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Current Affairs

Article
27 Jun 2026

Supreme Court Pushes States to Build Trauma Care Systems

Why in the News?

  • The Supreme Court’s push for a uniform trauma care architecture has revealed that not a single state has fully implemented the key life-saving measures required to improve road crash response during the Golden Hour.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • Road Safety & Trauma Care (Background, Important Measures, etc.)
  • News Summary (Emergency Number Integration, Good Samaritan Protection, Rescue Protocols, State Response, Significance, etc.)

Road Safety and Trauma Care in India

  • India has one of the world’s worst road safety records, with around 1.77 lakh road fatalities a year.
  • A major reason is the weak post-crash response system, especially in the Golden Hour, the first 60 minutes after an accident, when timely medical intervention can mean the difference between life and death.
  • To address this, the Supreme Court, acting on a petition by SaveLIFE Foundation, asked states to put in place a more uniform trauma care system.
  • The core idea was simple: accident victims should be rescued quickly, transported efficiently, treated without delay, and supported by a legal and administrative framework that encourages public help.
  • Five measures were especially important:
    • A common emergency number
    • GPS-equipped ambulances
    • A functioning Good Samaritan system
    • A trauma registry
    • A proper rescue protocol
  • These form the backbone of any effective trauma response system.

News Summary

  • Data submitted by 34 states and Union Territories to the Supreme Court over the last nine months show that not a single state has all five key measures in place.
  • This means India still lacks a complete trauma care architecture even after repeated judicial and policy attention.

Emergency Number Integration

  • One of the Court’s key expectations was the integration of emergency response into 112, the nationwide emergency number launched in 2019 to combine police, fire, ambulance, highway, and women’s helplines.
  • Among the eight states that account for about two out of every three road deaths, Uttar Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Karnataka, Rajasthan, Bihar, and Andhra Pradesh, seven have not fully integrated all emergency numbers into 112. Karnataka did not provide information.
  • This matters because multiple helplines create confusion during emergencies, delaying response.

Good Samaritan Protection

  • Another major barrier to saving lives is that bystanders often fear harassment by police or hospitals.
  • Although the Supreme Court recognised the rights of Good Samaritans in 2016 and the government later notified the Good Samaritan Rules, 2020 under the Motor Vehicles Act, implementation remains weak.
  • Among the eight high-fatality states:
    • Only Maharashtra and Karnataka have a grievance redressal system for Good Samaritans
    • Four states do not have such a system
    • Two states did not provide full information
  • Across all 34 states and UTs, only eight have a grievance system for Good Samaritans.

Trauma Registry

  • A trauma registry is a clinical database that tracks the accident victim’s journey from the crash site to ambulance transport, hospital care, and discharge.
  • It is essential for auditing treatment outcomes and improving policy.
  • Yet, five of the eight high-fatality states do not have a trauma registry. Only Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, and Madhya Pradesh reported having one.
  • Across the country, 22 states do not have a trauma registry, and many still rely on manual records.
  • Tamil Nadu appears relatively advanced here, with a trauma care registry that captures pre-hospital ambulance details, reception, resuscitation details, and patient outcomes in real time.

Rescue Protocols

  • A proper rescue protocol defines how crash victims are to be safely extracted, stabilised, and transferred to hospitals. It includes both medical and non-medical rescue procedures.
  • Among the eight high-fatality states, seven have some form of rescue protocol, but Karnataka does not have a protocol for medical and non-medical rescue and transfer of road crash victims.
  • Across all 34 states and UTs, only 17 have a rescue protocol.

GPS-Equipped Ambulances

  • The Supreme Court had also sought information on whether all registered ambulances, including private ones, were fitted with GPS and whether their movement could be tracked in real time.
  • Although several high-fatality states responded positively, the data often covered only government ambulances, not private ones, making the response incomplete. Nationwide:
    • 13 states either have no GPS or only partial GPS coverage
    • In many cases, GPS is available only in government ambulances
  • On whether the tracking dashboard had been made public:
    • Six high-fatality states said they had a dashboard, but it was not public
    • Only Uttar Pradesh and Tamil Nadu said their ambulance tracking dashboard was open to the public
  • This means families cannot verify whether the nearest ambulance was actually dispatched.
  • Also, seven of the eight high-fatality states do not track ambulance movements in real time by integrating them with the 112 system, making response-time assessment difficult.

State Responses

  • Uttar Pradesh, which recorded the highest number of road deaths in 2024, said most emergency numbers had been integrated into 112, except 102 medical services.
  • It does not have a separate Good Samaritan grievance system and is still examining a centralised trauma registry.
  • Tamil Nadu, the leading state in total road accidents and second in fatalities, reported a relatively detailed rescue protocol and real-time trauma registry, but has only partially integrated emergency numbers.
  • Maharashtra said only its MEMS 108 ambulances are fitted with GPS.
  • Madhya Pradesh said its Good Samaritan grievance system is still under process, though it has developed a trauma care policy.
  • Karnataka said it does not yet have a trauma care registry and currently monitors only 108 Arogya Kavacha ambulances through a central dashboard.
  • Rajasthan said its trauma care registry SOP is under process.
  • Bihar said trauma data is captured in emergency records, but not separately as a dedicated trauma registry.
  • Andhra Pradesh said it already had the 108 emergency system much before 112 was introduced.

Significance

  • This issue is important because, according to a 2021 NITI Aayog-AIIMS Emergency and Injury Care Report, at least 30% of all trauma-related deaths in India are attributable to delays in emergency care.
  • The gaps identified by the Supreme Court show that road safety is not only about safer roads and better driving behaviour. It is also about what happens after the crash:
    • Can victims be located quickly?
    • Can ambulances reach on time?
    • Will bystanders help without fear?
    • Can treatment data be tracked and improved?
  • India’s road fatality crisis cannot be reduced meaningfully without a functioning trauma care system.

 

Polity & Governance

Article
27 Jun 2026

India’s Population Transition - Progress, Persistent Challenges and the Road to Stabilisation

Context:

  • The latest Sample Registration System (SRS) and the sixth round of the National Family Health Survey (NFHS-6) provide fresh insights into India's demographic transition.
  • The data indicate that while India is steadily moving towards population stabilisation, significant challenges remain, particularly in terms of -
    • Regional demographic disparities,
    • Declining fertility,
    • Skewed sex ratio at birth, and
    • The policy implications of differential population growth.

India’s Population Outlook:

  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR): Average number of children expected to be born to a woman during her reproductive years. A replacement-level fertility of 2.1 ensures long-term population stability.
  • The University of Washington (2017) projected India's Total Fertility Rate (TFR) at 1.9 and estimated the population would peak at 160 crore by 2048.
  • However, the latest SRS (2024) records the TFR at 1.9 now, indicating a slower fertility decline than previously expected.
  • The UN Population Division projects India's population to peak at around 170 crore by 2062 before gradually declining. Based on current data, this appears to be the most realistic projection.

Persistent Demographic Concerns:

  • Skewed sex ratio at birth (SRB):
    • The SRB (2022–24) stands at 918 girls per 1,000 boys, far below the biological norm of 955.
    • Although it has improved from 907 (2018–20), progress remains slow.
    • At the present pace, achieving the natural sex ratio may take over a decade, prolonging the "girl deficit" and its associated social consequences.
  • Demographic divergence across States:
    • India's demographic transition is highly uneven. For example, TFR in Bihar is 2.9, Uttar Pradesh (2.6), while at all India level it is 1.9.
    • At the current pace, Bihar may take 18 years and Uttar Pradesh around 10 years to attain replacement fertility.
    • This widening demographic gap has implications for economic development, resource allocation and political representation.

Drivers of High Fertility in Bihar and Uttar Pradesh:

  • Women's empowerment:
    • Educational attainment remains substantially lower than the national average. For instance,
      • Women ever attending school in India stands at 73.7%, Bihar (64.1%), and Uttar Pradesh (70.1%).
      • Women with 10 or more years of schooling in India (46.4%), Bihar (33.1%), and Uttar Pradesh (42.5%).
    • Greater female education delays marriage, enhances workforce participation and reduces fertility.
  • Contraceptive use:
    • Use of contraception among married women (15–49 years) - India (69.1%), Bihar (59.3%), and Uttar Pradesh (62.4%).
    • The data highlight the need to strengthen family welfare programmes, improve reproductive healthcare and expand women's access to contraception.

Should Low-Fertility States Encourage Higher Birth Rates?

  • States such as Andhra Pradesh have introduced pronatalist policies, including:
    • One-time incentive of ₹30,000 for the third child and ₹40,000 for the fourth child.
    • Monthly nutrition allowance of ₹1,000 for the third child.
    • Free education up to 18 years.
    • Extended maternity leave.
  • However, demographic research—including Alva Myrdal's work Nation and Family—suggests that one-time financial incentives rarely produce sustained increases in fertility.

Political Dimension - Delimitation and Demographic Performance:

  • The concern over declining fertility is driven less by labour shortages and more by fears of reduced political representation after future delimitation.
  • States with successful population control fear losing parliamentary seats relative to faster-growing states.
  • Hence, the political concerns should not be addressed through population policy.
  • A useful precedent exists in Finance Commission tax devolution, where both the population and demographic performance are considered while allocating states' shares.
  • A similar balanced approach could prevent states from being penalised for achieving demographic success.

Way Forward:

  • Accelerate: Women's education, empowerment and reproductive health services in high-fertility states.
  • Expand: Access to modern contraception and strengthen family welfare programmes.
  • Avoid: Policies aimed solely at increasing fertility in low-fertility states, as India remains far from overall population decline.
  • Ensure: That political representation is not determined solely by population growth, thereby removing incentives for pronatalist policies.
  • Focus: Equally on population quality—health, education, nutrition and human capital—alongside population quantity.
  • Await: The next Census to reconcile differences between SRS and NFHS fertility estimates and enable evidence-based policymaking.

Conclusion:

  • India's demographic transition is progressing steadily but unevenly.
  • The immediate policy priority is not to increase fertility in low-fertility states, but to reduce regional disparities, while ensuring that demographic success does not translate into political disadvantage.
  • A balanced approach focusing on population stabilisation and human capital development will be critical for India's long-term demographic dividend.
Editorial Analysis

Article
27 Jun 2026

Sustaining India’s Low-Fertility Future

Context

  • India has entered a new demographic transition with its Total Fertility Rate (TFR) declining to 1.9, below the replacement level of 2.1.
  • While lower fertility reflects progress in healthcare, education, and family planning, it also marks the beginning of an ageing society.
  • The transition is uneven, with southern and urban States ageing faster than northern States.
  • This changing demographic landscape demands reforms in social security, healthcare, labour markets, and federal governance to ensure sustainable and inclusive development.

India's Uneven Demographic Transition

  • India's demographic change is highly uneven across regions.
  • States such as Kerala, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, and Delhi have fertility rates comparable to developed ageing economies, whereas Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, and Rajasthan continue to record relatively high fertility levels.
  • Consequently, some States face the challenge of supporting an expanding elderly population, while others must generate productive employment for a growing young workforce.
  • This regional diversity requires differentiated policy responses rather than a uniform national strategy.

Ageing Before Becoming Wealthy

  • Unlike many developed countries, India is ageing before achieving high-income status.
  • Countries such as Japan and those in Western Europe established strong industrialisation, broader tax bases, and comprehensive welfare systems before population ageing accelerated.
  • India, however, continues to struggle with low per capita income, a narrow tax base, and widespread informal employment.
  • These structural limitations reduce the government's capacity to finance pensions, healthcare, and elderly welfare, making demographic ageing a more complex challenge.

Strengthening Social Security

  • India's existing pension framework provides limited protection for the elderly.
  • Most workers remain outside the formal sector, making contributory pensions difficult to sustain due to irregular incomes.
  • Public assistance under current schemes is insufficient to ensure dignified living standards.
  • Establishing an inflation-indexed minimum pension alongside contributory schemes would create a stronger safety net, reduce dependence on families, and improve income security for vulnerable elderly citizens.

Changing Family Structure and Elderly Care

  • Traditionally, the joint family system supported older generations through shared living arrangements and unpaid caregiving.
  • However, urbanisation, migration, nuclear families, and rising female workforce participation have weakened this model.
  • Although migration often improves household income, it also increases loneliness and health vulnerabilities among elderly parents left behind.
  • As family-based care declines, greater public investment in social care and community support becomes essential.

Transforming Healthcare for an Ageing Society

  • The healthcare system must shift its focus from primarily maternal and child health towards geriatric care and the long-term management of chronic diseases such as hypertension, diabetes, dementia, disability, and palliative care.
  • Expanding primary healthcare, training medical professionals in elderly care, and integrating geriatric services into district health systems will be crucial for addressing the needs of an ageing population.

Migration and Cooperative Federalism

  • Population ageing will increase the demand for workers in older States, making internal migration an important driver of economic balance.
  • Younger States should invest in education, skill development, and healthcare to prepare a productive workforce.
  • Simultaneously, richer States must recognise migrants as equal contributors by ensuring portable welfare benefits and equal access to public services.
  • A truly integrated national labour market depends upon social protection that moves with workers across State boundaries.

Conclusion

  • India's low-fertility future represents a major structural transformation rather than a demographic crisis.
  • If supported by stronger public institutions, expanded social protection, quality healthcare, skilled human capital, and inclusive labour policies, population ageing can become an opportunity for sustainable development.
  • Building resilient welfare systems and promoting cooperative federalism will enable India to achieve inclusive growth while ensuring dignity and security for its ageing population.
Editorial Analysis

Article
27 Jun 2026

India-New Zealand FTA, A Modern Trade Partnership

Context

  • The proposed India–New Zealand Free Trade Agreement (FTA) marks a significant step in strengthening bilateral economic relations.
  • Despite friendly diplomatic ties, bilateral merchandise trade remains modest at around US$1.3 billion in FY 2024–25.
  • The agreement aims to unlock untapped trade potential through expanded market access, increased investment, and improved regulatory cooperation.
  • More importantly, it reflects the changing nature of global trade, where trade facilitation, compliance, and supply-chain efficiency have become as important as tariff reductions.

Untapped Trade Potential

  • India’s exports to New Zealand have grown steadily, yet bilateral trade remains relatively small compared to India’s major trading partners.
  • The proposed FTA seeks to accelerate commercial engagement by encouraging exports, attracting an estimated US$20 billion investment, and creating long-term opportunities for businesses in both countries.
  • The agreement represents a strategic effort to deepen economic integration and diversify trade partnerships.

Modern Free Trade Agreements: Beyond Tariff Liberalization

  • Modern FTAs extend far beyond reducing customs duties.
  • International competitiveness increasingly depends on predictable regulations, faster customs clearance, recognition of certifications, digital documentation, and lower transaction costs.
  • These measures simplify cross-border trade, improve business confidence, and reduce delays across global value chains.
  • Consequently, trade agreements now focus equally on improving the overall business environment and facilitating smoother international commerce.

Export Opportunities for India

  • The agreement provides duty-free access across 100% of New Zealand’s tariff lines, creating valuable opportunities for textiles, apparel, leather, and handicrafts.
  • Even relatively small tariff reductions can provide Indian exporters with a significant pricing advantage over competing suppliers.
  • The services sector is likely to emerge as a major beneficiary.
  • India’s strengths in information technology, consulting, engineering, healthcare, and education can expand through improved market access and greater mobility for professionals and students.
  • Since services contribute substantially to India’s economy, these provisions hold considerable long-term significance.

India's Balanced and Protective Trade Strategy

  • India has adopted a cautious approach by protecting sensitive sectors such as dairy, reflecting a policy of selective liberalisation.
  • This strategy balances the objective of expanding international trade while safeguarding vulnerable domestic industries from intense foreign competition.
  • Such an approach promotes sustainable economic growth without compromising national interests.

Rules of Origin and Compliance: The New Competitive Advantage

  • Preferential tariff benefits depend on compliance with Rules of Origin (RoO), ensuring that products genuinely originate from member countries.
  • The agreement introduces product-specific rules, robust documentation requirements, traceability, and safeguards against transhipment.
  • For businesses, compliance has become a competitive advantage rather than a mere regulatory obligation.
  • Strong supply-chain transparency, accurate documentation, and effective regulatory management are essential for fully utilizing the benefits of the FTA.

Trade Facilitation and Reduction of Non-Tariff Barriers

  • Greater trade facilitation through digital certification, simplified customs procedures, and faster border clearances reduces inventory costs, improves cash flow, and strengthens supply-chain reliability.
  • The agreement also seeks to reduce non-tariff barriers, particularly in sectors such as pharmaceuticals, food processing, chemicals, and agriculture, where regulatory approvals often determine market access more than tariffs.
  • Harmonised standards and predictable regulatory processes enhance export competitiveness and encourage greater business participation.

Business Preparedness for the New Trade Environment

  • To maximise the benefits of the FTA, businesses must strengthen operational readiness.
  • This includes reviewing Harmonised System (HS) classifications, ensuring compliance with Rules of Origin, improving documentation, identifying sector-specific export opportunities, and reassessing landed-cost models.
  • Investments in digital compliance systems and efficient supply-chain management will enable firms to compete more effectively in international markets.

Conclusion

  • The India–New Zealand FTA represents more than a conventional trade agreement.
  • It combines tariff liberalisation with improved regulatory cooperation, digital trade facilitation, investment promotion, and stronger compliance mechanisms.
  • By reducing transaction costs, enhancing market access, and promoting transparent trade practices, the agreement can significantly strengthen bilateral economic relations.
  • Its long-term success will depend on coordinated government action and the preparedness of businesses to embrace a more competitive, rules-based, and globally integrated trading environment.
Editorial Analysis

Article
27 Jun 2026

India-Seychelles Relations: An Old Bond in the Indian Ocean

Why in news?

Prime Minister Narendra Modi is on a three-day visit to Seychelles to attend the island nation's 50th Independence Day celebrations on June 29 as the Guest of Honour.

The visit is an occasion to revisit the deep historical, demographic and strategic ties that bind the two nations, located some 4,000 km apart in the Indian Ocean.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • A Demographic Bond: From Five Indians to 5% of the Population
  • Migration and Trade
  • Diplomatic Relations
  • Cultural Ties
  • India as a Development Partner

A Demographic Bond: From Five Indians to 5% of the Population

  • The Indian connection with Seychelles is older than the country itself. In 1770, five Indians landed there as plantation workers, alongside seven African slaves and fifteen French colonists — recorded as the islands' first inhabitants.
  • Today, Persons of Indian Origin (PIOs) make up about 5% of the population.
  • The PIO population with Seychellois citizenship is estimated at around 6,000, which is significant in a nation of roughly 120,000 people.
  • Most belong to the Gujarati and Tamil communities. Beyond citizens, over 9,000 NRIs hold Gainful Employment Permits, working mainly in construction, as shop assistants and as professionals.

Migration and Trade

  • A steady flow of Indians began in the 20th century — mostly from Tamil Nadu, Puducherry, and later Gujarat — settling as traders, labourers and construction workers.
  • A key historical link was administrative: during British colonial rule, Seychelles was for a time governed from the Bombay Presidency, with regular shipping and goods flowing from India.
  • These trade routes encouraged Indian traders — who had reached a saturation point in East Africa — to seek new opportunities in the islands.

Diplomatic Relations

  • Diplomatic ties were established in 1976, the year Seychelles gained independence (June 29, 1976).
  • At that first Independence Day, a contingent from INS Nilgiri participated — a tradition echoed this year by an Indian Armed Forces contingent and two Indian Navy ships.
  • Earlier in 2026, PM Modi described Seychelles as a key part of India's maritime vision — MAHASAGAR (Mutual and Holistic Advancement for Security and Growth Across Regions).

Cultural Ties

  • Cultural contact has been largely community-driven, sustained by the diaspora.
  • In June 2022, a statue of Mahatma Gandhi was unveiled at the Peace Park in Victoria, standing alongside statues of Nelson Mandela and Sir James Mancham, the founding President of Seychelles.
  • India's recognition of the community is reflected in the Pravasi Bharatiya Samman Award, conferred on Justice D. Karunakaran of the Seychelles Supreme Court in 2015 — the second recipient from the country after entrepreneur V. Ramadoss in 2006.

India as a Development Partner

  • India has become one of Seychelles' most trusted development partners, working through grants, concessional credit and capacity-building.
  • More than 1% of the population has received professional training in India.
  • New Delhi has extended Lines of Credit and grants for infrastructure, healthcare, education and public transport.
  • In 2026, PM Modi announced a Special Economic Package of $175 million.
  • India remains a premier medical tourism destination for Seychellois, with island hospitals tied institutionally to facilities in cities like Chennai.

Strategic Significance: The Indian Ocean Chessboard

  • Seychelles is a cornerstone of India's Global South strategy and a critical maritime partner in the Western Indian Ocean. Its location near Africa, the Middle East and Asia makes it strategically vital.
  • For India, the partnership serves two purposes: it helps combat seaborne terrorism, piracy and illegal fishing, and it acts as a counterweight to China's expanding influence in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR).
  • For context, PM Modi last visited in 2015, and Indira Gandhi (1981) was the first Indian PM to visit. During this trip, Modi will also address the National Assembly of Seychelles and meet members of the Indian community.

Conclusion

The India-Seychelles relationship is a rare blend of the personal and the strategic — built on a diaspora dating back to 1770 and sustained today by development partnership and shared maritime interests.

As the Indian Ocean becomes an arena of intensifying competition, a stable, friendly Seychelles serves as both a partner in securing the seas and a quiet counterbalance to rival influence. PM Modi's presence at the 50th independence celebrations signals continuity in a tie that has matured from migration and trade into a full strategic partnership.

International Relations

Article
27 Jun 2026

Drug Control in India: Vision Document 2026-2029 and the NCB Annual Report 2025

Why in news?

Union Home Minister Amit Shah addressed the 10th Apex-Level Meeting of the Narco-Coordination Centre (NCORD) at Vigyan Bhawan, New Delhi.

At the meeting, organised by the Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB), he released two key documents: the Vision Document on Drug Control (2026-2029) and the NCB Annual Report 2025.

Together, they set out a time-bound national strategy and map the changing nature of the drug threat facing India.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • The Vision Document on Drug Control (2026-2029)
  • NCB Annual Report 2025: The Scale of the Threat

The Vision Document on Drug Control (2026-2029)

  • This document is a strategic roadmap targeting demand and supply reduction, as well as rehabilitation.
  • The roadmap rests on a simple three-part foundation — "detect, disrupt and destroy."
  • Core Shift: Dismantling Entire Networks
    • The core shift in approach is from chasing individual carriers to dismantling entire networks.
    • Enforcement will now target suppliers, financiers, handlers, facilitators and the organised syndicates behind them.
    • A mission-mode campaign aims to identify and dismantle 100 major interstate and transnational drug cartels through intelligence-led investigations and coordinated operations.
  • Whole-of-Government Approach
    • The strategy is built around a whole-of-government model.
    • More than 40 Ministries, central agencies, State governments, district administrations, educational institutions, civil society bodies and ordinary citizens are to work under a single national framework.
  • Key Specific Commitments
    • Legal reform: The Department of Revenue will amend the NDPS Act and Rules to close loopholes and address regulatory gaps. States have been asked to send suggestions. The amendment also promises a more reformative approach towards drug users and addicts.
    • Speedy justice: The MHA is working to set up exclusive NDPS courts for fast convictions in major cases.
    • Following the money: Financial investigation will be mandatory in major drug cases. There will be greater use of the PITNDPS Act (Prevention of Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, 1988) to attach illicit assets and strike at the financial base of trafficking networks.
    • Global reach: States have been urged to pursue traffickers hiding abroad through Red Corner Notices with CBI's help.
    • Technology: The plan calls for advanced surveillance, anti-drone systems, AI-enabled profiling and container scanning across land, sea and air routes.
    • Synthetic drugs: Special focus on methamphetamine, mephedrone and emerging synthetic drugs, with tighter precursor controls. Chemical and pharmaceutical industries are to adopt voluntary compliance and flag suspicious transactions.

NCB Annual Report 2025: The Scale of the Threat

  • NCB Annual Report 2025 was released during the 10th Apex-Level Meeting of the Narco-Coordination Centre (NCORD) in New Delhi.
  • The report records an all-time high of over 1.48 lakh cases and seizures of more than 1,200 tonnes of narcotics and psychotropic substances.
  • The seizures range from plant-based drugs to synthetic substances, diverted pharmaceuticals and precursor chemicals — a sign of how complex the threat has become.
  • A Shifting Global Supply: Myanmar Overtakes Afghanistan
    • The single biggest change is in where India's opium now comes from. Myanmar has overtaken Afghanistan as the leading source of illicit opium.
    • The reason is twofold: the Taliban's 2022 ban cut Afghan poppy cultivation sharply, while Myanmar's cultivation expanded amid conflict and economic collapse.
    • Its Golden Triangle region — largely controlled by ethnic armed groups in Shan State — has become a poly-drug hub, producing both opiates and methamphetamine (Yaba tablets).
  • The Eastern Front: The Manipur and Mizoram Corridors
    • The northeastern States of Manipur, Mizoram and Nagaland face the sharpest exposure.
    • The Free Movement Regime (FMR) and porous, unfenced stretches along the India-Myanmar border have turned these States from peripheral transit zones into active staging grounds for distribution into the Indian heartland.
    • Two corridors are highlighted:
      • Manipur corridor — through which National Highway 102 passes — is the most direct entry point and the primary land route for both heroin and methamphetamine tablets.
      • Champhai corridor in Mizoram, near Myanmar's Chin State, routes drugs towards Silchar (Assam's Barak Valley) via Aizawl.
    • Crucially, the report links this trade not just to addiction but to arms smuggling and the financing of insurgent and terror groups — making it a direct internal security concern.
  • The Western Front: Drones over Punjab
    • On India's western border, the Afghan pipeline has not disappeared despite the Taliban crackdown reducing production by 93% from its peak — an estimated 13,200 tonnes of pre-ban stockpiles continue to feed trafficking routes.
    • The most striking trend here is drone-based smuggling from across the Pakistan border, which has risen five-fold in five years and hits Punjab hardest.
    • The growth in drone incidents shows the rising operational maturity of these networks:
      • 3 (2021) → 35 (2022) → 28 (2023) → 178 (2024) → 305 (2025) — roughly a 100-fold rise in five years.
    • Beyond drones, the South Asian arm of the Afghan trade also enters through the land frontier in Punjab and Rajasthan and via the maritime route along the Gujarat and Maharashtra coasts, using fishing vessels and small craft that slip below standard surveillance.
  • Digital Trafficking: Telegram and Encrypted Apps
    • The report flags encrypted messaging apps — Telegram, WhatsApp and Signal — as major trafficking channels, with Telegram emerging as a key platform for drug advertising.
    • Why this is harder to police than the darknet: these apps need no special access and work on any smartphone, lowering the entry barrier.
    • Enforcement is difficult because of jurisdictional hurdles in getting platforms to cooperate, auto-deletion of messages, use of multiple accounts and layered communication, and cryptocurrency payments that protect anonymity.
  • Emerging Threats to Watch
    • The report singles out two threats needing urgent attention:
      • Nitazenes — a class of synthetic opioids said to be up to 500 times more potent than heroin.
      • The deepening link between drug trafficking and organised violence across transit economies.
    • India is also exposed to a wider global shift marked by ultra-potent synthetic opioids and record cocaine output.
Social Issues

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Current Affairs
June 26, 2026

What is the HELINA Missile?
State-owned Bharat Dynamics Limited recently secured an order worth Rs 1,109.37 crore from Hindustan Aeronautics Limited to supply launchers for helicopter-launched anti-tank Nag (Helina) missiles
current affairs image

About HELINA Missile:

  • HELINA (Helicopter-launched NAG) is an indigenous, third-generation "fire-and-forget" anti-tank guided missile (ATGM).
  • It is the helicopter-based version of the Nag Anti-Tank Guided Missile (ATGM).
  • The Air Force version of the missile is called Dhruvastra, along with an ATGM version, which can be fired by soldiers.
  • It has been developed indigenously by the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO).
  • Features:
    • Helina missile systems are outfitted with two twin launchers, one on each side, capable of carrying a total of eight missiles.
    • It can cover distances ranging between 500 m and 7,000 m and is guided by an imaging infrared (IIR) seeker with lock-on before launch
      • It means the crew locks on to the target before the launch, and the missile then guides itself to the target without any further control from the helicopter.
    • The missile climbs sharply after the launch and then plunges directly onto the top of the tank.
    • The system is equipped for day and night operations in all weather conditions, capable of neutralising battle tanks equipped with both conventional armour and explosive reactive armour.
Science & Tech

Current Affairs
June 26, 2026

Kiru Hydroelectric Power Project
The Kiru Hydroelectric Power Project in Kishtwar district of Chenab Valley has entered the final phase of construction, with the latest monitoring report of the Centre showing that more than 83 percent of the work has been completed.
current affairs image

About Kiru Hydroelectric Power Project:

  • It is a 624 MW run-of-the-river scheme being developed over the Chenab River in Kishtwar District of Jammu and Kashmir (J&K).
  • It is located between the Kirthai II hydroelectric project upstream and the Kwar hydroelectric project downstream.
  • The project will include the construction of a concrete gravity dam with a height of 135 m and an underground powerhouse located on the left bank of the river that will comprise four vertical Francis turbines with a capacity of 156 MW each.
  • The project is being developed by Chenab Valley Power Projects (CVPP), a joint venture between National Hydroelectric Power Corporation (NHPC, 49%), Jammu & Kashmir State Power Development Corporation (JKSPDC, 49%), and Power Trading Corporation (PTC, 2%).
  • The project shall provide much-needed power in the northern grid and shall accelerate the process of development of remote areas of J&K.
Economy
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