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Current Affairs
May 23, 2026

Fort St. George
Tamil Nadu Chief Minister toured the Secretariat campus and several iconic places within the historic Fort St. George complex recently.
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About Fort St. George:

  • It is a historic fort located in Chennai, Tamil Nadu.
  • Built by the British East India Company in 1644, it was the first English fortress in India.
  • It became both a trading base and a defensive outpost, protecting their interests along the Coromandel coast.
  • It is made of brick & stone and has thick, tall walls to protect against attacks.
  • The fort has a rectangular shape with strong, tall gates at the entrance.
  • It includes important buildings like Mary’s Church, which is the oldest Anglican church in India, and the Fort Museum, which displays artifacts from the colonial period.
  • The fortified settlement that grew around it served as the nucleus of Madras, which, in time, expanded and evolved into modern Chennai.
  • Currently, it serves as the administrative centre of Tamil Nadu, with the Secretariat, Legislative Assembly, and other government offices housed within.
History & Culture

Current Affairs
May 23, 2026

Key Facts about Lake Kariba
After a decade of erratic rains and heatwaves that devastated Lake Kariba’s levels, new inflows from the upper Zambezi are lifting the reservoir and restoring hope.
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About Lake Kariba:

  • It is located in central Africa, along the border between Zambia and Zimbabwe.
  • It is located on the Zambezi River, about halfway between the river's source and mouth.
  • It is the world’s largest artificial lake and reservoir by volume and the fourth largest by surface area.
  • Lake Kariba was filled between 1958 and 1963 after the completion of the Kariba Dam, which flooded the Kariba Gorge on the Zambezi River.
    • The Kariba Dam consists of a double-arch wall.
    • It provides considerable electric power to both Zambia and Zimbabwe and supports a thriving commercial fishing industry.
  • The lake encompasses Chete Island and Spurwing Island.
    • Chete Island boasts the world’s largest expanse of protected, undeveloped wetlands and hosts the largest single population of African elephants.
Geography

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Current Affairs
May 23, 2026

Pashupatinath Temple
India recently gifted a special type of sandalwood to the Nepal government to be used at the Pashupatinath temple on Kathmandu’s outskirts.
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About Pashupatinath Temple:

  • It is a Hindu temple located on both banks of the Bagmati River on the eastern outskirts of Kathmandu, Nepal.
  • It is dedicated to Lord Shiva in his form as Pashupati, protector of animals.
  • There has been a religious foundation here since at least the 5th century BCE, though the oldest recorded temple dates from 400 CE.
  • The original, mainly wooden, buildings were eaten by termites and replaced by the current stone and metal structures in the 15th century CE.
  • In 1979, the temple was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
  • Features:
    • The main temple is designed in the Nepalese pagoda style, with a tiered roof and plinth.
    • It is a cubic construction with four main doors, all covered with silver sheets.
    • The two-storied roof is made from copper and is covered with gold.
    • The temple has two interior rooms where the Pashupatinath idol is placed.
    • One of the most astonishing decorations of the temple is the huge golden statue of Nandi, Shiva’s bull.
Art and Culture

Current Affairs
May 23, 2026

What is Sickle Cell Disease?
A recent study by the AIIMS Bhopal has stressed the need for early and advanced health screening in children suffering from sickle cell disease (SCD).
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About Sickle Cell Disease (SCD):

  • It is a group of inherited blood cell disorders that affect hemoglobin, the molecule in Red Blood Cells (RBCs) that delivers oxygen to cells throughout the body.
  • SCD can cause episodes of severe pain and lead to life-threatening complications.
  • The most common and severe type of SCD is sickle cell anemia.
  • How Does it Affect Blood Flow?
    • Normally, RBCs are disc-shaped and flexible enough to move easily through the blood vessels.
    • People with SCD have atypical hemoglobin molecules called hemoglobin S, which can distort RBCs into a sickle, or crescent, shape.
    • When RBCs sickle, they do not bend or move easily and can block blood flow to the rest of the body.
    • The sickle-shaped cells can also stick to vessel walls, causing a blockage that slows or stops the flow of blood.
  • What causes it?
    • The cause of SCD is a defective gene, called a sickle cell gene.
    • A person will be born with SCD only if two genes are inheritedone from the mother and one from the father.
    • If born with one sickle cell gene, it's called sickle cell trait. People with sickle cell trait are generally healthy, but they can pass the defective gene on to their children.
  • Treatments:
    • A bone marrow transplant (stem cell transplant) can cure SCD.
    • However, there are treatments that can help relieve symptoms, lessen complications, and prolong life.
    • Gene therapy is also being explored as another potential cure.
    • The UK recently became the first country to approve gene therapy treatment for SCD.

 

Science & Tech

Current Affairs
May 23, 2026

Key Facts about Staten Island
A civilian has died and around 36 people have been injured following a fire and 2 powerful explosions at a shipyard on Staten Island in New York City.
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About Staten Island:

  • It is an island located in New York City, United States.
  • Historically, Staten Island was home to Native American Lenape people before European settlement by the Dutch and English.
  • It is often called the “Borough of Parks” because a large portion of its land is covered by parks, forests, and green spaces.
Geography

Current Affairs
May 23, 2026

Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission
The Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission (ABDM) has achieved a major milestone with over 100 crore health records successfully linked with Ayushman Bharat Health Accounts (ABHA).
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About Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission:

  • It was launched to build a comprehensive digital health ecosystem for the country.
  • The mission aims to develop the backbone necessary to support the integrated digital health infrastructure of the country.
  • Time Period: The flagship scheme was launched with an outlay of ₹1,600 crore for 5 years from 2021-2022 to 2025-2026.
  • Key Components of Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission:
    • Ayushman Bharat Health Account (ABHA) Number: It is a 14 digit health ID for hassle-free method of accessing and sharing your health records digitally. 
    • Healthcare Professionals Registry (HPR): It is a comprehensive repository of all healthcare professionals involved in delivery of healthcare services across both modern and traditional systems of medicine.
    • Health Facility Registry (HFR): It includes both public and private health facilities including hospitals, clinics, diagnostic laboratories and imaging centers, pharmacies
    • Health Information Exchange and Consent Manager (HIE-CM): It empowers citizens to securely access and share their health records, ensuring that data exchange is driven by informed consent.
    • Unified Health Interface (UHI): It is envisioned as an open protocol for various digital health services. UHI Network will be an open network of End User Applications (EUAs) and participating Health Service Provider (HSP) applications.
    • National Health Claims Exchange (NHCX): It enables exchange of standardized health claim-related information between payers, providers, beneficiaries, and other relevant entities.
  • It is implemented by the National Health Authority under the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare.
Polity & Governance

Article
23 May 2026

Cyber Warfare is Outpacing Global Legal Accountability

Context

  • Recent tensions involving the United States, Israel, and Iran reveal a significant transformation in the nature of warfare.
  • Modern conflicts are no longer fought only through conventional military action but increasingly through cyber operations targeting communication systems, digital infrastructure, and the information environment.
  • Cyberattacks on news websites, applications, and essential services demonstrate how digital tools are now integrated into military strategy.

Rise of Cyber Warfare in Modern Conflict

  • States and non-state actors use hacking, digital disruption, and information manipulation to weaken opponents before or alongside physical attacks.
  • Such operations target infrastructure, defence systems, and communication networks, thereby extending conflict beyond traditional battlefields.
  • Groups such as the Handala Hack Team have reportedly carried out attacks on foreign organisations, including a U.S.-based medical technology company.
  • These incidents demonstrate how cyber conflict affects civilian, commercial, and governmental sectors simultaneously.
  • Unlike traditional warfare, cyberattacks can occur across borders without direct military confrontation, making them difficult to control or regulate.

The Difficulty is Establishing Threshold

  • Applicability of International Law
    • The prohibition on the use of force under Article 2(4) of the United Nations Charter and the doctrine of state responsibility provide a legal basis for addressing cyberattacks.
    • If a cyber operation causes severe disruption to critical systems or essential services, it may qualify as an internationally wrongful act.
    • However, determining the legal threshold remains extremely difficult.
    • Cyberattacks often create indirect, temporary, or non-physical damage that is harder to measure than conventional military destruction.
    • As a result, deciding when a cyber operation becomes serious enough to constitute a prohibited use of force remains uncertain.
  • Gap Between Law and Practice
    • Although international law theoretically allows affected states to seek accountability and compensation, legal remedies are rarely successful in practice.
    • This creates a growing gap between legal principles and real-world enforcement.
    • Cyber incidents frequently cause significant disruption, yet they seldom lead to meaningful legal consequences.

Concerns that Hinder Litigation

  • The Problem of Attribution
    • Cyber operations are usually conducted through hidden networks and multiple jurisdictions, making it difficult to identify the actual perpetrator.
    • Governments may possess intelligence indicating responsibility, but transforming such information into legally admissible evidence is highly challenging.
    • This creates a divide between political certainty and legal proof. Without reliable attribution, holding states accountable under international law becomes nearly impossible.
  • Lack of Effective Judicial Forums
    • International institutions such as the International Court of Justice generally require state consent before hearing disputes, which states involved in cyber operations rarely provide.
    • Domestic courts also face limitations because foreign governments are often protected by sovereign immunity.
    • As a result, victims of cyberattacks have very limited opportunities to pursue legal remedies or compensation.
  • Political and Strategic Constraints
    • States often avoid legal proceedings due to political and strategic concerns.
    • Pursuing litigation may escalate tensions, expose sensitive intelligence capabilities, or provoke retaliation.
    • Consequently, many cyber incidents are addressed through diplomacy and political negotiations rather than through courts.
  • Challenges Related to Evidence
    • Cyber litigation also faces evidentiary difficulties. Cyberattacks involve complex technical data, classified intelligence, and complicated chains of causation.
    • Courts frequently struggle to establish who conducted the operation, how much damage occurred, and how the attack caused specific harm.
    • This makes legal proceedings uncertain and difficult.

International Efforts and Their Limitations

  • International initiatives such as the Budapest Convention on Cybercrime and the United Nations Convention against Cybercrime aim to improve cooperation against cybercrime.
  • However, these frameworks mainly focus on criminal activities and law enforcement rather than geopolitical conflict or state-sponsored cyber warfare.
  • As cyber operations become more frequent and damaging, the absence of strong international mechanisms for accountability highlights the limitations of current global legal systems.

India’s Necessity and Role in Shaping Cyber Norms

  • India’s Growing Vulnerability
    • For India, the issue is especially important because of its increasing dependence on digital infrastructure in sectors such as finance, governance, communication, and energy.
    • Greater digital connectivity also increases vulnerability to cyber threats and attacks on critical systems.
  • Need for Active International Engagement
    • India must strengthen its cyber resilience while also participating actively in global discussions on accountability, attribution, and responsible state behaviour in cyberspace.
    • Developing stronger legal standards and international cooperation is essential for addressing future cyber conflicts effectively.

Conclusion

  • Cyber warfare has become an inseparable part of modern conflict, operating alongside traditional military force.
  • Although international law formally applies to cyberspace, practical barriers such as attribution problems, lack of judicial forums, political constraints, and evidentiary difficulties prevent effective enforcement.
  • If cyber operations continue to expand without credible mechanisms of accountability, the gap between law and reality will continue to widen, creating a dangerous environment in which significant harm occurs beyond the effective reach of legal systems.
Editorial Analysis

Article
23 May 2026

Interpreting the ‘Rise’ of the Cockroach Janta Party

Context

  • The rapid rise of the Cockroach Janta Party demonstrates the growing power of digital politics in shaping contemporary political participation.
  • Within days, online campaigns driven by memes, Instagram reels, and viral content attracted support that traditional political organisations often take years to build.
  • Similar developments in Bangladesh and Nepal reveal how youth mobilisation and collective outrage can challenge established systems through emotionally charged online networks.
  • However, while digital platforms can rapidly create emotional unity, they often struggle to sustain long-term political commitment and meaningful collective organisation.

The Rise of Reactive Digital Politics

  • Emotional Participation Through Social Media
    • Digital platforms allow isolated individuals to experience moments of shared political intensity.
    • A slogan, meme, or viral campaign can create the feeling of collective participation within hours.
    • This explains the rapid popularity of decentralised political movements that rely on emotional energy rather than traditional organisational structures.
    • Unlike conventional politics based on ideology, leadership, and institutional continuity, modern online mobilisation is frequently driven by immediate reactions and symbolic enemies.
    • Synchronised outrage spreads quickly because anger is easier to communicate digitally than patience, organisation, or long-term responsibility.
  • Synchronisation vs Solidarity
    • Digital media is highly effective at producing emotional alignment among large groups of people.
    • Millions can react simultaneously to a shared event or enemy. However, emotional synchronisation is temporary.
    • True solidarity requires continuity, shared memory, trust, and sustained participation. It depends upon durable social relationships rather than momentary emotional intensity.
    • While synchronisation creates excitement, solidarity builds enduring political communities capable of surviving beyond moments of crisis.

The Erosion of Collective Social Life

  • Decline of Public Institutions
    • The deeper crisis lies in the weakening of collective social life. Earlier political movements developed through institutions such as trade unions, campuses, neighbourhood associations, and civic organisations.
    • These spaces encouraged long-term participation and collective identity.
    • Modern societies, however, increasingly produce highly individualised citizens who seek belonging but lack the social structures necessary to sustain it.
    • As traditional forms of participation decline, individuals become more dependent on digital platforms for emotional connection and political expression.
  • Modernity and Individualisation
    • This condition reflects a contradiction within modernity itself. Following the French Revolution, ideas of liberty and emancipation were linked to collective self-rule and public participation.
    • Over time, especially within consumer societies shaped by fossil-fuel-driven development, freedom became associated with personal consumption, competition, and private aspiration.
    • As public life weakened and private life expanded, societies became increasingly fragmented.
    • People remained emotionally hungry for collective belonging, making them more vulnerable to emotionally charged online mobilisation.

Cross-Country Comparisons and Structural Contradictions

  • Limits of Decentralised Movements
    • Comparisons with Bangladesh and Nepal require caution because decentralised political energy rarely remains decentralised indefinitely.
    • In both countries, reactive movements were eventually redirected, institutionalised, or exhausted.
    • This suggests that the broader problem extends beyond individual nations and reflects global trends such as weakening institutions, social fragmentation, and emotional isolation.
    • Sustainable collective action requires historical memory, shared commitment, and durable symbolic attachment.
  • Lacan and the Problem of Authority
    • The ideas of Jacques Lacan provide an important insight into revolutionary politics.
    • During the May 1968 protests in France, Lacan warned revolutionaries that they would ultimately produce a master.
    • Revolt against one authority often creates another form of authority rather than genuine liberation.
    • Movements organised mainly around opposition depend heavily on the existence of an enemy.
    • However, once movements enter governance, contradictions emerge, compromises become necessary, and emotional clarity weakens.
    • Sustaining collective political life becomes far more difficult than sustaining anger.

The Contradiction of Centralisation

  • Modern societies rely upon highly centralised systems such as digital platforms, logistics networks, financial institutions, and megacities.
  • Even the technologies that facilitate decentralised political mobilisation remain controlled by concentrated centres of economic and technological power.
  • This creates a fundamental contradiction within contemporary anti-establishment politics.
  • People increasingly desire decentralisation emotionally while living within systems structurally dependent on centralisation.
  • Crowds may challenge authority temporarily, but reorganising power requires engagement with material systems built around scale, concentration, and control.

Conclusion

  • The emergence of reactive digital politics demonstrates that decentralised political energy can develop rapidly in contemporary societies.
  • However, emotional synchronisation alone cannot produce lasting transformation.
  • The central challenge of modern politics is whether societies can transform moments of emotional mobilisation into lasting solidarity and enduring collective institutions.
  • Otherwise, every rupture may simply reproduce new forms of concentration, authority, and domination rather than genuine democratic renewal.
Editorial Analysis

Current Affairs
May 23, 2026

Agni-1 Missile
Recently, India successfully tested the short-range ballistic missile Agni-1 from the Integrated Test Range in Balasore, Odisha.
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About Agni-1 Missile:

  • It is a single-stage, solid-fuel missile.
  • It is a short-range ballistic missile (SRBM) with a heavy payload but can travel up to 1200 km with lighter payloads, which makes it a medium-range ballistic missile (MRBM).
  • Range: 700 km- 1200 km
  • It is powered by a solid-propellant booster based on the Indian Space Research Organisation's (ISRO) SLV-3.
  • It is nuclear-capable road-mobile missile and was first deployed by the Indian Army's Strategic Forces Command in 2007.
  • The Agni-I is designed to be launched from rail-based platforms or road-mobile transporter erector launchers (TELs).
    • The Agni missile series includes missiles I–V, with the most advanced, Agni-V. In addition to the Agni-V, India currently has the following Agni missiles: Agni-I, Agni-II, Agni-III, and Agni-IV and Agni Prime.
  • The Agni-I originated from India’s 1983 Integrated Guided Missile Development Program (IGMDP).
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