New Batch Starting Soon . . .   Chandigarh Centre: 8288021344   New Batch Starting Soon . . .   Chandigarh Centre: 8288021344   New Batch Starting Soon . . .   Chandigarh Centre: 8288021344   New Batch Starting Soon . . .   Chandigarh Centre: 8288021344

07 April 2026

Huge Turnout in Three States | Iran Truce Shaky Over Hormuz | West Asia War Hits India Growth | Scholarships Key To Academic | Nari Shakti Drives Next Decade | Bengal Blues | Timley Inaction | Post-Iran war Opens Space For India | Trump Should Rein Netanyahu In | Delhi, Dhaka Must Avoid Short-Termism

HUGE TURNOUT IN THREE STATES

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Conect of the News

  • Assembly elections in Assam, Kerala, and Puducherry recorded historic voter turnout:
    • Assam – 85.91% (highest ever)
    • Puducherry – 89.87% (highest ever)
    • Kerala – 78.27% (close to 1987 record)  
  • Elections conducted by the Election
  • Commission of India across 296 Assembly constituencies.
  • Total electorate: 5.31+ crore voters.
  • Bypolls held in Karnataka, Nagaland, and Tripura.
  • Counting of votes scheduled for May 4.

Key Points

  • Massive electoral exercise:
    • ~63,000 polling stations
    • ~2.5 lakh polling personnel deployed  
  • Electoral Roll Reforms:
    • Special Intensive Revision (SIR) undertaken for accuracy.
  • Voter-Friendly Initiatives:
    • Candidate photographs on EVM ballot units  
    • Improved voter information slips
    • Mobile deposit facilities
    • Cap of 1,200 voters per polling station
  • Participation Trends:
    • Several polling booths in Assam reported >95% turnout
  • Concerns Reported:
    • Instances of violence
    • Allegations of proxy voting
    • Concerns regarding EVM security

Static Linkages

  • Article 324 → Powers of Election Commission 
  • Article 326 → Universal Adult Franchise
  • Representation of the People Act, 1950 → Electoral rolls
  • Representation of the People Act, 1951 → Conduct of elections
  • Free and Fair Elections → Basic Structure Doctrine (SC judgments)
  • EVM & VVPAT → Ensuring transparency and verifiability
  • Model Code of Conduct (MCC) → Ethical electoral conduct

Critical Analysis

  • Significance
    • Reflects deepening democratic participation
    • Indicates greater political awareness and mobilisation
    • Demonstrates administrative efficiency of election machinery
    • Strengthens legitimacy of elected governments
  • Challenges
    • Electoral malpractices (proxy voting, violence)
    • Trust deficit in EVMs among sections of stakeholders
    • Regional disparities in turnout (urban vs rural)
    • Influence of identity politics and polarization
  • Stakeholder Perspective
    • Voters → Increased awareness but concerns about fairness
    • Political parties → Competing narratives on mandate
    • Election Commission → Balancing scale, neutrality, credibility

Way Forward

  • Strengthen VVPAT-based audit mechanisms  
  • Enhance transparency in EVM functioning
  • Promote urban voter participation campaigns  
  • Use technology (AI, webcasting) to curb malpractice
  • Introduce remote voting options for migrant workers
  • Ensure strict enforcement of MCC and electoral laws

IRAN TRUCE SHAKY OVER HOMRUZ

KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
  • A tentative ceasefire between Iran and Israel was announced after escalating hostilities.
  • Soon after, Israel conducted heavy airstrikes on Beirut in Lebanon, causing over 300 deaths and more than 1,100 injuries.
  • Iran accused Israel of violating the ceasefire and warned of strong retaliation.
  • Iran indicated possible disruption in the Strait of Hormuz, a key global oil transit route.
  • The U.S. and Iran are expected to hold talks amid tensions over Iran’s nuclear enrichment program.

Key Points

  • Ceasefire Fragility: Immediate violations reflect lack of trust and weak enforcement.
  • Lebanon’s Strategic Position: Seen as part of Iran-backed “Resistance Axis” (including Hezbollah).
  • Humanitarian Impact: Large-scale civilian casualties in Beirut.
  • Energy Security Concern:
    • Strait of Hormuz carries nearly 20% of global oil supply.
  • Nuclear Dispute:
    • Iran insists on its right to uranium enrichment under peaceful use provisions.
  • Geopolitical Implications:
    • U.S. involvement signals broader West Asian strategic contest.

Static Linkages

  • Strait of Hormuz connects the Persian Gulf with the Gulf of Oman and Arabian Sea.
  • Principle of freedom of navigation under UNCLOS.
  • Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT):
    • Permits peaceful nuclear use but restricts weaponization.
  • West Asian geopolitics linked with:
    • Proxy conflicts
    • Sectarian divides
  • India’s crude oil import dependence (~85%)— Energy security concern.

Critical Analysis

  • Positive Dimensions
    • Indicates scope for diplomatic engagement despite tensions.
    • U.S.–Iran talks could revive nuclear negotiation frameworks.
    • Reinforces need for multilateral conflict resolution mechanisms.
  • Concerns
    • Ceasefire violations reduce credibility of agreements.
    • Civilian casualties raise concerns under international humanitarian law.
    • Possible disruption of Strait of Hormuz threatens global energy supply.
    • Nuclear disagreement increases proliferation risks.
    • Risk of regional escalation involving multiple actors.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen ceasefire monitoring through neutral international mechanisms (e.g., UN-led oversight).
  • Promote sustained diplomatic dialogue including regional stakeholders.
  • Ensure adherence to international humanitarian law.
  • Secure global energy routes through multilateral cooperation.
  • Revive nuclear agreements with balanced safeguards and verification.

WEST ASIA WAR HITS INDIA GROWTH

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • World Bank has revised India’s GDP growth forecast for 2026–27 to 6.6%, down from 7.2%.
  • The revision is attributed to ongoing conflict in West Asia (Middle East) affecting global energy markets.
  • The projection assumes prolonged disruption in oil and gas supply till end-2026.
  • The estimate comes from the India Development Update (2026), companion to the South Asia Economic Update 2026.
  • South Asia’s overall growth is also projected to slow to 6.3% in 2026 (from 7% in 2025).

Key Points

  • Growth Drivers (Earlier Projection – 7.2%)Strong momentum from Q4 of FY26
  • Pro-growth reforms and macroeconomic stability
  • Revised Growth (6.6%) due to:Rising energy prices (oil & gas)
  • Reduced household consumption
  • Lower government spending flexibility
  • Sectoral Impact:Industrial growth expected to decline to 7.5% (from 8.8%)
  • Manufacturing (electronics, automobiles) remains a key support
  • Services sector (business, hospitality) faces input cost pressures
  • External Sector Risks:India’s high dependence on energy imports
  • Lower export demand from Gulf economies  
  • Potential fall in remittances due to labour market disruption in Gulf
  • Fiscal Concerns:Subsidies and excise cuts to cushion fuel prices may derail fiscal consolidation

Static Linkages

  • India imports ~85% of its crude oil requirement (Economic Survey trends). 
  • Oil price rise leads to cost-push inflation → impacts CPI and WPI.
  • Twin deficit problem: Fiscal deficit + Current Account Deficit worsen with high oil prices.
  • Remittances form a key part of India’s external sector (~$100+ billion annually, RBI trends).
  • Industrial growth measured via Index of Industrial Production (IIP).
  • GDP estimation based on Gross Value Added (GVA) across sectors.

Critical Analysis

  • Positives / Resilience Factors
    • Strong domestic demand base cushions shocks 
    • Diversified economy with strong services sector
    • Government’s reform agenda (PLI schemes, infrastructure push)
    • Manufacturing sectors like electronics & automobiles show resilience
  • Concerns / Challenges
    • High energy import dependence → vulnerability to geopolitical shocks
    • Inflationary pressure due to fuel price rise  
    • Risk to fiscal discipline due to subsidies
    • Declining export demand from Gulf region
    • Possible fall in remittances, affecting current account
  • Stakeholder Perspectives
    • Government: Balancing growth vs fiscal prudence
    • Industry: Facing rising input costs and demand slowdown
    • Consumers: Reduced purchasing power due to inflation
    • Global institutions: Emphasizing private sector-led growth

Way Forward

  • Diversify energy sources via renewables and strategic reserves
  • Accelerate domestic manufacturing under Make in India
  • Enhance export diversification beyond Gulf markets
  • Strengthen fiscal consolidation roadmap while targeting subsidies
  • Promote private investment and ease of doing business
  • Boost skilling and employment generation for demographic dividend

SCHOLARSHIPS KEYS TO ACADEMIC

KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
  • India aims to achieve 50% Gross Enrolment Ratio (GER) in higher education as envisioned in the National Education Policy 2020.
  • Current GER stands at 29.5% (2022–23) despite expansion in institutions from 51,534 (2014–15) to over 70,000.
  • Key concern: capacity expansion alone is insufficient; access, affordability, and quality remain barriers.
  • Scholarships are increasingly being viewed as central policy tools, not peripheral financial aids.

Key Points

  • Three major challenges:Access disparities across regions and social groups
  • Affordability constraints (high private cost of education)
  • Quality concerns affecting employability outcomes
  • Existing initiatives:National Scholarship Portal – single-window system for multiple schemes
  • Central Sector Scheme of Scholarship for College and University Students – ~82,000 scholarships annually
  • Interest subsidy and credit guarantee schemes for education loans
  • Key insight: “Seats alone do not create students”; financial and social barriers limit participation.
  • Scholarships can also provide:
    • Mentorship and career guidance
    • Exposure and leadership development
    • Social mobility and inclusion

Static Linkages

  • Gross Enrolment Ratio = Enrolled population (18–23 age group) ÷ total population in that age group
  • Directive Principles emphasize promotion of education and equal opportunity
  • Human capital formation is a key driver of economic growth
  • Public expenditure on education target: 6% of GDP (policy recommendation)
  • Social justice principle: equitable access to education for disadvantaged groups

Critical Analysis

  • Positives
    • Scholarships improve equity and inclusion by supporting disadvantaged groups
    • Enhance GER without excessive infrastructure burden
    • Promote meritocracy and diversity in institutions  
    • Strengthen human capital and employability
  • Concerns
    • Limited number of scholarships relative to demand  
    • Fragmented schemes across ministries → inefficiency
    • Overemphasis on financial aid only, neglecting mentoring/support
    • Risk of regional and social exclusion if poorly targeted
    • Loan-based financing may increase debt burden on students
  • Stakeholder Perspectives
    • Students: Need affordability + certainty of support  
    • Institutions: Need incentives for inclusive admissions
    • Government: Balancing fiscal constraints with expansion goals
    • Private sector: Role in philanthropy and endowments

Way Forward

  • Shift scholarships from “add-on” to “core policy instrument”
  • Design multi-year scholarships for stability
  • Introduce region-specific and district-focused scholarships
  • Link scholarships to skill-demand sectors (AI, healthcare, manufacturing)
  • Promote public-private partnerships and philanthropic endowments
  • Incentivize institutions through performance-linked funding
  • Integrate scholarships with mentorship, internships, and career support
  • Ensure data-driven targeting via digital platforms
NARI SHAKTI, DRIVES NEXT DECADE
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
  • Over the past decade, India has undertaken a policy-driven expansion of women’s empowerment, shifting from welfare to infrastructure-based inclusion.
  • Large-scale flagship schemes have targeted financial inclusion, health, clean energy, and entrepreneurship for women.
  • Recent discourse emphasizes moving from policy creation to effective last-mile delivery and saturation.
  • The Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam (Women’s Reservation Act) is seen as a transformative step toward institutional empowerment and political representation.
  • The focus is now on policy penetration, outcome-based governance, and leadership participation of women in India’s development trajectory.

Key Points

  • Financial InclusionPM Jan Dhan Yojana: ~57 crore accounts; >55% held by women.
  • Self-Help Groups (SHGs)~10 crore women across 90 lakh SHGs, driving grassroots economic activity.
  • Clean Energy & WelfarePM Ujjwala Yojana: 10.5 crore households covered, reducing indoor pollution and drudgery.
  • Entrepreneurship~70% of MUDRA loans allocated to women entrepreneurs.
  • Labour Force ParticipationFemale Labour Force Participation Rate (FLFPR) ~37%, showing recovery.
  • Health InitiativesAyushman Bharat, PMSMA improving maternal and general healthcare access.
  • Social ChangeBeti Bachao Beti Padhao targeting gender bias and declining child sex ratio.
  • Governance ReformEmphasis on district- level monitoring, convergence, and accountability for last-mile delivery.

Static Linkages

  • Fundamental Rights: Equality before law, prohibition of discrimination (Articles 14, 15, 16)
  • Directive Principles: Article 39(a), 39(d), 42 (women’s welfare and equal pay)
  • 73rd & 74th Constitutional Amendments: Reservation for women in local governance
  • Human Development Indicators: Gender Development Index (GDI), Gender Inequality Index (GII)
  • Economic Survey: Link between women’s participation and GDP growth
  • SHG-Bank Linkage Programme (NABARD)
  • Concepts: Inclusive growth, demographic dividend, social capital

Critical Analysis

  • Positives
    • Shift to women-led development rather than welfare dependency
    • Strong financial inclusion architecture (DBT, banking access)
    • Improved health, dignity, and reduction in drudgery
    • Rise in entrepreneurship and SHG-based livelihoods
    • Potential for better policy outcomes via political representation
  • Challenges
    • Last-mile delivery gaps and uneven implementation
    • Regional and socio-economic disparities  
    • Low awareness and digital divide
    • Persistent patriarchal norms limiting agency
    • Capacity constraints in newly emerging women leadership

Way Forward

  • Achieve saturation of schemes through targeted identification
  • Strengthen district-level monitoring and accountability mechanisms
  • Ensure convergence of schemes (health, finance, livelihood)
  • Invest in capacity-building, training, and leadership development
  • Shift from output to outcome-based evaluation
  •  Promote digital literacy and access for women  
  • Institutionalize feedback-driven policy design

BENGAL BLUES

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • Assembly elections in West Bengal scheduled in two phases (April 23 and April 29, 2026).
  • Electoral contest dominated by issues related to voter identity and electoral roll revision rather than governance.
  • Special Intensive Revision (SIR) conducted by the Election Commission of India led to deletion of ~91 lakh voters (~12%).
  • Disproportionate impact reported on minority communities and border districts.
  • Over 60 lakh voters flagged for discrepancies; judicial scrutiny by Supreme Court of India led to ~27 lakh disenfranchised.
  • Tribunal-based remedy remains uncertain before elections.

Key Points

  • Electoral roll revision is a statutory exercise under the Representation of the People Act, 1950.
  • Large-scale deletions raise concerns over inclusiveness and procedural fairness.
  • Burden of proof placed on voters to establish eligibility.
  • Political polarization around electoral integrity vs exclusion narrative.
  • Shift from development issues (employment, industrial growth) to identity politics.
  • Raises concerns regarding free and fair elections (basic structure doctrine).

Static Linkages

  • Article 324 – Superintendence, direction and control of elections
  • Article 326 – Universal Adult Suffrage
  • Representation of the People Act, 1950 (electoral rolls)
  • Representation of the People Act, 1951 (conduct of elections)
  • Basic Structure Doctrine – Free and Fair Elections  
  • Article 14 – Equality before law
  • Rule of Law and Natural Justice principles  
  • Federalism and Centre-State relations

Critical Analysis

  • Positives
    • Periodic revision ensures removal of duplicate and bogus voters.
    • Enhances credibility of electoral rolls if conducted impartially.
    • Judicial intervention ensures constitutional safeguards.
  • Negatives
    • Mass deletion risks disenfranchisement of genuine voters.
    • Possible violation of equality and inclusiveness (Article 14).
    • Administrative burden on vulnerable populations.
    • Timing close to elections undermines electoral confidence.
    • Politicisation weakens neutrality of Election Commission.
  • Key Issues
    • Balancing electoral integrity vs voter inclusion.
    • Institutional credibility of ECI.
    • Impact on democratic participation.

Way Forward

  • Transparent and verifiable electoral roll revision mechanisms.
  • Time-bound grievance redressal before elections.  
  • Avoid large-scale revisions near election schedule.
  • Use technology with safeguards (de-duplication, digitisation).
  • Independent oversight and audits of electoral processes.
  • Promote issue-based electoral discourse (development-focused).

TIMELY INACTION

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • The Reserve Bank of India’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) decided to keep the repo rate unchanged, adopting a “wait and watch” approach.
  • The decision comes amid global economic uncertainty, particularly due to the West Asia conflict affecting supply chains and energy prices.
  • The RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra projected GDP growth at 6.9% for 2026–27, while acknowledging high uncertainty.
  • Inflation is expected to rise to around 4.6%, mainly driven by supply-side pressures rather than demand.
  • External risks include tensions around the Strait of Hormuz, U.S. trade actions, and possible El Niño impact on monsoon.

Key Points

  • Status quo on repo rate to balance inflation- growth trade-off.
  • Supply-side inflation: Driven by fuel costs, logistics disruptions, not excess demand.
  • Growth concerns:
    • Industrial slowdown flagged by World Bank  
    • Weak consumption (households + government tightening spending)
  • Forecast uncertainties:
    • Volatile global crude prices
    • Trade tensions (tariffs, investigations)  Monsoon variability (El Niño risk)
  • Transmission challenge:
    • Repo rate changes affect:  Inflation (via demand compression)
    • Growth (via credit cost changes)
  • Policy rationale: Rate hike would not reduce supply-driven inflation but would hurt growth further.

Static Linkages

  • Monetary policy tools: Repo rate, Reverse repo rate, CRR, SLR
  • Inflation types: Demand-pull vs Cost-push inflation
  • Phillips Curve: Inflation–unemployment trade-off  GDP components: Consumption, Investment,
  • Government expenditure, Net exports
  • Monetary Policy Committee (MPC): Composition, voting, inflation targeting (4% ± 2%)
  • Transmission mechanism of monetary policy
  • External sector vulnerabilities: Oil imports, current account deficit
  • Role of expectations in macroeconomic stability
  • The Reserve Bank of India’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) decided to keep the repo rate unchanged, adopting a “wait and watch” approach.
  • The decision comes amid global economic uncertainty, particularly due to the West Asia conflict affecting supply chains and energy prices.
  • The RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra projected GDP growth at 6.9% for 2026–27, while acknowledging high uncertainty.
  • Inflation is expected to rise to around 4.6%, mainly driven by supply-side pressures rather than demand.
  • External risks include tensions around the Strait of Hormuz, U.S. trade actions, and possible El Niño impact on monsoon.

Key Points

  • Status quo on repo rate to balance inflation- growth trade-off.
  • Supply-side inflation: Driven by fuel costs, logistics disruptions, not excess demand.
  • Growth concerns:
    • Industrial slowdown flagged by World Bank  
    • Weak consumption (households + government tightening spending)
  • Forecast uncertainties:
    • Volatile global crude prices
    • Trade tensions (tariffs, investigations)  Monsoon variability (El Niño risk)
  • Transmission challenge:
    • Repo rate changes affect:  Inflation (via demand compression)
    • Growth (via credit cost changes)
  • Policy rationale: Rate hike would not reduce supply-driven inflation but would hurt growth further.

Static Linkages

  • Monetary policy tools: Repo rate, Reverse repo rate, CRR, SLR
  • Inflation types: Demand-pull vs Cost-push inflation
  • Phillips Curve: Inflation–unemployment trade-off  
  • GDP components: Consumption, Investment,
  • Government expenditure, Net exports
  • Monetary Policy Committee (MPC): Composition, voting, inflation targeting (4% ± 2%)
  • Transmission mechanism of monetary policy  
  • External sector vulnerabilities: Oil imports, current account deficit
  • Role of expectations in macroeconomic stability

Critical Analysis

  • Advantages
    • Prevents premature tightening, supporting growth
    • Correctly identifies supply-side inflation, where monetary policy has limited role
    • Maintains policy stability and investor confidence  
    • Avoids negative impact on credit flow and investment
  • Limitations
    • Inflation may remain sticky in short term
    • Risk of erosion of RBI credibility if inflation persists above target
    • Real interest rates may become less effective
  • Challenges
    • Managing stagflation-like situation (low growth + high inflation)
    • High dependence on imported crude oil
    • Uncertainty due to global geopolitics and climate factors

Way Forward

  • Focus on supply-side measures (fuel tax rationalisation, logistics improvement)
  • Strengthen energy security (diversification, renewables)
  • Improve monetary-fiscal coordination  
  • Enhance data-based forward guidance
  • Build resilience against external shocks and trade disruption. 

POST- IRAN WAR OPEN SPACE FOR INDIA

KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
  • A tentative ceasefire has been declared after a prolonged conflict involving Iran, United States, and Israel, though it signals only a pause rather than a definitive end to hostilities.
  • Negotiations for a durable peace are expected, with Pakistan acting as a key intermediary and hosting talks.
  • The conflict has exposed vulnerabilities in the existing US-led security architecture in West Asia and raised questions about its effectiveness.
  • The war has had broader geopolitical consequences, including reputational damage to the US and increased strategic space for China and Russia.
  • India remains a significant stakeholder in the region but has largely been a passive observer during the conflict.

Key Points

  • Ceasefire reflects strategic compulsions rather than resolution of core disputes.
  • Iran appears to have gained leverage in negotiations due to resilience and asymmetric capabilities (missiles, drones).
  • Pakistan’s diplomatic role signals its re- emergence as a geopolitical intermediary.
  • US inability to mobilize NATO/European allies highlights fragmentation of Western unity.
  • Gulf countries are reassessing reliance on US security guarantees.
  • Potential decline of US-led regional security architecture.
  • Opportunities for diversification of defence partnerships in West Asia.
  • India faces challenges on both western (West Asia instability) and eastern fronts (China- Taiwan dynamics).

Static Linkages

  • Balance of Power theory in international relations.
  • Strategic autonomy in foreign policy.
  • Role of intermediaries in diplomacy (Track-I diplomacy).
  • Energy security and dependence on West Asia.
  • Defence cooperation and military alliances.
  • Concepts of multipolar world order.
  • Impact of war on global inflation and supply chains.

Critical Analysis

  • Pros
    • Opportunity for India to expand diplomatic and strategic engagement in West Asia.
    • Emergence of multipolarity aligns with India’s strategic autonomy.
    • Economic opportunities in post-war reconstruction.
  • Cons
    • Threat to India’s energy security and trade routes.
    • Increased instability in India’s extended neighbourhood.
    • Pakistan’s enhanced diplomatic role may impact India’s interests.
    • Reduced US focus on Indo-Pacific could strengthen China’s position.

Way Forward

  • Maintain balanced relations with Iran, Israel, and Gulf countries.
  • Strengthen energy diversification and strategic reserves.
  • Expand defence and maritime cooperation with West Asian partners.
  • Enhance diplomatic presence in regional security dialogues.
  • Monitor China’s expanding influence in both West Asia and Indo-Pacific.

TRUMP SHOULD REIN NETANYAHU IN

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • A fragile two-week ceasefire between the United States and Iran is under strain ahead of scheduled diplomatic talks.
  • Benjamin Netanyahu intensified military operations against Hezbollah in Lebanon, leading to heavy casualties.
  • Iran reportedly responded by closing the Strait of Hormuz, a key global energy route.
  • Disagreement persists over whether Lebanon was included in ceasefire provisions.
  • Rising tensions risk escalation into a broader regional conflict involving major powers.

Key Points

  • Ceasefire Fragility: Lack of clarity and trust deficit among stakeholders.
  • Israel’s Military Strategy:
    • Continued strikes despite ceasefire.
    • Plan to create a security zone south of Litani River.
  • Humanitarian Crisis in Lebanon:  
    • Over 1 million displaced.
    • More than 1,700 casualties reported.
  • Iran’s Strategic Move:
    • Closure of Strait of Hormuz threatens global oil supply.
  • Global Reactions:
    • Criticism from European nations and the EU.
    • US seen as the only actor capable of influencing Israel.
  • Hezbollah Factor:
    • Emerged after 1982 Lebanon War.
    • Acts as both militant group and political actor in Lebanon.

Static Linkages

  • Strait of Hormuz handles ~20% of global petroleum trade (Energy Geography – NCERT).
  • Concept of ceasefire vs armistice vs peace treaty (International Relations basics).
  • UN Charter – Article 2(4): Prohibition on use of force.
  • Geneva Conventions: Protection of civilians during conflict.
  • West Asia geopolitics:
    • Proxy wars and sectarian divide (Shia– Sunni dynamics).
  • India’s Energy Security:
    • ~85% crude oil import dependence (Economic Survey).
  • Diaspora and evacuation diplomacy (e.g., Operation Ganga, Operation Raahat).

Critical Analysis

  • Security vs Humanitarian Concerns:
    • Israel’s security objectives vs civilian protection obligations.
  • Erosion of Ceasefire Norms:
    • Undermines diplomatic credibility and peace processes.
    • Risk of Regional Escalation:
    • Possible Iran–Israel–US confrontation.
  • Economic Implications:
    • Oil supply disruption → inflationary pressures globally.
  • Complex Conflict Structure:
    • Presence of non-state actors like Hezbollah complicates negotiations.

Way Forward

  • Enforce ceasefire through international monitoring mechanisms.
  • Greater diplomatic engagement led by major powers and the UN.
  • Ensure freedom of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz.
  • Immediate humanitarian assistance and reconstruction support.
  • Long-term political dialogue addressing root causes of conflict.

DELHI, DHAKA MUST AVOID SHORT – TERMISM

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Connect of the News

  • Political transition in Bangladesh after the ouster of Sheikh Hasina in August 2024.
  • Electoral victory of Bangladesh Nationalist Party led by Tarique Rahman.
  • Visit of Bangladesh Foreign Minister to India indicates efforts to reset bilateral relations.
  • Bangladesh raised demand for extradition of former leadership.

Key Points

  • Extradition request via International Crimes Tribunal:
    • Considered politically sensitive
    • India unlikely to comply due to due process concerns
  • Ganga Water Treaty:
    • Signed in 1996 for 30 years  Renewal due in 2026
  • Bangladesh’s demands:
    • Increased supply of fuel and fertilisers  
  • Areas of cooperation:
    • Visa normalisation
    • Border management (4,156 km boundary) 
    • Trade and connectivity
  • Strategic relevance:
    • Stability in Northeast India
    • Regional cooperation under BIMSTEC

Static Linkages

  • Neighbourhood First Policy
  • Act East Policy
  • Extradition Act, 1962
  • River water-sharing principles
  • Border management and internal security  
  • Role of Northeast India in connectivity
  • Regional groupings: BIMSTEC vs SAARC

Critical Analysis

  • Positives
    • Opportunity to reset ties beyond regime- specific engagement
    • Strengthening economic cooperation (trade, energy, connectivity)
    • Enhances India’s strategic position in Bay of Bengal
  • Challenges
    • Political instability in Bangladesh
    • Extradition issue may create diplomatic friction
    • Water-sharing disputes remain sensitive
    • Minority-related concerns affecting bilateral perception
    • Expanding Chinese influence in Bangladesh
  • Stakeholders
    • India: security, connectivity, regional influence
    • Bangladesh: sovereignty, economic development
    • Northeast India: stability and access to markets

Way Forward

  • Insulate bilateral ties from domestic political changes
  • Ensure timely renewal of Ganga Water Treaty with data transparency
  • Strengthen border management using technology
  • Expand energy cooperation and grid integration
  • Enhance connectivity (road, rail, inland waterways)
  • Use BIMSTEC for strengthening regional cooperation
  • Promote people-to-people engagement