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Current Affairs

Article
18 Feb 2026

Digital Personal Data Protection Act Faces a Constitutional Challenge

Why in news?

Three Public Interest Litigations (PILs) have been filed in the Supreme Court questioning the constitutionality of the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 (DPDP Act). Although the law aims to protect individuals’ digital privacy, the petitioners argue that it weakens the Right to Information (RTI), restricts investigative journalism, and broadens state surveillance powers.

The petitioners have contended that certain provisions of the Act and its Rules dilute transparency safeguards and may curb access to public-interest information.

The Supreme Court has admitted the pleas, issued notice to the Centre, and referred the matter to a five-judge Constitution Bench for hearing in March. However, it declined to grant an interim stay on the Act.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • Privacy vs Transparency: The RTI Amendment at the Heart of the DPDP Challenge
  • Impact on Journalism: Data Law and Press Freedom
  • Concerns Over State Power and Surveillance
  • Concerns Over the Independence of the Data Protection Board

Privacy vs Transparency: The RTI Amendment at the Heart of the DPDP Challenge

  • A core objection raised in the petitions concerns Section 44(3) of the DPDP Act, which amends Section 8(1)(j) of the RTI Act, 2005.
  • Earlier, public authorities could deny disclosure of personal information only if it had no relation to public activity or if it caused an “unwarranted invasion of privacy.”
  • Crucially, the law allowed disclosure if a “larger public interest” justified it.
  • The amended provision now broadly exempts “information which relates to personal information,” removing the public interest override.
  • Concerns Over Shielding Corruption
    • The petitioners argue that this change eliminates the power of Public Information Officers (PIOs) to balance privacy against public interest.
    • Investigative journalism and anti-corruption inquiries often depend on records such as asset disclosures, tender documents, and file notings — all of which may contain personal data.
    • According to analysts, the amendment converts a “carefully calibrated privacy exemption into an absolute bar,” potentially shielding corrupt officials. They describe it as a “death knell for participatory democracy.”
  • Proportionality Test Under Puttaswamy
    • All three petitions rely on the Supreme Court’s 2017 Puttaswamy judgment, which requires that any restriction on fundamental rights meet the proportionality testserving a legitimate aim, adopting the least restrictive means, and including safeguards against misuse.
    • The petitioners contend that replacing the RTI Act’s public interest safeguard with a blanket exemption fails this test and is “manifestly arbitrary,” as it creates a category of information that remains opaque regardless of public interest.

Impact on Journalism: Data Law and Press Freedom

  • The Reporters’ Collective argues that under the DPDP Act, journalists collecting personal data during investigations may be treated as “data fiduciaries.”
  • This classification imposes obligations such as issuing notices and obtaining consent from individuals whose data is being used.
  • In investigative reporting — especially in cases involving fraud, corruption, or misuse of public funds — seeking consent from the subject of investigation is often impractical and defeats the purpose of the probe.
  • Consent and Data Erasure Concerns
    • Section 12 of the Act requires that if consent is not granted or is withdrawn, the data must be erased.
    • The petition contends that this would make post-publication verification and fact-checking difficult, potentially undermining the credibility and continuity of investigative journalism.
  • Chilling Effect on Free Press
    • The petition also highlights the risk of severe financial penalties — up to ₹250 crore — for non-compliance.
    • It argues that the fear of such heavy sanctions could discourage journalists from pursuing stories involving personal data, thereby creating a “chilling effect” on press freedom and limiting reporting in the public interest.

Concerns Over State Power and Surveillance

  • Section 36 of the DPDP Act, which authorises the Union government to demand information from any “data fiduciary.”
  • The petitions argue that this provision enables broad access to personal data without clear procedural safeguards, independent oversight, or prior authorisation.
  • As per the analysts, Section 36 is “vague, overbroad and arbitrary,” as it allows the government to obtain personal data without the individual’s consent.
  • The petition warns that, in the absence of specific protections for journalistic work, media organisations could be compelled to disclose data that may reveal confidential sources, discouraging whistleblowers and investigative reporting.
  • There is no statutory appeal or review mechanism against orders issued by the Central Government under Section 36.
  • This concentration of power creates the risk of arbitrary or excessive use, potentially enabling state control over private data and raising concerns about its implications for policymaking and electoral processes.

Concerns Over the Independence of the Data Protection Board

  • Experts argue that the Data Protection Board of India lacks institutional independence.
  • Under the notified Rules, the search-cum-selection committee for appointing the Board’s chairperson and members comprises only government secretaries and government-nominated experts.
  • They contend that this “complete executive dominance” undermines the doctrine of separation of powers, especially since the Board performs quasi-judicial functions such as adjudicating disputes and imposing penalties.
  • As per them, the State itself is the largest collector of personal data. Therefore, a regulatory body appointed solely by the executive raises concerns about impartiality, potential conflicts of interest, and effective oversight of government actions.
Polity & Governance

Article
18 Feb 2026

IndiaAI Mission 2.0

Why in news?

Union IT Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw has unveiled the broad roadmap for IndiaAI Mission 2.0, marking a strategic shift from infrastructure-building to deeper research, development, and widespread adoption of artificial intelligence across sectors.

The renewed mission aims to accelerate AI innovation, strengthen indigenous R&D capabilities, and ensure meaningful diffusion of AI technologies—particularly for India’s vast MSME ecosystem. By embedding AI into small and medium enterprises, the government seeks to enhance productivity, competitiveness, and global integration.

The announcement coincides with the India AI Impact Summit 2026 at Bharat Mandapam, underscoring India’s ambition to position itself as a major global AI player while aligning technology deployment with domestic economic priorities.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • IndiaAI Mission 2.0: MSME-Focused AI Stack on the Lines of UPI
  • Sovereign AI Beyond Models

IndiaAI Mission 2.0: MSME-Focused AI Stack on the Lines of UPI

  • India is preparing the next phase of its AI Mission with a strong focus on creating a bouquet of ready-to-use AI solutions for MSMEs.
  • Union IT Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw said these solutions will be hosted on a common digital platform—similar to UPI—allowing small and medium enterprises to easily access and deploy AI tools across key sectors.
  • Boosting Compute Capacity and Democratizing Access
    • India will expand its AI compute infrastructure by adding 20,000 GPUs to the existing 38,000.
    • Unlike many countries where AI infrastructure is concentrated in a few corporations, India is working to ensure broad-based access to AI compute capacity.
    • Several sovereign AI models launched at the summit, he said, have outperformed many global systems on multiple evaluation parameters.
  • Global Recognition and Investment Momentum
    • Citing Stanford’s ranking, Union IT Minister noted that India is now among the top three AI nations
    • He projected that over the next two years, more than $200 billion in investments could flow into the ecosystem, with venture capital commitments spanning all five layers of the AI stack—from hardware and models to applications.
    • The minister also acknowledged the overwhelming response from youth at the summit, despite logistical challenges on the opening day.
  • AI and India’s IT Services Sector
    • Addressing concerns about AI’s impact on India’s IT services industry amid recent market volatility, the minister said the sector remains a key national strength.
    • He stressed the need for collaboration between government, industry, and academia to upskill the existing workforce and prepare future talent for technological transitions.
  • Fair Remuneration for News Publishers
    • IT Minister also underscored the government’s view that news publishers must receive fair compensation when AI models use their publicly available content for training.
    • The government is in discussions with major AI platforms on remuneration mechanisms.
    • A DPIIT committee’s white paper has recommended a mandatory blanket licensing regime, under which AI companies would pay royalties for copyrighted material.
    • If adopted, India could become the first country to implement a statutory licensing framework with government-determined royalty rates for AI developers.

Sovereign AI Beyond Models

  • Mission 2.0 expands the idea of sovereign AI beyond just building domestic models. It includes:
    • Indigenous chip development
    • Infrastructure and control systems
    • Scalable applications
  • The goal is to ensure India can scale AI solutions independently, without reliance on external approvals or foreign technological gatekeepers.
  • Overall, IndiaAI Mission 2.0 marks a transition from infrastructure building to scalable innovation, sovereign capability, and inclusive AI adoption, positioning India as a global AI leader.
Economics

Article
18 Feb 2026

India's Aviation is in Need of Data-Driven Oversight

Context:

  • In December 2025, IndiGo’s operational crisis triggered a sharp rise in airfares nationwide, exposing vulnerabilities in India’s rapidly expanding aviation sector.
  • Although the Ministry of Civil Aviation imposed temporary fare caps and the DGCA sought pricing data from major airlines to probe potential market abuse, the episode revealed a deeper issue.
  • India, now the world’s third-largest aviation market, lacks robust, real-time data systems to systematically monitor fare patterns.
  • While reactive interventions may offer short-term consumer protection, the absence of a sustained analytical framework limits regulators’ ability to distinguish genuine demand-driven price increases from potential misuse of market dominance.
  • This article highlights the urgent need for India’s aviation sector to transition from reactive fare controls to a structured, data-driven oversight framework.

Learning from the U.S.: Building a Data-Driven Aviation Regulator

  • From Crisis Response to Continuous Oversight
    • The recent fare surge presents an opportunity for India’s DGCA to move beyond reactive interventions toward sustained, data-based regulation.
    • Mature aviation markets like the United States offer a useful template for this shift.
  • The U.S. DB1B Model
    • The U.S. Bureau of Transportation Statistics (BTS) maintains the Airline Origin and Destination Survey (DB1B), which publishes ticket-level data for a 10% random sample of all domestic tickets sold each quarter since 1995.
    • The database includes actual fares paid, route details, and carrier information—creating a comprehensive digital trail of airline pricing behaviour.
  • Implications for India
    • Unlike the DGCA, which mainly tracks passenger and freight volumes, the DB1B model enables monitoring of pricing trends and market conduct.
    • Adopting a similar 10% sampling framework in India would enhance transparency and help regulators detect abnormal fare patterns over time.
    • Such a system would function like a speed camera—encouraging compliance and maintaining market discipline without constant punitive action.

Transparency as a Check on Airline Pricing Power

  • Encouraging Self-Regulation Through Data Disclosure
    • Greater fare transparency can prompt airlines to self-regulate pricing algorithms.
    • When ticket data are open to scrutiny, carriers are more likely to embed safeguards against opportunistic or algorithm-driven price spikes, reducing legal and reputational risks.
  • Strengthening Research and Policy Design
    • Public access to long-term pricing data—like the U.S. DB1B dataset—has enabled landmark research, including the “Southwest Effect,” where entry of a low-cost carrier lowers fares and boosts passenger traffic.
    • A similar dataset in India could enhance regulatory insight and academic research.
  • Detecting Market Power Through Data Analysis
    • A structured fare database would allow regulators to:
      • Compare routes: Persistently higher fares on monopoly routes may signal dominance.
      • Track entry and exit effects: Fare spikes after competitor exits—or drops upon entry—indicate pricing power.
      • Monitor peak-period pricing: Disproportionate hikes on high-share routes during demand surges may reflect leverage of dominance.
  • Resistance to Transparency
    • Opposition to data disclosure typically cites concerns about proprietary information, technical burdens of reporting, and fears of tacit coordination among competitors.

Why a 10% Fare Data Sample Is a Practical Solution?

  • Balancing Transparency and Proprietary Protection
    • Airlines often argue that revenue management algorithms are commercially sensitive.
    • A 10% random ticket sample offers a middle path—protecting the proprietary “how” behind pricing systems while revealing the “what,” or actual fares charged.
    • Because only a fraction of total ticket data would be collected, compliance would not impose significant operational or technical strain on airlines.
  • Addressing Concerns Over Competitive Coordination
    • Fears that transparency could enable airlines to track competitors are overstated.
    • In today’s environment of real-time data scraping, airlines already monitor market prices.
    • Publishing sampled data with a quarterly delay can further prevent short-term fare alignment.
  • From Reactive Controls to Data-Driven Oversight
    • Instead of relying on ad hoc fare caps and investigations, the DGCA should adopt a structured, data-first framework—allowing market competition to function while ensuring informed and continuous regulatory oversight.
Editorial Analysis

Article
18 Feb 2026

Freedom of Satire and the Limits of State Power in India

Why in the News?

  • Access to a satirical cartoon video was recently blocked, citing national security concerns, sparking debate on freedom of satire in India.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • Free Speech (Constitutional Basis, Satire, Legal Framework, Judicial View, National Security & Free Expression)

Constitutional Basis of Free Speech in India

  • Freedom of speech and expression is guaranteed under Article 19(1)(a) of the Constitution of India.
  • However, this right is not absolute. Under Article 19(2), the State may impose reasonable restrictions in the interests of sovereignty and integrity of India, security of the State, friendly relations with foreign States, public order, decency, morality, and prevention of incitement to an offence.
  • Satire, cartoons, and comedy fall within the broad domain of artistic and political expression protected under Article 19(1)(a).
  • Courts have consistently held that democratic discourse must tolerate dissent, exaggeration, irony, and ridicule.

Satire as a Form of Democratic Expression

  • The Supreme Court has repeatedly recognised satire as a legitimate artistic tool. In Indibily Creative (P) Ltd. v. State of West Bengal (2019), the Court described satire as an exaggeration that exposes societal absurdities and hypocrisies. It emphasised satire’s “unique ability” to make complex points accessible and impactful.
  • Similarly, in D.C. Saxena v. Chief Justice of India (1997), the Court cautioned that suppressing debate on public issues can endanger democratic stability.
  • Courts have also observed that satire should be evaluated from the perspective of a “reasonable person” and not a “hypersensitive individual.”
  • The Madras High Court in Kama v. M. Jothisorupan (2018) termed political cartoons as a “weapon of ridicule,” meant to sting and provoke thought rather than flatter authority.

Legal Framework for Blocking Online Content

  • The recent controversy arises in the context of the Information Technology Act, 2000 and related rules.
  • Section 69A of the IT Act
    • Section 69A empowers the Union government to block public access to online content on specific grounds aligned with Article 19(2).
    • Blocking orders must be reasoned, recorded in writing, and subject to review.
    • In Shreya Singhal v. Union of India (2015), the Supreme Court upheld Section 69A but clarified that both intermediaries and originators of content should be heard before blocking, and that restrictions must strictly fall within Article 19(2).
  • IT Rules and Amendments
    • Amendments to the Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2026, reduce the time for social media platforms to remove content deemed illegal from 24-36 hours to three hours.
    • The Karnataka High Court upheld the government’s ‘Sahyog’ content-blocking portal, which automates notice transmission to intermediaries. However, concerns have been raised about bypassing procedural safeguards.
    • Petitions before the Supreme Court challenge the IT (Procedure and Safeguards for Blocking for Access of Information by Public) Rules, 2009, particularly provisions allowing emergency blocking without prior notice and maintaining confidentiality of blocking orders.

Judicial View on Artistic Freedom

  • Indian courts have repeatedly affirmed the importance of artistic and satirical expression.
  • In a March 2025 verdict, the Supreme Court observed that 75 years into the Republic, India cannot be so fragile that poetry, stand-up comedy, or artistic expression would automatically incite hatred.
  • The Delhi High Court has similarly defended creative liberty, stating that satire exposes societal ills through exaggeration. Globally too, democracies afford cartoons and satire greater latitude, recognising them as essential to public life.
  • The Supreme Court has even invoked philosopher Albert Camus to underline that art unites society while tyranny separates it.

Tension Between National Security and Free Expression

  • The recent blocking of a satirical cartoon video reportedly featuring the Prime Minister was justified on grounds such as national security, defence, and foreign relations.
  • While Article 19(2) permits restrictions, courts insist that such limitations must be reasonable, proportionate, and procedurally fair. Overbroad or opaque blocking measures risk chilling free speech and undermining democratic accountability.
  • The key constitutional question is whether satire, by its very nature exaggerated and ironic, can genuinely threaten national security, or whether invoking such grounds in artistic contexts amounts to excessive restriction.

 

Polity & Governance

Article
18 Feb 2026

India–France Relations - Strategic Convergence, Recasting Multipolarity through a “Multipolar West”

Context:

  • President Emmanuel Macron’s fourth visit to India since 2017 underscores the steady transformation of India–France relations, especially in defence, technology, artificial intelligence (AI), and the Indo-Pacific.
  • His engagements in Mumbai and Delhi reflect not just bilateral warmth with the Indian Prime Minister, but a deeper recalibration in India’s global strategy — one that increasingly runs through Europe.
  • This visit coincides with India’s broader pivot towards Europe, evidenced by high-level exchanges, EU participation in Republic Day celebrations, and progress on trade negotiations.

Key Highlights/ Outcome of the French President Visit to India:

  • Shared vision:
    • At a time of global geopolitical flux, the Indian PM described the Indo-French partnership as a “force for stability”.
    • Both leaders underscored shared principles of rule of law, strategic autonomy, opposition to hegemony, and advocacy of sovereign equality, and technological sovereignty.
  • Institutional elevation: From Strategic to “Special Global Strategic” Partnership, marking a qualitative shift in India–France ties across defence, technology, innovation, space, AI governance, and economic cooperation.
  • AI governance (A “Third Way” Approach):
    • Macron emphasised transparent algorithms, respect for diversity, and ethical AI governance.
    • This echoes India’s attempt to promote a “third way” between the American corporate-dominated AI model, and Chinese state-centric digital control.
    • Their joint participation in the AI Action Summit in Paris (2025) and the India AI Impact Summit signals growing cooperation in global norm-setting.
  • Defence and industrial cooperation (From Buyer-Seller to Co-Production):
    • H125 Helicopter: Both leaders virtually inaugurated the Airbus H125 Helicopter final assembly line in Vemagal, Karnataka.
    • Dassault Rafale: Recent developments include expansion of India’s Rafale fleet (Air Force and Navy). French willingness to produce components in India. Joint jet-engine development.
    • Significance: Reinforcing Make in India, Atmanirbhar Bharat in defence, defence technology transfer, etc.
  • Launch of India–France Year of Innovation: Marked at the iconic Gateway of India, this initiative aims -
    • At deeper integration between two knowledge-based economies.
    • To promote joint R&D, enhance digital sovereignty, create high-skilled workforce, and strengthen startup and industrial ecosystems.
  • Space diplomacy (TRISHNA Satellite): A joint mission between ISRO and CNES, TRISHNA will help monitor and understand climate change through advanced thermal infrared observation.
  • Counter-terrorism and strategic signalling: President Macron paid tribute at the Taj Mahal Palace Hotel to victims of the 26/11 attacks, reiterating France’s firm stance against terrorism.
  • Economic and cultural diplomacy:
    • Amendment of Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA) protocol enhances investment climate.
    • Farm-to-plate agricultural tracking projects reflect cooperation in sustainable agriculture and food systems.
    • Macron’s engagement with investors in Mumbai underscores economic partnership.
    • Cultural diplomacy (cinema interaction, museum cooperation) strengthens soft power ties.

Analysing These Outcomes:

  • Rethinking multipolarity:
    • Despite rhetorical emphasis on multipolarity, the global balance of power remains asymmetrical.
    • For example,
      • The United States remains pre-eminent.
      • China continues to rise.
      • Middle powers like India and France lag behind in economic and technological scale.
    • The AI sector exemplifies this imbalance, challenging the simplistic usage of multipolarity and highlighting structural hierarchies in global power.
  • Geopolitical drivers (Space created by American retrenchment):
    • The US is increasingly focused on the Western hemisphere, pressuring allies for greater burden-sharing.
    • This encourages regional self-reliance in Eurasia and the Indo-Pacific, and creates strategic space for India–France cooperation, India–EU strategic engagement, and expanded Indo-Pacific coordination.
    • Importantly, India–France ties are not anti-American; rather, they complement India’s diversified engagement strategy.
  • India’s European pivot:
    • India no longer sees Europe as merely an adjunct of Washington in US-China rivalry.
    • Instead, it views Europe — especially France — as a source of advanced technology, a partner in economic diversification, a geopolitical balancer, and a contributor to India’s “strategic autonomy”.
    • This marks India’s exploration of what can be termed a “multipolar West” — recognising internal differentiation within the Western bloc.
  • Institutionalising the partnership (Horizon 2047 Framework):
    • Unveiled in 2023, Horizon 2047 is a long-term roadmap aligning India and France’s cooperation until India’s centenary of independence.
    • Key pillars: Defence industrial cooperation, space collaboration, energy transition, technology and AI, and Indo-Pacific maritime security.
    • This institutionalisation reflects a shift from transactional ties to structural strategic alignment.

Strategic Implications for India:

  • Diversification within the West: The “collective West” is not monolithic. Partnership with France allows India to reduce overdependence on Washington. Engage a geopolitically assertive Europe. Expand strategic manoeuvring space.
  • Mitigating vulnerabilities: Cooperation among Delhi, Paris, and Brussels can help address supply-chain risks, enhance technological resilience, and balance geopolitical pressures. Manage economic interdependence with China.
  • Historical significance: India, a post-colonial state, has built a stable and forward-looking partnership with a former imperial power embedded in the political West.

Challenges:

  • Structural power asymmetry: US-China dominance in technology and capital markets.
  • European fragmentation: Varied threat perceptions within the EU. Economic slowdown in Europe may limit investment capacity.
  • AI norm-setting constraints: Limited technological weight compared to US and China.
  • Defence technology transfer sensitivities: Intellectual property and export control barriers.

Way Forward:

  • Deepen co-production: Move towards joint R&D in defence and aerospace. Integrate Indian private sector.
  • Institutionalise AI collaboration: Joint regulatory platforms. Shared standards in ethical AI.
  • Strengthen Indo-Pacific cooperation: Maritime domain awareness, trilateral partnerships (India–France–Australia, etc.).
  • Expand economic engagement: Conclude and operationalise India–EU trade agreements, and strengthen clean energy partnerships.
  • Build normative coalitions: Lead middle-power coalitions on digital governance and climate action.

Conclusion:

  • The “Macron moment” goes beyond bilateral warmth. It signals a deeper shift in India’s geopolitical imagination — from abstract multipolar rhetoric to a calibrated engagement with a differentiated West.
  • By strengthening ties with France and a strategically autonomous Europe, India widens its strategic options, reduces overdependence, and enhances its manoeuvrability in a complex global order.
  • For India, multipolarity is no longer merely about balancing great powers — it is about constructing resilient networks of partnerships across traditional East-West and North-South divides. The India–France axis stands at the heart of this transformation.
Editorial Analysis

Article
18 Feb 2026

Why Yuvraj Mehta’s Death Was Not an Accident

Context

  • Urban India often treats deaths caused by infrastructural failure as unfortunate events.
  • The death of 27-year-old Yuvraj Mehta in Greater Noida, after his car plunged into an unguarded construction pit, illustrates a deeper pattern.
  • Cities are not merely sites where tragedies occur; they actively generate them through weak governance, poor infrastructure, and diffused accountability.
  • The issue reflects not isolated negligence but a systemic outcome of rapid urbanisation where daily life is shaped by unmanaged risk.

The Myth of the Accident

  • The term accident suggests unpredictability, yet dangerous roads, open construction sites, exposed wiring, and waterlogging are documented repeatedly in civic complaints.
  • National Crime Records Bureau data for 2023 records 1.73 lakh road fatalities, with urban areas accounting for roughly 32% and showing higher death rates per lakh population.
  • These deaths occur in an environment where citizens anticipate danger and constantly adjust behaviour for personal safety.
  • Instead of institutional protection, individuals navigate hazards themselves: slowing near dark stretches, avoiding flooded areas, and choosing routes carefully.
  • This transfer of responsibility contradicts the 74th Constitutional Amendment, which intended decentralised urban administration.
  • In practice, fragmented authority and weak regulation leave cities unable to guarantee basic protection.

Development Priorities and Invisible Infrastructure

  • Indian cities heavily prioritise visible development- flyovers, expressways, and metro corridors.
  • Projects that enhance visibility attract attention, funding, and political prestige. In contrast, essential systems such as drainage, pedestrian pathways, and electrical networks receive little urgency.
  • The result is a modern facade masking structural vulnerability. Karol Bagh in Delhi demonstrates this pattern.
  • The area, known for educational aspiration, repeatedly experiences monsoon flooding.
  • In 2024, three students drowned in a flooded basement library already flagged in municipal audits.
  • The illegal use of basements persisted despite known violation because demand was high and enforcement weak.
  • Such incidents reveal a consistent logic: expansion and appearance take precedence over safety.

Fragmented Responsibility and Lack of Accountability

  • After tragedies, multiple agencies appear: municipal departments, contractors, inspectors, and police.
  • Each controls a limited portion of the system but none assumes full responsibility.
  • In Mehta’s case, oversight failures combined with delayed emergency response, as recovery was handled only after the State Disaster Response Force intervened.
  • Administrative reactions typically involve a committee, an inquiry, and suspension of junior officials.
  • These actions rarely address deeper institutional flaws. Investigations often stop at lower levels even when failures are clearly systemic.
  • As a result, procedural activity replaces genuine accountability, and structural risks remain unchanged.

Social Vulnerability Across Classes

  • Urban danger cuts across social categories. Mehta, a working professional, and students living in unsafe basements share the same vulnerability.
  • Infrastructure failure does not discriminate by class. Yet public outrage is limited because responsibility lacks a single identifiable face.
  • Harm accumulates through overlooked inspections, delayed repairs, and ignored warnings.
  • Public mourning follows a predictable cycle: sorrow, assurances, and eventual silence. Without sustained attention, tragedy becomes routine rather than transformative.

The Way Forward: Toward Safer Urban Governance

  • Deaths resulting from infrastructural neglect should be recognised as political outcomes of planning and policy choices.
  • Meaningful reform requires enforceable oversight rather than reactive measures.
  • Three steps are essential:
    • RTI-linked urban risk registers ensuring citizen complaints lead to action within 30 days.
    • Quarterly independent audits of preventable deaths to introduce administrative transparency.
    • Independent urban safety commissions empowered to enforce binding standards across municipalities.
    • These measures would convert awareness into responsibility and prevention into a governance priority.

Conclusion

  • Urban fatalities caused by infrastructural neglect are not random misfortunes. They arise from planning priorities that privilege visibility over protection and speed over maintenance.
  • Fragmented institutions dilute responsibility, while citizens adapt to danger rather than challenge it.
  • Until safety becomes central to governance and accountability is clearly assigned, such deaths will persist.
  • Ultimately, these tragedies are civic failures, demonstrating that development without reliable public systems does not represent progress but enduring insecurity.
Editorial Analysis

Online Test
18 Feb 2026

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Online Test
18 Feb 2026

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CAMP-HINDI-PT-02

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18 Feb 2026

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CA Test-2 (CA1102)

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