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Article
14 May 2026
Context
- India’s criminal justice system is facing a serious crisis because of the huge number of pending cases in courts.
- Delayed justice weakens public trust and increases pressure on legal institutions. In this context, reforming plea bargaining has become extremely important.
- Introduced through the Criminal Law (Amendment) Act, 2005, plea bargaining was designed to reduce delays through negotiated settlements between the accused and the prosecution.
- However, despite its success in countries such as the United States, Canada, and Australia, the system has failed to perform effectively in India due to legal contradictions, institutional indifference, and social stigma.
Meaning and Importance of Plea Bargaining
- Concept of Plea Bargaining
- Plea bargaining is a pre-trial agreement in which the accused pleads guilty to a lesser offence or accepts a reduced punishment.
- It is mainly applicable to offences carrying imprisonment of less than seven years.
- Global Success of the System
- In many countries, plea bargaining is an effective tool for reducing judicial burden.
Around 90–95% of criminal cases in the United States and nearly 85–90% in Canada and Australia are resolved through negotiated pleas. - In India, however, less than one percent of criminal cases are settled through this mechanism.
- In many countries, plea bargaining is an effective tool for reducing judicial burden.
- Need for Reform
- India currently faces massive pendency of cases, with over 58.8 million cases awaiting disposal. Courts have almost exhausted their capacity, making judicial reforms essential.
- A stronger plea-bargaining framework can help ensure faster disposal of cases and reduce pressure on courts.
Reasons for the Failure of Plea Bargaining in India
- Stigma of Conviction
- One of the major reasons for failure is the stigma of conviction attached to plea bargaining.
- Under Section 294 of the BNSS, a successful plea bargain still results in formal conviction and punishment.
- Such convictions can negatively affect employment opportunities, social reputation, and civil rights.
- Conflict with Compounding of Offences
- Section 359 of the BNSS allows compounding of offences, where parties settle disputes and the accused receives acquittal.
- Naturally, accused persons prefer compounding because it avoids the long-term consequences of conviction.
- This contradiction has weakened the appeal of plea bargaining.
- Institutional Indifference
- Another major weakness is the poor role of prosecutors and legal institutions.
- Many prosecutors focus on maintaining high conviction rates instead of promoting efficient justice delivery.
- Additionally, legal aid lawyers often lack proper training in negotiation and settlement procedures.
Measures Required for Effective Reform
- Strengthening Judicial Oversight
- Strong judicial evaluation is necessary to ensure fairness in negotiated settlements.
- Judges must verify facts, monitor agreed charges, and impose proportionate sentences. Proper supervision can prevent misuse of the process.
- Accountability and Transparency
- A district-level data dashboard can improve accountability by tracking disposal rates, offence categories, and settlement outcomes.
- Monthly reporting systems can make officials more responsible and transparent.
- Establishment of Mediation Cells
- District courts should establish dedicated mediation cells with trained facilitators, legal aid officers, and victim liaisons.
- Such institutions can ensure smoother implementation of plea bargaining.
- Training and Professional Development
- Mandatory training for prosecutors and legal aid lawyers is essential.
- Skilled negotiation and proper legal understanding are necessary for the success of negotiated settlements.
Making Plea Bargaining More Attractive
- Reducing Legal Disqualifications
- The disqualification attached to imprisonment and conviction should be reduced in plea-bargaining cases.
- This can encourage more accused persons to choose negotiated settlements.
- Introducing Acquittal as an Outcome
- In selected cases, acquittal may be introduced as one of the outcomes of negotiated pleas.
- This would remove the perception that plea bargaining is less beneficial than compounding.
- Rehabilitation-Oriented Measures
- Prisoners resolving cases through plea bargaining may receive benefits such as parole, remission, and rehabilitation support.
- Such reforms would make the justice system more humane and restorative.
Conclusion
- Reforming plea bargaining is essential for improving India’s overburdened criminal justice system. Legal contradictions, lack of institutional support, and the social stigma attached to conviction have prevented the system from achieving its purpose.
- By strengthening accountability, improving prosecutorial training, ensuring judicial oversight, and making negotiated settlements more attractive, India can transform plea bargaining into an efficient and fair mechanism of justice.
- Effective reforms will not only reduce judicial backlog but also promote faster, fairer, and more restorative outcomes in the legal system.
Article
14 May 2026
Context:
- The fourth India–Africa Forum Summit (IAFS-IV), scheduled for May 28–31, marks a crucial opportunity for India to recalibrate and deepen its engagement with Africa amid rapidly evolving geopolitical and economic realities.
- Originally due in 2020, the summit was delayed because of the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent global diplomatic disruptions.
- In the intervening years, Africa’s external partnerships have expanded significantly, with major powers such as the European Union (EU), China, Japan, France, Germany, and South Korea intensifying their outreach.
- Against this backdrop, India must transform its historical goodwill with Africa into a more structured, continuous, and strategic partnership.
Changing Geopolitical Landscape in Africa:
- Intensifying global competition: Africa has emerged as a major arena of geopolitical competition and strategic engagement.
- Recent developments:
- EU and Japan organised high-level summits with African nations in 2025.
- South Korea conducted ministerial consultations with African partners.
- Germany hosted discussions on the Sudan crisis.
- France is advancing a renewed Africa outreach strategy.
- China continues its sustained engagement through the Forum on China–Africa Cooperation (FOCAC).
- This increasingly crowded diplomatic space poses a challenge for India to maintain visibility and relevance.
India’s Traditional Strengths in Africa:
- Historical goodwill: India enjoys substantial goodwill in Africa due to shared colonial experiences and anti-imperial struggles, South-South cooperation framework, capacity-building initiatives, etc.
- Development partnership: India is often viewed by African nations as -
- A country that provides affordable and accessible developmental solutions.
- A non-hegemonic partner.
- Adaptable and development-oriented.
- Respectful of African sovereignty and priorities.
- However, goodwill alone is no longer sufficient in an increasingly competitive environment.
Need for Institutionalised Engagement:
- Limitations of the existing summit model: The five-year summit cycle remains useful for leadership-level engagement, but the absence of robust inter-summit mechanisms has weakened continuity.
- Consequences:
- Engagement often becomes episodic.
- Partnerships default to bilateral interactions.
- Pan-African institutional cooperation remains limited.
- Many summit commitments suffer from weak implementation.
Reviving the Three-Tier Africa Framework:
- India’s earlier framework of engagement: It was based on bilateral level, regional level, and pan-African level. Although implementation challenges reduced its effectiveness, the framework remains strategically relevant.
- Suggested measures:
- Enhanced political engagement:
- Annual invitation to the Chairperson of the African Union Commission (AUC).
- State visits for the annually rotating African Union (AU) Chair.
- Greater inclusion of geographically underrepresented African countries.
- Importance of Burundi’s role: With Burundi currently holding the AU Chair and co-chairing IAFS-IV, such engagement gains additional significance.
- Enhanced political engagement:
Importance of AU and Regional Economic Communities (RECs):
- Strategic role of the AUC: The AUC plays a central role in shaping Africa’s collective positions on climate change, energy transition, digital governance, Artificial Intelligence (AI), and global South cooperation.
- Sharing developmental experiences: Engaging the AUC would enable India to share its developmental experiences in Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI), financial inclusion, public health systems, capacity building, and e-governance.
- Re-engaging RECs:
- Africa’s RECs are critical pillars of continental integration and economic coordination.
- Suggested initiative is an annual Track 1.5 India–Africa Strategic Dialogue involving policymakers, AUC leadership, Permanent Representatives’ Committee (PRC), academia, and industry experts.
- This can create sustained policy continuity beyond summit diplomacy.
Persistent Challenges in India–Africa Engagement:
- Gap between commitments and delivery: Many IAFS announcements have suffered from slow implementation, weak monitoring mechanisms, and limited institutional follow-up.
- Episodic nature of engagement: Without regular engagement mechanisms, India risks being viewed as a reactive partner, and an occasional diplomatic actor rather than a long-term strategic stakeholder.
- Weak institutionalisation of cooperation: Several promising initiatives remain insufficiently developed, particularly in renewable energy, agriculture, climate finance, digital economy, counterterrorism cooperation, etc.
- Growing Chinese influence: China’s highly institutionalised and financially intensive engagement through FOCAC creates competitive pressure for India.
Way Forward:
- Shift to process-driven diplomacy: IAFS-IV should evolve from symbolic summitry to sustained strategic engagement. Key institutional mechanisms -
- Establish regular mid-cycle review meetings.
- Create monitoring frameworks for implementation of commitments.
- Enhance consultations with African diplomats in New Delhi and Addis Ababa.
- Deepen development cooperation: India should focus on sectors where it has comparative strengths - DPI, FinTech and UPI-based payment systems, affordable healthcare, pharmaceuticals, skill development, and renewable energy.
- Align with African priorities:
- “African priorities should guide India’s engagement with Africa” - the Indian PM’s 2018 principle articulated in Uganda.
- This would reinforce mutual trust, demand-driven cooperation, and respect for African agencies.
- Strengthen multilateral coordination: In Global South platforms, climate negotiations, WTO reforms, UNSC reforms, and digital governance norms.
Conclusion:
- IAFS-IV arrives at a critical juncture in global geopolitics and South-South cooperation.
- Africa is no longer a peripheral strategic space but a central arena in the emerging multipolar world order.
- For India, the challenge is not merely to preserve historical goodwill but to translate it into sustained institutional partnerships and credible delivery mechanisms.
Article
14 May 2026
Why in the News?
- The Union Cabinet has approved a Rs. 37,500 crore scheme to promote surface coal and lignite gasification projects, aimed at boosting domestic syngas production.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Coal Gasification (About, Working, Applications, Significance, etc.)
- News Summary (Scheme, Key Features, Benefits, etc.)
About Coal Gasification
- Coal gasification is a thermo-chemical process that converts coal or lignite into synthesis gas, commonly known as syngas, a mixture primarily composed of carbon monoxide (CO) and hydrogen (H₂).
- Unlike direct combustion, gasification allows controlled conversion of coal into a clean and versatile industrial feedstock.
Working of Coal Gasification
- In coal gasification, coal or lignite reacts with oxygen and steam under high temperature and pressure conditions.
- This controlled reaction breaks down the carbon-rich material into its gaseous components.
- The syngas produced is then cleaned of impurities such as sulphur and particulates before being processed for industrial use.
Applications of Syngas
- Syngas is a versatile feedstock that can be used to produce:
- Power and Synthetic Natural Gas (SNG)
- Fertilisers such as urea and ammonia
- Chemicals, including methanol, dimethyl ether (DME), and ammonium nitrate
- Liquid fuels through further conversion processes
- Hydrogen for industrial and energy applications
Why Coal Gasification is Important?
- India holds one of the world's largest reserves of coal and lignite, approximately 401 billion tonnes of coal and 47 billion tonnes of lignite.
- Coal currently contributes more than 55% of India's energy mix. Despite this abundance, India imports large volumes of high-value chemicals and fuels.
- Coal gasification offers several strategic benefits:
- Cleaner utilisation of coal compared to direct combustion, with lower emissions.
- Import substitution for LNG, urea, ammonia, methanol, and coking coal.
- Energy security by reducing exposure to global price volatility and geopolitical disruptions.
- Industrial diversification in coal-bearing regions, creating new economic opportunities.
- Alignment with Atmanirbhar Bharat and Make in India initiatives by strengthening domestic capabilities.
- India aims to gasify 100 million tonnes of coal by 2030, and the new scheme is a significant step toward this national target.
News Summary
- The Union Cabinet, chaired by PM Modi, has approved a major scheme to accelerate surface coal and lignite gasification across the country.
- The scheme, titled "Scheme for Promotion of New Surface Coal/Lignite Gasification Projects for Production of Syngas and Downstream Products," marks one of the most significant initiatives toward building a domestic syngas ecosystem.
Key Features of the Scheme
- Total Financial Outlay: Rs. 37,500 crore.
- Gasification Target: Approximately 75 million tonnes of coal and lignite.
- Project Selection: Through a transparent and competitive bidding process, with an evaluation framework benchmarking project cost, coal input, and syngas output.
- Financial Incentives: Up to 20% of the cost of plant and machinery, disbursed in four equal instalments linked to project milestones.
Incentive Caps
- To ensure equitable distribution, the scheme has set the following caps:
- Rs. 5,000 crore per single project.
- Rs. 9,000 crore per single product category (excluding Synthetic Natural Gas and Urea).
- Rs. 12,000 crore per single entity or group across all projects.
- The incentives under this scheme are additional and do not restrict access to other Central or State Government schemes, including those under the commercial coal mining regime.
Structural Reforms
- A major accompanying reform is the extension of coal linkage tenure to 30 years under the "Production of Syngas leading to Coal Gasification" sub-sector in the Non-Regulated Sector (NRS) linkage auction framework.
- This provides long-term policy certainty for investments in coal gasification projects.
Strategic and Economic Benefits
- Investment Mobilisation
- The scheme is expected to attract investments worth Rs. 2.5-3 lakh crore across the value chain, creating significant industrial activity.
- Import Substitution
- India's import bill for key substitutable products, including LNG, urea, ammonium nitrate, ammonia, coking coal, methanol, and DME, stood at approximately Rs. 2.77 lakh crore in FY2025.
- The ongoing West Asia geopolitical situation has further exposed vulnerabilities in global supply chains.
- Coal gasification will help insulate India from global price volatility and geopolitical supply-chain disruptions.
- Employment Generation
- The scheme is projected to create around 50,000 direct and indirect jobs across 25 projects in coal-bearing regions, providing significant employment opportunities.
- Revenue Generation
- Coal and lignite utilisation under the scheme is expected to generate Rs. 6,300 crore annually from 75 million tonnes of gasification, in addition to downstream revenue from GST and other levies.
Article
14 May 2026
Why in news?
Nine days after nearly 22 lakh students appeared for the NEET medical entrance exam, the National Testing Agency (NTA) announced that the examination had been compromised and ordered a re-test.
The decision triggered nationwide outrage among aspirants and parents, raising serious concerns about examination integrity and administrative accountability.
The Federation of All India Medical Association (FAIMA) has approached the Supreme Court, demanding either major structural reforms in NTA or its replacement.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- NEET’s History of Controversies
- Why NTA’s ‘Zero Error’ Promise Failed
- What the Radhakrishnan Panel Recommended?
NEET’s History of Controversies
- The decision to conduct a re-test for nearly 22 lakh NEET aspirants is unprecedented, but concerns over exam integrity and paper leaks have surfaced before.
- The 2024 Result Controversy
- In 2024, NEET results triggered major controversy when:
- 67 of the top 100 candidates scored full marks,
- compared to only 2 perfect scorers in 2023, and none in 2022.
- This led to severe rank inflation, making admissions to top medical colleges far more competitive.
- In 2024:
- around 13 lakh students qualified,
- while only about 1.1 lakh MBBS seats were available across government and private institutions.
- This intensified pressure and scrutiny over the fairness of the examination process.
- Subsequent investigations in 2024 revealed allegations that around 155 students may have benefited from leaked question papers.
- Despite widespread demands from aspirants for a re-examination following the leak controversy, no re-test was conducted at the time, adding to concerns about inconsistency in the response to exam compromises.
- In 2024, NEET results triggered major controversy when:
Why NTA’s ‘Zero Error’ Promise Failed
- Despite repeated controversies over paper leaks and exam irregularities, the National Testing Agency appears to have struggled to address systemic weaknesses effectively.
- After the 2024 NEET controversy, the then NTA chief was removed, but the agency functioned without a full-time head for over a year, creating concerns about administrative continuity and institutional accountability.
- The ‘Zero Error, Zero Tolerance’ Commitment
- Under new leadership, NTA promised a strict “Zero Error, Zero Tolerance” approach and claimed robust security measures for NEET-UG 2026, including:
- sealed handling of confidential materials,
- GPS-tracked transport with police escorts,
- CCTV surveillance at exam centres,
- biometric Aadhaar verification,
- frisking with metal detectors, and
- centralised real-time monitoring.
- The agency also acted against online fraud by blocking numerous Telegram channels allegedly spreading fake question papers and misleading candidates.
- Under new leadership, NTA promised a strict “Zero Error, Zero Tolerance” approach and claimed robust security measures for NEET-UG 2026, including:
- Security Failure Despite Safeguards
- Despite these extensive precautions, police investigations indicated that a so-called “guess paper” containing a large number of actual exam questions had reportedly circulated well before the exam, exposing major gaps in the system.
- The controversy suggests that while technological and procedural safeguards were expanded, underlying intelligence, monitoring, and institutional enforcement failures continued to undermine exam integrity.
What the Radhakrishnan Panel Recommended?
- Following the NEET-UG 2024 controversy, the Ministry of Education constituted a high-level committee headed by former ISRO chief K.Radhakrishnan to review examination security and reforms.
- The committee identified the traditional pen-and-paper testing model as a major security vulnerability due to the higher risk of question paper leaks and logistical breaches.
- The panel recommended transitioning NEET to a Computer-Based Testing format, similar to JEE Main, to improve exam security and reduce leak risks.
- It also proposed a Computer-Assisted Secure Pen-and-Paper system, where encrypted question papers would be digitally transmitted to exam centres and printed locally just before the exam.
- Implementation Gaps
- Despite these recommendations, NTA reportedly continued with conventional paper-based arrangements relying on physical transport, GPS tracking, and police escorts instead of adopting the suggested technological safeguards.
- NTA leadership cited limited CBT capacity, stating that existing infrastructure can handle only a fraction of NEET candidates in a single day. Expansion efforts through additional computer centres have reportedly not progressed sufficiently.
- Moving NEET fully online requires broader ministerial approval involving both education and health authorities, and proposals for such a transition have remained pending for years.
Conclusion
The panel’s recommendations highlighted clear structural reforms, but slow implementation and infrastructure limitations appear to have prevented meaningful change.
Article
14 May 2026
Why in news?
The India government has sharply raised import duties on gold, silver, and platinum to curb precious metal imports and protect foreign exchange reserves amid economic pressure from the West Asia crisis.
Effective customs duty on gold and silver has increased from 6% to 15%, alongside higher duties on related products such as doré, coins, and jewellery components.
The move aligns with PM Modi’s call for austerity measures, including postponing gold purchases, reducing fuel consumption, limiting non-essential foreign travel, and promoting public transport and electric mobility to ease pressure on India’s import bill and the weakening rupee.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Why India Raised Import Duty on Precious Metals?
- Rupee Under Pressure from Rising Import Costs
- Declining Forex Reserves Raise Economic Concerns
- Gold Imports Increasing India’s External Economic Pressure
- Oil Shock and Strait of Hormuz Disruption
Why India Raised Import Duty on Precious Metals?
- The government increased import duties on gold and silver to conserve foreign exchange reserves as economic pressures intensify due to the ongoing West Asia crisis.
- The decision is linked to: soaring crude oil prices, disruption in the Strait of Hormuz, and rising pressure on India’s external economic stability.
- Gold and silver are viewed as discretionary imports, and the duty hike aims to discourage their purchase so foreign exchange can be preserved for more critical needs.
- The government intends to channel foreign exchange toward essential imports such as:
- crude oil,
- fertilisers,
- industrial raw materials,
- defence equipment, and
- capital goods supporting economic activity and food security.
- The move is part of a precautionary strategy to reduce India’s vulnerability to external shocks and prevent further strain on the current account during an uncertain global economic environment.
Rupee Under Pressure from Rising Import Costs
- The Indian rupee has weakened sharply due to escalating import costs and geopolitical tensions linked to the West Asia crisis.
- As crude oil prices surged amid supply disruption fears, the rupee fell to a record low against the US dollar.
- Higher import bills increase dollar demand, worsening the current account deficit and further weakening the currency.
- The government has described the situation as a real-time balance of payments stress test with implications for inflation and economic stability.
Declining Forex Reserves Raise Economic Concerns
- India’s foreign exchange reserves have fallen significantly since the West Asia conflict began, reflecting growing external economic pressure.
- The decline in reserves, especially foreign currency assets, has increased concerns about India’s ability to manage rising import costs.
- In response, the government is prioritising foreign exchange for essential imports such as energy, fertilisers, defence equipment, critical technologies, and industrial inputs, while seeking to curb non-essential imports to protect macroeconomic stability.
Gold Imports Increasing India’s External Economic Pressure
- Heavy Dependence on Imported Gold - India is the world’s second-largest gold consumer and relies heavily on imports to meet domestic demand.
- Pressure on Foreign Exchange - Since gold imports are paid for in U.S. dollars, they increase demand for foreign currency, put pressure on forex reserves, and widen the trade deficit.
- Sharp Rise in Import Bill - India’s gold import bill surged significantly in 2025–26, despite lower import volumes, mainly because of a steep rise in global gold prices.
- Discretionary Nature of Gold Imports - Officials view precious metal imports as largely consumption- and investment-driven rather than essential economic imports, making them a target for moderation during periods of external economic stress.
- Macro-Economic Rationale - Reducing discretionary gold imports can help: conserve foreign exchange, ease pressure on the external account, and support broader macroeconomic stability during global uncertainty.
Oil Shock and Strait of Hormuz Disruption
- India’s import duty hike comes amid a sharp increase in the oil import bill caused by the ongoing West Asia conflict.
- Brent crude prices have risen steeply from pre-conflict levels, significantly increasing India’s energy import costs and external economic pressure.
- India imports the vast majority of its crude oil needs, making it highly vulnerable to global supply disruptions and price shocks.
- A large share of India’s crude oil shipments passes through or near the Strait of Hormuz, making disruptions in this route a major threat to energy security.
- India also depends heavily on LPG imports, with most supplies sourced through the Gulf region, further increasing exposure to geopolitical instability in West Asia.
Impact of the Duty Hike on Gold Prices
- Higher Import Costs - The increase in import duty will raise the landed cost of gold and silver, since India depends heavily on imported precious metals.
- Cost Passed to Consumers - Jewellers are expected to transfer the higher import burden to buyers, making jewellery, bullion, and silver products more expensive in the domestic market.
- Immediate Market Reaction - Following the announcement, gold and silver prices surged sharply in commodity markets, reflecting expectations of higher domestic prices.
- Reversal of Earlier Policy - The move effectively reverses the government’s earlier customs duty reduction aimed at supporting the gems and jewellery industry, lowering prices, and discouraging smuggling.
- Historical Precedent - India had adopted a similar import duty hike during the Russia-Ukraine crisis, when rising oil prices and rupee weakness created comparable external economic pressures.
Online Test
14 May 2026
Full Length Test - 10 (R7730)
Questions : 100 Questions
Time Limit : 0 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, midnight
Online Test
14 May 2026
Full Length Test - 10 (R7730)
Questions : 100 Questions
Time Limit : 0 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, midnight
Article
14 May 2026
Context:
- An American President, trapped in a costly and unpopular war, turns to China for diplomatic help in securing an exit strategy.
- China responds cautiously, offering assistance while seeking strategic concessions in return.
- Eventually, the U.S. disengages from the conflict, effectively allowing its adversary to prevail.
- The episode marks a shift in Washington’s perception, from scepticism and hostility toward a more reluctant acceptance of China’s growing global influence and its narrative of a “peaceful rise.”
- The article draws a comparison between a possible visit by Donald Trump to China and the landmark 1972 summit when U.S. President Richard Nixon met Chairman Mao Zedong amid the Vietnam War.
What Happened in 1972?
- During the 1972 summit:
- U.S. formally recognised Communist China as the legitimate China,
- China gained greater international legitimacy and strategic status, and
- U.S. moved toward disengagement from the Vietnam War.
- In exchange for helping the U.S. secure an exit from Vietnam, China gained major geopolitical and economic advantages, including eventual access to Western capital, technology, and global influence.
Possible Modern Parallel
- Experts suggest history may be repeating, with Trump potentially seeking Chinese help in managing the ongoing U.S.-Iran conflict and securing a politically face-saving exit.
- Why the Iran Conflict Matters?
- The U.S.-Iran war has become costly for Washington due to:
- economic disruptions,
- strategic uncertainty,
- rising global oil prices, and
- domestic political pressure on Trump ahead of midterm elections.
- Despite military setbacks, Iran has used asymmetric tactics, particularly pressure around the Strait of Hormuz, to disrupt crude oil supplies and impose economic costs globally.
- Iran’s refusal to accept U.S. demands has denied Trump a clear exit strategy, weakening his domestic political standing and increasing the urgency for diplomatic intervention.
- The U.S.-Iran war has become costly for Washington due to:
China’s Central Role in the Iran Crisis
- China is Iran’s most important economic partner, purchasing the bulk of its oil exports and maintaining significant non-oil trade ties, making Beijing a crucial external influence on Tehran’s strategic decisions.
- China’s influence is reinforced by:
- close communication channels involving Pakistan,
- high-level diplomatic engagement such as Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi’s Beijing visit, and
- broader geopolitical coordination involving Russia.
- These factors make China a potential mediator in the U.S.-Iran standoff.
Trump’s Diplomatic Dilemma
- Despite public claims to the contrary, the article suggests Donald Trump may need Chinese President Xi Jinping’s help to find a workable diplomatic settlement with Iran.
- Several developments have complicated the U.S. position:
- failed attempts to finalise a negotiation roadmap before the Beijing summit,
- Iran’s rejection of U.S. proposals,
- ineffective efforts to restore navigation through the Strait of Hormuz, and
- domestic legal and political constraints on prolonged military engagement.
Iran’s Hardening Position
- Following diplomatic engagement with China, Iran’s stance appears to have hardened on key issues such as:
- the Strait of Hormuz blockade,
- nuclear enrichment,
- missile programmes, and
- regional proxy groups.
- Iran has reportedly raised broader demands including:
- reparations,
- security guarantees,
- release of frozen assets,
- closure of U.S. military bases in the region, and
- ceasefires in Lebanon and Yemen.
- China and Russia have increased pressure by signalling opposition to even a diluted U.S.-backed UN Security Council resolution related to the Hormuz blockade, strengthening Iran’s diplomatic leverage.
China’s Possible Negotiating Strategy
- Analysts suggest China may use the ongoing Gulf crisis as strategic leverage in negotiations with the United States, calculating that prolonged instability increases Washington’s dependence on Beijing’s diplomatic help.
- In exchange for helping resolve Iranian resistance, China may seek American concessions on major bilateral issues such as:
- tariffs and economic sanctions,
- technology restrictions, and
- the Taiwan issue.
- Beijing may attempt to position itself as:
- a mediator or guarantor in a U.S.-Iran settlement, or
- a key player through a UN Security Council-backed diplomatic framework.
- Any potential settlement could be structured as a gradual diplomatic unwinding over several months rather than an immediate breakthrough.
Trump’s Strategic Challenge
- Need for a Counterstrategy - The key uncertainty is whether Donald Trump can negotiate Chinese cooperation while limiting concessions, rather than accepting a broader strategic compromise.
- Risk of a Grand Bargain - Without a strong counterstrategy, Trump could end up making significant geopolitical concessions—similar to past U.S. compromises with China—simply to secure an exit from a difficult international crisis.
Conclusion
- The Trump-Xi summit could become a pivotal geopolitical bargain where America seeks crisis exit, China seeks strategic gains, and Iran’s resistance reshapes global power calculations.
Article
13 May 2026
Why in News?
- The National Testing Agency (NTA) cancelled the NEET-UG 2026 examination conducted on May 3 for over 22 lakh candidates following allegations of paper leaks and malpractices.
- This marks the first-ever complete cancellation of the country’s largest single-day entrance examination for undergraduate medical admissions.
- The decision reflects growing concerns regarding the integrity of India’s public examination system, especially after controversies surrounding NEET-UG 2024 and other examinations such as UGC-NET and NEET-PG.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Reasons for Cancelling NEET-UG 2026
- Previous Controversies
- Structural Challenges in Conducting NEET-UG
- Key Recommendations of the K. Radhakrishnan Committee
- Reasons for Not Implementing CBT
- Broader Issues Highlighted by the Crisis
- Measures Already Implemented by NTA
- Way Forward
- Conclusion
Reasons for Cancelling NEET-UG 2026:
- Allegations of paper leak and malpractice:
- On May 7, the NTA received information about a PDF containing alleged NEET-UG questions circulating after the examination. The matter was referred to law enforcement agencies on May 8.
- Investigations reportedly found evidence suggesting prior circulation of exam-related material.
- Findings by investigative agencies:
- The Rajasthan Special Operations Group reportedly recovered a “guess paper” containing 410 questions, of which around 120 appeared in the actual examination.
- Based on inputs from central agencies and investigative findings, the NTA decided to cancel the entire examination.
- NTA’s justification:
- The agency stated that preserving the trust and credibility of the national examination system was paramount; failure to act decisively could have caused “greater and more lasting damage”.
- The exam will now be reconducted without fresh registration or additional fees.
Previous Controversies:
- NEET-UG 2024 controversy: NEET-UG 2024 witnessed allegations of -
- Paper leaks in Jharkhand and Bihar;
- Claims that candidates paid for solved papers before the exam;
- Involvement of examination centre officials.
- Supreme Court’s stand in 2024:
- The SC refused to cancel the exam, observing that evidence did not indicate a systemic breach large enough to compromise the entire examination; however, the existence of leaks in specific locations was not disputed.
- The apex court balanced fairness for affected candidates, and the future of lakhs of genuine aspirants.
- Cancellation of AIPMT (2015):
- The All India Pre-Medical/Pre-Dental Test (AIPMT) conducted by the CBSE was cancelled on SC orders, and was reconducted.
- Candidates allegedly used electronic devices, bluetooth-enabled vests, and SIM cards to access answer keys during the examination.
Structural Challenges in Conducting NEET-UG:
- Massive scale of examination:
- NEET-UG is India’s largest entrance examination; conducted in a single day and single shift; and attended by nearly 25 lakh candidates.
- Such scale creates logistical vulnerabilities, transportation risks, and coordination challenges.
- Continued dependence on pen-and-paper testing (PPT):
- Despite repeated controversies, NEET-UG continues in offline mode.
- Risks in PPT: Physical transportation of papers creates leakage points. Printing, storage, and distribution involve multiple intermediaries. Local-level collusion becomes possible.
- Officials have acknowledged that a high-stakes exam with physically transported papers remains highly vulnerable.
- Delay in implementing reforms: Following the 2024 controversy, the Union Government constituted a high-level committee under former ISRO Chairman K. Radhakrishnan. However, many key recommendations remain unimplemented.
Key Recommendations of the K. Radhakrishnan Committee:
- Transition to computer-based testing (CBT):
- The committee strongly recommended shifting from pen-and-paper testing to CBT; and conducting exams across multiple shifts.
- Advantages: It reduces physical paper handling; minimises leakage possibilities; enhances encryption and digital security; and allows centralised monitoring.
- Hybrid secure examination system:
- The panel suggested encrypted digital delivery of question papers to centres; local printing at examination centres shortly before the exam.
- This would eliminate vulnerabilities during transportation and storage.
- Multi-session and multi-stage testing:
- The committee proposed examinations spread over multiple days; and possible multi-stage testing for NEET-UG.
- This would reduce administrative burden, and concentration of risk.
- Enhanced coordination with local authorities: Recommendations included sealing testing centres in the presence of district administration; police monitoring of exam materials; GPS-enabled transport systems; and centralised CCTV surveillance.
Reasons for Not Implementing CBT:
- Concerns regarding normalisation: The biggest hurdle is ensuring fairness across multiple shifts.
- What is normalisation? Normalisation is a statistical method used to balance differences in difficulty levels across various question papers. This standard-score approach helps compare candidate performance across different exam sessions.
- Challenges: NEET-UG may require over 15 shifts for 25 lakh candidates. Variations in paper difficulty may trigger litigation, allegations of unfairness, and delays in admissions.
- Judicial concerns: During NEET-PG 2024 controversy, The SC raised concerns regarding multi-shift examinations and fairness concerns.
Broader Issues Highlighted by the Crisis:
- Crisis of institutional credibility: Repeated controversies have weakened public trust in national testing systems; affected the morale of genuine candidates.
- Coaching and commercialisation of exams: High-stakes competitive exams have created large coaching economies; and incentivised organised cheating networks.
- Technological and administrative gaps: Despite digital advances exam administration remains fragmented; cybersecurity and data protection measures remain inadequate.
Measures Already Implemented by NTA:
- Following the 2024 controversy, the NTA introduced:
- Aadhaar-based biometric verification;
- GPS-enabled transportation of papers;
- Police escort for exam materials;
- Centralised CCTV monitoring;
- Coordination with district administrations; and
- Security mock drills.
- However, these measures proved insufficient to fully prevent leaks.
Way Forward:
- Gradual shift to CBT: India should build secure digital infrastructure; increase CBT-capable centres; phase in computer-based examinations.
- Transparent normalisation framework: A scientifically robust and publicly audited normalisation mechanism is essential for multi-shift examinations.
- Strengthening the Public Examinations (Prevention of Unfair Means) Act, 2024: To deter organised exam fraud, establish accountability, and impose stringent penalties.
- An autonomous national examination authority: With cybersecurity experts, psychometricians, digital audit teams, and academic specialists could improve transparency and professionalism.
- End-to-end encryption and digital security: Question paper generation and delivery should use encrypted cloud systems, blockchain-based audit trails, and AI-assisted anomaly detection.
- Psychological and academic support for students: Frequent exam disruptions create severe stress among aspirants. Institutional counselling and timely communication are essential.
Conclusion:
- The cancellation of NEET-UG 2026 episode highlights the urgent need for institutional accountability, stronger legal safeguards, etc.
- Restoring public confidence will require not merely reactive measures after leaks occur, but a comprehensive redesign of the examination ecosystem rooted in integrity, transparency, and technological resilience.