Content
Malda Violence & Electoral Integrity Crisis
LWE Reclassification 2026: Towards a Naxal-Free India
Plastic Waste Rules 2026: EPR Dilution Debate
INS Aridhaman: Strengthening India’s Nuclear Triad
Right to Promotion Consideration: Constitutional Guarantee
RBI Curbs Offshore Rupee Speculation (NDD Ban)
Shivaji Maharaj: Model of Ethical & Strategic Governance
Malda Violence Case: Judiciary, Elections & Rule of Law
Why in News?
On 4 April 2026, West Bengal Police arrested Moffakkerul Islam for allegedly orchestrating the gherao of 7 judicial officers in Malda.
On 1-2 April 2026, Election Commission directed an NIA probe, after violence linked to Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls (2025–26).
Relevance
GS II (Polity & Governance)
Article 324: Limits of ECI powers due to dependence on state machinery
Judicial independence as part of Basic Structure (intimidation of judicial officers)
Electoral integrity: challenges in voter roll revision (RPA, 1950)
GS III (Internal Security)
Electoral violence as threat to democratic stability
Intelligence and policing gaps in managing politically sensitive mobilisations
Border district vulnerability (Malda – cross-border linkages)
Practice Question
“Electoral processes in India are increasingly vulnerable to coercive pressures and administrative weaknesses.”Analyse the institutional and security challenges in ensuring free and fair elections, with reference to recent incidents. (250 words)
Static Background
Electoral Roll Revision
Under Section 21(3), Representation of the People Act, 1950, ECI conducts Special Intensive Revision (SIR) to ensure clean, updated voter rolls.
Latest nationwide SIR (2025) involved door-to-door verification, leading to deletion of duplicate and ineligible voters, triggering disputes.
Role of Judicial Officers
Judicial officers deployed as Election Registration Officers (EROs) ensure neutral adjudication of voter claims and objections, enhancing electoral credibility.
Key Legal Issues
Article 324 gives ECI control over elections but enforcement depends on state police, exposing institutional limitations.
Supreme Court (April 2026) termed the gherao a “brazen attempt” to intimidate judiciary, violating judicial independence (Basic Structure).
Gherao amounts to criminal contempt under Contempt of Courts Act, 1971, as it obstructs judicial functioning.
FIRs include Section 105, BNS 2023 (culpable homicide not amounting to murder), indicating seriousness of violence.
Governance Concerns
Dependence of ECI on state machinery creates vulnerability when administration is perceived as politically influenced.
Supreme Court flagged failure of Chief Secretary and DGP (April 2026), highlighting breakdown of administrative accountability.
NIA probe (3 April 2026) under Section 6, NIA Act, 2008 indicates suspicion of organised disruption of democratic processes.
Internal Security Concerns
Shift from peaceful protest to coercive mob action, targeting constitutional functionaries, undermines democratic order.
Malda’s border proximity (Indo-Bangladesh) raises concerns of external influence or organised mobilisation networks.
Incident reflects gaps in intelligence gathering, crowd control, and rapid response mechanisms.
Social & Ethical Issues
Conflict between Right to protest (Article 19) and rule of law, where violence delegitimises genuine grievances.
Judicial officers demonstrated fortitude and duty commitment under threat, reflecting core civil service values.
Allegations of political instigation show erosion of ethical political conduct and democratic responsibility.
Key Challenges
No independent enforcement arm for ECI, leading to over-reliance on state machinery.
Increasing trend of mob pressure influencing governance, weakening institutional authority.
Overlap between agencies (ECI, State Police, NIA) creates coordination and jurisdictional issues.
Politicisation of administration affects neutral enforcement of electoral processes.
Way Forward
Create dedicated election security mechanism to reduce ECI’s dependence on state police.
Develop standard protocols for electoral security, including crowd control and protection of officials.
Strengthen Centre–State coordination frameworks for handling election-related disturbances.
Enforce stricter laws against obstruction of public officials and mob violence.
Improve police training in crowd psychology, intelligence, and conflict de-escalation.
Ensure strict implementation of Model Code of Conduct (MCC) to prevent political incitement.
Prelims Pointers
Article 324 → powers of Election Commission of India
Section 21(3), RPA 1950 → Special Intensive Revision (SIR)
Contempt of Courts Act, 1971 → criminal contempt
Section 6, NIA Act, 2008 → Centre can order NIA probe
Section 105, BNS 2023 → culpable homicide not amounting to murder
Left-Wing Extremism (LWE) District Reclassification, 2026: Shrinking Red Corridor
Why in News?
On 27 March 2026, Union Home Ministry revised classification of LWE-affected districts, replacing “most affected” with “LWE affected”, “districts of concern”, and “legacy & thrust districts”.
Statement in Parliament (March 2026) highlighted India nearing “Naxal-free” status, with red corridor shrinking from 200+ districts (2005) to just 2 core districts (2026).
Relevance
GS III (Internal Security)
Decline of Maoist insurgency: from widespread to localised pockets
Role of intelligence-based operations, inter-state coordination, and specialised forces
Remaining hotspots (Bastar, Jharkhand) and future risks
GS II (Governance)
Development-led approach: Aspirational Districts, PESA, FRA implementation
Rehabilitation and reintegration policies for surrendered cadres
Targeted resource allocation via SRE scheme
Practice Question
“The decline of Left-Wing Extremism in India reflects both security success and governance improvement.”Critically examine the factors behind the shrinking Red Corridor and the challenges that remain. (250 words)
Static Background
What is Left-Wing Extremism (LWE)?
Ideology based on Maoist insurgency, aiming to overthrow state through armed struggle.
Rooted in:
Land alienation, tribal exploitation, governance deficit
Major affected belt historically known as “Red Corridor” across central-eastern India.
New Classification (2026)
LWE Affected Districts (Core) → 2 districts:
Bijapur (Chhattisgarh), West Singhbhum (Jharkhand)
District of Concern → 1 district:
Kanker (Chhattisgarh)
Legacy & Thrust Districts → 35 districts across 9 States:
Include regions in Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Odisha, Maharashtra, Bihar, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, MP, West Bengal
Total districts under LWE framework remain 38 (same as 2024–25), but severity classification refined.
Key Trend: Decline of LWE
2005: LWE spread across 200+ districts
2026: Reduced to 2 core districts, indicating ~99% geographical contraction
Earlier “most affected districts” (e.g., Sukma, Narayanpur) downgraded, showing declining intensity of violence
Governance Significance
Classification determines allocation under:
Security Related Expenditure (SRE) Scheme
Infrastructure, policing, and development interventions
Periodic revision ensures:
Resource targeting based on ground realities
Shift from security-heavy approach → development + rehabilitation focus
Security Insights
Residual LWE presence now concentrated in:
Dense forested, tribal-dominated regions (Bastar, Jharkhand belt)
Indicates transition from:
Widespread insurgency → localized pockets of resistance
Improved outcomes due to:
Better intelligence-based operations
Inter-state coordination
Development & Rehabilitation Measures
Establishment of skill and rehabilitation centres (e.g., Dantewada) for surrendered Maoists
Focus on:
Livelihood generation, reintegration, and deradicalisation
Complementary schemes:
Aspirational Districts Programme
Infrastructure (roads, telecom, banking access)
Key Drivers Behind Decline
Enhanced security operations (Greyhounds, CoBRA forces)
Improved connectivity and governance penetration in remote areas
Targeted welfare schemes for:
tribal communities and forest dwellers
Weakening of Maoist leadership and organisational structure
Challenges Remaining
Persistence in core forest zones (Bijapur, West Singhbhum)
Continued issues of:
tribal displacement, land rights, mining conflicts
Risk of:
regrouping or tactical retreat by Maoists
Need for sustained:
state presence and trust-building
Way Forward
Consolidate gains through:
development-led approach in legacy districts
Strengthen:
last-mile governance, PESA Act implementation, forest rights
Expand:
rehabilitation and surrender policies
Use technology for:
real-time surveillance, drone monitoring, intelligence integration
Ensure balanced approach:
security + development + rights-based governance
Prelims Pointers
LWE districts (2026): 38 total
Core LWE districts: Bijapur (Chhattisgarh), West Singhbhum (Jharkhand)
Scheme: Security Related Expenditure (SRE)
Red Corridor reduced from 200+ districts (2005) to 2 (2026)
Maoism based on left-wing extremist ideology inspired by Mao Zedong
Plastic Waste Management Rules Amendment, 2026: Flexibility vs Environmental Integrity
Why in News?
On 31 March 2026, Environment Ministry amended Plastic Waste Management Rules, allowing carry-forward of unmet EPR targets for 3 years, diluting strict annual compliance.
Introduced tradable EPR certificates, enabling firms to meet obligations via credit purchase, amid concerns over weak enforcement of 100% recycling mandate (2024–25).
Relevance
GS III (Environment)
EPR framework and circular economy
Plastic pollution management and SDG-12, SDG-14 linkages
Risks of dilution through flexible compliance and credit trading
GS II (Governance)
Regulatory design vs implementation gap
Challenges of monitoring, enforcement, and data transparency
Practice Question
“Flexibility in environmental regulation can undermine sustainability goals if not backed by strong enforcement.”Critically analyse the recent amendments to Plastic Waste Management Rules in India. (250 words)
Static Background
Plastic Waste Management Rules
Notified under Environment (Protection) Act, 1986, governing plastic production, usage, and waste management in India.
Introduced Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) in 2022, making producers responsible for collection and recycling of plastic waste equivalent to market introduction.
EPR Framework
Mandates companies to:
Collect and process 100% of plastic waste introduced (target by 2024–25)
Ensure recycling, reuse, or safe disposal
Covers:
Producers, importers, brand owners (PIBOs)
Key Provisions of 2026 Amendment
Carry-Forward of Targets
Companies failing 2025–26 targets can carry forward deficits for 3 years (till 2028–29).
Condition:
Must fulfil at least one-third of deficit annually, ensuring gradual compliance.
Tradable EPR Certificates
Firms can meet obligations by:
Purchasing credits from over-compliant entities
Introduces market-based compliance mechanism, reducing direct recycling burden.
Exemptions
Targets do not apply where:
Food safety or other regulations restrict recycled plastic use, especially in food packaging sector.
Plastic Categories & Targets (Important Data)
Category I (Rigid plastics):
30% recycled content (2025–26) → 60% by 2028–29
Category II (Flexible plastics):
10% (2025–26) → 20% thereafter
Category III (Multi-layered plastics):
5% (2025–26) → 10% later
Reuse obligations:
Range from 10% to 70% depending on packaging type, with gradual escalation
Ground Reality
Despite 100% EPR target (2024–25), there is:
No credible public dataset confirming full compliance
Heavy reliance on self-reporting via centralised portal
Indicates gap between policy design and implementation
Environmental Implications
Positive:
Encourages recycling ecosystem and circular economy
Promotes market efficiency via tradable credits
Negative:
Risk of “paper compliance” without actual recycling
Weakens urgency of plastic waste reduction efforts
Multi-layered plastics remain hardest to recycle, posing long-term environmental risk
Economic Implications
Reduces compliance cost for firms through:
Flexible timelines
credit trading mechanisms
Encourages development of:
recycling markets and waste management industry
However, may disincentivise:
investment in in-house recycling infrastructure
Governance Concerns
Shift from strict compliance → flexible compliance regime may dilute regulatory intent.
Lack of:
independent verification mechanisms
real-time tracking of recycling outcomes
Over-reliance on self-declaration increases risk of data manipulation and greenwashing.
Key Challenges
Implementation deficit: weak monitoring and enforcement capacity
Data opacity: absence of transparent, verifiable compliance data
Recycling limitations: multi-layered plastics difficult to process
Regulatory exemptions: large sectors like food packaging excluded
Market distortion: credit trading may allow non-performing firms to bypass responsibility
Way Forward
Strengthen independent audit and verification systems for EPR compliance data
Develop real-time digital tracking of plastic lifecycle using technology
Tighten rules for:
credit trading transparency and accountability
Promote design for recyclability, especially for multi-layered plastics
Incentivise:
domestic recycling infrastructure and innovation
Gradually reduce exemptions in food-grade plastics with safe alternatives
Align with SDG 12 (Responsible Consumption) and SDG 14 (Marine Pollution reduction)
Prelims Pointers
Plastic Waste Management Rules under Environment Protection Act, 1986
EPR (Extended Producer Responsibility) → producers responsible for plastic waste collection and recycling
100% collection target by 2024–25 (implementation gap exists)
Categories:
Category I → rigid plastics
Category II → flexible plastics
Category III → multi-layered plastics
Amendment date: 31 March 2026
India’s Third SSBN (INS Aridhaman): Strengthening Sea-Based Nuclear Deterrence
Why in News?
On 4 April 2026, India inducted its third nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarine (SSBN) – INS Aridhaman (S4) at Visakhapatnam.
Induction enables three operational SSBNs simultaneously, significantly enhancing credible second-strike capability and nuclear triad strength.
Relevance
GS III (Security / Defence)
Nuclear triad and credible minimum deterrence
Second-strike capability and strategic stability
Maritime security in Indo-Pacific and Indian Ocean Region
GS III (Science & Tech)
Indigenous nuclear propulsion and SLBM development (K-4)
Advanced Technology Vessel (ATV) programme
Practice Question
“Sea-based nuclear deterrence is the most survivable leg of the nuclear triad.”Examine the strategic significance of India’s SSBN programme in ensuring credible deterrence. (250 words)
Static Background
Nuclear Triad
A nuclear triad refers to capability to launch nuclear weapons from:
Land → Agni series missiles
Air → aircraft like Rafale, Su-30MKI, Mirage 2000
Sea → SSBNs (Arihant-class)
India joined elite group (US, Russia, China, France) with triad after first deterrence patrol of INS Arihant (2018).
Types of Nuclear Submarines
SSBN → carries nuclear-tipped ballistic missiles (strategic deterrence)
SSN → nuclear-powered attack submarines (conventional weapons)
SSGN → guided missile submarines
Arihant-Class Submarines
INS Arihant
Commissioned: 2016
Displacement: ~6,000 tonnes
Missiles: K-15 (700 km)
Reactor: 83 MW nuclear reactor
INS Arighaat
Commissioned: August 2024
More advanced technology, capable of K-4 SLBM (~3,500 km range)
INS Aridhaman (S4)
Commissioned: 4 April 2026
Larger displacement: ~7,000 tonnes
Higher missile capacity with more vertical launch tubes (~8)
Enhanced endurance → longer underwater deployment (months)
S4* (under trials)
Next-generation SSBN with higher payload and range capability
Strategic Significance
Strengthening Second-Strike Capability
SSBNs ensure survivable nuclear deterrent, as submarines remain:
Stealthy and undetectable underwater
Even after enemy’s first nuclear strike, SSBNs can launch retaliatory strike, ensuring credible deterrence.
Sea-Based Deterrence Advantage
Unlike land/air assets, SSBNs are:
Less vulnerable to pre-emptive attacks
Provide continuous deterrence patrol capability
Shift from Minimum Deterrence to Credible Deterrence
Induction of third SSBN enables:
Continuous at-sea deterrence (CASD)
At least one submarine always on patrol
Military Capabilities
Equipped with:
K-15 SLBM (700 km range)
K-4 SLBM (~3,500 km range) → allows targeting deep inland adversary locations
Larger missile load enhances:
strike flexibility and deterrence depth
Technological & Strategic Programme
Developed under Advanced Technology Vessel (ATV) Project, initiated in 1980s–90s, with DRDO + Indian Navy + Russian assistance.
Built at Ship Building Centre (Visakhapatnam) using:
Advanced materials
Indigenous nuclear propulsion technology
India’s Submarine Capability
Total submarines:
16 conventional submarines (Kalvari, Kilo, Shishumar class)
Operational gaps:
~30% under refit at any time, reducing effective strength
Planned:
6 indigenous SSNs + 1 Russian lease (expected 2027–28)
Project-75I submarines with AIP technology
Geopolitical Context
China:
~12 nuclear submarines (6 SSNs)
USA:
14 Ohio-class SSBNs + 50+ attack submarines
India’s expansion addresses:
Chinese naval expansion in Indo-Pacific
Strategic competition in Indian Ocean Region (IOR)
Challenges / Limitations
Limited number of SSBNs → still evolving credible continuous deterrence capability
Technological challenges in:
quieting technology (stealth)
long-range SLBMs
High cost and long gestation of nuclear submarine programme
Dependence on foreign assistance (Russia) for critical technologies
Way Forward
Accelerate development of:
longer-range SLBMs (>5,000 km) for full deterrence coverage
Fast-track SSN programme to complement SSBN fleet
Strengthen anti-submarine warfare (ASW) capabilities for defence
Enhance indigenous R&D in nuclear propulsion and stealth technologies
Ensure continuous at-sea deterrence (CASD) posture
Prelims Pointers
INS Aridhaman (S4) commissioned on 4 April 2026
SSBN → nuclear-powered submarine carrying ballistic missiles
K-15 range ~700 km; K-4 range ~3,500 km
ATV Project → India’s indigenous nuclear submarine programme
Nuclear triad → land + air + sea-based nuclear delivery systems
Right to be Considered for Promotion: Constitutional Position & Recent HC Judgment
Why in News?
On 27 March 2026, Punjab & Haryana High Court held that denial of consideration for promotion violates fundamental rights under Articles 14 and 16(1).
Case involved exclusion of Kulwant Singh (Junior Engineer) from DPC, highlighting misuse of service rules and administrative discretion.
Relevance
GS II (Polity & Governance)
Articles 14 and 16: equality and fairness in public employment
Judicial review of administrative discretion
Service jurisprudence and DPC transparency
Practice Question
“While promotion is not a fundamental right, fair consideration for promotion is integral to equality in public employment.”Discuss in light of constitutional provisions and judicial interpretation. (250 words)
Static Background
Constitutional Basis
Article 14 → guarantees equality before law and prohibits arbitrary state action.
Article 16(1) → ensures equality of opportunity in public employment, covering entire service career including promotion stage.
Evolution of Doctrine
Supreme Court expanded meaning of “employment” to include career progression, promotions, and service benefits, not just initial appointment.
Established distinction:
No fundamental right to promotion
Fundamental right to be considered for promotion
Key Judicial Principles
1991 Supreme Court Principle
Court clarified that:
Promotion is not an enforceable right
But fair consideration for promotion is mandatory under service rules
Ajit Singh v State of Punjab (1999)
Five-judge Constitution Bench held:
Eligible employees have fundamental right to be considered for promotion
Denial of consideration = violation of Article 16(1)
Present Case (March 2026)
Petitioner excluded from Departmental Promotion Committee (DPC) despite eligibility.
State denied consideration citing distance education diploma, misinterpreting rules.
Court found:
Existing employees exempted under amended rules
Administrative action was arbitrary and illegal
Judgment reaffirmed:
Right to be considered = enforceable fundamental right
Governance Implications
Ensures fair, transparent, and rule-based promotion processes in public administration.
Limits arbitrary discretion of bureaucracy in:
Interpreting service rules
Excluding eligible candidates
Strengthens merit-based career progression and institutional accountability.
Legal Nuances
Right to promotion ≠ Fundamental Right
Right to be considered for promotion = Fundamental Right (Art 16(1))
Applies when:
Employee meets eligibility criteria
Falls within zone of consideration (DPC list)
Issues & Challenges
Frequent misinterpretation of service rules by departments leading to exclusion of eligible candidates.
Lack of transparency in DPC proceedings and evaluation criteria.
Delays and arbitrariness result in:
Litigation burden on courts
Demotivation among public servants
Way Forward
Codify clear, uniform promotion guidelines across departments to minimise ambiguity.
Ensure digitisation and transparency of DPC processes, including reasons for exclusion.
Strengthen judicial review mechanisms for timely redressal of service grievances.
Promote capacity building of administrative authorities to correctly interpret service rules.
Prelims Pointers
Article 14 → equality before law
Article 16(1) → equality of opportunity in public employment
No fundamental right to promotion, but right to be considered for promotion exists
Ajit Singh v State of Punjab (1999) → key judgment on promotion rights
DPC (Departmental Promotion Committee) → evaluates eligible employees
RBI Ban on NDD (Non-Deliverable Derivatives) in Rupee: Stabilising Forex Amid Global Pressures
Why in News?
On 2 April 2026, RBI barred banks from engaging in Non-Deliverable Derivative (NDD) contracts in rupee, targeting offshore speculative trading.
Move led to rupee appreciation from ₹95/$ to ₹93.10/$ (gain of ₹1.73), amid pressures from West Asia conflict (Feb–April 2026), rising oil prices, and capital outflows.
Relevance
GS III (Economy)
Forex market regulation and exchange rate stability
Capital account management and speculative flows
Offshore vs onshore market dynamics
Practice Question
“Offshore currency derivatives pose both opportunities and risks for emerging economies.”Analyse the implications of RBI’s recent restrictions on non-deliverable derivatives in rupee. (250 words)
Static Background
What is NDD (Non-Deliverable Derivative)?
NDD/NDF is a derivative contract where parties agree on a future exchange rate, but settle difference in cash (usually USD), without actual currency delivery.
Operates mainly in offshore centres like Singapore, Hong Kong, London, Dubai, outside RBI regulatory jurisdiction.
Why NDD Exists?
India maintains partial capital account convertibility, restricting free rupee trading globally.
NDD markets allow:
Foreign investors, hedge funds, global banks to trade rupee exposure
Firms to hedge currency risks without accessing onshore markets
How NDD Market Works
Participants bet on rupee appreciation/depreciation without physical exchange of rupee.
Settlement occurs in foreign currency (USD) based on difference between contracted rate and spot rate.
Offshore trades often influence price discovery before Indian markets open, impacting domestic forex sentiment.
Key Issues with NDD Market
Speculative Volatility
Large offshore players take high-leverage positions, especially during crises (e.g., West Asia conflict 2026), amplifying rupee volatility.
Offshore sentiment may diverge from domestic macro fundamentals, distorting exchange rate.
Regulatory Arbitrage
Lack of RBI oversight allows:
Contract cancellation and re-entry strategies
Transformation of hedging tools into pure speculative instruments
Price Distortion
Offshore NDD market sometimes drives rupee expectations, undermining onshore market primacy and RBI monetary control.
Intra-group Risk Manipulation
Transactions between related parties used to:
Shift risks/profits
Mask real exposure across jurisdictions
RBI’s Intervention (April 2026)
Prohibited banks from participating in NDD contracts involving rupee, closing key speculative channels.
Restricted related-party transactions, aligning with global accounting and risk disclosure standards.
Objective:
Strengthen onshore forex market dominance
Reduce speculative pressure and volatility
Improve transparency and investor confidence
Economic Implications
Short-Term
Reduced speculative activity → lower volatility in rupee exchange rate
Immediate appreciation to ₹93.10/$, reflecting market confidence in regulatory action
Medium-Term
Strengthens RBI’s control over exchange rate dynamics
Enhances credibility of domestic forex market for hedging and investment
External Sector Context
India faces:
High crude oil import dependence (~85%) → pressure on rupee
Capital outflows due to global uncertainty (West Asia conflict)
RBI action acts as stabilisation tool in volatile external environment
Governance & Regulatory Significance
Reinforces RBI’s role as forex market regulator, ensuring:
Orderly market conditions
Prevention of systemic risks from speculative flows
Aligns with global best practices in derivative regulation and risk transparency
Signals shift toward tightening offshore-onshore regulatory gaps
Challenges / Criticisms
Impact on Hedging
Genuine investors using NDD for risk hedging may face constraints, increasing cost of hedging.
Limited Jurisdiction
RBI cannot directly regulate offshore markets, so complete elimination of NDD speculation is difficult.
Liquidity Concerns
Reduced participation may lower market liquidity and depth, affecting efficient price discovery.
Global Integration Trade-off
Excess regulation may conflict with India’s goal of greater financial globalisation and capital account liberalisation.
Way Forward
Deepen onshore derivative markets to provide alternatives for hedging within regulatory framework.
Enhance coordination with global financial centres and regulators to monitor offshore rupee trading.
Gradual move toward capital account liberalisation with safeguards, reducing need for offshore NDD markets.
Strengthen data analytics and surveillance systems for detecting speculative positions and manipulation.
Maintain balance between:
market stability (control)
financial integration (liberalisation)
Prelims Pointers
NDD/NDF → cash-settled forex derivative without currency delivery
Operates in offshore markets (Singapore, London, Hong Kong)
Exists due to partial capital account convertibility in India
RBI regulates onshore forex market, not offshore NDD directly
Rupee appreciated from ₹95/$ to ₹93.10/$ (2 April 2026) after RBI action
Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj: Legacy of Swarajya, Governance & Strategic Vision
Why in News?
On 3 April 2026, Union Home Minister paid tribute on Punyatithi of Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj (died 3 April 1680), highlighting his legacy of Hindavi Swarajya and maritime strength.
Renewed focus on his contributions to statecraft, naval power, and indigenous governance models, relevant for modern policy discourse.
Relevance
GS I (History)
Maratha state formation and resistance to Mughal expansion
Military innovations (guerrilla warfare)
GS II (Governance)
Proto-model of decentralised administration (Ashtapradhan)
Welfare-oriented governance and accountability
Practice Question
“Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj’s governance model reflects a blend of strategic foresight and ethical statecraft.”Analyse its relevance for contemporary public administration in India. (250 words)
Static Background
Early Life & Vision
Born on 19 February 1630 at Shivneri Fort (Pune), Shivaji founded the Maratha Empire, challenging Mughal and regional dominance.
Concept of Hindavi Swarajya emphasised indigenous rule, political autonomy, and ethical governance rooted in local traditions.
Ideological Pillars
Promoted:
Swadharma → protection of cultural identity
Swaraj → self-rule free from external domination
Swabhasha → use of Marathi and Sanskrit instead of Persian in administration
Military & Strategic Contributions
Guerrilla Warfare (Ganimi Kava)
Developed asymmetric warfare techniques:
Surprise attacks, mobility, terrain advantage
Enabled smaller forces to defeat larger Mughal armies, redefining Indian military strategy.
Major Battles
Battle of Pratapgad (1659) → defeat of Afzal Khan using Wagh Nakh
Pavan Khind (1660) → strategic sacrifice securing escape
Surat Raid (1664) → economic assertion against Mughal wealth centres
Purandar Treaty (1665) → diplomatic compromise
Sinhagad (1670) → recapture through strategic assault
Sangamner (1679) → last major battle
Naval Power & Maritime Vision
Recognised importance of sea control for trade and security, rare among Indian rulers of the time.
Built strong navy with coastal forts like Sindhudurg, Vijaydurg, securing Konkan coastline.
Earned title “Father of the Indian Navy”, laying foundation for maritime security doctrine in India.
Administrative System
Ashtapradhan Mandal
Council of eight ministers ensured division of power and administrative efficiency:
Peshwa (Prime Minister), Amatya (Finance), Senapati (Military), etc.
Revenue Administration
Introduced direct revenue collection from cultivators, reducing exploitation by intermediaries.
Ensured fair taxation and agrarian stability, strengthening rural economy.
Governance Model
Emphasised:
Decentralisation and accountability
Welfare-oriented governance
Protection of women, peasants, and local communities
Constitutional / Governance Relevance
Early model of good governance principles:
Rule of law
Accountability of officials
Welfare state orientation
His system reflected proto-concepts of:
Participatory governance
Administrative decentralisation
Economic Dimension
Control over coastal trade routes and ports enhanced state revenue and economic autonomy.
Surat raids demonstrated economic warfare strategy, targeting enemy financial strength.
Strengthened agrarian economy through fair taxation policies.
Social / Ethical Dimension
Promoted religious tolerance and inclusivity, despite strong cultural identity assertion.
Strict codes against:
Looting of civilians
Harassment of women
Balanced cultural pride with ethical governance standards.
Security Perspective
Integrated land and maritime security, ensuring defence against:
Mughal expansion
European naval powers (Portuguese, Siddis)
Developed fort-based defence system, creating strategic depth across Western Ghats and coast.
Key Challenges / Historical Context
Constant conflict with Mughal Empire (Aurangzeb) and Deccan Sultanates.
Limited resources compared to adversaries required innovative military and administrative strategies.
Way Forward
Apply Shivaji Mahraj’s principles of:
Decentralised governance and accountability in modern administration
Strengthen maritime security and blue economy, inspired by his naval foresight
Promote local language governance and cultural rootedness in policy implementation
Integrate ethical leadership and welfare orientation in public administration
Prelims Pointers
Born: 19 February 1630, Shivneri Fort
Death: 3 April 1680, Raigad Fort
Founder of Maratha Empire
Concept: Hindavi Swarajya
Council: Ashtapradhan Mandal (8 ministers)
Warfare: Guerrilla tactics (Ganimi Kava)
Naval legacy: Father of Indian Navy; forts like Sindhudurg
Weapon: Wagh Nakh (Pratapgad, 1659)