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Article
24 May 2026
Why in the News?
- The Supreme Court has referred to a larger Bench the issue of whether prolonged incarceration and delayed trial can override strict bail conditions under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA).
What’s in Today’s Article?
- UAPA (Basics, Bail Provisions, Important Judgements & Constitutional Safeguards, Recent Case, etc.)
Understanding UAPA and Bail Provisions
- The Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967 (UAPA) is India’s primary anti-terror law. Initially enacted to deal with unlawful organisations.
- The Act has gradually expanded to include provisions related to terrorism, terrorist financing, and designation of individuals as terrorists.
- UAPA grants wide powers to investigative agencies, especially in cases involving threats to national security.
- However, one of the most debated aspects of the law concerns bail provisions, which are significantly stricter than ordinary criminal law.
- Under normal criminal jurisprudence, courts generally follow the principle of “bail, not jail”, based on the presumption that an accused person remains innocent until proven guilty. UAPA, however, modifies this principle through Section 43D(5).
Why Is Bail Difficult Under UAPA?
- Section 43D(5) of UAPA creates a stringent framework for granting bail. It provides that courts shall deny bail if, after examining the chargesheet or case diary, there are “reasonable grounds” to believe that accusations are prima facie true.
- This provision effectively shifts the balance in favour of prolonged detention.
- The Supreme Court’s ruling in National Investigation Agency (NIA) vs Zahoor Ahmad Shah Watali (2019) strengthened this restrictive approach.
- The Court held that judges need not undertake an elaborate analysis of evidence at the bail stage. Instead, courts only need to examine the broad probabilities of the accusations.
- As a result, securing bail under UAPA became significantly harder because courts often defer to the prosecution’s initial allegations. Critics argue that this transforms pre-trial detention into a form of punishment.
The K.A. Najeeb Judgment and Constitutional Safeguards
- A major shift came through the Supreme Court’s decision in Union of India vs K.A. Najeeb (2021).
- The Court recognised that rigid application of Section 43D(5) could violate Article 21 of the Constitution, which guarantees the right to life and personal liberty.
- In this case, the Supreme Court held that constitutional courts have the power to grant bail when an accused has spent a substantial period in jail and the trial is unlikely to conclude within a reasonable time.
- The judgment clarified that prolonged incarceration without trial cannot continue indefinitely, irrespective of the seriousness of charges.
- It stressed that courts cannot become mute spectators if legal delays effectively punish an undertrial person before conviction.
- Thus, the Najeeb judgment softened the rigour of Section 43D(5) by allowing constitutional principles to override statutory restrictions in exceptional circumstances.
Recent Supreme Court Debate on UAPA Bail
- The present controversy arose after the Supreme Court granted interim bail to two accused in the 2020 Delhi riots case and referred a larger legal question regarding UAPA bail.
- The debate intensified because of apparent differences between two recent Supreme Court rulings:
- Syed Iftikhar Andrabi vs National Investigation Agency (2026).
- Gulfisha Fatima vs State (Government of NCT Delhi) (2026).
- In the Andrabi case, Justices B.V. Nagarathna and Ujjal Bhuyan raised concerns that smaller Benches may be weakening the principle established in K.A. Najeeb.
- Justice Bhuyan emphasised that courts must not ignore prolonged incarceration merely because offences are serious.
- The Bench observed that undertrials should not suffer because the State fails to complete trials within a reasonable time. It also noted that seriousness of charges alone cannot justify indefinite detention.
- Justice Bhuyan further highlighted that UAPA conviction rates remain low, reportedly between 2% and 6% nationally, raising concerns over prolonged imprisonment without conviction.
- However, another Bench in the Gulfisha Fatima case denied bail to accused persons such as Umar Khalid and Sharjeel Imam, holding that an accused-specific assessment of evidence justified continued detention.
- The Bench maintained that the K.A. Najeeb ruling did not create an automatic right to bail merely because of delay.
- Because of these differing interpretations, the Supreme Court has now referred the matter to a larger Bench for authoritative clarification.
Balancing Security and Liberty
- The ongoing debate reflects a larger constitutional tension between:
- National security and anti-terror enforcement, and
- Protection of personal liberty under Article 21.
- Supporters of strict bail norms argue that terrorism-related offences require exceptional caution.
- Critics, however, contend that prolonged incarceration without trial undermines constitutional rights and effectively punishes individuals before guilt is established.
- The Supreme Court’s upcoming clarification may significantly shape India’s future UAPA bail jurisprudence.
Article
24 May 2026
Why in News?
- The Central Information Commission (CIC) ruled that the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) is not a “public authority” under the Right to Information (RTI) Act, 2005, and therefore cannot be compelled to disclose information under the Act.
- The decision revisits a long-standing debate over transparency, accountability, and the legal status of sports bodies performing public functions.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Legal Framework Behind the Dispute
- Earlier Recommendations for Bringing BCCI Under RTI
- Earlier CIC Position and Judicial Developments
- What the Latest CIC Order Held?
- SC Judgments Shaping the Issue
- National Sports Governance Act, 2025
- Implications of the CIC Decision
Legal Framework Behind the Dispute:
- RTI Act and definition of “public authority”: Section 2(h) of the RTI Act defines a public authority as a body -
- Established by the Constitution, parliamentary or state laws, or government notification;
- Owned, controlled, or substantially financed by the government;
- Including NGOs substantially funded through public money.
- The BCCI argued that it is -
- A private autonomous body;
- Registered under the Tamil Nadu Societies Registration Act, 1975;
- Neither created by statute nor substantially financed by the government.
- Article 12 and the concept of “State”:
- It includes governments and authorities under governmental control.
- Courts have expanded this interpretation in some cases involving bodies performing public functions.
- However, the BCCI maintained that despite regulating cricket in India, it is not “State” because there is no deep and pervasive governmental control over its affairs.
Earlier Recommendations for Bringing BCCI Under RTI:
- Justice Lodha committee recommendations:
- The committee criticised the BCCI’s opaque functioning as a “closed-door and backroom affair”.
- It recommended bringing the BCCI within the RTI framework to enhance transparency and accountability.
- Law Commission’s 275th Report (2018):
- It also recommended that sports bodies performing public functions should come under RTI because they exercise “state-like powers”; BCCI virtually functions as a National Sports Federation.
- Despite these recommendations, Parliament did not enact any law to include the BCCI under RTI.
Earlier CIC Position and Judicial Developments:
- 2018 CIC order: The BCCI qualified as a public authority and directed it to appoint Public Information Officers (PIOs); create an RTI compliance mechanism.
- Madras High Court (HC) intervention: The BCCI challenged the order before the Madras HC, which remanded the matter back to the CIC for reconsideration in light of SC rulings. The recent SC order emerged from this reconsideration.
What the Latest CIC Order Held?
- Registration under a statute does not make an entity public:
- The CIC clarified that the BCCI is merely registered under a statute; it was not created by legislation or government notification.
- The Commission distinguished between the bodies created by law (e.g., SBI); and private entities later registered under a legal framework.
- Thus, registration only grants legal recognition, not statutory status.
- No “substantial and pervasive” government control:
- Relying on the SC judgment in Thalappalam Service Cooperative Bank Ltd case (2013), the CIC held that RTI applies only when government control is deep, substantial, and pervasive across administration, finance, and policy.
- The Commission observed that the BCCI office-bearers are internally elected; no government nominees sit on its committees; government approval is unnecessary for its decisions.
- Hence, ordinary regulatory supervision was held insufficient to convert it into a public authority.
- No substantial government financing:
- The CIC interpreted “substantial financing” under Section 2(h)(d) as funding essential for an entity’s survival.
- It rejected claims that tax exemptions, police deployment, and use of public stadiums amount to substantial government financing.
- The Commission emphasised that the BCCI generates massive independent revenues through media rights, sponsorships, broadcasting deals, and ticket sales.
SC Judgments Shaping the Issue:
- Zee Telefilms Ltd. v. Union of India (2005):
- The BCCI is not “State” under Article 12 because there is no government shareholding; no substantial financial assistance exists; government control is not deep or pervasive.
- The CIC heavily relied on this reasoning.
- BCCI v. Cricket Association of Bihar (2016):
- Following IPL spot-fixing controversies, the SC imposed major governance reforms through the Lodha Committee recommendations, including:
- One-state-one-vote principle,
- Tenure limits,
- Conflict-of-interest norms.
- The Court also clarified that even if BCCI is not “State” under Article 12, it can still be subject to judicial review under Article 226 because it performs public functions.
- Thus, a body may remain outside RTI yet still be answerable before HCs for arbitrary or unfair actions.
- Following IPL spot-fixing controversies, the SC imposed major governance reforms through the Lodha Committee recommendations, including:
National Sports Governance Act, 2025:
- Section 14(2) of the Act provides that sports bodies will be treated as public authorities only regarding the utilisation of government grants or financial assistance.
- Since the BCCI receives no such grants, the law effectively keeps it outside the RTI regime.
Implications of the CIC Decision:
- Transparency concerns: Excluding the BCCI from RTI limits public access to information relating to the team selection processes, governance decisions, etc.
- Accountability gap: The decision highlights a legal paradox - the BCCI performs significant public functions and regulates cricket nationally, yet it remains outside direct transparency obligations under RTI.
- Distinction between public function and public authority:
- Performing public functions does not automatically make an entity a “public authority” under RTI;
- Government ownership, financing, or pervasive control remains the determining test.
Article
23 May 2026
Why in news?
Governments across the world are finding it increasingly costly to borrow money, with interest rates demanded by lenders reaching their highest levels since the Global Financial Crisis of 2008.
What makes this particularly alarming is not just the level of these rates but the sharpness of the rise — a sudden spike in borrowing costs that has cascading consequences for governments, businesses, and ordinary citizens alike.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Why Do Governments Borrow?
- How Do Governments Borrow — The Bond Market Explained
- Why Are Bond Yields Rising Now?
- What Rising Yields Mean — The Real-World Impact
Why Do Governments Borrow?
- In most countries, governments cannot meet their expenditures through taxation and other revenue sources alone. The gap between what a government earns and what it spends is called the fiscal deficit — and it is bridged through borrowing.
- This borrowing need is typically higher in developing countries because poorer countries do not have enough people in the well-off bracket to generate sufficient tax revenues.
- However, repeated crises have pushed even developed countries into higher levels of borrowing — not just in absolute terms but also as a percentage of their GDP — as economic growth has slowed and welfare expenditures have risen.
How Do Governments Borrow — The Bond Market Explained
- Governments borrow in a unique and standardised way — by issuing bonds.
- A government bond is essentially an "I Owe You" (IOU) statement — the government borrows a fixed sum of money for a fixed period of time and promises to pay a fixed annual return (called a coupon) and repay the principal at maturity.
- A Simple Example
- Suppose a government issues a bond — borrowing $100 for 10 years with an annual coupon of $5. The yield (effective annual return) on this bond is 5%.
- Now, if the government launches a war — inflation rises, economic prospects decline, and the government needs to borrow more. Investors now perceive higher risk and demand a higher return — say $10 per year on new bonds.
- This makes the old bonds (paying only $5) look unattractive. Holders rush to sell old bonds — but to sell them, the price must fall enough to make the effective yield equal to the new rate of 10%.
- So, the old bond price falls from $100 to $50. This illustrates the fundamental inverse relationship between bond prices and bond yields — when yields rise, bond prices fall, and vice versa.
- What Government Bonds are Called in Different Countries?
- USA – Treasury
- UK – Gilts
- Germany – Bunds
- India - G-Secs (Government Securities)
- Japan - JGBs (Japanese Government Bonds)
Why Are Bond Yields Rising Now?
- Across the world, several factors are simultaneously pushing government bond yields higher.
- War and geopolitical uncertainty — particularly the West Asia conflict — are raising risk perceptions.
- Rising inflation is eroding the real value of fixed coupon payments, making investors demand higher yields as compensation.
- Higher government borrowing needs — as governments spend more on defence, energy security, and welfare — are flooding markets with new bonds, pushing prices down and yields up.
- The sharpness of the rise is itself a problem — sudden spikes in borrowing costs leave governments and businesses with little time to adjust.
What Rising Yields Mean — The Real-World Impact
- For Governments
- Higher bond yields mean governments must spend more of their annual budgets on interest payments — leaving less money for everything else.
- This creates a painful choice between cutting spending in areas like welfare schemes and defence or raising taxes — both of which are politically and economically costly.
- Countries that have large existing debt stocks are particularly vulnerable because they must refinance old debt at new, higher rates — creating a debt servicing spiral.
- For Common People and Businesses
- Government bonds are the least risky loans in any economy.
- All other interest rates — for home loans, car loans, business loans, and personal credit — are priced above government bond yields.
- When government yields rise, borrowing costs for everyone rise — often by an even greater degree.
- This means higher EMIs on home and car loans, more expensive business credit, and reduced consumer spending — all of which slow economic growth.
- For Developing Countries Like India
- Developing countries face a double burden.
- Rising global yields attract capital away from emerging markets to safer developed-country bonds — causing capital outflows, currency depreciation, and further inflation.
- This forces their own central banks to raise interest rates defensively — slowing domestic growth even further.
Article
23 May 2026
Why in news?
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) released data showing that India's gross Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) inflows rose to a record high of $94.53 billion in 2025-26 — up 17% from the previous year.
However, despite this record gross figure, net FDI inflows stood at a mere $7.65 billion — revealing a significant and concerning gap between headline numbers and actual retained investment.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Understanding the Key Terms
- The Gross vs Net FDI Gap — The Real Story
- Impact on the Rupee
- RBI's Forex Market Interventions — The Scale of Defense
- The FPI Exodus — Foreign Capital Fleeing India
- Conclusion
Understanding the Key Terms
- Gross FDI — The total amount of foreign investment that flows into India before any deductions.
- Net FDI — Gross FDI minus the money repatriated (taken back) by foreign companies minus overseas investments made by Indian companies. It represents the actual net addition to India's investment stock.
- Repatriation — When foreign companies take back money they had previously invested in India — in the form of profits, dividends, or sale of assets.
- Foreign Portfolio Investment (FPI) — FPI is investment by foreign entities in a country’s financial assets like stocks and bonds. It is a passive, short-term investment, unlike FDI, which involves ownership and control of businesses.
The Gross vs Net FDI Gap — The Real Story
- Despite record gross inflows, net FDI has been extremely low in the past two years because of two simultaneous trends — foreign investors increasingly repatriating previously invested capital and Indian companies investing more abroad.
- Together, these two outflows nearly cancel out the record gross inflows — leaving very little net addition to India's investment base.
- Why Are Foreign Investors Repatriating?
- Repatriation at $53.58 billion — the highest in at least three years — reflects several concerns among foreign investors including:
- global risk-off sentiment,
- the West Asia war disrupting supply chains and raising uncertainty,
- rupee depreciation (making rupee-denominated returns less attractive in dollar terms), and
- profit-booking after years of strong Indian market performance.
- Repatriation at $53.58 billion — the highest in at least three years — reflects several concerns among foreign investors including:
Impact on the Rupee
- The weak net FDI inflows have been a significant contributor to pressure on the Indian rupee.
- The rupee came close to breaching the 97-per-dollar mark earlier in the week — a record low — before the RBI intervened to stabilise it.
- The rupee ended the week at 95.69 per dollar and is down 5% since the West Asia war began on February 28.
RBI's Forex Market Interventions — The Scale of Defense
- The RBI has been intervening aggressively in forex markets to defend the rupee.
- In March 2026 alone, RBI sold $29.6 billion of foreign currency on a gross basis — the highest in 13 months and the most since it sold $46.65 billion in February 2025.
- While gross forex sales in 2025-26 were less than half of the previous year, net forex sales were significantly higher — indicating that the RBI was buying back less in the forward market, reflecting a more defensive posture.
- The RBI also intervened far more heavily in the forward market last year.
The FPI Exodus — Foreign Capital Fleeing India
- Since the West Asia war began, Foreign Portfolio Investors have been exiting Indian shores in large volumes:
- March 2026 — FPI net outflows of $13.6 billion
- April 2026 — FPI net outflows of $7.56 billion
- May 2026 (so far) — FPI net outflows of $2.62 billion
- This scale of capital flight — combined with weak net FDI — is putting enormous pressure on India's Balance of Payments, forex reserves, and the rupee.
Conclusion
The record gross FDI figure is reassuring at the headline level but masks serious structural concerns. India's ability to retain foreign investment (net FDI) has weakened significantly. The rising trend of repatriation and outward FDI suggests that foreign companies are becoming more cautious about India's near-term environment.
The West Asia war has emerged as the single biggest external shock to India's capital flows — triggering both FPI outflows and forex reserve depletion simultaneously.
The RBI's aggressive intervention in forex markets has helped stabilise the rupee but at the cost of drawing down India's foreign exchange reserves. The distinction between gross and net FDI is therefore critically important — headline numbers can be misleading without understanding what lies beneath.
Article
23 May 2026
Why in News?
- The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has approved a record surplus transfer of Rs 2.87 lakh crore to the Central Government for FY 2025–26.
- The move comes at a time when rising geopolitical tensions in West Asia, volatile crude oil prices, and pressure on the rupee are straining India’s fiscal and external sector position.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Framework of RBI’s Dividend Transfer
- Record Surplus Transfer by RBI
- Reasons Behind Higher RBI Earnings
- Why was the CRB Increased?
- Fiscal Implications for the Government
- Broader Economic Significance
- Conclusion
Framework of RBI’s Dividend Transfer:
- Overview:
- The RBI transfers its surplus profits to the Central Government under the RBI Act, 1934.
- Governed by the revised Economic Capital Framework (ECF), the RBI retains funds for risk provisions and transfers the remaining net income to the central government.
- Legal and policy frameworks:
- RBI Act, 1934: Section 47 mandates that after making provisions for bad and doubtful debts, depreciation in assets, and staff contributions, the net profits of the RBI must be transferred to the government.
- ECF: The ECF determines how much of the RBI's capital needs to be held as buffers against risks versus how much can be distributed as dividend RBI ‘surplus’ transfer to the government.
- Bimal Jalan committee (2018): It designed the current framework and recommended categorizing the RBI’s reserves into two parts -
- Realized equity: Acts as the primary risk buffer ECF of the RBI.
- Revaluation balances: Highly volatile buffers based on currency and gold valuations ECF of the RBI.
- Contingent Risk Buffer (CRB): The CRB acts as the RBI’s financial safety cushion to absorb risks arising from currency volatility, interest-rate shocks, financial instability, market losses, external sector pressures, and operational risks.
- Mechanics of the transfer:
- Income calculation: The RBI calculates its gross income primarily from interest on domestic/foreign bonds and revaluation gains on foreign exchange/gold transactions.
- Provisioning: Deductions are made for operational expenses, and the necessary amount is allocated to maintain the CRB.
- Surplus distribution: If the CRB is above the required target, the entire residual net income is transferred to the Government.
Record Surplus Transfer by RBI:
- The RBI approved a dividend transfer of Rs 2,86,588 crore, the highest ever surplus transfer to the government.
- This is higher (by around 6.7%) than Rs 2,68,590 crore transferred in FY 2024–25, and significantly above the transfers of Rs 2,10,874 crore in FY 2023–24, and Rs 87,416 crore in FY 2022–23.
- The surplus is expected to provide substantial fiscal support to the Centre.
Reasons Behind Higher RBI Earnings:
- Forex market intervention and trading gains:
- A major contributor was the RBI’s large-scale sale of US dollars to stabilise the rupee amid depreciation pressures.
- These foreign exchange operations generated significant trading gains for the central bank.
- Higher returns on foreign assets: Elevated global interest rates increased returns on the RBI’s overseas securities and foreign currency assets, boosting its income position.
- Revised Economic Capital Framework (ECF):
- The surplus transfer was calculated under the revised ECF, which allows flexibility in maintaining the Contingent Risk Buffer (CRB) between 4.5% and 7.5% of the RBI balance sheet.
- The RBI maintained the CRB at 6.5%, reflecting a cautious and prudent approach.
Why was the CRB Increased?
- The RBI transferred Rs 1,09,379 crore to the CRB in FY 2025–26, sharply higher than Rs 44,862 crore in the previous year.
- The is due to -
- Escalating conflict in West Asia
- Risks of crude oil price spikes
- Volatility in global bond and currency markets
- Uncertain global macroeconomic conditions
- Analysts noted that the RBI could have transferred over Rs 3.5 lakh crore to the government if it had maintained last year’s lower CRB level.
- However, strengthening the buffer enhances the central bank’s ability to intervene during financial stress.
Fiscal Implications for the Government:
- Relief to fiscal deficit management:
- The higher dividend provides the government with additional non-tax revenue, easing fiscal pressures at a time of rising global uncertainty.
- The RBI surplus alone constitutes nearly 90.8% of the budgeted non-tax revenue under the “dividend/surplus” category for FY27.
- Greater fiscal space: The transfer is expected to support infrastructure and capital expenditure, finance sectors like transport, energy, urban development, and logistics, and reduce pressure for additional government borrowing.
- Impact on bond market:
- Lower borrowing requirements could help contain bond yields, reduce upward pressure on interest rates, and support financial stability.
- The benchmark 10-year government bond yield currently stands around 7.09%.
Broader Economic Significance:
- The record transfer reflects the growing role of the RBI in supporting macroeconomic stability during periods of external shocks.
- At the same time, the higher CRB indicates the central bank’s emphasis on maintaining institutional resilience rather than maximising immediate transfers.
- The episode also highlights the interconnectedness between monetary policy, exchange rate management, fiscal policy, and global financial conditions.
Conclusion: The balance between supporting government finances and preserving financial stability underscores the RBI’s evolving role in safeguarding India’s macroeconomic resilience.
Article
23 May 2026
Why in the News?
- India and Cyprus have elevated their bilateral relationship to a strategic partnership during the visit of President Nikos Christodoulides to New Delhi, signing pacts on defence cooperation, counter-terrorism, and connectivity.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- India Cyprus Bilateral Relationship (Historical Background, Strategic & Diplomatic Engagement, Economic Ties, Diaspora, etc.)
- News Summary
India-Cyprus Bilateral Relations
- India and Cyprus share a longstanding partnership built on shared democratic values, mutual respect for sovereignty, and growing cooperation across multiple sectors.
- Cyprus, a small island nation strategically located in the eastern Mediterranean, has been a steady supporter of India in international forums and serves as a key bridge between India and the European Union.
Historical Background
- Diplomatic relations between India and Cyprus were established in 1962, soon after Cyprus gained independence from British colonial rule in 1960.
- Both countries shared common experiences of colonial rule and were active members of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM), which fostered strong political ties from the outset.
- Indian leader Archbishop Makarios, the first President of Cyprus, was a close friend of Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, and this personal rapport laid the foundation for warm bilateral relations.
- India consistently supported Cyprus's struggle for independence and territorial integrity, including its position on the Cyprus problem following the Turkish invasion of northern Cyprus in 1974.
Strategic and Diplomatic Engagement
- The strategic dimension of India-Cyprus relations has grown significantly in recent years:
- EU Gateway: Cyprus, as an EU member since 2004, serves as an important gateway for India's engagement with the European Union.
- UN Cooperation: Both nations collaborate at the United Nations, with Cyprus supporting India's bid for permanent membership of a reformed UN Security Council.
- Counter-Terrorism: Cyprus has consistently expressed solidarity with India in its fight against cross-border terrorism.
Economic and Trade Relations
- Bilateral Trade: Bilateral trade between the two countries was USD 140.47 million for April 2024- March 2025.
- Investments: Cyprus is one of India's top 10 foreign investors, with significant cumulative FDI inflows. Cypriot investment routes have been used by global investors to access the Indian market.
- India-EU FTA: The recently concluded India-EU Free Trade Agreement opens new opportunities, with Cyprus positioned as a key access point.
Indian Diaspora in Cyprus
- There are around 15,500 Indians living and working in Cyprus (April 2026).
- The Indian diaspora mainly consists of professionals working primarily in shipping, IT, Fintech, farmhands, domestic workers and students.
News Summary: Cypriot President's Visit to India
- The visit of Cypriot President Nikos Christodoulides to India marked a significant milestone in bilateral relations, with both nations elevating their partnership to a strategic partnership.
- Cyprus currently holds the Presidency of the Council of the European Union, adding strategic significance to the visit.
Defence Cooperation Roadmap
- MoU between Cyprus Defence and Space Industries Cluster and Society of Indian Defence Manufacturers, paving the way for industrial collaboration.
- Cyprus expressed interest in purchasing items from the Indian defence industry.
- Strengthening cooperation in cyber security, maritime security, and emerging technologies.
- Increased military exchanges and training cooperation between the two countries.
- Establishment of a cybersecurity dialogue to address contemporary threats.
Counter-Terrorism Pact
- Both leaders reiterated their zero-tolerance approach to terrorism, rejecting double standards, state-sponsored terrorism, and any justification for such acts. Key outcomes include:
- Signing of an MoU establishing a Joint Working Group on Counter-Terrorism.
- Strong condemnation of cross-border terrorism, including the Pahalgam terror attack.
- Cyprus expressed solidarity and unwavering support to India in its fight against cross-border terrorism.
Economic and Investment Outlook
- PM Modi described Cyprus as an "investment gateway" between India and Europe:
- Cyprus is among India's top 10 investors.
- Both sides aim to double bilateral investment in the next five years.
- New opportunities for Indian companies in Cyprus's infrastructure, energy, and agriculture sectors.
- New investment opportunities in India's growing shipping and maritime sectors.
- Direct flights between India and Cyprus to be launched soon.
India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (IMEEC)
- A significant focus of the visit was the India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (IMEEC). Cyprus has positioned itself as a key partner in this transformative initiative:
- Cyprus has formed a 'Friends of IMEEC' grouping within the EU.
- The country is offering transhipment facilities to address supply chain disruptions caused by the US-Israel war against Iran.
- Both sides discussed establishing a Bilateral Connectivity Dialogue.
- IMEEC is seen as transformational for global trade, connectivity, and prosperity.
- Both nations emphasised promoting stability in the Eastern Mediterranean and the wider Middle East.
Significance of the Visit
- EU Engagement: Reinforces India's growing engagement with the European Union through Cyprus.
- Indo-Mediterranean Connectivity: Strengthens India's presence in the eastern Mediterranean.
- IMEEC Acceleration: Cyprus's active role can help operationalise this transformative connectivity project.
- Counter-Terrorism Solidarity: Strengthens India's global coalition against terrorism.
- Defence Industrial Ties: Opens new markets for India's defence exports.
- Migration Framework: Provides structured opportunities for Indian professionals and students.
Current Affairs
May 23, 2026
About Fort St. George:
- It is a historic fort located in Chennai, Tamil Nadu.
- Built by the British East India Company in 1644, it was the first English fortress in India.
- It became both a trading base and a defensive outpost, protecting their interests along the Coromandel coast.
- It is made of brick & stone and has thick, tall walls to protect against attacks.
- The fort has a rectangular shape with strong, tall gates at the entrance.
- It includes important buildings like Mary’s Church, which is the oldest Anglican church in India, and the Fort Museum, which displays artifacts from the colonial period.
- The fortified settlement that grew around it served as the nucleus of Madras, which, in time, expanded and evolved into modern Chennai.
- Currently, it serves as the administrative centre of Tamil Nadu, with the Secretariat, Legislative Assembly, and other government offices housed within.
Current Affairs
May 23, 2026
About Lake Kariba:
- It is located in central Africa, along the border between Zambia and Zimbabwe.
- It is located on the Zambezi River, about halfway between the river's source and mouth.
- It is the world’s largest artificial lake and reservoir by volume and the fourth largest by surface area.
- Lake Kariba was filled between 1958 and 1963 after the completion of the Kariba Dam, which flooded the Kariba Gorge on the Zambezi River.
- The Kariba Dam consists of a double-arch wall.
- It provides considerable electric power to both Zambia and Zimbabwe and supports a thriving commercial fishing industry.
- The lake encompasses Chete Island and Spurwing Island.
- Chete Island boasts the world’s largest expanse of protected, undeveloped wetlands and hosts the largest single population of African elephants.