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Article
03 May 2026
Why in the News?
- The Enforcement Directorate’s latest annual report highlights its intensified action against financial crimes, attaching assets worth Rs. 81,422 crore, achieving a 94% conviction rate, and declaring 21 individuals as fugitive economic offenders.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Economic Offences (Definition, Major Legal Framework, etc.)
- News Summary (Key Highlights of ED’s Annual Report)
Understanding Economic Offences in India
- Economic offences refer to crimes that cause wrongful gain to one party and financial loss to another through deceit, fraud, or abuse of financial systems.
- These crimes often involve money laundering, tax evasion, corruption, cyber fraud, and violations of foreign exchange regulations.
- They threaten the stability of the financial system and undermine public trust in institutions.
- The major legal frameworks addressing these offences include:
- Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA), 2002: The primary law enabling confiscation of proceeds of crime and prosecution of money laundering. It empowers the ED to trace illicit funds and attach assets derived from criminal activity.
- Fugitive Economic Offenders Act (FEOA), 2018: Enacted to deter economic offenders who flee India to evade prosecution. It allows the ED to confiscate assets of offenders involving economic offences exceeding Rs. 100 crore.
- Benami Transactions (Prohibition) Act, 1988: Prohibits property held in the name of another person to conceal ownership.
- Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA), 1999: Regulates foreign exchange and cross-border financial transactions.
- Companies Act, 2013 and SEBI Act, 1992: Provide provisions for corporate fraud and market-related offences.
- The Enforcement Directorate, functioning under the Ministry of Finance, is the chief investigative agency enforcing PMLA and FEOA. Its powers include:
- Attachment of properties derived from crime.
- Arrest and prosecution of offenders.
- Coordination with international agencies for extradition.
- It plays a crucial role in tracing illicit financial flows, recovering assets, and fostering economic integrity.
News Summary
- The Enforcement Directorate’s annual report for the year ending March 2026 underscores significant progress in financial crime enforcement and asset recovery.
- Massive Asset Attachments and Recoveries
- According to the report, the ED attached assets worth Rs. 81,422 crore in the last financial year, marking one of its largest seizures to date.
- Out of these, assets worth Rs. 63,142 crore have already been returned to banks, investors, and homebuyers, a major step in restitution and recovering public funds lost to fraud.
- High Conviction Rate but Slow Judicial Disposal
- One of the most striking figures from the report is the 94% conviction rate in concluded cases, the highest ever achieved by the agency.
- This demonstrates improved investigative outcomes and robust prosecution under PMLA.
- However, the report also reveals that over 2,400 cases remain pending in various courts, and only around 60 cases have reached final verdicts.
- This indicates that judicial delays remain a critical bottleneck in ensuring swift justice, despite the agency’s success in establishing guilt in most resolved cases.
- Crackdown on Fugitive Economic Offenders
- The agency’s report further highlights its growing emphasis on action against economic offenders who have fled abroad.
- Under the Fugitive Economic Offenders Act (FEOA), ED has initiated proceedings against 54 individuals, out of which 21 have been officially declared Fugitive Economic Offenders.
- The confiscated assets in these cases total Rs. 2,178.34 crore.
- Rise in Money Laundering and Digital Crime Cases
- Between October 2025 and March 2026, the ED registered nearly 800 new money laundering cases under PMLA.
- These include cases related to digital arrest scams, intellectual property fraud, foreign interference, and offences against national interest.
- Much of this activity was authorised by the newly formed risk assessment committee, which convened 91 meetings and approved 794 case registrations in just seven months.
- This marks a major procedural advance in identifying emerging threats in the digital economy and transnational financial crime patterns.
- Institutional Strengthening and Technological Upgrades
- The ED’s leadership has acknowledged that advanced data analytics, AI-assisted investigations, and inter-agency coordination have vastly improved efficiency.
- These capabilities enhance asset tracing, reduce delays, and improve confidence in India’s anti-money laundering efforts.
Article
03 May 2026
Why in News?
- In a major reform push, the Government of India has allowed 100% Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in the insurance sector under the automatic route.
- This is notified through the Foreign Exchange Management (Non-debt Instruments) (2nd Amendment) Rules, 2026.
- This follows the enactment of the Sabka Bima Sabki Raksha (Amendment of Insurance Laws) Act, 2025, signalling deeper financial sector liberalisation and efforts to enhance insurance penetration.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- FDI in Insurance
- Key Features of the Reform
- Regulatory Framework and Oversight
- Legislative Background
- Significance of the Reform
- Challenges and Concerns
- Way Forward
- Conclusion
FDI in Insurance:
- Meaning:
- FDI refers to investment made by a company or individual from one country into business interests located in another country.
- In the insurance industry, FDI typically involves foreign insurers investing in or owning stakes in Indian insurance companies.
- FDI helps bring:
- Capital for business expansion
- Advanced technology platforms
- Global management practices
- Product innovation and risk management expertise
- Regulatory oversight:
- In India, insurance companies are regulated by the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI).
- IRDAI regulates insurers (licensing, solvency, governance and policyholder protection) and verifies compliance for entities receiving foreign investment.
- FDI limit increase:
- Purpose: India has gradually increased foreign ownership limits for insurance companies, reflecting the government’s efforts to attract investment while maintaining regulatory stability.
- Timeline:
- Earlier 26% cap: When the Indian insurance sector was opened to private players in 2000, the foreign ownership limit was capped at 26% (a minority stake in joint ventures with Indian companies).
- Increase to 49%: In 2015, the government raised the FDI cap in insurance companies to 49% (management control remained with Indian partners) through amendments to insurance laws.
- Increase to 74% - liberalising the insurance sector: In 2021, the government further raised the foreign ownership limit to 74%. Under the new rules, foreign insurers could now hold majority stakes in the Indian companies.
Key Features of the Recent Reform:
- Full FDI liberalisation: FDI cap increased from 74% to 100% in insurance companies, and insurance intermediaries (brokers, TPAs, consultants, etc.). Investment will be permitted under the automatic route (no prior government approval required).
- Special provision for LIC: Foreign investment capped at 20% in the Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC), reflecting LIC’s strategic and sovereign importance.
- Coverage of intermediaries: FDI liberalisation extended to insurance brokers and reinsurance brokers, Third Party Administrators (TPAs), corporate agents, surveyors and loss assessors, insurance repositories and managing general agents.
Regulatory Framework and Oversight:
- Role of IRDAI: All FDI investments are subject to verification and regulatory oversight by the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI), ensuring financial stability and policyholder protection.
- Governance safeguards: At least one key managerial person (Chairperson / Managing Director / CEO) must be a Resident Indian citizen.
- Special conditions for intermediaries: If an intermediary is part of a non-insurance entity (e.g., bank) sectoral FDI caps of that sector apply, and non-insurance revenue must exceed 50% of total revenue.
Legislative Background:
- Sabka Bima Sabki Raksha (Amendment) Act, 2025: It amended three core laws - the Insurance Act, 1938; the LIC Act, 1956; and the IRDAI Act, 1999.
- Objective: To enhance insurance coverage, attract global capital, and modernise regulation.
Significance of the Reform:
- Boost to insurance penetration: India’s insurance penetration remains low (~4% of GDP), and increased FDI can expand reach in rural and underserved areas, and promote financial inclusion.
- Capital infusion and growth: Enables insurers to raise long-term capital, improve solvency margins, and invest in infrastructure and innovation.
- Technology and expertise transfer: Entry of global players brings advanced underwriting practices, digital insurance models (InsurTech), and risk management capabilities.
- Ease of Doing Business: Automatic route reduces regulatory delays. Aligns with broader economic liberalisation policies.
Challenges and Concerns:
- Domestic industry competition: Smaller Indian insurers may face pressure from large global firms.
- Regulatory capacity: IRDAI must strengthen supervision mechanisms, and risk monitoring of foreign-dominated entities.
- Policyholder protection: Ensuring that profit motives do not compromise claim settlement, and consumer rights.
- Strategic concerns: Excessive foreign control in financial sectors may raise economic sovereignty issues, and data security concerns.
Way Forward:
- Strengthening regulatory oversight: Enhance IRDAI’s capacity for real-time monitoring, and risk-based supervision.
- Promoting inclusive insurance: Incentivise insurers to expand in rural areas, and low-income segments.
- Safeguards for domestic players: Through regulatory support and innovation incentives.
- Consumer protection framework: Strengthen grievance redressal mechanisms. Improve transparency in policy terms.
Conclusion:
- The move to allow 100% FDI in the insurance sector marks a significant step in India’s financial sector reforms, aimed at boosting capital inflows, enhancing insurance penetration, and modernising the industry.
- However, its success will depend on robust regulation, balanced competition, and strong consumer safeguards, ensuring that liberalisation translates into inclusive and sustainable
Article
03 May 2026
Why in news?
India has introduced the SACHET Cell Broadcast system, an indigenous emergency messaging service designed to deliver instant alerts to citizens during crises such as natural disasters, wars, or other emergencies.
As part of testing, the government sent a nationwide notification with a siren sound, clarifying that no action was required as it was only a test message.
The initiative aims to strengthen India’s disaster response framework by ensuring timely alerts, thereby enhancing public safety and building a more resilient communication ecosystem.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- SACHET: India’s Integrated Emergency Alert System
- Cell Broadcast Technology: A Powerful Tool for Emergency Alerts
- How Cell Broadcast Technology Works?
- Cell Broadcast vs SMS: Key Differences
SACHET: India’s Integrated Emergency Alert System
- SACHET (meaning “alert”) is an Integrated Alert System designed to deliver disaster and emergency warnings directly to mobile users in geo-targeted areas via SMS.
- Institutional Framework
- Launched by the Department of Telecommunications (DoT)
- Developed in collaboration with the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA)
- Aims to strengthen real-time disaster communication across India
- Purpose and Scope
- Provides timely alerts during:
- Natural disasters (cyclones, earthquakes, floods)
- Man-made emergencies (gas leaks, chemical hazards, wars)
- Ensures rapid dissemination of critical information to citizens
- Provides timely alerts during:
- How the System Works?
- Uses cellular network towers to broadcast alerts
- Works as a one-way communication system
- Does not require internet connectivity
- Can deliver messages to billions of users within seconds (if connected to network)
- Alerts can be nationwide or location-specific
- Coverage and Reach
- Operational across all 36 States and Union Territories
- Has delivered over 134 billion SMS alerts
- Supports communication in 19 Indian languages
- Test Use in India
- Around 11:40 AM on May 2, 2026, smartphones across India emitted a loud alert sound with vibrations and a pop-up message titled “extremely severe alert”, as part of a nationwide test of the cell broadcast system.
- Similar systems are already used in countries like Japan for tsunami and disaster warnings.
- India’s recent test marks one of the largest-scale implementations of this technology.
- Significance
- Enhances disaster preparedness and response
- Under the UN’s “Early Warnings for All” initiative, which International Telecommunication Union (ITU) helps implement, cell broadcast is seen as a key tool to ensure people receive timely, accurate alerts.
- Improves last-mile connectivity of emergency alerts
- Builds a more resilient and responsive public communication system in India
- Enhances disaster preparedness and response
Cell Broadcast Technology: A Powerful Tool for Emergency Alerts
- Cell Broadcast is a communication method that enables authorities to send short messages simultaneously to multiple mobile phones within a specific geographic area.
- It can target either a large population or a limited set of users in a hazard-affected zone, ensuring precise and efficient dissemination of alerts.
- A major advantage of cell broadcast technology is its ability to bypass network congestion, allowing messages to be delivered instantly even during peak traffic conditions.
- It does not rely on internet connectivity and can be customised based on user preferences such as language, making it highly effective for mass communication.
- Origin and Global Adoption
- Developed in the early 1990s by the European Telecommunications Standards Institute and first demonstrated in Paris in 1997, the technology has since been adopted globally.
- Today, it is used by over 30 countries as a best practice for issuing timely warnings during natural disasters.
How Cell Broadcast Technology Works?
- Cell broadcast operates through the routine communication between mobile network towers and phones within their coverage area.
- These towers continuously transmit network-related information to connected devices, which usually remains invisible to users.
- Authorities utilise this existing one-way communication system to send emergency alerts.
- Instead of relying on individual messaging, the system enables a single alert to be transmitted from a cell tower to all connected devices simultaneously.
- By broadcasting one message to multiple users at once, cell broadcast ensures instant, wide-scale delivery without network congestion, making it highly effective for real-time alerts during disasters and emergencies.
Cell Broadcast vs SMS: Key Differences
- So far, India relied on an SMS-based disaster alert system operational across all 36 States and Union Territories.
- Over 134 billion sms alerts have been sent in 19+ Indian languages, ensuring broad reach.
- Now it has developed cell broadcast technology as a more advanced alert mechanism.
- It is not clear when the full rollout of this technology will take place.
- Cell Broadcast (CB) is a one-to-many system, allowing a single message to reach millions of devices simultaneously, whereas SMS operates on a one-to-one basis, sending messages individually to each recipient.
- CB sends alerts through specific cell towers, targeting users within a geographic area.
- Unlike SMS, it does not require phone numbers, enabling precise, location-specific messaging without tracking individuals.
- Cell Broadcast is more privacy-friendly, as it does not rely on user data. It can also reach visitors and foreign users in the area, often delivering messages in multiple languages.
- CB alerts are highly conspicuous, featuring loud sounds and pop-ups, making them difficult to ignore. In contrast, SMS messages can be missed or overlooked more easily.
Article
03 May 2026
Why in news?
Vantara, a 3,500-acre wildlife rescue and rehabilitation centre in Jamnagar, Gujarat, owned by Anant Ambani (son of Reliance chairman), has offered to relocate and care for 80 hippos that were otherwise set to be euthanised.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Origin of Colombia’s Hippo Population
- Why Colombia Decided to Cull Hippos?
- Ecological Impact: Why Colombia’s Hippos Need Control
- Challenges in Relocating Hippos
- Can Vantara Accommodate 80 Hippos
- CITES and Concerns Over Wildlife Transfers to India
Origin of Colombia’s Hippo Population
- Colombia’s hippos trace back to four animals—three females and one male—imported in 1981 by Pablo Escobar for his private zoo at Hacienda Nápoles.
- After his death in 1993, the estate was abandoned, allowing the hippos to escape into the Magdalena River basin, where they reproduced rapidly, growing their population.
Why Colombia Decided to Cull Hippos?
- Colombia declared Hippopotamus amphibius an invasive species in 2022 after rapid population growth became a major ecological concern.
- Earlier efforts like sterilisation, launched in 2021, proved costly, labour-intensive, and largely ineffective, especially since dominant males mate with multiple females.
- Scientific research further highlighted the urgency, showing that the rising population and high management costs left only a limited window for control.
- Experts concluded that even with relocation efforts, some level of culling would be unavoidable.
Ecological Impact: Why Colombia’s Hippos Need Control?
- Peer-reviewed research highlights that Colombia’s hippos are significantly altering local ecosystems.
- A 2020 study found that hippo-inhabited lakes showed disrupted ecosystem metabolism, increased nutrient loading from waste, and a shift in aquatic life, with phytoplankton increasingly dominated by harmful cyanobacteria.
- These changes indicate serious ecological imbalance, underscoring the need for population control.
Challenges in Relocating Hippos
- Moving hippos is extremely difficult due to biological, logistical, and financial constraints.
- Tranquilising them is risky because of their thick skin and proximity to water, where sedated animals can easily drown.
- Studies have shown high mortality during capture, often due to capture myopathy—a stress-induced condition.
- Additionally, their massive size (up to 3,000 kg) makes transport complex and costly, with expenses running into tens of thousands of dollars per animal.
- Also, peer-reviewed consensus is that no single intervention — sterilisation, translocation, or culling — is sufficient on its own, and that the window for combined intervention is narrowing each year.
Can Vantara Accommodate 80 Hippos
- Vantara’s Greens Zoological Rescue and Rehabilitation Centre, spread over about 650 acres, has sufficient space to house 80 hippos, as the minimum enclosure requirement would take only around 18 acres.
- However, practical challenges remain.
- Hippos live in social groups led by dominant males, so the animals would need to be divided into multiple separate enclosures rather than housed together.
- Additionally, Jamnagar’s hotter and drier climate would require continuous freshwater management to replicate their natural habitat, making long-term care more complex.
CITES and Concerns Over Wildlife Transfers to India
- The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) reviewed India’s handling of wildlife imports after inspecting Vantara and found gaps in due diligence while issuing permits for endangered species.
- It initially recommended halting further import permits until procedures improved and animal origins were verified.
- However, this recommendation was later reversed after countries like the US, Japan, Brazil, and India argued that the move was premature.
Online Test
03 May 2026
Full Length Test - 7 (R7727)
Questions : 100 Questions
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Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, midnight
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03 May 2026
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Questions : 100 Questions
Time Limit : 120 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, midnight
Online Test
03 May 2026
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Questions : 80 Questions
Time Limit : 120 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, midnight
Online Test
03 May 2026
All India GS Mock Test - 3 (Hindi)
Questions : 100 Questions
Time Limit : 120 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, midnight
Online Test
03 May 2026
CSAT - 04
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Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, midnight