Tue. Jun 23rd, 2026

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Current Affairs: 12th Sept 2025

  • SC will not sit idle if a wing of democracy fails to do its duty: CJI

Context: The Supreme Court will not “sit idle” and powerless if a constitutional authority fails to discharge his duties, no matter how high he may be, Chief Justice of India B.R. Gavai has said.

  • The CJI voiced the court’s firm resolve on the final day of a Presidential Reference hearing, which has brought into sharp focus the schism between non-BJP-ruled States and their Governors over delay in clearing crucial laws.

‘Separation of powers’

  • “Howsoever high an authority may be, he is not above the law… I am a strong believer in the doctrine of separation of powers. I believe that judicial activism must not turn into judicial terrorism. But at the same time, if one wing of democracy fails in the discharge of his duties, would the court, which is the custodian of the Constitution, be powerless and forced to sit idle,” the CJI asked the Union government.
  • The Union government has used the hearing to criticise the top court for encroaching on the domains of Governors and the President.
  • The bone of contention which led to the Presidential Reference is an April 8 judgment of the Supreme Court which imposed a three-month deadline on Governors and the President to deal with Bills placed before them for assent or consideration, respectively.
  • The court had, in the judgment, held that whims and fancies of Governors cannot hold up governance by endlessly sitting on important legislation passed by State legislatures for the welfare of their people.
  • Representing the Union government, Solicitor-General Tushar Mehta said the court’s attempt to compel a “one-size-fits-all” solution by “imposing” a uniform time frame for all Bills would prove “self-destructive”.

‘Context-based issues’

  • “Every Bill has its own context-based issues. Some may require the Governor to have further deliberations and consultations. There are times when a State, while knowing that a Bill may eventually harm the State, is forced to bow to public pressure to pass it. In such cases, the State may tell the Governor to hold the Bills.
  • Thus, imposing straitjacket time limits may become self-destructive. Each case turns on its own peculiar facts,” the Solicitor General argued. Mr. Mehta said the top court cannot issue a mandamus to Governors to assent to Bills. Gubernatorial assent was part of legislative process. Courts cannot interfere in law-making.
  • “Yes, we cannot ask a Governor to take a decision in a particular manner, but the court can very well ask the Governor to take a decision. A mandamus can be issued to the Governor to decide,” Justice Kant replied pithily.
  • Mr. Mehta challenged the narrative that Governors were consistently delaying Bills. He said a majority of Bills, in the last 50 years, were given assent by Governors in a month’s time.
  • “Even in the case of Tamil Nadu, except for 10 disputed Bills, assent was usually given in a month. The Governor does not sit over Bills endlessly,” Mr. Mehta submitted.
  • Chief Justice Gavai said the Constitution’s framers had envisaged an atmosphere of mutual accord while envisaging the role of the Governors in States. “While the Constitution framers were considering the position of the Governors, the expectation was it would be an existence in harmony. That while appointing Governors, the provincial governments (States now) would be taken on board…” the Chief Justice remarked.
  • Mr. Mehta reacted that State-Governor relationships had seen decades of harmony before the Delhi government, during the Aam Aadmi Party regime, started filing writ petitions under Article 32 of the Constitution against the Lieutenant-Governor.
  • Attorney-General R. Venkataramani said the Governor should be given the discretion to either assent or withhold a Bill after testing its constitutionality.
  • “There is nothing wrong in a Governor deciding to withhold assent to a Bill and sending back a message to the State Assembly about his decision. The question here is whether a Governor can withhold endlessly without sending any message,” Chief Justice Gavai observed. The Presidential Reference was reserved for judgment.
  • ‘Project Khushi’ for police personnel

Context: The Bengaluru city police, in association with Happiest Health,launched ‘Project Khushi,’ a health and wellness programme designed to help police personnel prevent and manage lifestyle-related diseases such as diabetes, hypertension, obesity, and metabolic disorders.

  • According to a release, the proposed project includes in-person expert-led classes and digital learning modules with six live sessions over three months led by specialists in endocrinology, nutrition, ayurveda, yoga, and mindfulness .
  • Weekly digital modules are delivered via web stories, articles, videos and tips and a dedicated WhatsApp support group offering daily nudges, exercise prompts, and nutrition tips.
  • It includes comprehensive health assessments at the start and conclusion of the programme, including tests for glycaemic control, organ function, thyroid health, vitamin levels.
  • Participants will undergo a comprehensive health test at the start and end of the program.
  • ETM upgrade key to rollout of Shakti scheme smart cards in State

Context: More than two years after the launch of Karnataka’s flagship Shakti Scheme, smart cards promised to women beneficiaries are yet to be distributed. The Transport Department has attributed the delay to the lack of compatible electronic ticketing machines (ETMs) across the four State-run road transport corporations.

  • While the Karnataka State Road Transport Corporation (KSRTC) has already upgraded its ETMs, the rollout of uniform machines across the other corporations is yet to be completed.
  • The Shakti scheme, introduced on June 11, 2023, as the first of the Congress government’s five guarantees, allows women, including transgender persons and students, to travel for free on non-premium State-run buses. The scheme has been immensely popular, recently earning a place in the Golden Book of World Records for ferrying the highest number of women passengers under a free-travel programme. As of July 31, 2025, over 516.95 crore trips were completed under the scheme.
  • Despite this success, the smart card system envisioned to streamline ticketing and data collection remains in the pipeline. Currently, female passengers can show any valid government-issued identity card to avail of a ‘zero ticket’ from conductors.

Why the delay

  • Transport Minister Ramalinga Reddy said that the smart card plan is still on the table, but has been delayed. “The issuance of smart cards has been stalled because not all our ETMs can read and validate them. KSRTC has upgraded its machines, but similar ETMs need to be introduced across all four corporations for uniformity,”.
  • Earlier, the Transport Department, in collaboration with the Centre for e-Governance (CeG), developed prototypes of the cards. These cards, built on ‘tap-and-travel’ technology, would allow women passengers to tap their card on a conductor’s ETM to validate their journey. The backend system has already been designed to handle registration, data collection, card procurement, and linking to central servers.
  • “The technology part is largely ready, including systems for registration, issuing, and linking data. What remains is ensuring that all four RTCs adopt the same ETMs, so that the cards can work seamlessly across the State,” Mr. Reddy explained.

Cabinet approval

  • To address these issues, the Transport Department conducted a Technical Advisory Panel (TAP) meeting with officials from all four RTCs on August 2, 2024. The meeting highlighted the incompatibility of existing ETMs as the primary hurdle.
  • “Based on the suggestions at the meeting, KSRTC introduced new ETMs capable of reading smart cards. The procurement process for upgrading ETMs in the other corporations is underway. Once completed, smart cards can be rolled out,” Mr. Reddy said.
  • The proposal to distribute the cards will soon be placed before the State Cabinet. “After Cabinet approval, the smart cards will be issued without delay,” he assured.
  • While the scheme currently functions smoothly with the use of identity cards, officials admit that smart cards could improve efficiency. At present, conductors issue tickets after manually verifying ID cards of passengers, which often leads to longer boarding times.

Benefits

  • “Smart cards will save time for both conductors and passengers. More importantly, they will allow the government to generate accurate data on usage patterns, routes, and beneficiary profiles. This data could also guide policy decisions on public transport planning,” a senior Transport Department official said.
  • At the time of the scheme’s launch, women were asked to register on the official portal and provide a valid government-issued ID to receive Shakti smart cards. However, due to the ETM issues, the smart card distribution has not taken place. Instead, the temporary arrangement of showing ID cards continues to this day.
  • Meanwhile, a recent study titled ‘Beyond Free Rides: A Multi-State Assessment of Women’s Bus Fare Subsidy Schemes in Urban India’, commissioned by the Sustainable Mobility Network and conducted by Nikore Associates, found that the Shakti Scheme in Karnataka has led to a 23% rise in women’s employment in Bengaluru and a 21% increase in Hubballi-Dharwad.
  • HAL gets 3rd engine for LCA Mk1A

Context: The Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) said that it has received the third GE 404 engine from General Electric (GE) Aerospace for Light Combat Aircraft (LCA) Mk1A.

  • The Bengaluru-headquartered defence PSU said that while the third GE 404 engine has been received, the fourth will be delivered by the U.S. firm by the end of the month.
  • “HAL has received the third GE 404 engine for LCA Mk1A. One more engine is scheduled to be delivered by the end of September. Engine supply chain improvement will pave the way for LCA Mk1A deliveries,” HAL said in a statement. In January 2021, the Cabinet Committee on Security had approved the procurement of 73 LCA Tejas Mk1A fighter aircraft and 10 LCA Tejas Mk1 trainer aircraft at the cost of 45,696 crore, along with design and development of infrastructure sanctions worth 1,202 crore.
  • As per the plan, the deliveries of all 83 aircraft would have to be completed in eight years.
  • “HAL will be delivering the first three aircraft in the third year and 16 aircraft per year for the five subsequent years,” the Ministry of Defence had said in February 2021.
  • However, there have been delays in the deliveries of LCA Mk1As by HAL.
  • Air Chief Marshal A.P. Singh, during the Aero India 2025 in February, had criticised the PSU over the delays and said he was “just not confident” of HAL. HAL, however, had said that the delays in handing over of the aircraft to Indian Air Force (IAF) were due to supply chain issues of GE.
  • “When the IAF Chief made the mention (about delays), we did not have a single engine from GE, though the airframe was ready. The first engine came in April and we are now getting the second one. This is the primary reason why the deliveries have been held up,” HAL Chairman and Managing Director D.K. Sunil.
  • Mr. Sunil said that if GE delivers 12 engines as assured, HAL will be able to have 12 aircraft ready by the end of this financial year.
  • Special Cabinet meeting on Sept. 16 to discuss UKP-III

Context: In a bid to give a push to the third phase of the Upper Krishna Project (UKP-III), which is currently mired in controversy and in limbo due to the land acquisition issue, the State government has scheduled a special Cabinet meeting for September 16 to arrive at a decision on the land acquisition issue.

  • “Chief Minister Siddaramaiah and Deputy Chief Minister D.K. Shivakumar have been holding consultations with the leaders and farmers’ representatives from the region. To complete the project, we need to take the farmers into confidence since over 75,000 acres that will be submerged have to be acquired,” Law and Parliamentary Affairs Minister H.K. Patil told presspersons in his post-Cabinet briefing.
  • Stating that the government intends to provide justice to the farmers, he said that technical and legal issues are to be sorted out, after which a decision could be taken. Though land acquisition rates were informally discussed, no decision was arrived at, he said.
  • Meanwhile, government sources stated that farmers could be offered solatium for relinquishing their lands to help irrigate others’ lands, and that the huge compensation could be met through bonds, as the government does not have the necessary funds.

Protocol changed

  • Changing the protocol procedures in the Department of Personnel and Administrative Reforms (DPAR), the State government also decided to restrict the number of persons to be invited and seated on the dais in public functions to a maximum of nine in ordinary circumstances.
  • “We have brought changes to the protocol to bring discipline. Earlier, there was no limit. Only in unavoidable circumstances, the maximum number of persons to be invited and seated on the dais will be 13. Respective district in-charge Ministers and Cabinet Ministers will decide on the people whose names are to be included in the invitation and those to be seated on the dais,” Mr. Patil said.
  • On fears that the Opposition party members could be ignored in the new protocols, he said that no one would be ignored. Asked what would happen if the protocols are violated, he said that it would be construed as ‘indiscipline’.
  • Among other decisions, the Cabinet approved a 160 crore package for 11 tribal communities, including Soliga, Hasalaru, Gowdalu, Siddi, Kudiya, Malekudiya, Kadukuruba, Iruliga, Betta Kuruba, Yarava, Paniyan and others, for a housing scheme to 6,856 households under the Chief Minister’s Adivasi Gruha Bhagya scheme and 150 crore for Karnataka -Global Information System.
  • The Cabinet also approved Karnataka Minor Minerals Concessions (Amendment) Rules, 2025, which seeks to simplify permit fees and bring convenience to farmers and the public.
  • State govt. unlikely to take Ordinance route on ballot papers

Context: The State government said that it had recommended to the State Election Commission to use ballot papers instead of electronic voting machines (EVMs) and was contemplating promulgating an ordinance to amend the legislation, but may not take the Ordinance route.

SC judgment

  • Government sources stated that the government is also considering not taking the Ordinance route, as the Supreme Court, in one of its judgments, has ruled that the choice between ballot paper and EVM in local bodies is left to the State. “Taking the ordinance route may trigger political debate,” said the sources.
  • Cyber Command Centre should be made robust: Karnataka High Court

Context: Observing that the Cyber Command Centre (CCC) should not be a mere edifice of bureaucracy but a beacon heralding a new dawn in the fight against cybercrime, the High Court of Karnataka said that officials posted to the CCC should not face frequent transfers.

Directive

  • Also, the court directed that it is imperative that the cybercrime helpline 1930 be integrated with the Police Information Technology application that is subsisting and all this to be a part of the CCC besides integration of the system of jurisdictional police station and the CCC for every cybercrime to be brought under the umbrella of the CCC, whether the crime is registered with jurisdictional police or the Cyber, Economic and Narcotic (CEN) police stations.
  • Justice M. Nagaprasanna issued the directions while monitoring the progress made in making the CCC operational as per the directions issued by the court in April this year.
  • Stating that the CCC must be insulated from external intrusion, the court said the officers, particularly the head of CCC, should not be frequently moved out of the centre, unless warranted at least until a year or two, till the teething problems of CCC or the birth pangs of the establishment do not get obviated.
  • “The head of the CCC and his team working in the CCC must not be overnight de-positioned, without the consultation of the head of the CCC. I make it clear that it is consultation and not information, as any investigation by the CCC under way, should not be thwarted by repeated change of officers of the CCC,” Justice Nagaprasanna observed.

Transparency

  • The court also made it clear that it would be the duty of the CCC to ensure transparency in its functioning and take steps towards such transparency, including alleged corruption within the CCC.

1930 helpline

  • Pointing out that police officers, who act on complaints received on loss of money from bank accounts, take steps for freezing and de-freezing accounts to secure return of lost money without any documents, the court made it clear that it is necessary that the conversation of 1930 helpline should be recorded as part of the police/information technology system.
  • If necessary, draw up a zero FIR against each of the complaints received by the helpline, said the court.
  • The State government is expected to make the CCC robust, people-friendly, deft and iron-handed to handle cybercrimes, the court said, while directing the head of the CCC to submit a status report by September 24 on the progress in the investigation of cybercrimes or integration of information and technology cases to be done under one roof i.e. CCC.
  • Kerala to initiate SIR of electoral rolls soon: CEO

Context: After Bihar, it is Kerala’s turn for the special intensive revision (SIR) of electoral rolls as the southern State moves towards 2026 Assembly elections.

  • Chief Electoral Officer, Kerala, Rathan U. Kelkar, said that his office was awaiting a formal announcement of the SIR schedule for Kerala by the Election Commission of India (EC), but indicated that the roll-out could likely be in October.
  • Mr. Kelkar said his office had been laying the groundwork for the exercise and had uploaded the rolls prepared under the 2002 intensive revision, the last time it was held in Kerala, on the CEO Kerala’s website. The SIR arrangements in Kerala were presented at a review held by the EC in New Delhi on the preparedness of States.
  • “We have been asked to be ready. I feel it may happen sometime in October,” Mr. Kelkar said, adding that he was planning to meet political parties in the State on September 20.
  • Mr. Kelkar sought to allay fears saying that no eligible voter would be left out of the rolls.
  • “We don’t feel that SIR will affect any eligible citizen in Kerala. Complaints regarding the electoral roll will be settled once and for all when the SIR is done,” he said, adding that the SIR would make the rolls more “sanitised and healthier” and keep out non-citizens.
  • Postal ballots for NRI voters may turn a reality
  • Postal ballots for overseas electors may soon become a reality with the Election Commission of India exploring its feasibility.
  • Chief Electoral Officer Rathan U. Kelkar said that his office had urged the EC to introduce the facility for the upcoming Assembly elections in Kerala.
  • Govt. contemplates raising civil border guards along China border

Context: The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) is contemplating raising the Border Wing Home Guards (BWHG) along the China border, on the lines of the force patrolling the India-Pakistan border.

  • The BWHGs drawn from the civilian population which lives in the border areas act as an ancillary to border guarding forces and the Indian Army during emergencies.
  • There are seven States authorised to have BWHGs — Meghalaya, Tripura, Assam, West Bengal, Punjab, Rajasthan and Gujarat.
  • They are now operational only in Rajasthan and their utility was realised during the recent Operation Sindoor when their services were required to collect or disseminate information among the border population.
  • As many as 2,279 BWHGs are presently active in Rajasthan. “It is a voluntary force and Rajasthan is the only State which has BWHGs in the present times. They perform the responsibilities of a constable and are usually enlisted for three or four years; 25% cost of training and financial support is borne by the Government of India.
  • The usual pay compares to ₹800-900 per day equivalent to that of a constable’s salary,” said the official. The Ministry held a meeting recently on raising the strength of BWHGs for its active engagement with border guarding forces, including the Indo Tibetan Border Police (ITBP), which is deployed along the 3,488-km border with China.
  • Since 2020, more than 50,000 Army and ITBP personnel have been deployed in eastern Ladakh and the raising of BWHGs will help in augmenting the presence and collection of intelligence, a senior government official said.
  • Twenty Indian personnel, including a Colonel, were killed in violent clashes with Chinese troops on June 20, 2020 along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in Ladakh, in what is possibly the worst incident between the two countries in decades.
  • After several rounds of talks, there are 26 patrolling points, out of 65 PPs in eastern Ladakh that are not being patrolled by Indian troops since April-May 2020. The areas being patrolled earlier have been turned into “buffer zones” with the Chinese also not sending troops. PPs are often used to assert territorial claims along the undefined border.
  • Police officials must shed all personal biases when they don uniform, says SC

Context: The Supreme Court, in a judgment, warned against communal colours seeping into the khakhi of the police.

  • The court issued an unprecedented order that a special investigation team (SIT), comprising an equal number of Muslim and Hindu officers, be formed by the Maharashtra government to investigate allegations of murder and assault made by a 17-year-old Muslim boy during the Akola communal riots of 2023.
  • “When members of the police force don their uniforms, they are required to shed their personal predilections and biases, be they religious, racial, casteist or otherwise. They must be true to the call of duty attached to their office and their uniform with absolute and total integrity. Unfortunately, in the case on hand, this did not happen,” Justice Sanjay Kumar observed in the ruling, issued by a Bench which also included Justice Satish Chandra Sharma.
  • The case concerned the complaints made by a teenager, Mohammad Afzal Mohammad Sharif, who allegedly witnessed four men — including one who was later identified to have political connections — fatally attacking a man in an autorickshaw during the riots. The men assaulted the boy, leaving him with head injuries.
  • Afzal and his father then went to the police station to file a complaint about the murder he witnessed and the assault on himself, but the police took no notice. A subsequent appeal to the Superintendent of Police of Akola came to no avail.
  • The murder victim was identified as Vilas Mahadevrao Gaikwad. Afzal had stated that Gaikwad was killed under the mistaken impression that he was a Muslim. “It was for the police to investigate the truth or otherwise of the specific allegations made by the appellant, a 17-year-old boy, who asserted that he was an eyewitness to the murder of Vilas Mahadevrao Gaikwad and was himself assaulted by the very same assailants… If, in fact, the deceased was really murdered under the impression that he belonged to Muslim community and the assailants were not of that community, that was a fact that had to be ascertained after thorough and proper investigation,” Justice Kumar said.
  • The State Home Secretary was directed to initiate appropriate disciplinary action against erring police officials for their “patent dereliction of duties”.
  • India and Mauritius not just partners but a family: Modi

Context: India and Mauritius are not just partners but a family, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said in Varanasi, at the signing of agreements to deepen ties between the two countries.

  • Following bilateral discussions with his counterpart from Mauritius, Navinchandra Ramgoolam, Mr. Modi said that a stable, prosperous, free, open and secure Indian Ocean was a joint priority of both countries.
  • “Centuries ago, our culture and traditions travelled from India to Mauritius, and became a part of everyday life there. Just like the eternal flow of Maa Ganga in Kashi, the continuous stream of Indian culture has enriched Mauritius. And today, when we are welcoming friends from Mauritius in Kashi, it is not just a formality but a spiritual union. That is why I proudly say that India and Mauritius are not just partners but a family,” said Mr. Modi.
  • The Prime Minister said Mauritius is an integral part of India’s “Neighbourhood First” policy.
  • At a press conference, Mr. Modi said, “Today, we have announced a special economic package designed to support Mauritius’s needs and priorities. This will strengthen infrastructure, create new employment opportunities, and further enhance healthcare facilities.
  • The first Jan Aushadhi Kendra outside India has now been established in Mauritius.”

AYUSH centre

  • India also announced that it would extend cooperation in establishing an AYUSH Centre of Excellence, a 500-bed Sir Seewoosagur Ramgoolam National Hospital, as well as a veterinary school and animal hospital in Mauritius.
  • The two countries also signed memorandums of understanding to enhance cooperation in science and technology, oceanographic research, power sector and implementation of Phase 2 of small development projects.
  • In a proposed hydrography project, the countries will work together on joint surveys, navigation charts, and hydrographic data of the exclusive economic zones of Mauritius.
  • “Very soon, we will also launch the training modules of Mission Karmayogi [capacity building for government officials] in Mauritius.
  • The Indian Institute of Technology, Madras, and the Indian Institute of Plantation Management have entered into agreements with the University of Mauritius. These agreements will elevate our partnership in research, education, and innovation to new heights,” added Mr. Modi, lauding the unique “civilisational ties” between the two countries.
  • Mr. Ramgoolam, who arrived in Varanasi, witnessed the Ganga Aarti from a cruise in the evening. On Friday morning, he is scheduled to offer prayers at Shri Kashi Vishwanath Dham before leaving for Ayodhya.
  • Standard of debates should improve: Speaker Om Birla

Context: Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla expressed concern over the lack of meaningful discussions in the Lok Sabha, Rajya Sabha, and State legislatures, and said the standard of debates in the House should improve.

  • Speaking at the inaugural function of a three-day Conference of the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association (CPA), India Region, Mr. Birla, who is also the Chairman of the CPA,said the debates in the State legislatures and Parliament should be of high quality to ensure meaningful discussion of laws.
  • He expressed concern that the dignity of the debates were getting lowered due to disruptions in the proceedings of the Houses owing to petty political reasons. He urged lawmakers to rise above party lines on issues of national interest and meet the aspirations of people.
  • The programme, held at the Vidhana Soudha, was attended by Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah, Rajya Sabha Deputy Chairman Harivansh Narayan Singh, and presiding officers of Legislative Assemblies.
  • Mr. Siddaramaiah said “a culture of dialogue, commitment to equality, and a willingness to listen, deliberate, and decide together is the true spirit of democracy”.
  • He said the Parliament and State legislatures were laboratories of federal democracy, where diversity was debated, dissent was respected, and unity was forged.
  • Home Minister launches faster immigration clearance at 5 airports

Context: Union Home Minister Amit Shah launched the Fast Track Immigration-Trusted Traveller Programme (FTI-TTP), which accelerates the immigration process for preverified Indian nationals and Overseas Citizen of India (OCI) cardholders, at five more airports.

  • After launching the FTI-TTP at Lucknow, Thiruvananthapuram, Tiruchirappalli, Kozhikode and Amritsar airports, Mr. Shah said travellers would no longer experience long queues or manual checking and would receive immigration clearance in just 30 seconds without delays.
  • He said the programme had been launched in alignment with Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s vision of “speed, scale and scope”. The special initiative was first rolled out at the Indira Gandhi International Airport in July 2024, and two months later, extended to Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata, Bangalore, Hyderabad, Cochin and Ahmedabad.
  • Mr. Shah said the facility would not only enhance the convenience of travellers but also provide an opportunity to introduce them to the changes taking place in the country.
  • Mr. Shah said with the FTI-TTP, seamless immigration facilities would be available at the designated airports and emphasised that merely providing convenience was not enough, action must be taken to ensure that the maximum number of travellers benefited from it.
  • “To achieve this, efforts should be made to enable registration at the time of issuing passports and OCI cards,” he said, adding that if this could be implemented, travellers did not need to return for fingerprinting or documentation and they could travel using their passports whenever they wished.
  • “OCI cardholders will benefit the most,” he said, adding that the Home Ministry has planned to integrate this programme with the upcoming Navi Mumbai and Jewar airports.
  • About three lakh travellers have registered on this portal, of which 2.65 lakh have utilised it and efforts should be made to increase this number, he said. The FTI-TTP will eventually be launched at 21 major airports in the country.
  • First tri-service all-women circumnavigation sailing expedition flagged off

Context: Commemorating women power and the vision of a developed India, Defence Minister Rajnath Singh virtually flagged off a historic tri-service all-women circumnavigation sailing expedition — Samudra Pradakshina — from the Gateway of India in Mumbai.

  • The expedition is the first of its kind in the world. Addressing the gathering from South Block in New Delhi, Mr. Singh described the initiative, a first of its kind, as a glowing symbol of nari shakti (women power), the jointness of the armed forces, self-reliant India (Aatmanirbhar Bharat) and India’s global vision.

The route

  • According to the Ministry of Defence, over the next nine months, 10 women officers from the Army, Navy and Air Force will sail onboard the indigenously-built Indian Army Sailing Vessel (IASV) Triveni, a 50-foot yacht.
  • They will follow an easterly route covering nearly 26,000 nautical miles, crossing the Equator twice and rounding the three great Capes — Leeuwin, Horn and Good Hope. They will return to Mumbai in May 2026.
  • Centre to conduct 2 key surveys on household finances from July 2026

Context: The Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation is all set to conduct two key economic surveys — to measure household finances and to gauge the economic situation of India’s farmers — between July 2026 and June 2027, the Ministry.

  • These are the All-India Debt and Investment Survey (AIDIS) and the Situation Assessment Survey (SAS) of Agricultural Households.
  • “Both of these nationally representative surveys are scheduled to be conducted from July 2026 to June 2027,” MoSPI said in a press release. “The AIDIS is one of India’s most significant surveys on household finance,” it added. “The SAS of Agricultural Households, first launched in 2003, is designed to assess the economic conditions of farming communities.”
  • According to MoSPI, the AIDIS provides “critical” data on household indebtedness and asset ownership across both rural and urban areas. “Its findings are instrumental in shaping national accounts, assessing inequality in asset distribution, understanding credit markets, and informing policies of the RBI, MoSPI, and other government institutions,” it said.
  • The SAS of Agricultural Households, on the other hand, includes data on agricultural household income and expenditure, indebtedness and access to credit, land and livestock ownership, crop and livestock production, farming practices and the use of technology, and access to government schemes and crop insurance.
  • “The Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare, NITI Aayog, researchers, and financial institutions utilise the survey findings to shape policies and programmes aimed at agriculture and rural development,” MoSPI noted.
  • U.S., Paraguay question India’s hiking of support price for rice

Context: The U.S. and Paraguay, in a joint submission at the WTO, have questioned India’s decision to raise Minimum Support Price (MSP) for rice in 2025 despite “record harvests, exports, stocks, and offloading of stocks for ethanol production”.

  • The countries asked India to explain the rationale for increasing the MSP for rice in 2025, while it has been claiming benefits under the ‘Bali Interim Decision’ (that allows WTO subsidy limits to be breached), given India’s record harvests, exports, and stocks exceeding what is necessary to meet domestic food aid needs.
  • “While the MSP scheme may be part of India’s domestic public food distribution system, the scheme’s effects on exports and disposal of stocks for non-food purposes appear to go far beyond food security,” the U.S. and Paraguay submitted to the Committee of Agriculture (CoA).

CoA review

  • The submission will be taken up for detailed discussions at the CoA review meeting on September 25-26, together with other questions from different members about each other’s policies.
  • ‘Working to blend isobutanol with diesel after ethanol blending failed’

Context: The Automotive Research Association of India (ARAI) is working to explore the possibility of blending 10% isobutanol with diesel, Union Minister for Transport Nitin Gadkari.

  • At the annual conclave of the India Sugar and Bio-Energy Manufacturers Association (ISMA), Mr. Gadkari said whilst trials of blending one-tenth ethanol with diesel was not successful, other than the isobutanol blend, it was also being explored for a potential standalone use.
  • Isobutanol is an alcoholic compound with flammable properties, and is commonly used as a solvent in many industries including paints and coating.
  • Mr. Gadkari’s announcement comes amid the backlash the government received for petrol blended with ethanol at 20%.
  • He also said that tractor companies and agricultural equipment manufacturers had expressed eagerness to explore a flex fuel combination of CNG and isobutanol at a recent meeting.
  • Mr. Gadkari said using corn to create an ethanol blend was a success, adding farmers had earned more than 42,000 crore, with prices spiking from 1,200/quintal to 2,600-2,800/quintal since they commenced blending.
  • Union Minister for Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution Pralhad Joshi urged biofuel producers to increase production and look to enter the global market to export ethanol.
  • ISMA president Gautam Goel urged the government to consider, among other things, aligning the fair and remunerative price (FRP) of sugarcane in line with the rising (procurement) costs of cane.
  • The industry body chief also sought the government to consider revision in the minimum support price of sugarcane, and increasing the permissible export quota in the sugar season 2025-26.

‘Healthy harvests’

  • Sugar production in 2025-2026 season (October 1, 2025 to September 30, 2026) is likely to be 349 lakh tonnes, which will be significantly more than the production in the current year (2024-25).
  • ISMA said that with a favourable monsoon and healthy growth, the crops in Maharashtra and Karnataka are expected to yield healthy harvests.

Current Affairs: 11th Sept 2025

  • Up maintenance paid to parents, suggests HC

Context: The High Court of Karnataka has recommended the Central government to revise the ceiling on the maintenance to be paid to senior citizens by their children or relatives in tune with the present cost of living index.

  • The High Court of Karnataka has recommended the Central government to revise the ceiling on the maintenance to be paid to senior citizens by their children or relatives, from the existing 10,000 per month fixed 18 years ago under the Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Act, 2007, in tune with the present cost of living index.
  • “Maintenance cannot remain a mirage shimmering in the desert of inflation, nor an oasis that vanishes on approach. Relief that is illusory is no relief at all. It is, but a rope of sand, incapable of sustaining those for whom it is meant. Therefore, this Court deems it fit to recommend, with earnestness that the Union government revisit Section 9 of the 2007 Act, and revise the ceiling in tune with the cost of living index, so that the Act may not be reduced to a hollow promise, but remain a living guarantee of dignity in old age, as the nation’s wealth is not measured by its material progress, but by the welfare of the child and the care of the elderly-old…,” said Justice M. Nagaprasanna.
  • Though the Act had undergone several amendments between 2007 and 2023, the provision that limits ceiling on payment of maintenance to senior citizens has remained same from past 18 years, the court noted while pointing out that ₹10,000 cannot be enough to achieve the real intent of the enactment.
  • Citing the graph of cost inflation index as found in the website of the Ministry of Finance, the court said: “The numbers tell a tale, more eloquent, than words. In the year 2007-08 the cost inflation index stood at 129; today, it is 363. Thus, what one could procure for 100/- in 2007, requires nearly a 1,000/- in 2025. Prices of food, shelter and medicine have climbed steeply; only the statutory cap of ₹10,000/- has remained petrified, untouched, notwithstanding the march of time.”
  • As the objective of the Act was primarily three-fold – (i) need based maintenance to the parents and senior citizens, (ii) to provide better medical facilities and (iii) suitable mechanism for protection, the court said that the enactment, therefore was to be a need based, and securing the need for a senior citizen cannot be seen to remain the same as it was in 2007.
  • “Cost of living inflation has increased exponentially. With the inflation index today, what a senior citizen would have got in 2007 is reduced by 10% today even to the medical facilities. Therefore, the amount of ₹10,000/-, that is now subsisting, cannot be enough to achieve the real intent of the enactment,” the court said.
  • The court made these observation while setting aside an order passed passed by a tribunal, which asked the children to pay ₹5 lakh as compensation to their parents as there is no provision in the Act to grant compensation.
  • City civic groups move NGT against tunnel road project        

Context: On May 22, the State Cabinet approved the construction of a 16.74 km twin-tunnel from Esteem Mall in Hebbal to Silk Board

  • Bengaluru Praja Vedike and other civic groups in the city have moved the National Green Tribunal (NGT), seeking the cancellation of the proposed Twin Tunnel Road project, which claims to decongest the city’s chronic traffic problem.
  • The petition alleges that the ₹19,000-crore project violates environmental clearances, is riddled with flaws, and contradicts Bengaluru’s mobility plans.
  • The citizen activists said that during the first hearing held on Wednesday, NGT directed that notices be issued to the State government, the State Environmental Impact Assessment Authority (SEIAA), Bangalore Smart Infrastructure Limited (B-SMILE), the Union Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, and the project consultants.
  • On May 22, 2025, the State Cabinet approved the construction of a 16.74 km twin tunnel from Esteem Mall in Hebbal to Silk Board under a Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) model. A Special Purpose Vehicle, B-SMILE, was created to execute the project, with Rodic Consultants preparing the Detailed Project Report (DPR) in barely three months.
  • The alignment of the tunnel, the petition points out, cuts through ecologically sensitive and legally protected areas such as the Peninsular Gneiss at Lalbagh, Hebbal Valley’s stormwater corridor, and the vicinity of the critically polluted Peenya Industrial Area.
  • These zones are particularly vulnerable to groundwater depletion, soil instability, and aggravated flooding.
  • Independent studies, including those from the Indian Institute of Science (IISc), have warned that the project could encourage a shift from public to private transport, increase exhaust emissions and fossil fuels use, and worsen climate vulnerabilities. Even statutory agencies like the Directorate of Urban Land Transport (DULT) have noted that the tunnel road contradicts Bengaluru’s approved mobility and climate policies and have recommended alternative measures instead, the petitioners said.
  • Despite these concerns, the petition alleges that authorities bypassed the mandatory Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA), ignored public consultation, and exploited a loophole in the 2006 EIA notification, arguing that ‘tunnels’ are not explicitly listed to avoid clearance. This, the petitioners said, mirrors past unlawful practices such as the scrapped 2017 steel flyover project.
  • The petition further notes that the tunnel alignment overlaps with a proposed metro corridor, which offers a more inclusive, sustainable, and environmentally sound alternative.
  • The petitioners have sought the tribunal’s intervention to declare the project unlawful, quash the tender process, and order its cancellation to prevent irreversible ecological damage. They have also urged the NGT to uphold statutory environmental safeguards.
  • Govt. declares 371-tree cantonment area as Biodiversity Heritage Site

Context: Forest, Ecology and Environment Minister Eshwar B. Khandre announced that the 8.61-acre Cantonment Railway Colony area, containing 371 trees from 50 different species, has been declared a Biodiversity Heritage Site.

  • The announcement came after Mr. Khandre chaired a meeting of the State Biodiversity Board at Vikasa Soudha. “Survey Numbers 1028 and 1047 of the Cantonment Railway Colony, which are both historically significant and ecologically rich, have been declared a Biodiversity Heritage Site under Section 37 of the Biological Diversity Act, 2002,” he said.
  • The Minister said the 34,843 sq. ft. stretch, located in the heart of the city, is not only home to diverse species of flora, fauna, and insects, but also serves as an essential lung space for Bengaluru.
  • “The area also carries historic significance, as Mahatma Gandhi had interacted with freedom fighters here in 1920. The trees play a vital role in reducing carbon dioxide levels, curbing air and noise pollution, and preserving the city’s green cover,” he said.
  • On April 25, the erstwhile Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike issued a notice announcing that the Rail Land Development Authority (RLDA) had applied to remove 368 trees in the area for commercial activity.
  • Following the public notice, the proposal received strong opposition from environmentalists, tree lovers and the general public. In response, Mr. Khandre visited the site on June 20 for inspection. Following the inspection, the government proposed declaring the site a Biodiversity Heritage Site and invited citizens to submit suggestions, objections and feedback.
  • In total, more than 15,000 citizens called for the preservation of the 371 trees and the declaration of the site as a Biodiversity Heritage Site. A survey confirmed the existence of 371 trees in the area.
  • “Bengaluru’s air quality has already deteriorated, and its green cover is shrinking. At a time when the world is confronting climate change and rising global temperatures, conserving these 371 trees is of utmost importance,”.
  • 87,818 crore will be required for UKP phase-III: Siddaramaiah

Context: Chief Minister Siddaramaiah said an estimated ₹87,818 crore would be required for implementation of the Upper Krishna Project Phase-III, which would increase the Almatti dam height from 519 metres to 524 metres.

  • The initial project cost for implementation of the project was estimated at ₹51,148 crore and it had now been revised to ₹87,818 crore.
  • Out of this, ₹17,627 crore was initially estimated for the land acquisition process. The current revised cost was ₹40,557.09 crore.
  • The revised cost for civil works of nine sub-projects related to the project was estimated at ₹25,122.53 crore.
  • By raising the dam height, he said, an additional 100 tmc ft of water would be stored, which would provide irrigation facilities to 5.94 lakh hectares.
  • Manipur law to regulate issuance of certificates to SC, OBC communities gets Presidential assent

Context: The law to regulate the issuance of caste certificates for the Scheduled Caste (SC) and Other Backward Class (OBC) communities in Manipur, introduced by the erstwhile Manipur government in 2024 amid the ethnic conflict in the State, has received the assent of the President.

  • The law was brought by the then Biren Singh government in 2024, and is meant to “prevent fraudulent cases” of people claiming caste status and to bring uniformity in the processes for issuing caste certificates, according to the Bill’s Statement of Objects and Reasons.
  • Manipur has seven communities classified as SC and four communities categorised as OBC. Reservation in public education and employment for SCs is prescribed in the State at 2% and for OBCs at 17%. For Scheduled Tribes (STs), the reservation is 31%.

Detailed vetting process

  • The provisions of the law set out procedures for applying for caste certificates, competent authorities for issuing the certificates, and scrutiny committees to verify them, offences and penalties, among other things. The Bill had added that most other States had already framed such provisions.
  • Notably, the law, which received the Presidential assent in July this year, provides for the setting up of one or more Scrutiny Committees, which are meant to verify suspicious caste certificates.
  • It also gives these committees the power to verify a caste certificate suo motu, adding that the decision of the panel would be final and can only be challenged in the High Court.
  • However, it adds that the certificate of the person will remain valid during the verification process until a final decision is arrived.
  • While States like Maharashtra and Andhra Pradesh do have specific laws to regulate caste certificates, several others regulate through executive orders and circulars. Maharashtra also has provisions for setting up Scrutiny Committees, but Andhra Pradesh has given this power of suo motu verification to the District Collector.
  • ‘For Hindu Bengalis, CAA is irrelevant’
  • Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma said hardly any Hindu Bengalis in the State have taken the Citizenship (Amendment) Act route, as they are certain of their Indianness.
  • “No reason to suspect Hindu Bengalis, who came before 1971 as foreigners. The CAA has no relevance for them; they have not applied for citizenship under it,” Mr. Sarma said.
  • EC holds CEO conference; reviews preparedness for rolling out nationwide SIR

Context: The Election Commission (EC) held a conference of Chief Electoral Officers (CEOs) of all States and Union Territories to assess the preparedness for rolling out a nationwide special intensive revision (SIR) of voter lists.

  • The commission was planning to roll out the SIR across the country with a single schedule, as of now, sources in the EC said.
  • The conference was inaugurated by Chief Election Commissioner Gyanesh Kumar in the presence of Election Commissioners Sukhbir Singh Sandhu and Vivek Joshi. It assessed the preparedness of the offices of the CEOs of all States and Union Territories for the nationwide SIR exercise, an official statement said.
  • At the beginning of the conference, Bihar CEO Vinod Singh Gunjiyal made a presentation on the strategies, constraints, and best practices adopted in his State, which was the first to roll out the SIR.
  • All other CEOs provided detailed presentations on the number of electors and the qualifying date of the previous SIRs and electoral rolls in their respective States or Union Territories, according to the previous completed SIR. They also presented the status of digitisation and uploading of the electoral roll after the previous SIR on the website of the State and Union Territory CEO.
  • The officers also provided suggested documents to ensure no eligible citizen was left out of the electoral roll, and no ineligible person was included in it.
  • The issue assumes importance in light of the controversy surrounding the list of 11 indicative documents, which the EC had sought as part of the SIR exercise in Bihar. However, the Supreme Court had on Monday asked the poll body to add Aadhaar as the 12th document in the Bihar SIR.
  • EC sources said that though the SIR order of June 24 holds for the entire country, the list of documents could be made more inclusive when the schedule is announced.
  • The CEOs also provided the status of mapping of current electors with the electors as per the previous SIR, the statement said.
  • SC flags Governors sitting on Bills as Centre terms dispute a ‘false alarm’

Context: Chief Justice of India B.R. Gavai, heading a five-judge Presidential Reference Bench, pointed to Governors sitting on Bills for years together even as the Union government referred to disputes raised by non-BJP-ruled States such as Tamil Nadu and Kerala over inexplicable gubernatorial delay as a “false alarm”.

  • “How can you say that when Governors are sitting over Bills for four years,” Chief Justice Gavai asked the Centre, represented by Solicitor-General Tushar Mehta.
  • The Reference had followed an April 8 judgment of the court in the Tamil Nadu Governor case, which prescribed a three-month timeline for the President and the Governor to decide Bills.
  • Tamil Nadu had approached the court after the Governor sat on 10 Bills for four years, since 2020.
  • Mr. Mehta reasoned the Centre was not justifying Governors delaying assent to Bills “endlessly”. He had only meant to say that a State and its Governor must act “collaboratively” to ensure the smooth working of the Constitution.
  • “We are proud of our Constitution, considering what is happening in the neighbouring countries. Like what happened in Nepal yesterday…” Chief Justice Gavai remarked. Justice Vikram Nath mentioned Bangladesh in the same context.
  • Mr. Mehta said “collaboration” was possible only if both parties (State and Governor) had powers. He argued there was no room for collaboration if the Governor was expected to toe the line of the State Cabinet and mechanically sign Bills put before him for assent.
  • “The Governor cannot be reduced to an ornamental head of State. We may have had some aberrations, but for the past 55 years, every Governor has acted in a way expected of them, in a collaborative manner,” Mr. Mehta submitted.
  • He objected to the argument by non-BJP-ruled States that instances of Governors delaying Bills had increased after the NDA government came to power in 2014 at the Centre.
  • Justice Vikram Nath observed that the Reference Bench was not tracing what happened before or after 2014. The court was answering the questions of law raised by the President in the Reference.
  • Justice P.S. Narasimha tested the Centre’s submission that the moment a Governor withheld assent to a Bill in the first instance under Article 200, the proposed law would fail. The judge asked how a Bill passed by both Houses of the State legislature, after due consultation, could be failed by the solitary action of the Governor withholding assent.
  • “Should there not be a consultative process by which the Bill is returned to the State legislature for reconsideration. This way, both the State Assembly and the Governor get a role to play,” Justice Narasimha said.
  • “A Governor cannot act like a constitutional court, adjudicate on the constitutionality of a Bill and unilaterally withhold it… If timelines are not set for gubernatorial assent to Bill, States will be left to wander the corridors of the court,” he submitted.

‘Sitting ducks’

  • Advocate Avani Bansal, appearing for Tiruvallur MLA Sasikanth Senthil, said citizens could not be made “sitting ducks” by a Governor who sits on, for example, a health care Bill for years together.
  • “If the Governor sits indefinitely on a Bill, Article 200 would be made unworkable and superfluous,” Advocate-General of Meghalaya Amit Kumar submitted.
  • The State of Telangana, represented by senior advocate S. Niranjan Reddy, submitted that a Governor’s action must be judicially reviewed for discrimination if a law assented to in one State ruled by the same party as in the Centre was disapproved by a Governor in a State governed by a party in the Opposition.
  • Digital platform to preserve tribal art, culture launched
  • The Union Tribal Affairs Ministry launched the beta version of “Adi Sanskriti”, a digital platform for “tribal artforms and heritage”. Officials said it had been envisioned to become the “world’s first Digital University to preserve and promote the culture and knowledge of tribal communities”.
  • The digital platform will have an online marketplace, opening up a digital market for products made by tribal artisans in India.
  • The platform consists of three components: Adi Vishwavidyalaya (Digital Tribal Art Academy), Adi Sampada (Socio-Cultural Repository), and Adi Haat (digital marketplace).
  • ISRO inks agreement with HAL for transfer of SSLV technology

Context: The Indian Space Research Organisation signed a formal agreement with Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd. on Wednesday for the transfer of technology for production of small satellite launch vehicles (SSLV), marking a significant step in industry participation in the space sector.

  • The agreement, the 100th transfer of technology agreement facilitated by the space sector promoter INSPACe, was inked in Bengaluru by the ISRO, NewSpace India Ltd., and INSPACe with HAL, which outbid a consortium led by Adani Group-backed Alpha Design Technologies.
  • The aim is to complete the entire technology transfer process within 24 months from the date of signing the agreement, a statement from INSPACe said. During this period, the ISRO will provide training and technical support to the HAL for acquiring the know-how of the SSLV, it added.
  • ISRO Chairman V. Narayanan said the agreement would allow the HAL to independently build the SSLV for both domestic and international markets.
  • “We are honoured to be in this league to scale India’s next big frontiers with the SSLV technology, by partnering with ISRO and NSIL and IN-SPACe to implement it,” D.K. Sunil, Chairman and Managing Director of HAL, said.
  • Mr. Sunil said HAL would build SSLVs so that India could offer regular, cost-competitive small-satellite launches to domestic and global customers.
  • India resists full crypto framework, fears systemic risks

Context: India is leaning towards not creating legislation to regulate cryptocurrencies in the country and instead will maintain partial oversight, fearing that bringing the digital assets into its mainstream financial system could raise systemic risks, a government document shows.

  • The document, seen by Reuters, cites the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) view that, in practice, containing the risks of cryptocurrencies through regulation would be difficult.
  • Global acceptance of cryptocurrencies has improved since U.S. President Donald Trump took office and prices of bitcoin have hit record highs.
  • The U.S. has also passed legislation permitting wider use of stablecoins, which are cryptocurrencies backed by fiat currencies making them less vulnerable to wild swings.
  • China continues to ban cryptocurrencies but is considering a Yuan-backed stablecoin, Reuters reported last month. Although, Japan and Australia are developing regulatory frameworks for such virtual assets, they maintain a cautious stance without actively promoting the sector. Regulating cryptocurrencies in India would grant them “legitimacy”, and “may cause the sector to become systemic”, the government document, prepared this month, said.
  • In contrast, while an outright ban can tackle the “alarming” risks from largely speculative crypto assets, it would not be able to tackle peer-to-peer transfers or trades on decentralised exchanges, it added.
  • India’s federal finance ministry and the RBI did not immediately respond to Reuters request for comment.
  • ‘India set to be among top five shipbuilding nations by 2047’

Context: With less than 1% share in global shipbuilding currently, India is on course to be among the world’s top five countries in this arena by 2047, according to the Centre.

  • “The Government of India, through the Ministry of Ports, Shipping and Waterways and the Directorate General of Shipping, is committed to positioning India as a new hub for shipbuilding,” Shantanu Thakur, Minister of State, Ministry of Ports, Shipping and Waterways, Government of India.
  • The nation has a clear goal of ranking among the top 10 maritime nations by 2030 and among the top 5 by 2047,” he said, speaking at INMEX SMM India 2025, organised by Informa Markets in India.
  • He said shipbuilding and repair would serve as vital growth engines of India’s ‘blue economy’, generating employment, enhancing global competitiveness, and driving sustainability through green shipping initiatives and modernised infrastructure.
  • “While the maritime sector currently contributes 4% to India’s GDP and just 1% of global tonnage, the vision is to raise its share to 12% of national GDP and advance it from the 16th position globally to the fifth by 2047,” said Shyam Jagannathan, Director General of Shipping, Ministry of Ports, Shipping and Waterways.
  • “Indian seafarers already represent 12% of the global workforce, with a goal to expand this to around 25%, making shipbuilding and repair central to this transformation,” he said.
  • He said the government was strongly supporting the ambition through initiatives such as the Shipbuilding Finance Assistance Scheme, the Maritime Development Fund, shipbuilding and repair clusters, a National Shipbuilding Mission, the Shipbreaking Credit Note scheme, and upfront subsidies of up to 30% for non-conventional builds.
  • “Under Maritime India Vision India is firmly on course to emerge as a global maritime superpower,” he emphasised.
  • Sabyasachi Hajara, Chairman, INMEX SMM India Advisory Board, said, “The Government of India has taken unprecedented measures to boost the maritime sector, including the establishment of a $3 billion Maritime Development Fund, with nearly 45% earmarked for shipbuilding and ship repair, and 20% for building Indian tonnage, alongside investments in port infrastructure and coastal shipping.”
  • PhonePe partners with SIDBI, MSME Ministry on Udyam
  • PhonePe will work with the Ministry of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs), and the Small Industries Development Bank of India, to register more small merchants with the Udyam facility, thereby opening up more avenues for credit and availing government schemes, the company said.
  • Udyam is a platform to formalise more MSMEs, and SIDBI has already worked on an “assist platform” to make it easier for merchants to register for an Udyam number.
  • Rampant development, not climate, pushing Himalayas to the edge

Context: Punjab faced its worst floods since 1988 in August this year. Waters overflowing from the Sutlej, Beas, and Ravi rivers have destroyed several villages in the State. Around the same time, at least 34 people died after intense rainfall lashed India-controlled Kashmir and several parts of Pakistan. Early in August, the village of Dharali in Uttarkashi district of Uttarakhand disappeared after a deluge triggered a landslide.

  • This isn’t the first time the Indian Himalayan region has suffered such catastrophe; the 2013 Kedarnath floods and the 2021 disaster in Chamoli come to mind. And at least one thread runs through all of these incidents: they were all treated as unprecedented acts of nature.

The invisible hand

  • Experts have already said calling every heavy-rain event a “cloudburst” risks oversimplifying the disasters.
  • “Most of these natural disasters are not really natural at all. They are often a combination of two factors — climate change and development,” Arun B. Shreshta, a senior advisor, Climate and Environmental Risks, at the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), said.
  • The Himalayas are the world’s youngest mountains and are high-energy environments characterised by instability and variability. Landslides here are often triggered by heavy rainfall, slope undercutting or seismic activity.
  • According to ICIMOD research, the mountains are also particularly susceptible to floods, cloudbursts, glacial lake eruptions, and landslides.
  • Chief Justice B.R. Gavai called visuals of tree logs floating in flood waters in Himachal Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, Punjab, and Uttarakhand in the first week of September a “very serious issue.”
  • “Logs are seen flowing with the flood waters. If this goes on, we will not have any forests left. In Punjab, entire villages are inundated. Development is needed, but not at the cost of the environment and lives,” Justice Gavai observed on September 4.

No blanket plan

  • On July 18, the Supreme Court bench of Justices J.B. Pardiwala and R. Mahadevan had observed: “If things proceed the way they are as of date, the day is not far when the entire state of Himachal Pradesh may vanish in thin air from the map of India. God forbid this does not happen.”
  • The bench also said governments shouldn’t build revenue at the cost of ecological sustainability, and blamed human activity for worsening disasters.
  • “I think the Supreme Court is very much right about this,” Navneet Yadav, lead, Humanitarian Action and Disaster Risk Reduction at Caritas India, an NGO, said.
  • He added that development in Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand can’t happen according to the same plans drafted for metropolitan cities like Delhi and Mumbai.
  • “Every aspect of development should go through a lifecycle analysis. We should start looking at it in a completely different way, where we take into consideration the real impact of climate change,” Mr. Shreshta, who also stressed on assessing the carrying capacity of an area before implementing any project, said.
  • “Prior to making any major interventions in the mountains, there should be clearly defined steps in terms of an honest and independent social impact assessment in addition to a disaster impact assessment, which should go through a democratic public consultation process,” Himanshu Thakkar, coordinator of the South Asia Network on Dams, Rivers, and People, added.

The disaster potential

  • The Hindu Kush mountains are currently being encroached on as well as hosting more tourists, infrastructure development projects, and power generation activities. Together with a paucity of proper environmental impact assessments, experts have warned that the mountains are being pushed beyond their ability to cope.
  • According to the Directorate of Energy of Himachal Pradesh, there are 1,144 hydropower plants in the state, of which 721 are at various stages of clearance and investigation, 180 have been commissioned, and 53 are under construction. The Centre has also sanctioned funds to build new bridges and widen roads.
  • Similarly, in Uttarakhand, there are 40 operational hydroelectric plants while 87 more are at various stages of planning and construction, all to boost the State’s power generation capacity.
  • All these construction activities entail the use of heavy equipment to cut through the mountains.
  • “Today, we are building highways without any attention to how they can increase disaster potential,” Mr. Thakkar said.
  • As the Supreme Court bench observed on July 18, the proliferation of ‘development’ work is joining hands with climate change to worsen the effects of rain and temperature changes.
  • On September 4, the apex court also issued a notice to the National Highways Authority of India following a petition that claimed 14 tunnels between Chandigarh and Manali turned into “death traps” during heavy rains.
  • The average temperature in the Indian Himalaya is already rising faster than the global average, resulting in reduced snowfall and more snow melt. When a glacier melts, the water pools into a new lake. If a rocky barrier adjacent to the lake shifts or breaks, all the water can be released into a nearby river or drain, leading to sudden and massive floods. These events are called glacial lake outburst floods (GLOFs).
  • According to ICIMOD, there were more than 25,000 classified glacial lakes in five major river basins across the Himalayas by 2018, placing communities and livelihoods downstream at more and more risk.

‘Worst kind of land’

  • “Infrastructure changes have to be done keeping in mind such climatic variations — GLOFs, landslides, and even droughts,” Mr. Shreshta said. “The Himalayas are at a tipping point, and we need an urgent course correction that balances economy and energy. We need nature-based solutions with the involvement of the local communities because they know the local landscape and the hazards that come with it.”
  • “Building climate literacy amongst the locals to drive local self-governance is important,” Mr. Yadav said. “Not just that, all the critical structures, such as hospitals and schools, must never be built in unsafe locations because they are the immediate places that house those affected by any disaster. But that is unfortunately not the reality. Most government schools are built on the worst kind of land.”
  • The rise in tourism has also stoked a demand for land on which to build hotels, homestays, and other facilities, and that in turn has been driving local deforestation. The deodar trees in particular are native to the region and hold the soil in place.
  • “When you remove them, the soil is in boulders which will soon erode out. And that erosion will increase the disaster potential of the area in terms of landslides and floods in the downstream villages,” Mr. Thakkar said. He added that it should be possible to ‘develop’ without tearing trees down.

Current Affairs: 10th Sept 2025

  • Radhakrishnan elected Vice-President of India

Context: Maharashtra Governor C.P. Radhakrishnan was elected the 17th Vice-President of India by a margin of 152 votes. The Opposition fell short of its own expected tally, even as 98.2% of the total electorate cast their ballot.

  • Mr. Radhakrishnan — the ruling National Democratic Alliance’s nominee — got 452 first preferential votes against the joint Opposition candidate Justice B. Sudershan Reddy, who got 300 votes. Fifteen votes were found to be invalid and 14 MPs abstained.
  • Including the strength of both Houses, the full electoral college comprises 788 electors. With six vacancies in the Rajya Sabha and one in the Lok Sabha, this tally was reduced to 781 for the election.

Cross-voting

  • Out of this, 767 electors cast their vote before the polling closed at 5 p.m. Rajya Sabha Secretary-General P.C. Mody, the Returning Officer for the election, announced the results.
  • Karnataka houses more than 50% of mid-market GCC units in India: Report

Context: Karnataka houses more than 50% of the mid-market GCCs in India, employing over 74,000 professionals, finds a new report released by the Karnataka Digital Economy Mission (KDEM), in collaboration with global management consulting firm Zinnov.

  • According to the report titled “Karnataka Mid-Market GCC Report 2025: Lean, Local, and Globally Impactful,” the State hosts more than 230 of the 480+ mid-market GCCs in the country. These centres are not just expanding faster; they are maturing 1.4 times quicker than larger peers, embracing product ownership, CXO-level leadership, and embedding AI-first strategies, the report notes.
  • Mid-market GCCs are Global Capability Centres established by mid-sized enterprises with annual global revenues ranging between $100 million and $1 billion.
  • According to the report, these firms scale faster and with greater control in Karnataka, enabled by plug-and-play infrastructure, payroll incentives, and simplicity of the government policies. Karnataka was the first in the country to roll out a GCC policy in 2024.
  • The report also notes that the State captured a disproportionately high share of new mid-market GCCs over the past two years. Around 65% of all new mid-market GCCs in India since 2023 have been set up in Karnataka.
  • “Higher talent quality in the State allows mid-market GCCs to operate with leaner teams – driving more productivity per employee and reducing overall cost of operations,” reads the report. While mid-market GCCs in India operate at 40% the size of non-mid-market peers, in Karnataka, the trend is amplified with the mid-market GCCs running at 35% the size of the larger peers. This, according to the report, is a reflection of ‘high-trust and high-quality talent.’ The State is currently home to 50% of India’s AI/ML talent and 38% digital workforce, and its capital city, the fourth largest technology and innovation cluster in the world, it notes.

Katalyst handbook

  • The report was launched in the presence of Minister of Electronics, Information Technology & Biotechnology Priyank Kharge and officials from the IT-BT department and KDEM. The event saw the release of the KATALYST GCC Handbook, a comprehensive guide for companies that wish to set up GCCs in Karnataka. KATALYST is a dedicated Ease of Doing Business cell formed by the Department of Electronics, IT & BT in August to support GCCs in Karnataka.
  • Noting that 65% of all the new mid-market GCCs in India since 2023 established in their offices in Karnataka, Mr. Kharge hoped that the release of the handbook would help the ecosystem to ensure that more software is coming to India.
  • Addressing the industry representatives gathered at the event, he said, “If the government participates closely with the industry, we will be able to ensure that we deliver faster for you.”
  • China digs in on ‘rare earth’, commands global market

Context: Last month, China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology introduced interim measures to tighten controls on ‘rare earth’ mining and processing. The rules are the latest in Beijing’s efforts to centralise oversight of extraction, exports, and refining.

  • While China’s trading partners such as India and the U.S. are seeking alternative sources to reduce dependency, data shows that China’s dominance in rare earths stems not only from resource availability but more so from its longstanding strength in mining and research capacity.
  • Rare earth elements (REEs), despite the name, are not particularly scarce. According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), they comprise 17 metals, typically grouped into light rare earths (LREEs) — including lanthanum, cerium, praseodymium, neodymium, samarium and europium — and heavy rare earths (HREEs) such as gadolinium, terbium, dysprosium, holmium, erbium, thulium, ytterbium, lutetium, scandium and yttrium. Promethium is not included in the list as it is radioactive and does not occur in mineable quantities.
  • They are critical components in clean energy technologies such as electric vehicles and wind turbines, as well as in defence applications. Rare earths are also essential for high-tech devices including smartphones and hard drives.
  • Although rare earth deposits exist in countries such as Brazil, Australia, and India, China holds nearly half of global reserves (Chart 1). It is also the world’s largest producer, contributing over 60% of global production in the last five years (Chart 2). Beyond extraction, China dominates the value chain with around 92% of global refining capacity, according to the IEA. Moreover, in the last five years, China has been the largest exporter, supplying close to 30% of global demand (Chart 3).
  • Charts 1, 2 and 3 establish China’s dominance across reserves, production, and exports.
  • In April, amid escalating U.S.-China trade tensions, Beijing imposed export restrictions on seven rare earth elements. The move targeted elements used in neodymium–iron–boron (NdFeB) magnets — essential for clean energy technologies — as well as those critical to ceramics, phosphors, steel, optical glass, fibres, and aerospace applications (Chart 4).
  • China’s decision to curb rare earth exports, amid tit-for-tat tariffs, dealt a significant blow to the U.S., which remains heavily dependent on Chinese supply. The U.S. is the second-largest importer of Chinese rare earths, after Japan (Chart 5). India, too, is heavily dependent on China for its rare earth imports. Since 2021, more than 75% have come from China.
  • Under China’s interim measures announced last month, Chinese companies must now operate within government-set quotas for various minerals and obtain approval to trade in rare earths. This is not the first time China has tightened its rare earth trade. It has already prohibited export of tools and methods used to extract and separate rare earths, and in December 2023, it banned the export of processing technology.
  • China’s monopoly over rare earths is also reinforced by its strong research base. A study found that China leads the field of rare-earth research, contributing nearly 30% of all published papers. The U.S. and Japan followed with shares of 10% or less, while India accounted for about 6%.
  • In parallel, China has increased funding for mineral exploration, allocating about $14 billion annually since 2022, according to the IEA. The agency notes that this marks the highest three-year stretch of investment in the past decade.
  • Governors must act as true guides and philosophers to States, says CJI Gavai

Context: Chief Justice of India B.R. Gavai, heading a five-judge Presidential Reference Bench, observed that Governors must act as “true guides and philosophers” to State governments. He agreed with the Kerala government that the working relationship between the two constitutional authorities must be “collaborative”.

  • Senior advocate K.K. Venugopal, representing Kerala, suggested that the Governors of States ruled by non-NDA parties, such as Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Punjab, Telangana and West Bengal, learn from their counterparts in States ruled by the BJP and its allies, where Bills are granted assent without delay.
  • “Governors must deal with Bills ‘as soon as possible’ and not ‘as soon as convenient’,” Mr. Venugopal, assisted by advocate C.K. Sasi for the State, submitted.
  • In its written submissions, Kerala said that eight Bills presented to its Governor had remained pending for periods between seven and 23 months.
  • “There are as many as 28 States and three Union Territories with Legislative Assemblies. Except for five States, i.e. Punjab, Telangana, West Bengal, Tamil Nadu and Kerala, 26 of the State governments or Union Territories had not gone to court complaining about the withholding of assent for long periods. This would mean that the legislatures and the Governors are ad idem [in agreement] in regard to the Bills becoming law. Hence, any approach to the functioning of the Governor cannot be on the basis that the Governor is an adversary of the legislature, but, on the other hand, the example set by the other 26 Governors should be treated as the norm,” Mr. Venugopal submitted.

‘Will create dyarchy’

  • Senior advocate Gopal Subramanium, for Karnataka, said that giving Governors expansive powers would create a dyarchy — a government with two independent authorities — in a State. “The repository of real power in a parliamentary democracy is the legislature in its role as the representatives of the people… Allowing Governors power to exercise his discretion in all his functions would render national elections a numerical exercise in expensive futility,” Mr. Subramanium submitted.
  • Mr. Venugopal argued that the Governor must not act as an adversary. He is, in an actual sense, intimately a part of the State Legislature. “He is as much interested in the success of State Bills, which are for the welfare of the people,” he submitted.

Specific deadlines

  • The Bench is hearing a Presidential Reference on whether timelines to deal with State Bills can be imposed on Governors and the President. The Reference followed the Supreme Court’s judgment in a case against the Tamil Nadu Governor on April 8, which declared three-month deadlines for Governors and the President to decide the fate of the Bills placed before them for assent or consideration, respectively, under Articles 200 and 201.
  • Senior advocate Arvind Datar questioned why the court must be content with requesting the Governors to act on Bills within a “reasonable time”.
  • “Why should Your Lordships keep the timelines vague by saying ‘do this within a reasonable time’? The Supreme Court must specify — three months, six months. By fixing specific timelines, the court gives complete clarity and certainty,” Mr. Datar submitted.

Wrangling on timelines

  • Justice P.S. Narasimha on the Bench referred to instances in the past when the court had specified timelines, especially in medicaladmission cases, only to end up with more litigation.
  • “Time after time, this court has laid down timelines. But such orders only became fodder for more litigation. Take a look at the medical admission cases. We fix timelines for admission every year. The next year, applications are filed to extend the timeline,” Justice Narasimha told Mr. Datar.
  • Noting that the Reference Bench was interpreting the Constitution, the senior counsel said that the interpretation must help the Constitution work better.
  • The Governor, State legislature, and the Union government are all components of governance, he said, warning that if one component acted truant by delaying assent to Bills, the whole system of governance would crumble.
  • Mr. Datar said that if the Supreme Court could weave the principle of substantive due process (protection of fundamental rights from government abuse) into the Constitution, it could very well read timelines into Articles 200 and 201.
  • The State of Telangana, represented by senior advocate S. Niranjan Reddy, submitted that the advisory jurisdiction of the top court under Article 143 was not restricted by the separation of powers.
  • “Acting under the advisory jurisdiction, the Supreme Court, which is answering the President’s questions, can give a collective opinion that the President/Governor must follow a three-month timeline. Though only an opinion of the Supreme Court under Article 143, it still has great persuasive value,” Mr. Reddy submitted.
  • EC directs Bihar CEO to accept Aadhaar for SIR  

Context: The Election Commission (EC) on Tuesday directed Bihar’s Chief Electoral Officer (CEO) to issue instructions for accepting Aadhaar as a proof of identity for the special intensive revision (SIR) of electoral rolls in the State. The directive came a day after the Supreme Court ordered the commission to include Aadhaar as a document that voters can submit to include or exclude names on the rolls.

  • In its June 24 SIR order, the EC had given an indicative list of 11 documents to be given as proof of birth and residence along with the enumeration forms.
  • The Supreme Court, during a hearing on a petition filed by the Association for Democratic Reforms on Monday, directed the EC to include Aadhaar as the 12th on the list of “indicative” documents.
  • The EC communique to the Bihar CEO on Tuesday said that Aadhaar should be accepted as a proof of identity and not as a proof of citizenship in terms of Section 9 of the Aadhaar Act, 2016.
  • It also noted that under the Representation of the People Act, 1950, Aadhaar is already one of the documents listed for the purpose of establishing the identity of a person.
  • The draft electoral rolls of Bihar published on August 1 have excluded 65 lakh people who were present on the earlier voter lists, citing deaths, migration and duplication among other reasons.
  • After the last SC order on accepting Aadhaar in cases where no other documents were available, the EC had said that all voters challenging the deletion of their names on the draft rolls could file claims along with a copy of their Aadhaar card in the absence of any of the indicative documents.
  • The poll body said such applications would get a hearing from the Electoral Registration Officer (ERO) who would then take a call on the inclusion or exclusion of the names from the final list.
  • Centre grants licences to five firms to manufacture its first indigenous malaria vaccine

Context: The Union government has given licences to five firms for manufacturing and commercialisation of its first indigenous multi-stage malaria vaccine developed by the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) and its partners.

  • Indian Immunologicals Ltd., Techinvention Lifecare Private Ltd., Panacea Biotec Ltd., Biological E Ltd., and Zydus Lifesciences will make the vaccine targeting the parasite before it enters the bloodstream to prevent transmission.
  • The council said it was an affordable, stable, and scalable solution.It remains effective for more than nine months at room temperature, it said.
  • The ICMR had invited expression of interest from eligible organisations, companies, and manufacturers for transfer of technology for commercialisation of “a recombinant chimeric multi-stage malaria vaccine (AdFalciVax) against Plasmodium falciparum useful in preventing infection in humans and minimising community transmission”.
  • The goal is to facilitate the commercialisation of the vaccine to prevent and minimise malaria transmission.
  • “The pre-clinical validation of this technology was conducted in collaboration with ICMR-National Institute of Malaria Research, another constituent institute of ICMR, and National Institute of Immunology (NII), New Delhi, an autonomous research institute of the Department of Biotechnology,” the council said.
  • Malaria remains one of the major public health problems in India. The country carries 1.4% of the global malaria case burden, and accounted for 66% of cases in the Southeast Asia region.

Current Affairs: 9th Sept 2025

Accept Aadhaar as identity proof, SC orders poll panel

Context: The Supreme Court directed the Election Commission to include Aadhaar as the 12th “indicative” document that those seeking inclusion or exclusion of names on the electoral rolls of Bihar could file as proof of identity during the special intensive revision.
  • A Bench of Justices Surya Kant and Joymalya Bagchi clarified that the use of Aadhaar would strictly be as proof of identity, and not as evidence of Indian citizenship.
  • The EC officials are entitled to verify the “authenticity and genuineness” of the Aadhaar submitted to them, just the way they would do in the case of the other 11 documents, the court noted in the order.
  • “Apart from passport and birth certificate, none of the remaining nine of the 11 documents you [EC] have listed for SIR are conclusive proof of citizenship. The petitioners are also agreeing that Aadhaar is not proof of citizenship. Statutorily also Aadhaar is not proof of citizenship. Then why can’t you add Aadhaar too in the list? This court has asked you several times to consider Aadhaar… Why are you not?” Justice Bagchi asked the EC’s counsel, senior advocate Rakesh Dwivedi.
  • The court ordered the EC to issue instructions to officials, from Electoral Registration Officers to booth-level officers (BLOs), working on the ground in poll-bound Bihar, to accept Aadhaar from persons filing claims or objections. Approximately 65 lakh voters, out of a total 7.89 crore in the State, were excluded from the draft rolls published on August 1.
  • The deadline for filing claims to include names and file objections to exclude names for reasons such as death, permanent shifting, and duplication, was September 1. The EC, on September 2, clarified that these were welcome even beyond the deadline.
  • On July 10, the Supreme Court urged the EC to consider accepting Aadhaar as a document of identity during the SIR. Again, on August 14, the court formally directed the use of Aadhaar as a proof of identity and residence.
  • Finally, on August 22, in response to complaints that the EC was still not accepting Aadhaar as a valid proof of identity or residence during the claims-and-objections period, the court clarified that voters excluded from the draft electoral roll could attach either Aadhaar card or any of the 11 “indicative” documents.
  • Senior advocate Kapil Sibal, appearing for Bihar’s main Opposition party, the Rashtriya Janata Dal, said the BLOs were refusing to accept Aadhaar from claimants despite these back-to-back orders from the top court.
  • “Your Lordships had clearly said several times that Aadhaar can be used as an alternative to any of the 11 documents. BLOs are still refusing. The EC is penalising officers for accepting Aadhaar and issued show-cause notices to BLOs who have allowed Aadhaar…Disciplinary proceedings have already started against these officers.
  • There are no instructions from EC to officers to accept Aadhaar despite separate orders by this court… I have 24 affidavits from people from various districts who were unsuccessful in giving Aadhaar.
  • The EC’s conduct amounts to gross contempt of this court’s orders… We want Aadhaar to be used as proof of residence or identity, so that a person can vote. We want only 11 documents plus Aadhaar,” Mr. Sibal submitted.
  • Mr. Dwivedi countered that Aadhaar could not be accorded the same status as a passport, which was a proof of citizenship. Besides, he contended that over 99% of the excluded voters had already submitted their claims and objections, disproving the petitioners’ argument that people did not have any of the 11 documents. Mr. Dwivedi said none of the political parties had pointed out any errors with the SIR process.
  • Justice Kant said Aadhaar was like any other official document such as ration card, passport, or birth certificate. Both statutes and judicial dictum did not consider Aadhaar as proof of citizenship. “You [EC] can accept Aadhaar and verify their authenticity,” Justice Kant observed.
  • Justice Bagchi said Aadhaar was not “alien” to the Representation of the People Act. “One of the provisions of the Act, in fact, allows Aadhaar as proof of residence,” the judge said.
  • The court orally asked Mr. Dwivedi to give “publicity” to the judicial order so that aggrieved voters would come to know and file their claims and objections along with Aadhaar, if need be. He responded that the order would be posted online.
  • IIMB’s global ranking in FT MiM 2025 goes up

Context: The Indian Institute of Management (IIM) Bangalore’s two-year full time MBA programme – the Post Graduate Programme in Management (PGP) – has been ranked number one in India and number 28 globally in the Financial Times Masters in Management (FT MiM) 2025 global ranking.

Global top 30

  • The programme was ranked at 41 globally in 2024. With the new ranking, the institute is now the only Indian B-school to feature in the global top 30.
  • The FT MiM ranking evaluates the world’s top business schools across 19 criteria, with alumni feedback accounting for 56% of the ranking’s weight and school data comprising the remaining 44%.
  • It factors in outcomes such as employment, return on investment, diversity, ESG, and internationalisation, the assessment provides a holistic measure of institutional performance.

Career progression

  • Outcomes of the IIMB alumni indicate higher career progression, marked rise in weighted salaries, and a notable salary percentage increase of 47% – the highest among the top three Indian B-schools. The institute has also advanced in measures of value for money, improved ESG and Net Zero teaching rank, and has recorded a leap in its carbon footprint rank, moving from 73 to 13.
  • The gains in diversity are also notable. The proportion of female faculty rose from 22% to 25%, female students from 33% to 40%, and women on the institute’s board from 30% to 40%. The IIMB also recorded an increased intake of international students to its programme this year.

Cultivating diversity

  • “The IIMB benchmarks its curriculum and impact through research against the best in the world to ensure that its students play a decisive role in addressing complex global challenges. The FT MiM ranking reaffirms our promise of delivering a transformational experience that leaves a lasting impact on students, practitioners, industries, and society,” said U. Dinesh Kumar, Director in-charge, IIMB.
  • Mukta Kulkarni, Dean, Programmes and Chairperson, Office of International Affairs, said that the 2025 FT MiM rankings were aided by the diversity that the institute has cultivated across its faculty, student, and alumni fraternity, as well as its governing body.
  • Infosys to train journalists in digital media and AI

Context: The Karnataka Media Academy signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Infosys Ltd. to assist journalists in digital education, skill development, and capacity building.

  • The training will be taken up under the CSR programme Springboard and is the first in the country, a note from the Chief Minister’s Office said.
  • The MoU was signed in the presence of Chief Minister Siddaramaiah. “The media academy will get access to digital content on Springboard, and journalists can benefit from the learning content in the areas of soft skills, personality development, and overview to the latest technologies such as the artificial intelligence.
  • This programme will help journalists in Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities,” said
  • Satheesha B. Nanjappa, senior vice-president and head of education, Training and Assessment. The programme aims to train 150 journalists this year and will involve a three-day training that will cover skills for digital media, the use of artificial intelligence, and personality development. One batch will be dedicated to train women journalists under the Gender budget, a note said.
  • 6.17 acres sanctioned for Quantum City at Hesaraghatta, says Minister Boseraju

Context: The State government has sanctioned a patch of 6.17 acres of land at Hesaraghatta for the establishment of a Quantum City (Q-City), Science and Technology Minister N.S. Boseraju announced.

  • “As we assured at the Bengaluru Quantum Summit, our government, under the visionary leadership of Chief Minister Siddaramaiah and Deputy Chief Minister D.K. Shivakumar and at the initiation of Department of Science and Technology, has sanctioned 6.17 acres of land at Hesaraghatta to set up Quantum City,” said the Minister in an X post.
  • According to him, Q-City will be Karnataka’s dedicated hub for state-of-the-art research laboratories, startup incubation, industry–academia collaboration. It will also feature production clusters for quantum hardware and processors and Quantum HPC data centres.
  • “This milestone is the start of our bold vision to build a $20 billion Quantum Economy by 2035 to create over 2 lakh direct jobs,” he wrote.
  • Karnataka was aiming to garner a 20% share in the global quantum market, he stated.
  • “This is a historic step for Karnataka. The Quantum City at Hesaraghatta will attract global talent, investments, and firmly place Bengaluru on the world’s quantum map. Build in Karnataka, but will be scaled across India and eventually to transform the world,” the Minister added.
  • Additionally, he said, 8 acres of land have been sanctioned for ICTS–TIFR (International Centre for Theoretical Sciences) to expand research and academic excellence in theoretical sciences — strengthening Bengaluru’s position as a global hub for advanced science.
  • Naga council in Manipur to enforce trade embargo

Context: An apex body of Manipur Nagas has stuck to its decision to enforce an indefinite ‘trade embargo’ across all Naga-majority areas of the State from September 8 midnight, less than a week after the Centre announced the “reopening” of a crucial national highway.

  • The United Naga Council had announced the ‘trade embargo’, expected to affect all forms of trade and transportation of goods, after a meeting between its team and officials of the Ministry of Home Affairs on August 26 was inconclusive.
  • The meeting was on the twin issues of the Centre’s move to scrap the Free Movement Regime, and fence the 1,643-km India-Myanmar border.
  • The UNC is opposed to the border fencing as Nagas believe the boundary was imposed by the British to divide the Naga homeland straddling Arunachal Pradesh, Manipur, and Nagaland, and Myanmar’s Sagaing Division.
  • Israeli Finance Minister visits India, signs bilateral investment treaty

Context: Days after Israel intensified its ongoing military operation in Gaza Strip, India hosted Israeli Minister of Finance Bezalel Smotrich, who held talks with his Indian counterpart, Nirmala Sitharaman, and signed a Bilateral Investment Agreement.

  • Mr. Smotrich is leading a delegation of Israeli officials that includes the Chief Economist of the Israeli Ministry of Finance, Shmuel Abramzon.
  • “The agreement we signed expresses our shared vision for innovative and secure economic development. This is a strategic step that will open new doors for both Israeli and Indian investors, strengthen Israeli exports, and provide businesses on both sides with certainty and tools to develop in the world’s fastest-growing markets. India is a growing economic powerhouse, and cooperation with it is a tremendous opportunity for the State of Israel,” said Mr. Smotrich after signing the agreement with Ms. Sitharaman.
  • Mr. Smotrich’s arrival in India coincided with the launch of a new phase of Israeli military campaign in the Gaza Strip as the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) are trying to evacuate the Gaza City in order to create a sanitised zone, which has million-plus civilians facing serious issues like bombing raids and starvation.

Significant outreach

  • Mr.Smotrich’s visit to India is a sign of significant outreach by Israel as he was banned by the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Norway and Canada in June this year.
  • The Ministry of External Affairs is yet to respond to a query about the visit but highly placed Israeli sources said that Israel is in the process of throwing open new sectors of its economy, especially the construction sector, which will generate investment and employment opportunities for Indians. Israel, which started the current military campaign after the October 7, 2023 attack by Hamas, has hired a large number of Indian blue collar workers in the last two years.
  • Mr. Smotrich also met Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal, who in a message said, “Our discussions focused on further strengthening trade and investment ties between our nations.”

New model

  • “A new Bilateral Investment Agreement signed by Israel’s Minister of Finance Bezalel Smotrich and India’s Finance Minister will facilitate reciprocal investments between investors from both countries. Israel is the first OECD [Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development] member state with which India has signed this strategic agreement, in accordance with India’s new model for investment treaties,” said the Israeli Ministry of Finance. Mr. Smotrich announced that the Israeli Ministry of Finance is examining the possibility of opening a representation office in India.
  • The Israeli Ministry further said that the new agreement will replace the previous agreement that was signed in 1996.
  • Parliamentary panel to be briefed ahead of EU-India FTA talks

Context: As European Trade Commissioners head to Delhi later this week to fast-track Free Trade Agreement (FTA) talks, the government will brief the parliamentary consultative committee on the discussions, including on contentious issues such as agricultural market access, and non-tariff barriers like the EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM).

  • The briefing comes close on the heels of the collapse of trade negotiations with the United States over issues such as opening the market for agricultural commodities, dairy and genetically modified crops, as well as ties with Russia.
  • Officials from the Ministry of External Affairs and the Commerce Ministry are expected to help build political consensus over FTA talks with European countries, which could also demand similar concessions from India.
  • According to sources, agreements signed in the past few months will be discussed during the briefing. This includes an FTA with the United Kingdom, and an agreement signed with Nordic countries last year, expected to go into force on October 1. However, these deals skirted the issues over agriculture and visas, focusing instead on areas that could be agreed on.
  • According to a notice sent out to members of the Shashi Tharoor-led Committee on External Affairs, the briefing by the government on “India and Europe Relationship: Opportunities and Challenges” will take place tomorrow, a day before European Union’s trade commissioner Maros Sefcovic and agriculture commissioner Christophe Hansen arrive in Delhi on September 11 for talks beginning Friday.
  • EU trade negotiators are already in Delhi for preparatory meetings, where both sides are expected to agree on an accelerated plan for talks every month, so as to arrive at an FTA deal by the end of the year. In addition, a 28-member delegation of the Political and Security Committee (PSC) that oversees the EU’s foreign, security and defence policies will travel to Delhi from September 10-14.
  • “The visit builds on recent key milestones, including the EU College of Commissioners’ visit to India in February, the inaugural EU-India Strategic Dialogue in June, and the upcoming EU-India Summit in early 2026,” the European Union office in India announced.
  • While the visits by the trade negotiators and commissioners will focus on the FTA, the PSC is expected to push for India to play a more proactive role in the Ukraine conflict and reduce its processing of Russian oil that finds its way back to European markets.
  • The visits follow the U.S. decision to impose a total 50% tariff on Indian goods, including a 25% penalty tariff for the purchase of Russian oil, with threats of more “secondary sanctions” from the U.S. over the Ukraine conflict. While the EU has not imposed penalty tariffs on India, it has moved to sanction several Indian companies including Gujarat-based Nayara Energy, partially owned by Russian oil major Rosneft. As a result, Nayara Energy’s oil purchases are being refused by shippers and insurers, even as the EU is preparing a 19th package of sanctions that will impose penalties on the European buyers of the refined-Russian products sold by Indian refineries.
  • Sources said the FTA negotiators have cleared about half of the 23-24 chapters in the final EU-India FTA, and they should complete the agreement by the end of 2025, or early next year.
  • Online gaming Act cases moved to Supreme Court

Context: The Supreme Court allowed a petition filed by the Centre seeking transfer of three cases pending in the Delhi, Karnataka and Madhya Pradesh High Courts challenging the Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming Act, 2025.

  • A Bench headed by Justice J.B. Pardiwala transferred the cases to the apex court. The Bench asked the High Courts to transfer the case records to the Supreme Court. Arguing for a transfer, the Union government said multiple proceedings before the various High Courts would add to the confusion, especially if the judgments contradict each other. An authoritative declaration on the constitutionality of the statute would settle the law.
  • Translated collection of Bhil folk tales to be out soon

Context: The Union government’s recent initiative to bring out a translation tool for tribal languages is helping bring out a translated collection of folk tales of the Bhil tribe in Madhya Pradesh.

  • The collection, in Hindi, will feature stories of inter-caste love, caste discrimination, guru pujan and the celebration of theatre.
  • In the compilation, titled Anuvad, a recurring theme in several stories appears to be a narrative where casteism is defeated through arguments such as “caste was never a part of Sanatan Dharma”, or “there is no caste in Manusmriti, it was introduced”, and that caste differences should be set aside because “all Hindus are the same”.
  • The e-booklet will be made available on the Tribal Affairs Ministry’s Adi Vaani website and the app. Other stories talk about farmer distress, faith healers, and worshippers of Lokmata Ahilya Devi, the Narmada, and Sant Singaji.
  • A story about inter-caste love titled Jaativaad Khatam Karo (end casteism) speaks of Basant and Palasi, who live in a beautiful village, where the only problem is that of casteism. While Basant’s caste location is not revealed in the story, it says Palasi is Dalit and Basant is of a “higher” caste. Basant, an attendance marker at a factory, falls for Palasi, a worker, but the villagers object to this.
  • The villagers, led by the Pandit, stop Basant to confront him about the adharm (sacrilege).
  • Basant stands his ground, enraging the Pandit, who forces Basant to argue with him in a public square. In this dialogue, the Pandit argues that caste is part of Hindu religious texts, while Basant argues that caste was never part of the Manusmriti but that it was inserted in made-up shloks (verses) later in the form of a “conspiracy”.
  • He goes on to argue that inter-caste relations are not wrong “because all Hindus are the same”, positing that “casteism” goes against the “Varna system”, which is based on karma and not on birth.
  • The Pandit listens to Basant, changes his mind, and declares him “innocent”, calling him a “protector of faith”.
  • Another story is about a fierce night-long street play competition where a “Vanvasi” audience is won over by the protagonist’s theatre group, which starts playing the roles of “Vanvasis” on stage, speaking their language and dancing their dances.
  • These tales have been collected from oral storytelling traditions of the Bhil community in regions of Madhya Pradesh, with some of them referring to the Nimar region of the State.

Vague timeline

  • The stories do not mention the year in which they take place, but some of them have vague clues indicating that they are taking place in a modern world, with the mention of cars and roads, and characters who are police officers and district officials.
  • Officials told The Hindu that such folk tales from Gondi, Santali, and Mundari communities have also been translated and will be made available soon.
  • In a story titled ‘Guru Pujan’, Samandar, a hard-working schoolteacher in a village, is preparing for Guru Purnima. As preparations are under way, the crowd is stunned into silence by a visibly drunk policeman, who is beating a child. When stopped, he threatens violence and cases against the teachers, children and guests, and vandalises the idol that was supposed to be worshipped. Samandar works up the courage to confront the policeman, stands his ground, and ensures that he runs away. When the students see their teacher defending their lives, they say they will now worship him as their guru. At this point, Samandar posits that they should instead worship “the guru of gurus” — the “bhaagwat flag” — a religious flag, typically yellow or saffron in colour. He says, “This flag represents our culture and civilisation.
  • It is a vehicle for our nation. Our Sanatan culture is reflected in this. This is our guru.”
  • According to the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh’s V. Bhagaiah, the RSS considers the “bhagwa dhwaj” (saffron flag) its guru. Author Arun Anand, who has studied the RSS, further writes that this concept originated when RSS members wished to consider founder K.B. Hedgewar as their guru, but Mr. Hedgewar had purportedly suggested they worship the saffron flag as their guru instead.
  • Red sea cable cuts take a toll on Indian networks to Europe

Context: Bharti Airtel Ltd., Reliance Jio Infocomm Ltd. and Tata Communications Ltd.’s networks are among many dealing with increased latency to traffic between India and Europe, according to telemetry published by the San Francisco-based network intelligence firm Kentic, Inc.

  • This follows cuts to the undersea cable systems SEA-ME-WE 4 and IMEWE in the Red Sea, which connect India to West Asia and Europe. Undersea cables are an essential part of the global Internet’s infrastructure, forming the backbone of networks around the world.
  • Latency is a measure of how long a data packet takes to make a round trip between two points. While latency between any two points on earth is rarely over one second, differences between domestic and international traffic can be perceptible, such as an inter-continental video call. According to Kentic’s data, latency between Europe and Mumbai (where most subsea cables land in India), went up from roughly 110–150ms to 190–300ms, depending on which cloud service provider was used to test the latency.
  • So far, widespread disruptions to networks have not been detected, as India has over a dozen subsea cable systems landing in the country, allowing telcos to reroute traffic over other systems (which are less optimal, but in any case allow for traffic to continue flowing).
  • Airtel, Tata Communications and Reliance Jio did not respond to a request for comment. The Department of Telecommunications did not respond to a query.
  • This is the second disruption to subsea cable systems connecting to India, after three subsea cable systems faced cuts in the Red Sea in the middle of last year, also linked to Houthi attacks in the ongoing crisis in the region.
  • India, Qatar likely to finalise terms of reference for FTA in early October

Context: India is likely to finalise terms of reference for a free trade agreement (FTA) with Qatar in the first week of October, a government source said. The source added that Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal may visit the Gulf country to finalise the same on October 6.

  • The possibility of a comprehensive economic partnership agreement (CEPA) with Doha was first announced in February during the Emir of Qatar Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani’s visit to India. The two sides sought to double their bilateral trade by 2030.
  • Doha accounts for 1.22% of India’s total trade. In FY 2024-25, India exported goods worth about $1.68 billion, whilst it imports totaled $12.47 billion. Qatar’s key exports to India include liquefied natural gas (LNG), liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), chemicals and petrochemicals and aluminium articles, among other things.
  • Expanding the number of FTA partners has emerged as an imperative for New Delhi in response to U.S. President Donald Trump-induced tariff regime.
  • Washington instituted a 50% tariff on Indian products inclusive of a 25% penalty for buying Russian oil. For perspective, trade with the North American country accounted for 11.4% of India’s overall trade in FY 2024-25.

Talks progressing well

  • Enumerating progress about the trade agreement with the European Union, the source stated that talks were progressing well with a delegation of the European Union already in New Delhi. Mr. Goyal is expected to meet the trade commissioner for EU Maroš Šefčovič as part of the 13th round of talks.
  • ‘India halts grid access for 17 GW of clean energy projects’

Context: India has cancelled grid access for nearly 17 gigawatts (GW) of delayed clean energy projects to prioritise connections for those that are operational or nearing completion, according to a source familiar with the matter and official documents reviewed by Reuters.

  • The state-run Central Transmission Utility of India Ltd. (CTUIL) informed companies including Adani Green Energy , ReNew Power, NTPC, Avaada Group, JSW Energy, and ACME Solar about the cancellations, the documents show.
  • The affected projects are located in renewable-rich states such as Rajasthan, western Gujarat, and Madhya Pradesh in central India, according to a document from the federal agency overseeing inter-state transmission access.

Notices served

  • The grid access terminations were carried out in the June quarter after prior notices were issued to the companies, said the source, who requested anonymity as the firms are seeking relief from the federal power regulator, the Central Electricity Regulatory Commission (CERC).

Current Affairs: 8th Sept 2025

‘Sri Lankan Tamil refugees not eligible for long-term visas’

Context: Undocumented Sri Lankan Tamil refugees who were exempted from penal provisions by a Union Home Ministry order last week are not eligible to apply for long-term visas (LTVs), a senior government.
  • The official, however, did not elaborate on the reason for the ineligibility.
  • Though the order removes the tag of an “illegal migrant” from registered Sri Lankan Tamil nationals who entered India before January 9, 2015, it willnot immediately help in the grant of Indian citizenship.
  • The LTVs, a precursor to citizenship, are issued for a period of one to five years.
  • The official said that Sri Lankan Tamils are not eligible to apply for LTVs but foreigners can apply for Indian citizenship under the Citizenship Act, 1955.
  • On March 17, 2021, the Ministry informed the Rajya Sabha that “Any foreigner, including a Sri Lankan citizen, may acquire Indian citizenship by registration or naturalisation after fulfilling the eligibility criteria laid down in the Citizenship Act, 1955, and the rules made thereunder.”
  • A 1986 letter by the Ministry to Chief Secretaries asks the States to not “entertain the applications of Sri Lanka refugees for the grant of Indian citizenship”. It states that the Government of India received enquiries regarding “national status of these Sri Lanka nationals who came to India as refugees”.
  • “After careful consideration, the GoI have come to the conclusion that no Sri Lanka refugees who came to India in July 1983 or after should be naturalised/registered under the provisions of the Citizenship Act, 1955, and Citizenship Rules, 1956,” it says.
  • The directions are still operational. On September 2, the MHA notified the Immigration and Foreigners (Exemption) Order under the Immigration and Foreigners Act, 2025 that was passed by the Parliament in April to repeal and replace four laws which governed the entry, stay, and exit of foreigners, and immigration and passport rules, including the Passport Act and Foreigners Act. The notified order exempted “registered Sri Lankan Tamil nationals who have taken shelter in India upto the 9th January, 2015” from the provisions of sub-sections (1), (2) and (3) of Section 3 (requirement of passport or other travel document or visa) of the 2025 Act.
  • The September 2 notification also exempted undocumented members of six minority communities from Afghanistan, Bangladesh, and Pakistan from penal provisions and possible deportation if they entered India without passports or visas, or with expired travel documents, before December 31, 2024.
  • While the six communities will be able to apply for LTVs, making them eligible to apply for citizenship after at least 11 years of continuous stay in India, Sri Lankan Tamils will not be eligible for the same.
  • Members of six minority communities — Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, Jains, Parsis, and Christians — from Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Afghanistan, who enter India on valid travel documents “seeking permanent settlement in India with a view to acquire Indian citizenship” are eligible for LTVs.
  • Antony Arulraj, an activist closely associated with issues faced by Sri Lankan Tamils since 1990, said that the MHA had been lenient in setting January 9, 2015 as the cut-off date, close to six years after the end of civil war in Sri Lanka.“The notification makes India a safe haven for Sri Lankan Tamils who took refuge before 2015. Those who wish to stay back can do so without fear of being branded as illegal immigrants,” he said.
  • According to the MHA’s report of 2023-24, 3,04,269 Sri Lankan refugees entered India in various phases between July 1983 and August 2012.

IAA astronomers make breakthrough in understanding how cosmic dust grains line up

Context: A team of astronomers led by the Indian Institute of Astrophysics (IIA) and their collaborators have made a breakthrough in understanding how cosmic dust grains line up with the galaxy’s magnetic field.
  • Dust grains, typically a few micrometers in size and composed primarily of silicates and carbonaceous material, are found throughout the interstellar medium in the Milky Way and other galaxies.

These tiny particles play a crucial role in a wide range of astrophysical processes, including the formation of stars and planets.

  • The Department of Science and Technology said that this breakthrough by the astronomers provides the strongest observational evidence yet for the long-theorised ways in which dust aligns itself with magnetic fields in our Galaxy.
  • They focused on the massive star-forming infrared dark cloud G34.43+0.24, located around 12,000 light-years away in the Milky Way.
  • Using the POL-2 polarimeter on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope in Hawaii, the researchers mapped how dust in this star-forming nursery aligned with magnetic fields.

Observational evidence

  • The study found observational evidence for three different alignment mechanisms acting in a single cosmic cloud namely RAT-A, RAT-D and M-RAT.
  • RAT-A, implies RAdiative Torque Alignment in which non-spherical grains exposed to anisotropic radiation fields experience RAdiative Torques—RATs, that cause them to spin up and align with the direction of the surrounding magnetic fields.

Polarisation fraction

  • RAT-D is Radiative Torque Disruption in which large dust grains spin so rapidly under strong radiation from the massive and luminous protostars embedded inside the cores that they are disrupted into smaller fragments, reducing the grain alignment efficiency and thereby lowering the polarisation fraction.
  • M-RAT implies Magnetically-enhanced RAdiative Torque alignment mechanism in which alignment efficiency of grains is enhanced by strong magnetic relaxation strength of grains, resulting in higher polarization percentages.

Environment

  • “This shows that the grains respond differently depending on their environment—sometimes aligning perfectly, sometimes shattering under stress, and sometimes becoming super-efficient at tracing magnetic fields,” the department said.
  • It added that by proving how these mechanisms play out in real space, astronomers now have stronger tools to map magnetic fields across the galaxy.

As per revised pact, future talks will focus on U.T. with legislature: Kuki-Zo groups

Context: The Kuki-Zo insurgent groups that signed a suspension of operations (SoO) pact with the Manipur government and the Union Home Ministry on September 2 accused the Press Information Bureau (PIB) of putting a spin on the signed official agreement, which has caused confusion among the people.
  • It said that following the renewed SoO agreement, future talks between the SoO group and government’s representatives would focus on the demand for Union Territory (UT) with legislature for the Kuki-Zo areas in Manipur.
  • The two groups — Kuki National Organisation (KNO) and United Peoples Front (UPF) — said in a statement on Sunday that the PIB’s aberration has seriously upset the Kuki-Zo sentiments to a point of affecting the mood over the much-awaited Prime Minister’s visit to Churachandpur on September 13.
  • “The recently concluded MHA and SoO extension agreement for one year, effective from the date signed September 4, 2025, at New Delhi clearly states, ‘SoO Agreement shall be followed by tripartite dialogue with KNO and UPF to pave the way for a negotiated political settlement under the Constitution of India in a time bound manner.’ The PIB has put a spin on the signed official agreement as follows: “Among other provisions, the revised ground rules reiterated: Need for a negotiated solution to bring peace and stability to the State of Manipur.” This twist by the PIB does not figure anywhere in the SoO agreement signed between the Home Ministry and the SoO group, the statement by the groups said.
  • The statement said that before May 3, 2023, when ethnic violence erupted in the State, the SoO group’s demand was local autonomy by way of Territorial Council within Manipur. Post-violence, the demand changed to UT with legislature, which was submitted at the SoO meeting on September 1, 2023.

Russia, India, China aware of mutual interests: Lavrov

Context: Russia, India and China are aware of their common interests in several sectors and there is an overt trend of developing mutual partnership, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.
  • Mr. Lavrov was referring to the recent bonhomie displayed by the leaders of the three countries at the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation summit in Tianjin last week. Triple handshake and huddle of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping at the summit hogged headlines.
  • It even prompted U.S. President Donald Trump, in a social media post, to lament the loss of India and Russia to “deepest and darkest” China.
  • “It is a demonstration that three great powers, representing three great civilisations, are aware of their common interests in a number of areas,” Mr. Lavrov said.
  • According to Mr. Lavrov, the common interests of the three countries lie in developing the economy, solving social problems, and improving the living standards of the population.

India and Bangladesh to hold talks on water sharing

Context: The India-Bangladesh Joint River Commission is set to meet in Delhi on Tuesday, sources said, amid ongoing tensions between the two countries. Dhaka plans to send a 10-member team to raise its concerns about water sharing of 14 cross-border rivers.
  • Sources said that Bangladesh plans to use the discussion as a warm-up for talks on the Ganga Waters Agreement of 1996 that will come up for renewal next year, when Bangladesh will also hold its first election since the overthrow of the Sheikh Hasina government in August 2024.
  • The treaty was signed during Ms. Hasina’s first term in power in 1996, when it was decided that the treaty would be considered for renewal 30 years later. It is understood that Bangladesh will now demand a longer time frame before the next renewal of the treaty. It is also seeking some changes in the use of the river’s water on the Indian side.
  • Diplomatic sources said that Dhaka is expected to ask for a specialvehicle to manage the waters of 14 rivers, including the Muhuri, Khowai, Gomti, Dharla, and Doodhkumar.
  • Bangladesh also wants India’s support to create a joint flood forecasting mechanism, sources said.

Anuparna Roy wins best director award at Venice festival

Context: Filmmaker Anuparna Roy, who made her debut with Songs of Forgotten Trees, has bagged the best director award at the Venice International Film Festival.
  • Presented by filmmaker Anurag Kashyap, the film premiered in the festival’s prestigious Orizzonti Competition section, an international competition for films that highlight new trends, with a focus on debut works, young talent, indie features, and less-known cinema, on September 1.
  • “This film is a tribute to every woman who’s ever been silenced, overlooked, or underestimated. May this win inspire more voices, more stories, and more power for women in cinema and beyond,” Ms. Roy said in a statement.
  • Songs of Forgotten Trees follows the story of Thooya, a migrant and aspiring actor, who survives the city by leveraging beauty and wit, occasionally trading intimacy for opportunity.

Stand by Palestine

  • During her acceptance speech, the filmmaker spoke on the ongoing Israel and Palestine conflict. “Every child deserves peace, freedom, liberation, and Palestinians are no exception… it’s a responsibility at the moment to stand by Palestine. I might upset my country but it doesn’t matter to me anymore,” she said, according to the entertainment news outlet Variety.
  • Produced by Bibhanshu Rai, Romil Modi, and Ranjan Singh, the cast includes Bhushan Shimpi, Ravi Maan, Pritam Pilania, and Lovely Singh.
  • The Venice International Film Festival concluded on Saturday.

Current Affairs: 7th Sept 2025

GS2: Health; Birth & Death Rates

Malappuram delivers in its fight against home births

Context: Home births rates in Malappuram district of Kerala have come down drastically from 253 in 2023-24 to 191 in 2024-25. Only four cases were reported in June, as remarkable to targeted interventions by the State health authorities.
  • Case Study: Death of a 35-year-old woman during home birth at Padapparamba, near Malappuram, in April that prompted a series of interventions from the State health authorities, with the support of the district administration and the police. Religious and socio-cultural leaders were also roped in.
  • The practice of home births is not restricted to any religion or community. The trend is largely influenced by certain naturopathy and acupuncture groups and driven by a desire to avoid medical procedures such as epidurals or pain medication; labour induction or delivery assisted with forceps or other instruments.
  • Efforts by health officials have led to a substantial decline in home births among the tribespeople in the district’s remote areas of Nilambur, where such cases were once common.
  • “Home births have a higher risk of infant or maternal death and other complications than hospital births,”.

GS2: Health; Birth & Death Rates

State’s fertility rate declines further to 1.5, well below replacement level

According to the Sample Registration Survey 2023, released this week, the Crude Birth Rate in Karnataka fell to 15.2 in 2023, down from 15.8 in 2022. However, the sex ratio at birth at 931 stood higher than the national average of 917.
  • Karnataka has recorded a steady decline in its birth rate, with the State’s Total Fertility Rate (TFR) at 1.5 in 2023, well below the replacement level fertility rate of 2.1. It was 1.6 in 2022.
  • Karnataka is in the group of other southern States such as Kerala, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, and Tamil Nadu, all of which have fertility levels lower than replacement rate.
  • Replacement level TFR denotes the average number of children each woman needs to give birth for one generation to replace the other.
  • According to the Sample Registration Survey (SRS) 2023, released this week by the Office of the Registrar General of India, the Crude Birth Rate (CBR) in Karnataka fell to 15.2 in 2023, down from 15.8 in 2022.
  • At the national level, India’s CBR declined from 19.1 in 2022 to 18.4 in 2023, while the country’s TFR fell for the first time in two years to 1.9. Bihar recorded the highest CBR at 25.8 and the highest TFR at 2.8, while Tamil Nadu reported the lowest CBR at 12 with a TFR of 1.3.
  • At 931, Karnataka’s sex ratio at birth (SRB) stood higher than the national average of 917, denoting that 931 girls are born for every 1,000 boys in the population. The sex ratio is higher in rural areas in Karnataka at 936 compared to 922 in urban areas.
  • The data showed that Chhattisgarh and Kerala reported the highest SRB at 974 and 971, respectively, while Uttarakhand reported the lowest at 868. Bihar’s SRB remained among the lowest in the country, despite slightly improving to 897 in 2023. Delhi, Maharashtra, and Haryana were among some of the States and UTs reporting SRB below 900 in 2023.

GS2: Health; Birth & Death Rates

State’s infant mortality rate falls by one point

Highlighting improved health indicators in Karnataka, the State’s infant mortality rate (IMR) fell from 15 in 2022 to 14 in 2023, according to the Sample Registration Survey (SRS), 2023, released this week by the office of the Registrar-General of India.
  • IMR is defined as infant (less than one year) deaths per thousand live births in a given time period and for a given region.
  • Karnataka’s IMR has seen a reduction of 21 points since 2011. From 35 in 2011, the State successfully reduced the IMR to 24 in 2016. Although this vital parameter again went up and touched 25 in 2017, it has fallen by two points every year since then, touching 19 in 2020 and 14 in 2023.
  • However, a matter of concern is that rural areas continue to report a higher number of infant deaths compared to urban areas. Also, the death rate is high in female babies. While 16 female infant deaths per thousand live births were reported in rural areas in Karnataka in 2023, the rate is 14 in urban regions.
  • Karnataka’s IMR is far better than the national average that dropped to 25 in 2023 from 26 in 2022. In the last 10 years, the national IMR has witnessed a decline of about 37.5% from 40 to 25 in the last decade. The corresponding decline in rural areas is 44 to 28, and for urban areas it is from 27 to 18, thereby exhibiting about 36% and 33% decadal decline, respectively.
  • Despite the decline in IMR over the last decades, one in every 40 infants die within the first year of their life at the national level (irrespective of rural-urban), stated the SRS bulletin.

What Interventions helped achieve this feat?

  • Substantially improving the community and facility based services.
  • Regularly conducting death audits and the causes are addressed.
  • Infectious diseases, including pneumonia, diarrhoea, and hypothermia, have come down drastically owing to general hygiene measures, awareness, and education of mothers by ASHAs.
  • However, preterm birth complications, birth asphyxia, and low birth weight apart from congenital anomalies are challenges that need to be addressed continuously.

GS2: International Organizations; UNGA

PM to skip key UNGA session later this month
Context: United nations Prime Minister Narendra Modi will not address the General Debate at the annual high-level session of the United Nations General Assembly from September 23 to 29. External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar will address the session on September 27.
  • Modi was scheduled to speak on September 26; Trump will address world leaders on Sept. 23; theme for session is ‘Better together: 80 years and more for peace, development, human rights’
  • The 80th session of the U.N. General Assembly will open on September 9. The General Debate will run from September 23-29, with Brazil as the traditional first speaker of the session, followed by the U.S.
  • According to a previous list issued in July, Mr. Modi was scheduled to address on September 26. The heads of government of Israel, China, Pakistan and Bangladesh were scheduled to address the UNGA General Debate on the same date.
  • Mr. Trump has imposed tariffs totalling 50% on India, including 25% for Delhi’s purchases of Russian oil.
  • The session this year comes amid the continued Israel-Hamas war as well as the Ukraine conflict.
  • The theme for the 80th session is ‘Better together: 80 years and more for peace, development and human rights’.
  • The session will open with a meeting to ‘Commemorate the 80th Anniversary of the United Nations’ on September 22.

GS2: Higher Education; Medical Education;

State introduces 15% NRI quota seats in government medical colleges

In a first, Karnataka is introducing 15% NRI quota seats in government medical colleges.
  • The development follows the National Medical Commission (NMC) sanctioning 450 additional medical seats for the State, fulfilling a long-standing demand.
  • Of the 450 newly approved seats, 15% had been earmarked for NRI quota, with a fixed fee of ₹25 lakh per seat. “This will help government medical colleges become more financially self-reliant instead of depending heavily on State grants,”.
  • These seats will be available from the academic year 2025–26, raising the total seats in the State to 9,663.
  • After NMC chairman Abhijit Chandrakant Seth announced the addition of 8,000 seats nationwide, Karnataka had submitted a proposal for additional seats in government medical colleges. “The number of students aspiring for medical education increases every year. Many meritorious students cannot afford the high fees of private colleges.

GS2: Election Commission of India; Special intensive revision (SIR) of electoral rolls;

EC to hold State CEOs’ meet over SIR on Sept. 10

The Election Commission will hold a conference of Chief Electoral Officers (CEO) of all States and Union Territories on September 10 to take stock of preparedness for rolling out a nationwide special intensive revision (SIR) of electoral rolls.
  • This will be the third meeting of CEOs since Chief Election Commissioner Gyanesh Kumar took over in February.
  • A senior EC official said though this was a routine meeting, special focus would be on the preparations under way to roll out the SIR across the country. The controversial exercise is currently on in Bihar.
  • All CEOs would be making presentations on the number of voters and details of the last intensive revision, the official said.
  • Though the rolls are summarily revised every year and before each election, through the SIR the EC has sought a list of 11 eligibility documents.
  • This has been challenged in the Supreme Court, which has asked the commission to consider Aadhaar as an eligibility document in case a voter is unable to furnish any of the 11 indicative documents and is facing deletions from the voter list.

Two new judges appointed to Allahabad High Court

The Union government on Saturday cleared the appointment of two advocates as judges of the Allahabad High Court. Sharing the information, Minister of Law and Justice Arjun Ram Meghwal wrote on X, “In exercise of the power conferred by the Constitution of India, the President of India, after consultation with Chief Justice of India, is pleased to appoint Amitabh Kumar Rai and Rajiv Lochan Shukla, advocates, as judges of the Allahabad High Court.” The appointment follows a recommendation made by the Supreme Court Collegium in March. The High Court now has 86 judges against 160 sanctioned.

GI tag push for traditional items reshapes Bodoland poll narrative

The registration of 21 items, including local textiles and traditional alcoholic beverages, has enthused 26 communities of the Bodoland Territorial Region to have their cultural artefacts GI-tagged; a youth- led initiative helped in gaining GI registration.

Assam’s poll-bound Bodoland Territorial Region (BTR) has the usual issues. It also has a new topic of discussion — Geographical Indication or GI tags for its traditional products, crafts, and agricultural items.

Elections in the 8,970- sq. km BTR, governed by the Bodoland Territorial Council (BTC), are scheduled for September 22. The council has 40 constituencies across five districts bordering Bhutan.

A team of Bodo youth undertook an initiative that helped the BTR government get GI registration for 21 items, including local textiles and traditional alcoholic beverages. Awareness about the inherent benefits of such tagging virtually triggered a race among 26 indigenous communities to register their cultural artefacts.

The core members of the team are biotechnologist Ling Narzihary, artist Swapna Muchahary, social worker Kansai Brahma, and entrepreneurs Nachani Brahma, Pulak Basumatary, and Ranjila Mohilary.

“A GI tag fuels economic growth through higher market value and export potential, legal protection against unauthorised use and imitation, cultural preservation, and enhanced consumer trust by assuring quality and authenticity. It also fosters rural development,” Mr. Narzihary said.

The team began collecting data in 2021 and identified more than 50 items that qualified for GI tagging. The registration for 21 of these was secured between November 2023 and May 2024. A few months ago, the BTR government launched a special drive to secure the GI tag for the remaining and more traditional items of all 26 communities living in the BTR. Apart from the dominant Bodos, the communities include Adivasis, Gurkhas, Koch-Rajbongshis, Hajongs, Kurukhs, Madahi Kacharis, Hiras, and Patnis.

Recently, the Delhi-based Gandhi Hindustani Sahitya Sabha was roped in to provide expert guidance through a series of workshops, and help various community scholars and leaders to identify and document their respective cultural items for filing GI tag applications.

The goal is to create “GI villages”, where clusters of artisans and farmers will be supported with training, infrastructure, and direct market linkages.

ABSU resolution

About a decade ago, the All Bodo Students’ Union (ABSU) adopted a resolution to seek GI tags for items unique to the BTR. The union was then headed by Pramod Boro, one of the key architects of the Bodo Peace Accord in January 2020. The push for GI tagging came after Mr. Boro, who left the ABSU to join the United People’s Party Liberal (UPPL), became the Chief Executive Member of the BTC in December 2020. The UPPL rules the BTR in alliance with the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the regional Gana Suraksha Party. The UPPL and the BJP are locked in a three-cornered contest along with the Bodoland People’s Front.

One of the priorities of the BTR government, headed by Mr. Boro, was to ensure the recognition and protection of indigenous heritage. The government’s objective was similar to that of the team headed by Mr. Narzihary, leading to their collaboration. Among 21 items that received the GI tag are Aronai, Dokhona, and Zwmgra (motif-rich textiles); Kham, Serza, and Siphung (musical instruments); Maibra Zwu Bidwi and Zwu Gisi (alcoholic beverages); Gwkha Gwkhwi and Napham (cuisine) and Gongar Dundia and Khera Daphini (rare medicinal plants).

‘Declining Central allocation for MGNREGS affects rural women’

There is a direct correlation between declining Central allocation for the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS) and the reduced income of rural women, activists of the NREGA Sangharsh Morcha, said at a press conference in Delhi to mark the 20th anniversary of the governing law.

Ram Beti, NREGA Sangharsh Morcha activist from Sitapur in Uttar Pradesh, said that prior to the implementation of the rural employment guarantee scheme, men used to be paid double that of women for agricultural work and blue collar jobs. “With MGNREGS, for the first time, we got the same pay for the same work as men,” she said. While the number of workers have increased, the budget for the programme has remained the same, she said, slowly starving the welfare programme.

“We are back to the pre-2006 situation since the work under the scheme is no longer available due to a fund shortage,” she said.

Women constitute more than 50% of the workforce for MGNREGS projects. This year, out of the total person-days (defined under MGNREGS as the total number of work days by a person registered under the scheme in a financial year), 56% was completed by women.

On the move with green hydrogen

The Indian Railways recently announced that a hydrogen-powered train, developed at the Integral Coach Factory in Chennai, has successfully completed all tests. This is a welcome sign of progress for the National Green Hydrogen Mission, which aims to produce at least five million metric tonnes of green hydrogen per year by the year 2030, a milestone on the way to achieving nationwide net zero emissions by 2070.

The train will soon be carrying passengers between Jind and Sonipat on an 89-km route in Haryana. This project will rely on hydrogen produced in Jind by a 1-MW polymer electrolyte membrane electrolyser that produces 430 kg of hydrogen every day. The hydrogen will refill fuel tanks on the train, where fuel cells will convert the hydrogen to electricity that runs the train’s electric motors.

The principle is quite simple. An electrolyser splits a water molecule into oxygen, protons, and electrons. In an electrochemical reaction at the negative electrode (called the anode), molecular oxygen is released, and the electrons liberated are conducted to the cathode via an external circuit. The polymer electrolyte membrane between the cathode and the anode is selective and only allows protons to pass through to the cathode, where they unite with the electrons to form hydrogen molecules. These rise as a gas and are collected, compressed, and stored. The membrane, typically a fluoropolymer such as Nafion (related to Teflon) is an excellent insulator, and electrons will not pass. The hydrogen and oxygen formed are clearly separated.

Inthe locomotive, as in a hydrogen-powered automobile, the above reaction is reversed in the hydrogen fuel cell. Hydrogen is brought to the anode, where each molecule is catalytically split into two protons and two electrons. The protons pass through the membrane to the cathode, where they meet oxygen in air and the electrons that are brought through an external circuit from the anode. Water is formed. The electrons flowing through the external circuit constitute the electric current that powers the locomotive.

There is a key difference between the chemical reactions in the fuel cell and in the electrolyser. The chemistry between hydrogen and oxygen is spontaneous, a reaction waiting to happen. Water, however, will not split into the two elements by itself. Electrical current must be supplied to provide the energy for this electrochemical reaction.

To produce green hydrogen, the electricity for the electrolysers has to come from renewable sources, such as solar panels or wind turbines. New sources of renewable energy will be needed to meet the goals of the National Green Hydrogen Mission. Also under way are exciting attempts to produce hydrogen in microbial electrolytic cells, where electrochemically active microbes grow on anodes and oxidize organic matter — agricultural residues, even wastewater — and pass the electrons generated to the anode (Current Science, vol. 128, p. 133, 2025).

The catalysis steps require expensive materials such as platinum, iridium, etc. Ongoing research is aimed at replacing these with inexpensive nickel, cobalt, or even iron. In early work towards cheap hydrogen generation, the group of C.N.R. Rao at the Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research designed nickel-nickel hydroxide-graphite electrodes with a water-splitting capability comparable to platinum electrodes (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci., USA, vol. 114, 2017). Combining such developments with solar and microbe-driven processes can produce a fuel that is both green and inexpensive.

Blood moon

Sky gazers in India and in other parts of the world will be able to witness a blood moon on September 7 during a total lunar eclipse. The moon will take on a dark red-copper hue. This is the result of a physical effect called Rayleigh scattering.

During a total lunar eclipse, the earth comes between the sun and the moon, blocking direct sunlight from striking the lunar surface. However, not all sunlight is blocked. Only the bluer light is filtered out; the redder light is scattered by the earth’s atmosphere, giving the moon its striking colour. This phenomenon is called Rayleigh scattering. When light interacts with particles smaller than its wavelength, the intensity of the scattered light is inversely proportional to its wavelength. This is why earthsky appears blue: it has the shortest wavelength in visible light.

During a blood moon, however, the bluer light is absorbed by the earth’s atmosphere while the redder light is refracted towards the moon. The precise hue depends on dust and smoke levels in the atmosphere.

A flashpoint in the Palk Strait

The Gist

Sri Lankan President Anura Kumara Dissanayake’s recent visit to Katchatheevu, said to be the first by a head of state, drew attention on both sides of the Palk Strait.

Attired in smart casuals — his trademark double-pocket shirt — the 56-year-old leftist leader, elected to office a year ago, is seen on a naval boat, flanked by Fisheries Minister and Jaffna MP Ramalingam Chandrasekar and other officials. He smiles gently before setting foot on the tiny, uninhabited island, 33 nautical miles off the Jaffna peninsula, on September 1. Seated in the shade of palm trees, Mr. Dissanayake listens intently while a Naval officer describes the 1.15 sq. km outcrop, pointing to a map.

Walking around briskly with officials in tow, Mr. Dissanayake pays respects at the St. Anthony’s Catholic Shrine, the only permanent structure there, before returning to Jaffna, where at a public meeting earlier that day he pledged to safeguard Sri Lankan territory, resisting any “external force”. The symbolism of the visit, with the accompanying visuals and messaging played well in Sri Lanka, comes days after Tamil actor-politician Vijay’s demand in a political rally that India must retrieve Katchatheevu from Sri Lanka. The government subsequently announced it is also exploring the tourism potential of Katchatheevu, by making it more accessible from nearby Delft island, one of Jaffna’s off-track tourist destinations.

The competing claims made from India [Madras Presidency, specifically] and Ceylon to Katchatheevu date back to the 1920s, during British colonial times. The neighbours settled the matter some five decades later, through two bilateral agreements signed in 1974 and 1976, delineating an International Maritime Boundary Line, whereby Katchatheevu is firmly on the Sri Lankan side. In return, New Delhi got sovereign rights over Wadge Bank, located near Kanniyakumari, known for its rich resources.

Katchatheevu is a barren island, with no drinking water or sanitation. Every March, Sri Lanka waives visa controls to allow fishermen from India to worship along with their Sri Lankan counterparts at the St. Anthony’s festival. Around the annual two-day event, mobile toilets and drinking water booths are put up for pilgrims.

Political calculation

Bizarrely, though, half a century since India gave up its claim to Katchatheevu and recognised Sri Lanka’s sovereignty over it, politicians in India periodically rake up the issue. The political calculation driving the frequent call is the assumption that it could boost voter support if pitched as a solution to the enduring fisheries conflict affecting Tamil Nadu’s fishermen, a sizeable electoral constituency.

The fact that the Congress and the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) were in power, respectively at the Centre and in Tamil Nadu, in the 1970s has offered political ammunition to their rivals, especially on the eve of State polls next year. Ahead of general elections last year, Prime Minister Narendra Modi accused the Congress of “callously giving away” the island to Sri Lanka. External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar swiftly amplified this by blaming the two BJP rivals for compromising Indian fishermen’s rights in the Palk Strait.

Both Dravidian parties [DMK and Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, or AIADMK], have demanded its retrieval. In 2008, former Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu Jayalalithaa, as General Secretary of the AIADMK, petitioned the Supreme Court seeking a declaration that the 1974 and 1976 agreements were unconstitutional. Ahead of Prime Minister Modi’s visit to Sri Lanka in April 2025, the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly unanimously adopted a resolution, urging the Union government to take steps to retrieve the Katchatheevu island. Subsequently, Chief Minister M.K. Stalin said the island’s retrieval was “the only permanent solution” to the issues faced by the fishermen in the State.

Everyone calling for the island’s retrieval in India must know well that it is a far-fetched ask from a mostly friendly neighbour. In 2013, the Union government informed the Supreme Court that the question of gaining Katchatheevu from Sri Lanka did not arise, as “no territory belonging to India was ceded nor sovereignty relinquished since the area in question was in dispute and had never been demarcated”. In 2014, then Attorney-General Mukul Rohatgi submitted before the Supreme Court that if India had to retrieve an island belonging to Sri Lanka, “we have to go to war”. The factors that keep the issue alive, despite diplomatic and legal resolution, are chiefly political, and in fact to do with the political economy of a depleting catch in a narrow stretch of water.

Fishermen of south India and northern Sri Lanka rely heavily on the resource-rich Palk Strait. However, with Tamil Nadu fishermen relentlessly resorting to bottom-trawling, a destructive fishing method that scoops out the seabed to maximise the catch and profits, this has severely affected the marine ecosystem. With the catch on the Indian side of the International Maritime Boundary Line diminishing over time, the Tamil Nadu fishing boats ventured into the Sri Lankan side, targeting a heavier net. Daily wage fishermen, working for wealthy boat owners in Tamil Nadu, periodically court arrest by the Sri Lankan Navy — over 230 arrests so far this year— a risk they take to secure their day’s earnings.

Bottom-trawling

Tamil fishermen in northern Sri Lanka, still reeling from the impact of the civil war that ended 16 years ago, contend they have no real chance of rebuilding their destroyed livelihoods, unless their counterparts across the Palk Strait give up bottom-trawling — a practice banned in Sri Lanka.

In bilateral talks with fisher leaders through the years, or petitions to politicians in India and Sri Lanka, all they have been asking their fellow, Tamil-speaking brothers is that they stop the practice. In ministerial level talks between India and Sri Lanka in 2016, New Delhi acknowledged this and agreed to expedite the transition towards ending the practice of bottom trawling “at the earliest”. But the practice continues.

Decades ago, fishermen from both sides used Katchatheevu as a resting point and a spot to dry out their nets. But in recent history, most arrests of Indian fishermen are made well past Katchatheevu, very close to Sri Lanka’s northern shores. Policymakers on the Indian side know where the problem lies. And politicians know that Katchatheevu offers no real solution to it. But unwilling to confront a key electorate with a difficult question, they habitually invoke it to divert attention from their own failure to resolve the festering fisheries conflict.

The competing claims made from India [Madras Presidency, specifically] and Ceylon to Katchatheevu date back to the 1920s, during British colonial times

The neighbours settled the matter some five decades later, through two bilateral agreements signed in 1974 and 1976, delineating an International Maritime Boundary Line, whereby Katchatheevu is firmly on the Sri Lankan side

In return, New Delhi got sovereign rights over Wadge Bank, located near Kanniyakumari, known for its rich resources.

Current Affairs: 6th Sept 2025

GS2: Regional and International Organization

Jaishankar to join BRICS virtual summit of BRICS nations convened by Brazil to discuss U.S. tariffs: MEA New Delhi.

Context: Meeting convened by Brazil President Lula da Silva to discuss tariffs imposed by the U.S. Summit would discuss the impact of U.S. tariffs on global trade, and measures to strengthen multilateralism in order to counter the effects of unilateral economic measures.

  • The U.S. has imposed 50% tariffs on goods from Brazil, like India, the two countries with the highest levies worldwide. China and South Africa also face high 30% tariffs, and Indonesian goods are levied 19% tariffs, with a waiver for its most important agricultural exports such as palm oil, cocoa and rubber.
  • All other BRICS nations including Russia and Iran, which are among the most heavily sanctioned countries, are on the lowest rung of 10% tariffs.
  • BRICS is a 11-member grouping of emerging economies. India is the next Chair of the BRICS grouping, and will host the summit of countries including Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa and new members Egypt, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Iran, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

GS2: Union and State relations

Meitei group rejects govt.’s SoO pact with Kuki-Zo outfits

Context: The Coordinating Committee on Manipur Integrity (COCOMI), one of the largest Meitei civil society groups in Manipur, has rejected the signing of Suspension of Operations (SoO) pact with the Kuki-Zo insurgent groups.

  • It said the decision taken by the Centre “reflects an undemocratic and hegemonic imposition upon the indigenous people and its elected representatives of Manipur”.
  • The Home Ministry and the Manipur government signed the pact with the Kuki-Zo groups on Thursday with “re-negotiated terms and conditions or ground rules”. It comes ahead of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s expected visit to Manipur on September 13.
  • This is his first visit to Manipur since ethnic violence between the Kuki-Zo and Meitei people erupted on May 3, 2023.
  • The Kuki-Zo Council (KZC), a conglomerate of civil society organisations, agreed to open the National Highway-2 (Imphal-Dimapur) passing through Kangpokpi district “for the free movement of commuters and essential goods,” the MHA said.
  • The COCOMI, which has been in talks with the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) to find a roadmap for peace in Manipur, said the extension of the SoO agreement despite “the series of terrorist and criminal acts” committed by these groups was a decision that ran completely against the interests of the indigenous people of Manipur.
  • The COCOMI said the popularly-elected government of Manipur had, through a Cabinet decision on March 10, 2023, unanimously resolved to abrogate the SoO pact. “Under the current President’s Rule, the administration is being run by an authority appointed from New Delhi, which lacks the legitimacy to represent the people of Manipur. The decision to extend the SoO under such circumstances is illegitimate,” COCOMI said in a statement on Friday.
  • It said that by extending legitimacy and recognition to the armed groups under the deceptive pact of the SoO, the Government of India had raised serious doubts about its role and responsibility in dealing with narco-terrorism in the region.

HUDCO approves ₹9,303.66 cr. loan for Tunnel Road project

Context: The Housing and Urban Development Corporation (HUDCO) has issued a loan sanction letter to Bengaluru Smart Infrastructure Ltd (B-SMILE), approving a loan of ₹9,303.66 crore for the construction of the first corridor of the Twin Tunnel Road project (North-South corridor).

  • HUDCO has instructed the Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) B-SMILE to furnish the required supporting documents and execute a formal agreement before the loan is operationalised.
  • The North-South corridor, which stretches 16.8 km, is estimated to cost ₹17,780.13 crore.

Interest rate

  • According to the sanction letter dated August 4, 2025, reviewed by, the loan will primarily be disbursed on the guarantee of the State government.
  • The loan will have an interest rate of 8.95% for the first year,finalised after a rebate of 0.10%.
  • The loan has a total tenure of 24 years and 2 months (290 months), which includes a draw period of 4 years and 2 months (50 months), followed by a repayment period of 20 years (240 months). The disbursement of funds will be carried out in mutually agreed phases, according to the letter.

Signboards

  • The letter further stipulates that B-SMILE must display signboards at all project sites, particularly in high-visibility locations, clearly acknowledging HUDCO’s financial assistance.

Areca growers upset over 18% GST on copper sulphate

Context: The Union government’s decision not to reduce the Goods and Services Tax (GST) on copper sulphate has upset arecanut growers and cooperatives marketing arecanut.

Only safeguard

  • Technical-grade copper sulphate, the key constituent of Bordeaux mixture, is an essential agricultural fungicide used almost entirely by small and marginal growers. It is the only proven effective safeguard against devastating crop diseases such as fruit rot (Mahali/Kole Roga) in arecanut and fungal diseases in other plantation crops like coffee, cardamom, rubber, and pepper.
  • “Since as early as 1910, when Dr. Leslie Coleman first investigated fruit rot disease in arecanut, no fungicide other than copper sulphate used in Bordeaux mixture has been found effective. It is a traditional, proven treatment for many diseases, in addition to being a soil health enhancer. In this context, the continued levy of 18% GST on technical-grade copper sulphate is unjust, insensitive, and unbearable for farmers already reeling under the burden of heavy rains, crop losses, and mounting input costs,” A. Kishore Kumar Kodgi, president, Central Arecanut and Cocoa Marketing and Processing Cooperative (CAMPCO) Ltd, told The Hindu.
  • “We fail to understand the rationale behind taxing technical-grade copper sulphate at 18%, while all other major fertilizers and farm inputs are taxed at only 5%,” Mr. Kodgi said.

Confusion

  • Mr. Kodgi said that copper sulphate is listed under Chapter 28 with HSN code 28332500 as a sulphate, which attracts 18% GST. It is also categorised under the same chapter as a micro-nutrient, attracting a 5% GST. “This lack of uniformity, coupled with the absence of a distinct HSN Code for agricultural-grade copper sulphate, has opened the doors for confusion, misinterpretation, and ultimately exploitation of farmers,” he said. Mr. Kodgi said that the cooperative has appealed to the government to fix the GST at 5% on all copper sulphate manufactured under C1B/FCO 1985 licences and used for agricultural purposes. “Introduce a separate HSN Code for technical-grade copper sulphate used in agriculture, clearly distinguishing it from industrial-grade copper sulphate,” he said.
  • Mahesh Hulkuli, vice-president of the Shivamogga-based Malnad Areca Marketing Cooperative Society (MAMCOS) Ltd, said that leaders from the cooperative and farm sectors will meet Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman again to apprise her of the need to fix the GST on copper sulphate at 5%.

GST on pan masala

  • Referring to GST on pan masala fixed at 40%, the CAMPCO president said: “Since arecanut is the principal ingredient in pan masala, such taxation has unfairly reinforced the false and unscientific notion that arecanut itself is carcinogenic.” Mahesh Puchchappady, president, Puttur-based All India Areca Growers’ Association, said that there is an immediate need to reduce GST on copper sulphate to 5%.

Recent recusals in higher courts send mixed signals on upholding transparency

Context: Recent recusals in a top tribunal, a High Court, and finally, the Supreme Court have sent confusing signals about whether judges must reveal why they choose to walk out of cases.

  • At the country’s top court, for instance, August 26 witnessed the inexplicable and sudden recusal of Justice M.M. Sundresh from hearing a bail plea filed by activist and advocate Surendra Pundalik Gadling in the Surjagarh iron ore mine arson case of 2016. The bail case had been with Justice Sundresh’s Bench since July 9, 2024. For well over a year, the case had seen a series of 13 adjournments till the day of the judge’s recusal, on August 26.
  • The recusal order does not reveal the reason why the judge chose to suddenly recuse after so many adjournments. The one-line order blandly read: “Subject to orders of the Honourable The Chief Justice, post before another Bench, in which one of us, Justice MM Sundresh, is not a member.”

Notable exceptions

  • The impenetrable veil thrown over judicial recusals was partially lifted recently when a judicial member of the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT), Justice Sharad Kumar Sharma, recorded in an order that he was recusing himself from a corporate insolvency appeal as a “revered member of the higher judiciary” had approached him for a favourable order for one of the parties.
  • Again, a Madhya Pradesh High Court judge, Justice Vishal Mishra, chose transparency by recording in his recusal order that a Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) MLA had “attempted to call him” about an illegal mining case.
  • However, these two instances, that of the NCLAT member and the High Court judge, are exceptions. The style of Justice Sundresh’s recusal order, non-explanatory and brief, is the general rule.

No formal rules

  • There are no formal rules governing recusals by judges. Judges who choose to opt out of a case can do so without giving any reason.
  • Justice Kurian Joseph (now retired), in his separate opinion in the National Judicial Appointments Commission (NJAC) judgment, had emphasised the need to frame specific rules for judicial recusal. “It is the constitutional duty, as reflected in one’s oath, to be transparent and accountable, and hence, a judge is required to indicate reasons for his recusal from a particular case,” Justice Kurian had observed.
  • He had argued that giving reasons for recusing oneself served the legal principle that “justice must not only be done, but be seen to be done”.

New technology, innovation conclave to ‘replace’ Science Congress to be held in Nov.

Context: Signalling a break from the past, the Department of Science and Technology (DST) is set to organise the first-ever Emerging Science, Technology and Innovation Conclave (ESTIC) in November.

  • The ESTIC may ‘replace’ the Indian Science Congress, the oldest congregation of scientists in India, with a rich history predating Independence. Over the years, it has gone into oblivion, with the last being held in 2023.
  • “You could see it as a replacement of the Indian Science Congress,” a senior official.
  • Since 2015, the government has nurtured the India International Science Festival (IISF) that is organised by the science-related departments. It has among its organisers Vijnana Bharti — a science popularisation outfit affiliated with the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh.
  • “The IISF is more of a festival, a ‘mela’ (fair), and meant to popularise science among students and young people. It is not a forum where scientists and technologists can discuss bigger themes of science, technology and innovation,” said the official.
  • This year, the IISF is expected to be held at the Panjab University, Chandigarh.
  • The IISF does not usually see participation by international Nobel Laureates, nor does Prime Minister Narendra Modi visit it in person. However, he has made virtual appearances or sent video messages for the IISF.
  • The ESTIC website says that Mr. Modi is expected to be present at its inaugural session.
  • Traditionally, the Indian Science Congress, organised by the Indian Science Congress Association, Kolkata, and funded by the DST and held in the first week of January, has always had the Prime Minister at the inaugural. However, the last time Prime Minister Modi appeared in person was at the 107th Science Congress at Lovely Professional University, Ludhiana, in 2020. The following two years, the event was not held, citing the pandemic.
  • In 2023, Mr. Modi made an appearance, but only online, at the 108th edition. In 2024 and this year, the Science Congress was not held due to a spat between the DST and the ISCA’s executive body over the organisation of the event. The DST has said that it would no longer fund the ISCA.
  • The inaugural ESTIC will be held at the Bharat Mandapam here from November 3-4. All the science-related Ministries, ranging from atomic energy to space and information technology, will be involved in it. According to the ESTIC website, there will be 11 thematic technical sessions and 75 exhibition stalls by ‘deep tech’ start-ups at the event. Nobel Laureate Andre Geim (2010, Physics) is expected to make an appearance. Jean-Yves Le Gall, former president of the French Space Agency, and Professor Masaru Tomita, Keio University, Japan, are among the foreign dignitaries expected.
  • In a meeting earlier, Science Minister Jitendra Singh said the ESTIC would “showcase cutting-edge research, deep-tech breakthroughs, and thought-provoking discussions, igniting a new era of scientific leadership towards Viksit Bharat 2047”.

India plans to strengthen nuclear deterrence, drone warfare capabilities

Context: India has set out an ambitious plan to reinforce its nuclear deterrence and expand drone warfare capabilities under the Technology Perspective and Capability Roadmap (TPCR-2025), a 15-year blueprint for military preparedness.

  • The document highlights measures to sustain credible nuclear deterrence through survivability systems and advanced delivery platforms. While it avoids reference to specific warhead technologies, it outlines future acquisitions such as nuclear command-and-control infrastructure, radiation detection tools, and mobile decontamination units.
  • Unmanned ground vehicles for chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear (CBRN) reconnaissance are also on the agenda, aimed at strengthening protection against potential nuclear or chemical fallout.
  • On the aerial front, the Army has projected requirements for stealth remotely piloted aircraft with ranges of up to 1,500 km and altitudes of 60,000 feet. These drones would carry electronic warfare payloads; nuclear, biological, and chemical detection equipment, and even guide artillery fire.

Loitering munition

  • The road map also places emphasis on loitering munitions, designed to carry out precision strikes with artificial intelligence-enabled targeting and reusable warhead systems. In addition, integrated surveillance and targeting drones are expected to boost the battlefield capabilities of mechanised forces.
  • India is also preparing for the emerging threat of hostile drone swarms.
  • The TPCR-2025 envisages adaptive jamming systems and electronic denial bubbles with a 15 km radius to neutralise such attacks, underscoring the rising importance of electronic warfare in modern combat.
  • Officials said the initiatives were closely aligned with the government’s self-reliance push in defence production by reducing dependence on foreign imports.
  • With the road map, India has signalled a strategic shift towards integrated deterrence — combining nuclear resilience, electronic warfare, and unmanned strike platforms — to strengthen national security in the coming decades.

Not easy to switch to domestic from global, say exporters

Context: Multiple factors, such as low surplus absorption capacity and different specifications, severely inhibit a shift to the domestic market for exporters struggling to sell in the U.S. because of the 50% tariffs.

  • Trade experts and exporters believe international market diversification is a more feasible option, but even that cannot happen overnight and would need active support from the government.

Market stress

  • “Diverting export products to the domestic market is not a big possibility as there is oversupply. Already, all domestic players are under stress, as you can see from their heavy discounts. International market diversification is definitely a solution, but it is not an immediate option,” pointed out Sanjay Jain, chairman, ICC National Textiles Committee.
  • Rationalisation of GST rates could expand the domestic market for some sectors such as footwear, but not for others like diamonds and jewellery, because for every product, the domestic market’s capacity to absorb will be different, explained Ajay Sahai of FIEO. “For low-value items like some handicrafts, there might be demand in the domestic market, but for high-value items like carpets, the capacity to absorb may be limited due to high price and because it is not a fast-moving item,” he said.

Long-term solution

  • Thirukkumaran Natarajan, chairman of Tiruppur-based Esstee Exports India Pvt. Ltd., said diversifying to domestic markets can only be a long-term solution. “The set-up is different for exports and domestic (demand) as markets are different and overheads are also different, said Mr. Natarajan, who is also the Secretary of Tiruppur Exporters Association.
  • Exporters need to keep supplying to their foreign markets to retain the major brands that source supplies from them, said Mithileshwar Thakur of AEPC.
  • “If exporters stop supplying to major foreign brands, they may just leave. So, exporters will try their best to retain them,” Mr. Thakur said.
  • The domestic market cannot substitute the export market for India, pointed out Biswajit Dhar from the Council for Social Development.
  • “India is a hugely import-dependent country. We need the foreign exchange,” he said. Mr. Dhar added that the best way to deal with the loss of U.S. market would be to diversify to newer markets in Africa, Latin America and Central Asia and the Centre should provide all support.

‘REITs, InvITs AUM crossed ₹9 lakh cr.’

Context: Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) and Infrastructure Investment Trusts (InvITs) instruments are becoming popular in India as their combined assets under management have crossed ₹9 lakh crore in the last nine years, as per industry bodies IRA and BIA.

  • The combined AUM of REITs and InvITs are expected to touch ₹25 lakh crore by 2030, as per the projections of The Indian REITs Association (IRA) and Bharat InvITs Association (BIA).
  • At present, there are five listed REITs in India – Brookfield India Real Estate Trust, Embassy Office Parks REIT, Mindspace Business Parks REIT, Nexus Select Trust, and Knowledge Realty Trust.
  • Currently, there are 27 Sebi-registered InvITs, and out of these, five are publicly listed on the stock exchanges, while 23 are privately listed.
  • The first InvIT was registered in 2016, while the first REIT got listed in 2019.
  • IRA and BIA, which jointly hosted the first product awareness programme in the national capital, highlighted assets under management (AUM) of InvITS and REITs currently stand at around ₹7 lakh crore and ₹2.25 lakh crore, respectively.

Current Affairs: 5th Sept 2025

GS3: Economy; Indirect Taxes; GST

Auto, pharma sectors cheer GST slabs; airlines say wings clipped

Context: While the goods and services tax (GST) rate changes authorised by the GST Council night brought cheer to the auto, insurance, consumer appliances, pharmaceuticals, and renewable energy sectors, among others, some of that was tinged with reproach. A few sectors are outright upset with the tax changes.

  • Airlines: Higher GST on non-economy seats.
  • Vegetable oil producers called for the resolution of the inverted duty structure on edible oils, which means that the GST rate on raw materials in their industry is higher than the rate on the finished product. This mismatch was something that the Council corrected for the fertilizer and man-made textiles industries.
  • The increase in the GST rate for labour charges, from 12% to 18%, has also led to some resistance, with small entrepreneurs saying that they would be hit hard by the change.

Mixed response

  • While the textile industry has welcomed the revision of GST rates for both man-made fibre and cotton sectors, it has also expressed its disappointment over the 18% duty for garments priced above ₹2,500 each.
  • The Cloth Manufacturers Association of India pointed out that such garments are also consumed in large numbers by the common man, especially in the form of woollens, wedding wear, traditional clothing, handlooms, and embroidered clothes. Charging 18% GST on these will make them significantly more costly, it said.
  • This nuanced cheer can be seen in the auto sector as well. Auto manufacturers have welcomed the rate rationalisation for the sector, along with the removal of the GST Compensation Cess applicable on cars. As per the new rates, entry-level and mid-segment cars priced up to ₹14 lakh will see a tax reduction of up to 13 percentage points, while high-end cars with engines above 1200 cc too are set to see an 8 to 10 percentage point cut in their tax rate. Auto dealers, however, have voiced some worries about consumers postponing their purchases until September 22, when the new rates come into force, and have called for greater clarity on what happens to the cess on vehicles they have already bought from manufacturers but not yet sold to customers.
  • The healthcare industry’s reaction has been more unequivocally positive, saying that the decision to reduce GST from 12% to 5% on a wide range of medical products.
  • Consumer appliance makers were also upbeat about the GST rate cuts, saying they would boost demand, especially in the run-up to the festive season.

Sources: TH

GS2: Polity; Union-State relation

Centre and Manipur govt. ink peace pact with Kuki-Zo groups

Context: The Union Home Ministry and the Manipur government signed a Suspension of Operations (SoO) pact with the Kuki-Zo insurgent groups with “re-negotiated terms and conditions or ground rules”, the Ministry.

  • Security forces will conduct verification of cadres and de-list foreign nationals, if any, the Ministry said.
  • A government official said once identified, the foreign nationals would be deported.
  • The revised ground rules reiterate territorial integrity of Manipur and relocation of camps of insurgent groups.
  • Prior to May 3, 2023, the SoO groups demanded autonomous territorial councils within Manipur, but post-violence the demands changed.
  • Asked if the SoO groups have given up their demand for a separate administration or Union Territory with a legislature, Seilen Haokip, spokesperson Kuki National Organisation (KNO), one of the signatories, told The Hindu, “Though the agreement speaks about territorial integrity of Manipur, it also mentions political settlement within the Constitution of India. The Constitution speaks about the integrity of the country, not a district or a State.”
  • He added that “negotiated political settlement within Constitution of India” is a new inclusion in the agreement as it was not there in the 2008 text when the demand was for territorial councils in Manipur.
  • The Kuki-Zo Council (KZC), a conglomerate of civil society organisations, agreed to open the National Highway-2 (Imphal-Dimapur) passing through Kangpokpi district “for the free movement of commuters and essential goods”, the Ministry said.

Revised SoO pact tightens norms for Kuki-Zo groups

Context: The revised Suspension of Operations (SoO) agreement signed between the Ministry of Home Affairs, Manipur government and 24 Kuki-Zo insurgent groups lays down the mechanism to monitor activities of cadres, and requires them to obtain Aadhaar cards.

  • According to the 2008 SoO pact, signed in the aftermath of the Kuki-Naga clashes in the 1990s, around 2,200 cadres under the umbrella of the Kuki National Organisation (KNO) and United People’s Front (UPF) were entitled to a stipend of ₹6,000 per month, which was stopped since ethnic violence erupted in the State on May 3, 2023.
  • The revised pact, stipend will be paid only through Aadhaar-linked bank accounts to those members who are present in camps during inspection. Photo identity cards shall be provided by the Manipur Police, it says.

Six camps each

  • The agreement states that the KNO and UPF shall have six camps each, instead of the 14 they operate presently and the camps shall not be located close to populated areas, National Highways and within areas vulnerable to conflict. The camps are to be located at reasonable distance from the Myanmar border as well.
  • A complete list of the cadres will be prepared by the government with name, date of birth, and other details along with latest photographs. Foreign nationals, if any, shall be deleted from the list of leaders and cadres, the pact says.
  • The preamble of the pact states that it was mutually agreed to review the implementation of the ground rules, and KNO and UPF shall “completely abjure the path of violence and abide by the Constitution of India, laws of the land, and territorial integrity of Manipur”. “SoO agreement shall be followed by tripartite dialogue with KNO and UPF to pave the way for a negotiated political settlement under the Constitution of India in a time-bound manner,” it says.
  • The pact bars groups from having association with any other armed group, within the country or outside; from recruiting new cadres; and carrying out offensive operations against security forces, other groups, and the public. The Army, Assam Rifles, Central Armed Police Forces and the the State Police shall not launch operations against the groups “as long as they abide” by the agreement.

State govt. for use of ballot papers in local body polls in future

Context: Amidst allegations of “vote theft” by the Congress, the State government on Thursday recommended to the State Election Commission (SEC) to revert to using ballot papers instead of EVMs in future elections to local bodies, citing the “erosion of confidence” in EVMs.

  • The Cabinet also recommended revision of voters’ list for such elections. There has been much anticipation in political circles over the long-delayed elections to the taluk and zilla panchayats, besides the newly formed five city corporations under the Greater Bengaluru Authority.
  • The State government plans to bring in suitable amendments to various provisions of law to bring back ballot papers in local body polls.
  • Amendments would be brought to Gram Swaraj and Panchayat Raj Act, 1993, Karnataka Municipalities Act, 1964, and Greater Bengaluru Governance Act, 2024, that govern the conduct of elections. He also acknowledged that the State Election Commission (SEC) is an independent body under Articles 243 (K) and 243 (ZA) of the Indian Constitution.

Binding on SEC

  • “At this point in time, the Cabinet has made recommendations, which may be accepted or not. However, once we make suitable changes in the laws and rules, it will be binding on the SEC,”.

Power to prepare rolls

  • In the light of “vote chori” allegations, Mr. Patil also said that the Cabinet has decided to recommend to the SEC to consider revision of voters list for the elections to the local bodies. “Till now, the voters list prepared for the Assembly constituencies were being considered. We are seeking changes in the light of ‘vote theft’ discussions. There have been discrepancies in in the voters list.” The recommendation is to consider revising or redoing the voters list, he added.
  • Government sources said that the recommendations for the voters list had come after the SEC sought necessary amendments based on the provisions in the GBA Act. Seeking necessary amendments to the GBA act, the SEC has said that the if the State government did not intend to adopt the Assembly electoral rolls, the SEC may be given power to prepare the electoral rolls for the elections of councillors under GBA Act.
  • It pointed out that the GBA Act is silent with respect to preparation of electoral rolls by the SEC or adopting the Assembly electoral roll. The SEC Commissioner G.S. Sangreshi, in his letter, has also said that the constitutional provisions do not direct the SECs to adopt the Legislative Assembly electoral rolls.
  • He has sought framing of rules related to Registration of Electoral Rolls by the SEC itself similar to that of Registration of Electors Rules, 1960, framed under The Representation of People’s Act, 1950, or bring amendment to Section 35 of Greater Bengaluru Governance Act regarding preparation of electoral rolls similar to provisions in Gram Swaraj and Panchayat Raj Act, 1993, Karnataka Municipalities Act, 1964, and Karnataka Municipal Corporation Act, 1976.

SEC ready to revert to ballot papers

Context: Following the State Cabinet’s recommendation, the State Election Commission (SEC) has said that it is ready to revert to ballot papers for the panchayat and urban local body (ULB) polls, as per rules.

  • The commission will conduct the polls by revising the electoral rolls as per recommended rules. “We have been using ballot papers for gram panchayat polls so far. EVMs were used in ZP/TP and urban local body polls. Now we are ready to use ballot papers for both gram panchayat and ZP/TP polls,” he said.
  • Stating that elections to the five corporations under the Greater Bengaluru Authority (GBA) will most likely be held in February next year, Mr. Sangreshi said the conduct of Zilla Panchayat (ZP)/ Taluk Panchayat (TP) polls will depend on revision of the electoral rolls. “We will have to see how much time the revision of rolls will take. These elections will be announced after the State government fixes reservations for various constituencies,” he said.
  • The ZP/TP elections in Karnataka have been pending since May 2021 owing to a delay in the delimitation of panchayat constituencies and notifying reservation.
  • The State government in 2022 divested the State Election Commission of its powers to carry out the delimitation exercise and draw up the reservation.
  • However, the State government failed to carry out these two exercises in time and thus delayed the polls. After much persuasion, it did complete the delimitation process in December 2023 but it is yet to notify reservation of seats.

IIT-Madras tops NIRF rankings; Pradhan criticises ‘peer perception’ parameter

Context: For the seventh straight year, the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Madras claimed the top overall position in the higher education rankings announced by the National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF). It also remained the country’s best engineering college for the tenth straight year.

  • The NIRF’s methodology, however, came in for some criticism from Union Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan, who presented the India Rankings 2025 awards. He was especially skeptical about the ‘peer perception’ parameter, that carries 10% of marks for the ranking, and suggested that the NIRF should ensure that government-funded institutions do not fall behind because of this yardstick.
  • After the 2024 rankings, States and State-run educational institutions had alleged that the rankings reflected “regional bias” as metropolitan education institutions score higher on the ‘peer perception’ criteria, in comparison to suburban or State-run higher education institutions.
  • The other parameters that the NIRF considers are teaching, learning, and resources; research and professional practice; graduation outcomes; and research and inclusivity.
  • Mr. Pradhan said he was confident that the NIRF would evolve into one of the best accreditation frameworks by including more parameters such as entrepreneurs created by an institution, involving more data-driven approaches, and including more categories and institutions in the future.
  • The top 100 institutions in the overall category comprised 24 State universities, 22 private deemed universities, 19 IITs and the Indian Institute of Science (IISc), nine private universities, eight National Institutes of Technology, seven Central universities, five medical institutions, four Indian Institutes of Science Education and Research, one college, and the Indian Agriculture Research Institute.
  • IISc, Bengaluru topped the universities category for the tenth consecutive year and also stood first in the research institutions category for the fifth consecutive year. IIM Ahmedabad was the best institution for management studies for the sixth consecutive year. The All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), New Delhi occupied the top slot among medical institutions for the eighth consecutive year and also topped the rankings in the dental category for the first time.

IISc retains second rank among top 100 HEIs

Context: Several Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) from Karnataka including premiere institutes, figure among India’s top 100 institutions in the National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF)-2025 list released by the Union Ministry of Education.

  • Institutions, including the Indian Institute of Science (IISc), Indian Institute of Management, Bangalore (IIMB), National Institute of Technology Surathkal (NITK), National Institute for Mental Health and Neuro Sciences (NIMHANS), National Law School of India University (NLSIU), Bengaluru, and Mysore and Bangalore universities are on the list.
  • IISc has retained its second rank among the top 100 HEIs across the country and best university, and also tops as the best research institute in the country.
  • While NITK has got the 54th rank, NIMHANS has secured 60th place among top 100 HEIs.
  • Three private institutions Manipal Academy of Higher Education (MAHE), JSS Academy for Higher Education and Research and CHRIST (Deemed to be University) have secured 14th, 38th and 96th places, respectively.
  • But, among top 100 universities, even as IISc leads, it is followed by MAHE ranked third, JSS Academy for Higher Education and Research at 21st rank, Bangalore University at 65, Jain (Deemed-to-be University) at 62, CHRIST (Deemed to be University) at 63, University of Mysore at 71, NITTE University at 80, and University of Agriculture Sciences Bengaluru (UAS-B) at 95th rank.
  • Bangalore University, which ranked 81 among all HEIs in 2024, has improved its ranking to 65 this year.
  • “This is a significant achievement which will motivate us to continue striving for academic excellence and to further enhance the quality of education and research at our university,” said Dr. Jayakara S.M., Vice-Chancellor, Bangalore University.
  • Despite having 32 State-run universities, only four universities managed to rank in the top 50 public universities in the list.
  • The University of Mysore (UoM) has secured 20th rank, Bangalore University (BU) 26th rank, UAS-B 37 and Visvesvaraya Technological University (VTU) 50th rank.

Degree colleges

  • Meanwhile, four degree colleges — Kristu Jayanti College, Bengaluru has ranked 34, M.S. Ramaiah Arts, Science and Commerce College, Bengaluru 67, St. Aloysius College, Mangaluru 73, and St. Joseph’s Commerce College Bengaluru has secured 98th rank — figure in the top 100 colleges category. No government-run colleges are on the list.
  • While NLSIU, Bengaluru, has retained its first rank in NIRF Law Rankings-2025 for the eighth consecutive year, IIMB has been ranked second among management colleges in the country.

UAS-B ranked 11th in India, no. 1 in State in agri and allied sectors

Context: The University of Agricultural Sciences-Bangalore (UAS-B) stands 11th among the total of 75 institutes of higher education and research in agriculture and allied sectors in the country as per the ranking under the National Institutional Ranking Framework.

  • While the UAS-B, the oldest agricultural university in the State, is ranked 11th nationally, it tops the State among the agricultural, horticultural, and veterinary universities as well as research institutes. Karnataka has a total of seven universities in agriculture and allied sectors.
  • University of Agricultural Sciences-Dharwad, which has been ranked 35 nationally, is the only other agricultural university from Karnataka to figure in the list that has identified the top 30 institutes. Though the State has a slew of ICAR research institutes in the sectors of horticulture, veterinary, and entomology, none of them have figured in the list of 30 best institutes of the country. For the UAS-B, it has been a status quo as it had been ranked 11th in the previous year’s ranking too. Incidentally, the UAS-B has secured A+ rating this year from the National Assessment and Accreditation Council (NAAC).

Kristu Jayanti secures 34th rank in NIRF 2025

Context: Kristu Jayanti (Deemed to be University) has been ranked 34th in the Colleges category of the National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF) 2025 released by the Ministry of Education. Union Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan announced the rankings.

  • This marks the highest position achieved by a college from Karnataka in this category, according to the university release. The institution received evaluation across six NIRF parameters, including Teaching, Learning and Resources, Research and Professional Practice, Graduation Outcomes, Outreach and Inclusivity, and Perception. The university has aligned its efforts with national development goals under Viksit Bharat @ 2047.

GS3: Urban Infrastructure & Artificial Intelligence Technology

Bidadi township will be developed into India’s first AI-powered township: DKS

Context: The long-delayed Greater Bengaluru Integrated Township (GBIT) will be developed as India’s first and largest Artificial Intelligence (AI)-powered integrated township, Deputy Chief Minister D.K. Shivakumar.

  • Spread across 8,493 acres, preliminary notification for which was issued in March earlier this year, the “work-live-play” model township at Bidadi, about 30 km from Bengaluru, is envisioned as Karnataka’s second central business hub, estimated to cost over ₹20,000 crore and will be completed over the next three years, Mr. Shivakumar said.
  • “Over 2,000 acres have been earmarked for AI-based industries and ancillaries. The project is expected to create lakhs of new jobs across IT, AI, start-ups, and service sectors. Dedicated skilling centres will train the workforce for AI-driven and future-ready industries,” he said.
  • GBIT will include residential spaces, healthcare, education, and cultural facilities. More than 1,100 acres will be reserved for parks and open spaces, making it one of India’s most sustainable green cities.

Compensation package

  • Since the project requires 6,731 acres of private land across nine villages, the government has planned compensation under a framework aligned with the Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement (RFCTLARR) Act, 2013.
  • In a first-of-its-kind measure, the government will provide livelihood support from the date of the final notification until monetary compensation is paid or developed sites are handed over.
  • Under the plan, Kushki landowners will receive ₹30,000 per acre annually, Tari landowners ₹40,000, Bhagait landowners ₹50,000, and landless families ₹25,000 per year. The Deputy Chief Minister also assured that habitations in the notified township area will be retained and not acquired.

Better connectivity

  • The township will be located 9 km from STRR Road, 11 km from NICE Road, 5 km from the Mysuru–Bengaluru Highway, and 2.2 km from the Bengaluru–Dindigul Highway.
  • Financial resources for the project have been secured in advance. Internal funding of ₹2,950 crore has been set aside from Bengaluru Metropolitan Region Development Authority’s existing funds, while ₹17,500 crore will be raised externally through financial institutions, backed by government surety.
  • In total, the authority has over ₹20,000 crore at its disposal and will begin disbursing compensation once the land acquisition process is completed.

GS3: Transportation; Civil Aviation; UDAN scheme

Seven airports operationalised under UDAN scheme connecting 118 routes

Context: Of the nine airports in Karnataka, seven have been operationalised under the Regional Connectivity Scheme — Ude Desh ka Aam Nagrik (RCS-UDAN).

  • As per information by Minister of State for Civil Aviation Murlidhar Mohol to a question in the Rajya Sabha during the Monsoon Session of Parliament, airports at Bidar, Mysuru, Vidyanagar, Hubballi, Kalaburagi, Belagavi, and Shivamogga have been developed under RCS-UDAN, and 118 routes have been operationalised under the scheme.
  • “An amount of ₹146.89 crore has been utilised under the UDAN scheme for this purpose. All the seven airports are currently operational. Bidar airport is connected to Bengaluru by Star Air,” he said.
  • He added that most of the routes under the scheme, which completed their RCS tenure, have demonstrated financial viability and continue commercial operations.
  • “Flight operations on a few routes were discontinued after the expiry of the RCS tenure. To revive these routes, special bidding rounds are conducted to operationalise them,” he added.
  • In reply to another question on current status of development of airports in Ballari, Kolar, Kushalnagar, Raichur, and Hassan under the scheme, the Minister said, “Under UDAN 5.2, bids have been received for small aircraft operations (less than 20 seats) for Ballari and Kolar airstrips”.
  • No bids have been received for Kushalnagar, Raichur, and Hassan airstrips. “The Ministry of Civil Aviation has requested the State government to provide consent, and confirm the availability of land for the development of these airports. This includes ensuring that the land is provided free of cost and free from encumbrances, and is suitable for operating small aircraft (2B) initially, with the potential for future expansion to category 3C,” he said.
  • The Minister added said that the actual timelines for airport projects depend upon various factors, such as land acquisition, mandatory clearances, and removal of obstacles.

GS2: Health; Birth Rate; Total Fertility Rate

‘India’s birth rate down, first dip in TFR in 2 years’

Context: India’s Crude Birth Rate (CBR), the number of children born per 1,000 people in the population in a year, has declined 0.7-points from 19.1 in 2022 to 18.4 in 2023.

  • The country’s Total Fertility Rate (TFR) has fallen for the first time in two years to 1.9 in 2023, according to the latest Sample Registration Survey Statistical Report for 2023. In 2021 and 2022, India’s TFR remained constant at 2.0.
  • The report, released by the Office of the Registrar General of India this week, revealed that the highest CBR was in Bihar at 25.8, and the lowest was in Tamil Nadu at 12. Bihar reported the highest TFR (2.8) among the bigger States and Union Territories (UTs), and Delhi reported the lowest (1.2).
  • The report pointed out that 18 States and UTs had reported a TFR of below the replacement level TFR of 2.1. Replacement level TFR denotes the average number of children each woman needs to give birth for one generation to replace the other.
  • The RGI released the Civil Registration System (CRS), Sample Registration System (SRS), and Medical Certification of Cause of Death (MCCD) reports for 2021 after a four-year delay in May this year, and in June, the SRS, CRS, and MCCD data for 2022 were released. While the SRS for 2023 has been made public, the corresponding CRS and MCCD datasets are yet to appear on the Census website.
  • The SRS 2023 datasets showed that the proportion of the elderly in the country (people above 60) rose by 0.7 percentage points in a year to 9.7% of the population. Kerala has the highest proportion of elderly population at 15%. Assam (7.6%), Delhi (7.7%), and Jharkhand (7.6%) reported the lowest proportion of their respective populations to be above 60.
  • The TFR data, which denotes the average number of children expected to be born per woman during her entire span of reproductive period, further showed that all States reporting TFR that is higher than replacement level were in northern India – Bihar (2.8), Uttar Pradesh (2.6), Madhya Pradesh (2.4), Rajasthan (2.3), and Chhattisgarh (2.2). The States and UTs reporting the lowest TFR included Delhi (1.2), West Bengal (1.3), Tamil Nadu (1.3), and Maharashtra (1.4).

GS3: Defence; Maritime Security

Singapore backs India on patrolling Malacca Straits

Context: Singapore acknowledged India’s plans to patrol the strategically important Malacca Straits.

  • The discussion was part of the agenda when Prime Minister Narendra Modi met Singaporean Prime Minister Lawrence Wong at Hyderabad House where the two sides signed five agreements, including one to export green energy from India to Singapore through dedicated ports.
  • Our cooperation will not remain confined to traditional areas. In keeping with the needs of changing times, advanced manufacturing, green shipping, skilling, civil nuclear energy, and urban water management will also emerge as focus points of our collaboration,” said Mr. Modi welcoming his Singaporean counterpart who paid a three-day visit to India.
  • A joint statement said the two sides will deepen defence technology cooperation in “quantum computing, AI, automation and unmanned vessels”. Both sides will cooperate to enhance maritime security, “submarine rescue” in the “Indo-Pacific” and the Indo-Pacific Oceans Initiative, said the statement, adding that “Singapore acknowledges with appreciation India’s interest in the Malacca Straits Patrol”.
  • India is interested in patrolling the Malacca Straits as it is next to the Andaman Sea and said that talks are on. Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand and Singapore patrol the Straits and India is expecting some kind of synergy among member countries.

GS3:

Cars get cheaper, festive sales likely to hit top gear

Context: The Goods and Services Tax (GST) overhaul will make cars cheaper this festive season across segments. Entry-level and mid-segment cars priced ₹14 lakh and below will see a reduction up to 13% in GST and cess, making them more attractive to a price-sensitive customer base. High-end cars with engines above 1,200 cc are set to become 5–10% cheaper.

  • Small cars that run on petrol, LPG and CNG with engines below 1,200 cc, and diesel cars of up to 1,500 cc and with a length under 4 metres will attract a GST of 18% instead of 28%. The cess of 1% and 3% will no longer be applicable.
  • “The benefit is greater for entry and mid-level segment as there is price sensitivity. The news will definitely bring cheer to buyers, and we expect more footfall at showrooms,” said Vinkesh Gulati, vice-president, Automotive Skill Development Council, and former president of the Federation of Automobile Dealers Association.
  • Unsoo Kim, managing director of Hyundai Motor India Ltd., called the GST revision a move that will “strengthen consumer confidence”. The company has 60% of its internal combustion engine portfolio under the 18% slab rate, with the remainder at 40%. All mid-sized and large cars, up to and above 1,500 cc and over 4 metres in length, will attract a higher GST of 40% instead of 28%. But the net savings of 5-10% come from a complete removal of cess, which stood at 17% for passenger vehicles with up to 1,500 cc engines, 20% with over 1,500 cc engines, and 22% for SUVs.
  • “Government listened to the automotive industry’s long-standing wish list of rationalising GST rates. This will induce the much-needed impetus by boosting consumption and bring momentum to the automotive industry which essentially remains the pulse of the Indian economy,” said Santosh Iyer, managing director & CEO, Mercedes-Benz India, in a press statement.
  • The flat GST on electric vehicles remains unchanged at 5%.
  • Higher GST for bikes: However, motorbike enthusiasts have been left disappointed as high-end two-wheelers with bigger engines will invite a higher GST of 40% instead of the prevalent 31% rate that includes 28% GST and 3% cess for bikes with engines above 350 cc.
  • There is also small relief expected in vehicle servicing and repair costs as the GST on spare parts has been brought down to 18% from 28%, but due to the varying taxation for different items such as rubber and fibre, the eventual benefit will accrue where there is a net drop.
  • The GST on commercial vehicles such as buses and trucks has dropped from 28% to 18%. “This will not only reduce logistics costs for the economy, but encourage customers to upgrade their fleets with modern, fuel efficient and safer trucks and buses,” said Vinod Aggarwal, vice-chairman, EML, and managing director & CEO of VE Commercial Vehicles.
  • But dealerships rue that the implementation of the new rates comes into effect three weeks later on September 22. They fear that this will result in some buyers postponing their purchase. Also, due to the removal of cess, dealerships are staring at a loss of ₹2,500 crore because of credit payments made on the cess for the inventory already purchased from automakers.
  • Dealers deposit the cess as a credit item at the time of their purchase and make the actual deposit on the GST portal once they sell the car to a buyer.
  • There is a lowering of tax on farm equipment too from 18% to 5% for tractors and parts. “These GST reforms will accelerate mechanisation by making tractors, harvesters, balers and implements more affordable, while lowering overall operating costs for farmers,” said tractor and construction equipment maker CNH India’s president & managing director, Narinder Mittal.

GS3:

White goods makers anticipate a cracker of a festive season

Context: The consumer appliances industry welcomed with enthusiasm the reduction of GST rates on air conditioners and dishwashers and the standardisation of rates for all television variants, especially ahead of the festive season.

  • The GST Council slashed rates on air-conditioners and dishwashers from 28% to 18%, while it standardised the rate on all types of televisions to a lower 18%. Previously, the purchase of televisions housed two tax rates — 18% and 28% — depending on the screen size being within or more than 32 inches.

No change for phones

  • The council, however, did not alter the GST on smartphones, tablets and laptops. While welcoming the revision for consumer appliances, Pankaj Mohindroo, Chairman at the India Cellular & Electronics Association (ICEA), said, “We also remain hopeful that the rationalisation of GST on smartphones and laptops will be considered in the future, given its potential to improve affordability and strengthen digital inclusion.”

GS3:

Zero GST is expected to increase penetration of health, life insurance

Context: The healthcare industry has welcomed the zero GST on individual health and life insurance policies, calling it a master stroke.

  • The GST Council’s decision to bring down the GST on individual life and health insurance policies from 18% to zero will make more families opt for medical cover, said analysts and industry executives.
  • An insurance cover will ease burden on families when medical inflation is rising sharply and is unchecked, they said.
  • The move made health protection a right, not a privilege.
  • “This progressive reform will directly benefit patients by lowering treatment costs, improving affordability, and expanding access to essential medical technologies,”.
  • Scrapping the tax on insurance services would mean that insurers would lose access to input tax credits on expenses linked to such policies. Insurers will be required to reverse input tax credits relating to these exempt outputs. This embedded tax could eventually feed into the costing structure, impacting the profits of the companies, they said.
  • “The exemption also extends to the reinsurance of these individual policies, ensuring tax neutrality across the risk management chain. However, the benefit is limited to individual covers. Group insurance policies, such as employer-sponsored health or life schemes, will continue to attract 18% GST with no input tax credit available to the employers,”.
  • “This makes it clear that the policy intent is to directly ease costs for households rather than institutional buyers,”.
  • While healthcare services by doctors, hospitals, and diagnostic centres were exempt under the GST regime, the government has announced a series of GST rationalisation measures to promote a health-positive tax regime, the Health Ministry.

GS3:

Premium air travel to become costlier; industry anguished

Context: The airline industry has termed the Centre’s decision to raise goods and services tax on premium air travel, including premium economy and business class flight tickets, from 12% to 18% “disappointing”.

  • The revised taxes will come into effect from September 22 and apply both for domestic and international flights offered by Indian and foreign carriers.
  • “Aviation has tremendous potential to contribute to India’s economic growth, both directly as Indian airlines grow, and indirectly through increased connectivity for travellers and businesses alike. It is therefore disappointing to hear of a decision to increase the GST on non-economy travel with no clear justification,” said International Air Transport Association’s regional vice-president, Asia Pacific, Sheldon Hee.
  • Over the years, this component of tax had more than doubled, growing from the 8.6% rate in 2017 under the service tax regime to 18%, he added.

‘Must consider risks’

  • While first-, business- and premium economy-class travel is offered by foreign carriers, among Indian airlines, Air India offers business and premium economy travel on domestic and international flights. IndiGo too has introduced business-class seats on flights to Mumbai and Bengaluru from New Delhi as well as to Singapore, Bangkok and Dubai, which will grow to 12 total routes by the end of 2025.

GS3:

18% GST on labour charges alarms MSMEs

Context: The GST rate for labour charges (job work) has been increased from 12% to 18% and it is expected to hit hard the Micro, Small, and Medium-scale Enterprises (MSMEs).

  • The long-pending demands of the job working/sub-contract industries in the manufacturing sector is the reduction of GST on job work to 5% from 12%. However, the government has increased it to 18%. This will create several challenges for the job working in micro and small-scale industries.
  • The Coimbatore District Small Industries Association has urged the government to have a relook at the rates for job work. The government should put in place a system so that lower GST rates for job work benefit the MSMEs that are vendors to larger industries and get only labour charges. The 18% duty will block the liquidity for the MSMEs, it said.

GS3:

Centre approves creation of new, independent class of ‘environment auditors’

Context: The Environment Ministry has authorised the creation of a new, independent class of “environment auditors” to supplement the work of State pollution control Boards in inspecting and verifying projects for compliance with environmental laws. Private, accredited agencies can also undertake environment impact assessment studies that will then be appraised by expert committees.

  • Under the new rules, called the Environment Audit Rules, 2025, private agencies can get themselves accredited as auditors. Environment auditors can get licences and be authorised to evaluate project compliance with environmental laws and adherence to best practices in prevention, control, and abatement of pollution.
  • “The overall framework for monitoring and compliance within the existing environmental framework is presently supported by the Central Pollution Control Board, the Regional Offices of the Ministry, and the State PCBs/Pollution Control Committees, which are facing constraints in terms of manpower, resources, capacity, and infrastructure.
  • These limitations hamper their ability to monitor and enforce environmental compliance across the vast number of projects and industries operating,” said a press statement by the Ministry.
  • “This scheme aims to bridge the manpower and infrastructure deficits, thereby strengthening the effective implementation of environmental compliance mechanisms. Furthermore, the scheme is designed to ensure greater transparency, accountability, and credibility in the compliance monitoring process, fostering trust among stakeholders and promoting sustainable environmental governance.”
  • Audits undertaken can be used for compliance with Green Credit Rules, under which individuals and organisations can gain tradeable “credits” for afforestation, sustainable water management, and waste management, among other activities.

GS3:

Renewable energy industry sees boost to domestic manufacturing

Context: The GST Council’s recommendation to reduce the taxation rate on renewable energy devices relating to solar, wind and biogas, and on parts required to manufacture them, from 12% to 5%, has been welcomed by the industry as a step towards spurring domestic manufacturing by easing capital expenditure.

  • Furthermore, industry associations stipulate this may translate to potentially lower tariffs for consumers.
  • National Solar Energy Federation of India (NSEFI) said the move was a “positive step” and adhered to a long-standing request of the industry for a return to status quo.

Current Affairs: 4th Sept 2025

GST Council approves two-rate tax slab effective September 22

Context: The Goods and Services Tax (GST) Council, during its 56th meeting, decided to revamp the tax structure into a primarily two-rate system, as proposed by the Central government, Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman.

  • Apart from the two rates of 5% and 18%, the new GST system would also include a 40% “special rate” on sin goods such as tobacco and luxury items such as large cars, yachts, and helicopters.
  • The decisions will come into effect from September 22 for most items, she said. Only tobacco and tobacco-related products will move to the new structure at a date to be specified by the Finance Minister.
  • The government also calculated that the net fiscal implication of the rate cuts, based on consumption patterns in 2023-24, would be ₹48,000 crore. However, the officials clarified that the real implication would be known on the basis of current consumption, and that the rate rationalisation was expected to result in a buoyancy effect, and improved compliance.
  • “These reforms have been carried out with a focus on the common man,” Ms. Sitharaman said. “Every tax levied on the common man has gone through a rigorous looking into, and in most cases, the rates have come down. Labour-intensive industries have been given good support.
  • Farmers and agriculture will benefit from the decisions. Health-related sectors will also benefit.”
  • She said common-use and middle-class items will see a reduction, with products such as hair oil, soap, shampoo, toothbrush, toothpaste, bicycle, table and kitchen ware, and other household articles being moved to 5% from either 18% or 12%. The other items moving down to the 5% rate include namkeens, sauces, pasta, instant noodles, chocolates, coffee, and butter.
  • Twelve specified bio-pesticides, bio-menthol, and labour-intensive items such as handicrafts, marble, travertine blocks, granite blocks, and intermediate leather goods would move from 12% to 5%. Notably, cement will move from 28% to 18%.
  • No tax on Indian bread: The Finance Minister further said that items such as ultra-high temperature milk, paneer, and all Indian bread, including rotis, chapatis, and parathas would see their tax rate fall to 0% from the earlier 5%.
  • On insurance services, individual life insurance policies and individual health policies will move to 0% from 18%. A total of 33 life-saving medicines will move from 12% to 0%, The tax on electric vehicles has been retained at 5%.
  • Products such as air-conditioners, all TVs, dishwashers, small cars, and motorcycles of engine capacity less than or equal to 350cc would see their tax reduced from 28% to 18%.
  • Buses, trucks and ambulances, as well as all auto parts, would also attract a GST rate of 18%. Spectacles to correct vision would move from the 28% slab to 5%.
  • “The long-pending inverted duty structure is being rectified for the manmade textile sector by reducing the GST rate on manmade fibre from 18% to 5% and manmade yarn from 12% to 5%,” Ms. Sitharaman said.
  • The inverted duty structure regarding the fertiliser will also be rectified, with the duty on sulphuric acid, nitric acid and ammonia being reduced from 18% to 5%.
  • The special rate of 40% will apply only on particular sin and super-luxury goods such as pan masala, cigarettes, gutka, chewable tobacco, zarda, unmanufactured tobacco and beedi, as well as goods such as aerated water, caffeinated beverages, mid-size or large cars, motorcycles of engines exceeding 350cc, among others.
  • On insurance services, individual life insurance policies and individual health policies will move to 0% from 18%.
  • Ms. Sitharaman said that the GST rate on pan masala, gutka, cigarettes, chewable and unmanufactured tobacco, and beedi would remain at 28%, in addition to a compensation cess. Once the Centre discharges the loans it had borrowed to compensate States, these tobacco and tobacco-related items will move to the 40% slab.

Governors must act ‘forthwith’ on Bills, States argue in SC

Context: States ruled by non-BJP parties argued in the Supreme Court on Wednesday that even a three-month deadline given in the Tamil Nadu Governor case judgment may be too long, and State Bills presented to Governors must be assented to by these “titular heads” forthwith.

  • West Bengal, Karnataka and Himachal Pradesh said the will of the people, which the proposed laws manifest, cannot be sacrificed on the altar of the whims and fancies of Governors. They said sitting over Bills was a quiet disguise for denying assent, but without necessarily having to return the proposed laws to the legislature for reconsideration.
  • The three States said that if the Centre wanted them to presume that a high constitutional authority like the Governor would act with integrity while dealing with Bills, the same courtesy must be extended to State legislatures, which also happened to be high constitutional authorities.
  • Appearing before a five-judge Presidential Reference Bench headed by Chief Justice of India B.R. Gavai, senior advocate Kapil Sibal, for West Bengal, said Article 200 required the Governor to return a Bill to a State Legislature “as soon as possible” in case he disagreed with it.
  • Mr. Sibal interpreted “as soon as possible” to mean “forthwith or immediately”. “‘Forthwith’ must apply to Governors and President, who is actually the Union government, while dealing with grant of assent.
  • Bills cannot wait,” he submitted. The Governor had no business questioning the constitutionality of Bills. He was bound to grant assent if the legislature re-passed them. Later, once the Bills are notified as laws, citizens could test their constitutionality in court, he said.
  • He drew attention to Article 167, which made it the Chief Minister’s duty to apprise the Governor of laws being contemplated by the State Cabinet. This was done as a part of the pre-legislative process.
  • The senior lawyer said the Chief Minister would meet the Governor for an informal interaction to discuss the crafting of a law and taking in suggestions. Later, once the Bill was passed by the legislature, the Governor was expected to give his assent.
  • Besides, Mr. Sibal pointed to the proviso of Article 254(2) of the Constitution that allowed Parliament to neutralise a repugnant State law by “adding to, amending, varying or repealing” it.
  • Justice Surya Kant observed the proviso acted as a “second filter” on State Bills.
  • “But prevention is better than cure, no?” Justice Vikram Nath interjected.
  • Mr. Sibal replied there was a presumption of constitutionality associated with Bills passed by the legislature. References to the President by Governors were once rare instances. “Now, Governors create conflict by sitting over Bills for years together. Their doubts about the constitutionality of Bills, especially in the case of re-passed Bills, is bogey… The power given to Governors to assent, withhold assent or refer State Bills to the President under Article 200 are not discretionary choices, but constitutional routes,” he responded.
  • Karnataka, represented by senior advocate Gopal Subramanium, said State Legislatures cannot allow other constitutional authorities to invade upon their legislative powers. He noted that the Centre’s argument that the President and Governors have wide discretionary powers was “fundamentally flawed”.
  • “In the parliamentary form of democracy, the aid and advice of the Cabinet is central. There cannot be a dyarchy within a State. Governors have to act under the aid and advice of the State government. Governance cannot happen in a constant state of conflict or threat of conflict,” Mr. Subramanium submitted.
  • Advocate Anand Sharma, a former Union Minister, said neither the President nor Governors have any role in lawmaking.

Every fourth adult in State is hypertensive as per NFHS, says Health Minister

Context: Hypertension (high blood pressure) is a significant health concern in Karnataka, with the NFHS-5 report indicating a prevalence of around 25% for women and 26.9% for men in the above-15 age group, higher than the national average, said Health Minister Dinesh Gundu Rao.

‘Silent epidemic’

  • The Minister, who inaugurated a sensitisation workshop on hypertension and other non-communicable diseases, said hypertension is a silent epidemic and if left unchecked, it leads to strokes, heart attacks, kidney failure, and premature deaths.
  • “NFHS-5 findings show that every fourth adult in Karnataka is hypertensive. This means lakhs of people in our State are living at high risk of chronic illness and sudden medical emergencies, often without being aware of it. The economic burden is also significant – rising hospitalisations, loss of productivity, and financial strain on families,” the Minister said.
  • Stating that it calls for urgent collective action – early detection, healthy lifestyle choices, and reliable treatment services, the Health Minister said, “Our government is committed to expanding screening, ensuring medicines at every Health and Wellness Centre, and driving community awareness campaigns.”
  • He said the community-level screening under the National Programme for Prevention and Control of Cancer, Diabetes, Cardiovascular Diseases and Stroke (NPCDCS) will be expanded. “Lifestyle interventions such as diet, exercise, and reduced salt intake will be promoted through awareness campaigns. Besides, we will ensure the availability of essential medicines and diagnostics for hypertension management at all Health and Wellness Centres,” he said.

In childhood

  • Oncologist U.S. Vishal Rao, who spoke on childhood hypertension, said no State government is screening children for hypertension in schools. “Studies show a rising trend of hypertension in children, in both urban and rural areas. Factors such as obesity, consumption of oily and junk food, lack of awareness about disease status and sedentary lifestyle contribute to the high burden,” he added.

Total lunar eclipse on the intervening night of September 7 and 8

Context: A total lunar eclipse will occur on the intervening night of September 7 and 8, which will be visible from all parts of the country between 8.58 p.m. and 2.25 a.m.

  • According to the Jawaharlal Nehru Planetarium, the penumbral eclipse will begin at 8.58 p.m. followed by the partial eclipse, which will commence at 9.57 p.m on September 7. It added that the total eclipse will begin at 11 p.m.
  • While the maximum eclipse is at 11.41 p.m., the total eclipse will end at 12.22 a.m., the partial eclipse and penumbral eclipse will end at 1.26 a.m. and 2.25 a.m. respectively.
  • Lunar eclipses occur on a full moon day when the Earth comes in between the Sun and the Moon and when all the three objects are aligned. There are three types of lunar eclipses: total, partial and penumbral.
  • A total lunar eclipse will occur when the whole Moon comes under the umbral shadow of the Earth and the partial lunar eclipse occurs only when a part of the Moon comes under shadow of the Earth.

No special equipment

  • The Jawaharlal Nehru Planetarium said that no special equipment is needed to view the lunar eclipse.
  • “It is safe to view through the unaided eye. The public can view this eclipse from their respective places, provided the sky is clear. This eclipse is visible all over India,” it said.
  • It further said that demonstration lectures about the lunar eclipse will be organised late in the evening of September 7 at the planetarium. “Any eclipse viewing activity will be subjected to sky conditions during the monsoon period,” it said.

Packaging of sugar in jute bags: HC declines to interfere with policy

Context: Observing that “a judge, based on inputs, cannot assume the role of a supreme adviser to the administration of policies governing innumerable activities of the State”, the High Court of Karnataka has declined to examine the issue on whether the presence of jute batching oil in jute bags, used for packing sugar, leads to any serious health hazard, as well as the correctness of the policy decision to use jute bags.

  • The court stated that it is the Standing Advisory Committee (SAC), operating under the provisions of the Jute Packaging Materials (Compulsory Use in Packing Commodities) Act, 1987, and the experts who will examine the claim regarding the alleged presence of carcinogenic material in jute batching oil.

Not arbitrary

  • Also, the High Court said that making sugar industries compulsorily use 20% jute bags for packing sugar cannot be termed as arbitrary when the apex court, several years ago, had upheld the legality of this policy when the sugar industry was mandated to use 100% jute bags for packing sugar.
  • Justice M. Nagaprasanna made these observations while dismissing a petition filed by the South Indian Sugar Mills Association-Karnataka, Bengaluru, and the Indian Sugar Mills Association, New Delhi.
  • The associations had questioned the notifications issued by the Ministry of Textiles under the 1987 Act, which mandated the use of 20% jute bags for packing sugar.
  • Pointing out that it is for the first time that the petitioners have claimed before the court about certain reports with regard to the alleged presence of carcinogenic material in jute batching oil, the High Court said that it is not inclined to examine these reports as they have to be looked into by the SAC, which meets annually to decide on the use of jute bags.
  • Justice Nagaprasanna said that “the jute batching oil, after its usage, is again covered by another thin layer to block perforation and pilferage of sugar or dropping out of sugar, causing moisture of sugar owing to its hygroscopic nature. Since this has been in usage, all of which can be analysed for the ensuing year by the SAC”.
  • “By taking oath of office as a judge, an ordinary man turns himself into a man with magic wand and qualifies himself to be an unquestionable authority to advise on policies is inconceivable. It is further trite that the court would not sit in the armchair of those experts who have promulgated such policies and overrule them…,” the High Court observed while declining to accept that the policy on usage of jute bags effected the right of sugar industry to carry on their trade.

Jaishankar meets German Foreign Minister, pushes for EU-India FTA

Context: India and Germany committed on Wednesday to doubling trade and expediting efforts to complete the India-European Union Free Trade Agreement under negotiation, amid uncertainty over whether Europe would follow the U.S. in imposing secondary sanctions on countries for buying Russian oil.

  • After talks with German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul, External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar said the two sides discussed the “twin challenges” of economic volatility and political uncertainty, a reference to the U.S. imposition of 50% tariffs and sanctions.
  • Speaking at a press conference after the meeting, Mr. Wadephul called Russia and China the two biggest challenges to the international world order.
  • “We would like the [India-EU FTA talks] to move to a decisive conclusion in the coming days,” Mr. Jaishankar said, referring to the next round of talks between trade negotiators. He added that an FTA would help stabilise the global economy as a “ballast which today the world economy really needs”.
  • Indian and EU negotiators have fast-tracked their talks and expect to meet more regularly, possibly every month in order to reach the year-end deadline set by EU President Ursula Von der Leyen and Prime Minister Narendra Modi when they met in February this year. However, as with the India-U.S. trade negotiations, the two sides have differences over issues such as agricultural market access for food and dairy products.
  • Another major issue may arise between the two sides if the EU leadership follows U.S. President Donald Trump in imposing secondary sanctions on Indian companies due to the purchase of Russian oil. On Friday, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz announced that Germany and France would push for the U.S. and the EU to enforce sanctions on “other nations whose purchases of oil and gas finance a large part of Russia’s war economy”.
  • In New Delhi, Mr. Wadephul did not respond directly to a question about whether Germany would endorse the penalty tariffs against India, but said their intention was to ensure Russia would come to the negotiating table with Ukraine.
  • “We have not used tariffs but sanctions that we have imposed on Russia so as to ensure that Russia which has to fund its war will be less able to do so”, he said, adding that while the EU countries did not want to stop countries from accessing the oil they need, Russia should not be able to use “detours” to sell its oil to Europe. In the last round of sanctions, the EU had banned trade with Nayara Energy, a consortium of Russian oil major Rosneft and other companies in India.
  • The German Foreign Minister, who arrived in India a day after Mr. Modi’s meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping made international headlines, also lashed out at Russian and Chinese “aggression”, and said he welcomed Mr. Modi’s call for a ceasefire in Ukraine during his meetings.
  • “China’s increasingly aggressive behaviour in the Indo-Pacific is cause for concern for both our countries,” Mr. Wadephul said, adding, “Security in the Indo Pacific is closely linked to security in Europe.
  • Russia’s war of aggression, for us in Germany and Europe, remains the biggest challenge to our security policy.”
  • Mr. Jaishankar sidestepped the comments by the German Minister, saying India believed that a “multi-polar world with strategic autonomy can best respond [to economic and political challenges] through more intensive consultations and cooperation among key member states”.

SC has championed the right to dignity through multiple judgments: CJI

Context: Chief Justice of India B.R. Gavai on Wednesday described human dignity as the “soul of the Constitution” which sources and binds together core values such as personal liberty, freedom to choose, equality and fraternity.

  • The Supreme Court has championed the right to dignity through multiple judgments to better the lives of women, prisoners, ordinary workers, persons with disabilities, and other marginalised and minority groups over the decades, he said.
  • Through its interpretations of the value of dignity, the Supreme Court has ensured that the Constitution remained a living instrument, capable of responding to evolving societal challenges while remaining faithful to its foundational values, the CJI said.
  • Chief Justice Gavai was delivering the keynote address at the 11th Dr. L.M. Singhvi Memorial Lecture on “Human dignity as the soul of the Constitution: judicial reflections in the 21st century”.
  • Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla; senior advocate Abhishek Singhvi, MP; and Vice-Chancellor of the O.P. Jindal Global University C. Raj Kumar spoke on the occasion.
  • The CJI said the court had intervened to declare human dignity as a “Constitutional value that remains inviolable, even within the confines of incarceration”.

‘Not just physical survival’

  • Thus, the court’s interventions were not limited to ensuring physical survival of the affected persons, but its verdicts had touched upon broader conditions which would enable the aggrieved and disempowered sections of society to lead a life of self-respect, freedom, and opportunity, he said.
  • “Human dignity is intrinsically connected to an individual’s autonomy and capacity to make decisions about their own life. It encompasses the freedom to exercise choice, personal agency, and self-determination,” Chief Justice Gavai said.
  • India, EFTA trade pact to come into force from Oct. 1
  • The free trade agreement between India and four-European nation bloc EFTA, which will come into force from October 1, will have legally binding provisions, Switzerland.
  •  “For the first time, India has laid down legally binding provisions on trade and sustainable development in a free trade agreement,” it said in a statement.
  • The European Free Trade Association members are Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, and Switzerland.

Cabinet approves ₹1,500 cr. scheme for critical minerals recycling

Context: The Union Cabinet chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi  approved a ₹1,500-crore incentive scheme to develop recycling capacity in the country for the separation and production of critical minerals from secondary sources.

  • Recycling of critical minerals entails recovery of critical minerals from end-of-life products such as copper, lithium, nickel, cobalt and rare earth elements.
  • The incentive would form part of the National Critical Mineral Mission (NCMM), which seeks to build domestic capacity and supply chain resilience in critical minerals.
  • Set with a tenure of six years from FY2025-26 to 2030-31, e-waste, lithium-ion battery (LIB) scrap, and other stock as catalytic convertors in end-of-life vehicles would qualify as eligible feedstock.
  • The scheme earmarks one-third of the total outlay to small and new beneficiaries although beneficiaries may include both large and established recyclers.
  • The government has specified that incentives would be accorded to eligible entities for investments in new units as well as for expansion, modernisation or diversification of existing units.

At least 21,000 children disabled in Gaza war: UN

Context: At least 21,000 children in Gaza have been disabled since the war between Israel and Hamas began on October 7, 2023, a United Nations committee.

  • Around 40,500 children have suffered “new war-related injuries” in the nearly two years since the war erupted, with more than half of them left disabled, said the UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.
  • Reviewing the situation in the Palestinian territories, it said Israeli evacuation orders during the Army’s offensive in Gaza were “often inaccessible” to people with hearing or visual impairments, “rendering evacuation impossible”.
  • “Reports also described people with disabilities being forced to flee in unsafe and undignified conditions, such as crawling through mud without mobility assistance,” it said.
  • Meanwhile the committee said the restrictions on humanitarian aid being brought into the Gaza Strip were disproportionately impacting the disabled. “People with disabilities faced severe disruptions in assistance, leaving many without food, clean water, or sanitation and dependent on others for survival,” it said.
  • The committee said 83% of disabled people had lost their assistive devices, with most unable to afford alternatives such as donkey carts.
  • Iran increased uranium stock before Israeli strikes: IAEA

Context: A confidential report by the United Nations’ nuclear watchdog circulated to member states said on Wednesday that Iran increased its stockpile of uranium enriched to near weapons-grade levels before Israel launched its military attack on June 13.

  • The report said that as of June 13, Iran had 440.9 kg of uranium enriched up to 60%, an increase of 32.3 kg since the IAEA’s last report in May. The report stated that this figure is “based on the information provided by Iran, agency verification activities between 17 May 2025 and 12 June 2025, and estimates based on the past operation.”

Should reservations exceed the 50% cap?

Context:

  • The leader of the opposition in Bihar, Tejashwi Yadav, has declared that if voted to power, their alliance would increase reservation to 85%.
  • In another development, the Supreme Court has issued notice to the Union government on a petition demanding the introduction of a ‘system’ similar to the ‘creamy layer’ for reservations among the Scheduled Castes (SC) and Scheduled Tribes (ST)

What are constitutional provisions?

  • Articles 15 and 16 guarantee equality to all citizens in any action by the state (including admissions to educational institutions) and public employment respectively. In order to achieve social justice, these Articles also enable the state to make special provisions for the advancement of socially and educationally backward classes or Other Backward Classes (OBCs), SCs and STs. A brief summary of important developments with respect to reservations at the central level is provided in the Table. The reservation in the Centre at present stands as follows — OBCs (27%), SCs (15%), STs (7.5%) and for the Economically Weaker Section (EWS), 10%, resulting in a total reservation of 59.5%. The reservation percentages vary from State to State according to their demographic profile and policies.

What have courts ruled?

  • The issue arises due to two ostensibly competing aspects of equality — formal and substantive. The Supreme Court in Balaji versus State of Mysore (1962) noted that reservations under Articles 15 and 16 for backward classes should be ‘within reasonable limits’ and should be adjusted with the interests of the community as a whole. The court further ruled that such special provisions for reservation should not exceed 50%. This is seen as an endorsement of formal equality where reservations are seen as an exception to equality of opportunity and hence cannot exceed 50%.
  • Substantive equality on the other hand is based on the belief that formal equality is not sufficient to redress the difference between groups that have enjoyed privileges in the past and groups that have been historically underprivileged and underrepresented. A seven-judge Bench in State of Kerala versus N. M. Thomas (1975) have broached the aspect of substantive equality. The court in this case opined that reservation for backward classes is not an exception to equality of opportunity but is an assertion and continuation of the same. However, since the 50% ceiling was not a question before the court, it did not give a binding judgment on this aspect in the case.
  • In the Indra Sawhney case (1992), a nine-judge Bench upheld the 27% reservation for OBCs. It opined that caste is a determinant of class in the Indian context. Further, in order to uphold the equality of opportunity, it reaffirmed the cap of 50% for reservation as held in the Balaji case, unless there are exceptional circumstances. The court also provided for the exclusion of a creamy layer within OBCs. In the Janhit Abhiyan case (2022), the court by a majority of 3:2 upheld the constitutional validity of the EWS reservation. It held that economic criteria could be a basis for reservation and opined that the 50% limit set in the Indra Sawhney case was meant for backward classes while the EWS reservation of 10% is for a different category among unreserved communities.

What are the competing arguments?

  • Dr. B. R. Ambedkar in his Constituent Assembly speech in November 1948 justified the need to have reservations for backward communities that have been left out in the past. He also opined that reservations should be confined to a minority in order to uphold the guaranteed right of ‘equality of opportunity.’
  • However, there has been a growing demand for increasing the reservation percentage beyond the judicial cap of 50% to reflect the proportion of backward classes in the population. The demand for a caste census has been strong in order to have actual data about this proportion rather than mere estimates. It must also be noted that as per various government replies in Parliament, 40-50% of seats reserved for OBCs, SCs and STs in the Central government remain unfilled.
  • Another contentious issue relates to the concentration of reservation benefits. The Rohini Commission, set up for providing recommendations on the sub-categorisation among OBC castes, has estimated that 97% of reserved jobs and seats in educational institutions have been garnered by just around 25% of the OBC castes/sub-castes at the central level.
  • Close to 1,000 of around 2,600 communities under the OBC category have had zero representation in jobs and educational institutes.
  • A similar issue of concentration of reservation benefits persist in SC and ST categories as well. There is no exclusion of ‘creamy layer’ for these communities. In State of Punjab versus Davinder Singh (2024), four judges of a seven-judge Bench impressed upon the Central government the need to frame suitable policies for the exclusion of ‘creamy layer’ in SC and ST reservations. However, the Central government in a cabinet meeting in August 2024 reaffirmed that the ‘creamy layer’ does not apply to reservations for SCs and STs.
  • Critiques who are against the extension of a ‘creamy layer’ to SCs and STs argue that the vacancies for these communities are anyway not fully filled. Therefore, the question of a ‘creamy layer’ within such communities usurping the opportunities of even more marginalized castes does not arise. It is also likely that the exclusion of a ‘creamy layer’ based on any criteria will result in an even more increased backlog of vacancies. There is also a fear that such backlog vacancies may be converted in the long run to unreserved seats thereby depriving the SCs and STs of their rightful share of opportunities.

What can be the way forward?

  • Right to equality of opportunity is a fundamental right and an increase in reservation up to 85% may be seen as violating such right.
  • Nevertheless, substantive equality through affirmative action is required to uplift the underprivileged. Based on empirical data of the ensuing Census in 2027, which will also enumerate backward castes, there must be wide ranging discussions with all stakeholders to arrive at a suitable level of reservation. Equally important is to implement sub-categorisation among the OBCs as per the Rohini Commission report based on Census data. With respect to SCs and STs, as demanded in the plea before the Supreme Court, a ‘two-tier’ reservation system may be considered. Under such a scheme, priority would be given to more marginalised sections before extending it to those who are relatively well-off within those communities. These measures would ensure that benefits of reservation reach the more marginalised among the underprivileged in successive generations.
  • It must also be borne in mind that considering the opportunities available in the public sector and the young population of our country, any scheme of reservation would not meet the aspirations of large sections of the society. There must be sincere efforts to provide suitable skill development mechanisms that would enable our youth to be gainfully employed.

Current Affairs: 3rd Sept 2025

GS2: Governor

Governors can’t sit over Bills endlessly: SC judges

Context: Three of the five judges on the Presidential Reference Bench orally observed along with the States of Tamil Nadu and West Bengal that Governors could not sit endlessly over Bills placed before them for assent.

  • Chief Justice of India B.R. Gavai and Justices Vikram Nath and P.S. Narasimha separately remarked that Governors could neither delay the wisdom of the legislature indefinitely nor impede the functioning of the Constitution. “No organ can impair the functioning of the Constitution,” Justice Narasimha said.
  • Tamil Nadu, represented by senior advocates A.M. Singhvi and P. Wilson, said Governors “cannot assume to be royalty in a Republic”.
  • Senior advocate Kapil Sibal, for West Bengal, submitted that high offices under the Constitution must work collaboratively and not combatively with each other.
  • “When the Constitution is clear that a Governor should act with immediacy, why should he hold back Bills? There is a sense of urgency associated with the Governor’s assent. Legislation is a sovereign act. It cannot wait,” Mr. Sibal emphasised.
  • Mr. Singhvi said that Bills were meant to realise the felt necessity of the times.
  • Mr. Sibal argued that “absurdity” would follow if the court agreed with the Centre’s argument that Governors had absolute power to withhold State Bills under Article 200 (Governors’ power to assent to Bills).
  • Countering the Centre, he said States cannot go in search of political solutions to coax Governors’ assent. Gubernatorial delay thwarts the constitutional scheme, he said. “This Constitution has its genesis in history, but its alignment is with the future… And who decides the future of this country? You five in this case. The future of India is at stake if you give such absurd powers to the Governor,” Mr. Sibal submitted.
  • The Bench is hearing a Presidential Reference of May questioning time limits placed on the Governors and the President to deal with State Bills.
  • The Reference followed an April 8 judgment pronounced by a two-judge Bench of the apex court in the case of the Tamil Nadu Governor, who had delayed assent to 10 State Bills since 2020. The Division Bench had imposed a three-month deadline for the President and Governors to decide the fate of the Bills. If the Bills were left pending beyond three months, they would be “deemed” to have received assent and become laws.
  • The Bench, however, expressed doubts about the court imposing “general” time limits on the President and Governors and granting “deemed assent” to Bills. “What happens if the time limit of three months set by the Supreme Court [in the TN Governor judgment] is not followed by the President or Governors,” Justice Nath asked. He queried why it was “deemed assent” alone. “Why cannot the other options —withholding assent or reference to the President — also be “deemed”.
  • Justice Narasimha said time limits could be prescribed in individual cases after considering the peculiar facts and circumstances of each.
  • Chief Justice Gavai said a broad brushstroke of a “general” timeline applicable to all cases of delay may amount to overreaching by the judiciary. “Timelines help in maintaining discipline and immediacy. This dispute began with individual cases. Kerala and Tamil Nadu came with their own cases. However, the problem [gubernatorial delay] has proven to be endemic and repetitive,” Mr. Singhvi said explaining the reason for the Tamil Nadu Governor case judgment fixing a “general” three-month deadline.
  • Mr. Sibal said the sovereign act of the legislation cannot be impaired by a recalcitrant Governor. “He cannot say ‘I choose to sit back and do nothing’. The Governor is not a postman. He has certain play in the joints. If he feels a Bill requires consideration by the President, the Governor can consult lawyers, etc, and refer it…,” he said.

Sources: TH

GS2: Welfare of Backward classes

Maharashtra forms panel for Maratha quota; protest ends

Context: The Maharashtra government issued a Government Resolution (GR) announcing the formation of a special committee to facilitate the issuance of Kunbi caste certificates to eligible members of the Maratha community.

  • The decision followed marathon negotiations between State Ministers and activist Manoj Jarange-Patil, who had been on a hunger strike at Mumbai’s Azad Maidan for five days, demanding reservation for the Marathas under the Other Backward Classes category. Following the announcement, Mr. Jarange-Patil ended his fast.
  • “In accordance with the historical references contained in the Hyderabad gazetteer, a dedicated scrutiny process shall be conducted to verify documents and establish eligibility of persons from the Maratha community for Kunbi caste certificates. The committee shall ensure that every claim is assessed in a time-bound and transparent manner,” the GR stated.
  • Shortly after the announcement, celebrations erupted at the Azad Maidan and the CSMT Square, where thousands of protesters had gathered.
  • Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis hailed the resolution and thanked Mr. Jarange-Patil for calling off the protest. “My government has always worked for the welfare of the Maratha community. The Kunbi certification process ensures that eligible individuals can benefit lawfully while maintaining balance with OBC reservation,” Mr. Fadnavis said.

Sources: TH

GS2: Polity; Foreigners Tribunals

FTs can issue arrest warrants, send ‘foreigners’ to detention centres

Context: The Union Home Ministry has given the Foreigners Tribunals (FT), so far unique to Assam, powers of a first class judicial magistrate. The fresh Immigration and Foreigners Order, 2025, notified paves the way to send persons to a detention or a holding centre if they fail to produce any proof that they are “not a foreigner”. This was earlier enforced through executive orders.

  • The 2025 order, which replaces the Foreigners (Tribunal) Order, 1964, empowers the FTs to issue arrest warrants if a person whose nationality has been contested fails to appear in person. The order has been notified under the Immigration and Foreigners Act, 2025, passed by Parliament in April repealing four other laws.
  • According to Assam’s Home Department, there were 11 Illegal Migrant Determination Tribunals (IMDT) in the State that were converted to tribunals after the Supreme Court scrapped the Illegal Migrants (Determination by Tribunals) Act, 1983, in 2005. In total, 100 FTs are currently operational in the State.
  • The number of FTs was increased after the National Register of Citizens (NRC) was published in 2019 in Assam on the orders of the Supreme Court. The NRC, again unique to Assam, excluded 19 lakh out of 3.29 crore applicants and FTs were to give adequate opportunity to the those excluded from NRC to present their case.
  • Though the order is applicable across the country, FTs are functional only in Assam.
  • In other States, an illegal migrant is produced before a local court.

Curbs on employment

  • The order also bars employing foreigners in private undertakings that are engaged in the supply of power or water, in the petroleum sector, in the fields of defence, space technology, nuclear energy and human rights without the Central government’s nod.
  • “The designated Border Guarding Forces or the Coast Guard shall take steps to prevent illegal migrants attempting to enter into India by sending them back after capturing their biometric information and available demographic details on the designated portal of the Central Government,” the order said. It added that matters related to detection and deportation of illegal migrants settled in the country shall be closely monitored by a nodal officer designated for this purpose by the State government.
  • The order states that a foreigner may be refused entry or stay in India, “if he is convicted on charges of anti-national activities, espionage, rape and murder, crime against humanity, terrorist and subversive activity… human trafficking, racketeering in fake travel document and currency (including crypto currency), cyber crime, child abuse or found involved in such offences.”
  • The Ministry notified the Immigration and Foreigners (Exemption) Order, 2025 exempting Nepal and Bhutan citizens , Tibetans, and Sri Lankan Tamils from the Act.

Sources: TH

GS3: Economy; GST

SJM seeks lower rate of GST on beedi and plastic waste

  • The Swadeshi Jagran Manch (SJM), the economic wing of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, on Tuesday requested Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman to reconsider the Goods and Services Tax (GST) on beedi and plastic waste, saying higher tax will affect the people working in this sector.
  • In a letter to the Finance Minister, the SJM said that the beedi industry is a major source of employment, especially for women in more than nine States of India.
  • Similarly, millions of ragpickers are engaged in collection of plastic waste and an 18% GST reduces incentives for rag-pickers who collect and recycle plastic waste, the SJM said. The GST council is set to meet on September 3 and 4.

Sources: TH

GS3: Environment; Climate Change

COP-30 to focus on known solutions, says its President

Context: Instead of big-ticket announcements, the forthcoming edition of the UN climate summit is expected to focus on “well-known solutions”, with the host country, Brazil, moving to cleave the “negotiations” aspect of climate talks from the “implementation” of agreements.

  • The UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) will hold its 30th Conference of Parties (COP-30) in November, in the Brazilian port city of Belem, a gateway to the Amazonian rainforest.
  • With U.S. President Donald Trump having withdrawn his country from the UNFCCC’s Paris Agreement for the second time and casting global trade into flux with his tariffs, diplomats and seasoned climate negotiators said that this was a “difficult year and things could go bad” for the COP process.
  • However, COP-30 president André Corrêa do Lago, a Brazilian Minister, insisted that there are also “grounds for optimism”. Addressing a conclave organised here by the Council on Energy Environment and Water (CEEW), he said: “In the run-up to COP-30, we are trying to de-couple the process of negotiation – and agreements like the UNFCCC are designed for negotiation – from that of implementation.”
  • The typical process of climate negotiations in most COPs focusses on creating a “text”, said Mr. Lago, noting that it was “horribly difficult” to assemble all countries and have them agree on one.

COP-21 Paris Agreement

  • The Paris Agreement ironed out at COP-21 in 2015 is considered historic as it committed all countries, not just developed countries, to take action to contain greenhouse gas emissions to keep the increase in average global temperatures from exceeding 2 degrees Celsius and “as far as possible below 1.5C” by the turn of the century. However, scientific assessments suggest that the impact of all countries’ current commitments, even if implemented, will still lead to an increase of more than 2.6 C.

Sources: TH

GS3: Polity; Public Accounts Committee

Parliament panel seeks better rural mobile services

Context: The Public Accounts Committee (PAC) of Parliament, headed by Congress general secretary (organisation) K.C. Venugopal, has directed India’s leading telecom service providers to share details of steps taken to improve the network.

  • Expressing concern over poor connectivity of mobile networks in rural areas, the PAC, at a meeting, discussed the subject of “Levy and regulation of fees, tariffs, user charges, etc. on public infrastructure and other public utilities”.
  • “Today, the Public Accounts Committee deliberated over the audit report that flagged the delay of payments by private providers to the Telecommunications Department due to various reasons. We thoroughly examined the issue,” Mr. Venugopal said at the conclusion of the meeting. The members pointed out that the problem was pronounced in border districts, especially in the northeastern States, sources said.
  • Connectivity is extremely poor in villages on the India-Nepal border that many residents opted for Nepal networks, one of the members said.
  • The four service providers were asked by the panel to take more care to expand their networks in such remote districts.The members also flagged the lukewarm progress made by the National Broadband Mission.

Sources: TH

GS3: Science & Technology; Semiconductor

PM Modi receives first Made in India Vikram 32-bit chip       

Context: Union Minister for Electronics & Information Technology Ashwini Vaishnaw presented Prime Minister Narendra Modi a memento containing the ‘Made in India’ Vikram 32-bit Processor Launch Vehicle Grade chip at the Semicon India 2025.

  • The microprocessor chips were designed and developed by the Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre of the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) and the Semiconductor Laboratory (SCL), Chandigarh.
  • Utilised for space flights, it is an advanced refurbished version of the indigenously designed 16-bit VIKRAM1601 microprocessor, which has been used in the Avionics system of ISRO’s launch vehicles since 2009.
  • Other than the ‘Made in India’ chip, the memento also contained 31 more prototype chips created by academic institutions including IIT Jammu, IIT Roorkee, IIT Dhanbad, NIT Durgapur, NIT Calicut and IIT Ropar, among others.
  • In his address at the annual semiconductor conference, the Union Minister overseeing technology observed that in the three-and-a-half years since the inauguration of the Indian Semiconductor Mission “the world is looking at India with confidence”.
  • Elaborating on India’s progress in the realm, Mr. Vaishnaw said construction of five semi-conductor units was going on at a rapid pace, with the pilot line of one unit completed.
  • Two more units are expected to start production “in a few months from now”, he said. “Overall, foundation of the foundational industry is laid very well,” he observed.
  • Pitching India as a potential manufacturing hub to the participants from the semiconductor ecosystem on Tuesday, Mr. Vaishnaw said, “In these uncertain times, you should come to India because our policies are stable, we have attempted to cover all important aspects of the manufacturing sector.”

Sources: TH