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RMS - Indian Physiography - The Great North Indian Plain
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RMS - Polity - Judiciary - Part II
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RMS - Medieval History - 646 AD to 1192 AD
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Current Affairs
April 17, 2026
About Ghaggar River:
- The Ghaggar river is an intermittent river in India and Pakistan that flows only during the monsoon season.
- Origin: It originates in the village of Dagshai in the Shivalik Hills of Himachal Pradesh.
- The river is known as Ghaggar before the Ottu barrage and as the Hakra downstream of the barrage.
- Course:
- After passing through the Ambala and Hissar districts of Haryana, it eventually dries up in the Great Indian (Thar) Desert.
- The Hakra, which flows in Pakistan, is the continuation of the Ghaggar River in India, and they are together called the Ghaggar-Hakra River.
- Tributaries: The main tributaries of the Ghaggar are the Kaushalya River, Markanda, Sarsuti, Tangri, and Chautang.
Current Affairs
April 17, 2026
About Cyrtodactylus jayadityai
- It is a newly discovered species of bent-toed gecko from Tripura.
- Habitat: It inhabits lowland forest patches.
- Characteristics:
- It is primarily nocturnal, emerging at night to forage and retreating into burrows and crevices during the day.
What are Geckos?
- These are reptiles and are found on all the continents except Antarctica.
- These colorful lizards have adapted to habitats from rainforests, to deserts, to cold mountain slopes.
- These are mostly small, usually nocturnal reptiles.
- Geckos are spread across six families: Carphodactylidae, Diplodactylidae, Eublepharidae, Gekkonidae, Phyllodactylidae, and Sphaerodactylidae
Current Affairs
April 17, 2026
About Red Sea:
- It is s semi-enclosed inlet of the Indian Ocean between Africa and Asia.
- It is connected to the Arabian Sea and the Indian Ocean to the south through the Gulf of Aden and the narrow strait of Bab el Mandeb.
- The northern portion of the Red Sea is bifurcated by the Sinai Peninsula into the Gulf of Aqaba and the Gulf of Suez, where it is connected to the Mediterranean Sea via the famous Suez Canal.
- Bordering Countries: Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Sudan, Eritrea and Djibouti.
- The Red Sea’s unique color changes are due to algae blooms. Geologically, it lies in a fault depression between the Arabian and North African tectonic plates.
- It is known for its hot and salty waters and is a crucial maritime route between Europe and Asia.
- Five major types of mineral resources are found in the Red Sea region: petroleum deposits, evaporite deposits, sulfur, phosphates, and the heavy-metal deposits.
- Islands:
- Tiran Island: Located near the mouth of the Gulf of Aqaba.
- Shadwan Island: Located at the entrance of the Gulf of Suez
Current Affairs
April 17, 2026
About Annatto:
- It is a natural food colouring and flavoring agent obtained from the seeds of the achiote tree (Bixa orellana).
- Achiote tree is native to tropical America and is also cultivated in Asia and Africa, especially in areas where coffee is grown.
- The ripe fruits of annatto on drying yield annatto seed which serves as the raw material for the production of annatto colour.
- The crop is completely rain-fed and requires no pesticides or fertilizers, just pruning of branches as part of crop management.
- Colour: The bold red color comes from carotenoids, which are plant pigments that are found in the coating of the seed.
- Applications:
- The annatto seed is widely used as a natural food colour and dye.
- Its color can also be extracted from the seed and then added to foods as a dye.
- Some also use annatto to boost the flavor of certain dishes.
- It has a mild, peppery flavor when used in large amounts as well as a nutty and floral scent.
- Annatto is rich in several key antimicrobial compounds, which can limit the growth of bacteria, fungi, and parasites.
- It is safe for most people when used in normal food amounts. However, it might cause allergic reactions in some sensitive people.
Current Affairs
April 17, 2026
About Memristor:
- Memristor’ is a combination of ‘memory’ and ‘resistor’.
- It is an electronic component whose resistance depends on the history of current flow, allowing it to “remember” past electrical states.
- A resistor is a small device that applies a fixed amount of resistance to a current passed through it.
- Features of Memristor:
- Unlike a resistor, a memristor has variable resistance and ‘remembers’ the resistance.
- When the current is removed, the memristor ‘remembers’ the resistance it offered and maintains it.
- Memristors are nanomaterial and don’t take up much space. Their energy demand is also very small.
- They are usually made of a thin layer of titanium dioxide (TiO2) sandwiched between two metal electrodes.
- Applications of Memristor
- Memory Devices: Due to their ability to store previous resistive states, memristors are viable non-volatile random-access memories (NVRAM) for computers, industrial automation systems.
- Integrated Circuits: Memristors have been identified as viable components for augmenting or potentially replacing transistors in integrated circuits (ICs).
- Neuromorphic Computing: Researchers are exploring the viability of using memristors to build neuromorphic (brain-like) systems for artificial intelligence.
Article
17 Apr 2026
Context:
- India's evacuation of over 4.75 lakh citizens from West Asia by March-end has been widely celebrated as a diplomatic and logistical achievement.
- However, beneath this visible success lies a more uncomfortable policy question — whether India's migration governance is built for sustained welfare or merely crisis response.
India and Gulf Migration - The Scale of Dependence:
- The Gulf region is not a peripheral concern for Indian policymakers — it sits at the heart of household welfare and macroeconomic stability.
- For instance,
- The six GCC countries hosted nearly 99.35 lakh Indians as of December 2025.
- The region contributed 37.9% of India's total remittance inflows in 2023–24.
- Disruptions in West Asia transmit rapidly into districts, households, and state welfare systems.
- This dependence makes the region a strategic vulnerability as much as an economic asset.
The Crisis-Centric Framework - Strengths and Limits:
- India's current approach has demonstrated genuine strengths — diplomatic reach, consular coordination, and repatriation mechanisms. The Gulf evacuations are proof of that machinery working.
- But a framework that activates only at moments of disruption carries structural blind spots.
- For example,
- It defers foundational questions: How were workers recruited? What protections existed abroad? What awaits them in return?
- It struggles to detect slow-burn stresses — rising cost of living, LPG price hikes, sectoral slowdowns — that erode worker stability without triggering visible crisis signals.
- Workers may continue to move, work, and remit even as conditions around them quietly deteriorate.
Structural Fragilities in India's Migration Architecture:
- Fragmented institutional mandates:
- India's governance was never built around the worker's journey. Instead, responsibilities are siloed.
- For example,
- The mandate of the Ministry of External Affairs is emigration clearances, diplomatic coordination.
- The Union Ministry of Labour oversees recruitment regulation, worker welfare.
- The focus of State governments is skilling programmes, welfare funds (varying capacity).
- A worker's journey — from a source district through recruitment networks, across borders, and back — cuts across all these mandates but falls fully under none.
- At each stage, the worker is visible to some part of the system, rarely to the whole.
- The data deficit:
- India still lacks granular and dynamic migration data for anticipatory governance.
- In normal times, this is an administrative gap, but in extraordinary times, it becomes a welfare emergency.
- The absence of real-time information prevents early detection of stress patterns at the source, transit, or destination stage.
The Internal–External Continuum - A Missed Connection:
- A critical insight from this analysis is that internal and international migration are variations of the same fragmented system.
- A worker leaving Jharkhand for Surat faces structurally similar vulnerabilities to one leaving for Riyadh — weak recruitment oversight, thin support systems, and uncertain return pathways.
- The Covid pandemic made this visible for internal migrants — millions were suddenly immobilised with no safety net.
- The current West Asia stress is the international equivalent. Yet policy continues to treat these as separate domains.
Challenges:
- Partial institutional visibility at each stage of the migration journey.
- Inter-ministerial fragmentation with no single nodal authority overseeing the worker's full lifecycle.
- Uneven state capacity — Kerala's robust migration data infrastructure cannot be assumed elsewhere in major sending states like UP, Bihar, or Jharkhand.
- Absence of anticipatory governance tools — systems activate post-disruption rather than pre-empting stress.
- Slow-accumulating vulnerabilities that do not register as crises but steadily hollow out worker welfare.
Way Forward:
- Overseas Mobility Facilitation and Welfare Bill:
- The pending bill offers a legislative opportunity to institutionalise welfare across the entire mobility arc — not just at the moment of departure or return.
- It must embed protections that apply whether the worker moves domestically or internationally.
- Unified migration data architecture: Building a granular, dynamic, and interoperable migration information system is a prerequisite for anticipatory governance, and can enable early warning systems.
- Continuum-based governance: Covering pre-departure skilling and informed recruitment, destination-side welfare and legal recourse, and structured return and reintegration support.
- Strengthening State-level institutions: Replicating Kerala's model of sustained political attention to migration data and welfare institutions. The district administrations must be equipped to absorb and support returning migrants.
- Bilateral labour agreements: India's maturing diplomatic relationships with GCC countries must be leveraged to negotiate stronger worker protection clauses, portability of social security, and transparent recruitment standards.
Conclusion:
- The harder test for India is building a continuous, integrated governance architecture that treats mobility, whether across districts or across continents, as a connected social and economic system.
- This requires governing migration as a steady-state responsibility, not a crisis-triggered duty.
Online Test
17 Apr 2026
CAMP-CSAT-66
Questions : 40 Questions
Time Limit : 0 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.
Online Test
17 Apr 2026
CAMP-CSAT-66
Questions : 40 Questions
Time Limit : 60 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.
Article
17 Apr 2026
Why in news?
India has responded to two Section 301 investigations launched by the United States on issues of “structural excess capacity” and “forced labour”, defending its trade practices and legal framework.
The development assumes significance as US Treasury Secretary warned that Trump's tariffs — previously struck down by the US Supreme Court — could be restored to 50% reciprocal tariff levels by July.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- About Section 301
- India's Response on Excess Capacity
- India's Response on Forced Labour
- Broader Context
About Section 301
- Section 301 of the US Trade Act of 1974 is a powerful unilateral trade instrument that allows the US Trade Representative (USTR) to investigate foreign trade practices deemed "unreasonable, unjustifiable, or discriminatory" and to impose retaliatory tariffs or trade restrictions.
- It is a key tool through which Washington pressures trading partners on issues ranging from intellectual property and market access to labour practices and industrial policy.
- In March 2026, the USTR launched multiple Section 301 investigations against India and several other nations, targeting "structural excess capacity" in manufacturing and alleged failures to curb forced labor in supply chains.
India's Response on Excess Capacity
- India's central argument is that a bilateral trade surplus is not evidence of unfair trade practice but rather a natural consequence of global trade rooted in broader macroeconomic conditions.
- Trade imbalances inevitably manifest in bilateral relationships.
- Treating them as a "unique condition that harms US commerce" effectively challenges the foundational principles of comparative advantage that underpin the entire global trading system.
- The Reserve Currency Factor
- India made a sophisticated macroeconomic argument by pointing to the US Dollar's status as the world's primary reserve currency — accounting for 56% of global foreign exchange reserves.
- Because the dollar is the dominant medium for international transactions, the US can borrow more easily and sustain persistent trade deficits as a structural feature of its position in the global economy.
- Because the US can borrow so easily and spend so freely, American consumers and businesses buy a lot — including a lot of imported goods from countries like India, China etc.
- Americans consume more than they produce. This naturally means the US imports more than it exports — which is precisely what a trade deficit is.
- India argued that this makes the bilateral surplus a product of systemic global circumstances rather than Indian policy choices.
- Countries like India hold dollars as foreign exchange reserves or use them for its own international transactions.
- So, the dollar flows out of America into the world, and goods flow into America from the world.
- India's Export Profile Does Not Indicate Overcapacity
- India submitted that its merchandise export-to-GDP ratio of approximately 12% clearly indicates that Indian production is overwhelmingly oriented toward meeting domestic demand — not flooding global markets.
- Further, India's goods exports constitute only 3.1% of total US imports, making it difficult to argue that India is a significant contributor to the US trade deficit.
- The USTR's selective focus on specific sectors where India has a global trade surplus, India argued, does not automatically establish structural excess capacity in those sectors.
- India also pointed to the role of non-market economies as a more plausible factor behind the widening US trade deficit, implicitly referring to China without naming it.
India's Response on Forced Labour
- On the second investigation, India asserted that its legal framework is fully aligned with international labour standards.
- India highlighted that it has ratified both the Forced Labour Convention, 1930 and the Abolition of Forced Labour Convention, 1957 under the International Labour Organisation (ILO), which mandate the prohibition of forced labour in all forms.
- This positions India's labour laws as internationally compliant and the investigation as lacking a credible legal foundation.
Broader Context
- From a trade policy perspective, this incident illustrates:
- how unilateral instruments like Section 301 can be weaponised by large economies to pressure trading partners; and
- how the principle of comparative advantage — a cornerstone of free trade theory — is being increasingly challenged by protectionist impulses.
- It also reflects the complexity of the India-US relationship — simultaneously a strategic partnership and a site of significant economic friction.
- From a macroeconomics perspective, India's response offers a textbook illustration of why trade deficits are driven by structural factors like reserve currency dynamics rather than simply by the trade practices of surplus countries.