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Apr 4, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

Content GLP-1 Drugs Use, Risks, and Regulation India’s Seafood Exports: From Growth to Global Competitiveness GLP-1 Drugs Use, Risks, and Regulation Why in News? DCGI (2026) intensified surveillance against unauthorised GLP-1 sales, targeting online pharmacies, clinics, wholesalers, amid rising misuse for cosmetic weight loss without proper prescriptions. 49 entities inspected nationwide, revealing violations like OTC sales, improper prescriptions, misleading advertisements, prompting warnings, notices, and potential license cancellation and legal action. Relevance GS II (Governance & Social Justice) Regulation of pharmaceuticals (Drugs & Cosmetics Act, CDSCO, DCGI) Ethical issues in healthcare (misleading ads, influencer marketing, access inequity) Public health governance (NPCDCS, rational drug use) GS III (Science & Tech / Economy) Biotechnology & pharmacology (incretin-based therapies) Health economy (high-cost therapies, pharma market expansion) Digital governance (e-pharmacy regulation, AI pharmacovigilance) Practice Question “The rise of GLP-1 drugs highlights both innovation in metabolic disease management and emerging regulatory challenges.”Discuss the governance, ethical, and public health implications of their increasing use in India. (250 words) Static Background Diabetes & Hormonal Regulation Insulin lowers blood glucose by enabling cellular uptake, while glucagon increases glucose via hepatic release; both maintain homeostatic glucose balance in healthy individuals. Type 2 diabetes involves insulin resistance and relative insulin deficiency, combined with excess glucagon activity, leading to persistent hyperglycaemia and metabolic dysfunction. GLP-1 Hormone (Incretin System) GLP-1 (incretin hormone) is secreted from intestines post-meal, enhancing glucose-dependent insulin secretion and suppressing glucagon release, ensuring efficient glucose regulation. It also delays gastric emptying and induces satiety, thereby reducing food intake and postprandial glucose spikes, linking metabolism with appetite regulation. What are GLP-1 Drugs? Definition GLP-1 receptor agonists are pharmacological agents that mimic incretin hormones, correcting dual defects of insulin deficiency and glucagon excess in type 2 diabetes patients. Mechanism of Action These drugs increase insulin secretion and suppress glucagon, while delaying gastric emptying, leading to improved glycaemic control and sustained weight reduction. Appetite suppression via central satiety pathways reduces caloric intake, making them effective for obesity management alongside diabetes treatment. Examples Common drugs include Semaglutide, Liraglutide, Tirzepatide (dual GIP+GLP-1), Dulaglutide, Exenatide, administered mainly via injectable pens or oral tablets (semaglutide). Governance / Regulatory Framework Legal & Institutional Setup Regulated under Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940, with CDSCO (under DCGI) as the apex authority ensuring drug approval, safety, quality, and ethical marketing practices. Recent Actions (2026) March 2026 advisory directed manufacturers to stop misleading advertisements and non-prescription promotion, addressing rising misuse of GLP-1 drugs for non-therapeutic purposes. Nationwide inspections targeted e-pharmacies, wholesalers, wellness clinics, identifying violations like unauthorised sale and improper prescription practices, strengthening regulatory enforcement. Prescription Norms GLP-1 drugs are Schedule H prescription drugs, permitted only through qualified specialists (endocrinologists, physicians, cardiologists) to ensure safe and supervised clinical use. Economic Dimension India has ~101 million diabetics (ICMR-INDIAB 2023), making it a global hotspot, with rising obesity accelerating demand for advanced but expensive therapies like GLP-1 drugs. Monthly treatment costs of ₹8,000–₹15,000 limit access, creating health inequity, where affluent urban populations benefit disproportionately compared to vulnerable groups. Global GLP-1 market projected to exceed $100 billion by 2030, indicating massive pharmaceutical growth potential and commercialisation of metabolic disease treatment. Social / Ethical Dimension Increasing off-label use for cosmetic weight loss reflects a shift from medical necessity to lifestyle consumption, driven by celebrity endorsements and social media trends. Ethical concerns include self-medication, body image pressure, and diversion of essential drugs, potentially depriving genuine diabetic patients of critical treatment access. Health Risks and Safety Concerns Common Side Effects Frequently reported effects include nausea, vomiting, dizziness, and gastrointestinal discomfort, especially during initial phases of therapy due to delayed gastric emptying mechanisms. Severe Complications Serious risks include pancreatitis, kidney injury, bowel obstruction, and possible medullary thyroid cancer, necessitating strict medical supervision and patient selection criteria. Clinical Concerns Long-term safety remains under evaluation, with contraindications in thyroid cancer history, severe gastrointestinal disorders, and caution required in multi-morbidity patients. Governance Challenges / Criticisms Regulatory Gaps Weak enforcement in e-pharmacy platforms and wellness clinics enables OTC misuse, undermining prescription norms and increasing risks of unsupervised consumption. Supply Chain Issues Rising demand has led to black marketing, hoarding, and diversion, especially for high-demand drugs like semaglutide, affecting availability for genuine patients. Ethical Marketing Issues Aggressive pharmaceutical promotion and influencer-driven advertising create information asymmetry, encouraging irrational demand and undermining evidence-based medical practices. Capacity Constraints India faces shortage of endocrinologists (~1 per lakh population approx.), limiting specialist access and increasing dependence on unregulated or informal healthcare channels. Environment / Technology Dimension Use of injectable pens generates biomedical waste, raising concerns about safe disposal and environmental sustainability in expanding chronic therapy markets. Digital platforms enable unauthorised online drug sales, but also offer solutions like e-prescriptions, AI-based pharmacovigilance, and real-time regulatory monitoring systems. Way Forward Strengthen Regulation Implement mandatory e-prescription verification systems and integrate e-pharmacies under CDSCO oversight, ensuring traceability and preventing unauthorised drug access. Ethical Governance Strict enforcement of Drugs and Magic Remedies Act, 1954 to curb misleading advertisements, along with regulation of celebrity and influencer endorsements in healthcare marketing. Public Health Approach Prioritise lifestyle interventions (diet, exercise) under programmes like NPCDCS, reducing over-reliance on pharmacological solutions for preventable metabolic disorders. Improve Access & Equity Consider price regulation via NPPA and insurance inclusion, ensuring affordability and equitable access to GLP-1 drugs for clinically indicated patients. Surveillance & Research Establish national registries and AI-driven pharmacovigilance systems to monitor long-term safety, adverse effects, and real-world outcomes of GLP-1 drug usage. Prelims Pointers GLP-1 drugs mimic incretin hormone, not insulin, enhancing glucose-dependent insulin secretion and suppressing glucagon. Tirzepatide acts as a dual GIP + GLP-1 receptor agonist, offering enhanced metabolic effects. Regulatory authority: CDSCO under DCGI ensures approval, monitoring, and enforcement of drug standards in India. Type 1 diabetes involves insulin deficiency, while Type 2 diabetes involves insulin resistance and glucagon excess. BMI threshold in India: obesity defined as ≥25 kg/m², lower than global standards due to higher metabolic risk. India’s Seafood Exports: From Growth to Global Competitiveness Why in News? India’s seafood exports reached ₹62,408 crore (2024–25), registering sustained ~7% CAGR over 11 years, with frozen shrimp contributing ₹43,334 crore, indicating strong export concentration. India secured US MMPA comparability finding (2025), ensuring continued access to largest market (36.42% share) beyond deadline, alongside ₹39,272 crore public investment since 2015. Relevance GS III (Economy) Agri-exports & Blue Economy Export diversification and value addition External trade vulnerability (market concentration, shrimp dominance) GS II (Governance) Policy interventions (PMMSY, digital traceability, SPS compliance) Trade diplomacy (US MMPA compliance, global market access) Practice Question  “India’s seafood exports have grown significantly, but sustainability and diversification remain key challenges.”Critically analyse the structural issues in India’s fisheries export sector and suggest measures for achieving global competitiveness. (250 words) Static Background Fisheries Sector Overview Fisheries sector supports ~30 million primary livelihoods and nearly 60 million across value chain, contributing to employment, food security, and rural income diversification. India is 2nd largest aquaculture producer globally, contributing ~8% of global fish production, driven by rapid expansion of brackish-water aquaculture systems. Growth Trends Fish production increased from 141.64 lakh tonnes (2019–20) to 197.75 lakh tonnes (2024–25), reflecting consistent ~7% annual growth and sectoral commercialisation. Marine exports more than doubled from ₹30,213 crore (2013–14) to ₹62,408 crore (2024–25), indicating rising global integration and export competitiveness. What are India’s Seafood Exports? Export Composition India exports 350+ seafood varieties to ~130 countries, including frozen shrimp, fish, squid, cuttlefish, surimi products, dried and live seafood, reflecting increasing diversification. Share of value-added products increased from 2.5% to 11%, generating USD 742 million, indicating gradual shift from raw exports to processed, high-value products. Major Markets USA accounts for 36.42% of exports, followed by China, EU, ASEAN, Japan, Middle East, highlighting dependence on few key markets with concentrated demand patterns. Governance / Regulatory Framework (India) Key Schemes & Interventions PMMSY drives sector transformation through quality seed production, aquaculture expansion, disease management, traceability systems, and capacity building across value chain. Promotion of high-value species (tuna, seabass, cobia, GIFT tilapia, tiger shrimp, seaweed) aims to diversify exports and access premium global markets. Sustainability & Compliance Measures Deployment of Turtle Excluder Devices (TEDs) reduces by-catch, ensuring compliance with international conservation norms and export regulations like MMPA. National digital traceability framework enables end-to-end tracking, ensuring food safety, transparency, and compliance with SPS standards in US/EU markets. Ease of Doing Business Reforms SIP digitisation via National Single Window System reduced approval time from 30 days to 72 hours, improving trade facilitation and efficiency. Waiver of SIP for SPF broodstock, fish oil, R&D samples, re-export inputs enhances ease of business and value-added processing capacity. Economic Dimension Seafood exports contribute significantly to foreign exchange earnings and agri-export diversification, strengthening India’s blue economy strategy. Dominance of shrimp exports (₹43,334 crore) creates high commodity concentration risk, exposing sector to price volatility and disease outbreaks. Shift toward value-added processing (11% share) improves unit value realisation and global competitiveness, reducing reliance on bulk exports. Social / Ethical Dimension Fisheries sector enables inclusive growth, supporting small-scale fishers, coastal communities, women workers, and marginal farmers under PMMSY interventions. Ethical supply chains through traceability and certification align with global standards on labour rights, sustainability, and responsible sourcing. However, export-driven mechanisation risks marginalising traditional artisanal fishers, creating intra-sectoral inequality and livelihood vulnerabilities. Health & Quality Dimension Strengthened Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) measures ensure compliance with stringent food safety norms in US and EU markets, protecting export credibility. Digital traceability allows rapid recall and quality monitoring, reducing risks of contamination, rejection, and reputational loss in global markets. Environment / Sustainability Dimension Adoption of TEDs and EEZ sustainable fishing rules reduces by-catch and protects marine biodiversity and endangered species like sea turtles. Expansion of aquaculture must address risks of coastal ecosystem degradation, water pollution, and disease spread, requiring ecosystem-based management approaches. Governance Challenges / Criticisms Market Dependence Heavy reliance on shrimp (~major share) and US market (36.42%) creates vulnerability to trade barriers, regulatory shocks, and demand fluctuations. Sustainability Gaps Incomplete adoption of TEDs and by-catch mitigation technologies undermines compliance with global environmental standards and export regulations. Infrastructure Deficits Limited cold-chain infrastructure, modern harbours, inland logistics hubs restrict expansion of value-added exports and freshwater seafood supply chains. Capacity Constraints Small-scale aquaculture faces challenges in technology adoption, disease control, and certification compliance, affecting productivity and export quality consistency. Technology Dimension Digital traceability systems enhance transparency, compliance, and efficiency, enabling India to meet global food safety and sustainability benchmarks. Adoption of advanced hatchery technologies, cold-chain logistics, and processing units reduces post-harvest losses and improves export competitiveness. Way Forward Diversification Strategy Expand exports of high-value species (tuna, seabass, grouper, seaweed) to reduce dependence on shrimp and enhance resilience of export basket. Value Addition Push Increase share of processed and ready-to-eat seafood beyond 11%, improving export margins and integration into global value chains. Market Expansion Diversify towards UK, EU, ASEAN, West Asia markets, reducing vulnerability arising from US-centric export dependence. Infrastructure Development Invest in integrated cold chains, inland export hubs, modern fishing harbours, ensuring efficient logistics and reduced post-harvest losses. Sustainability Governance Ensure full compliance with MMPA, TED deployment, and EEZ regulations, aligning with SDG-14 (Life Below Water) commitments. Policy Integration Integrate PMMSY with skilling, digital governance, and innovation ecosystems, balancing quantity growth with quality, sustainability, and competitiveness. Prelims Pointers India contributes ~8% of global fish production and is 2nd largest aquaculture producer globally. Seafood exports reached ₹62,408 crore (2024–25), with shrimp contributing ₹43,334 crore. USA share: 36.42% of total seafood export value. PMMSY focuses on infrastructure, diversification, and export promotion. MMPA (USA) requires reduction of marine mammal by-catch for export eligibility. Fish production reached 197.75 lakh tonnes (2024–25) with ~7% annual growth. Value-added products share increased to 11% (USD 742 million).

Apr 4, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

Content Lessons unlearned Jan Vishwas Initiative & Decriminalisation of Compliance Lessons unlearned Why in News? Nalanda temple stampede (March 2026) led to 9 deaths and 12 injuries, triggered by 10,000+ crowd surge vs 500–1,000 capacity, exposing severe crowd management failures. Recurrent tragedies (e.g., RCB celebration 2025, Bihar stampedes 2012, 2014, 2017) highlight systemic gaps despite repeated inquiries and guidelines. Relevance GS II (Governance & Polity) State responsibility under Article 21 (right to life and safety in public spaces) Disaster preparedness gaps and administrative accountability Multi-agency coordination failure (police–local administration–event authorities) GS III (Internal Security & Disaster Management) Stampedes as human-induced disasters within NDMA framework Risk assessment, early warning systems, and emergency response failures Impact of poor crowd control on law & order and policing efficiency Practice Question Q1. “Recurring stampedes in India reflect institutional failure rather than isolated incidents.” Examine the causes of crowd disasters and suggest systemic reforms for effective crowd management. (250 words) Static Background What is Crowd Management? Crowd management involves planning, monitoring, and controlling large gatherings using scientific density thresholds, infrastructure design, and behavioural interventions. Crowd science studies dynamics such as density, flow, panic behaviour, combining quantitative models (persons/m²) and qualitative behavioural insights. Types of Crowds Planned gatherings: events, stadiums, festivals with prior arrangements Spontaneous/emotional gatherings: religious events, celebrity sightings, often digitally mobilised and unpredictable Key Concepts in Crowd Science Critical density threshold: Above 5 persons per m², crowd movement becomes restricted, increasing risk of compressive asphyxia and stampedes. Loss of individual identity in dense crowds leads to panic-driven irrational behaviour, amplifying risk during triggers like falls or rumours. Behavioural tools such as visual cues (mirrors), announcements, guided flow help restore individual awareness and order. Governance / Administrative Dimension Institutional Responsibility Crowd management involves police, local administration, event organisers, and religious institutions, requiring multi-agency coordination. Failure in Nalanda: No prior risk assessment despite predictable surge (Chaitra event) Police diversion due to VIP duty, creating security vacuum Regulatory Framework Managed under: Disaster Management Act, 2005 State Police Acts and local event permissions However, absence of standardised national crowd management protocols leads to inconsistent implementation. Causes of Stampedes (Case-linked Analysis) Structural Factors Inadequate infrastructure: Narrow lanes, blocked exits, poor entry–exit segregation Absence of crowd flow design, leading to bidirectional congestion and bottlenecks Administrative Failures Lack of anticipatory planning and crowd estimation Inadequate police deployment and on-ground supervision Delay in emergency response (ambulances, medical aid) Behavioural Triggers Panic due to fall or rumour (“someone died”) triggers sudden surge Queue violations and VIP/bribery entry disrupt orderly movement Governance Lapses Alleged corruption (paid entry through exit gate) worsened congestion Poor enforcement of safety norms and accountability mechanisms Constitutional / Legal Dimension State obligation under Article 21 (Right to Life) includes ensuring public safety in mass gatherings. Supreme Court emphasises duty of care by authorities in disaster prevention. Criminal liability invoked under BNS Section 105 (culpable homicide not amounting to murder) for negligence. Social / Ethical Dimension Stampedes disproportionately affect: Women, elderly, and economically weaker sections, reflecting vulnerability in public safety systems Religious faith-driven gatherings show: High trust in institutions but low systemic preparedness Ethical issue: Preventable deaths indicate failure of state capacity and institutional accountability Internal Security / Disaster Management Dimension Stampedes classified as human-induced disasters, requiring integration into NDMA disaster risk reduction frameworks. Poor crowd management diverts police resources, impacting law and order and emergency response efficiency. Data & Evidence Nalanda incident: 10,000+ crowd vs ~1,000 capacity, resulting in compressive asphyxia deaths Bihar history: 2012 (22 deaths), 2014 (33 deaths), 2017 (3 deaths) → pattern of recurring failures Global benchmark: Developed countries enforce strict crowd density limits and real-time monitoring systems Governance Challenges / Criticisms Lack of Institutionalisation Crowd management remains experience-based policing, not formalised into academic or professional discipline in India. Absence of Standard Protocols No uniform national guidelines on crowd density, entry-exit design, emergency evacuation planning. Capacity Constraints Limited training of police and organisers in crowd science and behavioural management techniques. Coordination Failures Weak coordination between event organisers, police, health services, and local bodies. Political Prioritisation Issues Diversion of police for VIP security (Nalanda case) compromises public safety priorities. Way Forward Institutionalise Crowd Science Introduce crowd management as formal academic and training discipline in police academies and disaster management institutes. Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) Develop national SOPs on: Maximum crowd density thresholds Entry-exit design and segregation Emergency evacuation protocols Technology Integration Use AI-based crowd monitoring, CCTV analytics, drones, and real-time alerts to predict and manage crowd surges. Infrastructure Reforms Design dedicated crowd corridors, wider access routes, multiple exits, especially in religious and high-density sites. Behavioural Interventions Deploy public announcements, signage, behavioural nudges, and trained volunteers to maintain order and calmness. Governance Accountability Fix responsibility through legal liability for organisers and authorities, ensuring compliance with safety norms. Community & Digital Coordination Use digital platforms for crowd forecasting and advisories, especially for religious and festival gatherings. Prelims Pointers Stampedes caused primarily by compressive asphyxia, not trampling. Critical density: >5 persons per m² increases risk significantly. Managed under Disaster Management Act, 2005 framework. BNS Section 105 deals with culpable homicide not amounting to murder. Crowd types: planned vs spontaneous (emotion-driven). Jan Vishwas Initiative & Decriminalisation of Compliance Why in News? Government operationalised the Jan Vishwas framework via the Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Act, 2023 and the Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Bill, 2026 (recently passed by Parliament). The 2023 Act decriminalised 183 provisions in 42 Central Acts, while the 2026 Bill amends 784 provisions across 79 Central Acts (23 Ministries), decriminalising 717 provisions by replacing jail terms with civil penalties/fines for minor offences. This reflects PM’s vision of “danda se data” — shifting from coercive to trust-based and facilitative governance. Key Features – Scale of Reform The reforms cover minor procedural defaults (filings, registers, reporting), business compliance lapses (factory norms, record maintenance), and low-harm civic violations. While the direct impact is on ~900 central provisions, one parent Act can generate thousands of compliances through delegated legislation, highlighting the deeper challenge of “regulatory cholesterol”. Relevance GS II (Governance & Polity) Reform of regulatory state and ease of doing business Doctrine of proportionality and Article 21 (personal liberty) Delegated legislation and accountability concerns GS III (Economy) Reducing compliance burden and improving investment climate Formalisation of economy and reducing “regulatory cholesterol” Impact on judicial pendency and efficiency Practice Question “Decriminalisation of minor offences marks a paradigm shift from coercive to trust-based governance.”Critically examine the significance and limitations of the Jan Vishwas Initiative in India’s regulatory framework. (250 words) Static Background Criminalisation in Indian Regulatory State Indian legal framework historically embedded criminal penalties for minor procedural lapses, reflecting colonial-era control-oriented governance philosophy. Laws passed by Parliament enable delegated legislation (rules, notifications, SOPs), often multiplying compliance obligations with criminal consequences. Concept of Decriminalisation Decriminalisation involves removing imprisonment provisions for minor offences, replacing them with civil penalties, fines, or administrative actions. Objective: ensure proportionality of punishment, reduce over-criminalisation, and uphold Article 21 (personal liberty). Key Features of Jan Vishwas Reform Scale of Reform Review covered 950+ laws, eliminating 12,500+ imprisonment-linked compliances, impacting both citizens and enterprises across sectors. Addresses irrational provisions such as jail for cheque bouncing (43 lakh cases), highlighting link between over-criminalisation and judicial backlog (~5 crore cases). Types of Offences Decriminalised Removed jail provisions for: Minor procedural defaults (filings, registers, reporting) Business compliance lapses (factory norms, record maintenance) Low-harm civic violations (ticketless travel, minor regulatory breaches) Governance / Administrative Dimension Delegated Legislation Problem Single statutory provision can generate thousands of criminal compliances, e.g., 8,500+ obligations under Factories Act via rules. Administrative instruments (21 types: notifications, circulars, SOPs, etc.) expand criminalisation without parliamentary scrutiny. Compliance Complexity India has 41 types of compliance requirements (licenses, filings, registers, inspections), creating regulatory overload (“regulatory cholesterol”). Example: Environment Protection Act, 1986 used to create 20+ criminal liabilities in poultry guidelines (2021). Constitutional / Legal Dimension Excessive criminalisation violates: Article 21 → protection of life and personal liberty Doctrine of proportionality (SC jurisprudence) Jan Vishwas aligns with: Ease of Doing Business reforms Shift from “niti” (rules) to “nyaya” (justice) Reinforces principle: criminal law as last resort (ultima ratio) Economic Dimension Over-criminalisation increases: Compliance costs and uncertainty, discouraging entrepreneurship Informality: only ~10 lakh of 7 crore enterprises contribute to formal social security systems Decriminalisation promotes: Investment climate improvement Reduced litigation burden Efficient allocation of judicial and administrative resources Social / Ethical Dimension Unenforced criminal laws create: Inequality → harsher impact on poor, selective enforcement Corruption → rent-seeking through discretionary enforcement Informality culture → erosion of respect for rule of law Ethical governance shift: From fear-based compliance → trust-based compliance (Jan Vishwas) Internal Security / Governance Nexus Overuse of criminal law dilutes focus on serious offences, weakening deterrence capacity of state machinery. Police and judiciary burdened with minor compliance cases, affecting efficiency in handling serious crimes and national security issues. Challenges / Criticisms Partial Decriminalisation Some provisions retain personal criminal liability even when covered under Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), creating legal overlap and ambiguity. Bureaucratic Resistance Administrative tendency to retain control via delegated legislation, limiting full realisation of reform objectives. Implementation Gaps State-level laws and rules may not reflect uniform decriminalisation, leading to federal inconsistencies. Risk of Under-deterrence Critics argue excessive decriminalisation may reduce compliance discipline, especially in environmental and labour standards. Way Forward Deepen Decriminalisation Extend review to state laws and subordinate legislation, ensuring uniformity across federal structure. Digitisation & Transparency Create single digital repository (“single source of truth”) for all laws, rules, and compliances to reduce ambiguity and discretion. Rationalisation of Delegated Legislation Limit scope of criminal penalties in rules and notifications, ensuring parliamentary oversight and accountability. Strengthen Civil Penalty Framework Replace jail provisions with graded monetary penalties, administrative sanctions, and compliance incentives. Capacity Building Train bureaucracy toward facilitative governance mindset, shifting from enforcement-centric to service delivery approach. Replication by States Encourage states to adopt Jan Vishwas principles, ensuring nationwide regulatory coherence and ease of doing business. Prelims Pointers Jan Vishwas Act, 2023 focuses on decriminalisation of minor offences across multiple laws. Over 12,500 compliance provisions decriminalised across 950+ laws. Cheque bouncing cases (~43 lakh) significantly contribute to judicial pendency. Delegated legislation includes rules, notifications, SOPs, often creating additional compliance burdens. Principle: criminal law as last resort (ultima ratio).

Apr 4, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

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)