Content
- BNSS Section 356: Trial in Absentia
- India’s Doctor–Population Ratio Debate
- SC Advisory Opinion on Governor’s Powers (Art. 200)
- INS Mahe Commissioning
- Hayli Gubbi Volcano Eruption & DGCA Advisory
- COP30 Brazil & the Concept of Mutirão
BNSS Section 356
Why is it in news ?
- Delhi Police invoked Section 356 of the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS) for the first time.
- Against Jitendra Mehto, accused of murder and evading arrest.
- The provision enables trial in absentia, marking a significant shift under the new criminal law framework.
Relevance
GS2 – Governance / Polity
- New criminal procedure architecture under BNSS.
- Due process concerns: rights of absconding accused vs Article 21.
- Oversight on police powers; risk of misuse in politically sensitive cases.
- Judicial scrutiny of absentee trials; alignment with global standards.
- Impact on pendency reduction and court efficiency.
GS2 – Federalism
- Harmonisation of State police functioning under new central law.
- Centre–State friction potential in high-profile cases.

What is Section 356 (BNSS)
- Enables trial of an absconding accused without their presence.
- Preconditions:
- Accused must be declared a proclaimed offender.
- Must have absconded or evaded arrest despite repeated summons/warrants.
- Objective: Prevent accused from stalling trials and ensure timely justice.
Key features of Section 356
- Court may:
- Conduct trial in absence of the accused.
- Record evidence, examine witnesses, and pass judgment.
- Assign legal aid counsel to represent the absconding accused.
- Safeguards:
- Public notice, proof of intentional evasion, right to re-opening of trial upon arrest.
Difference from old CrPC
- CrPC allowed declaring someone a proclaimed offender (Sections 82–83) but did not permit full trial in absentia.
- BNSS introduces a complete absentee-trial mechanism, inspired by European systems.
- Supports BNSS goals:
- Time-bound trials,
- ** Victim-centric justice**,
- Reduced judicial delay.
Application in the Delhi cases
- Protest-related case:
- Officials were obstructed; pepper spray allegedly used.
- Accused evaded notices; police sought Section 356 to prevent delay.
- Murder case:
- Accused absconding; Section 356 triggered to continue trial.
Legal and constitutional analysis
Merits
- Addresses chronic problem of absconding accused.
- Strengthens victim’s right to speedy justice (Article 21; Hussainara Khatoon).
- Prevents deliberate stalling of criminal proceedings.
Concerns
- Risk of misuse in politically sensitive cases.
- Could impact fair hearing if safeguards not strictly followed.
- Requires robust judicial oversight in declaring someone absconding.
Judicial position (likely)
- SC has upheld flexible modes of trial (Praful Desai, video trials).
- Will insist on procedural safeguards to uphold Article 21.
Administrative significance
- Helps police tackle habitual evaders.
- Strengthens enforcement of summons/warrants.
- Reduces pendency caused by non-appearance of accused.
- Supports the BNSS’s time-bound trial architecture.
Impact on criminal justice system
- Faster disposal of serious offences (murder, organised crime).
- Reduces backlog linked to absconding behaviour.
- Enhances accountability in politically sensitive or public-order situations.
- Moves the system toward certainty of trial, not merely certainty of arrest.
1 doctor per 1,000 population
Why it is in news ?
- Government replies in Parliament (2015 and 2024) cited a WHO benchmark of 1 doctor per 1,000 population.
- The Hindu’s investigation shows WHO has never prescribed this norm.
- WHO issued a written clarification to The Hindu confirming: it does not recommend doctor-population ratios for countries.
- Government calculations were found inconsistent:
- Only 80% availability factor applied to allopathic doctors.
- No availability factor applied to AYUSH practitioners.
- Inclusion of AYUSH doctors helped the government claim it meets the supposed ratio.
- Raises questions on data transparency, policy accuracy, and misinterpretation of global health norms.
Relevance
GS2 – Health / Governance
- HRH planning under National Health Policy.
- Data integrity and parliamentary accountability.
- Rural–urban health workforce maldistribution.
- Overreliance on “composite workforce” metric.
GS3 – Economy
- Impact on health expenditure planning.
- Workforce shortages affecting productivity, demographic dividend.

What is the claimed “WHO ratio”?
- Popularly cited norm: 1 doctor per 1,000 population.
- Policymakers, medical bodies, and public discourse often present it as WHO-prescribed.
- Reality:
- No WHO document prescribes this ratio.
- No global standard exists for doctor-only ratios.
- The figure spread through academic citations, policy reports, and government statements without primary source evidence.
What does WHO actually prescribe?
- WHO clarified that it does not issue country-level doctor ratios because health workforce needs depend on:
- National disease burdens,
- Health labour markets,
- Infrastructure,
- Demography and epidemiology.
- WHO uses composite workforce benchmarks, not doctor-only ratios.
WHO benchmarks:
- 2006 global threshold:
- 2.25 doctors, nurses, midwives per 1,000 population
- Minimum required for essential maternal and child health services.
- Revised SDG Composite Index (current):
- 4.45 doctors + nurses + midwives per 1,000 population
- Needed to achieve 80% coverage on 12 SDG-linked health indicators.
How did the 1:1,000 myth originate?
- Public health expert Dr. Kumbhar traced the earliest official Indian reference to:
- Medical Council of India (MCI) “Vision 2015” report (2011).
- That report—based on expert consultations—recommended 1:1,000 as a target, not a WHO norm*.
- Later, the figure was cited in:
- Parliamentary answers
- Academic articles
- Policy discussions
- Media narratives
- Over time, it became politicised, especially in debates over:
- Need for more medical colleges
- Inclusion of AYUSH doctors in workforce counts
- Shortages exaggerated to justify rapid medical infrastructure expansion
Government’s use of the ratio (2015–2024)
- Government replies cited the 1:1,000 ratio while measuring India’s doctor availability.
- Issues in calculation:
- Allopathic doctors: only 80% counted, as per availability
- AYUSH doctors: 100% counted, no availability adjustment
- Inclusion of AYUSH boosted India’s numbers closer to the “benchmark”
Result:
- Produced inconsistent doctor-population ratios (shown in multiple Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha responses).
- Demonstrates selective application of workforce metrics.
What do global datasets show?
Based on WHO’s National Health Workforce Accounts (NHWA):
a) Doctors per 1,000 population (Chart 2)
- India: 0.7 per 1,000
- Rank: 118 out of 181 countries
b) Composite health workers (doctors + nurses + midwives) per 1,000 (Chart 3)
- India: 3.06 per 1,000
- Rank: 122 out of 181 countries
- Below WHO’s SDG threshold: 4.45
Real issue: maldistribution, not raw numbers
- Urban–rural divide is the core problem:
- Large concentration of doctors in metros and Tier-1 cities.
- Severe shortages in rural PHCs, CHCs, tribal areas.
- State variation is high:
- Some states exceed global benchmarks; others are far below.
- Raw national ratios hide structural gaps in:
- Quality of care
- Skilled nursing supply
- Midwifery cadres
- Rural incentives
- Regulatory standards
Policy implications
- Misstating WHO norms risks:
- Misaligned workforce planning
- Policy errors in medical education expansion
- Overreliance on numeric targets
- Shift needed toward:
- Local workforce forecasting
- State-specific staffing models
- Strengthening nurses and midwives
- Incentivising rural practice
- Accurate measurement and availability-adjusted counts
Conclusion
- India’s debate on doctor shortages is driven by a mythical benchmark, not evidence.
- WHO’s actual focus is on composite health workforce sufficiency, not doctor-specific norms.
What does the SC’s advisory opinion imply?
Why it is in news ?
- Supreme Court delivered its opinion on a Presidential Reference under Article 143, triggered by the April 2025 two-judge Bench decision in State of Tamil Nadu vs Governor of Tamil Nadu.
- The April 2025 judgment had:
- Imposed a three-month timeline for Governors/President to act on Bills.
- Declared decisions on Bills justiciable even before enactment.
- Invoked Article 142 to grant deemed assent to certain Tamil Nadu Bills.
- The Union government sought clarity on 14 issues, particularly the scope of Article 200/201, justiciability, and limits of Article 142 powers.
- The Constitution Bench has largely negated the 2025 two-judge ruling.
Relevance
GS2 – Polity / Federalism
- Limits of Governor’s discretion in bill assent.
- Clarification of timelines → smoother State legislative process.
- Strengthening constitutional conventions.
- Judicial review boundaries in pre-enactment stages.
GS2 – Governance
- Reducing executive delays; improving accountability in lawmaking.
Articles 200 and 201
Article 200 – Governor’s options on State Bills:
- Assent
- Withhold assent
- Return Bill (except Money Bills)
- Reserve for President
Article 201 – President’s options on reserved Bills:
- Assent
- Withhold assent
- Return (except Money Bills)
Neither Article prescribes time limits.
What was the Presidential reference? (14 questions)
- Can courts create time limits when Constitution is silent?
- Are Governor’s/President’s actions on pending Bills justiciable?
- Does Governor act with discretion or on aid and advice in Article 200 matters?
- Can Supreme Court under Article 142 grant deemed assent?
- Can courts review actions before a Bill becomes law?
- Do delays amount to constitutional impropriety reviewable by courts?
Supreme Court’s current opinion (Constitution Bench)
a) Governor’s options and discretion
- Governor has three constitutional options under Article 200.
- Governor enjoys discretion in exercising these options.
- This discretion is not bound by the Council of Ministers’ aid and advice.
- Court interprets Shamsher Singh (1974) and Nabam Rebia (2016) narrowly: Article 200 is a discretionary field.
b) Justiciability
- Actions under Articles 200 and 201 are not justiciable before enactment.
- Courts cannot question the content or choice of assent/withholding.
c) Limited judicial intervention
- Courts may only issue a limited mandamus asking the Governor to “decide”, in rare cases of prolonged, unexplained inaction.
- Courts cannot direct the outcome.
d) Timelines
- Courts cannot prescribe timelines where Constitution prescribes none.
- Punchhi Commission’s six-month suggestion is non-binding.
- April 2025 ruling granting three-month limit is overruled.
e) Article 142
- Article 142 cannot substitute constitutional powers of Governor/President.
- Deemed assent is unconstitutional.
f) Reservation of Bills
- Reservation to President is a discretionary power, consistent with Sarkaria and Punchhi Commission principles.
What issues arise from the opinion?
a) Potential derailment of State legislative intent
- Treating Article 200 decisions as discretionary allows Governors to delay/withhold assent.
- Weakens the parliamentary executive model in States.
b) Weakens judicial oversight
- Earlier State of Tamil Nadu (2025) ruling enabled accountability; current ruling reduces review space.
- Before-enactment stages become largely immune from judicial scrutiny.
c) Federalism concerns
- Empowers an unelected Governor (appointed by Centre) vis-à-vis elected State governments.
- Increases possibility of politicised obstruction of State policies.
d) Inconsistency with purposive interpretation tradition
- Court itself created time limits (e.g., K.M. Singh, 2020 — 3 months for Speakers).
- Refusal here marks a shift away from purposive constitutionalism.
e) Sidestepping Commission recommendations
- Sarkaria: Reservation for President should be rare, not routine.
- Punchhi: Decision on Bills ideally within six months.
- Current opinion chooses restraint, not reform.
Broader constitutional implications
- Reasserts textual fidelity over purposive interpretation.
- Alters balance between:
- State legislature (majoritarian mandate)
- Governor (constitutional head)
- President (central executive)
- Signals a conservative approach to judicial intervention in federal disputes.
Way forward
- Need for statutory or constitutional clarification on time limits.
- Governors must follow constitutional morality, not political expediency.
- Inter-governmental forums (e.g., Inter-State Council) should evolve operational protocols.
- Strengthen conventions:
- Timely assent
- Minimal reservation of Bills
- Transparent communication between Raj Bhavan and State governments
- Preserve balance between executive stability and federal autonomy.
INS Mahe
Why is it in News?
- India’s first Mahe-class Anti-Submarine Warfare (ASW) Shallow Watercraft, INS Mahe, commissioned at Naval Dockyard, Mumbai.
- Commissioned by Army Chief General Upendra Dwivedi — first-ever time an Indian Army Chief presided over a naval warship commissioning.
- Represents a major step in naval indigenisation, with 80%+ indigenous components.
- Enhances coastal ASW capability, crucial amid rising Chinese undersea presence in the IOR.
Relevance
GS2 – Governance / Security
- Defence indigenisation push under Aatmanirbhar Bharat.
- Strengthening coastal & ASW capabilities.
GS3 – Internal and External Security
- Countering Chinese submarine presence in IOR.
- Enhancing littoral surveillance and deterrence posture.
- Boost to shipbuilding ecosystem.

What is a Mahe-class ASW Shallow Watercraft?
- A small, agile anti-submarine warfare vessel designed for coastal and near-shore operations.
- Optimised for detecting and neutralising mini-submarines, midget subs, diver-delivery vehicles, and shallow-water intrusions.
- Designed and built by Cochin Shipyard Limited.
- Part of the 8-vessel ASW Shallow Watercraft Project.
Key Features
- Indigenous Content: Over 80% locally sourced systems and components.
- Stealth profile: Low acoustic signature.
- Motto: Silent Hunters — reflects stealth ASW capability.
- Advanced systems:
- Integrated combat suite
- Modern Sonar, radars, electronic warfare systems
- Precision ASW weapons
- Long endurance for persistent coastal patrols.
- Interoperable with larger naval platforms, submarines, and aircraft.
Operational Role: Why is it Important?
- Forms the first line of coastal defence against undersea threats.
- Crucial for littoral ASW operations where larger ships cannot manoeuvre effectively.
- Enhances surveillance over choke points, harbour approaches, EEZ areas, and critical maritime infrastructure.
- Addresses increasing Chinese submarine activity and grey-zone operations in the IOR.
- Strengthens the coastal security grid post-26/11.
Strategic Significance
- Strengthens India’s Near-Sea Dominance Doctrine.
- Supports Sea Control + Sea Denial missions in shallow waters.
- Enhances India’s ability to monitor sub-surface intrusions by state and non-state actors.
- Contributes to deterrence posture in Eastern Arabian Sea / Bay of Bengal.
Indigenisation Significance
- Demonstrates India’s increasing ability to design, integrate, and deploy complex combatant vessels.
- Part of the larger Aatmanirbhar Bharat in defence shipbuilding.
- Reduces dependency on foreign sonar, sensors, and propulsion systems.
- Boosts competence of shipyards like CSL, essential for future larger combatant projects.
Tri-Service/Jointness Significance
- Commissioning done by Army Chief → symbolism of jointness, integration, and Theatre Command readiness.
- Highlights the shift toward:
- Multi-domain operations
- Unified maritime-land-air integration
- Future tri-service maritime theatre command
Technical-Operational Capabilities (Condensed)
- ASW Sensors: Hull-mounted sonar, variable depth sonar.
- ASW Weapons: Lightweight torpedoes, ASW rockets.
- Navigation & Communication: Integrated bridge system, modern communication suite.
- Endurance: Long-duration coastal operations.
- Other: High-speed manoeuvrability in shallow waters.
Broader Maritime Security Context
- Rising submarine traffic in the region demands persistent ASW presence.
- China’s submarine docking in Sri Lanka / Pakistan increases littoral surveillance needs.
- Coastal vulnerability after Mumbai 26/11 → need for layered security.
- Supports SAGAR (Security and Growth for All in the Region) doctrine.
Hayli Gubbi volcano
Why is it in News?
- Hayli Gubbi volcano in Ethiopia’s Afar region erupted after ~10,000 years of dormancy, sending massive ash plumes up to 14 km into the atmosphere.
- Ash travelled across Red Sea → Yemen → Oman → India, entering through Rajasthan and drifiting toward Delhi, UP, Bihar, Northeast.
- DGCA issued urgent advisories directing all Indian airlines to avoid ash-affected flight routes and altitudes.
- Multiple flight diversions and cancellations (e.g., Indigo Kannur–Abu Dhabi flight diverted to Ahmedabad).
- Raises major concerns about aviation safety, atmospheric circulation patterns, and volcanic hazards in South Asia.
Relevance
GS3 – Disaster Management
- Aviation hazard management; ICAO compliance.
- Early warning & ash cloud monitoring systems.
GS1 – Geography
- East African Rift dynamics; Afar triple junction.
- Atmospheric transport of aerosols affecting distant regions.
Where is the Hayli Gubbi Volcano?
- Located in Afar Depression, northern Ethiopia.
- Part of the East African Rift System (EARS), one of the world’s most active tectonic zones.
- A rift volcano associated with continental plate divergence (African Plate splitting into Nubia and Somalia plates).
- Dormant for ~10,000 years → now active.
Type of Volcano & Eruption Characteristics
- Rift-zone basaltic volcano (common to Afar).
- Eruption produced:
- High-altitude ash plume (up to 14 km) reaching the tropopause.
- Volcanic ash and fine pyroclasts carried by upper-level winds.
- No major lava flow reported; eruption dominated by explosive ash generation.
Path of Ash Transport (Atmospheric Science)
- Strong westerlies and subtropical jet stream transported ash eastwards.
- Sequence: Ethiopia → Red Sea → Yemen → Oman → Arabian Sea → India.
- Entered India via western Rajasthan, then moving northeast.
- Expected spread: Delhi (near midnight), UP, Bihar, Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh.
Why Volcanic Ash is Dangerous for Aviation ?
- Extremely abrasive fine particles of glassy volcanic silica.
- At engine temperatures, ash melts → forms glass-like coating → sticks to turbine blades → engine stall/failure.
- Can cause:
- Compressor surges / flameouts
- Erosion of fan blades
- Pitot tube blockage → instrument failure
- Windshield abrasion → visibility loss
- Damage to avionics & filters
- Worst-case: multi-engine failure (e.g., 1982 BA Flight 9, 1989 KLM Alaska incident).
DGCA Advisory — Key Directives
- Avoid flights through ash-contaminated airspace/altitudes.
- Mandatory reporting of:
- Engine performance changes
- Smoke/odour in cabin
- Airports:
- Inspect runways for ash deposits
- Restrict/suspend operations if contamination detected
- India’s first large-scale volcanic ash intrusion in years → precautionary measures intensified.
Impact on India
- Flight disruptions: diversions, cancellations, re-routing.
- Visibility reduction possible in some sectors.
- Surface-level impact limited, as ash concentrations dilute with distance.
- Health impact low but sensitive groups may feel irritation if ash reaches ground level.
- Meteorology impact:
- Potential scattering of sunlight, minor cooling effect locally
- Monitoring by IMD, satellite agencies
Geological Significance
- Shows the tectonic dynamism of the Afar Triple Junction where Africa is splitting.
- Could indicate increased rifting activity in East Africa.
- Afar Depression is one of the only places where mid-ocean ridge volcanism occurs on land.
Why Volcano Ash Can Travel to India ?
- High-altitude eruption reaching jet stream level (approx. 12–16 km).
- Jet streams can carry ash thousands of kilometres rapidly.
- Dry conditions over the Arabian region prevent washout, allowing long-distance travel.
COP30 & Mutirão
Why is it in News?
- COP30 concluded in Belém, Brazil, and its entire Action Agenda was built around the concept of mutirão.
- First time a global climate summit formally adopted a Brazilian–Indigenous governance philosophy as its operational principle.
- Brazil highlighted mutirão to showcase participatory climate action and centre the role of Indigenous knowledge in rainforest protection, especially the Amazon.
Relevance
GS3 – Environment
- Community-driven climate governance model.
- Integration of indigenous knowledge into global climate action.
- Amazon conservation as global climate stabiliser.
GS2 – Governance / International Relations
- Multi-stakeholder participation shaping global negotiations.
- Climate justice, inclusivity, and consensus-building diplomacy.
What is Mutirão?
- A Brazilian term meaning collective effort, joint mobilisation, community work.
- Originates from Tupi-Guarani, an Indigenous language family of the Amazon.
- Core idea:
- Problems are solved together, not individually.
- Decisions emerge from consensus, not hierarchy.
- Action is continuous, not event-based.
Why is the Concept Symbolically Powerful?
- Indigenous-led → strengthens climate justice narrative.
- Brazil’s Amazon location makes mutirão a culturally rooted climate framework.
- COP30 intended to shift focus from top-down negotiations to ground-level participation.
What Did COP30 Mean by a “Mutirão Approach”?
Brazil framed mutirão as a governance method, not a slogan.
Key elements:
- Before COP:
- Mobilising Indigenous groups, scientific communities, youth, cities, and private firms.
- During COP:
- Decision-making through broad consultations, shared responsibilities.
- After COP:
- Implementation monitored through community-led networks rather than state-only mechanisms.
Essentially, mutirão = climate action as a continuous, participatory, community-driven process.
Indigenous Angle — Why It Matters
- Worldwide, 5,000+ Indigenous groups steward 80% of global biodiversity (IPBES).
- Amazon Indigenous communities:
- Manage vast forest areas
- Prevent deforestation far more effectively than state agencies
- COP30 placed Indigenous guardianship at the centre of global climate solutions, not the margins.
Relevance of Belém, Brazil
- Gateway to the Amazon → epicentre of global rainforest protection.
- COP30 in Belém symbolised:
- Country’s commitment to reduce Amazon deforestation
- Return of Brazil as climate leader after years of rollback
- Visibility for Amazonian Indigenous struggles
What COP30 Wanted to Achieve Through Mutirão ?
Governance Shift
- From elite-led climate diplomacy → mass-participatory model.
- Encourage shared ownership of mitigation & adaptation.
Climate Action Benefits
- Strengthen local monitoring, especially against illegal mining, logging, land invasion.
- Promote community-based carbon sinks, regenerative agriculture, riverine conservation.
- Ensure just transition for Amazonian and forest-dependent livelihoods.
How Mutirão Addresses Climate Summit Weaknesses ?
Past COP Problems
- Repeated failures due to:
- State-centric negotiations
- Poor implementation
- Exclusion of local communities
- North–South trust deficit
- Slow mobilisation of climate finance
Mutirão Response
- Broadens participation → reduces exclusion.
- Anchors action in social consensus → better implementation.
- Recognises Indigenous authority → increases legitimacy.
- Builds South American leadership in climate diplomacy.
Global Implications
- Could inspire similar community-led climate governance models.
- Increases pressure on high emitters to include marginalised groups.
- Helps remove false dichotomy between scientific and Indigenous ecological knowledge.
- Positions Brazil as a bridge leader between Global North and South.


