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Apr 28, 2026 Daily Prelims CA Quiz

The Current Affairs questions are based on sources like ‘The Hindu’, ‘Indian Express’ and ‘PIB’, which are very important sources for UPSC Prelims Exam. The questions are focused on both the concepts and facts. The topics covered here are generally different from what is being covered under ‘Daily Current Affairs/Daily News Analysis (DNA) and Daily Static Quiz’ to avoid duplication. The questions would be published from Monday to Saturday before 2 PM. One should not spend more than 10 minutes on this initiative. Gear up and Make the Best Use of this initiative. Do remember that, “the difference between Ordinary and EXTRA-Ordinary is PRACTICE!!” Important Note: Don’t forget to post your marks in the comment section. Also, let us know if you enjoyed today’s test 🙂 After completing the 5 questions, click on ‘View Questions’ to check your score, time taken, and solutions. .To take the Test Click Here

Apr 28, 2026 IASbaba's Daily Current Affairs

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) India-New Zealand FTA Subject: Economy – International Trade; Bilateral FTA; India-New Zealand; Investment; Mobility; AYUSH. Why in News? India and New Zealand signed a landmark Free Trade Agreement (FTA) on April 27, 2026 at Bharat Mandapam, New Delhi  Key Highlights 100% Duty-Free Access for Indian Exports All Indian goods exported to New Zealand will have zero duty from day one of implementation  This covers textiles, apparel, leather, footwear, gems & jewellery, engineering goods, processed foods, automobiles, auto components  Earlier, New Zealand had peak tariffs up to 10% on key Indian exports  $20 Billion Investment Commitment New Zealand has committed to facilitate $20 billion investment into India over 15 years  Expected to flow into agriculture, manufacturing, renewable energy, infrastructure, startups, and emerging technologies  Strengthens India’s manufacturing ecosystem including electric vehicles  Market Access Provisions India’s Offer to New Zealand Tariff liberalisation on 70.03% of tariff lines covering 95% of bilateral trade value  Exclusion category (29.97% of tariff lines) protects sensitive sectors: dairy, onions, sugar, edible oils, coffee, rubber, spices, gems & jewellery  Tariff Rate Quota (TRQ) System with Safeguards Apples: quota of 32,500 tonnes in first year, rising to 45,000 tonnes; linkage to Apple Action Plan  Kiwifruit and Mānuka honey: TRQ with Minimum Import Price  Phased elimination for wool, sheep meat (0% duty), wine (reduction over 10 years)  Services and Mobility (Major Win for India) Student Mobility Indian students can work 20 hours per week while studying  Post-study work visa: 3 years for STEM Bachelor & Master’s, 4 years for Doctorate (first such annex with any country)  Professional Pathways New Temporary Employment Entry (TEE) Visa with 5,000 visa quota for skilled Indians (IT, engineering, healthcare, education, construction)  Also covers yoga instructors, Indian chefs, music teachers, AYUSH practitioners  Working Holiday Visa 1,000 young Indians annually can live and work in New Zealand for 12 months  AYUSH Goes Global (First Time) New Zealand has facilitated trade in Ayurveda, yoga, and other traditional medicine services for the first time in any FTA  Promotes medical value travel and global recognition of India’s AYUSH systems  Agriculture Productivity Partnership Focus Areas Action Plans for apples, kiwifruit, honey to boost productivity of Indian growers  Establishment of Centres of Excellence, improved planting material, capacity building  Cooperative research on horticulture, honey, forestry, livestock, fisheries, apiculture, and wine  Joint Agriculture Productivity Council (JAPC) Monitors TRQs and ensures delivery on Agricultural Productivity Action Plans  Textile and Apparel Sector Boost “Made-up textile articles” were the 4th largest import category from India into New Zealand (NZ$80.22 million in year ending Dec 2025)  FTA provides duty-free access; expected to help reduce India’s dependence on select markets  New Zealand’s premium wool imports will support high-end garment exports  Auto and EV Sector Zero duty on Indian automotive exports to New Zealand (earlier 5-10% tariff on select engineering goods)  $20 billion investment expected to flow into electric vehicle (EV) components and high-technology manufacturing Pharmaceutical Sector Gains Fast-track mechanism for regulatory approval of Indian pharma products in New Zealand  Enhanced access for Indian generic medicines Implementation Timeline FTA to be tabled in New Zealand Parliament on April 28, 2026  Expected to enter into force by end of 2026 after ratification by both countries  Strategic Significance India’s 7th FTA in 5 Years After agreements with Mauritius, UAE, Australia, EFTA (4 countries), UK, and Oman  India now has trade pacts with all members of RCEP (Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership) except China  Bilateral Trade Growth Merchandise exports to New Zealand: $711 million (2024-25) – 32% growth  Bilateral trade target: **5billionby2030**(currently1.3 billion)  Services exports to New Zealand: $634 million (13% growth)  Context of Global Uncertainty New Zealand PM Christopher Luxon: “At a time of global uncertainty, this FTA is a clear commitment by both sides to stable, predictable, and rules-based trade”  Static-Dynamic Linkage Static (Economy / International Relations Syllabus) RCEP (Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership) – 15-member Asia-Pacific trade bloc EFTA (European Free Trade Association) – Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, Switzerland WTO Most Favoured Nation principle – Article I of GATT Tariff vs Non-Tariff Barriers – tariff concessions in FTA Dynamic (Current Affairs – April 2026) Fastest negotiated FTA – 9 months (launched March 16, 2025) 100% duty-free access for Indian exports – unprecedented in India’s FTA history $20 billion investment commitment – largest from New Zealand AYUSH first-time inclusion – traditional medicine services in FTA Student work rights – 20 hours/week guaranteed even if NZ changes domestic policy Source/Reference: https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2255990&reg=3&lang=1 Indian Researchers Decode Breast Cancer Drug Resistance: Role of CDKN1B Gene Subject: Science & Tech – Cancer Research; Genetics; Precision Medicine; Drug Resistance; CDKN1B Gene. Why in News? Researchers from University of Delhi, South Campus and Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai have identified a genetic reason why hormone receptor-positive (HR+) breast cancer patients become resistant to standard hormone therapies Findings published in the British Journal of Cancer Key Statistics: Breast Cancer in India Annual cases: Approximately 2 lakh (200,000) HR+ breast cancer (hormone receptor-positive) accounts for nearly 70% of all cases in India Resistance rate: In about 40% of cases, standard drugs lose effectiveness within months to a few years → relapse and regrowth of cancerous cells What is HR+ Breast Cancer? Cancer cells that grow in response to hormones like estrogen Treated with hormonal therapy using drugs like tamoxifen that block or reduce hormone effects Hormonal therapy is cost-effective and involves only oral medication The Genetic Discovery: CDKN1B Gene Gene Function CDKN1B gene is responsible for producing a protein called p27 p27 protein slows down the growth of breast cancer cells p27 is essential for drugs like tamoxifen to work effectively What Goes Wrong When CDKN1B gene is missing, damaged, or not performing optimally, p27 protein production is affected Loss-of-function mutations or deletions in CDKN1B were dramatically enriched in resistant tumors The Solution: CDK4/6 Inhibitors What are CDK4/6 Inhibitors? Another class of drugs (e.g., palbociclib) that target enzymes driving cell division These drugs work effectively even in the absence of p27 protein Combination Therapy Mice models showed that combination of tamoxifen + palbociclib was more effective at killing cancerous cells Clinical Implications (Precision Medicine) Biomarker for Drug Resistance p27 protein levels can be measured in laboratory testing Patients with low p27 levels are at high risk of developing resistance to hormonal therapy Early Intervention Strategy Patients with low p27 may benefit from addition of palbociclib at early stage of cancer itself, before resistance develops Static-Dynamic Linkage Static (Science & Technology / Biology Syllabus) Gene function: CDKN1B as tumor suppressor gene (regulates cell cycle) Protein synthesis: Central dogma – DNA → RNA → Protein Hormone receptors: Estrogen receptor (ER) and progesterone receptor (PR) in breast cancer Cell cycle regulation: CDK4/6 enzymes drive cell division; inhibition slows cancer growth Translational research: From laboratory discovery to clinical application Dynamic (Current Affairs – 2026) Indian-led research – University of Delhi South Campus + Tata Memorial Hospital British Journal of Cancer publication – peer-reviewed international recognition 40% resistance rate – addressing major treatment failure cause Cost-effective solution – adding palbociclib early could prevent futile therapy p27 as biomarker – simple lab test for patient stratification Source/Reference: https://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-breast-cancer-study-cdkn1b-gene-hormone-therapy-resistance-p27-protein-10657722/ SCO Defence Ministers’ Meeting 2026: Rajnath Singh in Bishkek for Regional Security Talks Subject: International Relations – SCO; Regional Security; Counter-terrorism; Defence Cooperation; India-Central Asia. Why in News? Rajnath Singh attended the SCO Defence Ministers’ Meeting in Bishkek (April 2026) amid rising West Asia tensions. Key Agenda of the Meeting Core Deliberations Key regional and global security challenges International peace and stability Counter-terrorism efforts Enhancing defence collaboration within the grouping Measures to mitigate the impact of West Asia conflict on regional stability India’s Stance (Expected) Reiterate commitment to global peace and stability Underscore policy of zero tolerance towards terrorism and extremism Bilateral Meetings on Sidelines Rajnath Singh expected to hold bilateral meetings with counterparts from: Belarus Kazakhstan Kyrgyzstan Other participating nations Aim: Strengthening defence cooperation and expanding strategic ties About the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) Establishment Founded: June 15, 2001 in Shanghai, China Predecessor: Shanghai Five (China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan) – established 1996 Current Members (10) India, Russia, China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Iran, Belarus (joined 2024) India’s SCO Journey Became full member in 2017 (along with Pakistan) Assumed rotating chairmanship in 2023 Observer States Afghanistan, Belarus (was observer before full membership), Mongolia Dialogue Partners Armenia, Azerbaijan, Cambodia, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Turkey, Qatar (2023) Objectives of SCO Main Goals Strengthening mutual trust and neighbourly relations Promoting effective cooperation in politics, trade, economy, science, technology, culture, education, energy, transport, tourism, environmental protection Joint efforts to maintain and ensure peace, security, and stability in the region Establishment of a democratic, fair, and rational new international political and economic order Areas of Cooperation Security (counter-terrorism, separatism, extremism – the “three evils”) Defence and military cooperation Economic integration and connectivity Cultural and people-to-people exchanges Key Institutional Framework Highest Decision-Making Body Council of Heads of State (CHS) – meets annually Other Councils Council of Heads of Government (CHG) Council of Ministers of Foreign Affairs (CMFA) Council of National Coordinators (CNC) SCO Bodies Regional Anti-Terrorist Structure (RATS) – headquartered in Tashkent, Uzbekistan SCO Secretariat – headquartered in Beijing, China India’s Engagement with SCO Strategic Significance Only SCO member that shares borders with both Pakistan and China Platform to engage with Central Asian republics (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan) Connectivity projects: International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTSC), Chabahar Port India’s Priorities Counter-terrorism cooperation through RATS Enhancing economic connectivity with Central Asia Balancing influence of China and Pakistan within the grouping Static-Dynamic Linkage Static (International Relations / Polity Syllabus) UNSC Permanent Five: China and Russia are SCO members Nuclear powers in SCO: India, China, Russia, Pakistan India’s Central Asia policy: Connect Central Asia (2023) – first India-Central Asia summit INSTSC: Alternative trade route to Europe via Iran, Central Asia, Russia Dynamic (Current Affairs – April 2026) Defence Ministers’ Meeting in Bishkek – key platform for regional security coordination West Asia crisis context – discussions on mitigating impact on regional stability India’s zero tolerance to terrorism – consistent stance reiterated Bilateral meetings – Rajnath Singh with Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan (strengthening defence ties) Belarus as newest member – joined SCO in 2024 (first meeting after full membership) Source/Reference: https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/rajnath-singh-arrives-in-bishkek-for-sco-defence-ministers-meeting/article70912774.ece 'Made in India' Cloud Push: Govt May Mandate Sovereign Cloud for Critical Sectors Subject: Science & Tech – Cloud Computing; Polity – Data Sovereignty; Economy – Digital Infrastructure; International Relations – Sanctions Impact. Why in News? Government is considering requiring companies in critical sectors (energy, telecom, banking) to use ‘Made in India’ sovereign cloud systems Move prompted by Microsoft’s sudden blocking of Nayara Energy from its IT services in July 2025 Aim: Reduce dependence on foreign cloud providers and strengthen data security What Triggered the Move? Nayara Energy Incident (July 2025) Microsoft suspended tech support to Nayara Energy following EU sanctions (Russian oil giant Rosneft holds 49.13% in Nayara) Block affected employees’ Outlook and Teams accounts Nayara lost access to its own data, proprietary tools, and products – despite fully paid-up licenses What are Cloud Systems? Definition On-demand, internet-based services delivering computing resources (servers, data storage, databases, software) hosted in remote data centres Businesses rent resources instead of purchasing expensive in-house IT infrastructure Benefits Scalability (instantly scale up/down to meet demand) Cost efficiency (no heavy capital investment) Core to modern business operations The Sovereign Cloud Proposal What is Being Discussed Companies in critical sectors (energy, telecom, banking) may be required to host digital infrastructure only on sovereign cloud Would ensure no sudden disruptions and insure against geopolitical risks Challenge Indian-made products are not at the same level as foreign counterparts yet Industry consensus: domestic cloud systems cannot yet rival US-based options Push needed to produce such systems in India Static-Dynamic Linkage Static (Polity / Economy / Science & Technology Syllabus) Data Protection Framework: Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 National Cyber Security Strategy – under formulation Critical Information Infrastructure (CII) – under Section 70 of IT Act, 2000 MeitY: Nodal ministry for IT policy and cyber security Dynamic (Current Affairs – 2026) Nayara Energy incident (July 2025) – wake-up call for digital sovereignty Microsoft’s automated sanctions enforcement – flaw acknowledged and rectified Government push for ‘Made in India’ cloud – reducing foreign dependency Challenge: domestic cloud systems need to match global standards Geopolitical context: rising US-China, Russia-West tensions affecting Indian companies Source/Reference: https://indianexpress.com/article/business/govt-keen-firms-in-critical-sectors-use-made-in-india-cloud-systems-10659074/ Light Pollution Threatens World's Darkest Skies in Chile's Atacama Desert Subject: Geography – Atacama Desert; Science & Tech – Astronomy; Environment – Light Pollution; Extremely Large Telescope (ELT). Why in News? Chile’s Atacama Desert – considered the driest place on Earth – faces growing threat from light pollution due to urban sprawl, industrial development, mining, and wind farms An energy firm’s proposal to build a green power complex just kilometres from the Paranal Observatory (later cancelled) exposed that existing sky preservation laws are outdated and unclear Atacama Desert: An Astronomical Paradise Unique Conditions Driest non-polar desert in the world Over 300 clear nights per year (no clouds, no rain) High altitude (3,000+ metres) Isolation from urban light pollution Area: over 105,000 sq km Why It’s Ideal for Astronomy Rare combination of dry climate, high altitude, and darkness makes it an unrivalled hub for world-class astronomy Home to the world’s largest ground-based astronomical projects Major Observatories and Telescopes European Southern Observatory (ESO) Operates several facilities in Atacama, including Paranal Observatory Extremely Large Telescope (ELT) $1.5 billion endeavour by ESO Scheduled for completion in 2030 798 mirrors with light-gathering area of nearly 1,000 square metres Will be 20 times more powerful than today’s leading telescopes Will be 15 times sharper than NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope Other Observatories Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) Several international projects in the “Photon Valley” corridor The Threat: Light Pollution What is Light Pollution? Excessive, misdirected, or obtrusive artificial light Disrupts astronomical observations by creating “skyglow” that washes out faint celestial objects Sources of Threat in Atacama Urban sprawl (growing cities near observatories) Industrial development Mining operations Wind farms (proposed green power complex near Paranal) Static-Dynamic Linkage Static (Geography / Science & Technology Syllabus) Atacama Desert: Rain shadow effect caused by Andes Mountains; driest non-polar desert; rich in copper and lithium Electromagnetic spectrum: Optical astronomy (visible light) vs. radio astronomy (radio waves) Why deserts are good for astronomy: Clear skies, low humidity, minimal atmospheric distortion, no cloud cover Hubble vs. ground telescopes: Space telescopes avoid atmospheric distortion; ground telescopes can be larger and cheaper Dynamic (Current Affairs – 2026) Light pollution emerging threat – even in remote Atacama Renewable energy vs. astronomy conflict – green power complex cancelled after scientific appeal Outdated preservation laws – Chile reviewing environmental regulations ELT completion 2030 – world’s most powerful optical telescope at risk Global lessons – balancing development and preservation of dark sky sites Source/Reference: https://www.thehindu.com/sci-tech/science/light-pollution-threatens-worlds-darkest-skies-in-the-atacama/article70911369.ece St Francis Xavier Row Subject: History – Portuguese in India; Art & Culture – Goa’s Religious Heritage; Current Affairs – Religious Sensitivities. Why in News? YouTuber Gautam Khattar was arrested from Himachal Pradesh and brought to Goa on transit remand on April 26, 2026 He made derogatory remarks against St Francis Xavier on April 18, 2026 at an event organised by Sanatan Dharma Raksha Samiti Mormugao in Vasco, South Goa Remarks led to widespread protests across Goa, with protestors demanding immediate arrest for hurting religious sentiments and disturbing communal harmony Who is St Francis Xavier? Basic Profile Spanish Jesuit missionary (1506-1552) Founding member of The Society of Jesus (Jesuits) Revered as “Goencho Saib” (Lord of Goa) – patron saint of Goa Arrived in Goa in 1542 (Portuguese colony at the time) “Incorruptible” Remains Died in 1552 on Shangchuan Island (off China’s coast) Body exhumed in 1553; transported to Malacca (present-day Malaysia) Shipped to Goa in 1554; kept at St Paul’s College, Old Goa Transferred to Basilica of Bom Jesus in 1624 Remains found “well preserved” – minimal signs of decay despite being exhumed; considered a “miracle” by the faithful Exposition of Sacred Relics Held once every decade in Goa Four-century-old silver glass casket holding relics is lowered from mausoleum and placed at Se Cathedral Remains kept for public veneration for 45 days Pilgrims of all faiths, especially Catholics, visit to pay homage The Controversy What Happened Khattar spoke at ‘Bhagwan Parshuram Janmotsav’ event in Vasco, South Goa Made derogatory remarks against St Francis Xavier Speech went viral on social media, triggering criticism Static-Dynamic Linkage Static (History / Art & Culture Syllabus) Portuguese in India: Arrived 1498 (Vasco da Gama); Goa captured 1510 (Afonso de Albuquerque) Goa Inquisition (1560-1812): Established by Portuguese to suppress heresy; abolished in 1812 Jesuits in India: St Francis Xavier; educational institutions (St Xavier’s colleges) UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Goa: Churches and Convents of Goa (including Basilica of Bom Jesus) – inscribed 1986 Dynamic (Current Affairs – April 2026) Gautam Khattar’s arrest – derogatory remarks against St Francis Xavier Protests across Goa – demand for immediate arrest Political condemnation – cross-party consensus CM Sawant’s statement – communal harmony cannot be disturbed by outsiders Previous Velingkar controversy (2024) – DNA test demand; Goa Inquisition reference Source/Reference: https://indianexpress.com/article/explained/explained-history/st-francis-xavier-comments-goa-gautam-khattar-10658678/ (MAINS Focus) AI in Middle School: Feasible, Ethical, and Age-Appropriate? GS Paper II – Governance (Education) | GS Paper III – Science & Technology School Curriculum; AI Literacy; Computational Thinking; NEP 2020; Digital Safety   Introduction CBSE will introduce a CT–AI curriculum for classes 3–8 from 2026–27, focusing on core skills like abstraction and algorithmic thinking, along with ethics and digital safety. While aligned with global practices, concerns remain about age-appropriate understanding, shift away from rote learning, and risks like anthropomorphising AI.   Main Body Global Precedents: Aligning with International Frameworks OECD and European Commission’s AI Literacy Framework: Identifies CT as a precursor to AI learning Recommends CT competencies across age bands beginning from early primary school AI4K12 Initiative (United States): Places CT-related competencies at the base of its “Five Big Ideas in AI” CT-competencies progression plan spans K-2, 3-5, 6-8, and 9-12 grade bands UNESCO Recommendations: Identifies topics such as “What is AI?”, “Foundations of computing”, and “Data literacy” as necessary for school students Learners need to cultivate logical thinking from early stages and gradually build problem-solving skills CBSE’s Alignment: Sequencing broadly aligns with these comparative curricular architectures Designed independently in line with NEP 2020 and National Curriculum Framework for School Education (NCF-SE), 2023 The Feasibility Question: Can Middle Schoolers Engage? Empirical Evidence (US Middle Schools): Learners in the 11-13 age group can engage with AI ideas when supported by structured pedagogical interventions Introducing ethical dimensions of AI at this stage is pedagogically feasible Research on AI in K-12 Education: School-age participants as young as 10-12 years can work with fundamental AI concepts Introducing concepts such as supervised learning or predictive modelling is viable for learners in 11-14 age group No-Code Tools: Many international initiatives encourage no-code tools for introductory AI learning CBSE’s expectation that Class 8 students can solve real-world problems using no-code tools is supported by multiple empirical studies The Verdict: CBSE’s CT-AI framework appears compatible with learning capacities observed in this age group Addressing Inherent Risks: Anthropomorphism and Misconceptions The Risk: Children may start attributing human-like traits or capabilities to AI tools that do not actually possess them AI systems are pattern-matchers, not thinkers; children may not understand this distinction CBSE’s Response: Curriculum contains topics discussing ethical use, fairness, and responsible digital behaviour Such discussions can help reduce children’s misconceptions about AI Modules can support better understanding and prudent use of AI systems AI4K12 Guidelines (for Comparison): Recognising when AI systems may mislead Identifying bias in datasets Distinguishing between AI and human capabilities across all age groups The Gap: Does CBSE explicitly teach children that AI is not human-like? Does it address the “black box” problem (AI systems that cannot explain their reasoning)? Moving Away from Rote Learning The Indian Problem: Habit of rote learning is deeply entrenched Students memorise without understanding; reproduce without reasoning CT and AI Potential: CT and AI learning have the potential to encourage inquiry-driven, reflective learning Emphasises practical modelling, reflection, and ethical reasoning Can contribute to ongoing efforts to move classroom practices away from rote-based methods Cross-Disciplinary Design: CBSE curriculum follows cross-disciplinary design by integrating CT into Mathematics and ‘The World Around Us’ course for Classes 3-5 Global experiences with cross-disciplinary instructional models reported improvements in students’ reasoning and problem-solving The Challenge: Curriculum design alone cannot change rote culture Teacher training, assessment reform, and classroom practices must align Way Forward: Recommendations Teacher Training: National mission for teacher upskilling in CT and AI Pre-service and in-service training modules Certification pathways for AI literacy educators Infrastructure: Bridge digital divide (devices, internet, electricity in schools) No-code tools pre-installed and tested Offline alternatives for schools without reliable connectivity Assessment Reform: Move away from rote-based examinations Project-based assessment (build, test, reflect) Portfolios and peer review, not just pen-and-paper tests Curriculum Support: Develop age-appropriate local examples (Indian contexts, not just Western) Explicit modules on AI anthropomorphism (AI is not human) Parental awareness campaigns to reinforce learning at home Pilot and Scale: Pilot in select schools before nationwide rollout Gather Indian empirical evidence on learning outcomes Iterate based on classroom feedback   Conclusion CBSE’s CT-AI curriculum for classes 3–8 aligns with global frameworks and National Education Policy 2020, and can foster early AI literacy and ethical awareness through activity-based learning. However, its success hinges on robust teacher training, adequate infrastructure, and assessment reforms. Without these, and without addressing risks like anthropomorphising AI, it may remain a token addition rather than transforming rote-based learning.   UPSC Mains Practice Question Evaluate the feasibility of introducing AI literacy for classes 3–8 in India, highlighting key challenges in teacher capacity, infrastructure, and assessment. (250 words, 15 marks)   https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/can-middle-school-students-engage-with-ai/article70913678.ece Agriculture 2026-27: Season of Scarcity, Rich for Reform GS Paper III – Economy (Agriculture; Food Security) | GS Paper III – Environment Monsoon Forecast; Fertiliser Crisis; Subsidy Reform; Direct Income Support   Introduction The 2026–27 farm season may face a “perfect storm” of a below-normal monsoon (El Niño risk) and a severe fertiliser supply shock due to the West Asia conflict. Disruptions in gas and key inputs, along with curbs by major exporters, expose India’s heavy import dependence. The crisis highlights urgent vulnerabilities—and the need for long-pending reforms rather than continued policy delays.   Main Body The Monsoon: Below Normal, But Not the Primary Concern IMD Forecast: “Below normal” southwest monsoon (June-September) 92% of long period average (LPA) Anticipated El Niño may impact both kharif (planting in one month) and rabi (2026-27 winter crop) The Mitigating Factor: Improved irrigation coverage over the years has made Indian agriculture relatively resilient against subnormal rains Water is not the primary concern The Real Concern: Plant nutrients (fertilisers) Supply shock, not just price shock The Fertiliser Crisis: Supply Shock, Not Price Shock Historical Context: 2008 global food crisis: price shock 2021-22 post-Russia-Ukraine war: price shock Current crisis (2026): supply shock What makes the current crisis different: Prices haven’t yet surged to 2008 or 2021-22 highs But availability itself is in question Extends beyond finished fertilisers to key raw materials: Natural gas Ammonia Sulphur The Strait of Hormuz Factor: Effective closure has affected around one-third of the world’s seaborne fertiliser trade 90% of India’s LPG imports and significant fertiliser imports transit this corridor Other Supply Constraints: Russia (one-fifth share of global fertiliser trade) prioritising domestic availability China (India’s biggest urea and DAP supplier until 2023-24) restricting exports India’s Vulnerability: Hardly any domestic reserves of: natural gas, rock phosphate, potash, mineable sulphur Predominantly import-dependent in plant nutrients The Failure of the Current Subsidy Regime What the Current Regime Does: Product-wise subsidy on urea, DAP, and other fertilisers Artificially underprices fertilisers to keep farmer costs low Why It Fails During a Supply Shock: Subsidies boost demand (farmers pay less, use more) But supply is constrained (imports blocked, domestic production limited) Result: shortages, black markets, diversion The Perverse Incentives: Urea subsidy encourages overuse (imbalanced soil health) Subsidies benefit fertiliser companies as much as farmers No incentive for efficient use or alternative nutrient sources The Fiscal Burden: Fertiliser subsidy bill already huge During supply shock, either subsidies skyrocket (if imports available) or shortages worsen (if imports not available) The Way Forward: Deregulation and Direct Income Support The Proposal: Deregulate retail prices of urea, DAP, and all other fertilisers Replace product-wise subsidy regime with a flat per-acre payment Example: Rs 5,000 per acre for all cultivating farmers Redirect and repurpose funds from both fertiliser subsidy and PM-Kisan into a genuinely pro-farmer direct income support scheme Why This Works: Farmers get cash, not subsidised inputs Farmers decide what to buy (fertilisers, seeds, water, labour) based on their needs Removes distortion from fertiliser overuse Market prices for fertilisers reflect genuine scarcity (rationing by price, not by shortage) Reduces fiscal burden (subsidy becomes capped per-acre payment, not open-ended import bill) Potential Objections and Responses: Objection Response Farmers will face higher fertiliser costs Cash transfer compensates; farmers can choose cheaper alternatives (bio-fertilisers, organic manure) Deregulation will lead to price gouging Competitive markets; government can monitor anti-competitive practices Small farmers will lose out Per-acre payment benefits small farmers proportionally more (higher subsidy per acre) Administrative challenge of identifying cultivating farmers PM-Kisan database already exists; can be expanded Alternative Nutrient Sources: Augmenting Availability Beyond Urea and DAP: Bio-fertilisers (rhizobium, azotobacter, phosphate solubilising bacteria) Organic manure (crop residues, animal dung, compost) Nano-fertilisers (emerging technology) Treated municipal waste (phosphorus recovery) The Biomethane Opportunity: India’s cattle and poultry manure can generate over 55 billion cubic metres of biomethane annually Biomethane can replace natural gas as fertiliser feedstock Reduces import dependence Government’s Role: Focus on augmenting availability, not artificial underpricing Support alternative nutrient sources through R&D and infrastructure Create markets for bio-fertilisers and organic manure The Political Economy of Reform Why Reform Has Been Delayed: Fertiliser subsidy is politically sensitive (farmers vote) Industry lobby (fertiliser companies benefit from product-wise subsidy) Bureaucratic inertia (existing system, however flawed, is familiar) Why Reform Is Now Possible: Supply shock makes existing system unworkable (you cannot subsidise what is not available) Perfect storm creates political cover for hard choices PM-Kisan provides existing direct income transfer infrastructure The Opportunity: 2026-27 could be a perfect storm for Indian agriculture Also an opportunity for reforms where “kicking the can down the road” is no longer an option There are limits to subsidising products whose supply is itself in question   Conclusion The 2026–27 agricultural season may face a dual shock: weak monsoon and severe fertiliser supply disruptions due to the West Asia conflict. With India heavily import-dependent, the crisis exposes the limits of the current product-based subsidy regime, which worsens shortages by underpricing scarce inputs. The situation calls for bold reform—deregulating fertiliser prices and shifting to a flat per-acre direct income support by rationalising fertiliser subsidies and PM-Kisan.   UPSC Mains Practice Question India’s fertiliser crisis is driven by supply constraints rather than prices. Examine the challenges for agriculture in 2026–27 and suggest reforms in fertiliser pricing and subsidy delivery to balance farmer welfare with fiscal sustainability. (250 words, 15 marks)   https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/editorials/upcoming-agriculture-year-season-of-scarcity-rich-for-reform-10657175/  

Apr 28, 2026 IASbaba's Daily Current Affairs

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Anti-Defection Law (Tenth Schedule): The Merger Loophole and recent Case Subject: Polity – Tenth Schedule; Anti-Defection Law; 52nd Amendment; Merger Exception; Judicial Review. Why in News? Seven out of ten AAP Rajya Sabha MPs, led by Raghav Chadha, announced their “merger” with the BJP on April 24, 2026  AAP has filed a petition seeking their disqualification, arguing that the merger was invalid without the approval of the original political party  The case has reignited debate on the “merger exception” — a major loophole in the anti-defection framework What is the Anti-Defection Law? Origin Enacted through the 52nd Constitutional Amendment Act, 1985 Inserted the Tenth Schedule into the Constitution Objective: Curb the culture of floor-crossing that destabilized governments during the 1960s and 1970s  Key Provisions (Tenth Schedule) Paragraph 2 — Grounds for Disqualification Voluntarily giving up membership of the political party Voting or abstaining from voting contrary to the party whip (without prior permission or condonation within 15 days) Independent member joining any party after election Nominated member joining any party after six months Paragraph 4 — The Merger Exception Disqualification does not apply if the original political party merges with another party Two-thirds condition: At least two-thirds of the legislature party must agree to such merger  Paragraph 6 — Adjudication Authority Questions of disqualification are decided by the Speaker/Chairman of the House Their decision is final — but subject to judicial review on limited grounds  Paragraph 7 — Bar on Courts Courts had no jurisdiction over disqualification matters (substantially modified by judicial interpretation)  Key Judicial Precedents Kihoto Hollohan v. Zachillhu: Upheld Tenth Schedule; Speaker acts as tribunal; judicial review allowed (Arts. 136, 226, 227); struck down Para 7 for violating basic structure Subhash Desai v. State of Maharashtra: Legislature party cannot act independently of political party; key distinction central to anti-defection disputes 91st Constitutional Amendment Act: Removed split exception; only merger allowed with 2/3rd support The AAP-BJP “Merger” Case (2026) What Happened? Seven of ten AAP Rajya Sabha MPs (70% — meeting the two-thirds threshold) announced they were merging with the BJP  They claim protection under Paragraph 4 (merger exception) of the Tenth Schedule AAP has moved the Rajya Sabha Chairman seeking their disqualification  Two Competing Interpretations View Argument In Favor of MPs (Merger Valid) Two-thirds numerical threshold satisfied under Para 4(2); this alone exempts them from disqualification; supported by legal experts like Mukul Rohatgi  In Favor of AAP (Merger Invalid) Para 4 requires “merger of original political party” — not merely the legislature party; MPs cannot unilaterally merge without party’s formal decision; supported by Subhash Desai (2023) ruling  Pending Supreme Court Clarification The exact meaning of “merger” under Paragraph 4 is yet to be authoritatively settled The Girish Chodankar v. Speaker of Goa case is pending before the Supreme Court and will likely settle whether Para 4 is conjunctive (party merger + legislative support) or disjunctive (numerical strength alone suffices)  Speaker’s Role and Delays Concerns with Speaker as Adjudicator Speaker owes position to the ruling dispensation — raises concerns about impartiality  No time limit prescribed for deciding disqualification petitions Supreme Court’s Recent Direction (July 2025) In BRS MLAs defecting to Congress in Telangana, SC directed Speaker to decide within three months Observed that Parliament entrusted adjudication to Speaker expecting “fearlessly and expeditiously” — not to let them “die a natural death”  Criticism of the Anti-Defection Law Advantages Promotes political stability and prevents floor-crossing Reduces corruption — incentivizes loyalty over bribery Strengthens party discipline  Disadvantages Violates freedom of speech and conscience — legislator cannot vote according to conscience  Stifles dissent within the party — prevents checks on the government Speaker’s partiality — adjudicator is a political appointee Merger loophole — two-thirds threshold still allows large-scale defections  Static-Dynamic Linkage Static (Polity Syllabus) Tenth Schedule — Anti-defection provisions (Part of Constitution) Speaker’s powers under Tenth Schedule — judicial review limited to jurisdictional errors  Articles 102(2) and 191(2) — Disqualification of MPs and MLAs  Dynamic (Current Affairs – 2026) AAP-BJP merger case — Seven Rajya Sabha MPs; two-thirds threshold met; AAP fighting disqualification  Subhash Desai (2023) — Key precedent distinguishing political party from legislature party  Pending Chodankar case — Expected to settle the “merger” interpretation  SC’s July 2025 direction to Telangana Speaker — three-month time limit  Source/Reference: https://www.telegraphindia.com/india/aap-seeks-rs-disqualification-of-mps-over-bjp-switch-cites-anti-defection-law-prnt/cid/2157927 Census 2027: India's First Digital Enumeration Exercise Subject: Polity – Census; Digital Governance; Legal Framework; Data Security; Caste Enumeration. Why in News? Census 2027 will mark India’s first digital enumeration, leveraging mobile-based data collection for faster nationwide data availability Cabinet Committee on Political Affairs (April 30, 2025) decided to include caste enumeration in Census 2027 Historical Background Ancient References Kautilya’s Arthashastra (321-296 BC) – earliest reference to conducting census Ain-e-Akbari by Abul Fazl during Emperor Akbar’s reign Modern Census in India First population count: 1865-1872 (not simultaneous across all regions) First synchronous nationwide census: 1881 Conducted decennially (every 10 years) since 1881 Census due in 2021 could not be undertaken due to COVID-19 pandemic Census 2027 16th Indian Census overall 8th Census since Independence Legal and Institutional Framework Constitutional Basis Census is a Union subject under Seventh Schedule (Entry 69) of the Constitution Legal Framework Census Act, 1948 Census Rules, 1990 Key Provision – Section 15 of Census Act, 1948 Personal information provided by people is strictly confidential Cannot be made public under RTI Act Cannot be used as evidence in any court of law Cannot be shared with any institution Two-Phase Enumeration Strategy Phase I: Houselisting and Housing Census (HLO) Scheduled: April to September 2026 (30 days per State/UT) Optional self-enumeration for 15 days before house-to-house work Gathers: housing conditions, amenities, assets possessed by households Phase II: Population Enumeration (PE) Scheduled: February 2027 Captures: demographic, socio-economic, cultural, migration, fertility-related information Caste enumeration will be done during this phase (as decided by CCPA) For snow-bound areas (Ladakh, J&K, Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh): September 2026 Caste Enumeration – Key Decision Historical Context Until 2011 Census, only Scheduled Castes (SCs) and Scheduled Tribes (STs) were systematically enumerated CCPA Decision (April 30, 2025) Census 2027 will undertake full caste enumeration during Phase II Digital Innovations in Census 2027 First Digital Census India’s first census by digital means Mobile-based data collection Census Management & Monitoring System (CMMS) Portal Manages and monitors entire Census process on near real-time basis Integrated dashboard for officers at Sub-district, District, State, and National levels Houselisting and Housing Census (HLO) Mobile Application Secure offline app for enumerators Direct field-to-server data transmission (eliminates paperwork) Available on Android and iOS in 16 regional languages Houselisting Block Creator (HLBC) Web Mapping Application Used by Charge Officers Digital creation of Houselisting Blocks using satellite imagery Ensures geographic coverage without omission and duplication Self-Enumeration Portal Secure web-based facility: https://se.census.gov.in/ Available in 16 languages (Assamese, Bengali, English, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Konkani, Malayalam, Manipuri, Marathi, Nepali, Odia, Punjabi, Tamil, Telugu, Urdu) Generates unique Self-Enumeration ID (SE ID) after submission SE ID shared with enumerator for verification Data Security and Privacy Architecture Multi-Layered Framework End-to-end encryption – collection, transmission, storage Secure transmission protocols Data Centres Certified and secure data centres designated as Critical Information Infrastructure (CII) Compliance with ISO/IEC 27001:2022 standards Regular security audits by reputed agencies Static-Dynamic Linkage Static (Polity/Geography/Economy Syllabus) Seventh Schedule (Entry 69, Union List): Census as Union subject Census Act, 1948: Legal framework; Section 15 confidentiality provision Historical census: 1881 first synchronous census; 1951 first post-Independence census Article 246: Distribution of legislative powers (Union List) Dynamic (Current Affairs – 2026) Census 2027 – 16th Indian census, 8th since Independence First digital census – mobile app, real-time monitoring, self-enumeration portal Caste enumeration – CCPA decision (April 30, 2025); after 2011 only SC/ST enumeration ₹11,718 crore approved – largest census budget 31 lakh enumerators – massive workforce mobilization CII-designated data centres – ISO 27001:2022 compliance Source/Reference: https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2255461&reg=3&lang=1#:~:text=Census%202027%20will%20mark%20India’s,enumeration%20in%20the%20Census%202027. Inland Waterways of India: 111 National Waterways, 145 MMT Cargo (2024-25) Subject: Geography – Inland Waterways; Economy – Cargo Transport; Schemes – Jalvahak, JMVP, Harit Nauka. Why in News? India has 111 National Waterways (NWs) with total length of 20,187 km across 23 States and 4 UTs 32 National Waterways currently operational (as of March 2026) Cargo transportation reached 145.84 million metric tonnes (MMT) in FY 2024-25; 198 MMT till February 2026 in FY 2025-26 Union Budget 2026-27 announced operationalisation of 20 new NWs over next 5 years Target: Raise IWT modal share from 2% to 5% by 2030 and to 500 MMT by 2047 (Maritime Amrit Kaal Vision) What are Inland Waterways? Definition Navigable water channels within a country not part of the sea (rivers, canals, lakes, lagoons, estuaries) Suitable for vessels carrying at least 50 tonnes under normal conditions Types Open River Waterways: Natural free-flowing channels Canalised Waterways: Modified rivers using locks and dams Canals: Man-made waterways to avoid natural barriers Advantages of Inland Water Transport (IWT) Environmental: 3–6× more energy-efficient than road (up to 2× rail), with lower emissions, noise, and minimal land use Economic: Lower operating costs; one 2,000-tonne vessel can replace ~125 trucks Efficiency: Safely carries bulk/ODC cargo with high safety and predictable travel times Key Government Initiatives Jalvahak Cargo Promotion Scheme: Up to 35% cost reimbursement; targets NW-1, NW-2, NW-16 & IBP; aims to shift ~800 million tonne-km to waterways Jal Marg Vikas Project (NW-1): Varanasi–Haldia (1,390 km), ₹5,061 cr; 2.2–3.0 m depth; cargo up 220%; terminals at Varanasi, Sahibganj, Haldia Arth Ganga: Socio-economic push along Ganga; supports farmers, fisheries, artisans; 66 jetties serving ~1.22 lakh users/day Harit Nauka Guidelines: Targets 30% carbon reduction by 2030, 70% by 2047; aims 100% green vessels National Waterways Regulations 2025: Promotes private sector participation in jetties and terminals Development in North-Eastern States NW-2 (Brahmaputra): ₹498 crore development (2020-25); terminals at Bogibeel, Jogighopa NW-16 (Barak): ₹134.72 crore development; terminals at Badarpur, Karimganj NW-57 (Kopili River): Operationalised; cement movement from Chandrapur to Hatsingimari Central Sector Schemes: ₹100 crore sanctioned for NER IWT projects Static-Dynamic Linkage Static (Geography / Economy Syllabus) Inland Waterways Authority of India Act, 1985 – established IWAI National Waterways Act, 2016 – declared 111 NWs Inland Vessels Act, 2021 – uniform navigation rules Entry 24, Union List: Shipping and navigation on inland waterways declared as national waterways Dynamic (Current Affairs – 2026) Budget 2026-27: 20 new NWs to be operationalised; Coastal Cargo Promotion Scheme Cargo record: 145.84 MMT (2024-25); 198 MMT (till Feb 2026) Passenger surge: 1.61 crore → 7.6 crore in one year Cruise growth: 371 to 443 voyages (19.4% increase) NW-5 in Odisha to connect Talcher-Angul to Paradip and Dhamra Ship repair ecosystem in Varanasi and Patna Source/Reference: https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2255798&reg=3&lang=1 H-1B Visa: US Tightens Rules, Impact on Indian ProfesBnei Menashe Tribe: Israel Airlifts 240 Members from Mizoram in 'Operation Wings of Dawn Subject: History – Jewish Diaspora; Art & Culture – Lost Tribes of Israel; International Relations – India-Israel Migration. Why in News? Israel airlifted around 240 individuals from Mizoram to Tel Aviv on April 23, 2026, as part of ‘Operation Wings of Dawn’ This is the first time such a large number of Bnei Menashe members have been airlifted against the backdrop of the ongoing West Asia war (Iran-Israel-US conflict) Who are the Bnei Menashe? Definition A community from Northeast India (primarily Mizoram and Manipur) claiming descent from one of the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel – specifically the tribe of Menashe (Manasseh) Their name means “Sons of Manasseh” in Hebrew Religious and Cultural Identity They claim lineage from the tribe exiled by Assyrian conquerors more than 2,700 years ago The community has adopted Judaism and follows Jewish religious practices Their claim is recognized by Israel’s Chief Rabbinate, which has accepted them as descendants of the lost tribe Population in India Estimated around 10,000-12,000 people (including Mizoram and Manipur) Several thousand have already emigrated to Israel in previous decades Migration to Israel: Legal Framework Law of Return: Grants every Jew the right to settle in Israel; Bnei Menashe qualify after recognition by Israel’s Chief Rabbinate Conversion Requirement: Mandatory process involving study of Jewish laws, rituals, and traditions before immigration approval First Aliyah (2005): Initial migration of Bnei Menashe to Israel after formal conversion and official recognition The Ten Lost Tribes of Israel – Biblical Context Historical Split: After King Solomon (c. 930 BCE), Israel divided; northern kingdom fell to Assyrian Empire (722 BCE), leading to exile of 10 tribes Ten Lost Tribes: Reuben, Simeon, Levi, Dan, Naphtali, Gad, Asher, Issachar, Zebulun, and Manasseh—later assimilated and termed “lost” Search & Claims: Many groups claim descent; Bnei Menashe are among the most recognized (linked to Manasseh) Other Claimants: Beta Israel (Dan), Lemba people (Levi), and Bene Israel (Zebulun) Static-Dynamic Linkage Static (History / Art & Culture / International Relations Syllabus) Kingdom of Israel and Kingdom of Judah – split after Solomon’s reign (c. 930 BCE) Assyrian Empire – conquered northern kingdom (c. 722 BCE); exiled the 10 tribes Babylonian Exile – southern kingdom (Judah) exiled to Babylon (c. 586 BCE); returned 70 years later Jewish diaspora – communities dispersed across Middle East, Europe, Africa, Asia Mizoram and Manipur demographics – predominantly Christian states with significant tribal populations Dynamic (Current Affairs – April 2026) Operation Wings of Dawn (April 23, 2026) – largest single airlift of Bnei Menashe West Asia war context – ongoing Iran-Israel-US conflict; India maintained security advisory India-Israel relations – continues despite regional tensions; migration permitted Bnei Menashe population – estimated 10,000-12,000 in Northeast India; several thousand already in Israel Source/Reference: https://www.thehindu.com/news/international/around-240-indians-claiming-descent-from-biblical-tribe-arrive-at-israels-tel-aviv/article70901136.ece Kraken Fossils: Scientists Uncover Evidence of Giant Cretaceous Octopus Subject: Science & Tech – Paleontology; Cretaceous Period; Marine Fossils; Apex Predators; Invertebrate Evolution. Why in News? A new study published in the journal Science (April 23, 2026) has uncovered fossil evidence of a massive, kraken-like octopus that lived approximately 86 to 72 million years ago during the Late Cretaceous Period The creature, named Nanaimoteuthis haggarti, has been described as a real-life “Cretaceous Kraken” – competing with marine reptiles as an apex predator What is the Kraken? Mythological Origin The Kraken is a huge tentacled sea monster from Norse folklore (Scandinavian mythology) Often depicted as a giant octopus or squid capable of dragging ships and sailors down into the deep Scientific Connection While the literal mythological Kraken never existed, the newly discovered giant octopus represents the closest real-life equivalent The study confirms that massive octopuses did exist and functioned as top predators in ancient seas Key Discovery: Nanaimoteuthis haggarti Gigantic ancient finned octopus, estimated 7–19 m long, among the largest invertebrates ever, comparable to large marine reptiles. Close relative Nanaimoteuthis jeletzkyi (100–72 MYA) was smaller, about 3–8 m in length. Had fins for swimming and long, flexible arms with strong suckers, likely adapted to deep-sea life. The Fossil Evidence: Jaws that Tell a Story Fossils are rare because octopuses lack hard skeletons; only durable chitin beaks occasionally survive. Research reclassified 15 fossils and used digital fossil mining to find 12 more jaws, estimating size and ecology from them. Beak wear patterns (chips, scratches, ~10% loss) indicate powerful predators that crushed shells and bones. Ecological Significance: Rewriting the Food Chain Old view: Marine ecosystems (last ~370 MY) dominated by large vertebrate predators. New finding: Yasuhiro Iba suggests giant octopuses were also apex predators in the Cretaceous seas. Competition: Likely shared top tier with Mosasaurs, Plesiosaurs, and giant sharks. Diet: Probably hunted large shelled animals, fish, and crustaceans, possibly even some marine reptiles. Static-Dynamic Linkage Static (Science & Technology / Geography Syllabus) Cretaceous Period: Last period of the Mesozoic Era (145-66 million years ago); ended with dinosaur extinction event Mesozoic marine reptiles: Mosasaurs, plesiosaurs, ichthyosaurs dominated the oceans Fossilization process: Soft-bodied organisms rarely fossilize; hard parts (shells, bones, beaks, teeth) preserve better Trophic levels: Position of an organism in the food chain (apex predators at top trophic level) Dynamic (Current Affairs – April 2026) Science journal publication (April 23, 2026) – peer-reviewed research confirming giant Cretaceous octopuses Nanaimoteuthis haggarti identified – one of the largest invertebrates ever discovered Paradigm shift – invertebrates also functioned as apex predators alongside marine reptiles Digital fossil mining – modern technology enabling new discoveries from existing fossil collections Global collaboration – research involved Japan, Canada, and international experts Source/Reference: https://www.wionews.com/videos/scientists-unearth-60-foot-kraken-fossils-massive-cephalopod-found-1777106278332   Thrissur Pooram: Kerala’s Grand Temple Festival Scales Down After Fireworks Tragedy Subject: Art & Culture – Temple Festivals of Kerala; Thrissur Pooram; Shakthan Thampuran; Kudamattam; Vadakkunnathan Temple. Why in News? Thrissur Pooram on April 26, 2026 was scaled down after the Mundathikode fireworks tragedy (15 deaths), with no fireworks and a brief Kudamattam, yet crowds still gathered at Thekkinkadu Maidan. What is Thrissur Pooram? Overview One of the most famous temple festivals of Kerala, often called the “mother of all Poorams” Celebrated at the Vadakkunnathan Temple in Thrissur Known for its majestic display of caparisoned elephants, Kudamattam (ritual umbrella changing), and fireworks Historical Origin Introduced by Shakthan Thampuran (Raja of Cochin) in the late 18th century (c. 1798) Created as a grand festival to bring together temples from surrounding regions Two main competing groups – Paramekkavu and Thiruvambady – participate in friendly rivalry Key Rituals and Attractions Kudamattam: Ceremonial umbrella exchange on elephants; in 2026 limited to 15 minutes with 10 sets Fireworks: Usually a midnight highlight of Thrissur Pooram; completely cancelled in 2026 after the Mundathikode fireworks tragedy Elephant Procession: About 30 decorated elephants with nettipattam, bells, and ornaments Ilanjithara Melam: Traditional percussion performance with chenda, maddalam, edakka, and kombu Significance of Thrissur Pooram Cultural: Thrissur Pooram reflects Kerala’s cultural ethos and strengthens community bonding Religious: Celebrated in honour of Lord Shiva at Vadakkunnathan Temple, with participation of neighbouring temples Economic & Tourism: Major attraction boosting tourism and supporting local economy (hospitality, transport, crafts) Static-Dynamic Linkage Static (Art & Culture / History Syllabus) Shakthan Thampuran (Raja of Cochin): 1751-1805; administrative and cultural reformer Vadakkunnathan Temple: Classic example of Kerala style of architecture (with gopurams and murals) Temple festivals of Kerala: Thrissur Pooram, Arattupuzha Pooram, Attukal Pongala, Padmanabhaswamy Temple festivals Kerala’s temple art forms: Caparisoned elephants (aanachamayam), chenda melam, panchavadyam Dynamic (Current Affairs – April 2026) Thrissur Pooram 2026 scaled down – no fireworks; curtailed Kudamattam Mundathikode tragedy (2026) – 15 deaths; impacted festival celebrations Community resilience – thousands attended despite grief and reduced format Safety concerns – highlighted need for stricter regulation of fireworks displays Source/Reference: https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/kerala/thrissur-pooram-rises-above-grief-keeping-its-spirit-alive/article70908749.ece (MAINS Focus) Chabahar Crossroads: US Sanctions and India's Strategic Autonomy GS Paper II – International Relations (Bilateral Relations; Foreign Policy) India-US Relations; India-Iran Relations; Sanctions; Strategic Autonomy; Connectivity   Introduction The lapse of the US waiver on Chabahar places India at a strategic crossroads. The port—key to accessing Afghanistan and Central Asia while bypassing Pakistan—has long been central to India’s connectivity and geopolitical strategy. With growing US pressure and regional instability, India risks losing not just a $620 million investment but also strategic space. Yielding would weaken its independent foreign policy, making Chabahar a test case for India’s strategic autonomy in an increasingly multipolar world.   Main Body Chabahar: A Brief History of Start-Stop Engagement Early Efforts (Vajpayee Era): 2003: PM A.B. Vajpayee signed MoU for Chabahar port development However, US pressure to postpone plans (aimed at stopping Iran’s nuclear programme) led to construction delays Manmohan Singh Era: Unable to make much progress on Chabahar Continued work on Zaranj-Delaram highway (connecting Iran-Afghanistan border to Kabul) Modi Era (Pre-Trump): 2015: After JCPOA (Iran nuclear deal), Modi government signed trilateral agreement with Iran and Afghanistan Aim: Advance trade and aid via Chabahar port and highway into Afghanistan Chabahar’s importance grew as ties with Pakistan deteriorated (Pakistan restricted India’s transit access to Afghanistan) Trump’s “Maximum Pressure” Campaign: Trump walked out of JCPOA Re-implemented all sanctions on Iran India forced to give up Iranian oil imports and plans for rail line However, US built a “carve-out” for Chabahar, allowing India to send wheat and medical supplies to Afghanistan The Current Crisis: Trump administration gave India until April 2026 to “wind-down” operations Since November 2025, India has: Withdrawn personnel from Chabahar Prepaid its $120 million investment commitment Considering transferring its stake to an Iranian company (with option to return later) Beyond Chabahar: A Pattern of US Diktats Other Instances of US Pressure on India: Stop buying oil from Iran (forced compliance) Stop buying oil from Venezuela (forced compliance) Stop buying oil from Russia (partial compliance; India continues but under pressure) Threats of sanctions on all trade with Iran Threats of sanctions on BRICS grouping members The Escalating Demand: US’s “seemingly insatiable demands” may extend to India’s engagement with other countries What is the limit? Where does India draw the line? The Chabahar Carve-Out (Now Lapsed): Was a pragmatic exception allowing India to maintain connectivity to Afghanistan Its lapse signals a hardening of US position No indication of renewal Strategic Importance of Chabahar for India Connectivity Hub: Gateway to Afghanistan and Central Asia (bypassing Pakistan) Alternative to China’s Gwadar port (80 km away in Pakistan) Key to International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC) connecting India to Russia and Europe via Iran Counter to China’s BRI: Gwadar is part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) Chabahar is India’s strategic counterweight in the region Afghanistan Access: Pakistan restricted India’s transit access to Afghanistan Chabahar provided a direct route for trade and aid (wheat, medical supplies, development assistance) Investment at Stake: $620 million already invested Additional $120 million prepaid commitment Transferring stake to Iranian company means loss of operational control The West Asia War: Further Complications Uncertain Timeline: Unclear when (or if) India will be able to re-engage with Iran Post-conflict reconstruction of Chabahar may be delayed by years Risk of Escalation: If war widens, even a transferred stake may become subject to secondary sanctions India’s ability to “return later” depends on geopolitical stability The Pragmatic Temptation: Temporarily dropping the project may seem prudent Preserves optionality while avoiding immediate sanctions risk The Larger Question: Strategic Autonomy vs. US Alignment India’s Claim: “Strategic autonomy” has been a cornerstone of India’s foreign policy since the Cold War (Non-Aligned Movement) Ability to pursue independent decisions based on national interest The Reality: US has systematically sliced away India’s independent choices On oil imports (Iran, Venezuela, Russia): India complied On Chabahar: India is complying On BRICS: US has threatened sanctions; India’s response is uncertain The Slippery Slope: Giving in on Chabahar will embolden US to demand more Next: restrictions on defence ties with Russia? (India’s S-400 systems already under CAATSA threat) Next: restrictions on trade with China? Next: restrictions on BRICS cooperation? The Cost of Compliance: Loss of sovereign autonomy Damage to credibility among other partners (Iran, Russia, Central Asian countries) Incentive for China to expand BRI footprint (Gwadar) without Indian competition Way Forward: Options for India Option 1: Full Compliance (Current Trajectory) Transfer stake to Iranian company Withdraw personnel and equipment Accept that Chabahar is dead until geopolitics changes Risk: Sets precedent for US diktats on other issues Option 2: Risk Sanctions (Proceed Anyway) Maintain stake and continue operations Risk strict US sanctions (secondary sanctions on Indian entities, banks) Risk: Financial and trade isolation; potential CAATSA triggers Option 3: Hedge (Delay and Diversify) Transfer operational control but maintain legal ownership Keep option to return after conflict or regime change in US Diversify connectivity options: INSTC via Bandar Abbas, Chabahar’s alternative? Risk: Iran may not accept “half-in” arrangement Option 4: Negotiate a New Carve-Out Argue that Chabahar is essential for post-conflict Afghanistan reconstruction Tie to US interest in regional stability Risk: US has shown no flexibility in current sanctions regime Long-Term Strategy: Strengthen rupee-rial trade mechanisms to bypass dollar-based sanctions Build strategic petroleum reserves to reduce import vulnerability Diversify connectivity partnerships (Central Asia via INSTC, Bay of Bengal initiatives) Accept that strategic autonomy requires paying a price; choose which battles to fight Conclusion The lapse of the US waiver on Chabahar reflects a broader pattern of external pressure on India’s strategic choices. Chabahar is vital as India’s gateway to Afghanistan and Central Asia, bypassing Pakistan and countering China’s regional footprint. Yielding to pressure risks undermining connectivity and strategic autonomy. India must negotiate a fresh carve-out, diversify routes, and accept trade-offs—because the real challenge is defining its foreign policy space in a multipolar world.   UPSC Mains Practice Question Critically examine the strategic importance of Chabahar Port for India. How should India respond to US pressure, and what does this mean for its strategic autonomy? (250 words, 15 marks)   https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/editorial/turning-point-on-the-us-and-indias-independent-foreign-policy/article70909254.ece Snakebite in India: Prevention-Heavy, Cure-Light GS Paper II – Social Justice (Health) | GS Paper III – Disaster Management Public Health Infrastructure; Venom Detection; Anti-Snake Venom (ASV); Tropical Medicine   Introduction India accounts for nearly half of global snakebites, mainly affecting farmers and children. In Kerala, ecological factors and gaps in clinical care mean that ASV availability alone hasn’t prevented deaths. With most cases being non-venomous or dry bites, the lack of a reliable venom detection kit forces symptom-based diagnosis—identified by ICMR as a systemic flaw—often delaying treatment until irreversible damage occurs.   Main Body Background: The Snakebite Burden India’s Share: Accounts for nearly half of all snakebites globally Agricultural workers and children are worst affected Kerala’s Vulnerability: Home to over 100 snake species, including the “Big Four” venomous snakes: Common krait Russell’s viper Saw-scaled viper Spectacled cobra Densely vegetated with substantial human-wildlife range overlap Seasonal Factors (April-May): Pre-monsoon breeding season for many venomous snakes Snakes move more and tend to be defensive Hotter summer than usual drives snakes to seek cool, damp spaces (homes, storerooms with firewood, coconut husks) The ASV Paradox: Widely Available but Not Enough What ASV Does: Neutralises venom circulating in blood Can prevent death if administered early The ASV Challenge: About 70% of snakebite presentations involve non-venomous species Roughly half of the rest are dry bites (no venom injected) A substantial number of patients thus do not warrant ASV Why Caution Is Merited: ASV can induce anaphylactic reactions (can be fatal) Administration must be clinical, not automatic The Information Gap: No commercially available diagnostic kit in India to detect venom in a patient’s blood Diagnosis is entirely symptomatic (syndromic approach) ICMR’s Critique: Syndromic approach is a “systemic flaw” By the time symptoms appear, venom may have already damaged tissue irreversibly Gaps in Clinical Infrastructure The Weak Links: Scarce ICU beds Lack of ventilator backups Inadequate training in managing anaphylaxis Limited lab support for monitoring The Consequence: Even where ASV is available, outcomes are poor ASV’s benefits are offset by infrastructure and training gaps The Decision-Making Gap: Uncertainty prevails over doctors’ decisions at first point of contact No rapid test to confirm envenomation Doctors must choose between: Administering ASV (risk anaphylaxis, waste scarce ASV) Waiting for symptoms (risk irreversible tissue damage) Kerala’s Progressive Measures (Prevention-Heavy) Notifiable Disease: Snakebite made a notifiable disease in Kerala Enables better data collection and surveillance SARPA Programme: Professionalises snake rescue operations Reduces human-snake conflict SARPA Padam and SARPA Suraksha: Assess risk Conduct ward-level awareness campaigns Conduct school awareness campaigns The Critique: Progressive as these measures are relative to rest of India Deaths are a sign that Kerala may be “prevention-heavy” Need to reinforce the “cure” as well The Way Forward: Rapid Venom Detection Diagnostics What Is Needed: Commercially available diagnostic kit to detect venom in patient’s blood Point-of-care test (like a pregnancy test or COVID rapid antigen test) Results within minutes, not hours Benefits: Eliminates risks of syndromic approach Confirms envenomation before symptoms appear Reduces unnecessary ASV administration (saves cost, avoids anaphylaxis risk) Enables timely ASV administration (reduces irreversible tissue damage) Expert Consensus: Many experts have called for development and use of rapid venom detection diagnostics This must be followed by: Increasing hospital capacity (ICU beds, ventilators) Availability of skilled medical workers to manage consequences Global Precedent: Australia has venom detection kits for snake and spider bites Several countries are developing rapid diagnostics for specific snake venoms India’s ICMR and DBT must prioritise indigenous development Complementary Measures: Beyond Diagnostics Hospital Capacity: More ICU beds in snakebite-prone districts Ventilator backups for respiratory paralysis cases (krait bites) Training: ASHA workers to identify snakebite symptoms and refer early Primary health centre doctors to manage anaphylaxis Triage protocols for snakebite (non-venomous, dry bite, envenomated) Community Awareness: First aid: immobilise limb, bring patient to hospital immediately What NOT to do: tourniquets, cutting wound, sucking venom, applying herbs Use SARPA Suraksha school campaigns to teach children (high-risk group) Data and Surveillance: Notifiable snakebite in all states (only Kerala has done so) Track species-specific bites and ASV efficacy Map high-risk areas for targeted interventions Conclusion India bears nearly half of global snakebite cases, disproportionately affecting farmers and children. While states like Kerala have improved reporting and prevention, mortality remains high due to gaps in diagnosis and treatment. Reliance on symptom-based diagnosis delays care, and the absence of rapid venom detection kits is a major flaw. Strengthening ICU capacity, ensuring timely ASV access, training healthcare workers, and developing point-of-care diagnostics are essential to reduce deaths.   UPSC Mains Practice Question Critically examine the gaps in India’s snakebite management—from diagnosis to clinical infrastructure—in light of the absence of reliable venom detection tools. What policy measures are needed to reduce mortality? (250 words, 15 marks)