Archives
(PRELIMS Focus)
World Press Freedom Index 2026: India Slips to 157th Rank, Drops 6 Places
Subject: Polity – Press Freedom; International Relations – RSF Index; Governance – Media Regulation; Fundamental Rights.
Why in News?
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) released its World Press Freedom Index 2026 on April 30, 2026
India ranks 157th out of 180 countries – a drop of 6 places from 151st in 2025
RSF notes: “Press freedom is in crisis in ‘the world’s largest democracy'”
Key Findings: Global Trends
Overall Deterioration
Average score of all 180 countries never been “so low” in 25 years
Over half of world’s countries now fall into “difficult” or “very serious” categories for press freedom
100 out of 180 countries saw press freedom score decline
Legal indicator declined the most – journalism increasingly criminalised worldwide
Top 5 Countries (Best Press Freedom)
Norway
Netherlands
Estonia
Denmark
Sweden
Bottom 5 Countries (Worst Press Freedom)
Saudi Arabia (176)
Iran (177)
China (178)
North Korea (179)
Eritrea (180)
India’s Ranking and Comparison
India’s Position
2026 rank: 157th (out of 180)
2025 rank: 151st
Drop of 6 places in one year
Comparison with Neighbours
Country
Rank
Nepal
87th
Sri Lanka
134th
Bhutan
150th
Bangladesh
152nd
Pakistan
153rd
India
157th
China
178th
Almost all of India’s neighbours rank higher than India
RSF’s Assessment of India
Overall Assessment
With rise in violence against journalists, highly concentrated media ownership, and outlets with increasingly overt political alignment, press freedom is in crisis
India media has fallen into an “unofficial state of emergency” since 2014
Prime Minister does not hold press conferences
Grants interviews only to journalists and YouTubers who cover him in favourable light
Concentration of Media Ownership
Mukesh Ambani (Reliance Industries) owns more than 70 media outlets
Gautam Adani acquired NDTV at end of 2022
RSF notes these acquisitions signal the end of pluralism in mainstream media
“Godi Media”
RSF uses the term “godi media” – a play on Modi’s name and the word for “lapdogs”
Through pressure and influence, Indian model of pluralist press is being called into question
Government Advertising Pressure
Media primarily funded by advertising revenue
Main source of advertising is government (central and state)
Under PM Modi, billions of dollars of public funds spent on advertising
Governments in position to put pressure on media to censor content
Legal and Security Concerns
Use of Colonial-Era Laws
Sedition, defamation, anti-state activities laws used to suppress media
Anti-terrorism laws increasingly used against journalists
Violence Against Journalists
Average of two to three journalists killed due to their work every year
India is one of the world’s most dangerous countries for media professionals
Forms of Harassment
Online harassment, intimidation, threats, physical attacks
Criminal prosecutions and arbitrary arrests
Victims: police officers, political activists, criminal groups, corrupt local officials
Targeted Groups
Women journalists – personal data divulged; campaigns especially violent
Environmental journalists – covering environmental topics
Journalists in Kashmir – harassed by police and paramilitaries; subjected to “provisional” detention for several years
Hindutva Factor
Proponents of Hindutva call for popular revenge against critics branded as “traitors” and “anti-national”
Terrifying coordinated campaigns of hatred and calls for murder conducted on social media
Diversity Deficit in Newsrooms
Journalism profession (especially managerial positions) remains prerogative of Hindu men from upper castes
Bias has repercussions on angles and subjects of articles and reports
On major evening talk shows, women make up less than 15% of guests
Hindu nationalist ideology has become dominant force, shaping current affairs, framing political debate, restricting space for dissenting or minority voices
Most TV media outlets, particularly in Hindi, devote significant airtime to religious news, sometimes openly advocating hatred of Muslims
India’s Scores on Indicators
The index maps five indicators:
Political – influence of political actors on media
Economic – concentration of ownership, advertising pressure
Legal – laws affecting press freedom
Social – safety of journalists, harassment
Security – violence against journalists
Static-Dynamic Linkage
Static (Polity / Governance Syllabus)
Article 19(1)(a): Freedom of speech and expression
Article 19(2): Reasonable restrictions on freedom of speech
Section 152 of Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS): Sedition law (replaced IPC Section 124A)
Press Council Act, 1978: Established Press Council of India (statutory body)
Right to Information Act, 2005: Promotes transparency and accountability
Source/Reference:
https://thewire.in/media/india-is-157th-out-of-180-countries-on-rsfs-2026-world-press-freedom-index
International Labour Day 2026: Origins, Significance and Observance (May 1)
Subject: History – Labour Movement; Polity – Labour Rights; Economy – Labour Codes; International Relations – ILO.
Why in News?
International Labour Day, also known as May Day, is celebrated annually on May 1 across the world
2026 marks the 140th anniversary of the Haymarket affair (1886)
Historical Origins
Early Labour Movements
April 21, 1856: Australian workers in Victoria undertook a mass stoppage as part of the eight-hour workday movement (first organised stoppage)
This inspired American workers to have their first stoppage
Haymarket Affair (May 4, 1886) – Reason for May 1 Date
May 1, 1886: General strike called in Chicago, USA demanding eight-hour workday
May 4, 1886: Peaceful rally at Haymarket Square turned violent when a bomb was thrown at police
Resulted in deaths of police officers and civilians
Became a symbol of the international struggle for workers’ rights
Official Declaration
1889: Second International (socialist international organisation) declared May 1 as International Workers’ Day
In honour of the Haymarket martyrs and the struggle for eight-hour workday
Significance
Core Issues Addressed
Worker exploitation
Unsafe working conditions
Income inequality
Eight-hour workday (historic demand)
Fair wages and benefits
Social Impact
When workers are treated fairly, it leads to greater positivity and solidarity within communities
Fosters unity and empowerment among all members of society
Contributes to social harmony and cohesion
Reminder of ongoing fight for human dignity and equity in workplace
India’s Labour Rights Framework (Static Context)
Constitutional Provisions
Article 19(1)(c): Right to form trade unions
Article 23: Prohibition of forced labour
Article 24: Prohibition of child labour (under 14 years)
Article 43 (DPSP): Living wage, decent standard of life for workers
Article 43A: Workers’ participation in management
Key Labour Laws (Pre-Labour Codes)
Trade Unions Act, 1926: Registration and regulation of trade unions
Industrial Disputes Act, 1947: Resolution of industrial disputes
Factories Act, 1948: Working conditions in factories (including 8-hour day, overtime)
Minimum Wages Act, 1948: Fixing minimum wages for certain employments
Labour Codes (2020-2026)
Code on Wages, 2019 (effective 2025-26)
Industrial Relations Code, 2020 (effective 2025-26)
Social Security Code, 2020 (effective 2025-26)
Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code, 2020 (effective 2025-26)
International Labour Organisation (ILO) – Static Context
Establishment
Founded: 1919 as part of Treaty of Versailles after World War I
Became: First specialised agency of United Nations in 1946
Headquarters
Geneva, Switzerland
Core Objectives
Promote social justice and internationally recognised human and labour rights
Set international labour standards
Decent work agenda (full and productive employment, rights at work, social protection, social dialogue)
India and ILO
Founding member of ILO (1919)
Has ratified many core ILO conventions including:
Forced Labour Convention (1930)
Abolition of Forced Labour Convention (1957)
Equal Remuneration Convention (1951)
Discrimination (Employment and Occupation) Convention (1958)
Source/Reference:
https://www.ndtv.com/offbeat/international-labour-day-2026-know-date-history-and-significance-11432403
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Subject: Economy – International Trade; Bilateral FTA; India-New Zealand; Investment; Mobility; AYUSH.
Why in News?
New Zealand Prime Minister Christopher Luxon described the India-New Zealand Free Trade Agreement (FTA) as a “once-in-a-generation opportunity”.
Key Statements by NZ PM Christopher Luxon
On India’s Market Potential
India’s population around 1.5 billion with rising income levels
India presents a vast and increasingly affluent market seeking high-quality goods and services
On Benefits for New Zealand
FTA is “extremely exciting” for New Zealand
Will create jobs, lift wages, and provide more opportunities to Kiwis (New Zealanders)
On Strategic Positioning
FTA positions New Zealand to align closely with India’s economic trajectory as India transitions toward becoming one of the world’s largest economies
Key Provisions of the FTA (Recap from April 27, 2026)
100% Duty-Free Access for Indian Exports
All Indian goods exported to New Zealand will have zero duty from day one of implementation
Covers textiles, apparel, leather, footwear, gems & jewellery, engineering goods, processed foods, automobiles, auto components
$20 Billion Investment Commitment
New Zealand committed to facilitate $20 billion investment into India over 15 years
Expected sectors: agriculture, manufacturing, renewable energy, infrastructure, startups, emerging technologies (including electric vehicles)
Services and Mobility (Major Win for India)
Student mobility: 20 hours per week work while studying; post-study work visa – 3 years for STEM Bachelor & Master’s, 4 years for Doctorate
TEE Visa: 5,000 visa quota for skilled Indians (IT, engineering, healthcare, education, construction, 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 facilitated trade in Ayurveda, yoga, and other traditional medicine services for the first time in any FTA
Fastest Negotiated FTA in India’s History
Negotiations launched on March 16, 2025 – concluded in a record 9 months
Bilateral Trade Context
Current Trade Figures
India’s merchandise exports to New Zealand: $711 million (2024-25) – 32% growth
Services exports to New Zealand: $634 million (13% growth)
Bilateral trade target: **5billionby2030**(currently1.3 billion)
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 except China
Static-Dynamic Linkage
Static (Economy / International Relations Syllabus)
India’s demographic advantage: World’s most populous nation (1.5 billion); large and young workforce
RCEP (Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership): 15-member Asia-Pacific trade bloc (India withdrew in 2019)
EFTA (European Free Trade Association): Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, Switzerland
Dynamic (Current Affairs – May 2026)
FTA finalised April 27, 2026 – fastest negotiated in India’s history (9 months)
NZ PM’s endorsement (April 29, 2026) – “once-in-a-generation opportunity”
100% duty-free access for Indian exports – unprecedented in India’s FTA history
$20 billion investment over 15 years from New Zealand
AYUSH first-time inclusion – traditional medicine services in FTA
5,000 TEE visas for skilled Indian professionals
Source/Reference:
https://www.newsonair.gov.in/new-zealand-pm-christopher-luxon-calls-india-new-zealand-fta-a-once-in-a-generation-opportunity/
UPI Completes 10 Years: World's Largest Real-Time Payments Platform
Subject: Economy – Digital Payments; NPCI; Real-Time Payments; UPI; Financial Inclusion; Global Benchmark.
Why in News?
Unified Payments Interface (UPI) completed 10 years on April 11, 2026
Launched by National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) under RBI oversight on April 11, 2016
Recognised by International Monetary Fund (IMF) as world’s largest real-time payment system by transaction volume
Captures nearly 49% of global real-time payment transactions
UPI at a Glance: Key Statistics (FY 2025-26)
Annual Transaction Volume
FY 2016-17: 2 crore transactions
FY 2025-26: 24,162 crore transactions
12,000-fold increase
Annual Transaction Value
FY 2016-17: ₹0.07 lakh crore
FY 2025-26: ₹314 lakh crore
4,000-fold increase
Growth Rates (FY 2025-26)
YoY volume growth: 30.0%
YoY value growth: 20.59%
Daily Averages (FY 2025-26)
Daily average transactions: 66 crore
Daily average value: ₹0.86 lakh crore
Record Monthly Performance (March 2026)
Monthly volume: 2,264 crore (peak)
Monthly value: ₹29.53 lakh crore
Other Key Statistics
Share in India’s digital payments: 85%
Share of global real-time volume: 49% (IMF recognition June 2025)
Countries accepting UPI: 8
Banks and Ecosystem Growth
Bank Participation
At launch (April 2016): 21 banks
As of March 2026: 703 banks
Covers public sector banks, private banks, small finance banks, payment banks, and cooperative banks
First Month Transactions (April 2016)
Only 373 transactions
Types of Banks
Each bank functions as Remitter PSP (processing outgoing transactions) and/or Beneficiary PSP (receiving funds)
Transaction Segmentation (H1 2025)
Person-to-Merchant (P2M)
Accounts for 63% of total transaction volume
Driven by high-frequency, low-value retail payments
86% of P2M transactions below ₹500 – deep integration into routine daily commerce
Person-to-Person (P2P)
Accounts for 71% of transaction value
Used for higher-ticket transfers between individuals
59% below ₹500 (low-value transfers) + 41% above ₹500 (growing versatility)
Key Insight
UPI plays dual role: mass retail payments platform (P2M volume dominant) + trusted channel for larger fund transfers (P2P value dominant)
Transaction Distribution by Ticket Size (FY 2026)
P2M Transactions
86% below ₹500 – highlighting UPI’s deep integration into routine retail and day-to-day commerce
P2P Transactions
59% below ₹500 – widespread usage for low-value transfers
41% above ₹500 – reflects UPI’s growing versatility for regular personal payments and higher-value fund transfers
International Acceptance (8 Countries)
Operational Countries
UAE – accepted at major merchant points; used by Indian diaspora
Singapore – linked with PayNow for cross-border transfers
France – expanding Indian tourist payment acceptance
Bhutan – NPCI-enabled real-time cross-border payments
Nepal – accepted across the nation
Sri Lanka – Indian visitor and diaspora payments
Mauritius – integrated with local payment infrastructure
Qatar – operational
Year 2025 Milestones
August 2025: Monthly transaction volume crossed 2,000 crore for first time
December 2025: Recorded 2,163 crore transactions (then highest)
Calendar year 2025 total: ~22,000 crore transactions (~60 crore daily average)
March 2026: New peak of 2,264 crore monthly transactions (value ₹29.53 lakh crore)
Why UPI Succeeded: Key Features
Virtual Payment Address (VPA) – no need to share account number or IFSC code
24×7 availability – real-time payments at any time
Interoperability – seamless transactions across banks and apps
Low-cost architecture – zero Merchant Discount Rate (MDR) for small merchants
Two-factor authentication – RBI mandate effective April 1, 2026 (PIN/biometric + OTP)
Simple QR code-based payments – drove merchant adoption across India
Static-Dynamic Linkage
Static (Economy / Science & Technology Syllabus)
NPCI: Established 2008 under Payment and Settlement Systems Act, 2007
UPI: Built on Immediate Payment Service (IMPS) infrastructure (IMPS launched 2010)
Payment and Settlement Systems Act, 2007: Legal framework for payment systems in India
Two-factor authentication: RBI mandate for all digital payments (PIN/biometric + OTP)
Dynamic (Current Affairs – May 2026)
10 years of UPI (April 11, 2026) – milestone celebration
24,162 crore annual transactions – 12,000-fold increase from FY17
₹314 lakh crore annual value – 4,000-fold increase from FY17
703 banks onboarded – up from 21 in 2016
49% of global real-time payment volume – IMF recognition June 2025
8 countries accept UPI – expanding international footprint
85% share of India’s digital payments
March 2026 record: 2,264 crore transactions (₹29.53 lakh crore)
Source/Reference:
https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2257087®=3&lang=1
Online Gaming Rules, 2026: New Era of Governance under PROG Act, 2025
Subject: Polity – Online Gaming Regulation; PROG Act, 2025; IT Act; User Safety; Digital Governance.
Why in News?
Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming Rules, 2026 come into force on May 1, 2026
Flows from Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming (PROG) Act, 2025 (enacted August 2025)
Establishes structured system to govern online games – focus on user safety and industry growth
Online Gaming Sector Snapshot
Market Size (2024)
Total revenue: ₹232 billion
77% from transaction-based games
Projected growth: 11% CAGR – reaching ₹316 billion by 2027
Three Segments
Esports
Competitive digital sports part of multi-sports events
Requires strategy, coordination, advanced decision-making skills
Online Social Games
Casual, skill-based games for entertainment, learning, social interaction
Considered safe
Online Money Games
Involve financial stakes (chance, skill, or both)
Concerns: addiction, financial losses, money laundering, suicides
Estimated 45 crore people affected; losses exceeding ₹20,000 crore
PROG Act, 2025 – Key Provisions
Complete Ban on Online Money Games
Applies to games of chance, skill, or mix of both
Prohibits advertising, promotion, and facilitation
Banks and payment systems barred from processing transactions linked to such games
Unlawful platforms may be blocked under IT Act, 2000
Penalties
Offering/facilitating online money games: imprisonment up to 3 years or fine up to ₹1 crore or both
Repeat offences: 3 to 5 years imprisonment; fine ₹1 crore to ₹2 crore
Advertising such games: imprisonment up to 2 years or fine up to ₹50 lakh or both
Promotion of Safe Gaming
Recognition to esports and online social games
Establishes Online Gaming Authority of India
Grievance redressal mechanism
Online Gaming Rules, 2026 – Key Pillars
Online Gaming Authority of India
Attached office of Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY)
Head office: New Delhi
Chaired by Additional Secretary, MeitY
Members: Joint Secretary level from Home Affairs, Finance, I&B, Youth Affairs and Sports, Law and Justice
Determination of Online Game
Clear test to classify game as online money game (prohibited) or permissible category
Triggered by: suo motu action of Authority, application by service provider, or Central Government notification
Based on objective factors: payment of stakes, expectation of monetary winnings, revenue model, monetisation of in-game assets outside game
Determination to be completed within 90 days
Registration of Online Games
Required for esports and notified online social games
Certificate of Registration valid up to 10 years
Online money games cannot be recognised or registered as esports under National Sports Governance Act, 2025
User Safety Features
Age verification, age gating, time restrictions, parental controls
User reporting tools, counselling support, fair play monitoring
Disclosure of safety features and internal grievance mechanisms
Two-Tier Grievance Redressal
Tier 1: Service provider’s internal grievance system
Tier 2: Appeal to Authority within 30 days (disposal within 30 days)
Tier 3: Second appeal to Appellate Authority (Secretary, MeitY) – disposal within 30 days
Penalties and Enforcement
Proceedings in digital mode
Cases to be concluded within 90 days from complaint receipt
Penalties credited to Consolidated Fund of India
Cyber cell officers at State/UT levels empowered to investigate offences
Wider Impact
Boost to Creative Economy
Supports India as hub for digital creativity and innovation
Creates jobs in design, technology, content creation
Empowering Youth
Access to safe digital spaces
Career pathways in esports and skill-based games
Safer Digital Environment
Protection from predatory online money gaming platforms
Prohibits misleading claims of easy financial gains
Global Leadership
India positioned as leader in responsible gaming and digital regulation
Model for other countries
Static-Dynamic Linkage
Static (Polity / Science & Technology Syllabus)
Information Technology Act, 2000: Section 69A – blocking of unlawful platforms
National Sports Governance Act, 2025: Recognition of esports
Payment and Settlement Systems Act, 2007: Regulation of banks and payment systems
MeitY: Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology – nodal ministry for online gaming
Dynamic (Current Affairs – May 2026)
Online Gaming Rules effective May 1, 2026 – operationalisation of PROG Act, 2025
Complete ban on online money games – first comprehensive prohibition
45 crore people affected – estimated scale of problem
Losses exceeding ₹20,000 crore
Online Gaming Authority of India – new regulatory body
Two-tier grievance redressal – user protection mechanism
Cyber cell officers empowered – enforcement at state/UT level
Source/Reference:
https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2256973®=3&lang=1
(MAINS Focus)
National Labour Day 2026: A Workforce Without a Floor
GS Paper III – Economy (Labour) | GS Paper II – Governance (Social Justice) | GS Paper IV – Ethics
Labour Codes; Minimum Wages; Industrial Safety; Contract Labour
Introduction
This May Day feels less like remembrance and more like diagnosis. In just two weeks, two stark events exposed the reality of Indian labour: garment workers in Noida demanding a ₹20,000 minimum wage, and the death of 20 contract workers in a plant accident in Chhattisgarh. One was about the cost of labour; the other, the cost of life itself. When neither fair wages nor safe workplaces are ensured, the system stands exposed as failing those it was meant to protect.
Main Body
The Noida Protest: Wages That Do Not Sustain Life
Trigger: Haryana raised wages to ₹15,220, while Noida workers earned ~₹11,300/month for similar work, exposing a sharp interstate gap.
Protest & Response: Workers demanded ₹20,000; protests led to clashes and detentions. UP announced an interim hike (₹13,690 unskilled, ₹16,868 skilled), which workers rejected.
Core Issue: The gap isn’t negotiation—it reflects the mismatch between actual living costs in NCR and the state’s notion of a “minimum” wage.
The Singhitarai Explosion: Safety That Does Not Preserve Life
Incident: A steam tube burst at a Vedanta plant in Singhitarai, releasing 600°C steam; 20 workers died and 15 were injured.
Employment Pattern: Victims were contract workers employed via a subcontractor, not directly by the company.
Aftermath: Probe found repeated maintenance negligence; an FIR was filed against Anil Agarwal and others under the BNS.
The National Picture:
3,331 factory deaths between 2018 and 2020 (three per day)
Only 14 people imprisoned under the Factories Act during the same period
Chhattisgarh alone recorded 296 industrial deaths over three years
The Labour Codes: A Structural Shift Against Workers
Adoption (November 21, 2025):
Four labour codes adopted in a single stroke, replacing 29 central labour laws
Codes: Wages, Industrial Relations, Social Security, and Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions (OSHWC)
No transition period; tripartite forum (Indian Labour Conference) not convened since 2015
Key Changes:
Industrial Relations Code (Raised Thresholds):
Prior government permission for layoffs, retrenchment, closure: raised from 100 workers to 300 workers
Firms below 300 can retrench without administrative scrutiny
No strike without 60 days’ prior notice; flash strikes prohibited
Strikes barred during and weeks after conciliation proceedings
“Mass casual leave” by more than 50% of workforce deemed a strike
OSHWC Code (Raised Definition of ‘Factory’):
From 10 workers (with power) to 20 workers
From 20 workers (without power) to 40 workers
Lifts an entire tier of smaller workplaces out of mandatory safety oversight
India’s textile, garment, hosiery, and food-processing clusters are concentrated in units employing fewer than 20 workers
Inspection Architecture (Diluted):
Replaces unannounced inspections with ‘Inspector-cum-Facilitator’ model
Web-based allocation through Shram Suvidha portal; employer self-certification
May contravene ILO Convention No. 81 (requirement for independent, unannounced inspections)
The Core Indicator: Conviction Rates
3,331 factory deaths (2018-2020)
14 imprisonments under Factories Act (same period)
0.42% of factory deaths resulted in imprisonment
Enforcement chapters read more like a facilitation framework than a compliance regime
Way Forward: Restoring the Floor
For Wages:
National floor minimum wage under Labour Code on Wages (operationalise)
Automatic indexation to inflation
Close the Noida-Haryana wage gap for identical work
For Safety:
Revert factory definition threshold (10/20 workers) to bring small units under scrutiny
Restore unannounced inspections (ILO Convention No. 81 compliance)
Principal employer must be criminally liable for subcontractor lapses
For Collective Bargaining:
60-day strike notice is excessive; restore reasonable balance
“Mass casual leave” should not be deemed strike without proof of coordination
For Tripartite Consultation:
Reconvene Indian Labour Conference immediately
Conclusion
This May Day, India’s workforce has no real floor. In Noida, workers seeking ₹20,000 faced lathi charges and a token hike to ₹13,690—still short of basic living costs. In Singhitarai, 20 contract workers died in a boiler blast, shielded by layers of subcontracting. The new labour codes have raised thresholds, weakened inspections, and narrowed accountability. The test is simple: can a worker earn enough to live, and survive the shift? In 2026, the answer remains no.
UPSC Mains Practice Question
With workers in Noida demanding a living wage and fatalities in Singhitarai exposing safety lapses, critically assess how India’s four labour codes affect minimum wages, workplace safety, and collective bargaining—and suggest necessary reforms. (250 words, 15 marks)
https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/on-may-day-a-workforce-in-india-without-a-floor/article70925854.ece
Buddha's Greatest Victory: Lessons for a Troubled World
GS Paper I – Indian Heritage & Culture (Philosophy) | GS Paper IV – Ethics | GS Paper II – International Relations
Buddhist Philosophy; Ethical Conduct; Conflict Resolution; India’s Soft Power
Introduction
On Buddha Purnima, we honour Gautama Buddha—the “awakened one” who renounced royal life in search of truth and attained enlightenment at Bodh Gaya. His first sermon at Sarnath laid the foundation of Buddhism. Emphasising non-violence, truth, and self-discipline, his message remains deeply relevant in a world marked by conflict and unrest.
Main Body
The Core of Buddha’s Teachings: Four Noble Truths and Eightfold Path
The Four Noble Truths:
There is suffering (Dukkha) – pain, illness, loss, separation
Desire (Tanha) is the root cause of suffering – attachment to pleasure, aversion to pain
By eliminating desire, suffering can be overcome (Nirodha)
By following the Eightfold Path, one can live free from suffering (Magga)
The Eightfold Path:
Right View, Right Intention, Right Speech, Right Action
Right Livelihood, Right Effort, Right Mindfulness, Right Concentration
The Five Moral Precepts (For Lay Followers):
Non-violence (Ahimsa) – do not kill or harm living beings
Non-stealing – do not take what is not given
Refraining from adultery – sexual misconduct
Truthfulness – speak the truth; avoid false speech
Abstaining from intoxicants – avoid substances that cloud the mind
Key Advice from the Buddha:
Do not dwell on the past—live in the present
Truthfulness is powerful
The mind is the source of all actions—cultivate positive thinking
Do not retreat in fear during difficult times
Words can wound—speak gently
Love and non-violence are essential
Always keep learning
Buddhism in Indian Literature and Culture
Tamil Buddhist Epics:
Manimekalai: Explains essence of Buddhism—birth and death as sleep and waking; righteous deeds lead to noble world; evil deeds lead to suffering
Kundalakesi: Another Tamil Buddhist text (lost, but contributions remain invaluable)
Ashoka’s Transformation:
Emperor Ashoka transformed from a conqueror to a proponent of peace after embracing Buddhism
Propagated Buddhist principles through inscriptions and stupas across the land
Sanchi and Sarnath stupas continue to attract pilgrims
The lion capital at Sarnath is Bharat’s national emblem
Spread of Buddhism:
Ashoka’s son Mahinda carried teachings to Sri Lanka
Buddhist monks propagated faith in Tamil Nadu (traces remain)
Monks provided free medical care and education without discrimination
Charity, especially feeding the poor, was a fundamental duty
Buddhist Universities: India’s Intellectual Legacy
Nalanda University (5th century CE):
Around 10,000 students and 1,500 teachers
Scholars from across Asia came to study
Libraries of immense scale
Other Major Centres:
Vikramashila University (Bihar)
Odantapuri University (Bihar)
Kanchipuram University (Tamil Nadu) – renowned centre of learning
Chinese Pilgrims:
Faxian: 15-year pilgrimage specifically for Buddhism
Xuanzang: 16 years in Bharat studying at Nalanda and collecting texts; visited Kanchipuram to study and copy manuscripts
Significance:
Buddhism emphasised lifelong learning
Established educational institutions and libraries on very large scale
Showcased India’s intellectual heights to the world
Contemporary Relevance of Buddha’s Teachings
PM Modi’s Message (Mann Ki Baat):
Gautama Buddha’s message remains timeless: peace begins within, and self-mastery is the greatest victory. In today’s conflict-ridden world, his teachings are more relevant than ever.
Relevance for Ethics (GS Paper IV):
Non-violence: Rejection of violence in thought, word, and deed
Truthfulness: Foundation of integrity in public life
Mindful speech: Words can wound—speak gently
Conquering oneself: Greatest victory is self-mastery, not domination over others
Relevance for International Relations:
India’s soft power: Buddhism as a gift to the world
Diplomatic tool: Shared Buddhist heritage with Japan, South Korea, China, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Nepal, Bhutan
Alternative to conflict: Peace begins within; extends to family, community, nation, world
Relevance for Mental Health:
“Do not dwell on the past—live in the present” (mindfulness)
“The mind is the source of all actions—cultivate positive thinking” (cognitive behavioural principles)
“Do not retreat in fear during difficult times” (resilience)
Buddha’s Teachings on Love and Compassion
The Story of Sujata:
Moved by compassion for the weakened Buddha after his severe austerities
Offered him milk porridge, saving his life
Gave him strength to meditate under the Bodhi tree
On Buddha Purnima, we remember her love and kindness by preparing payasam
Buddha’s Words on Love:
“Love is the source of joy, love is the light of the world, love is the greatest power”
The Five Precepts in Practice:
Non-violence: Protection of all living beings
Non-stealing: Respect for others’ property
Refraining from adultery: Respect for relationships
Truthfulness: Foundation of trust in society
Abstaining from intoxicants: Mental clarity for ethical decision-making
Conclusion
On Buddha Purnima, we honour Gautama Buddha—the “Light of Asia” who taught that mastering oneself is the greatest victory. From renunciation to enlightenment at Bodh Gaya and his first sermon at Sarnath, his message offered a practical path of ethics and inner discipline. His legacy shaped figures like Ashoka and great centres of learning such as Nalanda. In a world of conflict, his teachings remind us: love and peace remain humanity’s greatest strength.
UPSC Mains Practice Question
How do the ethical teachings of Gautama Buddha—especially the five moral precepts—continue to guide individual conduct, public governance, and international relations in a conflict-prone world? (250 words, 15 marks)
https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/greatest-victory-buddha-lesson-troubled-world-10664746/