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Article
23 Feb 2026
Context:
- Recent incidents of violence against citizens feeding street dogs — including fatal and serious assaults in Raipur, Gwalior, and Kolkata — highlight growing hostility toward animal caregivers.
- The debate over managing India’s large free-roaming dog population has intensified, marked by legal confusion, policy inconsistency, and vigilantism.
- These developments raise important issues related to animal welfare laws, urban governance, public health (rabies control), and citizen rights.
Rising Violence Against Animal Caregivers:
- Recent attacks reveal increasing intolerance toward people involved in feeding, sterilising, and vaccinating street dogs, despite such activities being lawful.
- Key concerns:
- Citizens feeding dogs have faced physical assaults and intimidation.
- Victims were engaged in activities consistent with legal animal welfare frameworks.
- Public rhetoric and social media debates have contributed to anti-feeder vigilantism.
- Weak law enforcement response has emboldened perpetrators.
- This reflects a breakdown in rule of law and civic tolerance.
Legal Framework for Street Dog Management:
- Animal Birth Control (ABC) Rules, 2023: The ABC Rules framed under the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, 1960 provide the official policy framework.
- Core provisions:
- Humane capture of free-roaming dogs.
- Sterilisation to control population growth.
- Anti-rabies vaccination.
- Release back to original location.
- Municipal responsibility for implementation.
- This model emphasises humane and scientific population control.
Judicial Interventions and Policy Confusion:
- Supreme Court directions:
- Recent (August 2025) judicial interventions have added uncertainty.
- The apex court directed municipal bodies in Delhi-NCR to remove street dogs and house them in shelters indefinitely.
- The critics argued that this contradicted the ABC Rules, 2023.
- Subsequent developments (2026 hearings):
- The earlier orders were reversed and partially restored.
- The court held that feeding should occur within private premises, and states could be liable for compensation if dog attacks occur.
- Concerns: Courts entering the policy-making domain. Lack of clarity for municipal authorities. Conflicting interpretations of animal welfare law.
Ecological Reality - Limits of Elimination Policies:
- The “vacuum effect”:
- Attempts to remove street dogs fail due to ecological dynamics, such as removed dogs being replaced by migrating animals, remaining dogs reproduce faster, and populations return to original levels.
- This phenomenon is well-documented globally.
- Indian experience:
- Cities (like Chennai) attempting removal policies have seen no long-term population reduction.
- Dogs continue to roam even where such directives are attempted.
- Street dogs are a resilient landrace embedded in South Asia’s urban ecology.
Evidence-Based Solutions:
- Strengthening ABC implementation: Large-scale sterilisation is the most effective strategy. Scientific data shows that around 70% sterilisation coverage slows reproduction, stabilises populations, reduces bite incidents, and controls rabies transmission.
- Adoption of Indian-breed dogs: Encouraging adoption can reduce free-roaming populations, promote animal welfare, and reduce commercial breeding demand.
- Legal protection for caregivers:
- Animal caregivers fill gaps left by under-resourced municipalities, assist vaccination and monitoring.
- Therefore, policy should recognise caregivers legally, protecting them from harassment and violence.
- Rabies and public health measures: Dog bites can be reduced through vaccination campaigns, public awareness, safe human-animal interaction, and waste management.
Major Challenges:
- Policy and legal ambiguity: Due to lack of coordination between courts and municipalities.
- Administrative weakness: Poor funding for sterilisation programmes. Limited veterinary infrastructure. Inadequate municipal capacity.
- Social polarisation: Anti-feeder sentiment, vigilante violence, and public fear of dog attacks.
- Public health concerns: India accounts for a large share of global rabies deaths. Poor vaccination coverage.
- Urban governance issues: Poor waste management sustains dog populations. Rapid urbanisation increases conflict.
Way Forward:
- Policy measures: Strict implementation of ABC Rules, 2023. Dedicated funding for sterilisation and vaccination. National guidelines for municipal animal management.
- Legal measures: Clear judicial interpretation aligned with statutory rules. Protection of lawful animal caregivers. Accountability for violence and vigilantism.
- Administrative measures: Expand veterinary infrastructure. Create municipal animal management units. Data-driven population monitoring.
- Social measures: Public awareness on humane coexistence, community participation in ABC programmes, and responsible pet ownership.
- Public health measures: Universal anti-rabies vaccination, bite-prevention education, and improved waste management.
Conclusion:
- India’s street dog issue cannot be resolved through elimination or reactionary policies.
- Policy must be guided by science, legality, and compassion, ensuring both public safety and animal welfare.
- A balanced approach — rooted in evidence-based governance and civic responsibility — is essential to prevent violence and build safer, more humane cities.
Online Test
23 Feb 2026
CAMP-HINDI-PT-05
Questions : 50 Questions
Time Limit : 60 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.
Online Test
23 Feb 2026
CAMP-HINDI-PT-05
Questions : 50 Questions
Time Limit : 0 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.
Article
23 Feb 2026
Context
- For decades, India was widely perceived as the world’s back office, a destination for low-cost outsourcing and routine business services.
- However, India has emerged not merely as a support base for multinational corporations (MNCs), but as a strategic nerve centre that shapes global corporate decision-making and innovation.
- The rise of Global Capability Centres (GCCs) marks a watershed moment in India’s economic history.
- These centres have evolved from cost-cutting units into global growth engines that define product strategy, technological development, and enterprise leadership.
The Evolution of GCCs
- Phase One: Labour Arbitrage and Routine Operations
- The first wave of GCCs was driven by labour arbitrage. MNCs established captive centres in India primarily to reduce operational costs.
- These centres handled repetitive tasks such as IT support, data processing, and back-office functions. India’s advantage lay in its large English-speaking workforce and lower wage structures.
- Phase Two: Process Specialisation
- Over time, GCCs expanded their scope to include specialised operational processes such as finance, analytics, human resources, and compliance.
- While still support-oriented, these functions required higher technical and managerial capabilities.
- Phase Three: Knowledge Integration
- The third wave saw Indian centres participating in product development, engineering support, and advanced analytics.
- GCCs moved beyond execution and began contributing to knowledge creation and innovation processes.
- Phase Four (GCC 4.0): Strategic Ownership and Innovation
- Today’s GCC 4.0 era represents a decisive shift. Indian centres now:
- Own end-to-end product lifecycles
- Lead global research and development (R&D)
- Develop proprietary intellectual property (IP)
- Deploy advanced technologies such as Agentic AI
- Nearly 58% of GCCs are investing heavily in autonomous AI systems capable of reasoning and executing complex tasks.
- This reflects a transition from experimentation to enterprise-scale innovation. Indian centres are now indispensable nodes in global value chains.
- Today’s GCC 4.0 era represents a decisive shift. Indian centres now:
Strategic Benefits for Multinational Corporations
- Access to Scale and Talent
- India hosts over 1,800 GCCs employing nearly two million professionals. This provides MNCs with access to a multidimensional talent pool at a scale unmatched elsewhere.
- The follow-the-sun operational model enables continuous development cycles, accelerating innovation.
- Centres of Excellence (CoEs)
- Indian GCCs have evolved into global Centres of Excellence in areas such as:
- Finance
- Legal services
- Human resources
- Advanced R&D
- These centres centralise high-value corporate functions in a high-skill, high-efficiency ecosystem.
- Indian GCCs have evolved into global Centres of Excellence in areas such as:
- Shift in Corporate Power
- In many cases, the technical depth and execution capacity within Indian GCCs rival or surpass those at traditional headquarters.
- This has created a form of shadow leadership, where strategic influence increasingly resides in India.
Socio-Economic Impact on India
- Creation of High-Value Employment
- The GCC boom has generated intellectually stimulating, well-compensated jobs, contributing to the emergence of a globally competitive professional class.
- These roles significantly exceed traditional service-sector wages.
- Regional Economic Diversification
- Growth is expanding beyond major technology hubs such as Bengaluru and Hyderabad into Tier-II and Tier-III cities like Coimbatore, Indore, and Kochi. This decentralisation:
- Reduces pressure on saturated metros
- Stimulates local infrastructure development
- Boosts real estate and retail economies
- Promotes balanced regional growth
- Growth is expanding beyond major technology hubs such as Bengaluru and Hyderabad into Tier-II and Tier-III cities like Coimbatore, Indore, and Kochi. This decentralisation:
Key Challenges Facing the GCC Ecosystem
- The Talent Gap
- While India produces millions of engineering graduates, demand for niche skills in AI security, cloud architecture, and quantum-resistant cryptography far exceeds supply.
- This has triggered intense competition and wage inflation, potentially eroding India’s cost advantage.
- Cybersecurity and Data Protection Risks
- As GCCs handle increasingly sensitive global data, they have become prime targets for state-sponsored cyber-attacks.
- Compliance with data protection regulations has increased governance pressure. Cybersecurity has emerged as the most expensive operational mandate for modern GCCs.
- Taxation and Fiscal Uncertainty
- The introduction of the OECD’s Global Minimum Tax (Pillar Two) reduces the tax arbitrage benefits previously enjoyed by MNCs.
- Additionally, ongoing debates regarding transfer pricing and Safe Harbour rules create fiscal unpredictability, making regulatory clarity a top board-level concern.
- Geopolitical Volatility and Protectionism
- Global trade uncertainties, tariff volatility, and reshoring policies, particularly in advanced economies, pose long-term risks.
- The growing emphasis on digital sovereignty may encourage corporations to relocate critical data operations back to domestic markets, slowing new GCC investments in India.
Policy Recommendations to Sustain the Momentum
- Introduce a Single-Window Clearance system for GCC establishment.
- Rationalise transfer pricing norms.
- Provide tax safe harbours for R&D-intensive operations.
- Strengthen industry-academia collaboration to address skill gaps.
- Offer capital subsidies to promote expansion into Tier-II cities.
Conclusion
- India’s transformation from the world’s outsourcing hub to a global innovation command centre represents a historic economic shift.
- GCCs have redefined the country’s role in the global value chain, positioning it as a driver of strategy, research, and technological advancement.
- If managed effectively, India’s GCC revolution has the potential to secure its position not merely as a participant, but as a leader in the global innovation economy for decades to come.
Article
23 Feb 2026
Context
- The Women’s Reservation Act, passed in September 2023, promises one-third reservation for women in the Lok Sabha and State Assemblies.
- It seeks to correct the long-standing underrepresentation of women in Indian politics and was widely celebrated as a step toward gender equality and inclusive democracy.
- Yet the legislation postpones its own operation. The Act links implementation to future constitutional processes, meaning women will not immediately receive guaranteed political participation.
- The reform therefore recognises women’s rights in principle while delaying their exercise in practice, raising questions about the real pace of democratic reform.
The Constitutional Framework Behind the Delay
- The Two Mandatory Preconditions
- The Act makes reservation conditional upon two sequential processes:
- A national Census conducted after 2026.
- A delimitation exercise based on that Census.
- Both steps are constitutionally required and cannot be bypassed.
- The Census Timeline
- The next Census is expected in 2027. After enumeration, the data must be verified and officially published, a process historically taking 12–18 months.
- Only after publication can the next constitutional step begin.
- Delimitation Process
- After publication, the President establishes a Delimitation Commission under Article 82.
- The Commission must redraw 543 parliamentary constituencies and thousands of Assembly constituencies while ensuring population balance, administrative boundaries, and existing SC/ST reservations, along with women’s reservation.
- Previous commissions have taken several years. Even under optimistic conditions, delimitation is unlikely to finish before 2032–2033.
Why Implementation Before 2029 Is Impossible?
- India’s next general election is scheduled for 2029. Because both Census and delimitation cannot be completed beforehand, reservation cannot operate in that election.
- The earliest likely implementation is around 2034.
- The delay results from constitutional procedures rather than administrative uncertainty.
- Until prerequisites are completed, the promised representation remains legally inoperative.
Political Logic Behind the Design
- Avoiding Immediate Displacement
- Immediate implementation would convert roughly 181 constituencies into women-only seats.
- A similar number of male incumbents would lose their positions. Political parties therefore faced direct electoral cost.
- Expansion Instead of Replacement
- By connecting reservation to delimitation, representation is introduced alongside an expected expansion of Parliament.
- A larger House allows new reserved seats without removing sitting members. Political loss is avoided through expansion rather than replacement, though the cost is a long delay in women’s participation.
Historical Background: A Long Wait
- Efforts for reservation began in 1996, followed by repeated debates, amendments, and lapses. The proposal passed the Rajya Sabha in 2010 but never became law at that time.
- The 2023 Act appeared to conclude decades of legislative struggle, yet implementation is postponed for another election cycle, extending a wait that has lasted nearly three decades.
Linkage with Delimitation and Federal Tensions
- Delimitation redistributes seats according to population. States with higher population growth may gain representation, while others may lose proportional strength.
- This north-south imbalance has historically caused political conflict and led to the 1976 freeze on seat redistribution, later extended in 2001.
- By tying women’s reservation to this unresolved federal issue, the Act places women’s rights within a broader federal dispute unrelated to gender justice.
- Any disagreement over seat allocation can postpone representation further.
Design Gaps in the Act
- Exclusion of Upper Houses
- Reservation applies only to directly elected bodies. The Rajya Sabha and Legislative Councils remain outside its scope.
- Absence of OBC Sub-Reservation
- While Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe women receive proportional representation, OBC women do not receive a separate quota despite forming a major demographic group.
- Rotation of Constituencies
- Reserved constituencies will rotate after each election, but operational rules are unclear.
- Frequent boundary changes and shifting constituencies may create uncertainty for candidates and parties.
Possible Solutions for Early Implementation
- Several options could enable earlier implementation:
- A constitutional amendment delinking reservation from delimitation
- Temporary reservation within existing constituencies
- Immediate Lok Sabha expansion with additional seats reserved for women
- Article 15(3) already allows special provisions for women. Implementation therefore depends primarily on political will, not constitutional impossibility.
The Larger Democratic Question
- The Act illustrates the tension between symbolic reform and substantive Legal recognition alone does not guarantee participation.
- Representation is essential to democratic legitimacy, and prolonged postponement weakens the meaning of equality.
- A right that cannot be exercised remains incomplete within a democratic system.
Conclusion
- The Women’s Reservation Act acknowledges the necessity of women’s political participation but delays its realization.
- By linking implementation to future Census and delimitation processes, the law transforms a reform into a deferred constitutional project.
- The measure’s success will depend not on its enactment but on its execution. Democratic equality requires not only recognition but timely application.
- Until women occupy the seats promised to them, representation remains unrealised. In democratic governance, representation delayed becomes representation denied.
Online Test
23 Feb 2026
CAMP-ME-02
Questions : 50 Questions
Time Limit : 0 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.
Online Test
23 Feb 2026
CAMP-ME-02
Questions : 50 Questions
Time Limit : 0 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.
Current Affairs
Feb. 22, 2026
About Exercise Vajra Prahar:
- It is the joint Special Forces exercise between the Indian Army and US Army.
- The exercise is designed to deepen defence cooperation, enhance interoperability and joint operational readiness, and enable the exchange of advanced special operations tactics, techniques, and procedures.
- The year 2026 marks the 16th edition of the exercise.
- It will be held at the Special Forces Training School, Bakloh, Himachal Pradesh.
- The focus this year will be on the exchange of advanced special operations tactics, techniques and procedures (TTPs), honed through rigorous training in realistic combat scenarios.
- It will place strong emphasis on counter-terror operations, precision strikes, intelligence-based missions, and joint planning under simulated battlefield conditions.
Current Affairs
Feb. 22, 2026
About Baglihar Hydropower Project:
- It is a 900 MW run-of-the-river power project on the Chenab River in the Ramban district of Jammu and Kashmir.
- It consists of a concrete gravity dam.
- The project consists of two stages of 450 MW each.
Key Facts about Chenab River:
- It is the largest of the five tributaries of the Indus River.
- Course:
- Origin: It is formed by the confluence of two streams, Chandra and Bhaga, in the Lahaul and Spiti Districts of Himachal Pradesh.
- In its upper reaches, it is also known as the Chandrabhaga.
- It flows through the Jammu and Kashmir union territory, Himachal Pradesh, and after receiving the Jhelum River near Trimmu, the Chenab empties into the Sutlej River.
- The Chenab valley is a structural trough formed by the great Himalayan and Pir Panjal ranges.
- Major Tributaries:
- Left Bank: Niru, Tawi, Neeru, and Liddrari.
- Right Bank: Ans, Bhut Nalla, Bichleri, Kalnai Marusudar, and Miyar Nalla.
- Major Dams on Chenab River: Salal (rockfill dam), Aalal (concrete dam), Baglihar, and Dul.