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Mar 26, 2026 IASbaba's Daily Current Affairs

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

Mar 25, 2026 IASbaba's Daily Current Affairs

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Force Majeure: Legal Shield in Extraordinary Circumstances Subject: Polity & Governance / Economy / International Relations Background: QatarEnergy recently declared force majeure on LNG contracts due to production disruptions caused by the US-Israel war on Iran, highlighting how geopolitical conflicts trigger contractual escape clauses with global economic consequences.   Definition & Nature Force Majeure: A contractual clause that exempts parties from liability when unforeseen, extraordinary events beyond human control prevent contract performance. French Origin: Term means “superior force” in French; derived from civil law systems. Not Self-Operating: Must be expressly invoked; cannot be presumed. Key Features Events Covered: Natural disasters (earthquakes, floods), war, terrorism, strikes, government actions, pandemics. Unlike Frustration: Force majeure is contractual; frustration (under Indian Contract Act, Section 56) is a common law doctrine where contract becomes impossible to perform. Effect: Suspends or terminates obligations without liability for damages. Recent Application Trigger: US-Israel war on Iran (Feb 28 onwards) disrupted Qatar’s LNG production. Impact: Qatar shares North Field (South Pars) with Iran; conflict affects extraction. Strategic Implication: Qatar is among world’s top LNG exporters; force majeure impacts major importers including India. Institutional Framework Indian Contract Act, 1872: No explicit “force majeure” provision; governed by Section 56 (doctrine of frustration). Judicial Precedent: Satyabrata Ghose v. Mugneeram (1954)—SC distinguished force majeure from frustration.   Significance for UPSC Prelims Force majeure is a recurring theme in UPSC Prelims across multiple domains: Polity: Section 56 of Indian Contract Act, 1872—frequently tested in law-related questions. Economy: COVID-19 saw widespread invocation; linked to MSME contracts and supply chain disruptions. International Relations: Energy security implications—India’s LNG imports from Qatar (approx. 40% of imports). PYQ Linkage: Previous questions on “Doctrine of Frustration,” “Contingent Contracts,” and “Energy Security of India” align directly. Conclusion Force majeure transforms geopolitical shocks into legal and economic realities. For Prelims, mastering its distinction from frustration, contractual mechanics, and current applications like Qatar LNG is essential for integrated questions spanning law, economy, and IR.   Source: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/24/qatarenergy-declares-force-majeure-on-some-lng-contracts Strategic Petroleum Reserves (SPRs): India's Energy Shock Absorber Subject: Economy / Energy Security / Geography Background: Amid ongoing West Asian conflict disrupting oil supplies through the Strait of Hormuz, India’s strategic petroleum reserves are currently at 64% capacity, raising concerns about energy security for the world’s third-largest oil importer.   Definition & Framework SPR: Emergency crude oil stockpiles for supply disruptions. Nodal Agency: Indian Strategic Petroleum Reserve Ltd. (ISPRL) under Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas. Storage: Underground rock caverns. Existing Facilities (Phase-I) Location State Capacity (MMT) Visakhapatnam Andhra Pradesh 1.33 Mangaluru Karnataka 1.50 Padur Karnataka 2.50 Total   5.33 MMT Current Status (March 2026) Stored: 3.372 MMT (64%) Strategic cover: 9.5 days at full capacity; current cover: ~6 days Total national cover (including commercial): 74 days IEA benchmark: 90 days   Expansion (Phase-II) Location Capacity Status Chandikhol, Odisha 4.0 MMT Stalled (land pending) Padur (expansion) 2.5 MMT Awarded; completion Aug 2030 Vulnerabilities Import dependence: 88% crude oil Chokepoint: Strait of Hormuz (85-95% LPG, 30% gas) Diversification: Crude sourced from 41 countries   Significance for UPSC Prelims PYQ Relevance: Energy security, IEA, Strait of Hormuz, CAG audits on delays, PPP models (Phase-II commercial-cum-strategic). Static Linkages: Geography of chokepoints, location of SPRs, ISPRL structure.   Conclusion India’s SPR expansion faces critical delays, exposing its energy security gap. Expediting Phase-II and maintaining IEA-recommended 90-day cover is imperative given import dependence and geopolitical volatility.   Source: https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/india-strategic-petroleum-reserve-how-much-petrol-stock-does-india-have-india-crude-oil-reserves-indias-strategic-crude-oil-reserves-2-3rd-full-11258389 Women's Quota Implementation: Seat Expansion Blueprint Subject: Polity & Governance / Social Justice Background: The government proposes increasing Lok Sabha seats to 816 (from 543) based on Census 2011—delinking from the ongoing Census—to implement the women’s reservation Act by the 2029 elections.   The Proposal Lok Sabha Seats: Increase from 543 to 816 (50% rise) Women’s Reservation: Approx. 273 seats (1/3rd of 816) reserved for women Vidhan Sabha: Similarly increased by 50% in each state Timeline: Implementation targeted for 2029 general elections Key Modifications Delimitation Base: Census 2011 (not the ongoing Census) State Proportions: Existing seat share among states remains unchanged—addressing southern states’ concerns SC/ST Sub-quota: Women’s reservation within SC/ST seats also proposed Caste Enumeration: Outcome of ongoing caste census not factored into delimitation   Institutional Process Step Details Amendment Needed Women’s Reservation Act (106th Amendment) + Delimitation Commission Act Delimitation Commission Likely by June 2026 based on 2011 Census Parliamentary Mechanism Extended session or special session for amendments Controversial Aspects Lottery System: Proposed for selecting which seats are reserved in each state Rotation: Whether reserved seats will be fixed or rotational—not discussed Opposition Stance: Congress, TMC, AAP, DMK, Left stayed away from talks; demanded detailed report   Significance for UPSC Prelims Constitutional Linkages: 106th Amendment Act (2023): Women’s reservation in Lok Sabha and state legislatures—implementation linked to delimitation after Census Delimitation: Article 82, 170—redrawing of constituencies based on Census Census: Constitutional basis under Article 246; delimitation freeze till 2026 PYQ Relevance: Delimitation, women’s reservation, Census provisions frequently tested Southern states’ concerns over population-based seat reallocation (demographic fears) Static Facts: Current Lok Sabha strength: 543 Current women’s representation: ~14% (below quota requirement) Conclusion The proposal to expand seats using Census 2011 while maintaining state proportions offers a pragmatic path to implement women’s quota by 2029, balancing regional concerns and bypassing Census delays—but requires constitutional amendments and political consensus.   Source: https://indianexpress.com/article/political-pulse/womens-quota-lok-sabha-seats-census-2011-816-in-lok-sabha-273-for-women-10596777/?ref=politics_pg Galactic Cosmic Rays: High-Energy Messengers from Space Subject: Science & Technology / Geography (Atmosphere) Background: Galactic cosmic rays (GCRs)—high-energy particles constantly bombarding Earth—are not rays but charged particles from distant cosmic events. Their discovery in 1912 revealed an invisible, ever-present phenomenon with applications from archaeology to space travel.   Definition & Composition Not Rays: Actually charged particles – primarily protons (hydrogen nuclei), plus helium nuclei, electrons, and heavier atomic nuclei stripped of electrons. Speed: Travel at nearly speed of light. Flux: ~1 particle passes through the palm of your hand every second. Discovery (1912) Scientist: Victor Hess (Austrian physicist) Method: Hydrogen balloon ascent to 5,300 meters with electroscope Finding: Radiation increased with altitude (opposite of expected); source was extraterrestrial, not from Earth’s crust or Sun Nobel Prize: 1936 Sources Type Origin Lower-energy Supernova remnants (magnetic fields accelerate particles like “cosmic pinball”) Ultra-high-energy Active galactic nuclei, gamma-ray bursts, supermassive black holes (sources remain mysterious) Key Characteristic Charged Nature: Bent by magnetic fields; cannot be traced back to source directly Applications & Effects Muon Tomography: Used to scan Great Pyramid of Giza (2017)—revealed hidden void Astronauts: See light flashes as particles pass through retinas (ISS phenomenon) Atmospheric Interaction: Trigger cascades of secondary particles reaching Earth’s surface   Significance for UPSC Prelims Science & Tech Linkages: Particle Physics: Protons, nuclei, cosmic radiation Atmospheric Science: Interaction with Earth’s atmosphere, secondary particles (muons) Space Technology: Radiation hazards for astronauts, spacecraft shielding Geography Linkages: Earth’s magnetic field as shield against charged particles Atmospheric layers and radiation penetration PYQ Relevance: Cosmic rays, atmospheric phenomena, and space radiation have appeared in Prelims (e.g., muons, aurora, magnetosphere) Discovery stories (Hess, balloon experiment) align with history of science questions Conclusion Galactic cosmic rays are a constant, invisible reminder that we are immersed in the cosmos. From Nobel-winning balloon experiments to pyramid-scanning muons, understanding these particles bridges fundamental physics with practical applications in archaeology, space exploration, and radiation science.   Source: https://indianexpress.com/article/technology/science/galactic-cosmic-rays-invisible-rain-that-never-stops-falling-10599077/ Global Corruption Index 2025: India’s Governance Stagnation Subject: Governance / Social Justice / Indian Economy Background: The Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) 2025 reveals a global decline in corruption perception, with the average score falling to 42. India’s stagnant score amidst its economic rise highlights a governance-performance paradox critical for policy analysis.   Key Facts What is CPI? An index ranking countries by perceived levels of public sector corruption, drawn from 13 independent data sources. Score ranges from 0 (highly corrupt) to 100 (very clean). Global Trends: Global Average: Dropped to 42/100 (first decline in over a decade). 122 of 182 countries scored below 50. Only 5 countries now score above 80 (down from 12 a decade ago). India’s Performance: Score: 39/100. Rank: 91 out of 182. Trend: Stagnated between 38-41 over the past decade (was 38 in 2014). Comparative Data: China: 42 Neighbors: Sri Lanka (close to India); Bangladesh & Pakistan (score lower). Context: Trails several upper-middle-income democracies and East Asian nations. Economic Cost of Corruption: Global estimate: Costs 5% of global GDP (~$2.6 trillion) annually. India estimate: Costs roughly 0.5% of GDP directly, with total losses (including indirect effects) estimated between 1%–1.5% of GDP. Compliance Burden: Indian entrepreneurs face 26,134 imprisonment provisions in business regulations. A pharma startup faces 998 compliances (49% with criminal liability). Positive Trends: Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI): DBT reduced leakages. RBI Digital Payments Index (DPI): Rose to 516.76 (Sept 2025) from 493.22 (March 2025). GST: Increased formalization and traceability.   Significance for UPSC Prelims This topic is vital for Prelims due to its intersection of Governance (Corruption), Economy (GDP loss, Ease of Doing Business), and International Relations (Global Rankings). It mirrors PYQ trends focusing on Transparency International, FRBM (fiscal impact), and Social Justice themes. The data on digital payments (RBI-DPI) and compliance burdens (criminalization of business laws) are static facts with dynamic current linkages. Conclusion India’s economic ascent contrasts with its governance stagnation reflected in the CPI. While digital infrastructure shows promise, sustained institutional reforms in transparency and regulatory simplification are imperative to align governance credibility with the nation’s developmental ambitions. Source: https://epaper.thehindu.com/ccidist-ws/th/th_delhi/issues/177231/OPS/GSUFOT154.1.png?cropFromPage=true (MAINS Focus) SC Status and Religious Conversion: Constitutional Interpretation vs. Social Reality UPSC Mains Subject: GS Paper II – Polity & Governance (Constitutional Provisions, Social Justice) | GS Paper I – Society Sub-topic: Structure of Constitutional Provisions; Mechanisms for Protection of Vulnerable Sections; Caste System   Introduction The Supreme Court ruled that conversion outside Hinduism, Buddhism, or Sikhism ends Scheduled Caste status, denying related protections. The judgment revives tensions between religious freedom, affirmative action, and caste discrimination beyond religion.   Constitutional & Legal Framework: The Origin of the Bar The exclusion of non-Hindus from SC status has a specific legal genealogy: Provision Key Feature Constitution (Scheduled Castes) Order, 1950 Originally listed SCs only among Hindus. Based on the understanding that caste is a feature of Hindu social structure. Article 341 Empowers the President to specify SCs. Parliament alone can modify the list. 1956 Amendment Added Sikhs to the SC list—recognized that caste discrimination persisted among Sikh converts. 1990 Amendment Added Buddhists—acknowledged that Dalit converts to Buddhism continued to face social ostracism. Clause 3 of the 1950 Order Mandates that “no person who professes a religion different from Hinduism shall be deemed to be a member of a Scheduled Caste.” The Court termed this bar “categorical and absolute.” The current judgment reaffirms that Christians and Muslims—despite evidence of caste-based discrimination within their communities—remain outside the SC net.   Key Judicial Findings & Rationale The Bench of Justices Mishra and Manmohan held: Immediate Loss of Status: Conversion results in automatic loss of SC status, regardless of birth. No exception is admitted. Theological Rationale: “Christianity, by its very theological foundation, does not recognise or incorporate the institution of caste.” The High Court’s view—that caste system is not recognized in Christianity—was affirmed. Re-conversion Requires Proof: A person reconverting to Hinduism, Sikhism, or Buddhism must cumulatively establish: (a) proof of original caste; (b) bona fide renunciation of the new religion; (c) acceptance and assimilation by the original caste community; and (d) adoption of customs, rituals, and practices of that caste. Scheduled Tribes: The judgment noted that the Constitution (Scheduled Tribes) Order, 1950, does not contain a similar religious bar, acknowledging the distinct social dynamics of tribal communities.   Significance & Implications Social Justice Dimension: Paradox of Discrimination: Caste-based discrimination is empirically documented among Indian Christians and Muslims. Denying SC status to converts ignores social reality—discrimination persists even after conversion. Atrocities Act Protection: The judgment bars Christian and Muslim Dalits from invoking the 1989 Act for protection against caste-based violence, creating a protection gap for vulnerable communities. Constitutional Tensions: Article 15(2) vs. Religious Bar: Article 15(2) prohibits discrimination on grounds of caste in public places. The judgment creates a situation where caste identity exists for discrimination but not for protection. Article 25 (Freedom of Religion): The ruling may have a chilling effect on religious choice, as converts risk losing affirmative action benefits and legal protection. Legislative vs. Judicial Role: The Court emphasized that modification of the SC list is Parliament’s exclusive domain under Article 341. Judicial restraint prevents the Court from expanding the list to include Christians or Muslims. The ball now lies in Parliament’s court to address the exclusion through constitutional amendment.   Challenges & Critique Dimension Issue Social Ignores empirical evidence of caste hierarchies within Christian and Muslim communities in India. Caste operates as a social reality, not merely a theological doctrine. Legal Creates a two-tier system: caste exists for oppression but not for protection or affirmative action. Ethical Poses a dilemma for Dalit converts—choose between religious freedom and constitutional protections. Implementation The stringent re-conversion proof requirement may be difficult to satisfy, especially for communities that converted generations ago.   Way Forward Legislative Intervention: Parliament must consider extending SC status to Dalit Christians and Dalit Muslims through constitutional amendment under Article 341, as recommended by the Ranganath Misra Commission (2007) and reiterated by the National Commission for Minorities. Evidence-Based Policy: Any amendment should be grounded in empirical data on caste discrimination within minority communities to withstand judicial scrutiny. Protection Gap: Pending legislative action, the Court could interpret the 1989 Act’s protections to apply to caste-based atrocities regardless of religious identity, distinguishing between affirmative action (linked to the 1950 Order) and criminal protection (linked to social reality). Balancing Approach: The state must reconcile competing constitutional goals—preserving affirmative action for historically disadvantaged groups while ensuring that religious freedom does not become a tool to perpetuate discrimination.   Conclusion The Supreme Court of India reaffirmed the bar on SC status for converts under the Constitution (Scheduled Castes) Order, 1950, highlighting a gap between law and social reality. While the Court stayed within interpretation, Parliament must decide whether caste-based benefits and protections should follow individuals across religions or remain tied to an outdated framework—shaping India’s commitment to social justice and religious freedom.   UPSC Mains Practice Question “The Supreme Court’s recent judgment on SC status for religious converts highlights the tension between constitutional text and social reality.” Critically examine the legal framework governing Scheduled Caste status for religious minorities. What are the implications of this judgment for social justice and religious freedom in India? (250 words, 15 marks)   Source: https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/supreme-court-concludes-only-hindus-sikhs-buddhists-can-claim-scheduled-caste-status/article70778524.ece The Gulf’s Enduring Predicament: Managing an Unstable Regional Order UPSC Mains Subject: GS Paper II – International Relations (Bilateral Relations, Regional Groupings) | GS Paper III – Security Sub-topic: India’s Foreign Policy; Regional Security Dynamics; Energy Security   Introduction The Gulf faces a structural imbalance, with Iran’s size and cohesion outweighing fragmented Arab states. Temporary de-escalations offer little stability. Enduring insecurity forces reliance on external powers, especially the US, leaving regional stability vulnerable to shifting priorities in Washington.   Historical Context: The Legacy of External Balancing Era Key Dynamics British Hegemony (19th–mid 20th century) Great Britain constrained Iranian ambition from the Indian Subcontinent, protecting weaker Gulf states while maintaining working relations with Tehran. 1971: Britain’s Withdrawal The decline of British power, withdrawal from east of Suez, and independence granted to Gulf kingdoms marked the demise of the old regional order. 1979: Islamic Revolution The monarchy’s fall intensified Iranian assertiveness, replacing Persian nationalism with Shia revolutionary ideology while retaining hegemonic ambitions. The Shah had already demonstrated Iran’s hegemonic instincts—seizing Abu Musa and the Tuns islands (1971), claiming Bahrain, deploying troops to Oman’s Dhofar, and building the region’s most powerful military. The Islamic Republic inherited and intensified this assertiveness, shifting from partnership with Washington to opposition against it. Structural Asymmetry: The Root of Insecurity Factor Iran Gulf Arabs (GCC) Population 90 million 27 million Political Structure Unified state Fragmented kingdoms Strategic Ambition Enduring hegemonic aspiration Defensive posture External Dependence Self-reliant Dependent on US security umbrella This asymmetry makes autonomous regional balance impossible. The GCC (est. 1981) was created to pool resources against Iran but has been hobbled by internal divisions—exemplified by the paradox of turning to Saddam Hussein’s Iraq to contain revolutionary Iran.   Failed Counterbalancing Strategies Strategy Outcome Iraq as Counterweight Eight years of Iran-Iraq War kept Iran at bay but at great cost; the same army invaded Kuwait in 1990, turning on its patrons. Direct US Military Presence American intervention expelled Iraq from Kuwait (1991) but replaced Iraqi protection with permanent US bases on Arabian Peninsula. Support for Radical Sunni Forces Backfired spectacularly on 9/11; blowback from supporting extremism against Shia threat. 2003 Iraq Invasion Fateful US decision to destroy Iraqi state handed Tehran geopolitical windfall—Shia allies now rule Baghdad; land route from Tehran to Beirut became physical reality. The cumulative effect: Iranian proxy forces now stretch across the region, and Gulf Arabs face an Iranian sphere of influence from the Zagros mountains to the Mediterranean.   Contemporary Dynamics: The Israel Rapprochement The rise of Iranian power has driven a quiet rapprochement between Israel and Gulf Arabs, adding a new strategic wrinkle. Shared threat perception has created unprecedented alignment, though it further complicates regional fault lines.   Competing Demands: An Irreconcilable Agenda US/Gulf/Israel Demands Iranian Demands Dismantle Iran’s missile and nuclear capabilities Right to develop nuclear and missile technologies Relinquish proxy forces; stop meddling in Arab affairs Guarantees against future US military action Internationalization of Strait of Hormuz Removal of US bases from Arab states   Compensation for wartime damages   Veto over governance of Hormuz The gulf between these positions underscores why a “complete and total resolution” remains unattainable.   India’s Stakes & Policy Implications Strategic Interests: Energy Security: Gulf supplies over 50% of India’s crude oil imports; Strait of Hormuz is a critical chokepoint Diaspora: Nearly 9 million Indians live in Gulf countries, a vital source of remittances Counterterrorism & Security: Stability in Gulf is essential for India’s western flank   Policy Challenges: India maintains traditional equidistance between Iran and GCC states Balancing ties with Iran (Chabahar port, connectivity to Central Asia) with deep economic and security partnership with GCC and the US Limited capacity to replace US as security guarantor—no other power (Russia, China, Europe) can fill this role   Way Forward for India: Strategic Autonomy: Continue balancing relationships without being drawn into regional rivalries Energy Diversification: Reduce dependence on Gulf through renewable expansion, strategic petroleum reserves, and diversified import sources Multilateral Engagement: Leverage platforms like I2U2 (India-Israel-UAE-US) and West Asia Quad to build diplomatic presence without military entanglement Crisis Preparedness: Strengthen contingency plans for evacuation of Indian nationals and energy supply disruptions   Conclusion: Management, Not Resolution The Gulf’s predicament is structural—Iran is too strong to be ignored but not strong enough to dominate; Gulf Arabs cannot balance without the US; no power can replace Washington. This cycle cannot be solved, only managed.  For India, the imperative is strategic patience, diversified interests, and a clear-eyed understanding of its own limitations in a region where it has vital stakes but limited leverage.   UPSC Mains Practice Question “The Gulf region’s geopolitical predicament is structural, not circumstantial—it cannot be solved, only managed.” Critically examine the roots of this enduring instability and analyze its implications for India’s energy security and foreign policy. (250 words, 15 marks) Source: https://epaper.indianexpress.com/4132651/Delhi/March-25-2026#page/12/1

Mar 24, 2026 IASbaba's Daily Current Affairs

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) World TB Day 2026: India’s End TB Quest and the Prelims Perspective Why in News? World TB Day is observed annually on March 24 to raise public awareness about the devastating health, social, and economic consequences of tuberculosis (TB) and to step up efforts to end the global TB epidemic.  For 2026, the focus remains on accelerating the momentum to meet the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 3.3 and the End TB Strategy targets, with a critical lens on post-pandemic recovery and the emergence of drug-resistant strains. UPSC Syllabus Coverage Subject: General Studies I (Social Issues – Health), General Studies II (Governance – Policies & Schemes), General Studies III (Science & Tech – Diseases) Micro-topic: Issues relating to Health; Government policies and interventions for development in health sector; Communicable Diseases.   Core Theme: From Elimination to Eradication The core theme revolves around shifting the strategy from merely controlling TB to eliminating it as a public health problem. India, which bears the highest global burden of TB, is leveraging its National Tuberculosis Elimination Programme (NTEP) (formerly RNTCP) to achieve the target of eliminating TB by 2025, five years ahead of the global SDG target of 2030.   Key Details & Facts Causative Agent: Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Initiatives: Ni-kshay Poshan Yojana: Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) for nutritional support to patients. Ni-kshay Mitra Initiative: Part of the Pradhan Mantri TB Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan, encouraging community/NGO/CSR support to adopt TB patients. TB Mukt Panchayat Initiative: Decentralizing the fight to the grassroots. Vaccine: BCG (Bacillus Calmette-Guérin). Reports: Global TB Report (WHO); India TB Report (MoHFW). Prelims Keywords Organizations: WHO, Stop TB Partnership, Central TB Division (CTD). Concepts: Drug-Resistant TB (MDR-TB, XDR-TB), NTEP, Nikshay Portal (case notification), Universal Drug Susceptibility Testing (UDST).   UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static-Dynamic Linkage) Static Link: Understanding the difference between Latent TB Infection (asymptomatic) and Active TB Disease; the socio-economic determinants of health (poverty, malnutrition) as primary drivers of the disease. Dynamic Link: The interplay of Ayushman Bharat – Health and Wellness Centres (HWCs) in decentralizing TB screening; the challenge of Co-morbidities (TB-Diabetes, TB-COVID-19); the critical role of vaccine development (looking beyond BCG) in achieving long-term goals. Possible Prelims Angle: MCQs on the year of target elimination (2025 vs 2030), matching schemes with their objectives (Ni-kshay Poshan vs Ni-kshay Mitra), the causative agent, and WHO’s ‘End TB Strategy’ pillars.   Source/Reference: https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/the-evolving-diagnostic-landscape-for-tuberculosis/article70776514.ece Delimitation Based on 2011 Census to Fast-Track Women’s Quota Why in News? The government proposes amending the delimitation framework to use 2011 Census data instead of the first Census after 2026, aiming to implement the Women’s Reservation Act, 2023 before the 2029 Lok Sabha elections. Lok Sabha seats may increase from 543 to 816, with 273 seats (33%) reserved for women. UPSC Syllabus: GS II – Parliament, Delimitation, Constitutional Amendments   Core Theme The move seeks to override the existing freeze on delimitation (based on 1971 Census, extended to 2026 by the 84th Amendment) to enable timely implementation of women’s quota. However, southern states fear losing representation due to their successful population control policies.   Key Facts Aspect Detail Constitutional Basis Article 82 (delimitation after Census); 84th Amendment (2001) froze seats until 2026 106th Amendment (2023) 33% reservation for women in Lok Sabha & Assemblies; implementation linked to delimitation Proposed Change Delimitation based on 2011 Census; expansion of Assemblies as well Major Concern Southern states (Tamil Nadu, Kerala, etc.) fear reduced representation vis-à-vis populous northern states   Prelims Keywords Amendments: 42nd, 84th, 87th, 106th (Women’s Reservation) Articles: 82, 330A, 332A Concept: Delimitation freeze, proportional representation   UPSC Angles Static: Delimitation process; difference between seat allocation and boundary redrawing; special majority amendment requiring state ratification if representation affected. Dynamic: Tension between population-based representation and federal equity; bypassing delayed 2021 Census; political consensus needed for 2/3rd majority.   Possible Prelims MCQ: The 106th Amendment’s implementation depends on – (a) next general election (b) Census & delimitation (c) state ratification (d) presidential notification.   Source: The Hindu  Rupee Depreciation Pressured by Geopolitics, Oil, and FII Outflows: A Prelims Perspective Why in News? The Indian rupee depreciated by 20 paise to 93.73 against the U.S. dollar in early trade on March 24, 2026, touching near-record lows. The decline was driven by a strengthening greenback, persistent foreign institutional investor (FII) outflows, and renewed volatility in global crude oil prices amid escalating geopolitical tensions involving the U.S. and Iran over the Strait of Hormuz. UPSC Syllabus Coverage Subject: General Studies III – Indian Economy Micro-topic: Indian Economy and issues relating to mobilization of resources; effects of global economic developments on India; Exchange rate management.   Core Theme: Triple Pressure on the Rupee The rupee is facing simultaneous headwinds from three critical variables: external sector vulnerability (high oil import dependence), capital account volatility (FII outflows), and global geopolitical uncertainty (West Asia tensions impacting supply routes). Despite intermittent intervention by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), the currency remains under pressure.   Key Details & Important Facts Factor Status/Impact Exchange Rate Opened at 93.66, slipped to 93.73 (down 20 paise) Record Low Touched 93.98 on previous day, with some trades above 94.00 Dollar Index Up 0.42% at 99.36 (greenback strengthening) Crude Oil (Brent) Trading at $103.9 per barrel (significant volatility) FII Outflows Net sellers of ₹10,414.23 crore on March 23, 2026 Domestic Equities Sensex up 1.14%, Nifty up 1.04% (cushioned losses) RBI Intervention Reportedly active around 93.95–93.98 levels   Geopolitical Context: Iran-U.S. Tensions U.S. President Trump announced five-day extension of deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Strait of Hormuz is a critical chokepoint through which approximately 20% of global oil supply passes. Iran’s denial of U.S. claims created uncertainty, initially pushing oil prices higher before partial correction.   Prelims Keywords Concepts: Rupee depreciation, FII outflows, dollar index, current account deficit (CAD), RBI intervention, managed float exchange rate system. Locations: Strait of Hormuz, Persian Gulf. Organizations: RBI, Finrex Treasury Advisors. UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static–Dynamic Linkages) Static Link Dynamic Link (Current Context) Mechanism of managed floating exchange rate system in India RBI’s intervention at 93.95–94.00 levels reflects active management to prevent excessive volatility Factors affecting exchange rate: import demand, capital flows, interest rate differentials High crude oil prices worsen Current Account Deficit (CAD); FII outflows reflect risk-off sentiment amid global uncertainty Strait of Hormuz – strategic importance in energy security Geopolitical premium in oil prices directly impacts India’s trade deficit and inflationary pressures Relationship between oil prices and rupee: negative correlation Every $10/barrel rise in oil prices increases CAD by approximately 0.4–0.5% of GDP   Possible Prelims Angles MCQ on exchange rate system: India follows (a) fixed (b) managed float (c) free float (d) currency board. MCQ on strategic chokepoints: Which strait is critical for global oil supply? (a) Malacca (b) Hormuz (c) Bab-el-Mandeb (d) Bering. MCQ on FIIs: FII outflows impact which component of Balance of Payments? (a) Current Account (b) Capital Account (c) Official Reserves Account (d) Trade Balance. MCQ on RBI intervention: RBI sells dollars in forex market to (a) depreciate rupee (b) appreciate rupee (c) stabilize inflation (d) increase money supply.   Source/Reference: https://www.thehindu.com/business/markets/rupee-falls-20-paise-to-9373-against-us-dollar-in-early-trade/article70778474.ece Superconductivity Breakthrough: Pressure Quenching Extends Temperature Record Why in News? Scientists have used a novel pressure-quenching protocol (PQP) to raise the ambient-pressure superconductivity temperature of a copper oxide (Hg1223) to -122°C, breaking a 33-year-old record. The study was published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. UPSC Syllabus: GS III – Science & Technology; Physics (basic concepts)   Core Theme Superconductors conduct electricity with zero resistance. Achieving this at room temperature and ambient pressure is a long-sought goal. The new technique preserves high-pressure superconducting states even after pressure is released, enabling practical applications.   Key Facts Aspect Detail Material Hg1223 (copper oxide / cuprate) Previous Record (1993) -140°C at ambient pressure New Achievement -122°C at ambient pressure (18°C higher) Technique Pressure-quenching protocol (PQP): compress → cool → rapidly release pressure Pressure Applied Up to 30 GPa (gigapascals); quenched from ~19 GPa Bulk Superconductivity ~78% of volume, not filamentary Stability Stable for 3 days in liquid nitrogen; partially reverses at room temperature Significance & Applications Lossless power transmission – eliminates energy waste in grids Efficient MRI machines, motors, maglev trains Cheaper renewable energy infrastructure Uses liquid nitrogen (cheaper coolant) instead of expensive liquid helium   Prelims Keywords Concepts: Zero resistance, Meissner effect, critical temperature (Tc), ambient pressure vs. high-pressure superconductivity Technique: Pressure quenching, diamond anvil cell Materials: Cuprates (Hg1223), YBCO (yttrium barium copper oxide) Institutions: University of Houston, Argonne National Laboratory   UPSC Angles Static: Difference between conductors, semiconductors, and superconductors; Meissner effect as hallmark of superconductivity; types of superconductors (Type I & II). Dynamic: India’s National Supercomputing Mission; applications in quantum computing and energy infrastructure; contrast with controversial LK-99 and Ranga Dias episodes (reproducibility crisis).   Possible Prelims MCQ: The Meissner effect is associated with – (a) photoelectric effect (b) superconductivity (c) thermionic emission (d) Compton effect.   Source: The Hindu  India-Iran Cultural Links: From Avestan and Sanskrit to Rumi and Sufism Why in News? Amid ongoing geopolitical tensions in West Asia, a reflection on the deep civilizational ties between India and Iran highlights centuries of shared linguistic, philosophical, and artistic heritage that transcend modern political boundaries. UPSC Syllabus: GS I – Indian Culture (salient aspects of Art Forms, Literature, and Architecture); GS I – History (ancient and medieval periods)   Core Theme India and Iran share a continuous cultural exchange dating back to prehistoric times, manifesting in common linguistic roots (Sanskrit and Avestan), shared philosophical concepts, and profound Persian influence on Indian medieval literature, music, architecture, and governance.   Key Historical & Cultural Links Period/Era Key Connections Prehistoric Migration along Persian coast; genetic mixing; shared agricultural origins Ancient (c. 1500 BCE) Indo-Iranian language family; Sanskrit & Avestan similarities (Asura/Ahura, rta/Asha, Gatha) Medieval Persian as lingua franca; Sufism & Bhakti movement synergy; Rumi’s influence Sultanates to 18th Century Persian administrative language; literary giants (Ferdowsi, Hafez); architectural and musical fusion   Linguistic & Philosophical Parallels Avestan (Iranian) Sanskrit (Indic) Meaning Ahura Asura Divine being / lord Asha Rta Cosmic order / truth Gatha Gatha Sung / recited verse Haptanghaiti Gatha-Saptashati Seven-stanza text   Persian Legacy in India Language: Persian was the lingua franca for centuries; loanwords include roj, sadak, darawaza, kagaz, sarkar. Literature: Raja Rammohan Roy’s first book was in Persian; British replaced Persian with English (1837). Music: Amir Khusrau (13th century) fused Persian and Indian traditions, shaping Hindustani classical music. Sufism: Rumi’s philosophy deeply influenced Bhakti literature and challenged social hierarchies.   Prelims Keywords Languages: Proto-Indo-European, Indo-Iranian, Avestan, Old Persian, Pahlavi, Sanskrit, Prakrits Texts: Avesta, Gathas, Vedas, Mahabharata, Gatha-Saptashati Personalities: Zoroaster, Al-Biruni, Rumi, Amir Khusrau, Ferdowsi, Tagore Concepts: Asha (truth), rta (cosmic order), Bhakti movement, Sufism   UPSC Angles Static: Indo-European language family tree; Zoroastrianism and its influence; Persian as court language under Delhi Sultanate and Mughals; difference between Avestan and modern Persian. Dynamic: Cultural diplomacy between India and Iran; India’s connectivity projects (Chabahar Port) and the civilizational underpinnings; contemporary relevance of shared heritage amid geopolitical shifts. Possible Prelims MCQ: The term ‘Gatha’ in Indian tradition refers to – (a) a form of classical dance (b) metrical verse (c) a temple architecture style (d) a philosophical school. Source: https://indianexpress.com/article/research/from-avestan-and-persian-to-rumi-and-sufism-the-many-links-between-india-and-iran-10593485/ (MAINS Focus) From ‘Jan Bhagidari’ to ‘TB-Mukt Bharat’: A Paradigm of Proactive Public Health Governance UPSC Mains Subject: GS Paper II – Social Justice (Health) | GS Paper I – Society Sub-topic: Government Policies & Interventions in Health; Issues Relating to Social Sector Development Introduction India’s commitment to eliminating Tuberculosis (TB) by 2025—five years ahead of the SDG target—represents a significant public health ambition. The recent 100-day ‘TB Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan’ and the documented 21% reduction in TB incidence (nearly double the global rate) signal a strategic shift.  This approach moves beyond passive clinical care to a proactive model combining scientific innovation, systemic integration, and ‘Jan Bhagidari’ (people’s participation), embodying the constitutional vision of health as a foundation for national development.   Background & Conceptual Shift: From Control to Elimination India’s TB strategy has evolved from the clinic-based Revised National TB Control Programme (RNTCP, 1997) to the current National TB Elimination Programme (NTEP, 2020). The paradigm now rests on three pillars: Science & Technology: AI-enabled handheld X-ray units and molecular testing deployed via mobile ‘Nishkaya Vahans’ enable proactive screening in high-risk communities. Systems Integration: Collaboration with 25 central ministries and Panchayati Raj Institutions mainstreams TB elimination into broader development planning. Jan Bhagidari: Recovered patients as ‘TB Vjetas’ and over 2 lakh ‘My Bharat’ volunteers provide psychosocial support, addressing stigma and ensuring treatment adherence.   Significance & Rationale Economic: TB affects the productive age group (15-54 years). The WHO estimates India loses billions annually due to TB-related morbidity. Reduction is critical for human capital development. Social Justice: TB disproportionately impacts marginalized groups—migrant workers, urban poor, tribal communities. Proactive screening of asymptomatic vulnerable populations targets health inequities, aligning with Article 21 (right to life) and distributive justice. Governance Model: The strategy exemplifies Cooperative Federalism and Collaborative Governance, demonstrating how a health goal can strengthen the primary healthcare ecosystem.   Key Challenges & Critical Analysis Dimension Challenges Social Stigma remains a barrier. TB is driven by malnutrition and overcrowding; success depends on convergence with schemes like POSHAN Abhiyaan and housing missions. Administrative Rapid urbanization creates challenges—transient migrants, unregulated private sector. Differentiated urban health strategies are needed. Systemic Private sector data integration into the Nikshay platform remains incomplete. Drug-resistant TB (DR-TB) requires sustained focus beyond diagnosis.   Strengths of the Current Approach: Evidence-based adaptation: The National TB Prevalence Survey revealed half of patients are asymptomatic, prompting the shift to proactive screening—a landmark policy pivot. ‘Made in India’ focus: Indigenous diagnostics and drugs ensure supply chain resilience and align with ‘Atmanirbhar Bharat’. Community ownership: Leveraging youth and recovered patients builds sustainable social capital, addressing workforce limitations.   Way Forward: Institutionalizing the Momentum Strengthen Private Sector Interface: Mandate TB notification in private healthcare. Use the Nikshay platform for unified, real-time patient tracking to ensure complete surveillance. Address Social Determinants: Converge TB efforts with PM-GKAY (food security) and PM-JAY (health insurance) to create holistic support, as recommended by NITI Aayog’s health action plan. Institutionalize Volunteer Framework: Integrate TB Vjetas and My Bharat volunteers into the public health system with honorariums and clear roles, transitioning from a campaign to a sustained framework. Ethical Safeguards: Ensure AI-driven screening adheres to data privacy protocols, maintaining patient dignity without coercive practices. Conclusion India’s TB elimination journey demonstrates that public health goals are achievable through a fusion of political will, scientific innovation, and community participation.  By institutionalizing Jan Bhagidari and addressing underlying social determinants, the ‘TB-Mukt Bharat’ campaign can leave a lasting legacy—not merely the elimination of a disease, but the creation of a more resilient, equitable, and community-owned health system aligned with India’s constitutional ideals.   UPSC Mains Practice Question “India’s strategy to eliminate Tuberculosis marks a paradigm shift from a clinical approach to a community-led, technology-enabled model.” Critically examine this statement. What are the key challenges in sustaining this momentum, and how can a whole-of-society approach be effectively institutionalized? (250 words, 15 marks)   Source: https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/science-and-the-power-of-jan-bhagidari-can-lead-to-a-tb-free-india-10597338/?ref=top_opinion Economic Slowdown & Structural Fragility: A Reality Check on India’s Growth Fundamentals UPSC Mains Subject: GS Paper III – Indian Economy (Mobilization of Resources, Growth, Employment) Sub-topic: Growth & Development; Industrial Policy; Energy Security Introduction Recent economic data presents a discomfiting picture, challenging the narrative of robust macroeconomic resilience. The Index of Eight Core Industries hit a three-month low in February 2026, with crude oil contracting for six consecutive months and natural gas for twenty.  Simultaneously, revised GDP data reveals a smaller economy with shrinking contributions from private consumption, capital formation, and trade. This confluence—domestic structural weakness compounded by external shocks like the West Asian conflict—necessitates a realistic reassessment of India’s economic fundamentals and policy preparedness.   Background & Diagnostic Reality: Core Sector Distress The core industries (weight: 40.27% in IIP) are leading indicators of industrial health. Recent trends reveal deep structural issues: Indicator Trend Implication Crude Oil Contracted 6 months; 20 of last 24 months Domestic production stagnation; rising import dependence Natural Gas Contracted 20 consecutive months Affects fertilizer, power, and industrial sectors Core Index 3-month low (Feb 2026), growth halved from January Broad-based industrial slowdown beyond base effects The revised GDP series further compounds concerns: Shrinking Economy: The economy is smaller than previously estimated Falling Demand: Share of private consumption, capital formation, and exports in GDP has declined Inventory Glut: Share of ‘change in stocks’ nearly doubled—production without commensurate sales signals subdued demand, presaging future output cuts   Significance & Policy Critique: Energy Security & Strategic Blindness Energy Import Dependence: India imports over 85% of its crude oil and 50% of natural gas. The West Asian conflict—predictable since mid-2025—exposed strategic unpreparedness. Missed Opportunity: Domestic production contracted partly due to cheap imports. Instead of building reserves during the window of stability, policy complacency prevailed. The belated push for domestic production now comes amid $100+/barrel oil and supply curtailments. LPG Security Gap: The Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (2016) expanded LPG access but was not accompanied by a parallel strategy to secure long-term supplies and strategic reserves. This represents a classic case of policy asymmetry—success in demand-side expansion without commensurate supply-side resilience.   Economic Implications: Current Account Deficit (CAD): Elevated oil prices worsen CAD, exerting pressure on the rupee Fiscal Space: Fuel subsidies, if reintroduced, constrain fiscal headroom for capital expenditure Inflation: Pass-through of higher energy costs fuels imported inflation, disproportionately impacting the poor   Challenges: Structural & Cyclical Converge Structural Bottlenecks: Stagnant domestic hydrocarbon production reflects policy, regulatory, and investment challenges in exploration and licensing (e.g., under the Hydrocarbon Exploration and Licensing Policy). Demand-Side Weakness: Declining share of private consumption and investment signals a deeper demand recession. High inventory accumulation indicates that supply-side capacity is not matched by purchasing power. Global Uncertainty: Trade disruptions, elevated oil prices, and rating agency downgrades (growth outlook ~6.5%) compound domestic fragilities.   Critical Analysis: Reassessing ‘Resilience’ The narrative of strong macroeconomic fundamentals requires nuanced scrutiny: Strengths Acknowledged: India’s foreign exchange reserves, formal sector digitization, and infrastructure push provide some cushion. Weaknesses Exposed: Over-reliance on imported energy without adequate strategic reserves, fiscal rigidity, and subdued private investment reveal vulnerabilities. The Economic Survey’s emphasis on caution against global spillovers stands validated, yet policy action on domestic production has been reactive rather than proactive.   Way Forward: Towards Realistic Reassessment Energy Security 2.0: Move beyond import dependence narratives. Operationalize strategic petroleum reserves (SPR) more aggressively. Diversify import sources beyond West Asia (e.g., Russia, South America). Revitalize domestic exploration through production-linked incentives and streamlined clearances. Supply-Demand Symmetry: Link demand-side schemes (like Ujjwala) with supply-side security audits. Establish a National Energy Security Council to anticipate geopolitical risks and coordinate production, imports, and reserves. Reviving Demand: The ‘change in stocks’ phenomenon signals weak consumption. Policy must prioritize rural demand recovery (via MGNREGS, direct benefit transfers) and private investment (via credit flow, regulatory stability) to align production with consumption. Fiscal Prudence: Maintain fiscal discipline while allowing automatic stabilizers to operate. Targeted subsidies, rather than broad-based ones, can cushion vulnerable populations without derailing consolidation.   Conclusion India’s economic fundamentals demand a realistic reassessment beyond celebratory narratives. The convergence of core sector contraction, downward GDP revisions, and external shocks reveals structural fragilities masked by short-term resilience. Strengthening energy security, reviving domestic demand, and institutionalizing strategic foresight are imperative.  A pragmatic recalibration—not mere optimism—will determine whether India navigates this turbulence to achieve its long-term growth aspirations.   UPSC Mains Practice Question “The recent slowdown in core industries and downward revision of GDP data expose structural fragilities in India’s growth model.” Critically examine the interlinkages between energy security, domestic demand, and macroeconomic stability in this context. Suggest a policy framework for building genuine economic resilience. (250 words, 15 marks)   Source: https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/editorial/grim-future-on-the-economy-discomfiting-data/article70775757.ece