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Mar 24, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

Content Subhash Chandra Bose Aapda Prabandhan Puraskar (SCBAPMP) AI Skilling, MyWAVES & DD Free Dish Reforms  Subhash Chandra Bose Aapda Prabandhan Puraskar (SCBAPMP) Why in News ? PIB (23 March 2026) announced that nominations are open throughout the year via the National Awards Portal, indicating a policy shift towards continuous engagement, wider outreach, and increased participation in disaster management ecosystem. The move comes amid rising climate-induced disasters in India (heatwaves, floods, landslides), reinforcing the need to strengthen preparedness, early warning systems, and community-level resilience mechanisms. Relevance GS II (Governance): Disaster management framework, institutional incentives, cooperative federalism GS III (Disaster Management): Preparedness, mitigation, resilience, Sendai Framework alignment Practice Question Q. “Awards like the Subhash Chandra Bose Aapda Prabandhan Puraskar act as soft governance tools in disaster management.” Critically examine their role in strengthening India’s disaster resilience framework.(250 Words) Key Features Instituted in 2019 by Ministry of Home Affairs to recognise excellence in disaster management, covering contributions from individuals and institutions across India. Announced annually on 23 January (Parakram Diwas), linking disaster resilience with Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose’s ideals of leadership, courage, and national service. Cash award: ₹5 lakh (individual) and ₹51 lakh (institution), ensuring recognition is accompanied by financial support for scaling disaster management initiatives. Open to individuals, NGOs, private sector, academic institutions, and government bodies, reflecting a multi-stakeholder approach to disaster governance. Scope of Recognition Covers entire disaster management cycle—prevention, mitigation, preparedness, response, relief, rehabilitation, and reconstruction, reflecting India’s shift towards risk reduction and resilience-building approach. Includes domains such as early warning systems, research, innovation, community awareness, and capacity building, aligned with Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction (2015–2030). Legal & Institutional Context Disaster management falls under Concurrent List (Entry 23: Social Security and Relief), enabling coordinated action between Union and States under cooperative federalism. Disaster Management Act, 2005 institutionalises NDMA, SDMAs, and DDMAs, transforming disaster governance into a structured, policy-driven system focused on preparedness and mitigation. The award functions as a soft governance instrument, incentivising innovation, best practices, and effective implementation of statutory disaster management frameworks. Data & Evidence 271 nominations received in 2026, indicating expanding participation across governance levels and sectors in disaster management initiatives. India has achieved over 90% reduction in cyclone-related mortality since the 1999 Odisha Super Cyclone, due to improved early warning systems and evacuation strategies. Challenges Symbolic recognition without structured replication mechanisms limits the ability to scale successful models across states and districts. Awareness and accessibility gaps restrict participation from grassroots organisations, smaller NGOs, and remote districts. Inter-state disparities in institutional capacity and preparedness lead to uneven representation and outcomes in award participation. Way Forward Establish a National Repository of Best Practices under NDMA to ensure systematic documentation and replication of award-winning innovations. Link the award with financial support, CSR funding, and pilot project scaling mechanisms to convert recognition into tangible governance outcomes. Enhance grassroots participation through Panchayats and Urban Local Bodies, strengthening localised disaster preparedness and response systems. Prelims Pointers Instituted: 2019 Announced: 23 January (Parakram Diwas) Cash Award: ₹5 lakh (individual), ₹51 lakh (institution) Covers entire disaster management cycle Year-round nominations via National Awards Portal AI Skilling, MyWAVES & DD Free Dish Reforms  Why in News ? PIB (23 March 2026): Government launched National AI Skilling Initiative, MyWAVES platform, and DD Free Dish access reforms, signalling a multi-pronged push towards digital inclusion, creator economy growth, and affordable public broadcasting. Reflects policy thrust on ‘Orange Economy’ (creative economy) and India’s ambition to become a global hub for digital content, AVGC sector, and AI-enabled media ecosystem. Relevance GS II (Governance): Digital inclusion, public broadcasting, IT regulation GS III (Economy): Digital economy, AVGC sector, employment, innovation GS III (Science & Tech): AI ecosystem, emerging technologies Practice Question Q. “India’s push towards AI skilling and public digital platforms reflects a shift towards an inclusive digital and creative economy.” Analyse the opportunities and challenges associated with this transition.(250 Words) Basics Concepts DD Free Dish DD Free Dish is India’s only free Direct-to-Home (DTH) service operated by Prasar Bharati, providing free access to television channels without monthly subscription fees. Uses satellite transmission (Ku-band) and typically requires a dish antenna + set-top box, mainly serving rural and low-income households (~4+ crore users). Plays a crucial role in public service broadcasting, disaster communication, and bridging digital divide, especially where cable/OTT penetration is low. WAVES OTT Platform WAVES is an OTT platform launched by Prasar Bharati, aimed at providing digital streaming of Doordarshan and other curated content. Designed to strengthen public broadcasting in digital era, competing with private OTT platforms while ensuring cultural representation and accessibility. Orange Economy Refers to economic activities linked to creativity, culture, media, and digital content industries (films, gaming, animation, content creation). Recognised globally by Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) and increasingly adopted in India to leverage youth talent and digital platforms for economic growth and soft power projection. Key Initiatives 1. National AI Skilling Initiative Implemented with Google & YouTube via IICT, targeting 15,000 creators, students, and media professionals with free training, addressing AI skill deficit in creative industries. Two phases: Phase I: Foundational AI (Generative AI, prompting, cloud tools) Phase II: Advanced training (AI tools like Gemini, storytelling, content optimisation) Focus on AVGC sector, aligning with India’s strategy to become global content production hub. 2. MyWAVES Platform Citizen creator interface within WAVES OTT, enabling users to create, upload, and share content, transforming platform from consumer-centric to participatory ecosystem. Supports short videos, episodic content, multilingual formats, promoting regional diversity and grassroots storytelling. Linked with initiatives like Create in India Challenge, encouraging local content creation and cultural representation. 3. DD Free Dish Reforms Introduction of in-built satellite tuners in TV sets + Advanced Electronic Programme Guide (EPG), eliminating need for separate set-top boxes and reducing cost barriers. Enhances ease of access, especially in rural and remote areas, ensuring last-mile delivery of information, education, and entertainment. Advanced EPG enables intuitive navigation of channels and schedules, improving user experience in public broadcasting ecosystem. Policy & Institutional Context Falls under Union List (Entry 31: Broadcasting, communication), giving Centre authority over satellite, OTT, and broadcasting infrastructure. Linked with: Digital India Programme → universal digital access National AVGC Policy (2022) → creative economy growth IT Rules, 2021 → digital content regulation framework Strengthens Prasar Bharati’s mandate of providing accessible, affordable, and inclusive broadcasting services. Data & Evidence India has 800+ million internet users, making it one of the largest digital content markets globally. DD Free Dish reaches ~4 crore households, predominantly in rural India, making it critical for information dissemination and governance communication. AVGC sector expected to grow at ~14–16% CAGR, indicating strong demand for AI-skilled workforce and digital creators. Challenges Digital divide remains significant, with gaps in internet access, device affordability, and digital literacy, limiting reach of OTT and AI skilling initiatives. Content regulation challenges in UGC platforms like MyWAVES, including misinformation, copyright issues, and ethical concerns (deepfakes). Employment linkage gap, where AI training may not directly translate into jobs or income without strong industry integration and monetisation pathways. Public broadcasting faces competition from private OTT platforms, requiring content quality improvement and innovation. Way Forward Integrate AI skilling with industry ecosystems, startups, and monetisation platforms, ensuring employment-oriented outcomes and global competitiveness. Strengthen balanced regulatory frameworks for UGC platforms, ensuring freedom of expression with accountability. Expand digital infrastructure (BharatNet, 5G) to bridge urban-rural access gap. Enhance content quality and regional diversity in public broadcasting, making platforms like WAVES and DD Free Dish more competitive and relevant. Prelims Pointers DD Free Dish: Free DTH service by Prasar Bharati, no monthly subscription MyWAVES: UGC platform under WAVES OTT AI Skilling: 15,000 beneficiaries, partnership with Google & YouTube EPG: Electronic Programme Guide for channel navigation Linked to Orange Economy and AVGC sector

Mar 24, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

Content The evolving diagnostic landscape for tuberculosis A decade of building India’s TB Champion movement The evolving diagnostic landscape for tuberculosis Why in News ? WHO recommended near point-of-care molecular tests (NPOC-NAAT), tongue swab sampling, and sputum pooling strategies, marking a major shift toward rapid, decentralised and scalable TB diagnosis globally. The developments coincide with World TB Day (24 March) and India’s push under National Tuberculosis Elimination Programme (NTEP) and TB Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan, highlighting diagnostics as the key bottleneck in TB elimination. Relevance GS II (Health Governance): Public health systems, NTEP implementation GS III (Science & Tech): Molecular diagnostics, AI in healthcare GS III (Economy): Health expenditure, productivity loss Practice Question Q. “Diagnostics remain the weakest link in India’s tuberculosis elimination strategy.” Examine in the context of emerging technologies and systemic challenges.(250 Words) Basics  Tuberculosis (TB) TB is a bacterial infectious disease caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis, primarily affecting lungs (pulmonary TB) but also other organs (extra-pulmonary TB ~25% cases in India). India accounts for ~27% of global TB burden (WHO Global TB Report), making it the highest TB burden country globally. NTEP (National Tuberculosis Elimination Programme) Flagship programme under Ministry of Health & Family Welfare, earlier known as RNTCP, focusing on universal access to TB diagnosis, free treatment, and prevention strategies. Implements tools like: CBNAAT (GeneXpert) Truenat (indigenous molecular test) Active Case Finding (ACF) Integrated with Nikshay portal for digital tracking of TB patients and treatment adherence. Recent WHO-Recommended Innovations  NPOC Molecular Tests (Near Point-of-Care NAAT): Allow rapid TB diagnosis at primary healthcare level, reducing dependence on centralised labs and sophisticated infrastructure. Tongue Swab Testing: Uses non-sputum samples, beneficial for children, elderly, and patients unable to produce sputum, improving inclusivity of diagnostics. Sputum Pooling Strategy: Combines samples for testing to increase efficiency and reduce costs in high-burden settings, especially useful for mass screening programmes. Shift in India’s Diagnostic Strategy India historically relied on Sputum Smear Microscopy, which has low sensitivity and cannot detect drug resistance, leading to missed or delayed diagnosis. Since 2016, India scaled up molecular diagnostics (CBNAAT, Truenat), enabling: Rapid detection of TB and Rifampicin resistance Current focus is on: Universal upfront NAAT testing before treatment initiation Decentralised testing at primary healthcare level Technology Integration in TB Diagnosis AI-enabled Chest X-Ray (CXR) India is deploying portable CXR machines with AI under TB Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan, enabling active case finding in communities via mobile vans. AI helps in: Rapid detection of lung abnormalities Reducing dependence on radiologists Opportunistic screening from routine X-rays in hospitals Field-Level Impact Transition from hospital-based diagnosis → community-based screening, improving early detection and reducing transmission. However, requires on-the-spot sputum collection and referral systems to avoid diagnostic dropouts (attrition). Key Data & Evidence India contributes ~27% of global TB cases, with significant burden of drug-resistant TB (DR-TB). Extra-pulmonary TB accounts for ~25% cases, often underdiagnosed due to complex testing requirements. Asymptomatic TB prevalence is high (National TB Survey), making symptom-based screening inadequate. Critical Challenges Uneven access to molecular testing, particularly in rural, tribal, and hard-to-reach areas, due to weak sample collection and transport systems. Diagnostic delays in drug-resistance testing, leading to inappropriate treatment and continued transmission. High burden of asymptomatic TB, where symptom-based screening fails, necessitating radiological and AI-based screening expansion. Difficulty in diagnosing children and EP-TB, due to: Low bacterial load Inability to produce sputum High out-of-pocket expenditure, especially when diagnosis occurs in private sector without regulation or standardisation. Emerging Research & Innovation Needs Need for biomarkers to predict progression from TB infection → active disease, enabling targeted preventive therapy (TPT). Development of non-sputum diagnostics (saliva, stool tests) for children and vulnerable populations. Improved tools for extra-pulmonary TB diagnosis, including AI-enabled ultrasound + molecular testing combinations. Strengthening implementation research in India-specific contexts, ensuring tools are cost-effective and scalable. System-Level Gaps Lack of diagnostic network optimisation, leading to inefficient placement and utilisation of tools across regions. Weak integration between public and private healthcare systems, affecting standardisation of diagnosis and reporting. Limited health system capacity (human resources, training) to effectively deploy AI and advanced diagnostics at scale. Way Forward Achieve 100% upfront molecular testing (NAAT) before treatment initiation through strengthened sample transport and decentralised labs. Expand AI-enabled CXR screening with integrated referral and sputum collection systems, reducing diagnostic delays. Develop clear national diagnostic algorithms combining AI + molecular tests, ensuring operational feasibility and standardisation. Strengthen ICMR-led evaluation and Health Technology Assessment (HTA) for evidence-based adoption of new diagnostic tools. Promote public-private integration, ensuring universal access, affordability, and reduced out-of-pocket expenditure. Prelims Pointers CBNAAT (GeneXpert): Molecular test detecting TB + Rifampicin resistance Truenat: Indigenous portable molecular diagnostic tool NPOC-NAAT: Near point-of-care molecular test EP-TB: Extra-pulmonary TB (~25% cases in India) Nikshay Portal: Digital TB patient tracking system A decade of building India’s TB Champion movement Why in News ? World TB Day (24 March 2026): Editorial focus highlights role of TB survivors (“TB Champions”) in addressing stigma, improving treatment adherence, and strengthening community participation in India’s TB elimination efforts. Comes amid India’s push under National Tuberculosis Elimination Programme (NTEP), where despite 25 lakh+ annual cases, social stigma and treatment dropouts remain major barriers to elimination. Relevance GS II (Governance): Community participation, public health delivery GS I (Society): Stigma, social exclusion, vulnerable groups Practice Question Q. “Tuberculosis is as much a social disease as a medical condition.” Discuss the role of community-led initiatives like the TB Champion movement in achieving TB elimination in India.(250 Words) Basics  TB Burden & Nature of Challenge India diagnoses and treats over 25 lakh TB patients annually, making it the highest TB burden country globally (~27% of global cases as per WHO). TB is not just a medical condition but a socio-economic disease, deeply linked with poverty, malnutrition, overcrowding, and social exclusion. Despite free diagnosis and treatment under NTEP, stigma, fear, and misinformation delay care-seeking and reduce treatment adherence. What are TB Champions? TB Champions are TB survivors trained as peer supporters, counsellors, and community advocates, institutionalised under NTEP through “Survivor to Champion” model. They use lived experience of illness and recovery to provide: Emotional support and counselling Treatment literacy and motivation Community awareness and stigma reduction Developed initially by organisations like REACH, now formally integrated into government TB strategy. Core Problem Highlighted TB response has historically been “biomedical-centric”, focusing on diagnostics and drugs, while neglecting psychosocial dimensions such as stigma, loneliness, and discrimination. TB remains one of the most stigmatised diseases in India, disproportionately affecting: Women (marriage, social exclusion) Transgender communities Children and elderly This leads to: Delayed diagnosis Treatment discontinuation Hidden cases and continued transmission Shift Toward Community-Centric Model Emergence of TB Champion movement (since ~2016) has challenged assumption that survivors do not engage post-treatment, proving that community-led models are viable and effective. TB Champions act as: Bridges between health system and communities First-level counsellors improving trust in public health services Reinforces principle that disease elimination requires social mobilisation, not just medical intervention. Impact of TB Champions Improved treatment adherence and completion rates, due to peer counselling and emotional support during long treatment cycles (6–24 months). Reduction in self-stigma and discrimination, as survivors publicly share their journeys and normalise TB as curable disease. Enhanced awareness at grassroots level, through community meetings, panchayat engagement, and last-mile outreach. Creation of survivor-led networks across states, acting as support systems and advocacy platforms for TB-affected individuals. Persistent Challenges Stigma and social exclusion remain deeply entrenched, especially in rural and conservative communities, limiting effectiveness of purely clinical interventions. Sustainability concerns, as TB Champion networks often depend on external funding and NGO support, lacking long-term institutional backing. Limited integration of psychosocial care within formal health system, with continued focus on diagnostics and treatment targets. Economic burden persists even after cure, including loss of livelihood, long-term health impacts, and social marginalisation. Structural Gaps in TB Response Weak emphasis on community engagement strategies within health policy frameworks, despite evidence of their effectiveness. Inadequate multi-sectoral convergence (health, nutrition, social welfare, livelihood support) needed to address TB’s social determinants. Lack of formal recognition, incentives, and career pathways for TB Champions, limiting scalability of the model. Way Forward Institutionalise TB Champion model within NTEP with formal funding, incentives, and training frameworks, ensuring long-term sustainability. Integrate psychosocial support and counselling services into TB care protocols, making treatment patient-centric rather than disease-centric. Strengthen community engagement through Panchayats, SHGs, and local governance institutions, enhancing last-mile awareness and trust-building. Promote multi-sectoral approach (nutrition support, social protection, livelihood schemes) to address root causes of TB vulnerability. Develop self-sustaining socio-economic models for survivor networks, reducing dependence on external funding. Prelims Pointers NTEP: India’s flagship TB programme (earlier RNTCP) Nikshay Portal: Digital tracking of TB patients TB Champions: Survivor-led peer support model under NTEP India’s TB elimination target: 2025 (ahead of SDG 2030)  

Mar 24, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Content Early Delimitation & Women’s Reservation Rejection Rate of Right to Information Applications in 2024–25 Assam Rifles Celebrates 191st Raising Day India’s Longest-Serving Head of Government Hope Builds for Nations to Save Bird that Flies 30,000 km Anti-Dumping Probe on Ethyl Chloroformate “Smog-Eating” Photocatalytic Coatings Early Delimitation & Women’s Reservation Why in News ? The Union Government has indicated early delimitation based on Census 2011 to implement the Women’s Reservation Act, 2023 (106th Constitutional Amendment) before the 2029 Lok Sabha elections. Proposal includes increasing Lok Sabha strength from 543 → ~816 seats, with ~273 seats (≈33%) reserved for women, ensuring no displacement of sitting MPs. The move attempts to balance women’s representation with federal concerns, especially Southern States’ fear of losing seats due to population control success. Relevance GS II (Polity & Governance): Representation, delimitation, federalism, electoral reforms GS IV (Ethics): Gender justice, substantive equality Essay: Representation vs equity; federal balance Practice Question Q. “The proposed early delimitation to implement women’s reservation reflects a trade-off between gender justice and federal equity.” Critically examine.(250 Words) Basics  Delimitation Delimitation is the process of redrawing boundaries of electoral constituencies to ensure equal representation based on population. Conducted by Delimitation Commission (independent statutory body) under: Article 82 (Lok Sabha) Article 170 (State Assemblies) Last delimitation exercise based on 2001 Census (2008 order); next scheduled after 2026 Census (freeze under 84th Amendment, 2001). Women’s Reservation Act, 2023 (106th Amendment) Provides 1/3rd reservation for women in Lok Sabha, State Assemblies, and Delhi Assembly. Key provisions: Article 330A → Women reservation in Lok Sabha Article 332A → Women reservation in State Assemblies Article 239AA amendment → Delhi Assembly inclusion Article 334A → Implementation post-delimitation + 15-year sunset clause Implementation conditional upon: Census + Delimitation exercise completion What is the 2026 “Strategic Shift”? Government proposes delinking implementation from upcoming Census (2024–25) and instead using Census 2011, enabling faster rollout before 2029 elections. Suggests ~50% increase in seats (543 → 816), ensuring: No existing constituency is removed Women’s quota implemented through expansion, not displacement Pro-rata seat distribution among states to maintain current state-wise representation ratios, addressing federal imbalance concerns. Constitutional & Legal Implications Requires amendment under Article 368 (special majority) to: Modify condition of “post next Census” in Article 334A Interacts with: 84th Amendment (2001) → Freeze on seat redistribution till post-2026 Census 87th Amendment (2003) → Allowed delimitation without altering number of seats Raises issue of whether delimitation using older Census (2011) aligns with constitutional spirit of equal representation. Data & Evidence Current Lok Sabha strength: 543 seats Proposed strength: ~816 seats (≈50% increase) Women’s reservation: ~273 seats (33%) Current women representation (17th LS): ~14.4% (78 MPs) → significant jump post-implementation India ranks ~140th globally in women parliamentary representation (IPU data) → highlights urgency of reform Key Issues & Challenges Federal Concerns (North–South Divide) States like Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Karnataka fear loss of representation if population-based redistribution occurs, due to successful family planning policies. Northern states (UP, Bihar) could gain disproportionately under pure population-based delimitation, altering political balance of power. Constitutional & Democratic Concerns Using 2011 Census data instead of latest population data may dilute principle of “one person, one vote, one value”. Raises question of temporary political expediency vs long-term representational justice. Design Issues in Women’s Reservation Rotation of seats may: Disrupt constituency linkages Reduce accountability of elected representatives Risk of proxy representation (Sarpanch Pati phenomenon) where male relatives exercise actual power. Political Economy Concerns Expansion of Lok Sabha to 816: Requires new Parliament infrastructure (already expanded building) May affect legislative efficiency and debate quality Potential political resistance from incumbents and parties due to seat reconfiguration. Case Studies Panchayati Raj (73rd–74th Amendments): Women’s reservation (33% → 50% in many states) led to: Increased female political participation Improved outcomes in health, education, sanitation (Esther Duflo studies) Rwanda (Global Example): Highest women representation (>60% Parliament) due to reservation → improved gender-sensitive policymaking Way Forward Build political consensus through all-party consultations, ensuring cooperative federalism in delimitation decisions. Develop transparent delimitation formula balancing population + equity considerations, avoiding regional imbalance. Complement reservation with: Capacity building of women leaders Political financing support Consider sub-quotas for OBC women to ensure intersectional representation. Ensure gradual and evidence-based implementation, avoiding abrupt structural disruptions. Prelims Pointers Delimitation Commission: Independent statutory body Articles: 82, 170 (delimitation), 330A, 332A, 334A (women reservation) 106th Constitutional Amendment Act, 2023 → Women’s reservation 84th Amendment (2001): Freeze on seat redistribution till post-2026 Census Rejection rate of Right to Information applications in 2024-25 Why in News ? Government informed Parliament that RTI rejection rate has declined to 3.26% in 2024–25 from 7.21% in 2013–14, indicating improvement in transparency and information access mechanisms. Central Information Commission (CIC) annual reports show enhanced compliance, along with third-party transparency audits of suo motu disclosures (Section 4) being monitored by the Centre. Relevance GS II: Transparency, accountability, RTI regime GS IV: Ethics in governance, citizen empowerment Practice Question Q. “Declining RTI rejection rates indicate improved transparency, yet systemic challenges persist.” Analyse.(250 Words) Basics  RTI Act, 2005 A landmark legislation enabling citizens to access information held by public authorities, thereby strengthening transparency, accountability, and participatory democracy. Rooted in Article 19(1)(a) (Freedom of Speech & Expression) → interpreted by Supreme Court as including Right to Know (Raj Narain case, 1976). Applies to: All public authorities (government bodies, PSUs, bodies substantially financed by government) Timeline: 30 days → normal cases 48 hours → life & liberty cases Key Provisions Section 3: Every citizen has the right to information without giving reasons. Section 4: Mandatory proactive disclosure of information (budgets, decisions, functions) to reduce RTI burden. Section 6: Simple application procedure (written/electronic). Section 7: Time-bound disposal (30 days). Section 8: Exemptions (national security, privacy, cabinet papers, etc.). Section 19: Two-tier appeal: First Appeal → Departmental authority Second Appeal → CIC/SIC Penalty: Up to ₹25,000 on PIO for delay/denial. Institutional Framework Central Information Commission (CIC) Apex appellate body under RTI Act. Composition: Chief Information Commissioner + up to 10 Commissioners Appointment: By President on recommendation of PM, LoP, and Cabinet Minister committee Functions: Adjudicate appeals, enforce transparency, monitor compliance, publish annual reports Data & Evidence Rejection rate declined: 7.21% (2013–14) → 3.26% (2024–25) → indicates improved disclosure practices and administrative responsiveness. India files ~60–70 lakh RTI applications annually, making it the largest transparency regime globally. However, pendency remains high (lakhs of appeals in CIC/SICs) → delays undermine effectiveness. Evolution & Judicial Backing Raj Narain v. State of UP (1976): RTI recognised as part of Fundamental Rights. CBSE v. Aditya Bandopadhyay (2011): Students can access answer sheets. RBI v. Jayantilal Mistry (2015): Financial regulatory transparency upheld. CJI under RTI (2019): Judiciary included under RTI → strengthens accountability. Key Challenges Institutional & Governance Issues High pendency and backlog in CIC/SICs, leading to delayed justice (often 1–2 years for appeals). Vacancies and understaffing weaken enforcement capacity. Weak Enforcement Penalties imposed in very few cases (~2%), reducing deterrence against PIO non-compliance. Increasing tendency of bureaucratic resistance and delays. Legal Dilution Concerns RTI Amendment Act, 2019: Gave Centre power over tenure and salary of CIC/SIC Raised concerns about reduced autonomy and independence Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023: Expanded “personal information” exemption, limiting public interest disclosures Transparency Deficit Poor implementation of Section 4 (proactive disclosure) → citizens forced to file RTIs unnecessarily. Weak record management and digitisation, especially at local levels. Social & Ethical Concerns Threats, harassment, and even killings of RTI activists, especially in corruption-related cases. Low awareness among rural and marginalised groups, limiting inclusivity of RTI regime.  Case Studies MKSS Movement (Rajasthan): Grassroots demand for wage transparency → led to birth of RTI movement in India. RTI exposing scams (2G, Adarsh Housing, PDS leakages): Demonstrates RTI’s role in anti-corruption and accountability mechanisms. Recent Government Measures Third-party transparency audits of proactive disclosures, monitored by CIC, to ensure Section 4 compliance. Promotion of online RTI portals and digital filing, improving ease of access and efficiency. Continuous assessment of RTI framework effectiveness, as stated in Parliament. Way Forward Fill vacancies and strengthen CIC/SIC capacity to reduce pendency and ensure timely justice. Strictly enforce penalty provisions on PIOs, enhancing accountability. Strengthen Section 4 proactive disclosures, reducing need for RTI applications. Ensure balance between privacy (DPDP Act) and transparency, protecting public interest disclosures. Provide legal protection for RTI activists, including whistleblower safeguards. Accelerate digitisation and record management reforms, especially at grassroots level. Prelims Pointers RTI rooted in Article 19(1)(a) Time limits: 30 days / 48 hours Penalty: ₹25,000 Appeal: First → FAA, Second → CIC/SIC Section 8 & 24 → Exemptions Assam Rifles celebrates 191st Raising Day Why in News ? Assam Rifles celebrated its 191st Raising Day (March 24, 2026), with homage paid at the war memorial in Shillong, highlighting its legacy as India’s oldest paramilitary force. Renewed focus due to: Ongoing counter-insurgency operations in Northeast India Policy discussions such as relocation of Assam Rifles battalions (e.g., Mizoram) Reinforces its role as “Sentinels of the Northeast”, critical for internal security and border management. Relevance GS III: Internal security, border management GS II: Federal security architecture Practice Question Q. “Assam Rifles plays a unique role in India’s internal security architecture, but institutional challenges limit its effectiveness.” Discuss.(250 Words) Basics What is Assam Rifles? Assam Rifles is the oldest Central Armed Police Force (CAPF), functioning under Ministry of Home Affairs (administrative control) but with operational control of the Indian Army. Unique dual structure: Administrative → MHA Operational → Indian Army (Lt General rank officer as DG) Headquarters: Shillong (Meghalaya), unlike other CAPFs headquartered in Delhi. Historical Evolution Originated in 1835 as “Cachar Levy” to protect British tea estates from tribal raids, later evolving into a frontier security force. Renamed Assam Rifles in 1917, and contributed troops in World War I (Europe & West Asia). Post-independence: Played role in 1962 Sino-India War Participated in IPKF (Sri Lanka, 1987) Expanded from 17 battalions (1960) → ~46 battalions today Core Functions & Mandate Conducts counter-insurgency operations in Northeast India, tackling groups in states like Manipur, Nagaland, Assam. Guards Indo-Myanmar border (~1,643 km), crucial for: Preventing insurgency spillover Checking smuggling, illegal migration, arms trafficking Provides: Internal security support Civic action programmes (medical camps, infrastructure support) Acts as link force between military and civil administration in remote regions. Strategic Importance Northeast India shares ~5,300 km international borders with 5 countries (China, Myanmar, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Nepal) → high strategic sensitivity. Indo-Myanmar border is porous and unfenced, making Assam Rifles crucial for: Act East Policy connectivity Countering cross-border insurgency networks Region hosts multiple insurgent groups (NSCN, ULFA factions, PLA-Manipur) → requires sustained low-intensity conflict management. Institutional & Governance Context Assam Rifles is part of CAPFs (6 forces): CRPF, BSF, ITBP, CISF, SSB, Assam Rifles Unique model: Combines military discipline (Army control) with policing functions (MHA) Falls within: Union List (Defence, Armed Forces, Border Security) Key Challenges Operational Challenges Difficult terrain (hills, forests, remote borders) limits surveillance and rapid deployment. Porous Indo-Myanmar border facilitates: Insurgent movement Drug trafficking (Golden Triangle proximity) Institutional Issues Dual control (MHA vs Army) leads to: Coordination challenges Administrative ambiguities (pay, service conditions) Human Security Issues Allegations under AFSPA (Armed Forces Special Powers Act) raise concerns about: Human rights violations Civil-military trust deficit Geopolitical Concerns Increasing China’s influence in Myanmar and Northeast region heightens strategic importance of Assam Rifles. Border instability impacts Act East Policy and regional integration efforts. Case Studies Counter-insurgency success in Mizoram (1980s–90s): Assam Rifles played key role in peace accord and stabilisation Civic Action Programmes: Infrastructure, healthcare, and education support in remote villages → winning “hearts and minds” strategy Way Forward Resolve dual control issue through clearer institutional framework ensuring operational efficiency and administrative clarity. Strengthen border infrastructure (fencing, smart surveillance, drones) along Indo-Myanmar border. Enhance civil-military engagement and accountability mechanisms to address human rights concerns. Integrate Assam Rifles role with Act East Policy, improving connectivity and regional security cooperation. Prelims Pointers Oldest CAPF (1835 origin) HQ: Shillong Administrative control: MHA; Operational control: Indian Army Guards Indo-Myanmar border Known as “Sentinels of the Northeast” India’s Longest-Serving Head of Government Why in News ? Prime Minister Narendra Modi has become India’s longest-serving head of an elected government, completing 8,931 days in office, surpassing Pawan Chamling (former Sikkim CM: 8,930 days). The milestone reflects ~25 years of continuous executive leadership (Gujarat CM + PM) and comes after three consecutive Lok Sabha victories (2014, 2019, 2024), highlighting political continuity and sustained mandate. Relevance GS II: Parliamentary system, executive dominance GS IV: Ethics of power, institutional balance Practice Question Q. “Long tenure of executive leadership strengthens policy continuity but may raise concerns for democratic balance.” Examine.(250 Words) Basics  Head of Government vs Head of State Head of Government → Prime Minister (real executive authority under Article 74–75) Head of State → President (constitutional head under Article 52) PM exercises: Policy leadership Council of Ministers control Executive decision-making authority Tenure of Prime Minister No fixed tenure; governed by: Article 75(3) → Collective responsibility to Lok Sabha Continues as long as: Enjoys majority support in Lok Sabha Hence, long tenure reflects: Electoral success + political stability + party dominance Key Facts & Records Total tenure: 8,931+ days (~24.5 years) Gujarat CM: 2001–2014 (~13 years) PM: 2014–present (~12 years) First PM: Born after Independence (1950) With longest prior CM experience before becoming PM Electoral record: Led party to 3 consecutive majority mandates (2014, 2019, 2024) Global comparison: Among longest-serving democratic leaders in contemporary politics Constitutional & Political Significance Demonstrates stability of parliamentary democracy, where leadership continuity depends on popular mandate rather than fixed tenure. Reflects shift toward dominant-party system, contrasting earlier coalition-era politics (1989–2014). Raises debate on: Centralisation of executive power Balance between strong leadership vs institutional autonomy Critical Issues & Debates Democratic Concerns Long tenure may lead to: Centralisation of power in executive Weakening of institutional checks and balances Debate on: Role of Parliament vs executive dominance Federal Concerns Strong central leadership may affect: Centre–State relations Perception of cooperative vs competitive federalism Electoral & Political Concerns Dominant-party system may: Reduce effective opposition space Impact pluralism and deliberative democracy Comparative Perspective Jawaharlal Nehru: ~17 years as PM (longest PM tenure) Indira Gandhi: ~15+ years However, Modi’s record is unique because: Combines state + central executive leadership Represents continuous uninterrupted governance across levels Way Forward  Strengthen institutional checks (Parliamentary committees, judiciary independence) to balance strong executive leadership. Promote intra-party democracy and leadership diversity to sustain democratic vitality. Enhance federal consultation mechanisms (Inter-State Council, GST Council) for cooperative governance. Prelims Pointers PM tenure: No fixed term, depends on Lok Sabha majority Article 75 → Council of Ministers responsible to Lok Sabha Longest-serving PM (only PM tenure): Jawaharlal Nehru Longest-serving head of government (combined): Narendra Modi   Hope builds for nations to save bird that flies 30,000 km Why in News ? At the UN Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species (CMS) meeting in Brazil (March 2026), Hudsonian godwit and 42 migratory species have been proposed for international protection due to rapid population decline. The godwit’s population has declined by ~95% over four decades, highlighting a global biodiversity crisis driven by climate change and habitat disruption across borders. Relevance GS III: Environment, biodiversity, climate change GS II: International environmental governance Practice Question Q. “Decline of migratory species reflects systemic ecological stress requiring global governance solutions.” Discuss.(250 Words) Basics Hudsonian Godwit (Limosa haemastica) A long-distance migratory shorebird, breeding in the Arctic and wintering in Patagonia (South America). Undertakes: ~30,000 km annual migration Non-stop flights up to ~11,000 km, among the longest in the animal kingdom Depends on precise ecological timing (“geological clock”) and predictable food availability across multiple ecosystems. Convention on Migratory Species (CMS) Also called Bonn Convention (1979) under UNEP. Objective: Conserve migratory species across international borders Key obligations for member countries: Protect endangered migratory species (Appendix I) Promote international cooperation (Appendix II) Conserve habitats and remove migration barriers Key Data & Evidence 49% of CMS-listed migratory species are declining (2024 report) → worsening from 44% earlier, indicating accelerating biodiversity loss. Migratory birds show steepest decline among taxa, signalling ecosystem-level stress. Hudsonian godwit population: ~95% decline in 40 years, making it a flagship indicator species for climate and habitat disruption. Ecological Significance of Migratory Species Maintain ecosystem connectivity across continents, linking Arctic, temperate, and tropical ecosystems. Provide critical services: Pollination and pest control Nutrient transport across ecosystems (marine–terrestrial linkages) Serve as bio-indicators of climate change and environmental health. Major Threats Climate Change Impacts Phenological mismatch: Arctic warming shifts insect emergence timing, while birds’ migration timing remains fixed → food shortage for chicks. Altered migration cues, evidenced by godwits migrating ~6 days later than a decade ago. Habitat Loss Across Flyways Chile (Patagonia): Expansion of salmon and oyster farming disrupting intertidal feeding grounds. USA: Agricultural changes reducing wetlands and shallow water habitats. Demonstrates “multiple stressors across migration routes” → cumulative ecological collapse. Anthropogenic Disturbances Infrastructure development in coastal zones and wetlands Increased human presence in feeding areas, disturbing critical stopover sites Systemic Ecological Stress Species can adapt to single stressor, but not simultaneous multi-factor disruptions (climate + habitat + human activity) → leading to rapid collapse. Governance & Institutional Issues Migratory species conservation suffers from: Fragmented governance across countries (flyway problem) Lack of binding enforcement mechanisms under CMS Requires multi-country coordination, unlike national conservation efforts Case Studies Hudsonian Godwit → indicator of flyway collapse, showing how disruptions across continents affect a single species. Snowy Owl & Hammerhead Shark (also under CMS list): Highlight cross-ecosystem vulnerability (Arctic + marine ecosystems) Pantanal (Brazil meeting site): One of world’s largest wetlands → crucial for migratory biodiversity conservation India Context    India lies on Central Asian Flyway (CAF) → supports ~370 migratory bird species. Threats in India: Wetland loss (urbanisation, pollution) Hunting and disturbance Initiatives: National Action Plan for Migratory Birds (2018) Ramsar Convention wetlands protection (75+ sites) Way Forward Strengthen international cooperation under CMS, including data sharing, joint conservation strategies, and funding mechanisms. Protect critical habitats across flyways (wetlands, intertidal zones, Arctic breeding grounds) through ecosystem-based approach. Integrate climate adaptation into biodiversity policies, addressing phenological mismatches and habitat shifts. Promote nature-based solutions and sustainable coastal management, balancing economic activities with conservation. Enhance monitoring using satellite tracking, AI, and ecological modelling for better migration mapping. Prelims Pointers Hudsonian Godwit: Migratory shorebird (~30,000 km migration) CMS (Bonn Convention): 1979, UNEP treaty Appendix I → endangered species; Appendix II → cooperation required India part of Central Asian Flyway Anti-Dumping Probe on Ethyl Chloroformate  Why in News ? India has initiated an anti-dumping investigation into imports of ethyl chloroformate from China, following a complaint by Paushak Ltd., alleging price undercutting and material injury to domestic industry. The probe is being conducted by the Directorate General of Trade Remedies (DGTR), signalling tightening scrutiny on cheap imports amid rising trade tensions and push for domestic manufacturing. Relevance GS III: Economy, trade policy, WTO GS II: International relations (trade tensions) Practice Question Q. “Anti-dumping measures protect domestic industry but may create downstream inefficiencies.” Analyse.(250 Words) Basics  What is Anti-Dumping? Dumping occurs when a country exports goods at prices lower than normal value (domestic price or cost of production), leading to unfair competition and injury to domestic industry. Governed by: WTO Anti-Dumping Agreement (GATT Article VI) India imposes anti-dumping duty (ADD) to: Level the playing field (not protectionism) Offset price distortion caused by dumping DGTR (Directorate General of Trade Remedies) Apex body under Ministry of Commerce & Industry dealing with: Anti-dumping, countervailing, and safeguard measures Functions: Investigates dumping margin, injury, and causal link Recommends duties → final decision by Ministry of Finance Ethyl Chloroformate A chemical intermediate used in: Pharmaceutical manufacturing (drug synthesis) Agrochemicals (pesticides, crop protection chemicals) Strategic importance: Critical input for India’s pharma industry (global generic leader) Key Facts from the Case Investigation period: Oct 2024 – Sept 2025 Domestic producer: Paushak claims to be sole manufacturer in India DGTR preliminary findings: Dumping margin above de minimis threshold → indicates significant price undercutting Parallel probe: Hexamine imports from China, Russia, UAE → indicates broader scrutiny of chemical sector imports Legal & Trade Framework Conditions for imposing anti-dumping duty: Existence of dumping Material injury to domestic industry Causal link between dumping and injury De minimis rule: If dumping margin < 2%, no duty imposed Time-bound process: Investigation → provisional duty → final duty (usually for 5 years) Economic Implications Positive (Domestic Industry) Protects infant/single domestic producers from predatory pricing Supports Atmanirbhar Bharat and Make in India in chemical sector Prevents market capture by foreign exporters Negative (Downstream Impact) Higher costs for: Pharmaceutical companies Agrochemical manufacturers May increase: Drug prices (indirectly) Input cost inflation in agriculture sector Broader Trade Context India increasingly using trade remedy measures against China, especially in: Steel (11–13% duty in 2025) Chemicals and intermediates Reflects: Concerns over Chinese overcapacity and dumping practices Strategic shift toward supply chain resilience and domestic capability building Key Challenges Trade-Off Dilemma Balancing: Protection of domestic industry vs Cost competitiveness of downstream sectors WTO Compliance Issues Risk of: Retaliation or disputes at WTO if duties seen as excessive or unjustified Industrial Structure Issues Over-reliance on: Single domestic producer (Paushak) → raises concerns about: Monopoly pricing Supply constraints Input Dependency India still dependent on China for bulk chemicals and APIs, making: Complete decoupling difficult Case Study API (Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients) dependence on China: COVID-19 exposed vulnerability → led to PLI schemes for domestic pharma manufacturing Similar pattern seen in: Chemical intermediates sector → triggering anti-dumping measures Way Forward Combine trade remedies with industrial policy (PLI schemes, R&D support) to build competitive domestic capacity. Ensure time-bound and evidence-based anti-dumping duties, avoiding long-term inefficiencies. Promote diversification of import sources, reducing over-dependence on a single country. Balance consumer interest and industry protection, especially in critical sectors like pharma. Strengthen global trade diplomacy to avoid retaliatory measures and disputes. Prelims Pointers DGTR → Anti-dumping investigations body Dumping margin >2% → actionable Anti-dumping duty ≠ protectionism (WTO-compliant corrective measure) Ethyl chloroformate → pharma & agrochemical intermediate “Smog-Eating” Photocatalytic Coatings Why in News ? Delhi Government + IIT Madras (March 2026) launched a 6-month pilot project to test “smog-eating” photocatalytic coatings on roads, pavements, and tiles to reduce NO₂ and VOCs, key contributors to urban air pollution. The project will begin with laboratory simulation of Delhi air conditions, followed by field trials, reflecting a shift toward technology-driven urban air pollution mitigation strategies. Relevance GS III: Environment, pollution control, technology GS III: Science & Tech (nanotechnology) Practice Question Q. “Technological solutions like photocatalytic coatings can complement but not replace structural pollution control measures.” Critically analyse.(250 Words) Basics What are Photocatalytic “Smog-Eating” Coatings? These are coatings (often using Titanium Dioxide – TiO₂ nanoparticles) that, under sunlight (UV radiation), trigger photocatalysis, breaking down pollutants. Mechanism: Sunlight activates catalyst → generates reactive oxygen species (ROS) ROS convert: NO₂ → nitrates (less harmful) VOCs → CO₂ + water Can be applied on: Roads, pavements, buildings, tiles Urban Air Pollution Context  Delhi is among the most polluted cities globally (PM2.5 levels often 5–10 times WHO limits). Major pollutants: PM2.5/PM10, NO₂, SO₂, VOCs, ozone Sources: Vehicular emissions (~30–40%) Construction dust, industries, biomass burning, stubble burning Health impact: Air pollution causes ~16–17 lakh deaths annually in India (Lancet estimates) Scientific & Technological Significance Represents nature-based + tech-enabled solution, combining: Nanotechnology Environmental chemistry Already tested globally: Italy, Netherlands, Mexico → showed 5–30% reduction in NOx levels locally Advantage: Works passively (no energy input beyond sunlight) Can be integrated into urban infrastructure Policy & Governance Context Aligns with: National Clean Air Programme (NCAP) → target 20–30% PM reduction by 2024 (extended timeline) GRAP (Graded Response Action Plan) in Delhi-NCR Reflects shift toward: Innovative, decentralised pollution control methods beyond traditional regulation Potential Benefits Localized pollution reduction, especially along: High-traffic corridors Low maintenance and scalable, if proven effective Supports smart city infrastructure integration Can complement: EV transition, emission control norms (BS-VI) Challenges & Limitations Scientific Limitations Works primarily on: NOx and VOCs, not directly on PM2.5 (major pollutant in Delhi) Efficiency depends on: Sunlight availability (reduced in winter smog conditions) Risk of: Secondary pollutants (nitrates accumulation) Implementation Challenges Durability of coatings under: Traffic load Dust accumulation Need for periodic reapplication and maintenance Limited real-world evidence in Indian conditions (dust-heavy environment) Policy Concerns Risk of over-reliance on techno-fixes, ignoring: Root causes like vehicular emissions, industrial pollution Cost-effectiveness compared to: Emission reduction policies Case Studies Italy (Milan roads): TiO₂ coatings reduced NOx levels by ~20% in localized zones Mexico City buildings: Photocatalytic surfaces equivalent to removing thousands of vehicles’ emissions annually (symbolic impact) India-Specific Relevance Suitable for: Urban hotspots (Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru) Needs adaptation for: High dust load and tropical climate conditions Can complement: Urban planning reforms (green buffers, dust control measures) Way Forward Conduct rigorous field trials with real-time air quality monitoring, ensuring evidence-based scaling. Integrate with holistic pollution control strategy: Vehicular emission reduction Dust management Clean energy transition Develop Indian standards and certification for photocatalytic materials. Encourage public-private partnerships and urban innovation labs for scaling. Prelims Pointers Photocatalysis: Light-driven chemical reaction using catalysts TiO₂ (Titanium Dioxide): Common photocatalyst Targets NOx and VOCs (not PM directly) Linked to NCAP and urban air quality management