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Jul 6, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

Contents01 LokOS: A Digital Backbone for Rural Livelihoods Ministry of Rural Development · DAY-NRLM Digital Governance GS 2GS 3 02 Viksit UDAN: Next Phase of Regional Air Connectivity Ministry of Civil Aviation · Jodhpur New Terminal Building GS 3GS 2 Article 01 Article 01 LokOS: A Digital Backbone for Rural Livelihoods Ministry of Rural Development · DAY-NRLM Digital Governance Initiative Relevance: GS 2 (governance, e-governance, welfare schemes) · GS 3 (inclusive growth, financial inclusion, rural livelihoods). GS 2GS 3 Image: LokOS digital platform for Self-Help Group governance under DAY-NRLM. [Replace src with image URL] Key Data at a Glance 34States/UTs covered by LokOS (762 districts, 7,241 blocks) 94.16 lakhSelf-Help Groups (SHGs) digitised on the platform 10.03 crSHG members with Aadhaar- and bank-linked digital IDs ₹2 lakh crannual SHG financial transactions captured on LokOS 18.50 crDigital Aajeevika Registers (DARs) maintained 29 Jun 2026launch date of SHE-LEAPS women's enterprise platform Issue in Brief LokOS (Lok = People, OS = Operating System) is a web-and-mobile platform under DAY-NRLM for end-to-end digitisation of Self-Help Groups (SHGs) and their federations, covering records, savings, lending and convergence. SHE-LEAPS (Self-Help Entrepreneur-Livelihoods and Enterprise Application for Prosperity and Sustainability), launched 29 June 2026 under LokOS, is a dedicated platform for women-led farm and non-farm enterprise creation and tracking. Static Background DAY-NRLM was launched as Aajeevika – National Rural Livelihoods Mission (NRLM) by the Ministry of Rural Development in June 2011, restructuring the earlier Swarnjayanti Gram Swarozgar Yojana (SGSY), 1999, which had limited reach and weak financial linkages. NRLM adopted a demand-driven strategy (replacing SGSY's allocation-based model) and used Participatory Identification of Poor (PIP) instead of BPL lists to select beneficiaries. The mission was renamed Deendayal Antyodaya Yojana-NRLM (DAY-NRLM) in November 2015, honouring Pandit Deendayal Upadhyaya's Antyodaya philosophy of uplifting the poorest first; it is partly World Bank-supported. DAY-NRLM mobilises rural households — especially women — into a three-tier institutional architecture: SHGs → Village Organisations (VOs) → Cluster Level Federations (CLFs). Key Dimensions LokOS coverage: 34 States/UTs, 762 districts, 7,241 blocks, 2.57 lakh Gram Panchayats, 5.92 lakh villages — among the largest digital community-institution platforms globally. Institutions digitised: 34,314 CLFs, 5.62 lakh VOs, 94.16 lakh SHGs, and 10.03 crore SHG members, each assigned Aadhaar- and bank-linked digital IDs. Financial footprint: captures ₹2 lakh crore/year in SHG transactions; tracks ₹9,718.41 crore Revolving Fund, ₹64,607.66 crore Community Investment Fund, and ₹38.34 crore Community Enterprise Fund. Lakhpati Didi support: enables 6,611 Master Trainers, 4.09 lakh Community Resource Persons, and monitoring of 3.87 crore Potential Lakhpati Didis, backed by 18.50 crore Digital Aajeevika Registers (DARs). The web app serves administrators, e-bookkeepers and transaction approvers for institution creation/approval; the mobile app supports field-level recording of CBO activity. Critical Analysis — Strengths Digitisation of records and real-time tracking reduces manual bookkeeping errors, curbs leakages, and gives a data-driven, auditable trail for one of the world's largest SHG networks. Unique digital IDs and role-based administration improve traceability from village to national level, aiding convergence with other government schemes. Critical Analysis — Structural Questions Platform effectiveness depends on last-mile digital literacy and connectivity among SHG members, many of whom are first-generation digital users in remote areas. Scale (10+ crore members) raises data privacy and grievance-redressal questions that require robust safeguards, especially with Aadhaar-linked financial data. SHE-LEAPS, being newly launched, has no track record yet; enterprise viability will depend on market linkages, not digitisation alone. Way Forward Strengthen digital literacy training for SHG members and CRPs to ensure genuine usage, not just top-down data entry by administrators. Build strong data-protection protocols given the scale of Aadhaar- and bank-linked personal and financial data being centralised. Link SHE-LEAPS enterprises to market platforms (e-NAM, GeM, ONDC) so digitisation translates into real income gains for entrepreneurs. Prelims Pointers DAY-NRLM: launched 2011 as Aajeevika-NRLM; renamed DAY-NRLM in Nov 2015; restructured version of SGSY (1999); partly World Bank-funded. LokOS: digital platform for SHGs/CBOs under DAY-NRLM; covers savings, lending, repayments, livelihoods. SHE-LEAPS: launched 29 June 2026; women's enterprise platform under LokOS. Institutional tiers: SHG → Village Organisation (VO) → Cluster Level Federation (CLF). Lakhpati Didi: flagship initiative for household income above ₹1 lakh/year, tracked via LokOS. DAR: Digital Aajeevika Register — 18.50 crore maintained under LokOS. Practice Mains Question Digital platforms are transforming the governance of India's Self-Help Group ecosystem. Discuss the significance of LokOS under DAY-NRLM, and examine the challenges in ensuring its benefits reach the last-mile beneficiary. GS Paper 2 · 250 words · 15 marks Practice MCQ Q1. Consider the following statements regarding LokOS: (1) It is implemented under DAY-NRLM. (2) It digitises records only at the Cluster Level Federation level. (3) It generates Aadhaar- and bank-linked digital IDs for SHG members. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? A) 1 and 3 onlyB) 2 onlyC) 1, 2 and 3D) 2 and 3 only Article 02 Article 02 Viksit UDAN: Next Phase of Regional Air Connectivity Ministry of Civil Aviation · Modified UDAN Scheme & Jodhpur New Terminal Building Relevance: GS 3 (infrastructure, civil aviation, economy) · GS 2 (government policies and schemes for regional development). GS 3GS 2 Key Data at a Glance ₹29,000 crModified UDAN Scheme outlay over the next 10 years 100aerodromes to be developed from unserved airstrips (₹12,159 cr) 200modern helipads planned under the scheme (₹3,661 cr) ₹480 crcost of the Jodhpur New Terminal Building (AAI) 20 lakhannual passenger capacity of the new Jodhpur terminal 669routes operationalised under UDAN since 2016 (1.66 cr+ passengers) Issue in Brief The Prime Minister launched the next phase of UDAN ("Viksit UDAN") and inaugurated the New Terminal Building (NTB) at Jodhpur Airport, reaffirming the push for regional air connectivity infrastructure. The Union Cabinet approved the Modified UDAN Scheme on 25 March 2026 with an outlay of ~₹29,000 crore over 10 years, aligned with Viksit Bharat 2047. Static Background UDAN (Ude Desh ka Aam Nagrik) is the operational arm of the Regional Connectivity Scheme (RCS), a key component of the National Civil Aviation Policy (NCAP), 2016. Launched by the Ministry of Civil Aviation on 21 October 2016, its first flight ran Shimla–Delhi on 27 April 2017, embodying PM Modi's "Hawai Chappal se Hawai Jahaz" vision. UDAN uses Viability Gap Funding (VGF) — financed via the Regional Connectivity Fund, built from a levy on non-RCS flights — plus fare caps and tax concessions to make regional flying viable for airlines. Originally conceived with a 10-year (2016–2026) vision, the scheme has since been extended for another decade as the Modified UDAN Scheme, taking it toward 2036. Since 2016, UDAN has operationalised 669 routes and connected 95 airports/heliports/water aerodromes, benefiting over 1.66 crore passengers. Key Dimensions Modified UDAN allocations: ₹12,159 crore for developing 100 aerodromes from unserved airstrips; ₹2,577 crore for Operations & Maintenance support; ₹3,661 crore for 200 modern helipads; ₹10,043 crore as continued VGF. Atmanirbhar push: scheme promotes induction of indigenous aircraft/helicopters — including HAL Dhruv and Dornier platforms — for underserved and remote-region operations. Jodhpur New Terminal Building: built by the Airports Authority of India at ₹480 crore, spread over 23,342 sq. m, handling 1,500 passengers/peak hour and 20 lakh passengers/year (up from the old terminal's ~4 lakh/year capacity). Terminal features: 20 check-in counters, six aerobridges, apron for 11 A-321 + 1 ATR-72 aircraft, ~320-car parking, and a target 5-Star GRIHA rating for sustainability. Design draws on Marwar's royal Rajasthani architecture — arches and jharokhas — reflecting Jodhpur's identity as gateway to the Thar Desert. Critical Analysis — Strengths A 10-year scheme extension with near-₹29,000 crore outlay signals long-term commitment rather than a one-off scheme, giving airlines and airports planning certainty. Combining helipad expansion, indigenous aircraft induction, and O&M support addresses earlier UDAN criticisms of route discontinuation due to poor aftercare and infrastructure gaps. Critical Analysis — Structural Questions Past UDAN rounds saw route discontinuation from low demand and delayed VGF disbursal to airlines; whether the Modified Scheme resolves these structural issues remains to be seen. Reliance on indigenous aircraft (HAL Dhruv, Dornier) for remote operations depends on adequate manufacturing scale-up and maintenance ecosystems, which have historically lagged demand. Terminal upgrades address capacity, but sustained traffic growth needs matching last-mile surface connectivity to smaller cities like Jodhpur. Way Forward Ensure timely VGF disbursal and route-viability monitoring so airlines sustain operations beyond the initial subsidy period. Scale up domestic manufacturing and maintenance capacity for indigenous aircraft platforms to support remote-route expansion sustainably. Integrate new terminals like Jodhpur's with multi-modal connectivity (rail, road) to maximise tourism and trade benefits from expanded capacity. Prelims Pointers UDAN: launched 21 Oct 2016; part of NCAP 2016; first flight Shimla–Delhi, 27 Apr 2017. VGF: Viability Gap Funding, financed via the Regional Connectivity Fund (levy on non-RCS flights). Modified UDAN: Cabinet-approved 25 March 2026; ~₹29,000 crore over 10 years. Jodhpur NTB: built by AAI; ₹480 crore; target 5-Star GRIHA rating. Indigenous platforms promoted under Modified UDAN: HAL Dhruv, Dornier. UDAN tagline: "Ude Desh ka Aam Nagrik"; PM's vision — "Hawai Chappal se Hawai Jahaz." Practice Mains Question UDAN has been described as transforming regional air connectivity in India. Critically examine the achievements and persistent challenges of the scheme as it enters its modified, extended phase. GS Paper 3 · 250 words · 15 marks Practice MCQ Q2. (Assertion–Reasoning) Assertion (A): The Modified UDAN Scheme continues Viability Gap Funding for regional airline operations. Reason (R): VGF is financed through general Union Budget allocations rather than any sector-specific levy. 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

Jul 6, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

Contents01 The Right to Belong Beyond Official Documentation The Hindu Editorial · Citizenship, Constitution, Election Commission GS 2 — Polity & CitizenshipGS 1 — Migration & DemographyEssay — Rights vs Documentation 02 India Needs a Second Home for Asiatic Lions Richa Singh, EY India · Wildlife Conservation, Federalism, Project Lion GS 3 — Environment & Wildlife ConservationGS 2 — Federalism & GovernanceEssay — Conservation Security Editorial 01 of 02 Article 01 The Right to Belong Beyond Official Documentation The Hindu · Editorial Relevance: GS 2 (Indian Constitution, citizenship provisions, judiciary, Election Commission), GS 1 (migration and demographic change) and Essay (personhood, rights vs documentation) — built around the MEA's clarification that a passport is a "travel document," not a "citizenship document." GS 2 — Polity & CitizenshipGS 1 — Migration & DemographyEssay — Rights vs Documentation 1 — Issue in Brief On 24 June 2026, at a briefing marking the 14th Passport Seva Divas, the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) stated that the Indian passport is a "travel document," not a "citizenship document." The statement drew sharp political reaction, since it left open the question of which document, if not the passport, proves citizenship. The clarification arrives amid the Election Commission's Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls across States, a Supreme Court verdict upholding SIR in Bihar, an earlier verdict on the Assam Accord's Section 6A, and the 2024 operationalisation of the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2019, which for the first time links naturalisation to religion. The author's central argument: across these developments, the burden of establishing citizenship has progressively shifted from the state to the individual, with successive identity documents — Aadhaar, voter ID, and now the passport — each in turn being described as insufficient proof. Core thesis: citizenship and the rights flowing from it should rest on personhood and the Constitution's foundational commitments — equality, secularism, non-discrimination — rather than on documentary sufficiency alone. 2 — Static Background Part II of the Constitution (Articles 5–11) deals with citizenship at the commencement of the Constitution. Article 11 confers on Parliament a broad power to legislate on "the acquisition and termination of citizenship and all other matters relating to citizenship." The Citizenship Act, 1955 originally reflected a jus soli (place-of-birth) principle of citizenship. Section 6A, inserted in 1985 to implement the Assam Accord (signed 15 August 1985), created a differentiated framework specific to Assam: entrants before 1 January 1966 received full citizenship; those between 1966 and 25 March 1971 received citizenship with a 10-year voting restriction; those after 25 March 1971 were treated as illegal migrants. A 2003 amendment to the Citizenship Act moved further from pure jus soli, denying citizenship to a person born in India if either parent was, at the time of birth, an "illegal migrant." The Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2019 (CAA) was assented on 12 December 2019 and brought into force 10 January 2020, but its implementing rules were notified only on 11 March 2024; the first citizenship certificates were issued on 15 May 2024. It offers an accelerated citizenship pathway to Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, Jains, Parsis and Christians from Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan who entered India by a specified cut-off date (originally 31 December 2014; extended to 31 December 2024 by a September 2025 notification). In Sarbananda Sonowal v. Union of India (2005) 5 SCC 665, the Supreme Court struck down the Illegal Migrants (Determination by Tribunals) Act, 1983 and held that large-scale illegal migration into Assam constituted "external aggression" under Article 355, obliging the Union to act. In In Re: Section 6A of the Citizenship Act (17 October 2024), a five-judge Constitution Bench upheld Section 6A's validity by a 4:1 majority (Justice Pardiwala dissenting), reading Parliament's Article 11 power broadly. In Association for Democratic Reforms v. Election Commission of India (27 May 2026), the Supreme Court upheld the ECI's Bihar SIR, holding that the ECI may conduct a "limited" citizenship inquiry for electoral-roll accuracy — distinct from final citizenship adjudication — and directed that persons excluded on citizenship-doubt grounds be referred to the "competent authority" under the Citizenship Act for time-bound resolution. In the Constituent Assembly (August 1949), member P.S. Deshmukh moved an amendment to grant automatic citizenship to all Hindus and Sikhs regardless of residence. It was opposed by Jawaharlal Nehru and Alladi Krishnaswami Ayyar, the latter noting that distinctions among persons could be drawn on grounds such as domicile, but never on "racial or religious" grounds. The amendment was rejected, and B.R. Ambedkar's religion-neutral clause was adopted (now Article 5). Under Passports Act, 1967, Section 20, the Central Government may issue a passport or travel document to a non-citizen only where it considers this "necessary in the public interest" — an exceptional, not routine, provision. Hannah Arendt's formulation, invoked by the author: citizenship represents "the right to have rights." 3 — Key Dimensions Shifting evidentiary burden: electoral-roll inclusion previously created a presumption of citizenship; recent processes place a greater onus on the individual to affirmatively demonstrate it. Sequential document insufficiency: Aadhaar (residence proof), voter ID (registration proof) and now the passport (travel proof) have each been publicly described as inadequate standalone proof of citizenship. The "doubtful" category: drawing on Assam's experience with foreigners' tribunals, the author highlights the risk of an intermediate administrative status — neither confirmed citizen nor adjudicated foreigner — with rights held in abeyance. Interpretive trajectory of Article 11: judicial reasoning has moved from a possible implied-limitation reading (constrained by secularism/equality) toward a broader reading of Parliament's plenary citizenship power, as reflected in the 2024 Section 6A ruling. Personhood-based vs. citizenship-based rights: Articles 14 and 21 extend to "any person"; Article 19's freedoms and the statutory right to vote are contingent on citizenship — making the citizenship determination consequential well beyond electoral participation. Institutional convergence: SIR, the Section 6A verdict, and the CAA's religion-linked criterion are together read by the author as forming one broader pattern in how citizenship eligibility is currently being examined. 4 — Critical Analysis In favour — Personhood as the safer anchor: Grounding basic entitlements in Articles 14 and 21 reduces the risk of erroneous or arbitrary exclusion where documentary records are incomplete, a real possibility among migrants and economically disadvantaged groups. In favour — Constituent Assembly precedent supports religious neutrality: The rejection of the Deshmukh amendment and adoption of Ambedkar's neutral clause represents documented founding-era consensus against religion as a citizenship criterion. In favour — Statutory weight of the passport: Since Section 20 of the Passports Act restricts non-citizen issuance to exceptional cases, characterising the passport as merely a travel document may understate its evidentiary significance for the ordinary applicant. In favour — Judicial safeguards exist but require follow-through: The referral mechanism to a "competent authority," with time-bound resolution before the next elections, reflects the Supreme Court's own recognition of the disenfranchisement risk. Against — The MEA's distinction may be technically accurate: The Passports Act is primarily a travel-and-identity statute; the Citizenship Act remains the substantive law for citizenship determination, so the clarification can be read as a legal statement rather than a rights-restricting one. Against — SIR serves a recognised administrative function: The Supreme Court characterised the ECI's role as a "principled" distinction between roll administration and final adjudication — periodic verification of electoral rolls is an established state function. Against — Article 11's text supports a wide reading: The 2024 Section 6A judgment's expansive interpretation of Parliament's power is a legitimate textual reading, even if contested by critics. Against — Administrative caution has a documented rationale: The Supreme Court's own recognition of illegal migration concerns in specific States (as in Sonowal) provides a non-arbitrary basis for institutional verification measures. 5 — Way Forward Citizenship-determination frameworks should be tested against the Constitution's core commitments — equality, secularism and non-discrimination — rather than resting solely on documentary completeness (the author's normative position). Clarity from the state on which document(s) constitute conclusive proof of citizenship would reduce public uncertainty. Time-bound safeguards directed by the Supreme Court for citizenship-referral cases require consistent operational implementation to prevent prolonged administrative limbo. Continued judicial scrutiny of Article 11's exercise, consistent with the Constituent Assembly's original intent on religious neutrality, remains relevant to future citizenship legislation. 6 — Data & Key Facts Art. 11Parliament's plenary power over citizenship (Part II, Articles 5–11) 1985Year Section 6A was inserted into the Citizenship Act via the Assam Accord 4:1Majority by which the SC upheld Section 6A of the Citizenship Act (17 Oct 2024) 11 Mar 2024Date CAA, 2019 rules were notified — over 4 years after the Act took force 27 May 2026SC verdict upholding the Bihar SIR (ADR v. Election Commission of India) Sec. 20Passports Act, 1967 provision on issuing a passport to a non-citizen Section 6A, Citizenship Act, 1955: differentiates Assam migrants by entry date (before 1966 / 1966–1971 / after 1971), each carrying distinct citizenship and voting consequences. Passports Act, 1967, Section 20: permits passport issuance to a non-citizen only where the Central Government considers it "necessary...in the public interest" — an exception, not the general rule. 7 — Prelims Pointers Part II (Articles 5–11) — citizenship provisions of the Constitution Article 11 — residuary parliamentary power over citizenship Article 355 — Union's duty to protect States from external aggression/internal disturbance Section 6A, Citizenship Act, 1955 — special provision for Assam, introduced via the 1985 Assam Accord CAA, 2019 — accelerated citizenship pathway for 6 specified religious communities from 3 countries Passports Act, 1967, Section 20 — governs passport issuance to non-citizens Exam note: Do not confuse SIR with a citizenship determination — the Supreme Court held ECI's inquiry is "limited" to electoral-roll purposes, with final adjudication resting with the "competent authority" under the Citizenship Act. Also recall: Section 6A was upheld by the SC in 2024, not struck down. 8 — Practice Mains Question "Citizenship in a constitutional democracy must rest on personhood rather than on the completeness of one's documentation." Critically examine this statement with reference to recent developments concerning electoral roll revision and the interpretation of Article 11.GS 2 · 15 marks · ~250 words · Polity & Rights Intro: Set out the MEA's passport clarification against the backdrop of SIR, the Section 6A verdict, and the CAA. Body 1: Constitutional basis for personhood-based rights (Articles 14, 21) vs. citizenship-contingent rights (Article 19, franchise); Constituent Assembly's rejection of religious criteria for citizenship. Body 2: Counter-considerations — Parliament's wide Article 11 power, ECI's legitimate verification interest, and the practical necessity of administrative checks. Conclusion: A citizenship framework should balance administrative integrity with constitutional guarantees of equal dignity. 9 — Practice MCQ Consider the following statements regarding Section 6A of the Citizenship Act, 1955: 1. It was inserted in 1985 to give effect to the Assam Accord. 2. The Supreme Court declared it unconstitutional in 2024. 3. It prescribes differentiated citizenship consequences based on a migrant's date of entry into Assam. 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 Editorial 02 of 02 Article 02 India Needs a Second Home for Asiatic Lions Richa Singh · Senior Consultant, EY India · The Hindu Relevance: GS 3 (biodiversity conservation, protected areas, species reintroduction), GS 2 (Centre-State cooperation on wildlife governance) and Essay (numbers vs resilience in conservation) — built around the unimplemented 2013 Supreme Court direction to establish a second, geographically distinct Asiatic lion population. GS 3 — Environment & Wildlife ConservationGS 2 — Federalism & GovernanceEssay — Conservation Security 1 — Issue in Brief The Asiatic lion's population recovery — from a few dozen individuals in the early 20th century to 891 in the 2025 census — is widely regarded as a major conservation success. However, the entire wild population remains concentrated in one geographic landscape (Gir, Gujarat), leaving it exposed to a single catastrophic event such as an epidemic, fire, or natural disaster. The Supreme Court, in 2013, directed translocation of some lions to Kuno National Park, Madhya Pradesh, to establish a second, geographically distinct population. This direction remains unimplemented over a decade later. The author frames the core policy gap as the transition from "conservation success" to "conservation security," via a metapopulation approach — distributing a species across multiple habitats to reduce extinction risk. 2 — Static Background Population trend: approximately 20 lions (1930s) → 327 (2001) → 359 (2005) → 411 (2010) → 523 (2015) → 674 (2020) → 891 (2025) — a 32.2% rise over five years, per the 16th Asiatic Lion Census. 2025 census distribution: 394 lions within Gir's core protected area; 507 across nine satellite populations, including Barda Wildlife Sanctuary (17 lions — its first recorded natural lion presence since 1879). Range expanded from approximately 30,000 sq km (2020) to 35,000 sq km (2025). IUCN Red List status: upgraded from "Critically Endangered" to "Endangered" in 2008. The Supreme Court judgment of 15 April 2013 directed translocation of Asiatic lions from Gir to Kuno within six months, and simultaneously quashed the Ministry of Environment and Forests' plan to introduce African cheetahs into Kuno ahead of lions, prioritising lion translocation. Kuno's preparation: upgraded to National Park status (December 2018); approximately 24 villages (around 5,000 residents) were relocated between 1996 and 2003, freeing roughly 345 sq km of habitat — yet no lion has been moved there to date. 2018 Canine Distemper Virus (CDV) outbreak: a peer-reviewed investigation recorded 28 lion deaths over roughly two weeks in September 2018 in Gir Wildlife Sanctuary, with additional lions and leopards found infected — documented evidence of single-site disease vulnerability. Project Cheetah's arrival: the Supreme Court permitted introduction of African cheetahs to India, including Kuno, in January 2020; cheetahs arrived in September 2022 (Namibia) and February 2023 (South Africa). In March 2023, the Centre informed the Supreme Court it was re-examining the Gir-Kuno lion translocation, citing inter-species competition risk. Project Lion: announced in 2020; a ₹2,900 crore, 25-year roadmap was approved in March 2025, currently emphasising "assisted natural dispersal" within Saurashtra by 2047, rather than inter-State translocation. State funding for lion protection: ₹91.03 crore (2021-22), ₹129.16 crore (2022-23), ₹155.53 crore (2023-24), per data placed before the Rajya Sabha (February 2025). 3 — Key Dimensions Metapopulation principle: conservation science holds that spreading a species across multiple, sufficiently distant sites lowers extinction risk from any single epidemic, fire, or disaster. Empirical validation of risk: the 2018 CDV outbreak provides documented, not merely hypothetical, evidence of single-site vulnerability. Genetic bottleneck: low genetic diversity, owing to descent from a small founder population, compounds disease susceptibility. The Kuno complication: the site originally identified as the ideal second home now hosts Project Cheetah, introducing a genuine ecological trade-off absent at the time of the 2013 judgment. Natural dispersal vs. genuine risk diversification: growth of in-State satellite populations (Barda, Mitiyala) reflects conservation success, but their proximity to Gir limits their value as true risk-diversification sites. Federal dimension: wildlife falls under the Concurrent List; despite the Supreme Court describing the lion as "national heritage," implementation has remained contingent on Gujarat's cooperation. Rising human-lion conflict: with a majority of lions now outside protected areas, conflict incidents involving livestock and infrastructure hazards have increased alongside population growth. 4 — Critical Analysis In favour — Scientific consensus is consistent: Wildlife Institute of India studies since the 1980s and the 2013 Supreme Court judgment both identify single-site concentration as a structural vulnerability regardless of population size. In favour — Direct empirical evidence exists: the 2018 CDV outbreak demonstrates the precise catastrophic-risk scenario long warned against by conservationists. In favour — Judicial and constitutional basis is already established: the Supreme Court has adjudicated this matter and characterised the lion as a national, not State-specific, asset — implementation, not fresh deliberation, remains the outstanding task. In favour — Geographic distance matters functionally: a genuinely distant site (such as Kuno) would diversify risk in a way in-State satellite growth structurally cannot. Against — In-situ conservation has been demonstrably effective: an expanding, range-diversifying population with nine satellite pockets indicates Gujarat's existing model has produced measurable results. Against — Kuno's changed ecological context is a legitimate concern: introducing lions where cheetahs are still establishing themselves risks inter-species competition, a genuine technical objection rather than a purely political one. Against — Translocation entails real costs and risks: capture, transport and habituation stress for the animals, alongside financial costs, are substantive considerations. Against — Federal cooperation cannot be judicially compelled indefinitely: absent Gujarat's willing participation, continued judicial pressure risks straining Centre-State conservation partnerships more broadly. 5 — Way Forward Expedite the Centre's stated re-examination of the Gir-Kuno translocation, incorporating updated ecological assessments in light of Project Cheetah's presence (the author's implicit recommendation). Evaluate alternative, genuinely distant sites identified in Project Lion's original 2020 site-assessment exercise that are free of competing large-carnivore programmes. Distinguish policy communication between "satellite/dispersal populations" and a true "second, distant population," to avoid conflating the two as equivalent solutions. Strengthen disease surveillance and health-monitoring infrastructure under Project Lion, independent of the translocation timeline, given the 2018 CDV precedent. Develop cooperative-federalism mechanisms — incentives, joint management frameworks — to align State and national conservation objectives. 6 — Data & Key Facts 891Asiatic lion population, 2025 census (up from 674 in 2020; 32.2% rise) 394 / 507Lions within Gir's core area / across nine satellite populations (2025) 15 Apr 2013SC judgment directing translocation to Kuno within six months 28Lion deaths recorded over ~2 weeks in the September 2018 CDV outbreak ₹2,900 CrProject Lion's approved 25-year budget (March 2025) 35,000 km²Lion range in 2025 (up from ~30,000 sq km in 2020) 2013 Supreme Court judgment: directed lion translocation from Gir to Kuno within six months and quashed the plan to introduce African cheetahs into Kuno ahead of lions. Barda Wildlife Sanctuary: recorded 17 lions in the 2025 census — the first natural lion presence there since 1879, though still within Gujarat and close to Gir. 7 — Prelims Pointers Asiatic lion (Panthera leo persica) — IUCN status upgraded to Endangered in 2008 Gir National Park — Gujarat; sole natural habitat of wild Asiatic lions globally Kuno National Park — Sheopur district, Madhya Pradesh; originally identified for lion translocation, now hosts Project Cheetah Project Lion — launched 2020; ₹2,900 crore roadmap approved March 2025 Project Cheetah — African cheetahs introduced at Kuno (Sept 2022, Namibia; Feb 2023, South Africa) Canine Distemper Virus (CDV) — caused the 2018 mass mortality event in Gir Exam note: Do not confuse "satellite/natural dispersal populations" (Barda, Mitiyala — still within Gujarat) with the "second, distant population" originally envisioned at Kuno by the 2013 Supreme Court judgment. Also recall: the 2013 judgment quashed the cheetah-first plan for Kuno; it did not approve it. 8 — Practice Mains Question "A thriving wildlife population that remains geographically concentrated is a conservation paradox." Examine this statement with reference to the Asiatic lion and the case for a second, distant population.GS 3 · 15 marks · ~250 words · Environment & Biodiversity Intro: Note the population growth (674 to 891) alongside its single-site concentration in Gir. Body 1: Scientific and judicial basis for translocation — WII findings, the 2013 judgment, and the 2018 CDV outbreak as evidence. Body 2: Counter-considerations — Project Cheetah's presence at Kuno, Gujarat's in-situ conservation record, federal dynamics. Conclusion: Genuine risk diversification, not population growth alone, is required for long-term species security. 9 — Practice MCQ With reference to the Asiatic lion, consider the following statements: 1. Its entire wild population is confined to Gujarat's Gir landscape and its satellite areas. 2. The Supreme Court's 2013 judgment approved introducing African cheetahs into Kuno National Park ahead of Asiatic lion translocation. 3. The 2018 Canine Distemper Virus outbreak in Gir resulted in several dozen lion deaths. 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

Jul 6, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Contents 06 July 2026 India’s Essential Medicine List Lags WHO Benchmark — NLEM Unrevised in Four YearsGS2 Why Tanks Still Matter in Modern WarfareGS3 EC Can Hold Bypolls Any Time Within Six Months of a VacancyGS2 Assam Releases Booklet on Bodoland Forests’ Butterfly DiversityGS1 Why Are There Concerns Over WhatsApp Usernames?GS2 The Real Crisis in India’s FisheriesGS3 Syama Prasad Mookerjee Remembered on His 125th Birth AnniversaryGS1 Climate Change and the Decline of Milk Production in the Gangetic PlainsGS3 AI Is Reshaping Warfare — How India Can Keep PaceGS3 Himalayan Pangolin Confirmed as a Distinct SpeciesGS3 Article 01 India’s Essential Medicine List Lags WHO Benchmark — NLEM Unrevised in Four Years GS Paper 2 — Health | Governance Why in News The Working Group on Access to Medicines and Treatments — a civil society collective of patient advocates, academics, lawyers and journalists — has written to the Union government demanding an urgent revision of the National List of Essential Medicines (NLEM), which has not been updated since 2022, even as the WHO Model List of Essential Medicines has been revised twice in the same period (2023 and 2025). Static Background NLEM is a curated list of medicines compiled by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare that prioritises drugs meeting the critical healthcare needs of India’s population; medicines on it are dispensed free at government hospitals. The government uses the NLEM to direct the National Pharmaceutical Pricing Authority (NPPA) to enforce a price ceiling on listed drugs under the Drug Price Control Order (DPCO), 2013. The WHO Model List of Essential Medicines was first published in 1977 and is revised biennially by an independent expert committee; it currently contains 523 medicines after its 2023 and 2025 revisions. India’s NLEM currently lists 384 medicines, and was last overhauled in 2022 (previous revisions in 2003, 2011 and 2015). Key Concerns Raised Cancer care gap: 17 active cancer-treating agents and 4 supportive cancer-care medicines that feature on the WHO list are missing from the NLEM. Monoclonal antibodies: None of nine monoclonal antibodies — targeted biologic drugs increasingly central to modern cancer treatment — currently appear on India’s list. The Working Group has urged a “transparent, time-bound, and conflict of interest-free” revision process, linking timely access to essential medicines with the constitutional guarantee of the Right to Life (Article 21). A four-year gap between NLEM revisions — against two WHO revisions in the same window — risks leaving high-burden disease categories such as cancer and diabetes without price-controlled access to newer therapeutic classes. Institutionalising a fixed, evidence-based revision cycle for the NLEM would align domestic drug-pricing policy more closely with global clinical practice. Prelims Pointers NLEM = list of essential medicines compiled by the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare; currently 384 medicines; last revised 2022. NPPA = National Pharmaceutical Pricing Authority; enforces price ceilings on NLEM drugs under the DPCO, 2013. WHO Model List of Essential Medicines = first published 1977; revised biennially; currently has 523 medicines (as of the 2025 revision). Monoclonal antibodies = lab-engineered antibodies designed to bind a specific target (e.g., a cancer cell marker); a class of biologic, targeted cancer therapy — distinct from conventional chemotherapy. Flag: this is a civil-society demand, not yet an enacted or announced government revision. Practice Mains Question “Periodic revision of the National List of Essential Medicines is central to affordable healthcare access in India.” Discuss the significance of the NLEM, the mechanism by which it controls drug prices, and the concerns raised over its delayed revision relative to the WHO Model List of Essential Medicines. GS Paper 2  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Which of the following statements regarding the National List of Essential Medicines (NLEM) is correct? (a)The NLEM is compiled by the National Pharmaceutical Pricing Authority. (b)The NLEM currently contains more medicines than the WHO Model List of Essential Medicines. (c)The NLEM was last revised in 2022, while the WHO Model List has since been revised twice. (d)Medicines on the NLEM are exempt from all forms of price regulation. Correct Answer: (c) The NLEM is compiled by the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare, not the NPPA (the NPPA only enforces the resulting price ceiling), ruling out (a). India’s NLEM has 384 medicines against the WHO Model List’s 523, ruling out (b). NLEM medicines are precisely the ones subject to NPPA price ceilings under the DPCO 2013, ruling out (d). Statement (c) correctly reflects the revision timeline gap flagged in the news. Article 02 Why Tanks Still Matter in Modern Warfare GS Paper 3 — Defence & Security | Science and Technology Why in News With drones, precision-guided missiles and AI-enabled surveillance transforming modern battlefields, military experts are debating whether tanks remain relevant. The debate has sharpened as India develops the indigenous Zorawar light tank for high-altitude operations along the Line of Actual Control (LAC), and as Prime Minister Narendra Modi reviewed the platform at Larsen & Toubro’s Hazira facility in Gujarat in June 2026. Static Background Tanks dominated land warfare from the Second World War through the end of the Cold War; their battlefield primacy has since been challenged by anti-tank missiles, drones and precision-guided munitions. India’s current armoured fleet is anchored by the T-72 Ajeya (approximately 2,400–2,500 tanks, many over four decades old) and the more capable T-90S Bhishma (over 1,200 tanks), which forms the backbone of the armoured corps. India faces a dual strategic requirement: conventional armoured warfare against Pakistan in the plains and deserts of the western theatre, and high-altitude operations against China along the LAC in the northern theatre — a terrain most Western militaries do not need to plan for. The Zorawar Programme Jointly developed by the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) and L&T Defence, the Zorawar is a 25-tonne, air-transportable light tank designed specifically for rapid deployment in high-altitude regions with narrow valleys, weak bridges and steep gradients. The Army plans to induct 354 Zorawar tanks under a programme estimated to cost around ₹17,500 crore, with induction expected between 2028 and 2029. It is designed to counter China’s deployment of Type-15 light tanks along the LAC and to narrow the operational gap in mountainous terrain. Key Arguments in the Debate Critics’ view: The Russia-Ukraine war has shown low-cost drones destroying multi-million-dollar armoured vehicles within seconds; a 35-km stretch of the front, nicknamed the “death zone,” has seen tanks and artillery pushed back by drone saturation. Supporters’ view: Air strikes and missiles can inflict damage but cannot occupy or hold territory; ultimately, enforcing surrender and establishing political control requires ground forces, of which tanks remain a critical component in a combined-arms operation involving infantry, artillery, air defence, electronic warfare and drones. At high altitudes, thin air reduces tank engine power and increases fuel consumption, while recovering disabled vehicles is extremely difficult — issues the Zorawar programme is addressing through design refinements and integrated anti-drone and active protection systems. Tanks are no longer the undisputed king of the battlefield, but military planners argue they remain the only platform that can physically seize, occupy and hold ground — the ultimate requirement for converting tactical gains into strategic control. India’s twin-track approach of upgrading legacy T-72/T-90 fleets while fielding a purpose-built light tank for the Himalayas reflects this continuing, if evolving, role. Prelims Pointers Zorawar = indigenous 25-tonne air-transportable light tank; DRDO & L&T; 354 units planned; cost ~₹17,500 crore; induction 2028–29; built for LAC high-altitude terrain. T-72 Ajeya = India’s largest tank fleet (~2,400–2,500 units, many over 40 years old); T-90S Bhishma = more capable, 1,200+ units, backbone of the armoured corps. LAC (Line of Actual Control, India-China) is distinct from the LoC (Line of Control, India-Pakistan in Jammu & Kashmir). Recent development: Gen. Dhiraj Seth took over as the 31st Chief of the Army Staff on 30 June 2026, succeeding Gen. Upendra Dwivedi; Lt Gen NS Raja Subramani has been named Chief of Defence Staff, succeeding Gen. Anil Chauhan. Practice Mains Question Drones and precision-guided munitions have transformed the modern battlefield, yet armies continue to invest in armoured platforms. Critically examine the continuing relevance of tanks in contemporary warfare with reference to India’s strategic requirements along the LAC and the western front. GS Paper 3  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Assertion (A): India is developing the Zorawar light tank specifically for deployment along the Line of Actual Control. Reason (R): Conventional main battle tanks such as the T-90S Bhishma suffer a significant loss of engine power and mobility at high altitudes due to thin air. Which one of the following is correct? (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: (a) Both statements are factually accurate as per the source: the Zorawar is purpose-built for LAC high-altitude terrain (A), and the reason given — thin air degrading engine performance and mobility for conventional tanks at altitude — is precisely the operational gap the Zorawar programme was conceived to close, making R the correct explanation of A. Article 03 EC Can Hold Bypolls Any Time Within Six Months After a Vacancy, Say Experts GS Paper 2 — Polity | Constitutional Bodies Why in News The Election Commission announced byelections to only three Assembly seats — in Bihar, Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat — even as at least 14 Assembly seats and six Parliamentary seats (three each in the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha) remain vacant across the country, reviving debate over the EC’s discretion in timing bypolls. Static Background The Election Commission of India derives its authority from Article 324 of the Constitution and currently comprises CEC Gyanesh Kumar along with Election Commissioners Sukhbir Singh Sandhu and Vivek Joshi. The Representation of the People Act (RPA), 1951 mandates that a bypoll be held within six months of a seat falling vacant, but leaves the EC discretion over exactly when within that window to conduct it. The RPA Act carves out two express exceptions to the six-month rule: (i) where the remainder of the term is less than one year, or (ii) where the EC, in consultation with the Union government, certifies that holding the bypoll within the period is difficult. A third exception has been recognised through judicial interpretation — where a pending election petition concerning that very vacant seat is before a court, the EC may await the outcome before scheduling a bypoll, since the court could ultimately declare another candidate duly elected. Contrasting Cases Cited Case Nature of Delay/Speed Reason Datia (Madhya Pradesh) Bypoll scheduled only in Feb 2025 Awaited withdrawal of a pending election petition in the Allahabad High Court Milkipur (Uttar Pradesh) Delay criticised by Opposition Seat vacated after Samajwadi Party’s Awadesh Prasad was elected to the Lok Sabha Concerns Opposition parties have repeatedly alleged both undue “hurry” and undue “delay” in the EC’s bypoll announcements, depending on the seat in question. Courts have generally shown deference to the EC’s scheduling decisions, and will not interfere with a bypoll timeline unless a specific stay is granted by a court in a pending case. The EC’s wide discretion within the six-month window is legally well-settled and judicially respected, but the inconsistency in perceived timing across seats continues to fuel political friction — underlining the need for the EC to communicate the specific exception (if any) being invoked whenever a bypoll is delayed beyond the norm. Prelims Pointers Article 324 = constitutional basis for the Election Commission’s superintendence, direction and control of elections. RPA, 1951 = mandates bypolls within 6 months of a vacancy; three recognised exceptions — remaining term <1 year, EC-Centre certification of difficulty, and a pending election petition on that seat. Election petition = a legal challenge to the validity of an election result, filed before a High Court. Current ECI composition: CEC Gyanesh Kumar; ECs Sukhbir Singh Sandhu and Vivek Joshi. Practice Mains Question Examine the statutory and judicially-evolved framework governing the timing of byelections in India. Discuss why courts have generally deferred to the Election Commission’s discretion in this regard. GS Paper 2  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Match List-I (Circumstance) with List-II (Consequence for EC bypoll scheduling) and select the correct answer using the codes given below: List-I A. Remainder of term is less than one year B. EC-Centre jointly certify difficulty in holding the poll C. A pending election petition concerns the very seat List-II 1. EC may await the court’s verdict before scheduling a bypoll 2. Bypoll need not be held under the RPA, 1951, six-month mandate 3. Bypoll can be deferred beyond six months by joint certification (a)A-2, B-1, C-3 (b)A-2, B-3, C-1 (c)A-1, B-2, C-3 (d)A-3, B-2, C-1 Correct Answer: (b) A seat with a remaining term of less than one year is exempt from the six-month bypoll mandate altogether (A-2). Joint EC-Centre certification of difficulty allows deferral beyond six months (B-3). A pending election petition on the very seat lets the EC await the court’s decision before scheduling (C-1). Article 04 Assam Releases Booklet Showcasing Bodoland Forests’ Butterfly Diversity GS Paper 1 — Art & Culture | GS Paper 3 — Biodiversity & Conservation Lime butterfly found in the Bodoland Territorial Region of Northeast India. Why in News The Assam Forest Department released a special booklet on the butterflies of the Bodoland Territorial Region (BTR), unveiled by Hagrama Mohilary, Chief Executive Member (CEM) of the Bodoland Territorial Council (BTC), in Kokrajhar. Static Background The BTC is an autonomous council under the Sixth Schedule of the Constitution, governing the Bodoland Territorial Region across five districts — Kokrajhar, Chirang, Baksa, Udalguri and Tamulpur — established following the 2003 Bodo Peace Accord and upgraded to a “Region” under the 2020 accord. Spread across 3,653 sq. km, the Bodoland forest landscape sits at the confluence of the Indo-Malayan and Indo-Gangetic biogeographic zones, comprising tropical evergreen, semi-evergreen, moist mixed-deciduous forests and alluvial grasslands. The landscape supports 346 of Assam’s 620 recorded butterfly species, making BTR one of the richest butterfly habitats in Northeast India, and the region’s only ecological corridor where Eastern Himalayan, Indo-Malayan and Indo-Gangetic butterfly species occur together. Notable Species Recorded Endemic/rare: yellow-crested spangle (Papilio elephenor), Swinhoe’s flat (Celaenorrhinus zea). Eastern Himalayan species: great windmill (Byasa dasarada), Moore’s cupid (Shijimia moorei), Mussoorie bush bob (Pedesta masuriensis), green awlet (Burara vasutana). Indo-Malayan species: the witch (Araotes lapithis). Rarely found elsewhere in the Northeast: Indian cupid (Everes lacturnus assamica), white-line bushbrown (Mycalesis malsara). Cultural Dimension The BTR represents not only a biodiversity hotspot but also a unique cultural landscape: the Bagurumba, popularly known as the “butterfly dance” of the Bodo community, is believed to have been inspired by the colourful mud-puddling congregations of butterflies witnessed across the forests during the monsoon. By documenting BTR’s butterfly wealth, the booklet links ecological research with a living tradition — the Bagurumba dance — offering a template for how biodiversity outreach can be anchored in local cultural identity to strengthen community support for conservation. Prelims Pointers BTC = Bodoland Territorial Council, an autonomous body under the Sixth Schedule; governs the Bodoland Territorial Region (BTR), comprising five Assam districts. Sixth Schedule = provides for administration of tribal areas in Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura and Mizoram through Autonomous District/Regional Councils. BTR biodiversity: 346 of Assam’s 620 butterfly species; located at the confluence of Indo-Malayan and Indo-Gangetic biogeographic zones. Bagurumba = the “butterfly dance” of the Bodo community, inspired by monsoon mud-puddling congregations of butterflies. Practice Mains Question Discuss the significance of India’s Northeast as a biodiversity corridor linking distinct biogeographic zones. How can documentation initiatives such as species booklets aid community-linked conservation? GS Paper 1 / GS Paper 3  |  150 words  |  10 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Consider the following statement: “The Bodoland Territorial Region is the only ecological corridor in Northeast India where butterfly species of the Eastern Himalayas, the Indo-Malayan region and the Indo-Gangetic plains occur together.” Is this statement correct or incorrect? (a)Correct (b)Incorrect Correct Answer: (a) As per Sonali Ghosh, chief of the Forest Department for BTR, this is precisely what distinguishes the region — it is the only corridor in Northeast India where these three butterfly assemblages converge, owing to its location at the confluence of the Indo-Malayan and Indo-Gangetic biogeographic zones. Article 05 Why Are There Concerns Over WhatsApp Usernames? GS Paper 2 — Governance (IT Act) | GS Paper 3 — Cyber Security Why in News On 1 July 2026, the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY), under Union Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw, sent a notice to Meta asking it to halt the rollout of WhatsApp’s new username feature, warning it could increase online fraud, phishing, digital-arrest scams and impersonation. Similar notices were subsequently sent to Telegram, Signal and Arattai. Static Background The feature lets users chat via a chosen username instead of sharing a phone number; there is no in-app search directory, so a contact must know the exact username. Users can additionally set a PIN to prevent contact even by those who know their username. WhatsApp is classified as a “significant social media intermediary” (SSMI) under the IT Rules, 2021 — a threshold that applies to platforms with more than 50 lakh registered users in India (WhatsApp has an estimated 80 crore Indian users), attracting enhanced due-diligence obligations. MeitY’s notice invoked Sections 66C (identity theft), 66D (cheating by personation) and 79 (intermediary liability/safe harbour) of the Information Technology Act, 2000. Positions of the Stakeholders Stakeholder Position MeitY Feature could enable impersonation of individuals, financial institutions and government agencies; may increase fraud, phishing and digital-arrest scams WhatsApp/Meta Has “reserved” usernames of prominent personalities to pre-empt imposters; will display sender country of origin and phonebook status; safeguards to be rolled out over coming months Internet Freedom Foundation (IFF) Argues Section 79 is a liability safe harbour, not a power for MeitY to pre-approve or veto a product feature Concerns / Legal Ambiguity It remains unsettled whether the government can direct a privately-owned platform to withdraw or delay a lawful product feature; the IFF has termed the notice’s approach as treating a feature launch as “a wrong the company must justify.” WhatsApp officials met MeitY on 3 July 2026, with a written response due 4 July; the government has previously sought explanations from WhatsApp, including after the platform’s global outage in October 2022. The dispute sits at the intersection of platform product design and India’s intermediary-liability framework: while MeitY’s underlying fraud-prevention concern is legitimate, whether the IT Act and Rules actually confer a pre-launch veto power over specific features — as opposed to post-facto due-diligence obligations — remains contested and could shape the scope of future platform regulation in India. Prelims Pointers Significant Social Media Intermediary (SSMI) = under IT Rules 2021, a platform with more than 50 lakh registered users in India; attracts enhanced due-diligence obligations. Section 66C, IT Act 2000 = identity theft; Section 66D = cheating by personation using computer resources; Section 79 = conditional safe harbour/liability exemption for intermediaries. “Safe harbour” = legal shield protecting an intermediary from liability for user-generated content, subject to observing due diligence — distinct from a power to pre-approve features. MeitY headed by Ashwini Vaishnaw (also holds Railways and Information & Broadcasting portfolios). Practice Mains Question Examine the scope and limits of the Indian government’s regulatory authority over significant social media intermediaries under the Information Technology Act, 2000 and IT Rules, 2021, with reference to the recent controversy over WhatsApp’s username feature. GS Paper 2 / GS Paper 3  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Which one of the following statements about the WhatsApp username controversy is NOT correct? (a)WhatsApp qualifies as a “significant social media intermediary” under the IT Rules, 2021. (b)MeitY’s notice cited Sections 66C, 66D and 79 of the IT Act, 2000. (c)WhatsApp’s username feature includes a searchable in-app directory of all registered usernames. (d)A user can set a PIN so that even a person who knows their username cannot contact them. Correct Answer: (c) There is explicitly no search directory of usernames within WhatsApp — a contact must already know the exact username to reach someone, making (c) the incorrect (and therefore correct answer to this “NOT correct” question) statement. Statements (a), (b) and (d) are all accurately drawn from the source. Article 06 The Real Crisis in India’s Fisheries GS Paper 3 — Environment & Conservation | Economy (Fisheries) This article is an opinion/analysis piece by an academic (coastal resource governance); the arguments and interpretations below are the author’s own and are presented as such, not as verified official findings. Why in News The Government of India’s February 2026 release stating that 91.1% of 135 marine fish stocks evaluated (2022 data) are “sustainable” is contested by this opinion piece, which argues the more urgent problem is the unregulated degradation of India’s inshore fishing grounds by an oversized mechanised trawling fleet, and that India’s stock assessment method is weaker than international best practice. Prelims Pointers Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) = sea area extending up to 200 nautical miles (371 km) from the coast, within which a state has sovereign rights over marine resources. Territorial waters = extend 12 nautical miles (22 km) from shore; largely overlap with the continental shelf, the most biologically productive fishing zone. CMFRI (Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute) relies primarily on landing data (what is caught) rather than at-sea stock assessments used by many other fishing nations — a key methodological critique in the piece. Government figure cited: 64,414 mechanised fishing vessels currently operate in India, a number growing with practically no restriction on new entries. A 5 nautical mile inshore zone is legally reserved for small-scale fishers (mechanised trawling prohibited), but the author says this restriction is weakly enforced; mechanised boat fishing is separately closed for two months annually for stock rejuvenation. The FAO’s country assessment is more cautious than the Indian government’s, stating major stocks are already “fully exploited” and that deep-sea fishing (the government’s proposed alternative) offers only a “marginal increase” in potential. The Palk Bay dispute (India-Sri Lanka) is cited as an example of mechanised-trawling conflict spilling across a maritime boundary, independent of the Katchatheevu ownership question. Article 07 Syama Prasad Mookerjee Remembered on His 125th Birth Anniversary GS Paper 1 — Modern Indian History (Personalities) An artist giving final touches to a bust of Syama Prasad Mookerjee in Kolkata. Note: this item is based on tributes paid to Mookerjee on his birth anniversary, including an op-ed by the Prime Minister. The analysis below focuses on Mookerjee’s verifiable biographical record and syllabus-relevant contributions rather than on any single tribute’s political framing. Why in News 6 July 2026 marks the 125th birth anniversary of Syama Prasad Mookerjee (b. 6 July 1901), founder of the Bharatiya Jana Sangh, prompting tributes including an op-ed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi describing him as embodying nationalism, public service and commitment to India’s unity. Static Background — Life and Career Born in Calcutta to Sir Ashutosh Mukherjee, a prominent educationist and jurist; Syama Prasad became the youngest Vice-Chancellor of the University of Calcutta, serving from 1934, and introduced a number of academic reforms during his tenure. He served as independent India’s first Minister for Industry and Supply in Jawaharlal Nehru’s cabinet (1947–1950), overseeing early industrialisation projects including the Damodar Valley Corporation and the Sindri Fertilizer Plant — India’s first large-scale fertiliser plant — while also emphasising traditional sectors such as handlooms, cottage industries and artisanal textiles. He resigned from the Nehru cabinet in 1950, and in 1951 founded the Bharatiya Jana Sangh, positioning it as an alternative political voice at a time of Congress dominance; the Jana Sangh is regarded as an ideological forerunner of the present-day Bharatiya Janata Party. He was a vocal opponent of the special constitutional provisions for Jammu & Kashmir under Article 370, and campaigned for the state’s fuller integration with the Indian Union. He died in 1953 while in detention in Srinagar, having entered Jammu & Kashmir without the then-mandatory permit to protest the state’s special status — a death that remains a significant and debated episode in his political legacy. Syllabus Relevance Modern Indian history: role in early post-Independence politics and the origins of Hindu nationalist political organisation in India. Industrial policy history: his tenure as Industry Minister is a reference point for India’s early public-sector-led industrialisation strategy under the mixed-economy model. Polity linkage: his opposition to Article 370 connects to a recurring GS2 theme on the historical debate over Jammu & Kashmir’s constitutional status, which was later altered by the reorganisation of the state in 2019. Beyond the political tributes he receives today, Mookerjee’s substantive record spans university administration, early industrial policy-making and the founding of a political tradition that continues to shape Indian politics — making him a recurring reference point across GS1 modern history and GS2 polity themes. Prelims Pointers Born 6 July 1901, Calcutta; son of Sir Ashutosh Mukherjee; died 1953 in detention in Srinagar. Youngest Vice-Chancellor of the University of Calcutta (from 1934). India’s first Minister for Industry and Supply (1947–1950); associated with the Damodar Valley Corporation and the Sindri Fertilizer Plant. Founded the Bharatiya Jana Sangh in 1951; opposed Article 370. Flag: characterisations of his political legacy (e.g., relative to later constitutional amendments) vary by source and are presented here only as attributed tribute content, not as settled historical consensus. Practice Mains Question Assess the contribution of Syama Prasad Mookerjee to India’s early industrial policy and political history, with reference to his tenure as Minister for Industry and Supply and the founding of the Bharatiya Jana Sangh. GS Paper 1  |  150 words  |  10 marks Prelims Practice MCQ With reference to Syama Prasad Mookerjee, consider the following statements: 1. He served as the first Minister for Industry and Supply in independent India. 2. He founded the Bharatiya Jana Sangh in 1951. 3. He supported the special constitutional status granted to Jammu & Kashmir under Article 370. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? (a)1 only (b)1 and 2 only (c)2 and 3 only (d)1, 2 and 3 Correct Answer: (b) Statements 1 and 2 are historically correct. Statement 3 is incorrect — Mookerjee was a prominent opponent, not supporter, of Article 370’s special provisions for Jammu & Kashmir, and campaigned for the state’s fuller integration with the Union. Article 08 Climate Change and the Decline of Milk Production in the Gangetic Plains GS Paper 3 — Agriculture | Environment (Climate Change Impact) Why in News A study published in Scientific Reports has attributed a significant decline in bovine milk production — especially among buffaloes — in the trans-Gangetic plains of northwestern India, particularly Haryana, to climate change-induced heat stress. Static Background India is the world’s largest milk producer; the study analysed livestock across 1,148 villages in Haryana (2004–2019), covering 4.66 million cross-bred cattle, 2.86 million indigenous cattle and 35.56 million buffaloes. Key climatic variables assessed: minimum/maximum/mean temperature, heavy rainfall, the Temperature-Humidity Index (THI), and potential evapotranspiration. Key Findings Temperatures above 38°C combined with humidity above 70% during July-August “significantly reduce milk production”; winter temperatures had negligible effect. Each unit rise in potential evapotranspiration reduces milk yield by around 1.4 litres per buffalo per day; buffaloes are especially vulnerable due to their dark hue, bare skin and fewer sweat glands. Cross-bred cattle show significant productivity decline during heatwaves; indigenous breeds such as Sahiwal and Hariana are comparatively heat-tolerant due to loose skin, efficient sweating and lower metabolic heat production. Estimated national loss: 3.2 million tonnes of milk (worth ₹2,661 crore), projected to rise to 15 million tonnes by the 2050s; a separate Lancet estimate projects a 25% decline in Indian milk production by 2085 due to climate-driven temperature rise. Concerns Heat stress triggers panting, sweating and reduced feed intake, raising cortisol levels that impair milk ejection and, in severe cases, cause mortality. Beyond direct physiological impact, rising temperatures reduce fodder availability, worsen water scarcity, and increase pest/disease attacks — compounding risk for India’s 80 million smallholder dairy farmers, who contribute 85% of national milk production. Way Forward Haryana farmers have already adopted adaptive practices — wallowing ponds for buffalo, agroforestry, sheds, sprinklers/foggers/mist systems and adjusted feeding schedules during summer. The study recommends integrating THI and evapotranspiration data into regional early-warning systems, and prioritising thermo-tolerant breeding programmes leveraging Bos indicus (indigenous) traits. The National Bureau of Animal Genetic Resources (NBAGR) has already identified heat-tolerance traits (heat shock proteins, coat colour, hair characteristics) in indigenous cattle for use in breeding programmes. With smallholders contributing the bulk of India’s milk output, climate-resilient dairy management — combining indigenous-breed conservation, early-warning systems and on-farm heat mitigation — is becoming central to safeguarding both rural livelihoods and India’s position as the world’s largest milk producer. Prelims Pointers Temperature-Humidity Index (THI) = a composite measure combining temperature and humidity to assess heat stress risk in livestock. Bos indicus (zebu/indigenous cattle, e.g. Sahiwal, Hariana) vs Bos taurus (typically cross-bred/exotic) — indigenous breeds show greater heat tolerance. NBAGR = National Bureau of Animal Genetic Resources; identifies and catalogues livestock genetic traits, including heat-tolerance markers. India’s smallholder dairy farmers: ~80 million, contributing 85% of national milk production. Practice Mains Question Examine the impact of climate change-induced heat stress on India’s dairy sector. Suggest measures for building climate resilience in India’s livestock economy, with particular reference to smallholder farmers. GS Paper 3  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ With reference to the recent Scientific Reports study on Haryana’s dairy sector, which of the following statements is correct? (a)Indigenous cattle breeds such as Sahiwal showed greater heat-stress vulnerability than cross-bred cattle. (b)Winter temperatures had a significant negative effect on milk yield. (c)A rise in potential evapotranspiration is associated with a decline in buffalo milk yield. (d)The study found no link between temperature-humidity index and milk productivity. Correct Answer: (c) The study found indigenous breeds to be more heat-tolerant, not less, ruling out (a). Winter temperatures had a negligible effect, ruling out (b). THI was found to have a strong link with productivity, ruling out (d). Statement (c) correctly reflects the finding that each unit rise in evapotranspiration reduces buffalo yield by around 1.4 litres/day. Article 09 AI Is Reshaping Warfare: How India Can Keep Pace GS Paper 3 — Science & Technology | Defence This article is an opinion/analysis column arguing for a specific policy direction; its recommendations are the author’s own. Separately, one claim in the original source — describing “Mythos” as a cyber-weapon — could not be verified and has been excluded from this analysis as a likely factual error. Why in News An opinion column argues that a “trinity” of artificial intelligence, military autonomy and algorithmic warfare is redefining combat, citing Ukraine’s AI-enabled battlefield platform, the February 2026 US-Israel strikes on Iran, and the January 2026 US operation that captured former Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro, and calls on India to build sovereign AI-military capabilities. Prelims Pointers Delta = Ukraine’s AI-enabled battlefield management platform that fuses radar, imagery and other data into a single stream to compress detection-to-engagement times. YFQ-44A Fury = an AI-powered autonomous fighter aircraft developed by U.S. defence-tech firm Anduril under the Collaborative Combat Aircraft programme; began flight testing in October 2025. Media reports (Wall Street Journal, Axios, Fox News) stated that Anthropic’s Claude was used, via a partnership with Palantir, in aspects of the U.S. operation that captured Nicolás Maduro in January 2026; this has been reported by multiple outlets citing anonymous sources but has not been confirmed by Anthropic, which stated it does not comment on specific operations. Separately, on 28 February 2026, US-Israeli strikes killed a large share of Iran’s senior political and military leadership, including Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei — a confirmed real-world event cited in the column as an example of AI-assisted “decapitation” targeting. Policy recommendations in the column include: a sovereign AI data-analytics platform; software for autonomous drone-swarm coordination; a target of 5 million drones by 2028; counter-drone laser/microwave systems; and greater use of low-Earth orbit (LEO) satellites for persistent surveillance. Article 10 Himalayan Pangolin Confirmed as a Distinct Species GS Paper 3 — Environment & Biodiversity | Species Conservation Why in News An international team of researchers, publishing in Communications Biology, has revalidated the Himalayan pangolin (Manis aurita) as a distinct extant species, separate from the Chinese pangolin (Manis pentadactyla) of which it was long treated as a subspecies. Static Background Pangolins are among the world’s most heavily trafficked mammals; all eight previously recognised pangolin species are listed under CITES Appendix I, prohibiting international commercial trade. Historically, three subspecies of M. pentadactyla were recognised: the nominate M. p. pentadactyla (Taiwan), M. p. pusilla (Hainan Island), and M. p. aurita (central Nepal) — described in 1836 but taxonomically understudied compared to the other two. Researchers sequenced the original 1836 lectotype specimen and compared it with modern genomic and morphological data to reach the revalidation. Key Findings The ancestral lineages of M. aurita and M. pentadactyla diverged around 1.8 million years ago in the early Pleistocene, when climatic cooling separated a western Himalayan refugium from an eastern China/Southeast Asia refugium. M. aurita is physically distinct: larger body and skull (average 95.2 cm vs 71.2 cm for the Chinese pangolin), but with markedly smaller ears and a shorter, broader nasal bone. The species underwent a further demographic contraction around the 14th century, coinciding with the onset of the Little Ice Age in the Himalayan region. Its distribution is restricted to the southern Himalayan foothills — confirmed in Nepal, South Tibet and Northeast India (including Assam) — with the Brahmaputra drainage and Arakan Mountains acting as long-term evolutionary barriers isolating it from the Chinese pangolin. Conservation Concerns Researchers found evidence that products from M. aurita have infiltrated regulated traditional medicine markets, indicating that illegally sourced material is being laundered through formal supply chains. Beyond poaching, populations around the Kathmandu Valley show “exceptionally high” inbreeding levels, suggesting possible inbreeding depression, even though the species overall has lower inbreeding than the Chinese pangolin. Way Forward The study calls for timely coordination between taxonomic updates and regulatory instruments — specifically, incorporating Manis aurita into standard nomenclatural references used by CITES and explicitly listing it under CITES Appendix I, since its new species status currently leaves an enforcement gap for a taxon otherwise identical in vulnerability to already-listed pangolins. The revalidation of the Himalayan pangolin illustrates how taxonomic research directly feeds into international wildlife-trade law — a species must be explicitly named for CITES protections to unambiguously apply, making rapid regulatory follow-up essential to close any interim enforcement gap. Prelims Pointers Manis aurita (Himalayan pangolin) is now a distinct species, separate from Manis pentadactyla (Chinese pangolin); found in Nepal, South Tibet and Northeast India (Assam). All pangolin species are listed under CITES Appendix I; M. aurita’s new species status requires a fresh, explicit CITES listing. Divergence driven by early Pleistocene climatic cooling (~1.8 million years ago); further population contraction during the 14th-century Little Ice Age. Geographic isolating barriers: Brahmaputra drainage and Arakan Mountains. Pangolins are highly olfactory-reliant mammals (enlarged olfactory bulb) used to forage for ants and termites. Practice Mains Question Discuss the significance of taxonomic revalidation of endangered species, such as the recently recognised Himalayan pangolin, for wildlife conservation and international trade regulation under CITES. GS Paper 3  |  150 words  |  10 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Assertion (A): The Himalayan pangolin (Manis aurita) has recently been revalidated as a species distinct from the Chinese pangolin. Reason (R): Genomic and morphological analysis showed the two lineages diverged only after the onset of the 14th-century Little Ice Age. Which one of the following is correct? (a)Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A. (b)A is true, but R is false. (c)A is false, but R is true. (d)Both A and R are false. Correct Answer: (b) Assertion A is correct — the revalidation is confirmed. However, Reason R is false: the two lineages diverged much earlier, around 1.8 million years ago in the early Pleistocene; the 14th-century Little Ice Age only caused a later, secondary demographic contraction within the already-distinct M. aurita lineage.