UPSC News Analysis
Mains & Prelims Oriented Current Affairs
Table of Contents
US–Iran War: Trump Mulls Ending War & Eases Sanctions on Iranian Oil
The US-Israeli military campaign against Iran, begun on February 28, 2026, entered a potential de-escalation phase with President Trump signalling the war may be “wound down”, while simultaneously the US Treasury issued a 30-day sanctions waiver for Iranian oil already at sea to ease global supply disruptions.
Iran’s seizure of the Strait of Hormuz — through which one-fifth of global traded oil passes — has caused oil prices to surge from $72 to $106/barrel (Brent), triggering an energy crisis with cascading effects on India’s LPG, fuel, and food supply chains.
India has been directly affected: 882 nationals evacuated, 7 deaths, thousands of sailors stranded, and critical energy imports disrupted.
| Concept | Key Facts |
|---|---|
| Strait of Hormuz | Narrow waterway between Iran and Oman; ~21 million barrels/day of oil transit; critical chokepoint for global energy |
| BRICS India Presidency | India holds BRICS Presidency in 2026; Iran urged India to use this for independent diplomatic role |
| Iran Nuclear Deal (JCPOA) | 2015 deal to limit Iran’s nuclear program in exchange for sanctions relief; US withdrew in 2018 under Trump |
| India–Iran Relations | India historically significant oil buyer from Iran; Chabahar Port development underway; strategic interests |
| Hezbollah | Lebanon-based Shia militant group, Iranian proxy; now drawn into war following Khamenei’s killing |
| IAEA | International Atomic Energy Agency; calls for “military restraint” amid nuclear facility strikes |
- Brent crude at $106/barrel
- LPG shortage (60% imported via Hormuz)
- ATF prices surge → airfare hike
- Fertiliser prices rising
- India balancing US & Iran ties
- No condemnation of strikes
- PM Modi calls for free navigation
- BRICS presidency leverage
- 882 Indians evacuated
- 7 Indians killed
- Millions of Indian expats in Gulf
- Sailors stranded in Gulf waters
- India refinery output up 40%
- LNG shipments via navy escort
- Trade route disruptions
- Textile industry input costs ↑
- Iran controls Hormuz
- Hezbollah joins war
- US sanctions waiver 30 days
- Indian refiners to buy Iranian oil
- Diego Garcia targeted by Iran
- UAE & Kuwait bases struck
- Dimona nuclear facility hit
- Israel ground offensive in Lebanon
- India traditionally non-aligned; avoids condemning either side
- Strategic ties with US (Quad, defence) vs. Iran (Chabahar, energy)
- Congress criticises “moral cowardice” — no condemnation of US-Israel strikes
- BRICS Presidency offers an independent platform India has not fully used
- India imports 85% of crude oil needs
- 60% LPG routed through Strait of Hormuz
- No strategic petroleum reserve large enough to buffer prolonged crisis
- Over-dependence on Gulf exposes structural fragility
- Natanz plant struck; IAEA warns of nuclear accident risk
- Iran targeted Dimona — Israel’s nuclear facility
- Risk of nuclear escalation unprecedented in post-Cold War era
- US unilateralism bypasses UN Security Council
- Killing of Khamenei — an extraordinary escalation by any standards
- Weakens international humanitarian law norms
- Multipolar pushback from China, Russia insufficient
- Diplomatic activism: India must use BRICS presidency to push for ceasefire; engage UN mechanisms
- Energy diversification: Accelerate domestic renewable energy, strategic oil reserves, diversify suppliers (Russia, Africa, Americas)
- Chabahar urgency: Deepen India-Iran-Afghanistan connectivity to reduce Hormuz dependence
- Naval escort diplomacy: Multilateral naval coordination to keep sea lanes open (UNCLOS Article 58)
- Diaspora protection: Bilateral evacuation protocols with Gulf states; expand consular capacity
- SDG linkage: SDG-7 (Affordable Clean Energy) — crisis underscores urgency of energy transition
🎯 Exam Orientation
Prelims Pointers
“The West Asia crisis of 2026 has exposed India’s energy vulnerabilities and diplomatic contradictions. Critically analyse India’s foreign policy response and suggest a roadmap for energy security and strategic autonomy.” (250 words)
“Examine how India’s dependence on the Strait of Hormuz for energy imports is a strategic liability. What structural reforms can reduce this vulnerability?” (150 words)
📝 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
Which of the following statements about the Strait of Hormuz is/are correct?
1. It connects the Persian Gulf to the Arabian Sea.
2. It is jointly controlled by Iran and the United Arab Emirates.
3. Approximately one-fifth of the world’s traded oil passes through it.
Select the correct answer using the code given below:
- (a) 1 and 2 only
- (b) 1 and 3 only
- (c) 2 and 3 only
- (d) 1, 2 and 3
SC Strikes Down Age Limit for Adoptive Mothers’ Maternity Leave
The Supreme Court struck down Section 60(4) of the Social Security Code, 2020 (previously Section 5(4) of the Maternity Benefit Act, 1961), which restricted maternity leave for adoptive mothers to those who adopted children below three months of age.
The Court ruled that all adoptive mothers are entitled to 12 weeks of paid maternity leave regardless of the age of the child at adoption, holding that motherhood cannot be seen through the “narrow lens of biology”. The Court also called for a paternity leave law for all fathers.
| Law/Provision | Key Content |
|---|---|
| Maternity Benefit Act, 1961 | 12 weeks paid leave for biological mothers; foundation statute |
| Maternity Benefit (Amendment) Act, 2017 | Extended to 26 weeks for bio-mothers; introduced 12 weeks for adoptive/surrogate mothers (child < 3 months) |
| Social Security Code, 2020 | Consolidated labour laws; Section 60(4) replicated the 3-month child-age restriction |
| Article 42 | DPSP — State shall make provision for just and humane conditions of work and maternity relief |
| CARA | Central Adoption Resource Authority — governs inter-country and domestic adoption; less than 5% adoptions involve children under 3 months |
| RPwD Act, 2016 | Rights of Persons with Disabilities — cited in related disability rights story |
- Expands reproductive autonomy under Article 21
- Recognises psychological bonding needs of adoptees (stress hormones elevated in institutional care)
- Older adoptees most in need of bonding time were excluded — now included
- Only <5% of adopted children are under 3 months; law was effectively useless
- Private sector not mandated — only company policy governs paternity leave
- Adoptive mothers still get 12 weeks vs. bio-mothers’ 26 weeks — disparity remains
- Unorganised sector workers largely unprotected
- No formal law on paternity leave despite Court recommendation
- Extend maternity leave for adoptive mothers to 26 weeks — parity with biological mothers
- Enact Paternity Leave legislation covering both private and public sectors
- Amend Social Security Code, 2020 provisions accordingly
- Promote shared parenting as an SDG-5 (Gender Equality) imperative
- CARA to streamline adoption process; reduce average waiting period of 3+ years
🎯 Exam Orientation
“The Supreme Court’s ruling on maternity leave for adoptive mothers reflects an evolving jurisprudence of reproductive rights in India. Examine the significance of the judgment and suggest further legislative reforms needed for gender-just labour laws.” (250 words)
📝 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
Consider the following about maternity benefits under Indian law:
1. The Maternity Benefit (Amendment) Act 2017 extended paid maternity leave for biological mothers to 26 weeks.
2. The Central Adoption Resource Authority (CARA) functions under the Ministry of Labour.
3. Article 42 of the Constitution directs the State to make provision for maternity relief.
Which of the above is/are correct?
- (a) 1 and 2 only
- (b) 1 and 3 only
- (c) 2 and 3 only
- (d) 1, 2 and 3
Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of Electoral Rolls — Parliamentary Panel Flags Exclusions
A Parliamentary Standing Committee on Personnel, Public Grievances, Law and Justice has asked the Election Commission (EC) to ensure no genuine voter is excluded during the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls — a house-to-house verification exercise currently ongoing across India, with West Bengal being the most contentious state.
In West Bengal, over 60 lakh voters with “logical discrepancies” are under adjudication; the EC has constituted 19 Appellate Tribunals. Elections are about a month away, adding urgency to the controversy.
| Term | Explanation |
|---|---|
| SIR (Special Intensive Revision) | Intensive door-to-door verification of voter rolls by Booth Level Officers (BLOs); aimed at updating and cleaning voter lists |
| ECINET | Election Commission Integrated Network — platform for uploading documents during SIR, with restricted access |
| Article 326 | Right to vote — universal adult franchise; no citizen to be disenfranchised arbitrarily |
| Representation of People Act, 1950 | Governs preparation and revision of electoral rolls; Section 21 empowers EC to revise rolls |
| Sixth Schedule | Special provisions for tribal areas — relevant in Assam context (KAAC, RHAC) |
| Appellate Tribunal | Former judges appointed to hear appeals against inclusion/exclusion decisions by judicial officers in SIR |
| Stakeholder | Concern | Position |
|---|---|---|
| Election Commission | Clean, accurate rolls; no bogus voters | SIR is necessary; process is transparent |
| Trinamool Congress (WB) | Alleged mass disenfranchisement of Muslim and minority voters | Opposes SIR; approaching courts |
| BJP (WB) | Believes bogus voters inflate Trinamool’s base | Supports SIR |
| Parliamentary Committee | Safeguards needed for senior citizens, disabled, migrants | Robust monitoring + data privacy |
| Supreme Court | Ensure process integrity | Directed HC to involve former CJs for Appellate Tribunals |
| Genuine Voters | Fear of disenfranchisement before elections | Seeking inclusion via judicial mechanism |
- Timing issue: SIR conducted close to West Bengal election creates risk of mass disenfranchisement without adequate redressal time
- Data privacy concerns: Documents uploaded on ECINET — need robust security protocols
- Logical discrepancy vs. genuine deletion: Algorithmic deletion risks excluding legitimate voters; no foolproof appeal mechanism for illiterate/rural voters
- Migrant voter problem: India has ~40 crore internal migrants; BLO verification fails them systematically
- Political weaponisation: Risk of SIR being used selectively against communities perceived to support opposition
- Federal tension: State governments and EC at loggerheads; weakens cooperative federalism in electoral administration
- Conduct SIR at least 6 months before elections to allow adequate redressal
- Mandatory notification to voters before deletion (SMS/letter); 30-day challenge window
- Strengthen Aadhaar-voter ID linkage while protecting privacy (SC guidelines)
- Remote voting for migrants (EC has proposed EVM pilot — needs implementation)
- Independent audit of BLO verification by civil society organisations
- SDG-16 linkage: Inclusive institutions; no citizen left behind
🎯 Exam Orientation
“The Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls, while aimed at cleaning voter lists, has raised serious concerns about disenfranchisement of vulnerable sections. Critically examine the process and suggest reforms to ensure free, fair and inclusive electoral participation.” (250 words)
📝 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
Which of the following is/are correct about the Sixth Schedule of the Indian Constitution?
1. It provides for autonomous district councils in tribal areas of Northeast India.
2. The Karbi Anglong Autonomous Council (KAAC) is a Sixth Schedule body.
3. Sixth Schedule areas are fully exempt from parliamentary legislation.
Select using the code:
- (a) 1 only
- (b) 1 and 2 only
- (c) 2 and 3 only
- (d) 1, 2 and 3
Why Do Electric Vehicle Batteries Catch Fire? — Causes, Safety & Regulation
An EV charging point-triggered fire in Indore (March 18, 2026) killed 8 people including 2 children, reviving scrutiny of lithium-ion battery safety in India. The incident involved LPG cylinders stored in the same space and electronic door locks failing during the fire — compounding the danger.
India is rapidly expanding its EV ecosystem; ensuring battery safety standards and consumer awareness is critical for the energy transition.
| Concept/Body | Details |
|---|---|
| Thermal Runaway | Chain reaction where one cell overheats → neighbouring cells overheat → releases toxic gases (H-fluoride) + fire |
| Battery Management System (BMS) | Onboard computer that monitors temperature, voltage, current; primary safety mechanism |
| AIS-156 Standard | Automotive Research Association of India (ARAI) standard — requires 5-min escape window before EV fire |
| BIS EV Safety Norms (2023) | Updated norms post-2022 EV fire incidents; covers thermal propagation tests |
| Solid-state batteries | Next-gen technology — solid electrolyte instead of liquid; dramatically reduces thermal runaway risk |
| National Mission for Electric Mobility | India’s policy framework for EV adoption; FAME scheme is key instrument |
- Hard impact to undercarriage
- Deforms casing → short circuit
- Flooding / submergence
- Third-party/damaged chargers
- Overcharging beyond capacity
- Old domestic wiring overload
- Extreme heat / direct sunlight
- Charging after long drive
- Battery aging & degradation
- Metal protrusions in cells
- Electrode contact → current surge
- Quality control gaps
- Improved BMS
- Evaporative cooling
- Solid-state batteries
- Firewall between cells
- BIS 2023 norms (AIS-156)
- Certified charger mandate
- Post-flood inspection requirement
- Home wiring standards
| Aspect | EV Fire Risk | Petrol Car Fire Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Frequency | Lower than petrol | Higher |
| Intensity | Burns hotter, faster | Slower spread typically |
| Extinguishing | Very difficult — battery releases O₂ | Conventional methods work |
| Toxic emissions | HF gas — highly toxic | CO, soot |
| Warning time | Minimal (AIS-156: 5 min requirement) | Generally more visible early |
Key gap: India lacks mandatory EV fire accident reporting database; no centralised safety recall mechanism comparable to US NHTSA.
- Mandate periodic battery health checks for EVs older than 3 years
- Standardise public charging infrastructure under a single regulatory framework (BIS + MoRTH)
- Create a national EV accident database for data-driven safety improvements
- R&D investment in solid-state batteries (aligned with National Battery Mission)
- Building codes for EV parking — fireproofing, sprinkler systems, ventilation
- Consumer awareness campaigns: cool before charge, certified chargers only
🎯 Exam Orientation
“India’s electric vehicle transition faces significant safety challenges related to battery technology. Examine the causes of EV battery fires and critically evaluate India’s regulatory response.” (150 words)
📝 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
With reference to electric vehicle (EV) batteries in India, consider the following statements:
1. AIS-156 is a safety standard that requires EV batteries to provide at least 5 minutes for occupant escape before fire spreads.
2. The Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) updated EV battery safety norms in 2023.
3. Thermal runaway in Li-ion batteries is primarily caused by overexposure to cold temperatures.
Which of the above is/are correct?
- (a) 1 and 2 only
- (b) 2 and 3 only
- (c) 1 only
- (d) 1, 2 and 3
Centre Boosts Commercial LPG Allocation to 50% Amid West Asia Crisis
The Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas (MoPNG) has permitted an additional 20% allocation of commercial LPG to states, taking the total to 50% of pre-crisis levels. All commercial LPG consumers must now apply for Piped Natural Gas (PNG) to access the revised allocation — incentivising transition away from LPG cylinders.
India imports 60% of its LPG needs, 90% via the Strait of Hormuz, making this a direct consequence of the West Asia conflict. Domestic refinery LPG output has risen 40% through supply maintenance orders.
| Concept | Details |
|---|---|
| LPG composition | Mainly propane and butane; used for cooking and industrial heating |
| PNG (Piped Natural Gas) | Natural gas delivered through pipeline to homes & businesses; cleaner, cheaper alternative to cylinders |
| City Gas Distribution (CGD) | PNGRB-regulated entities that distribute CNG & PNG in cities; key implementers of PNG expansion |
| PNGRB | Petroleum & Natural Gas Regulatory Board — regulator for downstream petroleum sector |
| UJJWALA Scheme | Free LPG connections to BPL households; 10 crore+ beneficiaries; domestic LPG remains protected |
| One Nation One Gas Grid | Policy to create a national gas pipeline network; enables PNG expansion |
- 50% is insufficient: Restaurants and industries operating on half capacity — economic losses mounting
- PNG not available everywhere: CGD network covers only ~10% of India’s geography; rural areas entirely excluded
- Structural vulnerability: 90% LPG via Hormuz is a critical single-point failure — diversification needed urgently
- Domestic production: 40% increase in refinery LPG output is positive but temporary and capacity-constrained
- Small businesses hardest hit: Street vendors, dhabas, migrant workers using 5kg cylinders face the sharpest impact
- Inflation risk: Rising cooking gas prices feed into food inflation — hurts consumer price index
- Accelerate CGD network rollout to Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities and rural areas
- Diversify LPG import sources: USA, Australia (LNG), Africa — reduce Hormuz dependence
- Expand Strategic Petroleum Reserves to include LPG storage buffer (currently only crude oil SPR)
- Promote biogas/compressed biogas (CBG) under SATAT scheme as local substitute
- Compensation mechanism for MSMEs affected by LPG shortage
- SDG-7 alignment: Affordable clean energy access — PNG transition must not exclude poor
🎯 Exam Orientation
“The West Asia conflict has exposed India’s critical dependence on the Strait of Hormuz for its LPG supply. Examine the short-term measures taken by India and suggest a long-term energy security strategy for cooking gas.” (250 words)
📝 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
Consider the following about India’s LPG supply situation:
1. India imports approximately 60% of its total LPG requirements.
2. About 90% of imported LPG is routed through the Strait of Hormuz.
3. PNGRB regulates city gas distribution (CGD) entities in India.
How many of the above statements are correct?
- (a) Only one
- (b) Only two
- (c) All three
- (d) None
SC: State Cannot Impose ‘Arbitrary Ceiling’ on Disability Limits for Government Jobs
The Supreme Court ruled that the State cannot prescribe an arbitrary upper ceiling on disability percentage for excluding candidates from government jobs if they are otherwise capable of performing job duties. A bench of Justices Vikram Nath and Sandeep Mehta invoked the Reasonable Accommodation Principle under the RPwD Act, 2016.
The case involved an advocate with 90% locomotor disability who scored high in the Himachal Pradesh Public Service Commission exam for Assistant District Attorney but was rejected because his disability exceeded the advertised upper limit of 60%.
| Law/Concept | Key Details |
|---|---|
| RPwD Act, 2016 | Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act; replaced Disabilities Act 1995; expanded to 21 categories of disability; mandates 4% reservation in govt jobs |
| Benchmark Disability | 40% or more disability — threshold for reservation benefits under RPwD Act; this is a FLOOR not a CEILING |
| Reasonable Accommodation | Necessary modifications to enable PwD to perform job duties; employers obligated to provide |
| Article 14 & 21 | Equality before law; Right to life with dignity — violated by arbitrary exclusion of highly disabled persons |
| UNCRPD | UN Convention on Rights of Persons with Disabilities — India ratified; guides RPwD Act |
| DEPwD | Department of Empowerment of Persons with Disabilities — under Social Justice Ministry |
- Clarifies RPwD Act intent: 40% is a minimum threshold, not an exclusion band
- Expands the scope of Article 21 to include dignity in employment
- Reasonable Accommodation now has stronger judicial backing
- Aligns with UNCRPD Article 27 (work and employment)
- Private sector not covered by RPwD reservation provisions
- Reasonable accommodation implementation remains ad hoc
- Many states still define narrow functional eligibility criteria
- Lack of awareness among PwD candidates about their legal rights
- All State PSCs to review and remove arbitrary disability upper limits immediately
- Extend RPwD Act reservation principles to private sector above a threshold size
- Establish a National Reasonable Accommodation Fund to assist employers
- DEPwD to issue clear guidelines on functional assessment replacing percentage-based exclusions
- SDG-8 linkage: Decent work for all, including persons with disabilities
🎯 Exam Orientation
“The Supreme Court’s ruling on disability ceiling in government employment is a landmark step towards inclusive governance. Examine the judgment in light of the RPwD Act, 2016 and the principle of Reasonable Accommodation.” (150 words)
📝 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
With reference to the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (RPwD) Act, 2016, which of the following is correct?
1. It recognises 21 types of disabilities, expanded from 7 under the earlier 1995 Act.
2. It mandates 4% reservation for persons with disabilities in government establishments.
3. The term “benchmark disability” refers to those with 40% or more disability.
- (a) 1 and 2 only
- (b) 2 and 3 only
- (c) 1 and 3 only
- (d) 1, 2 and 3
Indian Pharma Companies Launch Generic Semaglutide — A $1 Billion Market Opportunity
Six major Indian pharmaceutical companies — Sun Pharma, Dr. Reddy’s, Zydus, Torrent, Alkem, and Glenmark — launched generic versions of Semaglutide on the day the active ingredient’s patent expired. Semaglutide is the active ingredient in Wegovy and Ozempic — Novo Nordisk’s blockbuster drugs for Type 2 diabetes and obesity.
Generic versions are priced at a fraction of the innovator’s price, opening access for millions of Indian patients. The domestic market is estimated at $1 billion over two years.
| Term | Details |
|---|---|
| Semaglutide | GLP-1 receptor agonist; mimics gut hormone to regulate blood sugar and appetite; used for Type 2 diabetes and chronic weight management |
| GLP-1 Receptor Agonists | Class of drugs that stimulate insulin release and suppress glucagon; newer class of anti-diabetics |
| Generic Drug | Bioequivalent copy of an innovator drug after patent expiry; approved by DCGI in India |
| DCGI | Drugs Controller General of India — apex regulator; approves new drugs including generics |
| Patent Cliff | Expiry of a pharmaceutical patent opening market to generic competition; typically causes 80-90% price drop |
| Compulsory Licensing (CL) | Government override of patent rights for public health; India used CL in 2012 (Sorafenib/Natco case) |
| TRIPS Flexibilities | WTO TRIPS Agreement allows developing countries to issue CL; Doha Declaration, 2001 reinforced this |
| Brand/Company | Use | Price (Approx.) |
|---|---|---|
| Wegovy/Ozempic (Novo Nordisk) | Diabetes/Obesity (Innovator) | $800–1000/month (USA) |
| Dr. Reddy’s — Obeda | Type 2 Diabetes | ₹4,200/month |
| Sun Pharma — Noveltreat | Weight Management | ₹900–₹2,000/week |
| Zydus — Semaglyn | Diabetes & Obesity | ~₹2,200/month |
| Torrent — Sembolic (oral) | Diabetes | ₹3,999/month |
| Glenmark — Glipiq | Diabetes | ₹325–₹440/vial |
- Access vs. affordability: Even generic pricing (₹2,000–4,000/month) unaffordable for most Indians — needs inclusion in National Essential Medicines List (NEML)
- Obesity as public health challenge: India has 135 million diabetics (2nd globally); obesity epidemic growing — GLP-1 drugs could be transformative
- India’s generic pharma strength: Demonstrates India’s capacity as the “pharmacy of the world” — can supply affordable versions globally
- TRIPS debate: Patent expiry mechanism worked here; but innovators may use ever-greening tactics to extend monopoly
- Regulatory speed: DCGI weight management approval pending — delays full benefit to obese patients
- Include Semaglutide in NEML for subsidised access to diabetics under NHM
- Strengthen Section 3(d) of Patents Act to prevent evergreening by MNCs
- Promote Indian pharma R&D — beyond generics to new drug discovery (New Drugs & Clinical Trials Rules, 2019)
- Price regulation mechanism for high-value generics via NPPA (National Pharmaceutical Pricing Authority)
- SDG-3: Good Health and Well-Being — affordable generics critical for UHC under Ayushman Bharat
🎯 Exam Orientation
“India’s generic pharmaceutical industry is critical for ensuring affordable medicine access in developing countries. In this context, examine how the launch of generic Semaglutide highlights both the strengths of India’s pharma ecosystem and the gaps in drug access policies.” (150 words)
📝 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
Which of the following is/are correct regarding GLP-1 receptor agonists?
1. They are used in the treatment of Type 2 diabetes and obesity.
2. Semaglutide belongs to this class of drugs.
3. They work by directly blocking insulin receptors in the pancreas.
Select the correct answer:
- (a) 1 only
- (b) 1 and 2 only
- (c) 2 and 3 only
- (d) 1, 2 and 3
Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Amendment Bill, 2026 — Activists Call It ‘Inhumane’
Over 100 members of feminist and lawyer groups wrote an open letter to MPs opposing the Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Amendment Bill, 2026. The Bill, introduced last week, takes away the transgender persons’ “right to self-perceived gender identity” and alters the definition of a “transgender person” — introducing what activists call “inhumane requirements” that make accessing fundamental rights nearly impossible.
This comes against the backdrop of the NALSA judgment (2014) which had affirmed self-identification as a fundamental right.
| Landmark | Significance |
|---|---|
| NALSA v. Union of India (2014) | SC recognised transgender persons as “third gender”; right to self-identify gender — fundamental under Articles 14, 19, 21 |
| Transgender Persons Act, 2019 | First dedicated legislation; provides for certificate of identity, welfare boards, no discrimination |
| Article 14, 19, 21 | Equality, Expression, and Dignity — constitutionally protect gender identity rights |
| Yogyakarta Principles | International principles on sexual orientation and gender identity — India a signatory to related human rights instruments |
| Amendment Bill 2026 | Removes self-perceived gender identity; alters definition of transgender person — seen as regression from NALSA |
- Contradicts NALSA (2014) — constitutional right to self-identify
- Medical/bureaucratic gatekeeping of gender identity — dehumanising
- Access to healthcare, education, employment harder without self-ID
- Criminalises identity rather than protecting it
- Violates Articles 14, 21 — arbitrarily narrows who qualifies as transgender
- Administrative clarity and prevention of misuse of identity claims
- Verification requirements protect welfare scheme targeting
- Align definitions across legal statutes
- However, no evidence base for misuse; no consultation with community
- Withdraw or substantially amend the Bill to restore self-identification right (per NALSA)
- Constitutive consultation with transgender community before any legislative change
- Strengthen welfare provisions — housing, healthcare, education — in existing 2019 Act
- Implement National Council for Transgender Persons effectively (established under 2019 Act)
- Align with SDG-10 (Reduced Inequalities) and international human rights obligations
🎯 Exam Orientation
“The right to self-perceived gender identity is a fundamental right affirmed by the Supreme Court in NALSA (2014). In light of this, critically examine the constitutional and ethical concerns raised by the Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Amendment Bill, 2026.” (250 words)
📝 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
The NALSA judgment (2014) related to which of the following?
1. Right of transgender persons to self-identify their gender.
2. Recognition of transgender persons as a “third gender”.
3. Directing the Centre to provide reservation to transgender persons in government employment.
- (a) 1 and 2 only
- (b) 2 and 3 only
- (c) 1 only
- (d) 1, 2 and 3


