Category: Government Schemes
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About CoalSETU Policy:
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Category: International Relations
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About Pax Silica Initiative:
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Category: Science and Technology
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About Gonorrhea:
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Category: Miscellaneous
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About Ponduru Khadi:
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Category: Geography
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About Ratle Hydroelectric Project:
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(UPSC GS Paper II – International Relations: India and its neighbourhood; Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India’s interests)
Context (Introduction)
Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s December 2025 visit to Oman, marking 70 years of diplomatic relations, comes amid West Asia’s geopolitical volatility, energy transitions, connectivity initiatives, and shifting global trade alignments, making it strategically significant rather than ceremonial.
Strategic Significance of Oman for India
Defence and Security Cooperation
Economic, Trade and Investment Engagement
Energy, Connectivity and Emerging Domains
Way Forward
Conclusion
The Oman visit reaffirms one of India’s oldest and most stable Gulf partnerships. In a rapidly evolving regional and global order, India–Oman ties exemplify how trust, strategic autonomy, and diversification can anchor India’s expanding footprint in West Asia and the Indian Ocean Region.
Mains Question
Source: The Hindu
(UPSC GS Paper II – Governance, International Treaties, Security Challenges, Health Governance)
Context (Introduction)
Rapid advances in biotechnology have expanded humanity’s ability to manipulate biological agents, raising the risk of deliberate misuse. India’s ecological diversity, porous borders and demographic scale necessitate an urgent upgrade of its biosecurity framework to address emerging state and non-state biothreats.
Main Arguments (Need for Biosecurity & International Framework)
Existing Institutional and Legal Framework in India
Challenges / Criticisms
Way Forward
Conclusion
In an era of rapid biotechnological change, biosecurity is no longer a niche health concern but a core national security imperative. Upgrading India’s biosecurity architecture through coordination, capacity-building and global engagement is essential to safeguard lives, livelihoods and democratic stability.
Mains Question
Source: The Hindu
(UPSC GS Paper III – Inclusive Growth and Employment; GS Paper II – Welfare Schemes, Federalism, Governance)
Context (Introduction)
The Union government has proposed replacing MGNREGA with the Viksit Bharat–Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission (Gramin) Bill. While promising expanded employment and technological efficiency, the move has raised concerns over fiscal federalism, demand-driven design and the dilution of the rural safety net.
Main Arguments (Rationale for Reform)
Challenges / Criticisms
Way Forward
Conclusion
MGNREGA undoubtedly required reform, but VB-G RAM G risks weakening India’s rural employment safety net through poor fiscal design and centralisation. Sustainable reform must balance efficiency with federal equity, demand responsiveness and the rights-based spirit of rural employment guarantees.
Mains Question
Source: Indian Express