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Article
08 Jun 2026
Why in the News?
- The Supreme Court Collegium's acceptance of an Ordinance creating four additional judges' posts has raised significant questions about judicial independence, security of tenure, and the appearance of detachment from the executive.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Ordinances (Key Features, Judicial Precedents, etc.)
- News Summary (Latest Ordinance, Implications, Criticism, etc.)
About Ordinances in India
- An Ordinance is a temporary law promulgated by the President of India under Article 123 of the Constitution.
- It is an extraordinary legislative power that can be exercised when Parliament is not in session and when immediate action is necessary.
- Key Features of Ordinances
- Article 123: Empowers the President to promulgate ordinances when Parliament is not in session.
- Force of Law: An ordinance has the same force and effect as an Act of Parliament during its operation.
- Duration: An ordinance ceases to operate six weeks after Parliament reassembles, unless approved by both Houses.
- Withdrawal: The President may withdraw an ordinance at any time.
- Disapproval: Both Houses may disapprove it by resolution.
- Re-promulgation: While constitutionally permissible, repeated re-promulgation has been deemed unconstitutional by the Supreme Court.
Judicial Pronouncements on Ordinances
- The Supreme Court has, over time, established important principles to prevent misuse of the ordinance-making power:
- D.C. Wadhwa vs State of Bihar (1986): The Court held that governance by repeatedly re-promulgated ordinances is a "fraud on the Constitution."
- Krishna Kumar Singh vs State of Bihar (2017): A seven-judge Bench ruled against using the ordinance-making power as a parallel source of legislation, emphasising that ordinances are meant for exceptional circumstances.
Judicial Independence as a Basic Feature
- Constitutional Framework
- Article 124(1) of the Constitution states that the Supreme Court shall consist of a Chief Justice and such other judges, not exceeding the number Parliament may prescribe by law.
- The number of Supreme Court judges has been increased from time to time through legislation.
- The NJAC Judgment
- In Supreme Court Advocates-on-Record Association vs Union of India (2015), the Supreme Court struck down the 99th Constitutional Amendment and the National Judicial Appointments Commission (NJAC) Act. Key observations included:
- Judicial independence is part of the basic structure of the Constitution.
- The NJAC, despite its seemingly neutral composition, allowed the Law Minister and one eminent person to potentially veto judicial appointments.
- This was held to destroy the judiciary's primacy in its own appointments.
- In Supreme Court Advocates-on-Record Association vs Union of India (2015), the Supreme Court struck down the 99th Constitutional Amendment and the National Judicial Appointments Commission (NJAC) Act. Key observations included:
- The Court has consistently held that judicial independence is not just about freedom from external pressure but also about the appearance of detachment from the executive.
News Summary
- On May 16, 2026, the President promulgated an Ordinance lifting the sanctioned strength of the Supreme Court from 34 to 38 judges. Following this:
- Five judges took the oath in Delhi
- Of these, two filled lawful vacancies that already existed (the Court was sitting at 32 against a sanctioned 34).
- Three judges occupy chairs that no statute has created; they sit only by virtue of the Ordinance.
Constitutional Concerns
- The acceptance of the Ordinance by the Supreme Court Collegium raises several significant concerns:
- Security of Tenure
- Three judges hold their positions based on an Ordinance that:
- Can be withdrawn at any time by the President.
- May be disapproved by either House of Parliament.
- Will cease to operate six weeks after Parliament reassembles unless replaced by an Act.
- A court that owes three chairs to a six-week renewable Ordinance holds them at the executive's sufferance.
- Three judges hold their positions based on an Ordinance that:
- Judicial Independence
- The fundamental concern is whether the court can hold its seats free of obligation to the political branch.
- Judges whose tenure depends on the government's willingness to convert the Ordinance into an Act may face questions about their detachment in matters involving the Union government.
- Appearance of Bias
- In matters touching the Union, the government whose parliamentary majority must regularise the appointments may appear before these judges.
- A judge whose tenure lies, even loosely, in one party's gift cannot wear the detachment the office demands.
Potential Constitutional Challenges
- If the Bill Replaces the Ordinance
- The anomaly closes.
- The judges' positions are regularised through proper legislation.
- Constitutional concerns are addressed.
- If the Bill is Not Passed
- The apex court's strength reverts to 34.
- The executive cannot bridge the gap by re-promulgation; this would be the "fraud" condemned in the Wadhwa case.
- The status of judges appointed to Ordinance-created posts becomes uncertain.
Validity of Judgments
- The validity of judgments delivered by judges appointed to Ordinance-created posts is protected under the de facto doctrine, as affirmed in Gokaraju Rangaraju vs State of Andhra Pradesh (1981).
- This doctrine holds that acts of officials who hold office under colour of authority are valid, even if their appointment is later found to be defective.
- Removal Question
- Whether a judge appointed to an Ordinance-created post can be removed once that post lapses remains constitutionally untested.
Broader Implications
- For Judicial Independence
- The acceptance of Ordinance-based appointments may weaken the structural independence of the judiciary.
- Sets a precedent for the executive to influence the composition of the court without parliamentary scrutiny.
- May affect the perception of judicial impartiality.
- For Constitutional Governance
- Raises questions about the proper use of ordinance-making powers.
- Tests the limits of the D.C. Wadhwa principle.
- Potential for further litigation on the validity of the Ordinance.
- For the Collegium System
- The Collegium's acceptance of the Ordinance may be seen as a calculated risk.
- Stakes the institution's reputation on the political process completing the transition to a statute.
- May affect future negotiations between the judiciary and the executive.
Concerns Raised by Experts
- Security of tenure is a cornerstone of judicial independence that may be compromised.
- The appearance of detachment from the executive is essential for public confidence in the judiciary.
- Historical precedents like the Roosevelt court-packing plan demonstrate the dangers of executive interference in court composition.
- The Supreme Court's own jurisprudence in D.C. Wadhwa and Krishna Kumar Singh warns against using ordinances as parallel legislation.
Article
08 Jun 2026
Context:
- The Union Cabinet approved the Mission for Cotton Productivity with an outlay of ₹5,659 crore for 2026–31.
- The mission aims to raise cotton lint productivity from 441 kg/hectare (ha) (in triennium ending (TE) 2025-26) to 755 kg/ha by 2031.
- There is a need to evaluate whether this target is achievable amid declining productivity, technological stagnation, and policy constraints.
India's Bt Cotton Success Story:
- A major turning point came in 2002, when the government approved the commercial cultivation of Bt cotton as cleared by the Genetic Engineering Appraisal Committee (GEAC), marking India's entry into the biotechnology revolution in agriculture.
- Impact of Bt cotton (2002–2014):
- Introduction of Bollgard (Cry1Ac gene) and later Bollgard II (stacked genes) helped control bollworm infestation.
- Cotton production increased from 13.6 million bales (2002-03) to 39.8 million bales (2013-14).
- Cotton acreage expanded by 56%, from 7.6 million ha to 11.9 million ha. Productivity rose by 88%, from 302 kg/ha to 566 kg/ha.
- India emerged as the world's largest cotton producer and the 2nd-largest
- This period demonstrated how technological innovation can transform agricultural productivity and farmer incomes.
Policy Reversal and Innovation Slowdown:
- After Bollgard II, newer technologies such as Bollgard II with roundup ready flex (RRF) and Bollgard III (three stacked genes with herbicide tolerance), were developed (by MMB (Mahyco-Monsanto Biotech) India) but never commercialised in India.
- Role of price controls:
- A series of government interventions reduced returns on innovation.
- For example,
- 2006: Andhra Pradesh capped seed prices at ₹750 per packet, significantly below market prices. Maharashtra and Gujarat adopted similar measures.
- 2015: Cotton Seed Price Control Order reduced trait fees by 74%.
- 2018: National seed price further reduced.
- 2020: Trait fees were eliminated entirely.
- As a result, private biotechnology firms withdrew advanced cotton technologies from regulatory consideration, making further innovation commercially unattractive.
Global Competitors Moved Ahead:
- While India halted technological progress, other cotton-producing countries continued adopting advanced biotechnology and precision agriculture.
- Cotton productivity (TE 2025-26 - lint yield (kg/ha)): Australia (2,340); China (2,311); Brazil (1,943); US (976); and India (441) [reported by the International Cotton Advisory Committee].
- The productivity gap reflects differences in technology adoption, R&D investment, regulatory support, and seed innovation ecosystems.
- Brazil, for instance, has leveraged advanced seed technologies and efficient agronomic practices despite having predominantly rainfed cotton cultivation.
Emerging Cotton Crisis:
- India's cotton sector has entered a phase of stagnation and decline.
- Key trends:
- Cotton production has been declining by around 2% annually since 2014-15.
- If the earlier growth trajectory had continued, output could have reached 65.3 million bales by 2026.
- Actual production in 2025-26 stands at only 29 million bales.
- India has shifted from being a net exporter to importing approximately 4 million bales of cotton.
- This reversal raises concerns about the competitiveness of India's textile value chain and long-term cotton self-sufficiency.
Evaluating the Cotton Productivity Mission:
- The mission's objective of increasing productivity to 755 kg/ha by 2031 is ambitious and welcome.
- However, significant concerns remain:
- Lack of access to cutting-edge biotechnology available globally.
- Absence of next-generation genetically modified cotton varieties.
- Weak incentives for private-sector innovation.
- Long and uncertain regulatory approval processes.
- Inadequate public-sector agricultural R&D funding.
- Even if the target is achieved, India's productivity would remain well below current levels in Brazil, China, and Australia.
The Policy Dilemma:
- The cotton productivity cannot be sustainably improved without addressing the innovation ecosystem.
- Two possible pathways:
- Revive private innovation: Reconsider the Cotton Seed Price Control Order. Strengthen intellectual property protection. Ensure innovators can recover R&D investments.
- Expand public sector R&D:
- Substantially increase government funding for biotechnology research.
- Develop indigenous seed technologies and advanced cotton traits.
- Strengthen agricultural research institutions and extension services.
Conclusion:
- The Mission for Cotton Productivity acknowledges the seriousness of India's cotton crisis, but productivity gains alone may be difficult without technological renewal.
- The long-term revival of the cotton sector requires a balanced framework that promotes innovation, biotechnology adoption, robust R&D investment, and farmer access to advanced seed technologies.
- Without addressing these structural issues, the mission risks treating the symptoms rather than the underlying causes of declining cotton competitiveness.
Article
08 Jun 2026
Context
- Declining fertility rates have brought the country close to replacement-level fertility, shifting future concerns from managing a youthful population to addressing the challenges of an ageing population.
- However, recent policy discussions have increasingly focused on illegal immigration, border security, and demographic changes among religious communities.
- This shift has sparked debate over whether India's demographic policies are being guided by evidence-based concerns or by broader political objectives.
The Real Demographic Challenge: Population Ageing
- Declining Fertility and Its Implications
- India's fertility rates have fallen steadily over the past few decades.
- As a result, the country is moving towards a stage where population ageing, rather than population growth, will become the primary demographic concern.
- This transition will require greater investment in healthcare, social security, pensions, and elderly care.
- Policy Priorities and Demographic Realities
- Despite these emerging challenges, demographic discussions have focused heavily on undocumented migration and religious population trends.
- Such concerns risk diverting attention from pressing issues related to long-term demographic sustainability and economic development.
Concerns Regarding the Demographic Change Committee
- Absence of Demographic Expertise
- The composition of the High-Level Committee on Demographic Change has attracted criticism because it lacks professional demographers.
- Instead, the committee consists primarily of retired administrators and officials.
- Implications for Policy Formulation
- Demographic policymaking requires specialised knowledge and rigorous analysis.
- The absence of demographic experts raises concerns that administrative and security perspectives may overshadow scientific evidence, potentially affecting the quality and credibility of policy recommendations.
The Debate Over Illegal Immigration
- Claims of Large-Scale Migration
- The issue of Bangladeshi migration has become a central feature of political discourse, particularly in border states such as Assam and West Bengal.
- Concerns have been raised that undocumented migrants are altering local demographics and influencing electoral outcomes.
- Evaluating the Evidence
- Population growth in border regions can result from various factors, including domestic migration, urbanisation, and differences in fertility patterns.
- Population increases alone do not constitute conclusive evidence of large-scale infiltration.
- Reliable demographic analysis requires a broader examination of migration trends and socioeconomic factors.
Economic Realities and Migration Patterns
- Bangladesh's Economic Transformation
- Over the last two decades, Bangladesh has experienced remarkable economic growth, achieving levels of per capita income and human development comparable to India.
- Improvements in education, healthcare, and employment opportunities have significantly transformed its economy.
- Challenging Migration Narratives
- These developments weaken the argument that Bangladesh remains a major source of distress-driven migration.
- While cross-border migration continues to exist, available evidence does not support claims of migration on a scale capable of dramatically altering India's demographic balance.
Fertility Trends and Religious Demographics
- The Myth of Religious Determinism
- A persistent concern in public discourse is that higher Muslim fertility will eventually lead to significant demographic shifts.
- However, demographic data show that fertility rates among Muslims have declined substantially over time.
- The Role of Socioeconomic Factors
- Research consistently demonstrates that poverty, women's education, healthcare access, and economic opportunities influence fertility far more than religion.
- For example, Muslim women in Kerala, Tamil Nadu, and Jammu and Kashmir often exhibit lower fertility rates than Hindu women in Bihar and UP.
- Converging Fertility Patterns
- The gap between Hindu and Muslim fertility rates has narrowed considerably and continues to decline.
- These trends suggest that socioeconomic development, rather than religious identity, is the primary determinant of reproductive behaviour.
Social and Political Implications
- Risks of Communal Polarisation
- An excessive focus on religious demographics may reinforce stereotypes, deepen polarisation, and contribute to the othering of minority communities.
- Such narratives can weaken social cohesion and undermine trust between different groups.
- Human Rights and Democratic Values
- Policies centred on identification, detention, and deportation of suspected undocumented migrants raise broader concerns regarding civil liberties, human rights, and the protection of vulnerable populations.
- Democratic societies must balance security concerns with principles of equality and justice.
Conclusion
- India's demographic future will be shaped primarily by population ageing, declining fertility, and socioeconomic development rather than by fears of demographic takeover.
- Effective policymaking requires evidence-based policy, reliable demographic data, and expert analysis.
- Addressing challenges related to healthcare, education, employment, and social security will be far more important than focusing on narratives surrounding immigration and religious demographic change.
- A balanced, inclusive, and fact-driven approach remains essential for ensuring both social stability and long-term national development.
Article
08 Jun 2026
Why in news?
June 7, 2026 marked 100 days of the US-Israel war on Iran — a conflict triggered by the killing of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in the opening strikes.
The war has since spread across multiple fronts, disrupted global energy markets, and directly impacted India through rising oil prices and threats to its Gulf diaspora. Diplomacy remains deadlocked, with no ceasefire in sight.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- How It Started?
- Key players in the Conflict
- Who Is Winning?
- The Strait of Hormuz: The Energy Flashpoint
- Lebanon: The Second Front
- Diplomacy: Completely Stalled
- India's Concern: Three Direct Threats
How It Started?
- The US and Israel launched strikes targeting Iran's military and nuclear-linked infrastructure, aiming to prevent Tehran from developing nuclear weapons.
- The killing of Khamenei — Iran's highest political and religious authority — dramatically escalated the conflict.
- Iran retaliated through both direct strikes and regional proxies, drawing Lebanon, the Gulf states, and global energy markets into the crisis.
- Recently, the US House of Representatives voted 215–208 to restrict President Trump's authority to continue the war — a largely symbolic move, as the Senate must also pass it.
Key players in the Conflict
- The standoff involves multiple state and non-state actors:
- The United States is leading military strikes and diplomatic pressure.
- Israel is engaged in direct confrontation with Iran-linked forces.
- Iran, responding through direct actions and regional proxies.
- Hezbollah in Lebanon is sustaining cross-border attacks on Israel.
- Gulf countries are impacted by spillover effects despite not being direct participants.
- Countries across the Gulf have been affected by the conflict, even though they are not directly involved in the fighting.
- Missile and drone attacks have targeted infrastructure in parts of the region, raising security concerns.
- Air travel has been disrupted, with flights cancelled or rerouted due to safety risks.
Who Is Winning?
- Nobody, clearly. The conflict has become a war of endurance rather than decisive military gains. The US and Israel have struck Iranian military and nuclear facilities.
- But Iran has sustained its resistance through direct action and proxy forces — chiefly Hezbollah in Lebanon — keeping multiple fronts active. Both sides claim limited success while facing ongoing risks.
- Trump has described the war as a "great success" and insists Iran is "in no position" to develop nuclear weapons. But stalled diplomacy tells a different story.
The Strait of Hormuz: The Energy Flashpoint
- The Strait of Hormuz — a narrow waterway connecting the Persian Gulf to global markets — has become the most sensitive pressure point of the conflict.
- Roughly one-fifth of the world's crude oil passes through it daily.
- Iran has asserted shared control of the strait with Oman. Military activity has disrupted shipping, created a partial blockade, and kept oil prices volatile.
- Prices crossed $100 per barrel at peak, though they dipped when ceasefire signals emerged.
Lebanon: The Second Front
- Lebanon has become a major secondary front. Hezbollah — Iran's closest regional ally — has sustained cross-border attacks on Israel, opening a parallel conflict.
- Israel has continued striking southern Lebanon despite a Washington-brokered ceasefire agreement.
- Hezbollah has rejected conditional truce proposals, demanding full Israeli withdrawal.
- Iran has linked any peace deal with the US to a ceasefire in Lebanon, making the diplomatic picture even more complex.
Diplomacy: Completely Stalled
- A Pakistan-brokered ceasefire on April 7 is no longer holding. Iran has cut contact with US mediators.
- Earlier discussions on extending the ceasefire and reviving nuclear talks have collapsed after Washington sought changes to proposed terms.
- Iran's position: "The ball is in Trump's court." Tehran demands the release of frozen assets and a broader regional ceasefire — particularly in Lebanon — before any talks can resume.
- Trump shows little urgency, suggesting the talks have lost momentum.
India's Concern: Three Direct Threats
- India has maintained strategic neutrality but is directly affected across three dimensions.
- Oil imports: 65–70% of India's crude oil transits through the Strait of Hormuz. Sustained disruption raises fuel import costs, adding to inflation and current account pressure.
- Gulf diaspora: 9–10 million Indians live in Gulf countries — the largest Indian diaspora concentration in the world. Their remittances account for roughly 40% of India's total remittance inflows. An Indian national was killed in an Iranian drone strike on Kuwait International Airport on June 3.
- Trade routes: Shipping disruptions, flight cancellations, and supply chain uncertainty affect India's trade with the Gulf and beyond.
Article
08 Jun 2026
Why in news?
The Supreme Court recently framed a comprehensive Victim Protection Plan for survivors of human trafficking and commercial sexual exploitation (CSE).
A bench of Justices JB Pardiwala and R Mahadevan held that the "existing vacuum seriously impairs the fundamental rights" of trafficking victims and was "left with no option" but to issue detailed directions.
The plan will operate until Parliament enacts a dedicated law on the protection and rehabilitation of CSE victims.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Background: A 22-Year-Long Legal Battle
- On Dignity: What the Court Said?
- The Problem with Section 17 of ITPA
- What the Victim Protection Plan Covers?
- What the Court Did Not Do — and What It Asked Parliament to Do?
Background: A 22-Year-Long Legal Battle
- The case traces to a 2004 petition filed by Prajwala, a Hyderabad-based anti-trafficking organisation.
- Its core argument was: trafficking victims were being treated as criminals rather than victims or survivors. The absence of a Victim Protection Plan was making rescue and rehabilitation efforts ineffective.
- In December 2015, the Supreme Court disposed of the petition after the government promised to establish an Organised Crime Investigation Agency (OCIA) and an Inter-Ministerial Committee to draft a comprehensive anti-trafficking law.
- Neither promise was kept. The timeline of failure is striking:
- OCIA was never set up.
- Draft anti-trafficking Bills were prepared in 2016, 2017, 2018, and 2021 — none became law.
- The 2018 Bill passed the Lok Sabha but lapsed when the 16th Lok Sabha dissolved.
- Instead of OCIA, the government amended the NIA Act in 2019 to allow NIA to investigate trafficking cases.
- Prajwala returned to the Supreme Court in 2022, alleging non-compliance. The current judgment is the result.
On Dignity: What the Court Said?
- The bench grounded its entire reasoning in the concept of human dignity.
- Every person possesses dignity simply by virtue of being human. Trafficking violates this directly — the entire transaction treats victims as objects, as though their humanity is irrelevant.
- The court went further. It held that dignity is not a fixed condition — it is shaped by circumstances.
- A person without income or independent livelihood cannot negotiate from a position of choice. Material deprivation does not merely diminish dignity; it actively creates conditions in which dignity can be stripped away.
- This is why trafficking victims are so vulnerable — poverty and dependence make them easy targets.
- The court also acknowledged the deep and pervasive stigma that CSE victims carry, noting that it is their identity and suffering that are fundamentally undermined.
On Rehabilitation: A Constitutional Right
- The court made a landmark holding: victims of trafficking for CSE have a constitutional right to rehabilitation, flowing from Articles 21 and 23 of the Constitution.
- Article 21 guarantees the right to life with dignity.
- Article 23 explicitly prohibits traffic in human beings and forced labour.
- The court drew upon the Bandhua Mukti Morcha (1984) and Neerja Choudhary (1984) judgments, which had held that freeing bonded labourers was not enough — rehabilitation was equally essential.
- The goal, the court said, is not merely to punish perpetrators — it is to empower victims by guaranteeing their rights.
The Problem with Section 17 of ITPA
- The bench examined Section 17 of the Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act (ITPA), 1956, which governs what happens after a woman is removed from a brothel during a raid.
- The provision's fundamental flaw: it treats three very different categories of women identically —
- Women trafficked into prostitution
- Women who were trafficked but later continued voluntarily
- Women who entered sex work entirely voluntarily
- This one-size-fits-all approach, the court held, risks violating rights and dignity.
- The court directed that magistrates must first conduct an inquiry to identify voluntary adult sex workers — for whom "rescue" does not apply.
- A victim's consent must be the primary and governing consideration in all decisions about detention in protective homes or reintegration with family.
- Experts, however, note a real-world complexity - the line between voluntary and involuntary is rarely clean.
- Women who entered sex work under coercion may, after years, come to describe it as a part of life.
- Consent, in practice, operates under structural conditions of poverty and dependence that make clean determinations very difficult.
What the Victim Protection Plan Covers?
- The court framed a detailed plan covering every stage from rescue to reintegration.
- During Rescue
- Victims must not be arrested, abused, photographed, or filmed in ways that reveal their identity.
- Special attention is mandated for children, transgender persons, persons with disabilities, and those with mental illness.
- Post-Rescue
- Victims cannot be kept in lock-ups or detained overnight at police stations.
- They must be provided legal aid, medical care, and counselling immediately.
- They must be produced before appropriate authority without delay.
- Before ordering long-term custody, magistrates must hear the victim and, where necessary, determine whether an adult woman is in sex work voluntarily.
- In Protective Homes
- Homes must not resemble prisons.
- Each survivor is to be assigned a case worker and given an individual care plan covering healthcare, counselling, education, skill development, livelihood support, and access to government schemes.
- Bank accounts must be created for long-term residents.
- Mechanisms to report abuse within homes must be established.
- On Anti-Trafficking Units
- Units must be headed by officers of Deputy Superintendent of Police rank.
- They are to be notified as police stations with powers to register and investigate trafficking cases.
- They must maintain databases on traffickers and victims and coordinate with social workers and child welfare officials.
What the Court Did Not Do — and What It Asked Parliament to Do
- The bench declined to create OCIA as originally promised by the government. Instead, it directed Parliament to:
- Amend Sections 7, 8, and 20 of ITPA, which currently expose victims to prosecution.
- Rethink mandatory fixed-period detention in protective homes.
- Recognise the rights of voluntary adult sex workers — noting that "the rights of sex workers can exist without there being a right to sex work."
- Enact a comprehensive standalone anti-trafficking law.
Article
08 Jun 2026
Context:
- The Ministry of Mines has recently described several northeastern states in strikingly similar terms — Manipur as a "quiet mineral frontier", Arunachal Pradesh as a "resource-rich frontier", with Meghalaya and Mizoram framed through comparable narratives of hidden wealth.
- Individually, such descriptions may seem routine. Together, they signal a meaningful shift in how the Indian state is beginning to imagine its northeast — no longer just as a security buffer, but as a strategic resource base.
- This article highlights the growing strategic importance of Northeast India in India's critical mineral ambitions and examines how the region is being reimagined from a security frontier into a resource frontier.
The Critical Mineral Push
- Critical minerals — lithium, cobalt, graphite, nickel, and rare earth elements — have moved from geological niche to geopolitical priority.
- They are the building blocks of batteries, semiconductors, renewable energy systems, and defence technologies.
- Nations are now repositioning themselves around access to these resources, and India is no exception.
- India remains import-dependent for several critical minerals. To address this, the Geological Survey of India undertook 43 critical mineral exploration projects across northeastern states during the three field seasons from 2022-23 to 2024-25.
- The minerals targeted include graphite, vanadium, lithium, rare earth elements, nickel, and cobalt. States covered include Arunachal Pradesh, Meghalaya, Assam, Nagaland, and Manipur.
- In Manipur specifically, nickel, cobalt, and chromium exploration has recently begun.
- The geological potential was always known. What is new is the strategic urgency behind it.
A Shift in the Language of the Northeast
- From Security to Resources
- For decades, the northeast entered national strategy primarily through the language of borders and security — insurgencies, territorial management, connectivity as a tool of strategic access.
- Development was often justified not on its own terms but as an instrument of territorial control.
- Now, a new vocabulary is entering that space. Critical minerals are being discussed alongside trade corridors and geopolitical competition.
- The northeast is transitioning — in official imagination — from a zone to be secured to a landscape to be extracted from.
- The Word "Frontier" Is Not Neutral
- The article draws attention to the repeated use of the word frontier in official communications. Frontiers are not innocent geographical descriptions.
- Historically, they have implied spaces awaiting discovery, integration, or development — spaces that appear empty, available, waiting to be put to use.
- But the northeast is not empty. It contains dense, living social worlds — communities with customary land systems, local institutions, and deep relationships with their territory.
- Land in this region is not merely an economic asset. It is tied to authority, identity, and memory.
The Tension Between National Priority and Local Reality
- India's desire to secure critical minerals is understandable — global supply chains are increasingly uncertain, and strategic competition is intensifying.
- The northeast itself needs infrastructure, employment, and economic opportunities that have remained uneven for decades.
- But the history of development in the northeast offers a cautionary lesson. Connectivity projects have often arrived without the economic ecosystems needed to make them meaningful to local communities.
- Strategic considerations have repeatedly overshadowed questions of participation and representation.
- Resource extraction risks repeating this pattern — if mining begins moving faster than the institutions capable of managing its social consequences.
- In Manipur, where years of violence and displacement have already sharpened tensions around land and territory, these risks are acute.
- Across the northeast, questions of ecological vulnerability, local ownership, and political inclusion have surfaced repeatedly wherever development projects have touched land.
- Projects involving land in this region carry meanings that go far beyond economics. Communities interpret them through the lens of trust, representation, and political inclusion.
The Central Question
- The northeast has been reimagined by the Indian state in successive waves — first as a border to be secured, then as a corridor to be connected, and now as a landscape of strategic resources.
- Each reimagination has brought its own set of priorities and promises. What has often been missing is the question of whether local communities are shaping these transitions or merely living with their consequences.
- The author's argument is precise: how quickly extraction unfolds and who gets to shape it may matter as much as the minerals themselves.
- A new strategic frontier that ignores the people who already inhabit it is not development — it is merely assigning another purpose to land.
Conclusion
- The northeast's minerals matter — but so do its people. India's resource ambitions will only be legitimate if the communities that sit above these deposits are treated as partners in the process, not as obstacles to it.
Current Affairs
June 7, 2026
About Slovenia:
- Location: It is located in Central and South Eastern Europe.
- Bordering Countries: It is bordered by 4 countries: by Austria in the north; Hungary in the northeast; Italy in the west; and Croatia in the southeast.
- Maritime Border: It shares a small coastline along the Adriatic Sea in the South west.
- Capital City: Ljubljana
- Geographical Features of Slovenia:
- Terrain: Slovenia has a highly elevated terrain with over 40% of the country being mountainous.
- It is made up of portions of four major European geographic landscapes—the European Alps, the karstic Dinaric Alps, the Pannonian and Danubian lowlands and hills, and the Mediterranean coast.
- Climate: Mediterranean climate on the coast, continental climate with mild to hot summers and cold winters in the plateaus and valleys to the east.
- Highest point: Mount Triglav
- Natural Resources: It consists of Lignite, lead, zinc, building stone, hydropower, forests
- River: Major rivers include the Drava and Sava.
Current Affairs
June 7, 2026
About Kuno National Park:
- Location: It is located in the Sheopur district of Madhya Pradesh.
- It derives its name from the meandering Kuno River (one of the main tributaries of the Chambal River), which flows from south to north and divides the park into two sections.
- It is nestled near the Vindhyan Hills.
- Originally established as Kuno Wildlife Sanctuary in 1981, it was upgraded to a national park in 2018.
- Terrain: The park’s terrain is dotted with plateaus, valleys, and seasonal rivers, creating varied ecosystems.
- Vegetation: The park boasts diverse vegetation, including tropical dry deciduous forests, savannah grasslands, and riverine forests.
- Flora: Dominant trees include Khair (Acacia catechu), Salai (Boswellia serrata), and Ber (Ziziphus mauritiana).
- Fauna:
- The protected area of the forest is home to the jungle cat, Indian leopard, sloth bear, Indian wolf, striped hyena, golden jackal, Bengal fox, and dhole, along with many bird species.
- It was selected under the ‘Action Plan for Introduction of Cheetah in India’.
Current Affairs
June 7, 2026
About Sea of Azov:
- Location: It is bordered by Ukraine in the northwest and by Russia in the southeast.
- It is connected to the Black Sea in the south via the Strait of Kerch.
- The Kerch Strait is located between the Crimean Peninsula in the west and the Taman Peninsula in the east.
- It is linked with the Atlantic Ocean via the Black Sea, the Sea of Marmara, the Aegean Sea, and the Mediterranean Sea.
- Rivers: The Don and Kuban rivers contribute over 90% of freshwater inflow, reducing salinity and bringing nutrients.
- Chief Ports: Taganrog in Russia, and Mariupol and Berdyans’k in Ukraine.
- Coastal Features: The coastline is low and flat with extensive vegetation, lagoons like Syvash and long sand spits including Arabat, Fedotov and Berdyansk.
- Climate Conditions: It has a continental climate with cold winters (-1 to -5°C, sometimes -30°C) and warm summers (23-25°C), with frequent storms and seasonal ice formation.