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Article
09 Jul 2026

Indira Point: Why the Centre Wants to Protect the Landmark Lighthouse and Develop a Tourism Hub

Why in news?

The Union Ministry of Ports, Shipping and Waterways has proposed protection and development works at Indira Point and its famous lighthouse, located in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands.

The Centre, through the Directorate of Lighthouses and Lightships, Sri Vijaya Puram (formerly Port Blair), has sought coastal regulation zone clearance to carry out this proposed work.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • Indira Point
  • What Is the Protection and Development Proposal?
  • Coastal Protection and Regulatory Clearances Needed
  • Why Does the Site Need Protection Works?

Indira Point

  • Indira Point marks India's southernmost tip. It is located on the Great Nicobar Island (GNI) in the Union Territory of Andaman and Nicobar Islands.
  • It is an important maritime landmark, lying to the south of Galathea Bay — the site where a transshipment port has been proposed under the larger GNI mega infrastructure project.
  • The lighthouse at Indira Point serves as a key landmark on the Singapore-Colombo international maritime route, acting as a navigational aid for mariners.
  • It also holds growing importance for safe navigation toward Galathea Bay, given the upcoming transshipment port planned there.
  • A Brief History of the Site
    • Indira Point was earlier known as Pygmalion Point.
    • It was renamed in 1985 in memory of former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, following her death.
    • The lighthouse itself was commissioned in April 1972 and stands 35 metres tall. Its tower is made of cast iron, painted in distinctive red and white bands.

What Is the Protection and Development Proposal?

  • The Ministry of Ports, Shipping and Waterways, through the Directorate General of Lighthouses and Lightships, wants to structurally repair the lighthouse and eventually develop tourism infrastructure and facilities around it.
  • The stated objective is to "preserve and protect the lighthouse for its functional requirement for safety of mariners, rich legacy of region, for historic and cultural significant for future generations."

What Does the Detailed Project Report Propose?

  • According to the detailed project report prepared by IIT Madras (IIT-M), the structural work will include:
    • Repair and strengthening of the lighthouse tower's foundation
    • Construction of an all-weather approach road
    • Shore protection works, including breakwaters around the tower
    • Development of a powerhouse, inspection facility, and staff quarters
    • A compound wall and internal pathways
  • Separately, tourism-focused development activities have also been proposed, including eco-tourism initiatives, a convention centre, cafeteria, viewing tower, cycle tracks, an international-standard museum building, and a memorial structure.

Coastal Protection and Regulatory Clearances Needed

  • Since the proposed works fall within sensitive coastal habitats, they are subject to protection under the Island Coastal Regulation Zone(ICRZ) Notification, 2019.
  • This means the project requires prior approval from both the Union Territory's Coastal Zone Management Authority and the Union Environment Ministry.
  • The 2019 Notification provides a regulatory framework to protect coastal stretches, marine habitats, and the livelihoods of fishing and other coastal communities across the Andaman and Nicobar Islands.
  • As per coastal zone maps and the project proposal, the works fall in the most sensitive ICRZ-IA areas, along with some portions in ICRZ-IVA:
    • ICRZ-IA areas are considered environmentally the most They include mangrove cover, coral and coral reefs, sand dunes, mudflats, national parks and marine parks, notified forests, salt marshes, and turtle nesting grounds.
    • ICRZ-IVA covers the water area and seabed between the low tide line and up to 12 nautical miles seaward.

Why Does the Site Need Protection Works?

  • The lighthouse structure has weathered significantly over the years, with much of this damage traced back to the December 2004 earthquake and tsunami.
    • This natural disaster had a massive impact across the entire Andaman and Nicobar island chain, causing land to rise in some areas and sink in others.
  • The site at Indira Point specifically experienced permanent land subsidence. Originally, the lighthouse and its associated structures stood at a height of 3.5 metres above mean sea level.
  • When the earthquake and tsunami struck, land sinking combined with seawater ingress engulfed the lighthouse tower and destroyed nearby quarters and huts.
  • Scientists and authorities estimate that the Nicobar Islands sank by approximately 2.04 metres, submerging the lighthouse's base and foundation in seawater.
  • An assessment by IIT-M found that geological and shoreline changes have continuously exposed the lighthouse foundation to seawater and extreme wave conditions during high tide, ever since 2004.
  • The lighthouse itself now shows a 3.86° tilt — though this has not been assessed as posing any risk to its structural stability or safety.
  • The lighthouse and its surrounding structures have grown increasingly vulnerable due to ongoing coastal erosion, wave action, and shoreline changes — making structural strengthening necessary.

Conclusion

The Indira Point project reflects the government's dual objective of preserving a historically and navigationally significant landmark while promoting tourism at India's southernmost tip.

However, given its location within ecologically fragile ICRZ-IA zones, the project underscores the recurring tension between infrastructure development and coastal ecological protection — a debate that has similarly surrounded the broader Great Nicobar Island infrastructure project.

Polity & Governance

Article
09 Jul 2026

India's 'Hummus Trail' Under the Lens: Israeli Tourism, War Crimes Allegations, and Legal Accountability

Why in News?

In June 2026, the Hind Rajab Foundation (HRF), a Brussels-based Palestinian rights organisation, filed a complaint with India's Union Ministry of Home Affairs, the Bureau of Immigration, and the police.

The complaint sought the arrest of Eitan Gilboa, an Israeli soldier who was found vacationing in Himachal Pradesh. Gilboa, a member of the 271st Combat Engineering Battalion, was accused of committing war crimes in Gaza in 2024.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • What Is Gilboa Accused Of?
  • How Does Indian Law Apply Here?
  • About Hummus Trail
  • Concerns Around the Trail
  • Why Is This Drawing Global Attention?
  • Conclusion

What Is Gilboa Accused Of?

  • The HRF alleged that Gilboa participated in the destruction of residential buildings and civilian infrastructure in Khan Yunis and Rafah.
  • He reportedly filmed himself celebrating these actions, and the videos were later posted on social media by his mother. The HRF submitted geo-located videos, social media evidence, and chain-of-command documentation along with its complaint.
  • By the time the complaint was filed, Gilboa had already fled India. He had been traced by pro-Palestinian activists and the HRF to Old Manali and Gondla Village in Himachal Pradesh.

How Does Indian Law Apply Here?

  • The HRF alleged that Gilboa's actions violated the Fourth Geneva Convention, to which India is a signatory.
  • Under this convention, any intentional attack known to cause loss of civilian life or injury, along with severe damage to civilian property, is considered a war crime and a "grave breach" of the convention.
  • India does not have a standalone law specifically criminalising war crimes. However, it has enacted the Geneva Conventions Act, 1960. Under this law:
    • Any act constituting a "grave breach" under four sections of the Geneva Convention is criminalised.
    • India can arrest any person, regardless of nationality, found to have committed such an offence — even if the offence occurred outside India's territory.
    • If arrest is not feasible, the Home Ministry and Bureau of Immigration can facilitate deportation of the accused.
  • Despite this legal framework, the Union government did not issue any statement on the HRF's allegations, nor did it initiate a probe into the matter.

About Hummus Trail

  • The "Hummus Trail" refers to a well-known travel circuit across India that is especially popular among Israeli tourists — many of whom are young veterans recently discharged from mandatory Israeli army service.
  • Around 80,000 Israelis visit India every year. Many undertake what is called the Tiul Gadol — an extended trip that can last anywhere from six months to a year, largely funded by the discharge bonus soldiers receive after completing their military service.
  • In February 2026, the Israeli government allocated 4 million NIS (New Israeli Shekel) specifically to boost tourism collaboration with India.
  • Where Does This Trail Run?
    • The Hummus Trail spans locations across India, from north to south, including:
      • Kasol (often called "mini-Israel")
      • Kodaikanal and Gokarna
      • Goa and Hampi
      • Rishikesh, Varanasi, and Pushkar
      • Almora and Dharamkot
      • More recently, the Andaman and Nicobar Islands
    • In these areas, one can observe visible cultural shifts — Hebrew-language signage, posters promoting the Israeli Defence Forces, and cafes, stores, and hostels run by Israeli nationals.
    • In 2015, an Israeli-run café in Himachal Pradesh faced backlash for allegedly displaying a "whites only" sign that denied entry to Indians.

Concerns Around the Trail

  • A 2020 study found that drug abuse and rave parties are common along the Hummus Trail, with rising cases of drug peddling in these regions.
  • It noted that many veterans turn to high drug consumption as a coping mechanism for mental health challenges experienced during their army service.
  • In response, mental health workers from Israel have reportedly been sent to India to support these reservists during their travels.

Why Is This Drawing Global Attention?

  • As per the analysts, India-Israel tourism is not merely about routine holidays or cultural exchange — it forms part of a broader normalisation process aimed at deepening social and economic ties between the two nations.
  • They noted that Israel has repeatedly thanked India for being among the few countries offering it political and moral support at a time when much of the global community has distanced itself, at least publicly.
  • This issue has gained added significance given the scale of the conflict in Gaza.
  • Israel has killed over 73,000 Palestinians in the Gaza Strip since the October 7, 2023 Hamas attack, and currently faces a genocide case filed by South Africa at the International Court of Justice (ICJ).
  • Against this backdrop, the unrestricted entry of Israeli soldiers into India after their service in Gaza has drawn increased scrutiny.

Conclusion

The Gilboa case highlights an important gap between India's legal obligations under the Geneva Conventions Act, 1960, and its actual enforcement practice.

It also raises broader questions about how deepening India-Israel tourism ties intersect with India's stated commitments to international humanitarian law, particularly amid an ongoing genocide case at the ICJ.

International Relations

Article
09 Jul 2026

The Indian Diaspora as Australia's Identity, and Its Future

Context:

  • The Indian diaspora has now officially become Australia's largest overseas-born community, overtaking the England-born population for the first time in history.
  • This is a significant shift, since Australia's population has been anchored by a British-derived majority for two centuries.
  • An Indian-origin community now outnumbering it marks a genuine turning point in how Australia understands its own national identity.
  • This development forms the backdrop to PM Modi's third visit to Australia, where the diaspora is expected to be a central focus.

From Three Cs to Four Ds

  • The India-Australia relationship has evolved significantly over the years.
  • It moved from being defined by the simplistic "three Cs" — Cricket, Curry, and Commonwealth — to a more substantive framework of "four Ds": Democracy, Defence, Diaspora, and Dosti.
  • This shift reflects a decade of serious institution-building between the two countries.
  • A key example is India's participation alongside Australia, the United States, and Japan in the Quad — the informal security grouping that now forms the backbone of both countries' Indo-Pacific strategy.
  • During PM Modi's visit, all four pillars will be addressed. However, it is the diaspora-focused event — a large public gathering titled "Melbourne Meets Modi" — that is attracting the most attention, given what this community has come to symbolise for both nations.

A Relatively New Migration Story

  • The settlement pattern of the Indian-Australian community is notably different from Indian communities in the US or the UK.
  • Significant Indian professional migration to Australia only began in the 1960s and 1970s, gaining momentum after the White Australia Policy was dismantled — this had been an explicitly racist immigration regime that excluded non-European migrants.
  • Compared to other diaspora communities worldwide, Australia's Indian community remains relatively young.
  • A large share of recent arrivals left India during the "New India" years since 2014 — a period marked by rapid outward migration, driven by a mix of economic ambition and, for some, disillusionment with domestic democratic institutions.
  • This recent wave of migrants tends to maintain closer and more active ties to India — through family connections, business links, remittances, and a strong sense of nationalist identity.
  • This distinct character, not just its size, is what makes Australia's Indian community stand out.

Rising Political Backlash

  • As anti-immigration sentiment grows globally, in Australia this backlash has increasingly targeted the Indian community specifically.
  • Nationalist street rallies under banners like "March for Australia" have gained momentum over the past year.
  • PM Modi's high-visibility diaspora event takes place within this tense political environment.
  • By showcasing the scale and achievements of the Indian community, the event may inadvertently reinforce a narrative — increasingly used by conservative political movements — that this community has grown "too large, too fast, and too visible."
  • For Australia, the Indian diaspora represents both an economic asset and a strengthening force for its multicultural society.
  • However, given the country's fracturing domestic political landscape, this same asset risks being recast as a political liability in public discourse.

The Need to Move Beyond Numbers

  • For India, the diaspora has traditionally been framed with pride — seen as a cultural and emotional bridge connecting India to its strategic partnership with Australia.
  • However, pride and sentiment alone do not equal genuine understanding.
  • What remains missing on both sides is a serious, evidence-based picture of how this diaspora actually lives, builds trust, and participates in Australian civic life — going beyond routine headline statistics on income, education, and trade that typically dominate government discourse.
  • If both nations genuinely wish to treat the diaspora as a real pillar of their partnership — rather than merely a talking point — this requires dedicated efforts to understand their diverse and varied experiences of settlement, which are far from uniform or monolithic.

A Lasting Demographic Shift

  • Australia's demographic transformation is not a temporary trend — it will permanently reshape the country's national identity, shifting it from a purely antipodean outlook toward one more deeply intertwined with India and the broader Indo-Pacific region.
  • This shift calls for sustained research, stronger engagement with civil society organisations, and policies designed to actively build social cohesion, rather than assuming it will develop on its own.
  • If democracy, defence, diaspora, and dosti are to remain the genuine four pillars of this partnership, the diaspora must be treated not merely as a symbolic talking point, but as a real constituency — one whose experiences and trust genuinely deserve to be understood.

Conclusion

  • Australia's Indian diaspora represents more than demographic milestone — it embodies a strategic partnership's human core.
  • True partnership demands moving beyond statistics toward genuine understanding, ensuring this community's voice shapes policy, not just political optics.
Editorial Analysis

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Current Affairs
July 8, 2026

Kwar Hydroelectric Project
The heavy rainfall triggered a major landslide near the under-construction 540 MW Kwar Hydroelectric Power Project in the Kishtwar district of Jammu and Kashmir recently.
current affairs image

About Kwar Hydroelectric Project:

  • It is a 540 MW hydropower project located on the Chenab River in the Kishtwar district of Jammu and Kashmir.
  • The project is envisaged as a Run of River Scheme.
  • The project envisages the construction of a high dam, an underground power house.
  • It is expected to generate 1,975 million units (MU) of electricity annually.
  • The project is being developed by Chenab Valley Power Projects Private Ltd. (CVPPL).
    • CVPPL is a joint venture company between NHPC Ltd and Jammu & Kashmir State Power Development Corporation (JKSPDC) with equity contributions of 51 percent and 49 percent, respectively.
Economy

Current Affairs
July 8, 2026

Guwahati Declaration
The BRICS nations recently adopted the Guwahati Declaration, reaffirming their commitment to strengthen cooperation to prevent and combat illicit drug trafficking and related organised transnational crime.
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About Guwahati Declaration:

  • It was adopted by the BRICS nations to strengthen cooperation against illicit drug trafficking and related transnational organized crime.
  • The declaration was adopted at the conclusion of the two-day BRICS Heads of Anti-Drug Agencies Meeting held in Guwahati, Assam.
  • It was held under India's 2026 BRICS chairship, themed "Building for Resilience, Innovation, Cooperation and Sustainability,".
  • The meeting brought together representatives from Brazil, China, Ethiopia, India, Indonesia, Iran, Russia and the United Arab Emirates to discuss coordinated strategies against global drug trafficking.
  • The joint declaration calls for greater cooperation through the timely exchange of information, intelligence and best practices, in line with national laws and international obligations.
  • It also highlights the importance of using innovative technologies, digital tools and data-driven approaches to improve law enforcement and regulatory measures against drug trafficking.
  • The declaration also stresses the need to strengthen efforts to reduce drug demand, promote healthy lifestyles and protect vulnerable groups, especially children and young people, through evidence-based and people-centred strategies.

Key Facts about BRICS:

  • It is an intergovernmental organization of major emerging economies that aims to create greater economic and geopolitical integration and coordination among member states.
  • BRICS, originally coined by Goldman Sachs economist Jim O'Neill in 2001, started as the BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India, and China), with South Africa joining later in 2010 to form BRICS.
  • It was expanded in 2024 to include Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, Saudi Arabia and the UAE, with Indonesia joining in 2025.
  • The grouping has emerged as an influential bloc, bringing together 11 major emerging economies that account for around 49.5 percent of the world's population, about 40 percent of global GDP and nearly 26 percent of global trade.
  • In addition to the 11 member nations, 10 partner countries joined BRICS in 2025 -- Belarus, Bolivia, Cuba, Kazakhstan, Malaysia, Nigeria, Thailand, Uganda, Uzbekistan and Vietnam.
International Relations

Current Affairs
July 8, 2026

What is Bintang Adipurna?
Prime Minister of India was recently conferred with Indonesia's highest honour 'Bintang Adipurna of the Republic of Indonesia' medal for his role in strengthening the ties between both the countries.
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About Bintang Adipurna:

  • The Bintang Adipurna (First Class of the Star of the Republic of Indonesia) is Indonesia's highest civilian honor conferred by the President of the Republic of Indonesia.
  • It is awarded to individuals who have rendered exceptional service to the unity, continuity, and prosperity of the Republic of Indonesia.
  • Foreign officials receiving such an award are recognized by the Republic of Indonesia as contributors to establishing a relationship based on friendship and mutual respect between the two nations.
  • The insignia has very distinctive characteristics.
    • The decoration consists of a shining gold star with several rays that stand for excellence, honour and distinguished service.
    • In the middle of it there is the symbol of Indonesia—the Garuda Pancasila, which stands for the sovereignty of the nation and the five principles of the state.
    • It is worn along with a ceremonial sash, the colors of which are red and white – the national colors of Indonesia.
    • There is also a star badge that is put on in state ceremonies.
International Relations

Current Affairs
July 8, 2026

Sudan
Recently, UNICEF reported that over 300 children killed or wounded in Sudan's civil war over six months.
current affairs image

About Sudan:

  • Location: It is a Northeast African country.
  • Bordering Countries: It shares its border with Egypt (north), Eritrea, and Ethiopia (east), Central African Republic and Chad (west), Libya (northwest) and South Sudan (south),
  • Maritime Border: It shares its border with the Red Sea.
  • Capital City: Khartoum
  • Geographical Features of Sudan:
    • Terrain: It is mainly composed of vast plains and plateaus that are drained by the Nile River and its tributaries.
    • Climate: The climate of Sudan varies from north to south.
    • The northern part of Sudan is a desert climate, receiving little rainfall, shifting to semi-arid and the tropical savannah towards the South.
    • Highest point: Jabal Marrah 
    • Major River: The Nile River system is the dominant geographical feature, running from south to north across the country and draining all streams and rivers of Sudan.
    • Natural Resources: Petroleum; small reserves of iron ore, copper, chromium ore, zinc, tungsten, mica, silver, gold; hydropower.
Geography

Current Affairs
July 8, 2026

Egyptian Vulture
Recently, it was observed that once familiar in villages, temple towns, grazing lands and rocky cliffs across Southern India, the Egyptian Vulture (Neophron percnopterus) has almost disappeared from much of its range.
current affairs image

About Egyptian Vulture:

  • It is one of the world’s smallest vultures.
  • Habitat: It inhabits open, arid areas near humans, with plenty of food options. 
  • Distribution: It is distributed across southern Europe, northern and central Africa, the Middle East, Central Asia and the Indian subcontinent.
  • Characteristics: These are monogamous, migrating between breeding seasons as a pair. They build a large nest and will constantly replenish it during the breeding season.
  • Diet: Diverse feeding habit, from carrion to insects, small reptiles and amphibians and mammal faeces
  • Threats: The loss of habitat, decrease in food supply, collisions with electricity infrastructure and poisoning from the use of agricultural chemicals.
  • Conservation status
    • IUCN: Endangered
  • Ecological Role: It plays a vital ecological role by removing animal carcasses from the landscape and helping maintain healthy ecosystems.
Environment
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