship was elevated to a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership in 2018, anchored by a Shared Vision on Maritime Cooperation in the Indo-Pacific. Bilateral trade stood at approximately USD 28.15 billion in 2024-25; India is the largest global buyer of Indonesian crude palm oil and its second-largest buyer of coal. The diaspora includes an estimated 1,20,000 Persons of Indian Origin and 15,000 Non-Resident Indians. Key Outcomes of the Visit Defence and Maritime Security Indonesia signed a USD 200 million contract to procure two batteries of the BrahMos supersonic cruise missile system, a joint India-Russia programme. Indonesia placed the first-ever export order for India's indigenously developed Astra air-to-air missile system, to equip its Su-30 fleet. The two countries extended the MoU and Implementation Agreement on Maritime Safety and Security Cooperation. India and Indonesia agreed to jointly develop Sabang Port, located at the northern tip of Sumatra overlooking the entrance to the Strait of Malacca, a critical maritime chokepoint. The two sides welcomed the planned convening of the 3rd India-Indonesia Security Dialogue. The Astra Missile Programme Astra is a family of indigenous Beyond-Visual-Range Air-to-Air Missiles (BVRAAM) developed by the DRDO for integration with the Air Force and Navy. Astra Mk1 has a range of 80–110 km, an altitude ceiling of about 20 km, and a top speed of Mach 4.5; it is integrated with the Su-30 MKI fleet and is planned for the Tejas Mk1A and the Rafale. Astra Mk2, with an enhanced range of up to 200 km, has received the Acceptance of Necessity from the Defence Acquisition Council, signalling the start of procurement even as testing continues. Astra Mk3, officially named Gandiva, is under development and is expected to use a Solid Fuel Ducted Ramjet engine for sustained mid-flight thrust, with a potential range exceeding 350 km. The Astra family is positioned as India's indigenous counter to China's long-range PL-15 missile, used by both China and Pakistan. Critical Minerals, Steel and Heavy Industry The Steel Authority of India entered into an agreement to establish a high-capacity stainless-steel slab manufacturing facility in Indonesia. An MoU was signed for the joint development of rare earth magnets, used in electric vehicles and advanced electronics. A separate MoU covers cooperation on extraction and technology across the steel and mineral supply chain. Technology, Space, Health and Agriculture The Framework Agreement on Cooperation in the Exploration and Uses of Outer Space for Peaceful Purposes was extended, alongside MoUs on research and telecommunications technology cooperation. An MoU between India's Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation and Indonesia aims to harmonise medical product regulations, supported by a Health Workforce Collaboration agreement. India's National Disaster Management Authority established an institutional link with Indonesia's disaster management agency. A comprehensive MoU on Agriculture and Allied Sectors was signed, and India announced the supply of 100 tonnes of DWR 162 wheat seeds to Indonesia. Soft Power and Institutional Diplomacy Indonesia launched the Indonesia Open Network, modelled on India's Open Network for Digital Commerce. Indonesia will deploy a Liaison Officer to the Information Fusion Centre for the Indian Ocean Region in Gurugram, strengthening maritime domain awareness. India will provide technical assistance for the conservation of the Prambanan Temple Complex in Yogyakarta, Indonesia's largest Hindu temple site. 2026-27 was designated the "Tagore-Dewantara Year of India-Indonesia Cultural and Educational Diplomacy," marking the centenary of Rabindranath Tagore's visit to Indonesia. The Election Commission of India and Indonesia's General Elections Commission agreed to share best practices in managing large-scale elections. A branch campus of the Indian Institute of Management, Bangalore, will be set up at the Singhasari Special Economic Zone in East Java. Concerns and Way Forward Indonesia's Bebas-Aktif (independent and active) foreign policy makes it cautious of minilateral groupings such as the Quad, which it views as a risk to ASEAN Centrality. Despite the BrahMos purchase, Indonesia avoids overt alignment against China, whose economic footprint in Indonesian infrastructure and nickel-based EV supply chains remains substantially larger than India's. Bilateral trade remains skewed toward Indonesia because of India's large palm oil imports; the absence of a bilateral Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement and low utilisation of the ASEAN-India Trade in Goods Agreement constrain trade expansion. Way forward includes fast-tracking a trade agreement review, building critical mineral supply chains through joint ventures, operationalising Sabang Port through a dedicated Special Purpose Vehicle, and aligning India's SAGAR vision with Indonesia's Global Maritime Fulcrum while respecting its strategic autonomy. Value Addition for Mains: Formation of the Indonesian Archipelago The Indonesian archipelago is a volcanic island arc formed by intense tectonic activity along the Pacific Ring of Fire. It sits at a triple junction where the Eurasian, Indo-Australian and Pacific plates converge. The denser Indo-Australian oceanic crust is forced beneath the lighter Eurasian plate, creating a subduction zone such as the Sunda Trench. Friction and heat at depth cause partial melting of rock, generating magma that rises through fractures in the overriding plate and erupts as undersea volcanoes. Repeated eruptions build submarine mountains that eventually breach the ocean surface, forming a curved chain of islands such as Sumatra, Java and Bali. The visit consolidates India-Indonesia ties across defence, connectivity and technology, giving India a strategic foothold near the Malacca Strait. However, translating this convergence into deeper economic integration will require addressing the trade imbalance and respecting Indonesia's cautious approach to great-power balancing. Prelims Pointers Bintang Adipurna — Indonesia's highest civilian honour; the Indian PM is only the second recipient after Jawaharlal Nehru. Sabang Port — located at the northern tip of Sumatra, overlooking the Strait of Malacca. Astra Mk1 — DRDO-developed Beyond-Visual-Range Air-to-Air Missile, range 80–110 km; first-ever Astra export, to Indonesia. IFC-IOR — Information Fusion Centre for the Indian Ocean Region, based in Gurugram, for maritime domain awareness. Bandung Conference (1955) — precursor to the Non-Aligned Movement, founded in 1961. Mains Practice Question "India-Indonesia ties have moved beyond civilizational affinity to strategic convergence, yet structural asymmetries persist." Discuss the outcomes of the 2026 State Visit and identify the challenges to deeper economic integration between the two countries. GS Paper 2 · 15 marks MCQ Practice Match List I with List II and select the correct answer using the codes given below: List I A. Bintang Adipurna   B. Sabang Port   C. Indonesia Open Network   D. IFC-IOR List II 1. Maritime domain awareness   2. Digital public infrastructure export   3. Highest civilian honour   4. Strategic port near the Malacca Strait AA-3, B-4, C-1, D-2 BA-3, B-4, C-2, D-1 CA-4, B-3, C-2, D-1 DA-1, B-2, C-3, D-4 Answer: B The Bintang Adipurna is Indonesia's highest civilian honour; Sabang Port is the strategically located port near the Malacca Strait being jointly developed; the Indonesia Open Network is modelled on India's digital commerce platform; and the IFC-IOR in Gurugram supports maritime domain awareness, to which Indonesia will now post a Liaison Officer. Article 02 World Bank Country Income Classification, FY2027 GS Paper 3 — Indian Economy Why in News The World Bank's Country Income Classifications for Fiscal Year 2027, released in July 2026, retained India's status as a Lower-Middle-Income economy, a classification it has held since 2009. In contrast, Sri Lanka, along with Vietnam and the Philippines, was upgraded to the Upper-Middle-Income category this year, reflecting recovery from Sri Lanka's 2022 economic crisis and export-led growth in the other two economies. Static Background The World Bank classifies the world's economies into four income groups — Low, Lower-Middle, Upper-Middle and High income — updated annually on 1 July. Classification is based on Gross National Income (GNI) per capita of the previous calendar year, expressed in current US dollars using the Atlas method. The Atlas method smooths short-term exchange-rate volatility by averaging exchange rates over several years and adjusting for inflation, enabling cross-country comparability. Income thresholds for each category are revised annually using the Special Drawing Rights (SDR) deflator to account for global inflation. India moved out of the Low-Income bracket into the Lower-Middle-Income category in 2009. Key Highlights of the FY2027 Classification The annual update covers 218 economies; six countries moved to a higher income category this cycle. Lower-Middle to Upper-Middle income: Sri Lanka, Vietnam, the Philippines, Jordan and the Federated States of Micronesia. Low to Lower-Middle income: Togo. Upper-Middle to High income: Mayotte. Sri Lanka recorded 5% real GDP growth in 2025, with its Atlas GNI per capita rising 11.2%, attributed to stronger economic activity, lower inflation and exchange-rate stability following its 2022 sovereign debt default. Vietnam and the Philippines were driven by export-led industrial growth, while Jordan and Togo's upgrades were aided largely by statistical adjustments, including updated national accounts and census data. India's GNI per capita stood at approximately USD 2,760 in 2025. The share of low-income economies globally fell from nearly 30% in 1987 to about 11% by 2026. Why India Continues in the Lower-Middle-Income Bracket Denominator effect: India's population of over 1.4 billion dilutes aggregate GDP gains when converted to a per capita measure, making the leap to the upper-middle threshold mathematically steep. Regional disparities: industrialised states such as Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra and Gujarat report per capita incomes well above the national average, while populous states such as Bihar and Uttar Pradesh, with lower productivity, pull down the national mean. Informal sector dependence: up to 85% of India's workforce remains informal, with heavy reliance on low-productivity agriculture, suppressing average earnings. Historical starting point: India exited the Low-Income bracket only in 2009, and crossing the next threshold requires a sustained multi-decade period of high real growth outpacing population growth. Significance and Limitations Income classification determines eligibility for concessional financing — low-income countries access International Development Association (IDA) support, while many middle-income countries borrow from the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) on less concessional terms. It also informs foreign aid allocation, eligibility for preferential trade schemes, prioritisation of climate finance, and investor and policy benchmarking. The World Bank itself cautions that the classification is primarily an analytical and operational tool, not a comprehensive measure of development, since it does not capture inequality, poverty depth, health, education or institutional quality. Sri Lanka's upgrade illustrates a post-crisis recovery story, while India's continued Lower-Middle-Income status underscores the gap between aggregate economic size and per capita income, a gap that domestic productivity growth and reduced regional disparity will need to close over the coming decade. Prelims Pointers Atlas Method — smooths GNI figures using multi-year averaged exchange rates and inflation adjustment for cross-country comparison. India's classification — Lower-Middle-Income since 2009; GNI per capita approximately USD 2,760 in 2025. World Bank income groups — Low, Lower-Middle, Upper-Middle and High income (four categories). IDA vs IBRD — IDA offers concessional finance to low-income countries; IBRD lends to middle-income countries on less concessional terms. SDR deflator — used to revise income-category thresholds annually for global inflation. Mains Practice Question "The World Bank's income classification is often conflated with a measure of overall development, when in reality it is a narrow analytical construct." Critically examine this statement with reference to India's continued Lower-Middle-Income status despite its large aggregate economy. GS Paper 3 · 15 marks MCQ Practice As per the World Bank's Country Income Classification for FY2027, India's Gross National Income (GNI) per capita for 2025 was approximately: AUSD 1,760 BUSD 2,760 CUSD 3,760 DUSD 4,760 Answer: B India's Atlas GNI per capita for 2025 was reported at approximately USD 2,760, keeping it below the threshold required for Upper-Middle-Income status. Article 03 BHAVYA Industrial Parks Scheme and the Board of Trade Agenda GS Paper 3 — Indian Economy / Industrial Policy Why in News The Union Minister of Commerce and Industry chaired the Board of Trade meeting in New Delhi, urging State governments to fully utilise the BHAVYA Industrial Parks Scheme and accord high priority to exports. A seven-point action agenda was outlined for States, Export Promotion Councils and industry to accelerate India's export growth, alongside the announcement of a 90-day Districts as Export Hubs drive and a review of the Export Promotion Mission. Static Background The Board of Trade is the apex consultative platform of the Department of Commerce for dialogue between the Centre, States, industry associations and Export Promotion Councils on trade policy. BHAVYA (Bharat Audyogik Vikas Yojana) is a Central Sector Scheme of the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade to develop 100 investment-ready industrial parks across India, with a total outlay of about ₹33,660 crore, to be implemented over six years (2026-27 to 2031-32). The Export Promotion Mission (EPM) is jointly implemented by the Ministries of Commerce, MSME and Finance with an outlay exceeding ₹25,000 crore, structured around two pillars — NIRYAT PROTSAHAN for trade finance and NIRYAT DISHA for market access. Seven-Point Action Agenda States, line ministries, Export Promotion Councils and industry associations to treat exports as a high-priority agenda item, establishing dedicated export committees with regular, including monthly, review meetings. Active participation in the first round of the BHAVYA scheme, and prompt notification of labour codes by States yet to do so, with land and labour flagged as critical business enablers. Strengthening quality infrastructure through testing facilities in government, semi-government and university laboratories to reduce compliance costs. Leveraging Export Promotion Mission support, particularly for micro and small enterprises, to finance international certifications and compliance with SPS and TBT requirements in developed markets. Directing industries affected by unfair trade practices to the Directorate General of Trade Remedies (DGTR), which can recommend anti-dumping duties, safeguard measures and other trade remedies. Identifying import substitution opportunities where domestic manufacturing can competitively replace imports. Active participation by States and industry associations in international exhibitions, trade fairs and business delegations, particularly to support new and MSME exporters. BHAVYA Scheme — Structural Features Supports both greenfield and eligible brownfield industrial parks, with a minimum land requirement of 100 acres for non-hilly States and 25 acres for hilly, North-Eastern, Union Territory and smaller States. Up to 50 industrial parks will be selected in the first phase through a competitive process assessing connectivity, site suitability, infrastructure quality, digital readiness and sustainability. Projects will be implemented through Special Purpose Vehicles under the Companies Act, 2013, with the National Industrial Corridor Development Corporation acting as the Project Management Agency. 90-Day Districts as Export Hubs Drive Covers 120 priority districts across 27 States and Union Territories, supported by 24 DGFT Regional Authorities and 11 partner agencies. Focuses on measurable outcomes such as new exporter registrations and export value growth, converging with the One District One Product initiative, Geographical Indication products and MSME clusters. Export Performance and Target Indicator Figure Total exports, FY 2025-26 (highest ever) USD 863 billion (4.6% growth) Merchandise exports, FY 2025-26 ~USD 442 billion Services exports, FY 2025-26 (record) >USD 421 billion Overall export target USD 1 trillion   – Merchandise component of target ~USD 530 billion   – Services component of target ~USD 470 billion The Board also reviewed India's Free Trade Agreements, which cover markets accounting for over USD 27 trillion in GDP; the DGTR's new SETU digital platform; Government e-Marketplace procurement crossing ₹5 lakh crore, with 45% benefiting MSMEs; DPIIT's startup ecosystem of over 2.35 lakh startups supported by the Fund of Funds 2.0; the Ministry of Textiles' Vision 2030 targeting USD 100 billion in exports; and Production Linked Incentive-driven mobile phone manufacturing of approximately ₹6.25 lakh crore. Concerns and Way Forward Achieving the export target requires a coordinated Centre-State partnership, with States expected to convene export promotion committees, undertake monthly district-level reviews, and align State schemes with Central programmes. Cross-border e-commerce was highlighted as a low-barrier entry point for first-time exporters, to be supported through Dak Ghar Niryat Kendras so that every district can emerge as an exporting district. Import substitution and export promotion were described as complementary objectives within the broader Aatmanirbhar Bharat framework. The Board of Trade meeting reflects a renewed push to convert India's record FY 2025-26 export performance into sustained growth toward the USD 1 trillion target, with BHAVYA and the Export Promotion Mission serving as the principal instruments for industrial infrastructure and MSME-led export support. Prelims Pointers BHAVYA — Bharat Audyogik Vikas Yojana; DPIIT scheme for 100 industrial parks; outlay ₹33,660 crore (2026-27 to 2031-32); NICDC is the Project Management Agency. Export Promotion Mission — two pillars, NIRYAT PROTSAHAN (trade finance) and NIRYAT DISHA (market access); outlay over ₹25,000 crore. DGTR — Directorate General of Trade Remedies; recommends anti-dumping duties and safeguard measures against unfair trade practices. India's FY 2025-26 exports — highest ever, at USD 863 billion. Fund of Funds for Startups — ₹10,000 crore corpus, managed by SIDBI, investing in startups through SEBI-registered Alternative Investment Funds rather than directly. Mains Practice Question "Achieving India's USD 1 trillion export target requires addressing State-level bottlenecks as much as Central schemes." Examine this statement with reference to the BHAVYA Industrial Parks Scheme and the Export Promotion Mission. GS Paper 3 · 15 marks MCQ Practice Assertion (A): The BHAVYA Industrial Parks Scheme mandates a lower minimum land requirement for hilly and North-Eastern States compared to other States. Reason (R): The scheme aims to ensure equitable industrial infrastructure development while accounting for the geographical and developmental constraints of hilly and North-Eastern regions. Select the correct answer using the codes given below: ABoth A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A BBoth A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A CA is true, but R is false DA is false, but R is true Answer: A BHAVYA sets a minimum land requirement of 100 acres for non-hilly States and only 25 acres for hilly, North-Eastern, Union Territory and smaller States, precisely to accommodate their geographical and developmental constraints while ensuring equitable industrial infrastructure development. Article 04 The Right to Be Forgotten: The Delhi High Court Framework GS Paper 2 — Polity and Governance This analysis is based on an opinion/explainer piece. The proposed institutional design for adjudicating erasure requests reflects the author's recommendation rather than settled law or government policy. Why in News The Delhi High Court, in a batch of over 30 consolidated petitions led by Laksh Vir Singh Yadav v. Union of India, laid down principles governing the "right to be forgotten" in a ruling delivered on 29 May 2026. The Court evolved a structured framework to protect the privacy of individuals continuing to be affected by their digital footprints even after their legal matters were settled in their favour. Static Background The "right to be forgotten" is the right to have information erased or de-indexed from the public digital environment when its continued accessibility is harmful and serves no public interest. The concept gained prominence through the 2014 European Court of Justice ruling in the case of Mario Costeja González, a Spanish citizen who successfully argued that an old, settled debt notice should no longer appear in search results; this laid the groundwork for the right to erasure under Article 17 of the EU's General Data Protection Regulation. In India, the Supreme Court's judgment in K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India (2017) held that privacy, including informational privacy, is a fundamental right under Article 21. In the years that followed, High Courts adopted divergent approaches — some permitted anonymisation in limited matrimonial or criminal matters, while others declined similar requests on grounds of open justice, leaving no coherent framework until the 2026 ruling. Key Features of the Ruling The right to be forgotten was held to flow from Article 21's guarantee of dignity and informational privacy. The Court prescribed a structured proportionality test: retention of information must serve a legitimate purpose; the harm to privacy must be weighed against the public interest; and the least intrusive means — typically masking names rather than deleting the judgment — should be preferred. A two-week compliance deadline was set for legal databases to implement the required changes. Only the names of parties are to be redacted; the underlying facts of the case remain intact and accessible. Judgments continue to be accessible through case-number or keyword searches; only name-based search results are restricted. Interaction with Constitutional Values The right to be forgotten is not a stand-alone right; it frequently comes into tension with the freedom of speech and press under Article 19(1)(a), the principle of open justice, and the public's right to know. Privacy interests may need to yield where the public interest is of a high order, particularly in serious criminal matters, but the Court recognised that a person's permanent digital record should not extend punishment well beyond the conclusion of a trial. Concerns and Way Forward Enforcement remains the toughest challenge: an acquittal judgment may still surface prominently in name-based searches even after a de-indexing order, since mirror sites, archived copies and social media reposting fall outside the reach of a single court order. The Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 offers only a limited, largely consent-based right to erasure under Section 12, and does not explicitly address judicial records or public archives; its rules remain unnotified and the Data Protection Board is not yet fully operational. One suggested approach, put forward in the underlying commentary rather than by the Court itself, is a tiered system in which platforms handle routine requests, the Data Protection Board handles contested cases, and courts handle matters involving judicial records. Until the Supreme Court settles the matter definitively and the data protection institutional architecture becomes functional, the Delhi High Court's framework is likely to remain largely declaratory in practice. The Delhi High Court ruling marks a significant step in reconciling informational privacy with open justice, but its practical impact will depend on technical compliance by legal databases and the eventual operationalisation of India's data protection institutions. Prelims Pointers K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India (2017) — Supreme Court recognised privacy as a Fundamental Right under Article 21. Mario Costeja González case (2014) — European Court of Justice ruling that laid the basis for the "right to be forgotten" and Article 17 of the GDPR. Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023, Section 12 — provides a limited, consent-based right to erasure. Laksh Vir Singh Yadav v. Union of India (2026) — Delhi High Court ruling establishing a structured proportionality test for the right to be forgotten. The right to be forgotten interacts with Article 19(1)(a) and the principle of open justice. Mains Practice Question "The right to be forgotten sits at the intersection of privacy and the constitutional commitment to open justice." Discuss the balance struck by the Delhi High Court in its 2026 ruling and the institutional gaps that limit its enforcement. GS Paper 2 · 15 marks MCQ Practice With reference to the Delhi High Court's May 2026 ruling on the right to be forgotten, consider the statement: "The ruling permits complete deletion of the judgment text upon a successful application, including the underlying facts of the case." Which one of the following is correct? AThe statement is correct, as complete deletion is the preferred remedy BThe statement is incorrect; only the parties' names are redacted while the facts of the case remain accessible CThe statement is correct only for criminal cases, not civil matters DThe statement is incorrect; the ruling applies exclusively to social media content, not court judgments Answer: B The Court prescribed masking of names as the least intrusive remedy, explicitly preserving the facts of the case; complete deletion of judgments was not permitted, and judgments remain searchable by case number or keyword. Article 05 War Crimes, Universal Jurisdiction and the Geneva Conventions Act GS Paper 2 — International Relations / International Law This topic involves an active, contested international conflict. The analysis below focuses strictly on the applicable legal framework — the Geneva Conventions, universal jurisdiction and Indian statute — rather than adjudicating the underlying allegations, which remain contested and are the subject of ongoing international legal proceedings. Why in News The Hind Rajab Foundation, a Brussels-based Palestinian rights organisation, filed a complaint with India's Ministry of Home Affairs, the Bureau of Immigration and the police, seeking action against an Israeli soldier reported to be travelling in Himachal Pradesh. The complaint cited alleged conduct during military operations in Gaza in 2024 and has brought India's legal framework on war crimes and universal jurisdiction into focus. Static Background The Geneva Conventions of 1949, along with their additional protocols, are the foundational treaties of international humanitarian law governing conduct in armed conflict; India is a signatory. The Fourth Geneva Convention specifically protects civilians during wartime and defines "grave breaches" to include intentional attacks known to cause civilian death or injury, or severe damage to civilian objects. India has not enacted a standalone law criminalising "war crimes" as a distinct offence, but has passed the Geneva Conventions Act, 1960, which criminalises acts constituting a "grave breach" under the Convention. Universal jurisdiction is the principle that allows a state to prosecute serious international crimes — such as war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity — regardless of where the offence occurred or the nationality of the accused. Key Features of the Case Under the Geneva Conventions Act, 1960, India can, in principle, arrest a person for an offence constituting a grave breach irrespective of nationality or the location where the offence occurred. Where arrest is not pursued, the Home Ministry and the Bureau of Immigration may instead facilitate the deportation of the accused from Indian territory. The complaint in this instance included geo-located videos, social media content and chain-of-command documentation, according to the complainant organisation; as of the reporting period, the Indian government had not issued a public statement or initiated a formal probe. The complainant organisation has pursued comparable universal-jurisdiction complaints in other countries, reporting case progress in Brazil, Romania, Peru, Belgium and Canada, with a court in Chile recognising universal jurisdiction over alleged Gaza-related war crimes in a separate case. Broader Context India-Israel relations include an expanding tourism relationship, with a significant number of Israeli travellers, often recently discharged from military service, undertaking extended trips across several regions of India. Scrutiny of this travel pattern has intensified amid the ongoing conflict in Gaza and a pending case at the International Court of Justice concerning allegations against Israel, which Israel disputes. Concerns and Way Forward Enforcing universal jurisdiction requires a clear domestic procedure, diplomatic coordination and political will; in the absence of a formal probe, such complaints risk remaining largely symbolic. India's response reflects a broader diplomatic balancing act between maintaining strategic and economic ties with Israel and upholding its treaty obligations under the Geneva Conventions. A clearer domestic protocol for processing universal-jurisdiction complaints, better coordination with immigration authorities on entry and exit tracking, and a consistent institutional response distinguishing diplomatic considerations from treaty-law obligations would strengthen India's legal position. The case illustrates the gap between the legal principle of universal jurisdiction and its practical enforcement, and highlights the need for India to develop a clearer institutional response to complaints invoking the Geneva Conventions Act, 1960. Prelims Pointers Geneva Conventions Act, 1960 — India's domestic law criminalising "grave breaches" of the Geneva Conventions; enables universal jurisdiction. Fourth Geneva Convention — protects civilians and civilian objects during armed conflict. Universal jurisdiction — principle allowing prosecution of serious international crimes irrespective of the location of the offence or the nationality of the accused. India is a signatory to the Geneva Conventions (1949). Mains Practice Question "Universal jurisdiction remains more a principle of international law than a practised reality." Discuss with reference to India's Geneva Conventions Act, 1960, and the challenges in enforcing it. GS Paper 2 · 15 marks MCQ Practice Which of the following statements regarding India's legal framework on war crimes is NOT correct? AIndia has enacted the Geneva Conventions Act, 1960, to give domestic effect to its treaty obligations BIndia can, in principle, act against a foreign national for a grave breach under the Geneva Conventions regardless of where the offence occurred CIndia has a standalone domestic statute exclusively defining and criminalising "war crimes" as a distinct offence DThe Fourth Geneva Convention protects civilians and civilian objects during armed conflict Answer: C India does not have a standalone law that defines and criminalises "war crimes" as a distinct offence; it instead relies on the Geneva Conventions Act, 1960, which criminalises "grave breaches" of the Geneva Conventions. Article 06 AISHE 2022-24: Rising Female and Social-Group Enrolment in Higher Education GS Paper 2 — Education and Social Justice Why in News The latest All India Survey on Higher Education (AISHE) reports for 2022-23 and 2023-24, released by the Ministry of Education, show total higher education enrolment rising to 4.5 crore in 2023-24, with female enrolment recording a 42.2% increase since 2014-15. Static Background AISHE is an annual survey conducted by the Ministry of Education, covering higher education institutions across the country, with data self-reported by institutions through a web-based portal. The Ministry applies built-in validation and scrutiny checks, though primary responsibility for data quality rests with the reporting institutions. The latest survey draws on data from 59,533 higher education institutions, reflecting an institutional participation rate of over 90%. Key Findings Indicator 2014-15 2023-24 Total enrolment 3.42 crore 4.5 crore (+31.5%) Female enrolment 1.57 crore 2.24 crore (+42.2%) SC enrolment – 69.72 lakh (+51.4%) ST enrolment – 28.83 lakh (+75.7%) OBC enrolment 1.13 crore 1.80 crore (+60.2%) STEM enrolment – 1.02 crore The Gender Parity Index stood at 1.08 in 2023-24, remaining above 1.0 for seven consecutive years — indicating that female participation has consistently outpaced male participation. India's overall Gross Enrolment Ratio reached 30 in 2023-24, with the female Gross Enrolment Ratio at 31.2, distinctly higher than the national baseline. The Gross Enrolment Ratio for Scheduled Caste students rose from 18.9 to 27.8, and for Scheduled Tribe students from 13.5 to 22.8, over the decade. The female share within STEM programmes climbed to 44% in 2023-24, up from 38.4% a decade earlier. Concerns and Way Forward Since the data is self-reported by institutions, data quality assurance depends significantly on institutional diligence despite Ministry-level validation checks. Sustaining these gains will require continued focus on access in underrepresented regions and social groups, alongside converting enrolment gains into improved completion rates and quality outcomes, dimensions the enrolment data alone does not capture. The AISHE findings point to a decade of steady gains in access to higher education for women and historically disadvantaged groups, though translating rising enrolment ratios into genuine educational equity will depend on parallel improvements in completion rates and learning outcomes. Prelims Pointers AISHE — All India Survey on Higher Education, conducted annually by the Ministry of Education. Gender Parity Index — ratio of female to male Gross Enrolment Ratio; a value above 1.0 indicates female participation exceeds male participation. Gross Enrolment Ratio — enrolment expressed as a proportion of the eligible age-group population; 2023-24 figure was 30 overall and 31.2 for females. Female share in STEM enrolment rose to 44% in 2023-24, from 38.4% in 2014-15. Mains Practice Question "Rising enrolment ratios are a necessary but not sufficient indicator of educational equity." Examine this statement in light of the latest AISHE findings on gender and social-group participation in Indian higher education. GS Paper 2 · 15 marks MCQ Practice Consider the following statements regarding the AISHE reports for 2022-23 and 2023-24: 1. The Gender Parity Index in higher education has remained above 1.0 for seven consecutive years. 2. The Gross Enrolment Ratio for Scheduled Tribe students has grown at a faster rate than for Scheduled Caste students since 2014-15. 3. The female share in STEM enrolment has crossed 50% as of 2023-24. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? A1 and 2 only B2 and 3 only C1 only D1, 2 and 3 Answer: A Statement 1 is correct — GPI has stayed above 1.0 for seven years. Statement 2 is correct — ST GER rose from 13.5 to 22.8 (about 69% relative growth) compared to SC GER's rise from 18.9 to 27.8 (about 47% relative growth). Statement 3 is incorrect — the female share in STEM reached 44%, not over 50%.