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Jun 20, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

Contents01 Naxal-Free India: Integrated Strategies Defeated Left-Wing Extremism Ministry of Home Affairs · 12-Year Review (2014–2026) GS 1GS 2GS 3 02 PRAHAAR: India's First National Counter-Terrorism Policy and Strategy Ministry of Home Affairs · 12-Year Counter-Terrorism Review GS 3GS 2 03 Astronomers Trace the Origin of Fast X-ray Transient EP241107a Indian Institute of Astrophysics (IIA) · Department of Science & Technology GS 3 Article 01 Article 01 Naxal-Free India: Integrated Strategies Defeated Left-Wing Extremism Ministry of Home Affairs · 12-Year Review (2014–2026) Relevance: GS 1 (tribal society, vulnerable sections) · GS 2 (governance, welfare delivery) · GS 3 (internal security, Left-Wing Extremism). GS 1GS 2GS 3 Key Data at a Glance 597fortified police stations built (vs 66 pre-2014) 408new CAPF camps established in the last 7 years 12,249 kmroads constructed in LWE-affected areas since 2014 9,600+mobile towers set up; 96% village connectivity achieved 3,927cadres surrendered between 2024 and March 2026 870 → 234Naxal-related incidents, 2014 vs 2025 Issue in Brief India achieved a historic milestone, becoming effectively Naxal-free on 31 March 2026, ending nearly six decades of Left-Wing Extremism (LWE). The transformation rests on three integrated pillars — Vishwaas (trust/security), Nirman (infrastructure) and Jan Kalyan (welfare) — replacing earlier fragmented, incident-driven responses. Static Background LWE traces to the Naxalbari uprising (1967, West Bengal), rooted in Maoist ideology and armed-revolution doctrine. Multiple extremist outfits merged into CPI (Maoist) in 2004, becoming India's gravest internal security threat — officially acknowledged in 2009 as exceeding Kashmir and the Northeast in spread. Violence peaked in 2010 (1,936 incidents, 720 civilian deaths); the decade 2004–2014 recorded 17,542 incidents, 1,913 security force deaths and 5,019 civilian deaths. The National Policy and Action Plan (2015) was India's first structured framework, built on a Dialogue–Security–Coordination strategy, funded via the Security Related Expenditure (SRE), Special Infrastructure Scheme (SIS) and Special Central Assistance (SCA). The target of a Naxal-free India by 31 March 2026 was formally set on 24 August 2024. Key Dimensions — Vishwaas (Security & Trust) 597 fortified police stations built (vs 66 pre-2014); incident-reporting stations fell from 333 to 16; 408 new CAPF camps; 68 night-landing helipads; 400 bullet/blast-proof vehicles. Elite forces — CoBRA (CRPF), District Reserve Guard (DRG), Jharkhand Jaguar, Andhra Pradesh's Greyhounds — integrated under joint training and command. Technology shift: UAVs, drones, satellite imagery, AI-based analytics, call-log and social-media monitoring operationalised by the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA). "Trace, Target, Neutralise" doctrine — Operation Black Forest, Operation Double Bull and others restored state presence in three-decade-old strongholds (e.g., Gumla, Lohardaga, Latehar declared Naxal-free). Choking finances: a dedicated NIA vertical seized assets worth ₹40 crore+ (Dec 2025); ED attached ₹12 crore; 112 cases and 100 charge sheets filed (June 2026). Surrender policy: grants of ₹5 lakh / ₹2.5 lakh plus a ₹10,000/month stipend for 36 months; 2,337 surrenders in 2025; 3,927 between 2024 and March 2026. Key Dimensions — Nirman (Infrastructure) & Jan Kalyan (Welfare) 12,249 km of roads built since 2014 (₹20,557 crore for 17,319 km approved); 9,600+ mobile towers; 96% village connectivity (44,728/46,592 villages). Financial inclusion (Apr 2015–Mar 2026): 1,804 bank branches, 1,321 ATMs, 74,720 banking correspondents, 6,025 post offices. Education & skilling: 259 EMRS sanctioned (179 developed), 46 ITIs, 49 Skill Development Centres; over 90,000 youth and women trained. Jan Kalyan initiatives: PM-JANMAN for PVTGs; Dharti Aaba Janjatiya Gram Utkarsh Abhiyan; Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana housing and free education till Class XII for surrendered cadres' children. Chhattisgarh case study: Bastariya Battalion (2017, 1,143 personnel, ~400 local tribal youth); 3,240 km roads and 889 mobile towers in Bastar; Shaheed Veer Gunda Dhur Seva Dera (May 2026) converting ~70 CAPF camps into citizen-service centres. Critical Analysis — Strengths The security-development-welfare convergence model created a durable peace dividend rather than a temporary lull in violence. Tech-enabled precision (UAVs, AI analytics) reduced collateral harm while improving operational outcomes. The rehabilitation framework offered a dignified, economically-anchored exit route, reflected in rising surrender numbers. Critical Analysis — Structural Questions The "Naxal-free" declaration is a government self-assessment; independent, third-party verification of residual pockets is not yet available. Long-term economic viability of skilling and livelihood programmes for rehabilitated cadres and tribal youth in remote regions remains untested. Structural grievances — land rights, forest governance, displacement — that originally fuelled the insurgency need sustained attention beyond the security narrative. Way Forward Institute independent audits of the Naxal-free claim and maintain calibrated security presence during the transition phase. Convert remaining CAPF camps into permanent civic-service infrastructure on the Shaheed Veer Gunda Dhur Seva Dera model. Strengthen implementation of the Forest Rights Act, 2006 and PESA, 1996 to address root structural causes. Scale livelihood and market-linkage support so rehabilitation outcomes are sustainable, not one-time grants. Prelims Pointers LWE origin: Naxalbari uprising, 1967; CPI (Maoist) formed 2004. National Policy & Action Plan: 2015 — Dialogue, Security, Coordination strategy. Target set / achieved: 24 Aug 2024 / 31 March 2026. Key schemes: SRE, SIS, SCA, PM-JANMAN, Aspirational Districts Programme. Elite forces: CoBRA, DRG, Greyhounds, Jharkhand Jaguar. Bastariya Battalion: formed 2017, Chhattisgarh. Practice Mains Question "India's approach to Left-Wing Extremism evolved from incident-driven security responses to an integrated security-development-welfare model." Discuss the components of this strategy and evaluate the long-term sustainability of India's 'Naxal-free' achievement. GS Paper 3 · 250 words · 15 marks Practice MCQs Q1. Consider the following statements regarding the National Policy and Action Plan against LWE: (1) It was approved in 2015. (2) It is built on a three-pronged Dialogue, Security and Coordination strategy. (3) It replaced an earlier centrally-coordinated framework with a state-led one. Which are correct? A) 1 and 2 onlyB) 2 and 3 onlyC) 1 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3 Q2. Match List I (Pillar) with List II (Focus area): A. Vishwaas · B. Nirman · C. Jan Kalyan // 1. Welfare & dignity · 2. Connectivity & infrastructure · 3. Trust & security. Choose the correct match: A) A-3, B-2, C-1B) A-1, B-2, C-3C) A-2, B-3, C-1D) A-3, B-1, C-2 Article 02 Article 02 PRAHAAR: India's First National Counter-Terrorism Policy and Strategy Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) · Unveiled 23 February 2026 Relevance: GS 3 (internal security, terrorism, cyber security) · GS 2 (international cooperation, institutions, legal reform). GS 3GS 2 Key Data at a Glance 23 Feb 2026date PRAHAAR was unveiled by the MHA 7,217terrorist incidents recorded during 2004–2014 92.70%NIA conviction rate — among the highest globally ₹394.66 crNIA budget, 2024-25 (from ₹91.32 cr in 2014-15) 28agencies integrated under the Multi-Agency Centre (MAC) 57+individuals designated as terrorists since the UAPA Amendment, 2019 Issue in Brief The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) unveiled PRAHAAR on 23 February 2026 — India's first-ever comprehensive National Counter-Terrorism Policy and Strategy. PRAHAAR consolidates 12 years of legislative, institutional, operational and diplomatic counter-terror reform into one unified doctrine, reflecting a policy of zero tolerance against terrorism. Static Background India's pre-2014 challenge: 7,217 terror incidents (2004–2014); nearly 92,000 lives lost over four decades to terrorism, insurgency and extremism combined. Persistent threats: LoC infiltration backed by Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) via Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) and Hizbul Mujahideen; the 2008 Mumbai attacks (166 dead) with active ISI support. Kashmir saw an average of 2,654 stone-pelting incidents/year (2010–14); the framework of Article 370 complicated governance and security response at the time. Post-2014, the global emergence of ISIS introduced online radicalisation risks; legal frameworks then lacked the power to designate individuals (only organisations) as terrorists. Key Dimensions — Legislative & Institutional Pillars UAPA Amendment, 2019: enables individual terrorist designation, NIA Inspector-rank+ investigation, and DG-NIA approval for property seizures. NIA (Amendment) Act, 2019: expanded jurisdiction to cyberterrorism, human trafficking and extraterritorial offences; Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), 2023 replaced the IPC, 1860 (in force from 1 July 2024) with the first statutory definition of a "terrorist act." NIA budget grew fourfold — ₹91.32 cr (2014-15) to ₹394.66 cr (2024-25); 53 Special NIA Courts; conviction rate ~92.7%. Multi-Agency Centre (MAC) under the Intelligence Bureau links 28 agencies; NATGRID connects 11 central agencies and all states/UTs; CCTNS 2.0 (AI-enabled, 17,798 police stations, 2024); Cyber-MAC (CyMAC) launched 22 January 2025. Key Dimensions — Operational Doctrine & Diplomacy Cross-border deterrence doctrine: Surgical Strikes (2016) post-Uri; Balakot airstrike (2019) post-Pulwama against a JeM facility; Operation Sindoor (May 2025) post-Pahalgam. Diplomatic architecture: FATF member since 2010; No Money for Terror conferences (Paris 2018, Melbourne 2019, New Delhi 2022); Comprehensive Convention on International Terrorism (CCIT) first proposed by India at UNGA in 1996. Masood Azhar designated a UNSC global terrorist (May 2019); Tahawwur Rana extradited from the US (April 2025); BHARATPOL launched (7 Jan 2025) linking CBI (INTERPOL's National Central Bureau) nationally. PRAHAAR (23 Feb 2026): a seven-component doctrine — Prevention, Response, Aggregating capacities, Human rights, Attenuation of radicalisation, Aligning international cooperation, Recovery. Critical Analysis — Strengths A genuinely integrated legal–institutional–operational–diplomatic architecture, with a high NIA conviction rate lending prosecutorial credibility. The Surgical Strikes–Balakot–Sindoor sequence established a calibrated deterrence doctrine, altering the cost-benefit calculus for state sponsors of terror. Critical Analysis — Structural Questions PRAHAAR is a policy/doctrine, not a standalone statute — its force still depends on existing laws like the UAPA, BNS and PMLA. Expanded NIA/UAPA powers need independent human-rights oversight mechanisms to sustain due-process credibility. Cross-border, state-sponsored terrorism persists despite sustained legal and diplomatic pressure, underscoring the limits of unilateral action. Way Forward Build periodic, independent human-rights review mechanisms for UAPA and NIA operations. Push for early multilateral adoption of the CCIT at the United Nations. Strengthen CyMAC's mandate against drone-based and AI-enabled hybrid threats. Widen BHARATPOL-style integration beyond INTERPOL to more bilateral law-enforcement networks. Prelims Pointers PRAHAAR: unveiled 23 Feb 2026 by MHA; 7 components (P-R-A-H-A-A-R). NIA: established under the NIA Act, 2008, post-26/11; conviction rate ~92.7%. BNS, 2023: replaced the IPC, 1860; in force from 1 July 2024. Key operations: Surgical Strikes (2016), Balakot (2019), Operation Sindoor (2025). CCIT: first proposed by India at UNGA, 1996. BHARATPOL: launched 7 Jan 2025; links CBI (INTERPOL NCB-India) nationally. Practice Mains Question "PRAHAAR marks India's shift from a reactive to a doctrine-driven counter-terrorism architecture." Trace the legislative, institutional and diplomatic reforms of the past decade that culminated in PRAHAAR, and assess its significance. GS Paper 3 · 250 words · 15 marks Practice MCQs Q1. (Assertion–Reasoning) Assertion (A): The UAPA Amendment, 2019 significantly strengthened India's anti-terror legal framework. Reason (R): It empowered the Central Government to designate individuals, not just organisations, as terrorists. A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of AB) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of AC) A is true, R is falseD) A is false, R is true Q2. Arrange the following in chronological order: (1) Balakot airstrike (2) UAPA Amendment Act (3) Operation Sindoor (4) PRAHAAR unveiled A) 2-1-4-3B) 1-2-3-4C) 2-1-3-4D) 1-2-4-3 Q3. The term "CCIT", frequently seen in news related to India's counter-terror diplomacy, stands for: A) Comprehensive Convention on International TerrorismB) Combined Cyber Intelligence TaskforceC) Counter-Crime International TribunalD) Cross-Country Intelligence Treaty Article 03 Article 03 Astronomers Trace the Origin of Fast X-ray Transient EP241107a Indian Institute of Astrophysics (IIA) · Department of Science & Technology (DST) Relevance: GS 3 (science & technology, space exploration, astrophysics). GS 3 Key Data at a Glance 7 Nov 2024date EP241107a was detected by the Einstein Probe ~10 yrssince FXTs were first discovered as a transient class Mag 17.85optical counterpart brightness (Ic-band) 1051 erginferred isotropic-equivalent jet kinetic energy 4+facilities used across India, US and Chile for follow-up MNRASjournal of publication: Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Issue in Brief Astronomers led by Deepak Eappachen and Arvind Balasubramanian (Indian Institute of Astrophysics, IIA) traced the likely origin of Fast X-ray Transient (FXT) EP241107a — detected 7 November 2024 by China's Einstein Probe mission. The study links the event to a gamma-ray-burst (GRB)-like explosion, caused either by the collapse of a massive star or the merger of two neutron stars. Static Background FXTs are a new class of non-repeating X-ray flashes (minutes to hours), first discovered about a decade ago; proposed progenitors include supernova shock breakouts, magnetar formation after neutron-star mergers, and tidal disruption events. The Einstein Probe is a Chinese space mission designed to survey the dynamic high-energy X-ray sky. Some FXTs are linked to high-redshift long gamma-ray bursts (lGRBs); others show no gamma-ray counterpart at all — termed "orphan afterglows." Key Dimensions — Facilities & Findings Indian facilities used: the Himalayan Chandra Telescope (HCT) and GROWTH India Telescope (GIT), both at the Indian Astronomical Observatory, Hanle, Ladakh (operated by IIA; GIT jointly with IIT Bombay); the Upgraded Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope (uGMRT), operated by the National Centre for Radio Astrophysics (NCRA). International facilities: the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA, New Mexico) discovered the radio counterpart; the Keck Observatory (Hawaii) and the Southern Astrophysical Research Telescope (Chile) were also used. Afterglow modelling indicates a jet with kinetic energy comparable to the Milky Way's total stellar energy output over several months (if emitted isotropically). The event is classed as a likely orphan GRB afterglow — an explosion not directly detected in gamma rays, yet clearly linked to a gamma-ray-burst origin. Published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society; co-authors from IIA, IIT Bombay, Caltech, UNC Chapel Hill, and the Center for Astrophysics, Harvard & Smithsonian. Critical Analysis — Strengths Demonstrates the growing capability of Indian ground-based facilities (HCT, GIT, uGMRT) in rapid multi-wavelength, time-domain astronomy alongside global partners. Critical Analysis — Structural Questions The GRB origin is inferred by comparison with known transients, not a direct gamma-ray detection — the conclusion remains probabilistic. The exact progenitor — massive-star collapse versus neutron-star merger — could not be definitively distinguished for this event. Orphan-afterglow events are rare; broader statistical conclusions need more Einstein Probe detections and follow-up. Way Forward Expand India's rapid-response, multi-wavelength follow-up network for time-domain transient astronomy. Strengthen domestic radio/optical transient-survey infrastructure to reduce dependence on foreign facilities for time-critical follow-up. Deepen institutional collaboration (IIA–IIT Bombay–NCRA) and international partnerships for future high-energy transient missions. Prelims Pointers FXT: Fast X-ray Transient — non-repeating, minutes-to-hours duration. Einstein Probe: Chinese X-ray survey space mission. HCT / GIT: at the Indian Astronomical Observatory, Hanle, Ladakh; operated by IIA (GIT jointly with IIT Bombay). uGMRT: operated by NCRA, under TIFR. IIA: autonomous institute under the Department of Science & Technology (DST). VLA: Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array, located in New Mexico, USA. Practice Mains Question Discuss the significance of multi-institutional, multi-wavelength collaboration in advancing time-domain astronomy, with reference to India's recent contribution to studying Fast X-ray Transients. GS Paper 3 · 150 words · 10 marks Practice MCQs Q1. With reference to Fast X-ray Transients (FXTs), consider the following statements: (1) They are repeating X-ray signals from pulsars. (2) Proposed progenitors include supernova shock breakouts and neutron-star mergers. (3) The Einstein Probe is an Indian space mission. Which is/are correct? A) 2 onlyB) 1 and 3 onlyC) 2 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3 Q2. The term "orphan afterglow," used in the context of EP241107a, refers to: A) A gamma-ray burst with no detected host galaxyB) A transient linked to a GRB origin despite no direct gamma-ray detectionC) An X-ray flash from a rogue, ejected neutron starD) A supernova remnant with no visible afterglow Q3. Which of the following telescopes/facilities is NOT correctly matched with its location or operator? A) Himalayan Chandra Telescope — Hanle, Ladakh (IIA)B) GROWTH India Telescope — jointly operated by IIA and IIT BombayC) Upgraded GMRT — operated by ISROD) Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array — New Mexico, USA

Jun 20, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

Contents01 75 Years On, the First Amendment Still Casts a Long Shadow Tripurdaman Singh, Historian, Graduate Institute Geneva · Constitutional history, fundamental rights, judicial review GS 2 — Polity & ConstitutionEssay 02 Give Her Rights in Her Lifetime Paromita Chakrabarti, Senior Associate Editor, The Indian Express · Gender, social justice, family law GS 1 — SocietyGS 2 — Social JusticeEssay Data-sourcing note: Constitutional and case-law facts in this digest — the Constitution (First Amendment) Act, 1951; Romesh Thapar v. State of Madras; Brij Bhushan v. State of Delhi; State of Madras v. Champakam Dorairajan; Kameshwar Singh v. State of Bihar; the Ninth Schedule; the Basic Structure doctrine; and the 2026 Supreme Court and Delhi High Court homemaker rulings — are search-verified. Observations attributed to A.G. Noorani, Syama Prasad Mookerjee and Devaki Jain, and the 2025 High Court matrimonial-property reference in Editorial 02, are carried as cited by the editorial authors. Editorial 01 of 02 Article 01 75 Years On, the First Amendment Still Casts a Long Shadow Tripurdaman Singh — Historian; Ambizione Fellow, Graduate Institute, Geneva · The Indian Express Relevance: GS 2 (Indian Constitution — historical underpinnings, evolution, fundamental rights, judicial review, amendment process) and Essay (rights vs. state power, precedent and its long-term consequences) — built around the 75th anniversary of the Constitution (First Amendment) Act, 1951. GS 2 — Polity & ConstitutionEssay — Precedent & Power 1 — Issue in Brief 18 June 2026 marks 75 years since the Constitution (First Amendment) Act, 1951 came into force — a "seismic shift" that jurist Upendra Baxi has called the country's "Second Constitution." The author argues a measure framed as a technical correction in fact rewrote the relationship between Fundamental Rights, judicial review and parliamentary power — and that this template (override the courts via amendment rather than persuasion) has cast a long shadow on Indian democracy since. It emerged from Nehru's government seeking to reverse a string of early Supreme Court and High Court rulings on free speech, equality and property that it found inconvenient to its land-reform and public-order agenda. President Rajendra Prasad gave his assent reluctantly, reflecting contemporary unease even within the political establishment about the precedent being set. 2 — Static Background The Constitution came into force 26 January 1950; the First Amendment Bill was moved by Nehru on 10 May 1951 and took effect on 18 June 1951 — barely sixteen months after the Constitution itself. It was triggered by three sets of rulings: Romesh Thapar v. State of Madras and Brij Bhushan v. State of Delhi (both decided 26 May 1950) — the Supreme Court struck down a ban on the weekly Cross Roads and pre-censorship of the RSS-linked Organiser, holding that "public order" was not then a valid ground under Article 19(2) to restrict free speech. State of Madras v. Champakam Dorairajan (AIR 1951 SC 226, decided 9 April 1951) — the Supreme Court struck down Madras's caste-based "Communal G.O." reservation in medical and engineering college admissions as violating Articles 15(1) and 29(2), holding that Fundamental Rights override Directive Principles (Article 46). Kameshwar Singh v. State of Bihar (Patna High Court, 12 March 1951) — struck down the Bihar Land Reforms Act, 1950 because its compensation scale fell as estate size rose, violating Article 14. The Amendment's core changes: added new restriction grounds — "public order," "incitement to an offence," "friendly relations with foreign states" — to Article 19(1)(a); added Article 15(4) enabling reservations for backward classes; inserted Articles 31A and 31B plus the Ninth Schedule, immunising specified laws from challenge on fundamental-rights grounds. 3 — Key Dimensions Free speech narrowed: the new restriction grounds reversed the expansive post-Independence reading of Article 19(1)(a) that the Supreme Court had upheld in Thapar and Brij Bhushan. Equality vs. reservation: Article 15(4) responded directly to Champakam Dorairajan, legitimising caste-based affirmative action but opening a debate — on reservation ceilings and the definition of "backward class" — that runs through later cases like Balaji and Indra Sawhney. Property rights curtailed: Articles 31A/31B and the Ninth Schedule shielded land-reform laws — and eventually over 250 enactments — from Article 14/19 review, a structural breach in judicial review that lasted in full force until the Basic Structure doctrine (1973) and I.R. Coelho (2007) reasserted limits. Institutionalised a precedent: amending the Constitution to override an adverse judicial ruling, rather than reforming the underlying policy — a template invoked repeatedly in subsequent decades. The author connects this episode to a continuing pattern of restricting speech via deliberately elastic grounds — then "public order," in his framing today's equivalents being labels like "fake news" or "subversive activity." He cites jurist A.G. Noorani's characterisation of obscenity-related curbs flowing from this era, and recalls Syama Prasad Mookerjee's parliamentary warning that a precedent set by one government to silence one party could just as easily be turned against a different party in power later — carried as the author's own citations. 4 — Critical Analysis In favour — Practical governance correction: the government argued the early rulings created genuine difficulties in executing land reform and welfare policy; most mature democracies build reasonable-restriction clauses into free-speech guarantees from the outset, so some scholars read 1951 as calibration rather than pure retreat. In favour — Enabled social justice tools: without Article 15(4), Champakam Dorairajan would have frozen out caste-based reservations entirely; even B.R. Ambedkar, while critical of how the rulings constrained welfare measures, accepted that a corrective was needed. In favour — Protected land reform: zamindari abolition was a central post-Independence promise; without Ninth Schedule protection, estate-by-estate litigation (as in the Patna case) risked stalling land redistribution indefinitely. Against — Precedent of overriding courts: the single most consequential legacy, per the author — establishing that an inconvenient judicial check can be removed by amendment rather than engaged with, a precedent invoked again in later Ninth Schedule additions and constitutional amendments. Against — Discretion over dissent: "public order" and "friendly relations with foreign states" as restriction grounds gave the state wide discretion later used against unpopular speech of exactly the kind it was first deployed against. Against — Ninth Schedule overreach: designed for a handful of land laws, the Schedule grew into a near-blanket shield for unrelated legislation until I.R. Coelho (2007) confined post-1973 additions to basic-structure review. Against — Judicial review subordinated: it subordinated the courts — at the time the only institutional check on majoritarian excess — to a parliamentary majority's preference, a tension that runs through the entire Basic Structure debate that followed. 5 — Way Forward Use the 75th anniversary to interrogate, not merely commemorate, the precedent of amending fundamental rights to override courts — and ask where similar reflexes persist today. Lean on the Basic Structure doctrine (Kesavananda Bharati, 1973) and I.R. Coelho (2007) as the existing guardrails against repeat Ninth-Schedule-style overreach. Periodically test "reasonable restriction" provisions against contemporary proportionality standards so that grounds like "public order" aren't used as catch-all censorship tools. Treat Thapar, Champakam Dorairajan and Kameshwar Singh as a template for understanding how courts and legislatures continue to negotiate rights versus welfare and policy objectives. 6 — Data & Key Facts 10 May 1951First Amendment Bill moved by Nehru; in force from 18 June 1951 26 May 1950Romesh Thapar and Brij Bhushan decided the same day 9 Apr 1951Champakam Dorairajan — AIR 1951 SC 226 12 Mar 1951Patna HC strikes down Bihar Land Reforms Act, 1950, on Article 14 grounds ~13 → 250+Growth of Ninth Schedule laws from initial agrarian list to 250+ enactments 1973 / 2007Basic Structure doctrine (Kesavananda Bharati) and I.R. Coelho cabin Article 31B's reach Articles amended/inserted: 15, 19, 85, 87, 174, 176, 341, 342, 372, 376 amended; new Articles 31A and 31B inserted; Ninth Schedule added. Kameshwar Singh case outcome: the Supreme Court in 1952 upheld most of the Bihar Land Reforms Act, voiding only two specific compensation provisions (Sections 4(b) and 23(f)). 7 — Prelims Pointers First Amendment Act, 1951 — Article 15(4) added; Articles 31A, 31B + Ninth Schedule added; new restriction grounds inserted into Article 19(1)(a) Romesh Thapar v. State of Madras (Cross Roads) and Brij Bhushan v. State of Delhi (Organiser) — both decided 26 May 1950 Champakam Dorairajan v. State of Madras (1951) — led directly to Article 15(4) Kameshwar Singh v. State of Bihar — Patna HC, 1951; Bihar Land Reforms Act struck down on Article 14 grounds (modified by SC, 1952) Sankari Prasad Singh Deo v. Union of India (1951) — upheld validity of the First Amendment itself, including Article 31B Basic Structure doctrine — Kesavananda Bharati (1973); I.R. Coelho (2007) confines post-1973 Ninth Schedule insertions to basic-structure review Exam note: Do not confuse the three founding cases — Thapar/Brij Bhushan concern free speech (Article 19), Champakam Dorairajan concerns equality and reservation (Article 15), Kameshwar Singh concerns property and compensation (Article 14/31). All three fed into the same 1951 Amendment but address distinct fundamental rights. 8 — Practice Mains Question "The Constitution (First Amendment) Act, 1951 is often described as creating a 'Second Constitution.'" Discuss the circumstances that necessitated the amendment and critically examine its long-term implications for fundamental rights and judicial review in India.GS 2 · 15 marks · ~250 words · Constitution — Historical Underpinnings & Fundamental Rights Intro: Frame the First Amendment as arising from three judicial rulings (Thapar, Champakam Dorairajan, Kameshwar Singh) within a year of the Constitution's commencement; introduce Upendra Baxi's "Second Constitution" label. Body 1 — Circumstances: early expansive readings of Articles 19, 15 and 14 collided with the government's land-reform, public-order and social-justice agenda; the amendment added restriction grounds, Article 15(4), and Articles 31A/31B with the Ninth Schedule. Body 2 — Long-term implications: normalised the precedent of amending rights to override courts; narrowed free speech; enabled reservation policy; subordinated judicial review until the Basic Structure doctrine and I.R. Coelho restored limits. Conclusion: The episode remains a foundational case study in the enduring tension between parliamentary sovereignty and constitutional supremacy in India. 9 — Practice MCQ With reference to the Constitution (First Amendment) Act, 1951, consider the following statements: 1. It introduced Clause (4) to Article 15, enabling special provisions for socially and educationally backward classes. 2. It added Articles 31A and 31B along with the Ninth Schedule to protect specified laws from judicial review. 3. It was enacted partly in response to Romesh Thapar v. State of Madras and State of Madras v. Champakam Dorairajan. 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 Give Her Rights in Her Lifetime Paromita Chakrabarti — Senior Associate Editor · The Indian Express Relevance: GS 1 (role of women, society), GS 2 (social justice, vulnerable sections, welfare schemes) and Essay (recognition vs. compensation, care economy) — built around a 2026 Supreme Court ruling on homemakers' notional income in motor-accident compensation. GS 1 — SocietyGS 2 — Social JusticeEssay — Recognition vs. Compensation 1 — Issue in Brief The author's central argument: courts are finally putting a number on a homemaker's economic contribution — but almost always after she dies, through accident-compensation litigation, not while she is alive and the contribution is actually being made. Anchored in a June 2026 Supreme Court ruling that substantially raised compensation in a fatal motor-accident case by fixing a homemaker's notional income and creating a new "loss of domestic care" head — a genuine advance, but one the piece frames as backward-looking valuation, not real-time entitlement. Invokes the 1970s feminist framing "Wages Against Housework" to argue domestic labour remains invisible — unpaid, untaxed, absent from GDP — until a tragedy forces the legal system to price it. 2 — Static Background The Supreme Court ruling (Bench of Justices Sanjay Karol and N. Kotiswar Singh) arose from a road accident on 25 November 2001 in Haryana (Sirsa–Fatehabad) that killed a homemaker. The Motor Accident Claims Tribunal initially awarded ₹2.42 lakh (2003); the Punjab and Haryana High Court enhanced this to ₹8.43 lakh (December 2024); the Supreme Court further enhanced the total to roughly ₹62.77 lakh. The Court fixed ₹30,000/month as a homemaker's minimum notional income for compensation purposes, created the new "loss of domestic care" compensation head, and described homemakers as "nation builders." It traced this recognition through earlier precedents — Lata Wadhwa v. State of Bihar, Arun Kumar Agrawal v. National Insurance Co. Ltd., Rajendra Singh v. National Insurance Co. Ltd., and Kirti v. Oriental Insurance Co. Ltd. A separate February 2026 Delhi High Court ruling (Justice Swarana Kanta Sharma, in a maintenance matter) held that a non-earning spouse cannot be treated as "idle," observing that "the economic stability of the household is the result of combined, though differently manifested, contributions." A 2025 High Court matter is also referenced, in which a wife's claim to a fixed share of matrimonial property was not accepted; the court observed that while a homemaker's contribution deserves recognition, existing maintenance law lacks the statutory reach to enforce asset-sharing. Structural gap: India has no community-of-property regime for marriage. Marital assets are typically titled in one spouse's name (usually the husband's); family law offers maintenance and alimony, not automatic co-ownership, leaving a homemaker's economic claim contingent and litigation-driven. 3 — Key Dimensions Compensation vs. recognition: a posthumous tort award is fundamentally different from a homemaker having an enforceable, real-time claim over family wealth built during her lifetime. Economic invisibility: domestic labour doesn't show up in payslips, GDP, or provident-fund records — courts and legislators have historically defaulted to undervaluing it; the author cites economist Devaki Jain's description of homemakers as "virtual non-entities in economic transactions." Cumulative exit cost: every year a spouse stays outside the paid workforce — to relocate, raise children, or care for ageing parents — widens a measurable income and security gap that the legal system largely ignores until divorce or death forces a reckoning. Judicial momentum, legislative vacuum: courts (the Supreme Court on accident compensation, the Delhi High Court on maintenance) are incrementally building doctrine, but Parliament has not legislated a default community-property or asset-sharing regime — recognition stays case-specific and reactive. The "replacement-cost" test: the author's own heuristic — tally the market cost of a cook, part-time cleaner, elder-caregiver and nanny — to argue a homemaker's imputed monthly value in a city like Delhi would likely exceed ₹30,000, suggesting even the Supreme Court's new figure may already be conservative. 4 — Critical Analysis In favour — Doctrinal shift: naming homemakers "nation builders" and creating a distinct "loss of domestic care" head moves jurisprudence beyond treating a homemaker's economic worth as merely residual or derivative of her husband's income. In favour — Better tort outcomes: the compensation jump (₹8.43 lakh to ₹62.77 lakh in the cited case) translates directly into more realistic outcomes for surviving families. In favour — Consolidation of precedent: builds on an established doctrinal lineage (Lata Wadhwa, Arun Kumar Agrawal, Kirti v. Oriental Insurance) — this is consolidation of a trend, not an isolated outlier, which strengthens it as durable precedent. In favour — Cross-context consistency: aligns with the parallel Delhi High Court direction treating breadwinner and homemaker as equally valuable, differently manifested contributors to a shared household. Against — Tragedy-triggered recognition: the entire apparatus activates only after death or in adversarial litigation (maintenance, divorce) — it offers no homemaker a present-day, enforceable economic stake while the marriage is functioning normally. Against — No statutory property right: absent a community-of-property law, a homemaker's claim depends on a court accepting her argument case by case; there is no default share comparable to jurisdictions with community-property or equitable-distribution regimes. Against — Notional figure may still be low: ₹30,000/month, while a major increase over earlier figures, remains a judicially fixed number rather than one indexed to actual local replacement costs, which the author argues are higher. Against — Fragmented recognition: tort, maintenance, divorce, and inheritance law each value (or don't value) homemaker labour differently, with no unified standard, and even where a contribution is acknowledged, remedies may lack the statutory reach to convert it into an actual share of accumulated assets. 5 — Way Forward Consider a default matrimonial-property or community-of-property framework — echoing debates around the 2010 Marriage Laws (Amendment) Bill's asset-division provisions — so a homemaker has an enforceable share in marital assets, not only a discretionary maintenance award. Standardise notional-income computation for homemakers across tort, maintenance and divorce law using a replacement-cost methodology (cost of equivalent paid domestic, childcare and eldercare services), revised periodically for inflation. Explore social-security recognition for unpaid care work — pension credits or similar mechanisms, as seen in some international systems that count caregiving years toward retirement benefits. Encourage routine family-law practice — joint asset registration, financial transparency between spouses — rather than relying on litigation triggered by death or divorce. Situate this within the broader care-economy debate — relevant to GS 1 (women's issues), GS 2 (social justice) and GS 3 (informal/care economy) — recognising domestic work as economically productive in national accounting, not only in court judgments. 6 — Data & Key Facts ₹30,000Notional monthly income fixed for a homemaker by the SC (June 2026) 25 Nov 2001Date of the underlying fatal road accident, Sirsa–Fatehabad, Haryana ₹2.42 L → ₹62.77 LCompensation enhanced from Tribunal award (2003) to final SC award ₹8.43 LIntermediate enhancement by Punjab & Haryana HC, December 2024 New head"Loss of domestic care" — newly created compensation category Feb 2026Delhi HC ruling recognising domestic labour in maintenance decisions Precedents cited by the Supreme Court: Lata Wadhwa v. State of Bihar; Arun Kumar Agrawal v. National Insurance Co. Ltd.; Rajendra Singh v. National Insurance Co. Ltd.; Kirti v. Oriental Insurance Co. Ltd. — tracing the evolution of homemaker-income jurisprudence. Delhi High Court (Feb 2026, Justice Swarana Kanta Sharma): held that the assumption a non-earning spouse is "idle" reflects a misunderstanding of domestic contribution, and that the law must recognise the economic value of a homemaker's contribution while deciding maintenance. 7 — Prelims Pointers "Loss of domestic care" — new compensation head created by the Supreme Court (2026) for motor-accident claims involving a homemaker's death Notional income of a homemaker — judicially fixed at a minimum of ₹30,000/month for compensation purposes (2026 ruling) Key precedents — Lata Wadhwa v. State of Bihar; Arun Kumar Agrawal v. National Insurance Co.; Kirti v. Oriental Insurance Co. Ltd. Community-of-property regime — India has none for marriage; maintenance/alimony under personal laws (e.g. Hindu Marriage Act) remain the primary, non-automatic remedies Devaki Jain — Indian development economist known for work on gender and the economics of unpaid labour Motor Accident Claims Tribunal (MACT) — first-instance forum for road-accident compensation claims under the Motor Vehicles Act Exam note: Distinguish "notional income" (a figure used to calculate tort compensation after death) from a statutory right to matrimonial property (which India does not have). The 2026 ruling strengthens the former; it does not create the latter. 8 — Practice Mains Question "Recognition of a homemaker's economic contribution in Indian law has so far been largely retrospective and litigation-driven rather than a default entitlement during her lifetime." Critically examine this statement with reference to recent judicial trends and the absence of a statutory matrimonial property regime in India.GS 1 + GS 2 crossover · 15 marks · ~250 words · Society + Social Justice Intro: Frame the 2026 Supreme Court ruling on homemaker notional income and "loss of domestic care" as the latest step in a longer judicial trend; flag the retrospective, litigation-triggered nature of this recognition. Body 1 — Judicial progress: trace the precedent lineage (Lata Wadhwa, Arun Kumar Agrawal, Kirti) and the parallel Delhi HC maintenance ruling, showing a consistent doctrinal direction. Body 2 — The structural gap: absence of a community-of-property regime; compensation/maintenance triggered only by death or dispute; no enforceable real-time share in marital assets. Conclusion: Judicial recognition must be matched by legislative reform — a statutory matrimonial-property framework and standardised notional-income methodology — to move from reactive compensation to lifetime entitlement. 9 — Practice MCQ With reference to the recognition of homemakers' economic contribution in Indian law, consider the following statements: 1. The Supreme Court has created a distinct compensation head titled "loss of domestic care" in motor accident claims involving the death of a homemaker. 2. India has a statutory community-of-property regime under which marital assets are automatically shared equally between spouses. 3. Judicial recognition of a homemaker's notional income has evolved through a series of motor accident compensation cases. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only(b) 1 and 3 only(c) 2 and 3 only(d) 1, 2 and 3

Jun 20, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Contents 20 June 2026 What Does the India-Russia Logistics Agreement (RELOS) Allow?GS2 Central Banks to Increase Gold Reserves: WGC Survey 2026GS3 India World's Number Two Fish Producer: FAO 2026 ReportGS3 Walking on Footpaths a Fundamental Right, Rules Supreme CourtGS2 Four Glacial Lakes in Arunachal Pradesh Have Expanded in a DecadeGS1 Three Indigenously Built Naval Ships CommissionedGS3 Heatwaves Driving Up Ground-Level Ozone, Aggravating Health RisksGS3 Article 01 What Does the India-Russia Logistics Agreement (RELOS) Allow? GS Paper 2 — International Relations | Bilateral Agreements | India and its Neighbourhood | Effect of Policies of Developed/Developing Countries Why in News The India-Russia bilateral Logistics Support Agreement (LSA), termed the Reciprocal Exchange of Logistics Agreement (RELOS), was operationalised in January 2026 after having been under negotiation for several years. Social media claims that it allows stationing of 3,000 Russian troops on Indian soil (or vice versa) sparked confusion, framing it as a military alliance — but RELOS is a standard Logistics Support Agreement, similar to those India has signed with eight other countries. What is a Logistics Support Agreement (LSA)? An LSA is a foundational military cooperation agreement between countries for administrative purposes, enabling the reciprocal use of each other's bases and ports for supplies, repair, and fuel. It specifies the occasions for use — generally joint exercises, training, port calls, and Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief (HADR) situations — and reduces bureaucratic friction in military-to-military engagement. LEMOA (Logistics Exchange Memorandum of Agreement) — signed with the US in 2016; India's first such agreement and the basic template for all subsequent LSAs. Covers: food, water, billeting, transportation, petroleum/oils/lubricants (POL), clothing, communication services, medical services, storage, training services, spare parts, repair and maintenance, calibration, and port services. LSAs do not provide for the establishment of bases or basing arrangements — a point clarified by the Minister of State for Defence in Parliament in February 2017 regarding LEMOA. India's Network of Logistics Agreements India currently has LSAs with nine countries — the US, UK, France, Vietnam, Japan, Australia, Singapore, and Russia on the standard LSA template, plus a similar arrangement with Oman covered under a broader overarching defence cooperation agreement. 2020 Eastern Ladakh standoff: India invoked its logistics pact with the US to procure high-altitude winter clothing for over 50,000 troops deployed through the winter. UK reciprocity: Royal Navy ships have received India-manufactured spare parts and undergone maintenance at Indian shipyards under the bilateral LSA. Operational endurance: Indian Naval ships and P-8I long-range maritime patrol aircraft use partner-nation LSAs during anti-piracy deployments in the Gulf of Aden for quick turnaround without returning to home ports. The India-Russia RELOS Agreement RELOS defines procedures for supporting military formations, port calls of warships, and the use of airspace and airfield facilities by military aircraft of both countries, along with logistics and technical support of military formations, warships, aircraft, and other equipment. Parameter Detail Signed Moscow, February 18, 2025 Russian Ratification President Vladimir Putin signed the federal law on December 15, 2025 Operationalised January 2026 Personnel Ceiling Maximum 3,000 troops (upper limit, not a fixed deployment) Assets Ceiling Up to 5 warships and 10 military aircraft at any given time Validity 5 years, with provision for revision/extension Officials have clarified: "No permanent or long-term stationing has been agreed upon as part of the Agreement." The troop/asset ceiling represents a broad upper limit accounting for the size of contingents and number of ships or aircraft that may visit during mutually agreed engagements — not a basing arrangement. Arctic Dimension RELOS gives India access to Russian military facilities in the Arctic as both countries expand cooperation there, driven by new navigation routes opening up due to global warming. This extends India's maritime and aerial operational footprint into the Arctic and Northern Sea Route, while reinforcing Russia's presence in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR). Why LSAs Reinforce India's Strategic Autonomy Multi-Alignment, Not Bloc Alignment: By signing similar, non-binding logistics pacts with competing powers (the US and Russia simultaneously), India avoids joining any single power bloc while drawing tactical advantages from both. Counter to China's "String of Pearls": China relies on sovereign military bases (Djibouti) or dual-use commercial ports (Hambantota) to secure the IOR. India's LSA network instead grants an "invisible footprint" across choke points such as the Mozambique Channel (via France), the Strait of Malacca (via Singapore), and the Lombok/Sunda Straits (via Australia). Integrated Theatre Commands: LSAs provide ready-made external logistical infrastructure as India transitions its armed forces into unified theatre commands. Challenges Two-Front Balancing Act: Executing RELOS with Russia while deepening integration with the US via LEMOA (2016) and COMCASA (2018) requires India to walk a diplomatic tightrope — the West views LSAs as tools to contain China, while a sanctioned Russia views them through an anti-NATO lens. CAATSA Risk: Managing defence trade with Russia without triggering secondary sanctions under the US Countering America's Adversaries Through Sanctions Act (CAATSA) requires complex non-dollar financial engineering (e.g., Rupee-Ruble trade), which suffers from trade imbalances. "Case-by-Case" Neutrality Trap: Unlike NATO's Article 5, LSAs carry no mutual defence obligation. This protects autonomy but means partners can request aid during active conflicts, and India's refusals (to preserve neutrality) can trigger diplomatic friction. China-Russia Axis Vulnerability: Russia's growing dependence on Beijing tests RELOS's reliability — if an India-China border conflict erupts, Russian logistical nodes in the Far East or Arctic may become questionable. Conclusion RELOS is a standard, reciprocal Logistics Support Agreement — not a military alliance, and not a basing arrangement. To fully leverage its network of LSAs, India must integrate overseas logistics nodes with domestic initiatives such as PM Gati Shakti and the Integrated Theatre Commands, using these agreements to promote indigenous defence manufacturing and MRO services under Aatmanirbhar Bharat. Enduring strategic autonomy will ultimately depend on robust military-industrial self-reliance. Prelims Pointers RELOS = Reciprocal Exchange of Logistics Agreement (India-Russia); operationalised January 2026; signed Moscow, 18 Feb 2025; ratified by Russia 15 Dec 2025. LEMOA = Logistics Exchange Memorandum of Agreement (India-US, 2016) — India's first LSA and the basic template for subsequent agreements. COMCASA (2018) = Communications Compatibility and Security Agreement — a separate India-US pact on secure communications interoperability, distinct from LEMOA. RELOS troop/asset ceiling: 3,000 personnel, 5 warships, 10 aircraft; validity 5 years; no permanent basing permitted. India's LSA partners: US, UK, France, Vietnam, Japan, Australia, Singapore, Russia (standard LSA) + Oman (under a broader defence cooperation agreement) = 9 total. CAATSA = Countering America's Adversaries Through Sanctions Act (US, 2017) — relevant to India-Russia defence trade. LSAs carry no mutual defence obligation (unlike NATO's Article 5) — they are administrative/logistical, not military alliances. China's "String of Pearls" = network of Chinese-linked ports/bases across the IOR (e.g., Djibouti, Hambantota), often cited as the strategic contrast to India's LSA-based "invisible footprint." Practice Mains Question "Logistics Support Agreements (LSAs) are emerging as key force multipliers for India's defence diplomacy without compromising its strategic autonomy." Critically examine this statement with reference to the India-Russia RELOS agreement. GS Paper 2  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Match List-I (Logistics/Defence Agreement) with List-II (Partner Country) and select the correct answer using the codes given below: List-I A. LEMOA B. RELOS C. COMCASA D. Defence Cooperation Agreement (with embedded logistics arrangement) List-II 1. Oman 2. Russia 3. United States (communications interoperability) 4. United States (logistics exchange) (a)A-4, B-2, C-3, D-1 (b)A-3, B-2, C-4, D-1 (c)A-4, B-1, C-3, D-2 (d)A-2, B-4, C-1, D-3 Correct Answer: (a) LEMOA (2016) is India's logistics exchange agreement with the United States. RELOS is the logistics agreement with Russia. COMCASA (2018) is the communications compatibility and security agreement, also with the United States, but distinct from LEMOA. India's logistics arrangement with Oman is embedded within a broader defence cooperation agreement, unlike the standalone LSAs with the other eight partners. Article 02 Central Banks to Increase Gold Reserves Over Next 12 Months: WGC Survey GS Paper 3 — Indian Economy | Mobilisation of Resources | International Institutions Why in News The World Gold Council's (WGC) 2026 Central Bank Gold Reserves (CBGR) survey indicates that central banks around the world will accumulate more gold in the future, keeping gold prices elevated. Gold prices in India have increased about 40% in 12 months, driven primarily by central bank buying and the rupee's depreciation against the US dollar, the currency in which gold is priced globally. Key Findings of the Survey Central banks "remain very positive on gold, highlighting its significance amid a volatile geopolitical and economic environment," the WGC said, noting a continuation of the trend from previous years — gold is making up a growing share of reserve portfolios. Metric Figure Survey window 5 February – 19 May 2026 (majority of responses after the West Asia conflict began) Central bank gold accumulation (avg., last 4 years) ~1,000 tonnes/year Accumulation (avg., preceding decade) ~500 tonnes/year Expect global CB gold reserves to rise (next 12 months) 89% of respondents Expect own institution's reserves to rise 45% (a record high) Expect own reserves to decrease 1% Expect lower USD share in global reserves (next 5 years) 74% moderate/significant decline Why Central Banks Buy Gold Performance during times of crisis, portfolio diversification, and inflation hedging were cited as the main reasons. Gold also featured as a geopolitical risk hedge and as part of reserve diversification policy. Euro and renminbi shares are expected to remain broadly unchanged, even as the dollar's share declines and gold's share rises. Gold Vaulting Preferences Bank of England remains the most popular vaulting location — 57% of respondents. Domestic storage — 49% (second most popular); central banks continue diversifying storage across locations. Bank for International Settlements (BIS) — 16% (a slight uptick from last year). Swiss National Bank — fell to 6%, down from 12% in 2025. India's Position — RBI Gold Reserves Fiscal Year Total Gold Reserves FY24 822.1 tonnes FY25 879.58 tonnes FY26 880.52 tonnes The RBI repatriated over 100 tonnes of physical gold from overseas vaults to domestic storage during FY25, aligning with the broader global central-bank trend toward storage diversification and self-custody. About the World Gold Council WGC is the market development organisation for the global gold industry; formed in 1987, headquartered in London; a nonprofit association whose members are leading gold mining companies. Since 2018, WGC (with YouGov) has conducted this annual global survey of central banks on gold and reserve management — participation is voluntary and responses are anonymised. WGC played a key role in developing the Shanghai Gold Exchange (now the world's largest physical gold exchange) and supporting the India Gold Spot Exchange (launched 2022, at GIFT City, regulated by the International Financial Services Centres Authority, IFSCA) to improve transparency and liquidity. Significance De-dollarisation Signal: The expected decline in USD reserve share alongside rising gold allocation reflects a structural shift in global reserve management amid geopolitical fragmentation. India's Import Bill: Gold is among India's largest import items by value; sustained high prices have implications for the Current Account Deficit (CAD). Reserve Composition: India's forex reserves comprise Foreign Currency Assets, Gold, Special Drawing Rights (SDRs), and the Reserve Tranche Position (RTP) with the IMF — gold's growing share strengthens reserve resilience against currency volatility. Conclusion As the WGC noted, gold's safety, liquidity and return characteristics — the three key investment objectives for central banks — have risen in importance amid a volatile and unpredictable world. The survey confirms that central bank demand for gold, including the RBI's own steady accumulation, will likely remain healthy into the foreseeable future. Prelims Pointers WGC = World Gold Council; formed 1987; HQ London; nonprofit, members are gold mining companies. CBGR Survey = Central Bank Gold Reserves survey, conducted annually by WGC with YouGov since 2018. India's forex reserves = Foreign Currency Assets + Gold + SDRs + Reserve Tranche Position (RTP) with IMF. India Gold Spot Exchange = launched 2022 at GIFT City; regulated by the IFSCA (International Financial Services Centres Authority). Shanghai Gold Exchange = world's largest physical gold exchange; developed with WGC support. Most popular gold vaulting location among central banks: Bank of England (57%), followed by domestic storage (49%) and BIS (16%). RBI gold reserves rose from 822.1 tonnes (FY24) to 880.52 tonnes (FY26); over 100 tonnes repatriated to domestic vaults in FY25. Practice Mains Question "Rising central bank gold accumulation reflects a structural shift in global reserve management amid geopolitical uncertainty." Discuss the drivers of this trend and its implications for India's external sector. GS Paper 3  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Consider the following statements with reference to the World Gold Council's (WGC) 2026 Central Bank Gold Reserves Survey: 1. The survey found that a record 45% of respondent central banks expect their own gold reserves to increase over the next 12 months. 2. The Swiss National Bank emerged as the single most preferred gold vaulting location among central banks in 2026. 3. The World Gold Council was formed in 1987 and is headquartered in London. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? (a)1 and 3 only (b)2 and 3 only (c)1 only (d)1, 2 and 3 Correct Answer: (a) Statements 1 and 3 are correct. Statement 2 is incorrect — the Bank of England, not the Swiss National Bank, remains the most preferred vaulting location (57%); the Swiss National Bank's preference share actually fell to 6% in 2026, down from 12% in 2025. Article 03 India World's Number Two Fish Producer, Tops Inland Catches: FAO 2026 Report GS Paper 3 — Agriculture and Allied Sectors | Food Security | International Organisations Why in News India produced 9% of the world's aquatic animals in 2024, making it the second-largest producer globally after China, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization's State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture (SOFIA) 2026 report. India also led the world in inland water catches and ranked second in aquaculture, even as the FAO warned that marine fish stock sustainability continues to decline. India's Standing in the Report 2nd-largest producer of aquatic animals globally (after China) — 9% of world output (2024). World's largest inland water catch: 2.2 million tonnes from rivers, lakes, and freshwater systems — ahead of Bangladesh's 1.4 million tonnes. 2nd-largest aquaculture producer globally — contributing 12% of total farmed aquatic animal output. Part of a five-country bloc (China, India, Indonesia, Vietnam, Bangladesh) producing 82% of all farmed aquatic animals. Global Production Highlights Metric Figure (2024) Total global fisheries + aquaculture production 235 million tonnes (record high; +5.2% vs 2022)   — Aquatic animals 195 million tonnes   — Algae 40 million tonnes Aquaculture production alone 142 million tonnes (record high; main growth driver) Top-5 producers' share of aquaculture output 84% (China, Indonesia, India, Vietnam, Bangladesh) Marine vs inland water source split 67% marine / 33% inland Sustainability Concerns Share of marine fish stocks within biologically sustainable levels fell to 62.4% in 2023, down from 64.5% in 2021. FAO attributed the decline partly to methodological revisions, but also to real sustainability declines in specific regions. When weighted by catch volume, 72.6% of landings from assessed stocks came from sustainably managed stocks — suggesting larger commercial fisheries tend to be better governed, even as the overall trend remains a warning sign. Who is Eating the Fish? Over 90% of aquatic animal production reaches human plates. Per capita availability: global average 21.1 kg (2023) → preliminary 21.3 kg (2024). Regional gaps: Asia 26.3 kg (highest); North America, Europe, Oceania ~20–22 kg; Latin America/Caribbean 10.1 kg; Africa 9.1 kg (lowest). Despite having the lowest per-capita availability, Africa ranked 2nd globally in the share of animal protein derived from aquatic sources — 19% — reflecting strong reliance on fish as a protein source despite low absolute consumption. India's Domestic Policy Context Pradhan Mantri Matsya Sampada Yojana (PMMSY) — India's flagship fisheries scheme, launched 2020, implemented by the Department of Fisheries, Ministry of Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Dairying (a separate ministry since 2019). India's fisheries push is often referred to as a "Blue Revolution" — paralleling the Green Revolution in agriculture. About FAO Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) — a specialised United Nations agency, headquartered in Rome, established in 1945. SOFIA is FAO's flagship biennial report assessing global fisheries and aquaculture trends. Conclusion India's rise as the world's leading inland fish producer and second-largest aquatic animal producer overall reflects the structural dominance of Asia in global fish production. However, the FAO's warning of declining marine stock sustainability — even as production scales new highs — underscores that ensuring sustainable and equitable growth remains a major global challenge, one in which India's domestic fisheries governance under PMMSY will play an increasingly important role. Prelims Pointers FAO SOFIA 2026 = State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture report, by the Food and Agriculture Organization (UN agency, HQ Rome, est. 1945). India = 2nd-largest aquatic animal producer globally (after China); world's largest inland fish producer (2.2 million tonnes). PMMSY = Pradhan Mantri Matsya Sampada Yojana (launched 2020) — flagship scheme under the Department of Fisheries, Ministry of Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Dairying. "Blue Revolution" = term for India's fisheries development push, analogous to the Green Revolution. Marine stock sustainability fell to 62.4% (2023) from 64.5% (2021) — a key trend data point. Five-country bloc producing 82% of farmed aquatic animals: China, India, Indonesia, Vietnam, Bangladesh. Practice Mains Question "India's rising fish production coexists with a global decline in marine stock sustainability." Analyse the structural strengths of India's fisheries sector and the sustainability challenges it must address to consolidate its position in the Blue Economy. GS Paper 3  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ With reference to the FAO's State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture (SOFIA) 2026 report, which one of the following statements is NOT correct? (a)India is the world's second-largest producer of aquatic animals, after China. (b)India recorded the highest inland water fish catch in the world in 2024, ahead of Bangladesh. (c)The share of marine fish stocks within biologically sustainable levels increased in 2023 compared to 2021. (d)Aquaculture, at 142 million tonnes in 2024, was the principal driver of growth in global aquatic animal production. Correct Answer: (c) Statement (c) is not correct — the share of marine fish stocks within biologically sustainable levels actually fell to 62.4% in 2023, down from 64.5% in 2021, not increased. Statements (a), (b), and (d) are all correct as per the SOFIA 2026 report. Article 04 Walking on Footpaths a Fundamental Right, Rules Supreme Court GS Paper 2 — Indian Constitution | Fundamental Rights | Judiciary | Government Policies and Interventions Why in News The Supreme Court, in a judgment authored by Justice P.S. Narasimha (Bench: Justices P.S. Narasimha and Atul S. Chandurkar), declared the freedom to walk on demarcated and well-maintained footpaths a fundamental right which has priority over movement by motorised vehicles. The judgment came in a case concerning the death of a five-year-old boy, struck and killed by a tanker lorry while walking to school with his father in Karnataka. What the Court Held "If a road exists, there must then be a duty to ensure that a footpath is demarcated and maintained for the walkers. This is an enforceable duty." The fundamental right to walk on demarcated footpaths shall override the privilege of a motorised vehicle. The Court called for a statutory framework — not only to declare the right to walk a fundamental right, but also to recognise the duty-bearers responsible for ensuring it. The parent was awarded compensation of over ₹11 lakh. Constitutional Basis Article 19(1)(d) — "All citizens shall have the right... to move freely throughout the territory of India" — the Court held this constitutionally guarantees walking. The judgment situates the right within the Court's expansion of Article 21 (right to life and personal liberty) since the 1970s. Walking was also linked to Article 19(1)(a) (expression), 19(1)(b) (assembly), and 19(1)(c) (association) — the Court held that "walking is not just motion, it certainly embodies expressional, congregational and associational rights." Article 19 vs Article 21 — A Key Distinction Article 19 rights (including 19(1)(d), freedom of movement) are available only to citizens. Article 21 (life and personal liberty), under which the broader right to walk safely has also been read, is available to any person, citizen or not — a distinction frequently tested in Prelims. Precedents on Article 21 Expansion Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India (1978) — origin of the expansive, substantive-due-process reading of Article 21, beyond mere procedural protection. Olga Tellis v. Bombay Municipal Corporation (1985) — the Supreme Court read the right to livelihood (including pavement dwellers' rights) into Article 21, a direct precedent for reading public-space access rights into the same Article. Why the Right Exists but Footpaths Often Don't In the absence of a national law governing pedestrian rights, responsibility is split across municipal laws, town-planning statutes, and street design guidelines. Most cities lack continuous, unobstructed footpaths; where they exist, they are often encroached upon by parking, vendors, utilities, and construction debris. As motorised transport became widespread, walking was relegated to an inconvenience, with motorists often treating pedestrians as a "nuisance." Comparisons with Other Rights-Based Legislation Law Intended Protection Implementation Outcome Street Vendors Act, 2014 Protects vendors under Article 19(1)(g) Mixed success — municipalities still conduct "eviction drives"; surveys, town vending committees, and zone demarcation often delayed Cigarettes and Other Tobacco Products Act (COTPA), 2003 Curtailed public smoking Worked over 20 years — but via consistent social messaging and small fines, not "restitutionary remedies" Swachh Bharat Mission mandates Reduce littering Culture of littering persists — law focuses on citizens' duty to segregate while the state has often overlooked its duty to collect segregated waste Concerns Implementation Gap: The new judgment may set up disputes with the Street Vendors Act, 2014, over footpath space allocation. Risk of Misuse: A state using the ruling to "cleanse" streets of informal commercial activity could gentrify public spaces and criminalise the survival strategies of the urban poor. Tool for Compensation, Not Prevention: If the principal effect is post-tragedy compensation rather than upfront infrastructure investment, the "constitutional nudge" may not produce real change. Way Forward The nudge's principal path to success lies in moving state funds toward pedestrian infrastructure, not merely litigation-driven compensation. A statutory framework clearly assigning duty-bearers (municipal corporations, town planning authorities) is essential for enforceability. Conclusion As the Court observed, walking is "the simplest of human activity, inextricably connected to life." Yet declaring a right is not the same as enforcing it — as the chequered record of the Street Vendors Act and Swachh Bharat mandates shows. If the state does not build footpaths, the citizen's newly-declared right will remain, in the Court's own words, meaningless. Prelims Pointers Right to walk on demarcated footpaths read into Article 21 (life and personal liberty) and Article 19(1)(a)/(b)/(c)/(d) (expression, assembly, association, movement). Article 19(1)(d) = freedom to move freely throughout India's territory — available only to citizens. Article 21 = right to life and personal liberty — available to any person, not just citizens. Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India (1978) = foundational case for the expansive interpretation of Article 21. Olga Tellis v. Bombay Municipal Corporation (1985) = read the right to livelihood (including pavement dwellers) into Article 21. Street Vendors Act, 2014 = protects vendors under Article 19(1)(g); requires town vending committees and zone demarcation. COTPA, 2003 = Cigarettes and Other Tobacco Products Act — curtailed public smoking via social messaging and fines. Practice Mains Question "Bail is the rule, jail is the exception" and now "walking is a fundamental right" — yet declared rights in India often fail at the implementation stage. Critically examine, with reference to the Supreme Court's recent ruling on the right to walk on footpaths, why rights-based judicial pronouncements often struggle to translate into ground-level change, drawing on comparable legislative experience. GS Paper 2  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Assertion (A): The Supreme Court has held that the right to walk on a demarcated footpath constitutes an enforceable duty on the part of municipal authorities wherever a road exists. Reason (R): Article 19(1)(d) of the Constitution extends the freedom of movement to all persons, whether citizens or non-citizens, residing in India. Which one of the following is correct in respect of the above two statements? (a)Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A. (b)Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A. (c)A is true, but R is false. (d)A is false, but R is true. Correct Answer: (c) Assertion (A) is correct — the Court explicitly held the duty to demarcate and maintain footpaths to be enforceable. Reason (R) is false — Article 19(1)(d), including the freedom of movement, is available only to citizens, not to all persons. (It is Article 21, not Article 19, that extends to "any person.") Hence A is true but R is false, and R does not explain A in any case. Article 05 Four Glacial Lakes in Arunachal Have Expanded in a Decade: Study GS Paper 1 — Geography (Himalayan Hydrology) | GS Paper 3 — Disaster Management | Environment and Ecology Why in News A satellite-based assessment of five glacial lakes in the Tawang district of Arunachal Pradesh has found that four have expanded over the last decade, with one lake showing rapid growth — adding fresh evidence to concerns over the threat posed by Glacial Lake Outburst Floods (GLOFs) in the eastern Himalaya. The study was conducted by Suhora Technologies, a Noida-based geospatial intelligence firm, and is a company report rather than a peer-reviewed study. What is a GLOF? A Glacial Lake Outburst Flood (GLOF) occurs when natural moraine dams — ridges of rock and debris deposited by glaciers — fail, or when large avalanches, landslides, or icefalls suddenly displace water and generate destructive waves. Lakes impounded by moraines can become hazardous as retreating glaciers increase the volume of water trapped behind them. Key Findings of the Suhora Study Lake 2016 / Earlier Extent Mid-2026 Extent Trend Sanhapo Lake 78.07 hectares (2019) 88.81 hectares Most significant growth — flagged highest priority for hazard modelling Two "very high risk" lakes — — Each expanded by about 1 hectare over the decade Dharkha Tso ("high risk") — — Gradual growth recorded Fifth lake — — Remained broadly stable over the observation period All five lakes are located in the Mago Chu basin, Tawang district, and are classified by the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) as "high-risk" or "very high-risk." Satellite sources used: ICEYE, PlanetScope, and LISS-IV; comparison window: 2016 to June 2026. Uncertainties remain about Sanhapo Lake's historical extent due to ice cover visible in its 2016 imagery, but it has shown sustained expansion in recent years. National Context — NDMA's GLOF Monitoring Programme The National GLOF Risk Mitigation Programme was expanded following the October 2023 South Lhonak Lake disaster in Sikkim, which breached and triggered floods that destroyed the 1,200 MW Teesta III (Chungthang) hydropower dam and killed dozens of people. NDMA currently monitors 189 high-risk glacial lakes nationally as part of this programme. Arunachal Pradesh alone has 27 high-risk glacial lakes identified across five districts: Tawang (6), Kurung Kumey (1), Shi Yomi (1), Dibang Valley (16), and Anjaw (3). Over 900 glacial lakes and water bodies are currently under satellite observation by the Central Water Commission. Expert Caveats "If lakes are expanding, then it is considered an unstable lake," said Anil Kulkarni, glaciologist at the Divecha Centre for Climate Change, IISc Bengaluru — but he stressed that "mere increase in area, even over a decade, cannot be a single criterion" for judging danger. Risk also depends on factors such as the possibility of landslides, avalanches, or rockfalls entering the lake. Suhora itself cautioned that "lake expansion does not directly indicate a flood event," and that the findings instead highlight the importance of regular monitoring and further assessment. Significance of Satellite Monitoring India's ability to identify potentially dangerous glacial lakes has improved considerably through satellite monitoring and modelling. However, translating scientific assessments into practical risk reduction (early warning systems, evacuation planning, downstream infrastructure safeguards) remains a major challenge. The assessment comes amid heightened attention on glacial hazards following a recent risk evaluation by the Centre for Earth Sciences and Himalayan Studies (CESHS), Arunachal Pradesh. Way Forward Priority Hazard Modelling: Sanhapo Lake, given its size and continued growth, should receive detailed hazard modelling, continuous monitoring, and possible early-warning systems. Integrated Risk Assessment: Combine satellite-derived area data with on-ground geomorphological assessment (moraine stability, avalanche/landslide proneness) rather than relying on area expansion alone. Scale the NDMA Programme: Expand ground-truthing capacity to match the 189-lake satellite monitoring programme, particularly in remote, high-altitude districts. Conclusion The Tawang findings reinforce a now-familiar pattern in Himalayan disaster preparedness: satellite technology has dramatically improved India's ability to see glacial hazards, but converting that visibility into actionable, on-the-ground risk reduction — especially in remote high-altitude terrain — remains the harder, unfinished task, as the 2023 South Lhonak tragedy in Sikkim starkly demonstrated. Prelims Pointers GLOF = Glacial Lake Outburst Flood; triggered by moraine dam failure, avalanches, landslides, or icefalls. Moraine = ridge of rock and debris deposited by a glacier; moraine-dammed lakes become hazardous as meltwater volume increases. South Lhonak Lake GLOF (Oct 2023, Sikkim) = destroyed the 1,200 MW Teesta III (Chungthang) hydropower project; killed dozens — the key reference disaster for India's current GLOF monitoring push. NDMA currently monitors 189 high-risk glacial lakes nationally; Arunachal Pradesh has 27 across 5 districts (Tawang, Kurung Kumey, Shi Yomi, Dibang Valley, Anjaw). Mago Chu basin = location in Tawang district, Arunachal Pradesh, site of the Suhora Technologies 2026 study. Lake area expansion is not by itself sufficient evidence of imminent GLOF risk — a key conceptual distinction. Central Water Commission currently observes over 900 glacial lakes/water bodies via satellite. Practice Mains Question "Satellite monitoring has outpaced ground-level risk mitigation in India's glacial lake management." Discuss this statement with reference to recent findings from Arunachal Pradesh and the lessons of the 2023 South Lhonak Lake disaster. GS Paper 1 / GS Paper 3  |  150 words  |  10 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Consider the following statements regarding Glacial Lake Outburst Floods (GLOFs) in India: 1. The National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) currently monitors 189 high-risk glacial lakes across the Indian Himalayan region. 2. The October 2023 South Lhonak Lake disaster in Sikkim led to the destruction of the Teesta III hydropower project. 3. According to glaciologists, an increase in a glacial lake's surface area over time is, by itself, a sufficient indicator of imminent outburst flood risk. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? (a)1 and 2 only (b)2 and 3 only (c)1 only (d)1, 2 and 3 Correct Answer: (a) Statements 1 and 2 are correct. Statement 3 is incorrect — glaciologists have explicitly cautioned that mere area expansion cannot be a single criterion for assessing GLOF risk; factors such as landslide, avalanche, and rockfall proneness must also be considered. Article 06 Three Indigenously Built Naval Ships Commissioned GS Paper 3 — Defence and Security | Indigenisation of Technology | Science and Technology Why in News The Indian Navy commissioned three indigenously built frontline platforms — Dunagiri, Sanshodhak, and Agray — in Kolkata, with the ceremony presided over by Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Separately, the Ministry of Defence signed a ₹425 crore contract with Bharat Forge Limited for 12 sets of indigenous marine gas turbine generators for the Navy's Kolkata-class ships. The Three New Platforms Platform Role Detail Dunagiri Advanced stealth frigate 5th Project 17A stealth frigate; equipped with BrahMos surface-to-surface missiles and medium-range surface-to-air missile system Sanshodhak Survey vessel (large) 4th survey vessel (large); designed for coastal & deep-water hydrographic surveys; equipped with autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) and remotely operated vehicles (ROVs) Agray Anti-submarine warfare (ASW) shallow water craft 4th of the Arnala-class; equipped with lightweight torpedoes, indigenous rocket launchers, and shallow-water sonar systems All three platforms were designed by the Indian Navy's Warship Design Bureau and constructed by Garden Reach Shipbuilders & Engineers (GRSE), Kolkata. Indigenous content exceeds 75%; construction involved more than 200 MSMEs, generating substantial direct and indirect employment. Together, the three platforms strengthen blue-water operations, maritime domain awareness, and coastal security against evolving threats. BrahMos BrahMos is a supersonic cruise missile developed by BrahMos Aerospace, a joint venture between India and Russia — among the weapons systems equipping the Dunagiri frigate. Gas Turbine Generator Contract Parameter Detail Contracting Party Bharat Forge Limited (BFL), Pune Value ₹425 crore (approx.) Quantity 12 sets of 1.25 MW marine gas turbine generators Application Onboard power generation for Kolkata-class guided-missile destroyers Indigenous Content At least 60% Execution Period 5 years Procurement Category Buy (Indian) under the Defence Acquisition Procedure 2020 (DAP-2020) Indian warships have used marine gas turbine generators imported from Russia since the 1980s; every warship typically combines 2–4 marine gas turbine and diesel generators for power. This contract marks BFL's entry into the marine gas turbine (GT) business and will deliver the first indigenous GT-based power plant to operate aboard Indian Naval ships. Over the last three years, the Navy has worked to indigenise gas turbine parts and the compressor with firms including BHEL and Bharat Forge, to reduce import dependence on spares. Strategic and Economic Significance Maritime Self-Reliance: Both developments enhance self-reliance in critical strategic technologies and bolster operational readiness through indigenous production and end-to-end life-cycle support. Atmanirbhar Bharat in Defence: Indigenous content above 75% (ships) and 60%+ (gas turbines) reflects deepening defence-industrial self-reliance. MSME Ecosystem: Participation of 200+ MSMEs in shipbuilding demonstrates the breadth of India's defence manufacturing base beyond large public-sector shipyards. Reducing Import Dependence: Replacing Russian-imported gas turbine generators (in use since the 1980s) with indigenous units reduces a long-standing supply-chain vulnerability. Conclusion The commissioning of Dunagiri, Sanshodhak, and Agray alongside the indigenous gas turbine generator contract together illustrate the Navy's "balanced approach to capability development" — strengthening blue-water operations, hydrographic surveying, and anti-submarine warfare, while simultaneously reducing reliance on imported propulsion technology that has persisted since the 1980s. Prelims Pointers Project 17A = stealth frigate class; Dunagiri is the 5th ship, built by GRSE, Kolkata. GRSE = Garden Reach Shipbuilders & Engineers, Kolkata — a Defence PSU shipyard. Arnala-class = anti-submarine warfare shallow water craft; Agray is the 4th ship of this class. BrahMos = supersonic cruise missile; India-Russia joint venture (BrahMos Aerospace). DAP 2020 = Defence Acquisition Procedure 2020; "Buy (Indian)" category prioritises domestic manufacturers. Kolkata-class = guided-missile destroyers of the Indian Navy — context for the new gas turbine generator contract. Marine gas turbine generators for Indian warships have historically been imported from Russia since the 1980s. Practice Mains Question "Indigenisation of naval platforms and propulsion systems is central to India's Atmanirbhar Bharat vision in defence." Discuss with reference to recent developments in indigenous shipbuilding and marine gas turbine technology. GS Paper 3  |  150 words  |  10 marks Prelims Practice MCQ With reference to the recently commissioned Indian naval platforms, which one of the following is correctly matched? (a)Dunagiri — Anti-submarine warfare shallow water craft of the Arnala-class (b)Sanshodhak — Survey vessel (large), equipped with autonomous underwater vehicles (c)Agray — Advanced stealth frigate of Project 17A, equipped with BrahMos missiles (d)Dunagiri — Survey vessel (large) for hydrographic and oceanographic data collection Correct Answer: (b) Sanshodhak is correctly matched — it is the 4th survey vessel (large), equipped with AUVs and ROVs for hydrographic and oceanographic data collection. Dunagiri is actually the Project 17A stealth frigate (with BrahMos), and Agray is the Arnala-class anti-submarine warfare craft — making options (a), (c), and (d) incorrect pairings. Article 07 Heatwaves Leading to Increased Ground-Level Ozone, Aggravating Health Risks: Study GS Paper 3 — Environment and Ecology | Science and Technology | Disaster Management (Climate-Health Nexus) Why in News A new study by Indian researchers has shown that heatwaves are not just a direct threat to human health — they also drive up concentrations of ground-level (surface) ozone that sharply aggravate mortality risks. In 2024 alone, more than 830 deaths in India could be attributed to increased ozone concentrations caused by extreme heat, according to the study, published in Clean Air, part of the Nature stable of journals. About the Study Title: "Heatwaves trigger severe surface ozone pollution in India: Regional Hotspots, Trends and Health Effects." Authors: Jayanarayanan Kuttippurath (IIT Kharagpur) and Parambat Sangeetha (Kerala University of Fisheries and Ocean Studies, Kochi). First-of-its-kind attempt to assess the health impacts of heatwave-driven surface ozone in India, based on 21 years of data. Stratospheric vs Ground-Level Ozone — A Key Distinction Type Location Effect Stratospheric ("good") ozone 15–50 km altitude (middle atmosphere) Naturally produced; absorbs harmful UV rays — acts as Earth's natural sunscreen Ground-level / tropospheric ("bad") ozone Near the Earth's surface Air pollutant; not directly emitted — a secondary pollutant formed from chemical reactions Ground-level ozone is formed by reactions between nitrogen oxides (NOx) and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in the presence of sunlight. Heat accelerates these reactions, which is why heatwaves sharply elevate ozone concentrations. Montreal Protocol — A Common Prelims Trap The Montreal Protocol (1987) addresses ozone-depleting substances such as CFCs and protects the stratospheric ozone layer. It is not the relevant framework for ground-level ozone pollution, which is a tropospheric air-quality issue governed instead by air pollution standards such as NAAQS. Key Findings Metric Figure Deaths attributable to heatwave-driven ozone (India, 2024) 830+ Safe ground-level ozone concentration ~30 parts per billion (ppb) Typical Indian background ozone level 50–55 ppb (especially NW India and the Gangetic plains) Duration of elevated ozone after a heatwave ends 3–4 days on average COPD deaths in India (2023) linked to ozone exposure ~234,000 (State of Global Air report, 2025) Health Impacts Ozone exposure affects the lungs and heart, and can lead to Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) and Ischemic Heart Disease (IHD), apart from cancer and diabetes. Summer months in India are usually a relief from particulate air pollution — but rising ozone concentrations during heatwaves now add a new, distinct health threat during this period. Climate Change Linkage "Under climate change scenarios... more and more regions are likely to have high concentrations of ozone. The frequency and severity of heatwaves is expected to rise, and so would the threat from ozone exposure," the study's lead author noted. Policy Gaps and Way Forward Monitoring Gap: Agencies like the India Meteorological Department (IMD) and the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) need to monitor ground-level ozone as actively as other parameters and include it in regular bulletins and alerts. NAAQS Integration: Ozone is already one of 12 pollutants notified under the National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS), monitored by CPCB — this existing framework should be leveraged for heatwave-linked ozone alerts. National Clean Air Programme (NCAP) Integration: Heatwave action plans and air quality management under NCAP (MoEFCC/CPCB) should be explicitly linked, given the demonstrated heat-ozone-health pathway. Conclusion The study reveals an underappreciated compounding effect of climate change: rising heatwave frequency does not just threaten health directly through heat stress, but indirectly through worsening air quality. Integrating ozone monitoring into India's heatwave and air-quality alert systems is now a public-health necessity, not merely a scientific recommendation. Prelims Pointers Ground-level (tropospheric) ozone = secondary pollutant; formed from NOx + VOCs in sunlight — NOT directly emitted. Stratospheric ozone (15–50 km altitude) = protective, absorbs UV radiation; governed by the Montreal Protocol (1987), which addresses ozone-depleting substances like CFCs. NAAQS = National Ambient Air Quality Standards; ozone is one of 12 notified pollutants, monitored by CPCB. Safe ground-level ozone threshold ≈ 30 ppb; Indian background levels often 50–55 ppb in NW India/Gangetic plains. COPD = Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease; IHD = Ischemic Heart Disease — both linked to ozone exposure. Elevated ozone from a heatwave persists for 3–4 days after the heatwave ends (based on 21 years of data). Clean Air = journal (part of the Nature group) in which the study was published. Practice Mains Question "Heatwaves are increasingly compounding India's air pollution burden through rising ground-level ozone." Examine the science behind this linkage and suggest policy measures to integrate ozone monitoring into India's climate and public health response systems. GS Paper 3  |  150 words  |  10 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Which one of the following statements about atmospheric ozone is correct? (a)Ground-level ozone is a primary pollutant directly emitted by vehicles and industries. (b)The Montreal Protocol (1987) was designed primarily to regulate ground-level ozone pollution caused by heatwaves. (c)Ground-level ozone is a secondary pollutant formed from reactions between nitrogen oxides and volatile organic compounds in the presence of sunlight. (d)Stratospheric ozone and ground-level ozone are regulated under the same international framework. Correct Answer: (c) Statement (c) is correct — ground-level ozone is a secondary pollutant, formed when NOx and VOCs react in sunlight; heat accelerates this reaction. Statement (a) is incorrect, as it is not directly emitted. Statement (b) is incorrect — the Montreal Protocol addresses ozone-depleting substances protecting the stratospheric layer, unrelated to ground-level pollution. Statement (d) is incorrect, as the two are governed by entirely different frameworks (Montreal Protocol vs domestic air-quality standards like NAAQS).