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Current Affairs
June 28, 2026

Amrabad Tiger Reserve
The All-India Tiger Estimation- (AITE) 2026 has recorded a strong tiger presence in Amrabad Tiger Reserve (ATR).
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About Amrabad Tiger Reserve:

  • Location: It is located in the Nallamala hills of the Eastern Ghats in Telangana.
  • It was originally part of the larger Nagarjunasagar-Srisailam Tiger Reserve before the bifurcation of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana in 2014.
  • Terrain: The reserve is renowned for its rugged terrain, deep valleys, and dense forests.
  • Rivers: The Krishna River and its perennial streams originating within the reserve contribute to the water supply of major reservoirs such as the Srishailam Dam and Nagarjunsagar Dam.
  • Tribal Community: The Chenchu tribe is one of the major tribal communities that live in the ATR.
  • Flora: 
    • Amrabad is characterized by dry deciduous forests, primarily made up of sal, teak, bamboo, and acacia trees. 
    • The forest is rich in medicinal plants and shrubs, which have long been used by local tribes for traditional remedies.
  • Fauna: 
    • It is home to leopards and wild cats, along with herbivores like sambar deer, chital (spotted deer), nilgai (blue bull), wild boar, and the Indian bison (gaur). 
    • Over 303 bird species have been identified in this region. Some important groups include Eagles, Pigeons, Doves, Cuckoos, Woodpeckers, Drongos, etc.
Environment

Current Affairs
June 28, 2026

Colombia
Recently, the Prime Minister of India congratulated Abelardo de la Espriella on his victory in the Colombian presidential elections.
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About Colombia

  • Location: It is a country located in the northwestern part of South America.
  • It is known as the “Gateway of South America”, strategically located in the northwest, connecting South America with Central and North America.
  • Bordering Countries: It is bordered by Panama to the northwest; by Ecuador and Peru to the south; by Venezuela to the east, and by Brazil to the southeast.
  • Maritime Borders: It is also bounded by the Caribbean Sea in the north and by the Pacific Ocean in the west. 
  • It is a member of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) from 2020.
  • Capital City: Bogotá.
  • Geographical Features of Colombia:
    • Climate: The climate is tropical along the coasts and eastern plains, and cooler in the highlands.
    • Highest Peak: Its highest point is Pico Cristobal Colon.
    • Major Rivers: Major rivers include the Magdalena, Amazon, and Orinoco.
    • Natural Resources: It is rich in natural resources like petroleum, natural gas, coal, and gold.
Geography

Current Affairs
June 28, 2026

ICGS Akshay
Recently, Indian Coast Guard Ship (ICGS) Akshay, a new-generation Fast Patrol Vessel (FPV), was commissioned into the Bharatiya Tatrakshak Fleet at Goa.
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About ICGS Akshay:

  • It is a new-generation Fast Patrol Vessel (FPV).
  • It is named Akshay, meaning Indestructible.
  • It is the fourth vessel in the adamya class series of eight fast patrol vessels.
  • Functions: It is equipped to undertake a wide range of Coast Guard operations including;
    • Maritime law enforcement, coastal security, search and rescue, marine environmental protection and assistance to mariners in distress, thereby enhancing the operational capability of Bharatiya Tatrakshak.
  • It is designed and constructed by Goa Shipyard.
  • Features of ICGS Akshay:
    • Armaments: It is armed with a 30mm CRN-91 gun and two 12.7mm stabilised remote-controlled guns with fire-control systems.
    • It is equipped with advanced Controllable Pitch Propeller (CPP) propulsion systems paired with two 3,000 kW diesel engines.
    • The vessels measure 52 metres in length with a displacement of 320 tonnes.
  • Significance: It carries over 65 percent indigenous content.
Science & Tech

Study Material
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The Analyst Handout 28th June 2026
Current Affairs

Article
28 Jun 2026

Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Amendment Rules 2026 - Stricter Oversight of Foreign-Funded NGOs

Why in News?

  • The Union Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) has notified the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Amendment Rules 2026, marking the 10th amendment to the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Rules, 2011 under the FCRA 2010.
  • The amendments tighten regulatory oversight over foreign-funded NGOs by prescribing detailed activity classifications, expanding disclosure requirements, and introducing stricter penalties for violations. 

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • FCRA - Regulatory Framework
  • Major Amendments under the FCRA Rules 2026
  • Purpose-wise Classification of Foreign Contributions
  • Penalties for Violations
  • Concerns Raised by the Opposition and Civil Society Organisations
  • Conclusion

FCRA - Regulatory Framework:

  • Objective:
    • The Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act (FCRA) regulates the acceptance and utilisation of foreign contributions.
    • It ensures that such funds do not adversely affect India's sovereignty, internal security, public interest, or democratic institutions.
  • Evolution:
    • 1976: Original FCRA enacted.
    • 2010: Replaced by the current FCRA, effective from May 1, 2011. Subsequent amendments in 2016, 2018, 2020, and now 2026.
  • Validity: FCRA registration remains valid for five years, requiring periodic renewal.
  • Current status: Over 18,000 NGO registrations have been cancelled since 2015. As of June 22, 2026, 14,456 NGOs hold active FCRA registration.

Major Amendments under the FCRA Rules 2026:

  • Detailed disclosure of activities:
    • Registered NGOs must now:
      • Specify the exact nature of activities from a government-prescribed list.
      • Declare the States/Union Territories where foreign funds will be utilised.
      • Existing NGOs must update these details within one year.
    • Implication: Replaces the earlier broad permissions with purpose-specific approvals, enabling closer monitoring.
  • Expanded definition of 'Key Functionary':
    • The Rules widen the scope of persons responsible for compliance to include Trustees, Partners, Karta of a Hindu Undivided Family (HUF), governing body members, and any individual exercising managerial or controlling authority.
    • This increases accountability beyond office-bearers and directors.
  • Enhanced transparency requirements:
    • NGOs must mandatorily disclose official websites, social media accounts, and publications issued during the year (books, magazines, newspaper articles, etc.).
    • The objective is to improve transparency and facilitate regulatory oversight.
  • Higher registration costs:
    • Registration fees are now charged separately for each approved purpose, and for every State or Union Territory where the NGO operates.
    • This increases compliance costs, particularly for organisations working across multiple sectors or regions. 

Purpose-wise Classification of Foreign Contributions:

  • Foreign contributions may be received under five broad categories.
  • These are -
    • Social (30 specified activities), Economic (19 categories)
    • Educational: 22 activities; while awareness programmes on constitutional rights, fundamental duties and civic responsibilities must be strictly non-political.
    • Cultural: 18 categories, including promotion of contemporary arts inspired by Indian traditions. Activities must exclude political or ideological content.
    • Religious: 16 permitted activities, including -
      • Religious education,
      • Moral instruction,
      • Satsangs and meditation retreats,
      • Burial and cremation ground maintenance, and
      • Proselytisation is expressly excluded.

Penalties for Violations:

  • The MHA has separately notified penalties for several violations, including -
    • Excess administrative expenditure
    • Speculative investment of foreign funds
    • Misuse or unauthorised utilisation of contributions
    • Receipt or utilisation without approval
    • Use of funds for unapproved purposes or outside approved States/UTs
  • Penalty structure:
    • Misutilisation of funds: 30% of the misused amount or ₹1 lakh, whichever is higher.
    • Unapproved purposes: Use of funds for unapproved purposes or geographical areas, will attract 30% of the amount involved or ₹1 lakh penalty, whichever is higher.
    • Excess administrative expenditure: and speculative investments also attract percentage-based penalties, subject to a minimum fine of ₹1 lakh.

Concerns Raised by the Opposition and Civil Society Organisations:

  • The amendments may restrict the operational flexibility of NGOs.
  • Limit their ability to respond swiftly to emergencies and humanitarian crises.
  • Increase compliance burdens through rigid activity classifications and geographical restrictions.
  • Shift the focus from regulating foreign contributions to regulating voluntary organisations themselves.
  • Raise concerns regarding freedom of association (Article 19(1)(c)) and constitutional protections available to civil society organisations.

Conclusion:

  • The FCRA Amendment Rules 2026 represent a significant tightening of India's regulatory framework governing foreign-funded NGOs.
  • While the government views the amendments as necessary, critics contend that they may constrain their operational effectiveness.
  • This highlights the continuing challenge of balancing national security concerns with democratic freedoms and civic participation.
Polity & Governance

Article
28 Jun 2026

EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism

Why in the News?

  • The Government of India is reportedly preparing a scheme to bear 90% of the compliance cost incurred by MSMEs exporting to the European Union under the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM).

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • About CBAM (Basics, Working, Challenges for Indian MSMEs, Gov’t Support, Implications, Way Forward)

Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM)

  • The Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism is a carbon pricing mechanism introduced by the European Union (EU) to prevent carbon leakage, the relocation of carbon-intensive industries to countries with less stringent climate regulations.
  • Under CBAM, importers of certain goods into the EU must purchase CBAM certificates corresponding to the embedded carbon emissions generated during the production of those goods.
  • The mechanism aims to ensure that imported products face a carbon cost similar to that imposed on producers within the EU under the EU Emissions Trading System (EU ETS).
  • The transitional phase of CBAM began in October 2023, focusing on emissions reporting, while the financial obligations came into effect from January 1, 2026.
  • CBAM currently applies to carbon-intensive products such as:
    • Iron and steel, Aluminium, Cement, Fertilisers, Electricity and Hydrogen
  • The scope is expected to expand gradually to include additional sectors.

How CBAM Works?

  • Exporters selling covered products to the EU must report the embedded emissions generated during production.
  • These emissions include:
    • Direct emissions from manufacturing processes
    • Indirect emissions from electricity consumption (for specified sectors such as cement and fertilisers)
  • EU importers are required to purchase CBAM certificates based on these verified emissions.
  • If exporters fail to provide actual emissions data, the European Commission applies default emission values, which are subject to progressively increasing mark-ups:
    • 10% in 2026
    • 20% in 2027
    • 30% from 2028 onwards
  • These higher default values significantly increase compliance costs and reduce the competitiveness of exporters unable to accurately measure and report emissions.

Challenges for Indian MSMEs

  • Although CBAM is often viewed as a carbon tax, experts note that the largest burden for MSMEs is compliance rather than taxation.
  • To comply with the regulation, exporters must establish systems for:
    • Carbon accounting
    • Emissions measurement and monitoring
    • Third-party verification
    • Digital reporting
    • Data management and documentation
  • According to industry estimates, each MSME may incur compliance costs of Rs. 15-20 lakh merely to meet CBAM reporting requirements.
  • Unlike large corporations, MSMEs often lack:
    • Technical expertise
    • Financial resources
    • Dedicated sustainability teams
    • Digital infrastructure for emissions reporting
  • Since many of these expenses are fixed costs, they do not decrease with lower production or export volumes, placing smaller exporters at a competitive disadvantage.

Government's Proposed Support Scheme

  • Recognising the disproportionate burden on small exporters, the Central Government is working on a scheme to reimburse 90% of CBAM compliance costs for eligible MSMEs.
  • The proposed support is intended to help exporters:
    • Develop carbon accounting systems
    • Obtain third-party verification
    • Build reporting infrastructure
    • Continue accessing European markets
  • The initiative follows unsuccessful attempts by India to secure special concessions for small industries during negotiations with developed countries.

Impact on Indian Exports

  • India is the world's second-largest producer of crude steel and primary aluminium, making CBAM particularly significant for the country's manufacturing sector.
  • According to a recent Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations (ICRIER) working paper:
    • Iron and steel exports to the EU could decline by nearly 24%, making it the most affected sector.
    • India's overall global exports of iron and steel may decline by 5.7%.
    • Fertilisers, aluminium, and fabricated metal products are also expected to face substantial impacts.
  • The report further notes that while CBAM is likely to adversely affect India's exports to the EU, its impact on global carbon emissions is expected to be limited, as emission reductions will depend on the technologies and production processes adopted by exporting countries.

Implications for India

  • CBAM presents both challenges and opportunities for India's manufacturing sector.
  • Economic Challenges
    • Increased compliance costs for exporters
    • Reduced competitiveness of MSMEs in European markets
    • Pressure on labour-intensive export sectors
    • Additional burden due to the UK's proposed CBAM from 2027
  • Strategic Opportunities
    • Adopt cleaner production technologies
    • Improve energy efficiency
    • Strengthen carbon accounting systems
    • Enhance global competitiveness through sustainable manufacturing
  • The mechanism may also accelerate India's transition towards low-carbon industrial production, particularly as global markets increasingly prioritise environmental standards.

Way Forward

  • To minimise the impact of CBAM, India should adopt a comprehensive strategy by:
    • Providing financial assistance for MSME compliance
    • Expanding technical support for carbon accounting and emissions reporting
    • Strengthening domestic carbon measurement and verification infrastructure
    • Encouraging the adoption of cleaner production technologies through targeted incentives
    • Continuing bilateral negotiations with the EU to address concerns of developing countries while ensuring market access for Indian exporters
  • Such measures would help Indian industries remain competitive while aligning with global climate commitments.
Environment & Ecology

Article
28 Jun 2026

Proving Indian Citizenship: Documents, Gaps and Disputes

Why in news?

Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) recently clarified that the Indian passport is not a "document of citizenship." The remark came in response to whether a passport can be used to challenge exclusion from voter lists during the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls currently underway in 16 States.

The clarification has revived a long-standing question: India prescribes no single, universal document to prove citizenship.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • The Core Puzzle: No Universal Citizenship Document
  • Why the Passport Is Not Conclusive Proof?
  • Does a Voter ID / Electoral Roll Prove Citizenship
  • What Actually Proves Citizenship?

The Core Puzzle: No Universal Citizenship Document

  • The central fact is simple but counter-intuitive — India does not have one document that conclusively proves citizenship for all.
  • An attempt to create such a record through the National Register of Citizens (NRC) became politically contentious, amid fears that a nationwide verification drive could exclude genuine citizens over missing or inconsistent paperwork.
  • This forces citizens to rely on different combinations of evidence depending on the dispute.

Why the Passport Is Not Conclusive Proof?

  • This is not a new rule. The government's Passport Manual places a passport in the same category as any other evidence of citizenship status — it is strong evidence that the holder is an Indian citizen, but not conclusive proof in law.
  • The MEA official explained that a passport is a travel document, not a citizenship document. While it attests to nationality abroad, that is distinct from being conclusive proof.
  • The key distinction is between evidence of citizenship and conclusive proof of citizenship. Citizenship is determined under the Citizenship Act, 1955, while passports are issued under the Passports Act, 1967.
  • Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India (1978): Issuance of a passport is based on the holder being an Indian national, entitling them to the protection of the Indian Republic and assistance of its missions abroad.
  • Passports Act provisions: Under Section 6(2)(a), a passport can be refused if the applicant is not a citizen. But under Section 20, the government may issue a passport or travel document to a non-citizen in public interest — which is precisely why the passport cannot be treated as definitive proof.
  • If citizenship is disputed, courts examine the passport alongside other relevant evidence.

Can Aadhaar Prove Citizenship

  • From the start, the UIDAI has stressed that Aadhaar is proof of identity and address only — not citizenship.
  • In fact, non-Indian citizens legally resident in India are also eligible for Aadhaar and often need it for basic services like banking and cooking gas.
  • Supreme Court (May 2026): While upholding the constitutional validity of the SIR, the Court held that Aadhaar does not constitute proof of citizenship and cannot be relied on for that purpose. It may, however, be used for the limited purpose of establishing identity.

Does a Voter ID / Electoral Roll Prove Citizenship?

  • Only Indian citizens can vote — but presence on the electoral roll or holding an EPIC (Electoral Photo Identity Card) does not determine or conclusively prove citizenship.
  • Lal Babu Hussein v. Electoral Registration Officer (1995): Electors on the roll are entitled to a presumption of citizenship, which cannot be displaced except through the legally prescribed procedure.
  • 2026 SIR judgment: The Court emphasised that the Election Commission's role is confined to determining electoral eligibility — it cannot adjudicate citizenship. Importantly, a person's citizenship does not cease merely because they become ineligible for the electoral roll under the SIR.
  • A practical contradiction emerged here: the passport was one of 11 'indicative' documents the EC listed as proof of citizenship.
  • In Uttar Pradesh, some purged voters used passports to get back on the rolls — yet in West Bengal, some passport-holders were still deleted from draft lists.
  • This inconsistency underlines how no single document settles the matter.

What Actually Proves Citizenship?

  • The answer depends on how a person became a citizen. Under the Citizenship Act, 1955, citizenship can be acquired by birth, descent, registration, naturalisation, or incorporation of territory.
  • Citizenship certificates are issued to those who acquire citizenship by registration or naturalisation, and act as conclusive proof.
  • But most Indians are citizens by birth or descent and have no such certificate. They rely on documents proving date of birth, place of birth, or parentage, depending on the dispute.
  • The Home Ministry itself, replying in the Lok Sabha on August 2025, did not specify a fixed list of valid documents, stating that citizenship is governed by the Citizenship Act, 1955.
  • The Birth-Date Complication
    • Citizenship by birth has changed over time, making documentary proof progressively harder:
      • Jan 26, 1950 – Jul 1, 1987 - Citizen by birth, irrespective of parents' nationality.
      • Jul 1, 1987 – Dec 3, 2004 - Must also prove at least one parent was an Indian citizen.
      • On or after Dec 3, 2004 - One parent must be an Indian citizen and the other must not be an illegal migrant.
    • For the earliest group, since mandatory birth certificates were not issued then, many rely on a combination of educational certificates, Aadhaar and other records.
    • For the later groups, proving one's own birth is no longer enough — parentage must also be documented, complicating matters significantly.

Conclusion

The episode reveals a structural gap in India's governance: citizenship is a clearly defined legal status under the Citizenship Act, yet no document conclusively establishes it for the majority of Indians who are citizens by birth or descent.

Passports, Aadhaar and voter IDs each prove something narrower — nationality for travel, identity, or electoral eligibility — but none settles citizenship on its own. As exercises like the SIR test these boundaries, the case for robust universal birth and civil registration becomes not just an administrative reform but a safeguard for citizens' rights.

Polity & Governance

Article
28 Jun 2026

UNHRC Commission Report on Gaza: Genocidal Intent and Its Legal Implications

Why in news?

Recently, a United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) commission of inquiry released a report concluding that Israel deliberately targeted Palestinian children in Gaza, and that this pattern of acts established genocidal intent to destroy the Palestinian group.

Released by the UN Independent International Commission of Inquiry, the report has significant implications for ongoing international legal cases against Israel.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • About the Commission
  • What the Report Found?
  • Genocide Under International Law
  • Why a UN Report Matters Legally?
  • Conclusion

About the Commission

  • The report comes from the UN Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory (including East Jerusalem) and Israel.
  • It was set up in May 2021 through a UNHRC resolution as an independent body to monitor conditions in the occupied Palestinian territory, and is mandated to submit annual reports.
  • It is currently chaired by Justice S. Muralidhar of India, who retired in 2023 as Chief Justice of the Odisha High Court.
    • The other members are Florence Mumba (Zambia) and Chris Sidoti (Australia).
  • This is not the first such finding: in September 2025, the commission — then chaired by Navi Pillay (South Africa), with Miloon Kothari (India) and Chris Sidoti (Australia) — had reached similar conclusions on genocidal intent.

What the Report Found

  • The central argument is that children were not incidental victims but were directly targeted.
  • The commission described children as central to the survival and continuity of the Palestinian group, making their targeting a key element in establishing intent.
  • Key findings include:
    • Targeted killings: Medical practitioners interviewed reported a consistent pattern of children with single gunshot wounds from quadcopters or snipers.
    • Ceasefire did not end violence: The October 2025 ceasefire between Israel and Hamas did not stop the killings. Deaths increased near the "yellow line" — an Israel-declared security buffer cutting north-to-south through Gaza, established under the US-mediated October 2025 peace plan, marking the boundary to which Israeli forces withdrew while retaining control over a large part of the Strip.
    • Torture and abuse in detention: The report documented torture of children during arrests and detention, including sexual violence.
    • Attacks on protective infrastructure: It alleged Israeli forces targeted schools and orphanages, forced the closure of paediatric hospitals, and destroyed infrastructure essential for children's survival.

Genocide Under International Law

  • The UN Genocide Convention (Article II) defines genocide as acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group.
  • The five listed acts are:
    • Killing members of the group
    • Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group
    • Deliberately inflicting conditions of life calculated to bring about physical destruction
    • Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group
    • Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group
  • The same definition appears in Article 6 of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC) and in other international jurisdictions.
  • The crucial point: proving genocide requires establishing intent (the mental element), which is held to a very high evidentiary standard.
  • As legal experts noted, ethnic cleansing, indiscriminate killing or war crimes alone are not enough to prove genocide.

Why a UN Report Matters Legally?

  • A UN commission cannot impose penalties, but its findings can serve as documentary evidence before international courts.
  • Experts cited by the report explained how:
    • As corroborating evidence: UN fact-finding missions and similar reports have historically formed part of the evidentiary record in major genocide proceedings — examples cited include the Bosnia v. Serbia case at the ICJ and the ICC's prosecution of Sudan's Omar al-Bashir over Darfur.
  • Two parallel cases against Israel
    • ICJ: In South Africa's case against Israel, the court has held that Palestinians in Gaza have plausible rights under the Genocide Convention requiring protection.
    • ICC: The case against PM Benjamin Netanyahu is seen by some experts as having more potential, as evidence emerges on the chain of command behind alleged acts.
  • However, experts cautioned that proving genocidal intent is hard because, unlike the Rohingya in Myanmar (where a clear ethnicity was targeted), Palestinians do not fit as squarely into such identity definitions.
  • There is also concern about "judicial bullying" by powerful states obstructing evidence collection.

Conclusion

  • The report marks a significant step in documenting allegations of genocide in Gaza, but it sits at the gap between documentation and enforcement.
  • While its findings strengthen the evidentiary foundation for cases at the ICJ and ICC, the high legal threshold for proving genocidal intent — and the absence of enforcement obligations on powerful non-ICC states like India and the US — means its practical legal impact remains uncertain.
International Relations

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