Centre Unveils Anti-Terror Plan | Adulterated Milk Kills Four | HC Clears Interfaith Marriages | WhatsApp to SC: No Data Share | Adolescent Mental Health Crisis | Green Ammonia Energy Shift | AI For All | Stick Together | IDFC First Bank Rs 590cr Fraud | Oil Imports & $500bn US Goal
CENTRE UNVEIL ANTI- TERROR PLANKEY HIGHLIGHTS
- The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) has released India’s first comprehensive National Counter Terrorism Policy and Strategy titled PRAHAAR.
- It follows recent terror incidents including the April 2025 Pahalgam attack and growing concerns over cross-border terrorism and cyber threats.
- The policy aims to create a standardised anti- terror framework across States.
Key Highlights
- Nature of Threats Identified
- Cross-border sponsored terrorism.
- Global terror groups (e.g., al-Qaeda, IS).
- Cyber-attacks by nation-states and criminal hackers.
- Drone-enabled attacks in border states. Terror use of encryption, dark web, cryptocurrency.
- Risk of misuse of CBRNED (Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, Explosive, Digital) materials.
- Protection of Critical Infrastructure Focus on safeguarding:
- Power and energy sector Railways and aviation
- Ports and maritime assets
- Defence, space and atomic energy
- Institutional Measures
- Uniform anti-terror structure across States. Standardised operating procedures (SOPs).
- Legal experts to be involved at every stage of investigation.
- Strengthening coordination between Central and State agencies.
- Counter-Radicalisation Strategy
- Engagement with religious leaders and NGOs.
- Preventing recruitment of youth by extremist organisations.
5. Terror Financing & Logistics
- Criminalisation of all terrorist acts.
- Denial of access to funds, weapons and safe havens.
- Focus on terror–organised crime nexus.
Static Linkages
- Article 355 – Duty of Union to protect States against external aggression and internal disturbance.
- Police & Public Order – State List (Seventh Schedule).
- Criminal Law & Procedure – Concurrent List.
- Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA), 1967 – Primary anti-terror law.
- National Investigation Agency Act, 2008 – Central agency for terror offences.
- 2nd ARC Report on Combating Terrorism – Recommended institutional reforms including NCTC.
- FATF framework on terror financing.
Critical Analysis
- Prelims
- UAPA, NIA Act, Constitutional provisions (Art.
- 355, Seventh Schedule) Significance
- First formal national doctrine integrating cyber, drone and CBRN threats.
- Moves towards standardised national response.
- Recognises evolving technology-enabled terrorism.
- Challenges
- Federal concerns due to policing being a State subject.
- Balancing national security with civil liberties (Articles 14, 19, 21).
- Capacity gaps in cyber-forensics at State level.
- Coordination issues among multiple intelligence agencies.
Way Forward
- Strengthen intelligence-sharing platforms (MAC, NATGRID).
- Improve cyber forensic and AI-based surveillance capacity.
- Judicial safeguards to prevent misuse of anti- terror laws.
- Enhance international cooperation against terror financing.
- Institutionalise community-based de- radicalisation programs.
ADULTERATED MILK KILLS FOUR
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- Four elderly persons died due to acute renal failure after consuming allegedly adulterated milk in Rajamahendravaram, East Godavari district, Andhra Pradesh.
- 12 persons fell ill; 8 suffering from anuria (absence of urine) and undergoing dialysis.
- Three children below four years are critical.
- Milk was supplied by a local vendor procuring from 46 dairy farmers and supplying to 106 families.
- Samples sent for forensic testing.
- ₹10 lakh ex gratia announced by State government.
- Raises concerns regarding food safety enforcement and public health governance.
Key Exam-Relevant Points
- Anuria: Absence of urine output due to kidney failure; can result from toxic exposure.
- Possible adulterants in milk:
- Urea
- Detergents
- Heavy metals
- Pesticide residues
- FSSAI National Milk Safety Survey (2018):
- ~7% samples unsafe (contamination/adulteration)
- Food safety governed under:
- Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006
- Regulated by Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI)
- Food adulteration is punishable with imprisonment and fine under FSS Act.
Static Linkages
- Article 21 – Right to life (includes right to health – SC interpretation).
- Article 47 – Duty of State to improve public health.
- Adulteration of foodstuffs – Concurrent List (Seventh Schedule).
- National Health Mission (NHM).
- Integrated Disease Surveillance Programme (IDSP).
- Consumer Protection Act, 2019 (Product liability).
Critical Analysis
- Governance Issues
- Weak enforcement at district level.
- Inadequate food testing infrastructure.
- Informal dairy supply chains difficult to regulate.
- Public Health Concerns
- Vulnerable groups (elderly, children) disproportionately affected.
- Need for early detection and toxic surveillance.
- Administrative & Ethical Concerns
- Accountability of food safety officers.
- Criminal negligence vs systemic failure.
- Duty of State under welfare framework.
Way Forward
- Strengthen district-level food testing labs.
- Periodic mandatory testing of milk supply chains.
- Digital traceability in dairy procurement.
- Public awareness on milk adulteration detection kits.
- Strict enforcement under FSS Act.
- Integrate food poisoning alerts with IDSP.
HC CLEARS INTERFAITH MARRIAGES
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- The Allahabad High Court granted police protection to 12 interfaith live-in couples in Uttar Pradesh.
- The Court held that since no religious conversion had taken place, provisions of the Uttar Pradesh Prohibition of Unlawful Conversion of Religion Act, 2021 were not attracted.
- The State argued non-compliance with procedural provisions (Sections 8 & 9), but the Court rejected this.
- The Bench emphasized protection of life, liberty, privacy, and freedom of choice of consenting adults.
Key Takeaways
- Live-in relationships between consenting adults are not illegal.
- Anti-conversion laws apply only when:
- There is actual conversion, and
- It is induced by force, fraud, coercion, misrepresentation, undue influence, or allurement.
- Interfaith marriage or relationship per se is not prohibited.
- State has a constitutional obligation to protect life and liberty.
- Fundamental Rights cannot be denied on the basis of religion.
Static Constitutional Provisions
- Article 14 – Equality before law.
- Article 15 – Prohibition of discrimination.
- Article 19 – Freedom of expression and movement.
- Article 21 – Right to life and personal liberty (expanded interpretation).
- Article 25 – Freedom of conscience and religion.
- Judicial precedents:
- Rev. Stanislaus v. State of MP (1977) – No fundamental right to convert another person.
- Justice K.S. Puttaswamy (2017) – Right to privacy under Article 21.
- Recognition of live-in relationships under judicial interpretation.
Critical Dimensions
- Constitutional Angle
- Balance between Article 25 (religion) and Article 21 (personal liberty).
- Constitutional morality vs social morality.
- Scope of State’s regulatory power.
- Governance Issues
- Risk of misuse of anti-conversion laws.
- Need for clarity in procedural provisions.
- Protection mechanisms for vulnerable couples.
Way Forward
- Ensure anti-conversion laws are narrowly tailored.
- Prevent misuse through clear administrative guidelines.
- Strengthen police sensitization on Fundamental Rights.
- Promote constitutional awareness among citizens.
WHATSAPP TO SC: NO DATA SHARE
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
- Competition Commission of India (CCI) imposed a ₹213.14 crore penalty on WhatsApp for abuse of dominant position regarding its 2021 privacy policy.
- The penalty was upheld by the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT).
- WhatsApp and its parent company Meta challenged the decision before the Supreme Court of India.
- WhatsApp argued that concerns are addressed under the Digital Personal Data Protection Act (DPDP Act, 2023).
- The Supreme Court cautioned against breach of privacy and commercial exploitation of user data.
Key Points
- CCI’s Finding:
- Abuse of dominant position under Section 4 of the Competition Act, 2002.
- “Take-it-or-leave-it” consent mechanism.
- Users allegedly compelled to share data with Meta for continued service access.
- NCLAT Observations:
- Core principle: restore user choice.
- Non-essential data sharing must require express and revocable consent.
- Five-year advertisement data-sharing ban termed redundant due to opt-in/opt-out provision.
- WhatsApp’s Argument:
- End-to-end encryption protects private messages.
- No unlawful sharing of message content.
- DPDP Act provides comprehensive statutory framework for privacy protection.
- Competition Concern:
- Data accumulation strengthens network effects and market dominance.
- Privacy law and competition law address distinct but overlapping concerns.
Static Linkages
- Article 21 – Right to Life and Personal Liberty.
- Justice K.S. Puttaswamy v.
- Union of India (2017) – Right to Privacy recognised as Fundamental Right.
- Doctrine of Proportionality.
- Competition Act, 2002 – Abuse of Dominance (Section 4).
- Role of statutory and quasi-judicial bodies.
- Data as an economic resource in digital markets.
Critical Analysis
- Positives
- Strengthens user autonomy and informed consent.
- Recognises data concentration as a source of market power.
- Promotes accountability in dominant digital platforms.
- Aligns digital governance with constitutional privacy principles.
- Concerns
- Potential regulatory overlap between DPDP Act and Competition Act.
- Compliance burden on digital platforms.
- Jurisdictional issues in cross-border data flows.
- Difficulty in defining “essential” versus “non- essential” data.
Way Forward
- Institutional coordination between CCI and Data Protection Board.
- Clear guidelines on consent architecture and data minimisation.
- Periodic digital market audits.
- Strengthening user awareness and digital literacy.
- Balanced regulatory approach to protect innovation and fundamental rights.
ADOLESCENT MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
- The recent deaths of three adolescent girls in Ghaziabad (Uttar Pradesh) brought national attention to child and adolescent mental health vulnerabilities.
- The incident reflects a broader rise in anxiety, depression, ADHD, and digital addiction among young people.
- Economic Survey 2025–26 highlighted growing mental health challenges linked to excessive social media and screen exposure.
- India faces a significant shortage of trained child and adolescent mental health professionals.
Key Facts & Data
- National Mental Health Survey (MoHFW):
- 7–10% of adolescents suffer from diagnosable mental disorders.
- 5–7% of school-aged children have ADHD.
- India has <10,000 psychiatrists for 1.4+ billion population; very few specialize in child psychiatry.
- WHO (2019) guidelines cautioned against excessive screen time in children.
- Tele-MANAS launched under National Tele Mental Health Programme to expand access.
- Public health is a State subject (List II, Seventh Schedule).
- Mental Healthcare Act, 2017 recognizes the right to access mental healthcare services.
Static Linkages
- Early childhood = period of high neuroplasticity.
- Article 21 – Right to life includes dignity and mental wellbeing.
- Article 47 – Duty of State to improve public health.
- Human capital formation depends on health and education.
- Preventive healthcare reduces long-term fiscal burden.
- Social stigma affects access to healthcare.
Critical Issues
- Structural Gaps
- Acute shortage of mental health professionals.
- Weak school-based emotional support systems.
- Academic-centric education culture. Poor referral mechanisms.
- Digital Concerns
- Excessive screen time → sleep disturbance, poor attention, emotional dysregulation.
- Internet addiction emerging as behavioural disorder.
- Cyberbullying and social comparison pressures.
- Governance Challenges
- Fragmented implementation of NMHP.
- Urban-rural access disparity.
- Budgetary constraints.
- Social stigma delaying early intervention.
Way Forward
- Institutionalize school-based mental health screening.
- Mandatory training for teachers and frontline workers.
- Strengthen NMHP and integrate with Ayushman Bharat Health & Wellness Centres.
- Expand Tele-MANAS to rural and underserved areas.
- Develop clear digital usage guidelines in schools.
- Increase funding and seats in child psychiatry training.
- Promote parent and peer-support networks.
- Behavioural change campaigns to reduce stigma.
GREEN AMMONIA ENERGY SHIFT
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- At India Energy Week (January 2026), Prime Minister Narendra Modi highlighted $500 billion investment opportunities in India’s energy sector.
- Under the National Green Hydrogen Mission (2023), the Solar Energy Corporation of India (SECI) conducted a green ammonia tender under the SIGHT Programme.
- Aggregated demand: 7.24 lakh tonnes per annum across 13 fertiliser plants.
- 10-year fixed-price offtake agreements signed (auction concluded in 2025).
- Prices discovered were 40–50% lower than comparable global benchmarks.
Key Points
- Green Ammonia: Produced by combining nitrogen (from air) with green hydrogen (hydrogen produced via electrolysis using renewable energy).
- Used in: Fertilisers (urea), shipping fuel, power generation, hydrogen carrier.
- Discovered prices: ₹49.75–₹64.74/kg ($572– $744/tonne).
- Grey ammonia (gas-based) price: ~$515/tonne. Production-linked incentive support: ₹8.82/kg * ₹7.06/kg → ₹5.3/kg (declining support for initial years).
- Replaces ~30% of India’s imported ammonia.
- Linked to India’s target of 500 GW non-fossil capacity by 2030 and Net Zero by 2070.
Static Linkages
- Electrolysis process (NCERT Chemistry – Electrochemistry).
- Ammonia (NH₃) production via Haber-Bosch process (Industrial chemistry).
- Fertiliser subsidy burden (Economic Survey).
- Energy security and import dependence (~85% crude oil imports).
- Updated NDC commitments (UNFCCC submission, 2022).
- Renewable energy expansion under MNRE schemes.
Critical Analysis
- Positives
- Enhances energy independence.
- Reduces natural gas import vulnerability.
- Provides long-term price certainty via 10-year contracts.
- Positions India as potential global export hub.
- Aggregated procurement reduces cost through economies of scale.
- Challenges
- High capital cost of electrolysers.
- Renewable intermittency & storage gaps.
- Water availability issues for electrolysis.
- Need for global certification alignment.
- Risk of subsidy-driven market distortion.
Way Forward
- Strengthen domestic electrolyser manufacturing (PLI alignment).
- Develop green hydrogen/ammonia hubs near renewable clusters.
- Improve port and shipping infrastructure.
- Promote blended finance & risk mitigation instruments.
- Harmonise standards with EU and global markets.
AI FOR ALL
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- The AI Impact Summit (New Delhi, 2026) saw participation from 89 countries signing a voluntary declaration on AI democratisation and knowledge-sharing.
- India emerged as one of the largest AI user bases outside the U.S., reflecting rapid digital adoption.
- Debate centred around:
- Infrastructure dependence (GPUs, semiconductor supply chains).
- India’s strategic positioning in AI value chain (deployment vs model training).
- Global AI governance and Global South leadership.
Key Points
- National Strategy for AI (2018) by NITI Aayog – Vision: “AI for All”.
- IndiaAI Mission under Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology – aims to build compute capacity, datasets, skilling.
- AI training requires high-performance GPUs (parallel processing architecture).
- Data centres → high electricity consumption → energy security implications.
- Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 – governs data processing.
- Semiconductor push under India Semiconductor Mission.
Important Concepts
- Artificial Intelligence → Machine-based systems performing tasks requiring human intelligence.
- Comparative Advantage → India’s labour-cost advantage may reduce in capital-intensive AI ecosystem.
- Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) → Aadhaar, UPI, ONDC as innovation enablers.
- Data Sovereignty → Control over citizens’ data within national jurisdiction.
- Multilateralism → Cooperative global governance framework.
Critical Analysis
- Opportunities
- Large domestic market → bargaining power in global AI ecosystem.
- Strong DPI model → scalable AI deployment.
- Potential Global South leadership in AI governance.
- Economic transformation in health, agriculture, education.
- Challenges
- Heavy dependence on imported GPUs and advanced chips.
- High capital and energy costs of AI infrastructure.
- Risk of becoming only a “deployment hub” rather than innovation hub.
- Voluntary global AI norms lack enforceability.
- Risk of widening digital divide (“Inference Gap”).
Way Forward
- Build sovereign compute infrastructure (public-private partnerships).
- Promote indigenous foundational model training.
- Integrate renewable energy in data centres.
- Create binding AI safety and ethics frameworks.
- Skilling initiatives for AI workforce.
- Balance innovation with privacy and constitutional safeguards.
STICK TOGETHER
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva visited India and held talks with Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
- Both countries agreed to double bilateral trade to $30 billion by 2030.
- Agreements signed in:
- Critical minerals
- Steel and mining
- Digital cooperation
- Visit occurred amid:
- 50% U.S. tariffs imposed on India and Brazil.
- U.S. Supreme Court striking down tariff rationale under IEEPA.
- Leaders reaffirmed commitment to multilateralism and Global South coordination.
- Both are key members of BRICS, IBSA, and G4.
Key Points
- Trade & Economy
- Current trade: ~ $15 billion.
- Target: $30 billion by 2030.
- Trade basket:
- India imports crude oil, gold, soy oil.
- India exports pharmaceuticals, chemicals, machinery.
- Focus on supply chain diversification beyond China.
- Strategic Sectors
- Critical minerals: Lithium, rare earths (EVs, semiconductors, renewable energy).
- Biofuels:
- Brazil: Global ethanol leader.
- India: E20 blending target by 2025–26 (National Biofuel Policy).
- Digital & AI cooperation: Participation in AI Impact Summit.
- Geopolitical Context
- High U.S. tariffs affecting both countries.
- Concerns over BRICS expansion, Russia oil trade, Iran trade.
- Lula’s call for “bloc-based negotiation” to counter unilateralism.
Static Linkages
- Article 51: Promotion of international peace and security.
- WTO Principles:
- Most Favoured Nation (MFN).
- Rules-based multilateral trade.
- South-South Cooperation doctrine.
- Strategic Autonomy in India’s foreign policy.
- Multipolar World Order concept.
- Energy security and ethanol blending (Economic Survey references).
Critical Analysis
- Significance
- Strengthens Global South leadership.
- Enhances coordination in BRICS and IBSA.
- Promotes diversification of mineral and energy supply chains.
- Supports push for UNSC reform via G-4.
- Counters protectionism through multilateral engagement.
- Challenges
- Divergences within BRICS.
- Limited complementarities in trade structure.
- Risk of secondary sanctions.
- Balancing U.S. relations with BRICS commitments.
- Global trade uncertainty due to rising protectionism.
Way Forward
- Institutionalise India–Brazil annual strategic dialogue.
- Expand cooperation in green hydrogen and renewables.
- Enhance private sector investment and value-added trade.
- Coordinate at WTO to defend developing country interests.
- Maintain strategic balance between U.S., BRICS, and Global South partners.
- Strengthen critical mineral partnerships under national missions.
IDFC FIRST BANK RS 590CR FRAUD
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- A leading private sector bank reported a ₹590 crore fraud involving forged physical cheque transactions.
- Fraud confined to one branch (Chandigarh) and a Haryana Government entity account.
- Involved employee collusion with external parties.
- ₹490 crore detected during reconciliation; ₹100 crore self-identified internally.
- Police complaint filed; forensic audit initiated. RBI monitoring the development.
- Partial recovery expected through Employee Dishonesty Insurance.
Key Facts
- Type of Fraud: Internal (employee collusion) + external beneficiaries.
- Mode: Forged physical cheques (non-digital).
- Operational Risk: Falls under Basel norms classification.
- Fraud Reporting: RBI mandates reporting of frauds above specified thresholds under Master Directions on Frauds.
- Insurance Mechanism: Employee Dishonesty Insurance covers internal fraud losses.
- Reconciliation Mechanism: Account mismatch detected during balance transfer process.
Static Linkages
- RBI’s powers under Banking Regulation Act, 1949.
- Fraud risk classification: Credit risk vs Operational risk vs Market risk.
- Basel III norms – Capital adequacy for operational risk.
- Corporate Governance principles – Accountability & internal controls.
- Role of statutory and forensic audits.
- Financial Stability and depositor confidence.
- Public fund management and fiduciary responsibility.
Critical Issues
- Governance Gaps
- Failure of internal controls despite digitization.
- Weak segregation of duties at branch level.
- Regulatory Oversight
- Importance of RBI supervision and inspection framework.
- Need for stronger real-time fraud monitoring.
- Ethical Concerns
- Breach of fiduciary trust.
- Integrity failure at operational level.
- Financial Stability
- Impact on depositor trust and market confidence.
- Importance of adequate capitalization to absorb shocks.
Way Forward
- Strengthen cheque-clearing verification protocols.
- Rotation of staff in sensitive positions.
- Strengthening internal audit systems.
- Real-time reconciliation for government accounts.
- Promote digital payment systems to reduce physical instrument risks.
- Strengthen whistleblower protection mechanisms.
OIL IMPORTS & 500BN U.S GOAL
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- India postponed its trade delegation visit to the U.S. to finalise an Interim Trade Agreement (ITA).
- The postponement follows a U.S. Supreme Court ruling restricting the President’s ability to impose tariffs through executive authority.
- The development has implications for:
- India’s crude oil imports from Russia and the U.S.
- Tariff reductions on U.S. imports into India
- Ongoing bilateral trade negotiations
Key Developments
- Tariff-Related Implications
- The U.S. President cannot impose certain tariffs unilaterally without legislative backing.
- Reduces immediate tariff-based pressure on India regarding Russian oil imports.
- Future tariff imposition would require Congressional approval.
- Energy Trade Trends
- Russia’s share in India’s crude imports declined to below 25% (Dec 2025).
- U.S. crude imports increased (~31% YoY).
- U.S. crude priced ~8% higher than Russian crude.
- India intends to import $500 billion worth of
- U.S. goods (energy, aircraft, tech, coal) over 5 years.
- Impact of Interim Agreement Delay Positive for Domestic Industry:
- Protection from lower-tariff U.S. imports. Negative for Import-Dependent Sectors:
- Higher cost of oil, LNG, aircraft parts, telecom equipment, data-centre components.
- Electronic parts imports grew 117% (Apr–Dec 2025).
Static Concepts
- Tariff as a fiscal tool under legislative authority.
- Separation of Powers & Judicial Review.
- Balance of Payments (Current Account).
- Energy Security and Strategic Autonomy.
- WTO Principles: MFN & Reciprocity.
- Trade Diversification and Supply Chain Resilience.
Critical Analysis
- Prelims Focus
- WTO principles
- Trade agreements
- Current Account Deficit
- Energy import trends
- Analytical Dimensions for Mains Strategic
- Reduced U.S. tariff threat enhances India’s negotiating leverage.
- Maintains flexibility in Russian oil procurement.
- Economic
- Delayed tariff cuts increase input costs.
- Impacts manufacturing competitiveness and inflation.
- Geopolitical
- Balancing relations between U.S., Russia, and EU.
- Strategic autonomy in energy sourcing.
Way Forward
- Diversify crude oil sources while ensuring price stability.
- Accelerate renewable energy transition (solar, green hydrogen).
- Negotiate a calibrated Interim Agreement protecting sensitive sectors.
- Strengthen domestic manufacturing under Make in India.
- Maintain WTO-consistent trade diplomacy