PIB Summaries 25 March 2026

  1. Assistance to States to tackle Cyber Incidents
  2. SHE-Marts’ will provide a new market platform for rural women entrepreneurs


  • Cyber incidents in India surged sharply, rising from 14.02 lakh (2021) to 29.44 lakh (2025), indicating rapid expansion of digital vulnerabilities and cyber threats ecosystem.
  • CERT-In acts as nodal agency under Section 70B, IT Act, 2000, coordinating national-level response and supporting States/UTs in prevention, detection, and mitigation.
  • Federal structure: Cybercrime policing falls under State List (Police, Public Order), while Centre provides technical, financial, and institutional support through multi-layered mechanisms.

Relevance

  • GS-III (Internal Security): Cyber security architecture, cybercrime trends, critical infrastructure protection
  • GS-II (Governance): CentreState relations, cooperative federalism, institutional coordination
  • GS-III (Economy & Tech): Digital economy risks, fintech security, emerging technologies (AI, deepfakes)

Practice Question

Q1.Cybersecurity in India is increasingly becoming a test of cooperative federalism. Examine in the context of rising cyber incidents and institutional mechanisms.(250 Words)

  • PIB release highlights rising cyber incidents and CentreState coordination mechanisms, reflecting increasing digitalisation risks in Indias governance and economy.
  • Data spike in 2024–25 (20.41 lakh → 29.44 lakh) signals urgent need for capacity building of State Law Enforcement Agencies (LEAs).
  • New SOP (Jan 2026) for NCRP–CFCFRMS integration emphasises victim-centric approach and cooperative federalism in cyber governance.
Cyber Security Architecture in India
  • CERT-In: National nodal agency for incident response, advisories, vulnerability management, established under IT Act, 2000 (Sec 70B).
  • I4C (Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre): MHA initiative for integrated cybercrime response, including investigation, intelligence, and coordination.
  • NCRB: Publishes Crime in India report, providing cybercrime statistics and conviction data.
 Federal Context
  • Cybercrime = State subject (Seventh Schedule), but cybersecurity = shared responsibility, requiring cooperative federalism model.
  • Centre supplements States through advisories, funding (CCPWC Scheme), capacity building, and digital infrastructure.
  • Cyber incidents (CERT-In):
    • 2021: 14,02,809
    • 2022: 13,91,457
    • 2023: 15,92,917
    • 2024: 20,41,360
    • 2025: 29,44,248
  • Cybercrime cases (NCRB 2023): 86,420 cases registered, but only 1,104 convictions low conviction rate concern.
  • Financial fraud prevention: ₹8,690 crore saved via CFCFRMS (till Jan 2026).
  • Capacity building: ₹132.93 crore released under CCPWC Scheme; 24,600+ personnel trained.
A. Preventive & Monitoring Mechanisms
  • NCCC (National Cyber Coordination Centre) monitors cyberspace for real-time threat detection and intelligence sharing with States.
  • Cyber Swachhta Kendra (CSK) detects malware, botnets, and vulnerabilities, promoting cyber hygiene (Swachh Bharat analogy).
  • Automated Threat Exchange Platform enables real-time sharing of alerts with States and sectors.
B. Capacity Building & Training
  • Cyber Bharat Setu Programme: Promotes cybersecurity culture in States/UTs (MP, Tripura, Uttarakhand, J&K participated in 2025).
  • CyTrain MOOC Platform: 1.51 lakh officers enrolled, enhancing forensics, investigation, prosecution skills.
  • Mock drills & workshops: Regular exercises for testing preparedness and inter-agency coordination.
C. Investigation & Coordination Framework
  • I4C (MHA): Apex body for coordinated cybercrime response across States.
  • National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal (NCRP): Enables citizen reporting, especially for women/children-related crimes.
  • Helpline 1930: Immediate reporting of financial cyber frauds.
D. Financial Fraud Mitigation
  • CFCFRMS (2021): Enables real-time fund blocking, preventing fraudulent transactions.
  • Cyber Fraud Mitigation Centre (CFMC): Multi-stakeholder platform with banks, telecoms, intermediaries, LEAs.
E. Advanced Investigation Infrastructure
  • National Digital Investigation Support Centre (NDISC): Provided assistance in 13,417+ cases, strengthening forensic capabilities.
  • Samanvaya Platform + Pratibimb Module: Enables data analytics, interstate crime linkage mapping, geo-tagging of cyber criminals.
F. Legal & Institutional Strengthening
  • SOP (Jan 2026): Introduces uniform, victim-centric complaint handling framework, improving Centre–State coordination.
  • Joint Cyber Coordination Teams (JCCTs): Target cybercrime hotspots (e.g., Jamtara, Mewat) for multi-jurisdictional coordination.
  • IT Act, 2000 (Sec 70B): Legal basis for CERT-In powers (monitoring, response, compliance directions).
  • Seventh Schedule: Cybercrime enforcement lies under State List (Police) → need for cooperative federalism.
  • Data Protection & Privacy concerns: Emerging interplay with Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023.
  • Multi-agency fragmentation: CERT-In, I4C, NCRB, State Police → coordination challenges.
  • Capacity asymmetry across States: Advanced States vs. lagging States in cyber forensics, manpower, infrastructure.
  • Urban concentration of incidents (Delhi highest) reflects digital divide and uneven exposure.
  • Cyber frauds threaten digital economy growth, especially UPI, fintech ecosystem, e-commerce expansion.
  • 8,690 crore savings highlight economic stakes and importance of real-time intervention systems.
  • Absence of loss estimation data (CERT-In gap) weakens policy prioritisation and insurance ecosystem development.
  • Rise in cyber crimes against women and children → need for gender-sensitive digital policing.
  • Low conviction rate (~1.3% in 2023) undermines public trust in justice delivery.
  • Digital literacy gaps increase vulnerability of rural and elderly populations.
  • Emerging threats: AI-enabled phishing, ransomware, deepfakes, critical infrastructure attacks.
  • Cross-border nature of cybercrime complicates jurisdiction and attribution.
  • Need for indigenous cyber capabilities aligned with Atmanirbhar Bharat in cybersecurity tools.
  • Data gaps: No official estimation of financial losses due to cyber incidents (CERT-In limitation).
  • Low conviction rate: Weak investigation quality, digital evidence handling issues.
  • Institutional overlap: Lack of single unified cyber command structure.
  • Federal friction: States depend heavily on Centre for technology and funding.
  • Skill shortage: Acute deficit of cybersecurity professionals in LEAs.
  • Privacy concerns: Surveillance mechanisms like NCCC raise civil liberty debates.
  • Establish National Cyber Security Authority for unified command and coordination (recommended by experts).
  • Mandatory cyber audit & compliance standards across States and critical sectors.
  • Strengthen conviction ecosystem: Fast-track cyber courts, specialised prosecutors, digital evidence protocols.
  • Data-driven governance: Develop national cyber loss registry for better policymaking.
  • Enhance cyber literacy via Digital India + school curriculum integration.
  • Promote public-private partnerships with fintech, telecom, AI firms for real-time threat intelligence.
  • International cooperation: Strengthen MLATs, Budapest Convention engagement (debated).
  • CERT-In is a statutory body under Section 70B of the IT Act, 2000, responsible for cyber incident response and advisories.
  • CERT-In functions under MeitY, not MHA common prelims trap.
  • Cybercrime → State subject (Police, Public Order), while cybersecurity → shared responsibility (Centre + States).
  • I4C is an MHA initiative for cybercrime coordination and investigation support, distinct from CERT-In’s technical role.
  • Helpline 1930 is dedicated to financial cyber fraud reporting, linked with real-time fund blocking system (CFCFRMS).
  • NCCC is a cyber threat monitoring system, not an investigative or enforcement agency.
  • NCRP (portal) enables complaint filing only; FIR and investigation are done by State Police.
  • CERT-In (incidents data) and NCRB (crime data) are different datasets → frequent confusion.
  • CCPWC Scheme (MHA) provides financial assistance to States for cybercrime capacity building.
  • India is not a signatory to the Budapest Convention on Cybercrime.


  • Government announced SHE-Marts(Febr 2026) to enhance market access for rural women entrepreneurs, signalling policy shift from financial inclusion to enterprise-led empowerment under SHG ecosystem.
  • Rising focus on women-led development and rural entrepreneurship under DAY-NRLM, addressing persistent gap between credit availability and sustainable income generation for SHG members.

Relevance

  • GS-II (Governance): Rural development, SHG institutional strengthening, poverty alleviation schemes
  • GS-I (Society): Women empowerment, gender equity, social capital
  • GS-III (Economy): Inclusive growth, rural entrepreneurship, value chain development

Practice Question

Q1.SHE-Marts represent a shift from financial inclusion to enterprise-led empowerment.Analyse its significance in strengthening rural livelihoods.(250 Words)

  • SHE-Marts are structured retail platforms enabling direct sale of SHG products, reducing intermediaries and improving price realisation, visibility, and consumer outreach for rural women enterprises.
  • Initiative addresses core bottleneck of weak market linkages, which has historically limited scaling, profitability, and sustainability of SHG-based micro-enterprises despite institutional support.
  • DAY-NRLM is a flagship programme promoting women-centric poverty alleviation through SHGs, focusing on financial inclusion, livelihood diversification, and institutional capacity building in rural areas.
  • India hosts ~9 crore women in SHGs, representing worlds largest women-led community network, yet many remain confined to low-value, localised livelihood activities without formal market integration.
  • Community-owned retail outlets at Cluster Level Federations (CLFs) ensure collective ownership, decentralised governance, and sustainability, strengthening institutional capacity within SHG federations.
  • Provides market infrastructure, product visibility, and branding opportunities, enabling SHG products to compete in organised retail spaces and access broader consumer bases.
  • Supported by innovative financing mechanisms, though no funds sanctioned yet, indicating early-stage conceptualisation and need for clear financial roadmap for implementation.
  • Integrated with capacity building under DAY-NRLM, focusing on entrepreneurship development, product quality improvement, packaging, and business scaling strategies.
  • Facilitates transition from subsistence livelihoods to enterprise-based models, enhancing income stability, productivity, and rural economic diversification aligned with inclusive growth objectives.
  • Strengthens local value chains (productionaggregationretail), reducing leakages and improving efficiency, competitiveness, and rural market integration.
  • Promotes women’s economic empowerment through ownership and decision-making, moving beyond participation to leadership in rural enterprises and financial autonomy.
  • Strengthens social capital and collective agency of SHGs, enhancing bargaining power, community leadership, and gender equity outcomes in rural governance structures.
  • Absence of dedicated funding and operational guidelines may delay rollout, affecting credibility and scalability of SHE-Marts as a nationwide initiative.
  • Competition from e-commerce platforms and organised retail may limit market penetration unless quality, branding, and pricing competitiveness are ensured.
  • Persistent gaps in logistics, storage, standardisation, and certification may hinder product consistency and consumer trust in SHG-produced goods.
  • Risk of elite capture within SHGs or CLFs could undermine equitable access, reducing benefits for marginalised women within the ecosystem.
  • Integrate SHE-Marts with digital platforms like ONDC and e-commerce ecosystems, ensuring hybrid physical-digital market access and scalability of rural enterprises.
  • Provide dedicated funding support, viability gap financing, and credit guarantees to ensure sustainability during initial operational phases.
  • Strengthen quality certification, branding, GI tagging, and packaging infrastructure, enhancing competitiveness of SHG products in national and global markets.
  • Expand entrepreneurship training, digital literacy, and supply chain management skills, ensuring long-term viability and professionalisation of women-led enterprises.
  • SHE-Marts are proposed under DAY-NRLM, Ministry of Rural Development, focusing on market access for SHG products rather than credit linkage mechanisms.
  • Owned and operated by Cluster Level Federations (CLFs), ensuring community ownership and decentralised governance structure within SHG ecosystem.
  • Aim is to enable transition from livelihood activities to enterprise ownership, marking shift toward women-led entrepreneurship model.
  • Provide physical retail platforms for SHG products, not digital marketplaces, though future convergence with e-commerce is possible.
  • No funds sanctioned yet (as of March 2026), indicating initiative is in early conceptual and policy announcement stage.

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