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26 February 2026

Modi: India Stands With Israel | Bengal Courts Stall Over SIRs | Haryana Edu Outlay Slips Debt | Loose Link Doomed Satellite | Faith, Dignity & Rights Balance | Bottled Water Safety Myth | A Jab Well Done | Demagogue Salesman | The Space Between US- And How To Bridge It

MODI: INDIA STANDS WITH ISRAEL

 

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressed the Knesset.
  • Condemned the October 7, 2023 Hamas attack as a terrorist act and reiterated India’s zero- tolerance policy on terrorism.
  • Expressed support for the UNSC-endorsed Gaza Peace Initiative, emphasizing a just and durable peace including the Palestine issue.
  • Held talks with Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu on regional security and bilateral cooperation.
  • Supported normalization efforts under the Abraham Accords.
  • Announced progress on India–Israel Free Trade Agreement (FTA) and digital financial linkages.

Key Points

  • India follows a consistent zero-tolerance approach to terrorism (UAPA, NIA Act).
  • India supports a two-state solution and peaceful resolution of the Israel–Palestine conflict.
  • India–Israel diplomatic relations established in 1992.
  • Bilateral trade (excluding defence) ~USD 10 billion (recent official data).
  • Cooperation areas:
    • Defence and security
    • Agriculture (Indo-Israel Agricultural Project – Centres of Excellence)
    • Water management (drip irrigation, desalination)
    • Cybersecurity and innovation
  • Jewish communities historically present in:
    • Kerala (Cochin Jews)  Mumbai (Bene Israel)
    • Kolkata (Baghdadi Jews

Static Linkages

  • Article 51 – Promotion of international peace and security.
  • UN Security Council – Binding resolutions under Chapter VII.
  • India’s foreign policy principles:
    • Strategic autonomy
    • Multi-alignment
  • Energy security:
    • ~60% of India’s crude imports from West Asia.
  • Indian diaspora in Gulf region (~8–9 million).
  • Defence indigenisation under Atmanirbhar Bharat.

Critical Analysis

  • Positives
    • Strengthens strategic and defence cooperation.
    • Reinforces India’s global anti-terror stance.
    • Balances Israel ties with support for Palestinian cause.
    • Enhances India’s role in West Asian geopolitics.
  • Concerns
    • Balancing relations with Israel and Arab nations.
    • Oil price volatility and diaspora vulnerability.
    • Regional instability affecting trade routes.

Way Forward

  • Maintain balanced diplomacy (Israel security + Palestine rights).
  • Fast-track India–Israel FTA.
  • Enhance trilateral cooperation (e.g., I2U2 framework).
  • Promote humanitarian diplomacy alongside counter-terror policy.
  • Safeguard energy and diaspora interests.

BENGAL COURTS STALL OVER SIRs

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • Nearly 50 lakh claims and objections were received during the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls in West Bengal.
  • The Supreme Court of India directed that judicial officers examine these claims due to a trust deficit between the State Government and the Election Commission.
  • Judicial officers were deployed across district courts, affecting regular trials, including POCSO cases.
  • Final electoral rolls were directed to be published by February 28, with supplementary lists allowed later.

Key Constitutional & Legal Provisions

  • Article 324 – Election Commission of India (ECI) has superintendence, direction and control of elections.
  • Representation of the People Act, 1950
    • Deals with preparation and revision of electoral rolls.
    • District Magistrate acts as District Election Officer (DEO).
  • Article 50 – Separation of judiciary from executive.
  • Article 21 – Right to speedy trial (judicial interpretation).
  • POCSO Act, 2012 – Mandates special courts for time-bound trial of child sexual offences.

Core Issues for UPSC

  1. Separation of Powers
  • Judiciary performing executive election-related functions raises concerns.
  • Possible dilution of institutional specialization.
  1. Judicial Independence
  • Involvement in administrative tasks may blur functional boundaries.
  • Risk of judiciary being drawn into political controversies.
  1. Electoral Integrity vs Administrative Capacity
  • Judicial scrutiny may enhance neutrality and credibility.
  • However, it signals lack of confidence in regular election machinery.
  1. Impact on Justice Delivery
  • Delay in criminal trials affects Article 21.
  • Sensitive cases (POCSO, sexual assault) disrupted.

Constitutional & Governance Dimensions

  • Balance between Article 324 powers of ECI and Article 50 principle of separation.
  • Institutional coordination vs institutional overreach.
  • Need for capacity building in electoral administration.
  • Ensuring electoral credibility without compromising judicial efficiency.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen ECI’s district-level verification mechanisms.
  • Develop dedicated electoral grievance redressal systems.
  • Avoid routine deployment of judicial officers for executive tasks.
  • Protect time-bound criminal trials from administrative diversion.
  • Clarify legal framework for exceptional judicial involvement.

HARYANA EDUCATION OUTLAY SLIPS DEBT

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • RBI’s State Finances: A Study of Budgets 2025– 26 highlights trends in Haryana’s expenditure.
  • Over the last 15 years:
    • Share of education expenditure in total budget has declined.
    • Share of social welfare expenditure has increased significantly.
    • Debt and interest payments have risen sharply.
  • Major allocations concentrated in two schemes:
    • Old Age Samman Allowance Scheme  
    • Deen Dayal Lado Lakshmi Yojana

Key Data Points

  • Education
    • 2010–11:
      • ₹5,946 crore (out of ₹39,554 crore total expenditure).
    • 2025–26:
      • ₹22,312 crore.
    • National average spending on education (as % of total expenditure): 13.1% (RBI).
    • Technical education share declined from 1.08% to 0.6%.
    • ~50% vacancies in regular teaching posts in colleges.
    • 4.9% dropout rate at secondary level.
  • Health
    • Health expenditure: 0.77% of GSDP (Performance Audit 2022–23).
    • National benchmark (National Health Policy 2017): 2.5% of GDP.
    • Several states spend higher proportions than Haryana.
  • Social Welfare
    • 2025–26:
      • ₹18,751 crore for social empowerment, SC/BC welfare.
      • ₹10,210 crore allocated to two major schemes.
    • Old Age Pension:
      • 20 lakh beneficiaries.
      • ₹3,200 per month.
    • Lado Lakshmi Yojana:
      • ₹2,100 per month for eligible women.
    • Institutional Indicators
      • No Haryana university in QS World Rankings 2026.
      • No institution in top 150 of NIRF rankings.
      • Govt schools with internet: 69.3% (vs 94.5% private).

Constitutional & Policy Linkages

  • Article 41 – Public assistance in old age (DPSP). 
  • Article 21A – Right to Education.
  • FRBM Acts – Fiscal discipline for Union and States.
  • National Education Policy (2020) – 6% of GDP target.
  • National Health Policy (2017) – 2.5% of GDP public health target.
  • Human capital formation as driver of long-term growth (Economic Survey theme).

Issues for Analysis

  1. Fiscal Structure Concern
  • Rising revenue expenditure (pensions, cash transfers).
  • Increasing debt servicing burden.
  • Potential crowding out of capital expenditure.
  1. Human Capital Gap
  • Low spending on education and health relative to income level.
  • High vacancy in educational institutions.  
  • Weak higher education performance.
  1. Populism vs Welfare State
  • Targeted vs universal transfers debate.
  • Electoral commitments vs fiscal sustainability.
  • Short-term consumption vs long-term productivity gains.

Way Forward

  • Increase education allocation toward 6% benchmark.
  • Raise public health spending in line with NHP 2017.  
  • Rationalize welfare schemes with:
    • Better targeting.
    • Periodic outcome evaluation.
  • Fill vacancies in teaching and technical institutions.  
  • Strengthen outcome-based budgeting.
  • Maintain fiscal prudence under FRBM framework.

LOOSE LINK: DOOMED SATELLITE

KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
  • The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) released the report of an apex committee examining the failure of the NVS-02 satellite to reach its intended circular orbit.
  • NVS-02 was launched on 29 January 2025 aboard GSLV F15 from Satish Dhawan Space Centre.
  • The launch marked the 100th mission from Sriharikota.
  • The satellite was successfully placed in an elliptical transfer orbit, but orbit-raising manoeuvres failed.
  • NVS-02 is part of the NavIC constellation (second-generation satellites).

Key Findings of the Committee

  • The failure occurred because the signal to activate a key valve in the oxidiser line did not reach the engine.
  • Most probable reason: Loose or failed electrical connection in both primary and backup lines.
  • As a result, the engine could not fire for orbit raising.

Importance for India

  1. NavIC System
  • Indigenous regional navigation system.
  • Provides:
    • Standard Positioning Service (SPS) – civilian use.
    • Restricted Service (RS) – encrypted for strategic users.
  • Coverage: India and up to 1500 km beyond.
  • Reduces dependence on foreign systems like GPS.
  1. Strategic & Security Relevance
  • Critical for:
    • Defence operations.
    • Maritime domain awareness.  
    • Disaster management.
    • Transportation & logistics.

Corrective Measures Taken

  • Recommendations to enhance redundancy and reliability of pyro systems.
  • Successfully implemented in CMS-03.
  • CMS-03 was launched by LVM-3 M5 (November 2025).
  • CMS-03 (GSAT-7R):
    • ~4,400 kg.
    • Strengthens Navy’s secure communications.

Static Linkages

  • PSLV – Primarily used for polar and Sun- synchronous orbits.
  • GSLV – Used for Geosynchronous Transfer Orbit missions.
  • LVM-3 – Heavy-lift launch vehicle.
  • India is a signatory to the Outer Space Treaty (1967).
  • Space sector functions under the Department of Space (DoS).

Mains Dimensions

  • Indigenisation of critical technologies.
  • Strategic autonomy in space infrastructure.
  • Reliability challenges in high-technology missions.
  • Space as a component of internal security and blue economy.
  • Public accountability and transparency in strategic sectors.

Critical Analysis

  • Positives
    • Transparent disclosure of technical findings.
    • Quick implementation of corrective recommendations.
    • Strengthening self-reliant navigation infrastructure.
  • Concerns
    • Failure in both primary and backup systems indicates design-level vulnerability.
    • Successive mission issues may affect India’s commercial launch credibility.
    • Need for stronger quality control mechanisms.

Way Forward

  • Independent mission assurance audits.
  • Strengthened vendor and supply-chain certification.
  • AI-based predictive diagnostics.
  • Deeper private-sector quality benchmarking under IN-SPACe.
  • Institutionalised post-mission transparency.
FAITH, DIGNITY& RIGHTS BALANCE
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
  • In 2018, the Supreme Court in Indian Young Lawyers Association vs State of Kerala (2018) allowed entry of women of all ages into Sabarimala Temple.
  • The judgment struck down the practice excluding women aged 10–50 years.
  • Several review petitions were filed.
  • A nine-judge Constitution Bench is now examining broader constitutional questions:  
    • Scope of Articles 25 & 26
    • Validity of the Essential Religious Practices (ERP) doctrine
    • Balance between religious autonomy and individual dignity

Core Constitutional Issues

  • Whether Sabarimala devotees constitute a religious denomination under Article 26.
  • Whether exclusion of women violates:
    • Article 14 – Equality before law
    • Article 15(1) – Non-discrimination  
    • Article 25(1) – Freedom of religion
  • Scope of Article 25(2)(b) – Social reform and temple entry.
  • Whether courts should determine what is an “essential religious practice”.

Essential Religious Practices (ERP) Doctrine

  • Origin: 1954 Shirur Mutt case (Commissioner, Hindu Religious Endowments vs Sri Lakshmindra Thirtha Swamiar).
  • Courts decide whether a practice is essential to religion.
  • Criticism:
    • Judiciary acts as theological authority.
    • Inconsistent application.
    • Difficult to reconcile with secularism.

Anti-Exclusion Test

  • Focus shifts from “Is it essential?” to:
    • “Does it violate dignity and equal access?”
  • If a practice results in systematic exclusion affecting dignity → State/Court can intervene.
  • Grounded in constitutional morality and transformative constitutionalism.

Static Constitutional Provisions Relevant

  • Article 14 – Equality before law.
  • Article 15(2) – Access to public spaces.  Article 21 – Dignity jurisprudence.
  • Article 25 – Freedom of religion (subject to morality, health, public order, other FRs).
  • Article 26 – Rights of religious denominations.
  • Basic Structure Doctrine – Secularism.

Critical Analysis

  • In Favour of 2018 Judgment
    • Strengthens gender justice.
    • Reinforces dignity as central constitutional value.
    • Expands scope of Article 25(2)(b) social reform.
  • Concerns
    • Judicial overreach in theological matters.
    • Tension between group rights and individual rights.
    • Potential impact on denominational autonomy.

Way Forward

  •  Develop a clear constitutional test balancing:
  • Religious autonomy  Individual dignity
  • Limit judicial theological inquiry.
  • Strengthen principle of constitutional morality.
  • Harmonise Articles 14, 25, and 26 through proportionality analysis.
BOTTLED VATER SAFETY MYTH

 

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • Increasing dependence on packaged drinking water in India due to declining trust in municipal supply.
  • Recent Indian studies (Nagpur, Mumbai, coastal Andhra Pradesh) detected microplastics in all sampled bottled water brands.
  • Growing concerns about chemical leaching (antimony, phthalates, plasticisers) from PET bottles under high temperature conditions.
  • Present regulatory framework under Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) does not prescribe specific limits for microplastics.
  • Raises issues of public health, environmental sustainability, groundwater governance and regulatory oversight.

Key Points

  • Microplastics: Plastic particles smaller than 5 mm.
  • Detected concentration in Indian studies: 72– 212 particles per litre (Nagpur study).
  • Bottled water is regulated by:
    • Food Safety and Standards Authority of India
    • Standards earlier linked with Bureau of Indian Standards
  • Plastic Waste Management Rules, 2016 (amended 2022):
    • Ban on identified single-use plastics.
    • Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) provisions.
  • Chemical leaching increases with:
    • High temperature
    • UV exposure
    • Prolonged storage

Key Issues

  1. Public Health Concerns
  • Microplastics may carry toxic additives and pollutants.
  • Nanoplastics may cross biological barriers.
  • Long-term cumulative exposure not fully studied.
  1. Regulatory Gaps
  • Standards focus on microbiological safety.  
  • No routine testing for microplastics.
  • Weak enforcement in fragmented small bottling units.
  1. Environmental Dimension
  • India generates over 3 million tonnes of plastic waste annually (CPCB).
  • Single-use PET bottles contribute significantly.
  • Plastic degrades into microplastics contaminating water sources.
  1. Groundwater Governance
  • Bottling units extract groundwater.  
  • Links to aquifer depletion.
  • Raises concerns of common pool resource exploitation.

Static Linkages

  • Article 21 – Right to life includes right to clean water (SC interpretation).
  • Article 47 – Duty of the State to improve public health.
  • Environmental Protection Act, 1986.
  • Plastic Waste Management Rules, 2016.  
  • Polluter Pays Principle.
  • Precautionary Principle.
  • SDG 6 – Clean Water and Sanitation.
  • SDG 12 – Responsible Consumption and Production.

Critical Analysis

  • Positives
    • Ensures microbiological safety in areas with poor municipal supply.
    • Important during disasters and emergencies.  
    • Standardised purification in organized sector.
  • Concerns
    • Invisible contaminants (microplastics, nanoplastics).  
    • Cumulative chemical exposure unregulated.
    • Plastic waste crisis.
    • Weak monitoring and enforcement.
    • Trust deficit in public water systems.

Way Forward

  • Introduce mandatory microplastic testing standards.
  • Update FSSAI/BIS norms to include long-term exposure assessment.
  • Strengthen enforcement of Plastic Waste Management Rules.
  • Promote public water refill stations.
  • Improve municipal water quality monitoring and transparency.
  • Encourage research on health impacts via ICMR/CSIR.
  • Strengthen groundwater regulation of bottling units.

A JAB WELL DONE

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • Government of India to introduce nationwide HPV vaccination for girls aged 14 years.
  • Single-dose schedule as recommended by WHO (2022 update).
  • Administered through designated government health facilities with AEFI monitoring.
  • Decision taken amid rising global vaccine hesitancy.
  • India bears the highest cervical cancer burden in South-East Asia Region (SEARO).

Key Facts

  • Causative Agent: Persistent infection with high-risk HPV types, especially 16 and 18.
  • Share of types 16 and 18 in India: More than 80% of cervical cancer cases.
  • Burden in India (GLOBOCAN 2022):
    • Approximately 1.27 lakh new cases  
    • Approximately 79,000 deaths
  • Ranking: Second most common cancer among Indian women.
  • Screening Coverage (NFHS): Only about 1.9% women (30–49 years) screened.
  • Over 90 countries have adopted single-dose schedule.
  • Aligns with preventive health approach under National Health Policy 2017.

Static Constitutional and Policy Linkages

  • Article 21 – Right to life includes right to health (Supreme Court interpretation).
  • Article 47 (Directive Principles of State Policy) – Duty of State to improve public health.
  • Health – State List (Entry 6, Seventh Schedule).  
  • Universal Immunisation Programme (1985).
  • WHO 90–70–90 Target (2030):
    • 90% girls vaccinated by 15 years
    • 70% women screened
    • 90% treated

Critical Points

  • Significance
    • Cost-effective preventive intervention.
    • Reduces long-term cancer burden and mortality.
    • Strengthens women’s health and gender equity.
    • Supports SDG-3 (Good Health and Well-being).
  • Challenges
    • Vaccine hesitancy (2009–10 HPV trial controversy).
    • Weak screening ecosystem.
    • Cold chain and last-mile delivery issues.
    • Need for robust AEFI monitoring and transparency.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen cold-chain under Universal Immunisation Programme.
  • Ensure transparent AEFI reporting system.
  • Integrate with school health programmes and Health and Wellness Centres.
  • Mass IEC campaigns to counter misinformation.
  • Scale up screening alongside vaccination.
DEMAGOGUE SALESMAN

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • In the 2026 State of the Union Address, U.S. President Donald Trump defended his administration’s policies on tariffs, immigration enforcement, inflation and Iran.
  • The speech followed a ruling by the Supreme Court of the United States, which struck down the administration’s use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), 1977, to impose wide-ranging tariffs on multiple countries, including India.
  • Inflation in the U.S. has declined from nearly 9% (mid-2022 peak) to around 2.4% in 2026.
  • The U.S. has strengthened military deployment in West Asia amid tensions with Iran while indicating a preference for diplomatic engagement.
  • The address comes ahead of crucial mid-term elections in the U.S.

Key Points

  1. Tariffs and Trade Policy
  • IEEPA permits the U.S. President to regulate international commerce during a declared national emergency.
  • The Supreme Court ruling highlights constitutional limits on executive emergency powers.
  • Tariffs may:
    • Protect domestic industries (protectionism)
    • Increase consumer prices (cost-push inflation)
    • Trigger retaliatory trade measures
  • Potential implications for India’s exports and bilateral trade relations.
  1. Inflation and Public Debt
  • Inflation decline attributed to post-pandemic normalization and monetary tightening.
  • Debate over the role of tariff revenues in addressing public debt.
  • Protectionist policies affect:  
    • Supply chains
    • Exchange rates
    • Balance of Payments
  1. Immigration Policy
  • Intensified enforcement by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
  • Immigration remains a politically polarizing issue.
  • Raises concerns regarding:  
    • Civil liberties
    • Federal–state relations
    • Executive accountability
  1. Iran and West Asia
  • U.S. reiterates that Iran must not acquire nuclear weapons.
  • Continued sanctions and strategic deterrence posture.
  • Implications for:
    • Global energy markets
    • Maritime security (Strait of Hormuz)  
    • India’s energy security

Static Linkages

  • Separation of Powers – Executive actions subject to judicial review.
  • Judicial Review – Core principle of constitutional governance.
  • Protectionism vs Free Trade – Theory of Comparative Advantage (David Ricardo).
  • Types of Inflation – Demand-pull and Cost- push.
  • Public Debt sustainability and fiscal deficit.  
  • Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).
  • Energy security and geopolitical risks in West Asia.

Critical Analysis

  • Advantages
    • Protection of domestic manufacturing sectors.  
    • Political consolidation ahead of elections.
    • Strong deterrence posture toward Iran.
  • Concerns
    • Judicial rebuke indicates institutional friction.
    • Tariffs may increase inflation and hurt consumers.
    • Risk of trade retaliation and global supply chain disruption.
    • Escalation in West Asia may increase crude oil prices, affecting India.
    • Immigration enforcement may raise ethical and human rights concerns.
  • Implications for India
    • Potential tariff impact on Indian exports.
    • Concerns for skilled migration and IT sector.  
    • Oil price volatility affecting fiscal stability.
    • Need for strategic balancing in West Asia policy.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen multilateral trade mechanisms through WTO reforms.
  • Diversify export markets and enhance domestic manufacturing competitiveness.
  • Build and maintain strategic petroleum reserves.
  • Promote diplomatic resolution of West Asia tensions.
  • Support rule-based international economic order.

THE SPACE BETWEEN US- AND HOW TO BRIGDE IT

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • A recent opinion piece used the metaphor “Mind the Gap” to highlight entrenched social hierarchies in India, especially caste, class, and gender divisions.
  • The discussion is relevant amid:
    • Ongoing debates on women’s autonomy in marriage and relationships.
    • Judicial emphasis on constitutional morality over social morality.
    • Persistent concerns regarding caste discrimination, gender inequality, and power asymmetry.

Key Points

  • Article 14 – Equality before law and equal protection of laws.
  • Article 15(1) – Prohibits discrimination on grounds of religion, race, caste, sex, place of birth.
  • Article 15(3) – Permits special provisions for women and children.
  • Article 17 – Abolition of untouchability.
  • Article 21 – Protection of life and personal liberty (includes dignity, privacy, autonomy).
  • Preamble – Justice, Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity assuring dignity of the individual.
  • Constitutional Morality – A judicially evolved doctrine requiring adherence to constitutional values over societal prejudices.

Static Concepts to Revise

  • Difference between social morality and constitutional morality.
  • Role of judiciary in protecting Fundamental Rights.
  • Fraternity as a constitutional value.
  • Intersectionality (caste, gender, and class disadvantages).
  • Attitude, prejudice, and empathy (Ethics syllabus).

Critical Analysis

  • Issues
    • Persistence of caste-based exclusion and honour crimes.
    • Patriarchal control over women’s choices.
    • Gap between constitutional guarantees and ground realities.
    • Majoritarian morality influencing institutional decisions.
  • Significance
    • Ensures dignity and autonomy of individuals.
    • Promotes substantive equality, not merely formal equality.
    • Strengthens democratic ethos through fraternity.

Way Forward

  • Promote constitutional literacy and civic education.
  • Ensure strict enforcement of laws protecting women and marginalized groups.
  • Institutionalize gender sensitization mechanisms.
  • Increase representation of vulnerable groups in governance.
  • Encourage ethical public discourse rooted in empathy and constitutional values.