Content :
- FATF condemns Pahalgam attack, to release report on ‘state-sponsored terror’ for first time
- New flowering plant species discovered in Aravali hills near Jaipur
- Analysing Internet access and digital skills in India
- What is the significance of the Shipki La pass?
- What are the ambiguities in India’s nuclear liability law?
- Registrar-General of India issues 2027 Census notification
- Ax-4 mission: ISRO, Axiom Space coordinate on crucial experiments before launch
- Forbidding Arabian desert once had a lush and bountiful chapter
FATF condemns Pahalgam attack, to release report on ‘state-sponsored terror’ for first time
Significance of Condemnation
- FATF officially condemned the Pahalgam terrorist attack (22 April 2025).
- It noted that such attacks “could not occur without money and means to transfer funds“—directly linking terror to financing channels.
- This is only the third condemnation of a terror attack by FATF in the last 10 years, highlighting the exceptional severity of this case.
Relevance : GS 3(Internal Security) ,GS 2(International Relations)

International Concern
- The international community reportedly exerted pressure, showing global consensus on the seriousness of the attack.
- Signals growing fatigue with Pakistan’s role in cross-border terror financing.
Upcoming FATF Report
- FATF to release a report within a month that will:
- For the first time, officially include “state-sponsored terrorism” as a distinct source of terror financing.
- Mark a policy shift, aligning FATF’s global framework with India’s long-standing position on Pakistan.
- India’s National Risk Assessment is currently the only one acknowledging Pakistan’s state-sponsored terror as a financing risk.
New FATF Tools
- FATF has developed a Terror Financing Risk & Context Toolkit for assessors.
- Aim: To prevent countries like Pakistan from misleading FATF using incomplete or false data.
- Enhances transparency and consistency in assessing terror financing threats.
Public-Private Engagement
- FATF to host a webinar to sensitize public and private sector players on:
- Risks of terror financing.
- New and emerging threats.
- Importance of compliance and vigilance.
India’s Dossier
- India reportedly sent a detailed dossier to FATF urging renewed scrutiny of Pakistan, possibly to push for re-greylisting.
- Aimed at exposing continued violations by Pakistan despite previous warnings.
Broader Implications
- Policy shift at FATF adds global legitimacy to India’s narrative on Pakistan’s role in terrorism.
- May pave way for stricter sanctions, greylisting, or blacklisting, especially if Pakistan’s role is directly cited.
- Enhances international pressure on state sponsors of terrorism.
FATF – Key Facts
- Established: 1989 at the G7 Summit in Paris.
- Headquarters: Paris, France.
- Members: 39 (including India).
- Secretariat: Hosted by the OECD.
Main Objectives
- Combat money laundering, terror financing, and proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.
- Set global standards through 40 Recommendations.
Key Tools
- Maintains “Grey List” (Jurisdictions under increased monitoring).
- Maintains “Black List” (High-risk jurisdictions with serious strategic deficiencies).
- Conducts Mutual Evaluations and follow-ups to assess compliance.
India & FATF
- India became a member in 2010.
- Actively supports inclusion of Pakistan in the grey list for state-sponsored terror financing.
Recent Developments
- FATF is now recognizing state-sponsored terrorism as a key source of terror financing.
New flowering plant species discovered in Aravali hills near Jaipur
About the Discovery
- A new flowering plant species named Portulaca bharat has been discovered near Galtaji Temple in the Aravalli Hills, Jaipur.
- Found growing in rock crevices of dry, rocky slopes in a semi-arid landscape.
- Discovered by Nishant Chauhan, member of the Satpura Biodiversity Conservation Society.
Relevance : GS 3(Environment and Ecology)

Botanical Significance
- Belongs to the Portulaca genus, known for:
- Succulent characteristics
- Water-storing tissues
- Adaptation to arid environments
- Portulaca bharat shows distinct morphological features, confirming it as a new species after scientific comparison and cultivation.
- Described in the international journal Phytotaxa.
Ecological & Conservation Importance
- Classified as “Data Deficient” by IUCN Red List due to limited known population.
- Displays narrow endemism, found only at one location—Galtaji hills.
- Highly vulnerable to habitat degradation and climate change.
- Highlights the hidden biodiversity of the Aravalli range.
Scientific & Institutional Collaboration
- Research supported by:
- Amber Srivastava (BSI)
- Sudhanshu Shekhar Dash & Sushil Kumar Singh (BSI, Kolkata & Dehradun)
- Cultivated and studied in Hamirpur (Himachal Pradesh) and Lucknow under controlled conditions.
India’s Portulaca Diversity
- The genus has ~153 species globally, mainly in tropical/subtropical zones.
- India hosts 11 species, including 4 endemics.
- Most Indian species are adapted to dry, semi-arid habitats.
Analysing Internet access and digital skills in India
Survey Context
- First major dataset from CAMS (2022–2023) by NSSO, covering 3.02 lakh households and 12.99 lakh people.
- Aims to track progress on SDG 4.4 – digital skills for youth and adults.
Relevance : GS 2(Social Issues)

Internet Access – National Picture
- 76.3% households have broadband Internet access across India.
- Urban areas: 86.5%
- Rural areas: 71.2%
- Shows deep Internet penetration, but with regional and social disparities.
Regional Disparities
- High broadband access (>90%): Delhi, Goa, Mizoram, Manipur, Sikkim, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh.
- Low broadband access (<70%): West Bengal, Andhra Pradesh, Odisha, Arunachal Pradesh.
Social Group Disparities
- General category households: 84.1% have broadband.
- OBCs: 77.5%, SCs: 69.1%, STs: 64.8%.
- Indicates a digital caste divide, with marginalized groups lagging.
Income-Based Digital Divide
- Poorest decile (bottom 10%): 71.6% households lack broadband.
- Richest decile (top 10%): Only 1.9% lack broadband.
- Even second lowest decile shows 56.2% connectivity → shows improvement across income bands.
- Economic status = key driver of digital access.
Mobile Phone Access
- Mobile/telephone access: 94.2% rural, 97.1% urban households.
- Mobile usage (age 15+): 83.9% rural, 92.4% urban.
- However, exclusive mobile use is low among women and lower castes, especially in rural areas:
- Rural general category women: only 25.3% use mobile exclusively.
- Urban women: 51.2%.
- Even worse for SCs, STs, OBCs.
Technology Level in Use
- Only 50% rural and 70% urban users use 4G.
- 40.4% of Indians still use older mobile technologies (2G/3G).
- 5G adoption: negligible.
Digital Skills Gaps
- Internet usage (15+ age group): 53.6% rural, 74% urban.
- Email use: 20% rural, 40% urban.
- Copy-paste skills: 40% rural, 60% urban.
- Spreadsheet arithmetic skills: very low.
- Online banking skills: only 37.8% of population 15+ can perform.
Policy Implications
- Clear digital divide across regions, caste groups, genders, and income levels.
- Digital skills lag behind access, especially in rural areas and among marginalized groups.
- Government should:
- Subsidize broadband for the poor (as done for water/electricity).
- Focus on basic digital literacy training at the grassroots.
- Ensure equity in access to support goals under SDG 4.
What is the significance of the Shipki La pass?
Historical Importance
- Located in Kinnaur district, Himachal Pradesh at an altitude of 3,930 m.
- A historic Indo-Tibetan trade route — operational since at least the 15th century, likely earlier.
- Folklore-based trade oath symbolized enduring cross-border trust and peace.
Relevance : GS 1(Culture ,Heritage ,Geography) ,GS 3(Infrastructure ,Trade)
Why Trade Stopped
- Disrupted after the Sino-India War of 1962.
- Further breakdown due to Doklam standoff (2017) and COVID-19 pandemic.
- Commercial trade remains suspended, though local aspirations remain high.
Recent Developments
- Himachal Pradesh CM reopened the pass for Indian tourists (no permit now needed; Aadhaar card sufficient).
- Move has revived hopes for trade and religious tourism among locals.
Trade: Nature of Goods Exchanged
- Imports from Tibet: wool, yaks, goatskins, thangkas, prayer items, turquoise, gold.
- Exports from India: grains, spices, dried fruits, copper utensils, iron tools, tobacco.
- Trade supported local crafts and jewelry industries (e.g. Kinnauri ornaments).
Why Reopening Matters Despite Low Trade Volume
- Can shorten the Delhi–Mansarovar pilgrimage by 14 days — big religious tourism boost.
- Generates employment, revives hospitality sector, and encourages infrastructure growth.
- Serves as a community-led diplomatic model — fostering peace through cultural-economic ties.
Cultural & Spiritual Links
- People on both sides share pastoral lifestyles, similar surnames (e.g. Namgyal).
- Dominant religion: Buddhism — shared monastic traditions, festivals, and spiritual practices.
- Reflects civilisational continuity, unlike more fractured India–Pakistan cross-border ties.
Policy & Strategic Implications
- Reopening can act as a “soft corridor” for India-China people-to-people engagement.
- Advocated by Kinnaur Indo-China Trade Association; State Government plans to push MEA for trade revival.
- Could become a model for heritage-based diplomacy and inclusive border development.
What are the ambiguities in India’s nuclear liability law?
Basic Provisions of CLNDA
- Enacted in 2010 to provide compensation for nuclear damage and ensure a mechanism for speedy claims.
- Strict and no-fault liability on the operator (NPCIL in India’s case).
- Operator’s liability is capped at ₹1,500 crore; Government steps in beyond that up to ~₹2,100–₹2,300 crore.
- India acceded to the Convention on Supplementary Compensation (CSC) in 2016.
Relevance : GS 2(Governance )
CLNDA’s Unique Supplier Liability Clause
- Unlike CSC, India’s law allows operator to seek recourse from the supplier under three conditions:
- Section 17(a): If expressly mentioned in the contract.
- Section 17(b): If damage was caused by defective equipment/services (even if not in contract).
- Section 17(c): If damage was caused by intentional misconduct.
Key Ambiguities
- Section 17(b): Goes beyond international norms, creating automatic liability for suppliers if equipment is defective.
- Section 46: States CLNDA does not prevent other legal proceedings under other laws (e.g. tort law), potentially exposing suppliers to unlimited civil and criminal liability.
- No clear definition of “nuclear damage” under CLNDA → increases legal uncertainty.
Concerns of Foreign & Domestic Suppliers
- Fear of uncapped liability, especially due to Section 46, discouraging investment.
- Absence of clarity on insurance requirements and coverage for suppliers.
- Potential for class-action lawsuits or civil suits, despite CSC’s intention to limit claims to operator alone.
Impact on Projects
- Major foreign-backed projects like:
- Jaitapur (France),
- Kovvada (USA) remain stalled.
- Only Kudankulam (Russia) has progressed — initiated before CLNDA, operates under a separate framework.
Government’s Stand
- Claims CLNDA is in line with CSC and Section 17(b) is permissive, not mandatory.
- However, legal experts assert each subsection (17a, 17b, 17c) is independent — supplier can be sued even if contract doesn’t mention it.
- Government stance on Parliament debates holds little weight in court; statutory language prevails in legal trials.
Broader Implications
- Suppliers demand amendment or legal clarification for protection.
- Law intended to protect victims and promote accountability post-Bhopal tragedy, but ends up deterring foreign investment.
- Without reform, India risks missing out on clean nuclear energy expansion critical for energy security and climate goals.
Registrar-General of India issues 2027 Census notification
Timeline and Reference Dates
- Census Year: 2027
- Reference Date:
- March 1, 2027: For most parts of India
- October 1, 2026: For snow-bound and non-synchronous areas of:
- Ladakh
- Jammu & Kashmir
- Himachal Pradesh
- Uttarakhand
Relevance : GS 2(Governance)
Freezing of Administrative Boundaries
- With the Gazette notification issued under Section 3 of the Census Act, 1948, freezing of administrative boundaries comes into effect.
- States cannot alter boundaries of districts, tehsils, police stations, etc., until the Census process concludes.
- This is crucial for maintaining consistency in enumeration blocks.
Digital Census Features
- The 2027 Census will be digitally driven:
- Use of mobile applications by enumerators
- Option for self-enumeration by the public
- First-time use of end-to-end digital data collection in India’s census history.
Data Security Measures
- Emphasis on stringent data protection:
- Secure collection
- Secure transmission
- Secure storage
- Aims to ensure data privacy and public trust.
Manpower & Preparation
- Deployment of:
- 34 lakh enumerators and supervisors
- 1.3 lakh Census functionaries
- Two-phase Census:
- House Listing Operations
- Population Enumeration
- Pre-test exercises to test:
- Mobile app effectiveness
- Enumerator familiarity and process readiness
Administrative Oversight
- Notification issued by the Registrar-General of India under the Ministry of Home Affairs.
- Union Home Minister Amit Shah has already reviewed Census preparations.
- Upcoming notifications will detail:
- Pre-test schedule
- First-phase operations
Significance
- The 2027 Census will be India’s first digital census — a major technological and logistical shift.
- Comes after repeated delays of the 2021 Census, affected by the pandemic and other factors.
- Freezing administrative boundaries ensures consistency and comparability in demographic data over time.
Ax-4 mission: ISRO, Axiom Space coordinate on crucial experiments before launch
Mission Timeline & Context
- Launch Date: Scheduled for June 19, 2025.
- Astronaut: Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla of the Indian Air Force.
- Duration: 14-day stay aboard the International Space Station (ISS).
- Mission Partner: Axiom Space, a U.S.-based private space firm.
- Launch rescheduled four times due to technical/logistical issues.
Relevance : GS 3(Science and Technology)
ISRO’s Role & Coordination
- ISRO is actively coordinating with Axiom Space to:
- Refresh and prepare time-sensitive experimental samples.
- Ensure proper experimental setup in microgravity conditions.
- Close collaboration with Indian Principal Investigators (PIs) from national R&D labs and academic institutions.
7 ISRO-Backed Microgravity Experiments
Proposed by Indian scientists for ISS research:
- Microalgae in Space:
- Study of microgravity and radiation impact on edible microalgae growth.
- Sprouting Salad Seeds:
- Germination and viability of salad seeds in zero gravity.
- Tardigrades Study:
- Observing survival, revival, reproduction, and gene expression of tardigrades (microscopic extremophiles).
- Muscle Regeneration:
- Effects of metabolic supplements on muscle repair under microgravity.
- Human–Machine Interaction:
- Studying human interaction with electronic displays in microgravity environments.
- Cyanobacteria Proteomics:
- Growth and protein response comparison of cyanobacteria fed on urea vs. nitrate.
- Food Crop Seeds:
- Effects of microgravity on growth and yield parameters of key crop seeds.
Human Research Collaboration with NASA
- ISRO and NASA will jointly conduct five additional experiments:
- Primarily focused on human physiology and biomedical research.
- Part of NASA’s human research programme aboard the ISS.
Scientific & Strategic Significance
- First time Indian researchers will conduct indigenous experiments aboard the ISS.
- Strengthens India’s profile in:
- Human spaceflight readiness
- Space biosciences
- International scientific collaboration
- Aligns with ISRO’s goals for Gaganyaan and future space station participation.
Forbidding Arabian desert once had a lush and bountiful chapter
Geographical Context
- Arabian Peninsula lies in the world’s driest desert belt — from the Sahara to the Thar Desert.
- It has long served as a major biogeographical barrier, limiting migration of humans and animals between Africa and Eurasia.
- Arid conditions believed to have persisted for at least 11 million years.
Relevance : GS 1(Geography)

New Scientific Findings
- Recent research published in Nature suggests periodic wet/humid phases in the past 8 million years.
- These phases transformed Arabia into grasslands with rivers and lakes, enabling migration of animals and humans.
- Speleothems (cave mineral formations) found in 7 cave systems in central Saudi Arabia serve as key evidence.
Humidity Cycles & Dating
- 22 speleothem samples dated using Uranium-Thorium/Lead radiometric methods.
- Earliest wet period: 7.44 – 6.25 million years ago.
- Latest wet periods: 530,000 – 60,000 years ago.
- Wet phases became shorter and less intense over time due to:
- Weakening of monsoonal influence.
- Growth of Northern Hemisphere ice sheets in the Pleistocene.
Ecological & Archaeological Evidence
- Fossils of hippos, crocodiles, horses show wetland ecosystems existed ~74,000 years ago.
- Discovery of 10,000+ ancient lakes and archaeological sites like Jubbah Oasis with tools dating back 500,000 years.
- Indicates early human and animal migration corridors through Arabia during humid periods.
Human Evolution & Migration
- Earlier assumption: Arabia was uninhabitable until domestication of camels/goats a few thousand years ago.
- New evidence supports ‘Green Arabia Hypothesis’ — Arabia as a critical route in Out of Africa migration.
- Shows that Homo sapiens and other hominins used Arabia as a transit zone during humid phases.
Scientific Significance
- Reshapes theories of early human migration and biogeographic exchanges.
- Highlights role of climate variability in shaping migration, survival, and extinction.
- Shows how environmental corridors opened and closed over millennia due to climate shifts.
Lessons for the Present
- Historical patterns show that humans flourished in wet climates, and migrated or declined during arid ones.
- Raises a cautionary note: Could climate change today trigger new human migrations?
- Modern dependence on technology (e.g., air conditioning) may delay, but not prevent, migration due to heat and water scarcity.