The Hindu — UPSC Analysis
Friday, 3 July 2026
Bengaluru City Edition · Curated for Prelims & Mains | GS I · II · III · IV
📋 Today's Topics
- A "free Indo-Pacific": the India–Japan summitGS2
- When AI "hallucinates" case law: SC sets aside NCLT orderGS2 · GS3
- The right to a fair trial & undertrial imprisonmentGS2
- Mandsaur's model for HPV vaccinationGS2 · GS3
- Navy foils piracy in the Gulf of AdenGS3
- GST's import-driven surge & inflationGS3
- Uniform rules for cell & gene therapiesGS2 · GS3
- Citizenship & the burden of proof (Assam)GS2
- EPFO's new PF Rules & the pension questionGS3
- Fuel prices, OMC losses & the crude lagGS3
- Adani–IHC's $11.5-bn aluminium projectGS3
- Submarine cable linking India, Malaysia, SingaporeGS3
- Space oncology: cancer research in microgravityGS3
- Strait of Hormuz: approved routes & the Doha talksGS2 · GS3
- Welfare promises vs fiscal constraints (States)GS3 · GS2
- Manipur's renewed Kuki–Naga violenceGS2 · GS3
- Polity, Economy & World RoundupGS2 · GS3
- Quick Prelims Revision (MCQ Bank)Prelims
- FAQsRevision
A "free Indo-Pacific": the India–Japan summit
Context
On her first visit to India as Prime Minister, Japan's Sanae Takaichi and PM Modi said a "free and rules-based Indo-Pacific" is a common priority; the two "perfectly aligned" democracies sealed 129 MoUs on technology, investment and defence.
Background & Key Facts
- Maritime security: Both stressed keeping the Indo-Pacific "free, open and rules-based," and agreed to jointly develop technologies to strengthen maritime security and Maritime Domain Awareness (MDA).
- Defence & tech: India and Japan will pursue co-development of defence equipment and a new chapter of defence-technology partnership, including radar and other systems; Japan expressed concern over China's growing military spending and "coercive activities."
- Economics: Japan is among India's biggest economic partners; the two agreed to a fresh economic-security framework and Japanese investment (Maruti Suzuki's fourth plant was inaugurated, with exports to over 100 countries).
- Regional balance: India seeks to hedge China's escalation and de-escalate Persian-Gulf-linked crude disruption, while Japan supports India's "strategic stockpiling of crude oil."
Balancing China: The summit deepens the India–Japan axis within the Quad, countering Chinese assertiveness in the Indo-Pacific and East/South China Seas.
Beyond declarations: With 129 MoUs, the challenge is time-bound implementation of defence co-development and investment pledges.
Economic security: Supply-chain resilience and technology partnerships reduce mutual dependence on China.
- Operationalise defence co-development and MDA cooperation.
- Deepen supply-chain and critical-technology partnerships.
- Leverage Quad and minilaterals for a rules-based Indo-Pacific.
Quad Maritime Domain Awareness Indo-Pacific Economic security
MCQ: Indo-Pacific cooperation
Consider the following statements:
- India and Japan are both members of the Quad.
- "Maritime Domain Awareness" refers to the effective understanding of activity in the maritime domain that could affect security, safety or the environment.
- The Quad is a formal military alliance with a mutual-defence treaty.
- 1 and 2 only
- 2 and 3 only
- 1 and 3 only
- 1, 2 and 3
When AI "hallucinates" case law: SC sets aside NCLT order
Context
The Supreme Court set aside an order of the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) that had relied on non-existent, AI-hallucinated judicial precedents, calling the intrusion of fabricated material into decision-making "catastrophic" for the judicial process.
Background & Key Facts
- The finding: A Bench observed that courts must adopt a "zero-tolerance" approach to reliance on fictitious, AI-generated precedents; even "an iota of fake or hallucinated material" enters the decision-making process, it "will violate the sanctity of adjudication."
- The concern: The Court warned that "increased workloads" have pushed lawyers and judges to adapt to AI to improve efficiency — but unverified AI output can "subvert the rule of law," described as "contamination" of judicial determination.
- Direction: The Court urged the Bar Council of India to frame norms for the responsible use of AI, and asked whether tribunals should adopt AI-assisted safeguards; it flagged the need to constitute a committee and formulate norms (an "AI Regulations for Courts, 2026" was mooted).
Rule of law at risk: Fabricated citations in judgments erode legal certainty and public trust in adjudication.
Human oversight: AI can aid research but cannot supplant independent judicial verification — accountability must remain human.
Governance vacuum: The absence of norms for AI in courts leaves the system exposed; regulation must keep pace with adoption.
- Frame norms/guidelines for responsible AI use in courts and by the Bar.
- Mandate human verification of AI-assisted legal research.
- Build AI-literacy and citation-checking safeguards for judges and lawyers.
NCLT AI "hallucination" Bar Council of India Rule of law
MCQ: AI in adjudication
In the context of AI, "hallucination" refers to:
- An AI model generating confident but false or fabricated information
- An AI model refusing to answer
- A hardware malfunction in servers
- A cyber-attack on an AI system
The right to a fair trial & undertrial imprisonment
Context
An editorial (by Gautam Bhatia) argues that the right to a fair trial is "at the crossroads," as the Delhi Riots (2020) cases show accused persons imprisoned for years without trial — raising urgent questions of liberty and justice.
Background & Key Facts
- The bail paradox: Earlier this year the Supreme Court granted bail to two accused, noting that "if bail is too long," people can be "kept in jail without being found guilty of an offence." Yet at the time of writing, trial is nearly six years away.
- Article 21 & UAPA: High bail thresholds under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA) mean restrictions can override the constitutional (and human) right to liberty — an accused can languish for years without conviction.
- Judicial inconsistency: Different courts have treated the same underlying facts differently — the same judge weighing bail one way and denying it another, undermining the principle that similar cases yield similar outcomes.
- What the judiciary must ensure: Where interpretation is uncertain, courts should keep people behind bars for years without trial — the editorial warns this "makes a mockery of having a system based on the rule of law" and turns process into punishment.
Process as punishment: Prolonged pre-trial detention converts an unconvicted person's ordeal into de facto punishment, violating the presumption of innocence.
Stringent bail laws: UAPA's restrictive bail provisions strain Article 21 and demand judicial vigilance.
Consistency & liberty: Inconsistent bail jurisprudence weakens equal protection and the rule of law.
- Uphold "bail is the rule, jail the exception" and speedy-trial guarantees.
- Ensure consistent bail jurisprudence and time-bound trials.
- Reform stringent bail thresholds to protect Article 21.
Article 21 UAPA (bail provisions) Undertrial prisoners Speedy trial
MCQ: Rights & liberty
Consider the following statements:
- Article 21 guarantees the right to life and personal liberty, which includes the right to a speedy trial.
- The UAPA contains stringent conditions that make the grant of bail difficult.
- An undertrial prisoner is a person who has been convicted and is serving a sentence.
- 1 and 2 only
- 2 and 3 only
- 1 and 3 only
- 1, 2 and 3
Mandsaur's model for HPV vaccination
Context
Mandsaur district (Madhya Pradesh) has demonstrated an effective, data-driven grassroots model for HPV (Human Papillomavirus) vaccination to prevent cervical cancer — showing how "behavioural nudges" can overcome hesitancy.
Background & Key Facts
- The disease burden: Cervical cancer is the second-most-common cancer among Indian women; India accounts for about a quarter of the global cervical-cancer burden. HPV vaccination offers a significant prevention breakthrough (vaccines are ~95% effective when given at ages 9–14).
- Data to coverage: Mandsaur adopted a decentralised, data-driven, adaptive strategy — mapping vulnerable groups using platforms like RBSK, SAMAGRA and Ladli Laxmi Yojana to reach girls, and analysing enrolment gaps to target under-covered, "missed" populations.
- Barriers via "nudges": The district used trusted messengers (teachers, doctors, ASHAs, Gen-Z influencers, student "health ambassadors"), arranged transport to eliminate logistical barriers, and countered misinformation and vaccine hesitancy through community engagement.
- Impact: In under 40 days, coverage rose to ~93% via permanent and temporary vaccination sites; the campaign integrated with schemes like Rashtriya Bal Swasthya Karyakram and Pradhan Mantri Surakshit Matritva Abhiyan.
Preventive health win: Vaccinating adolescent girls is the cheapest, most effective route to reducing India's cervical-cancer deaths.
Behavioural insights work: Targeted "nudges" and trusted community champions overcome hesitancy better than top-down drives.
Scalable model: The grassroots, data-driven approach can inform a national HPV rollout — India's biggest health challenge is at the "last mile."
- Scale the data-driven, community-led model into a national HPV programme.
- Use behavioural nudges and trusted messengers to counter hesitancy.
- Integrate with school health and maternal-child health schemes.
HPV / cervical cancer RBSK Behavioural "nudges" PM Surakshit Matritva Abhiyan
MCQ: Public health
Consider the following statements:
- The Human Papillomavirus (HPV) is associated with cervical cancer.
- HPV vaccination is most effective when administered before exposure, typically in early adolescence.
- Rashtriya Bal Swasthya Karyakram (RBSK) is a child-health screening programme.
- 1 and 2 only
- 2 and 3 only
- 1 and 3 only
- 1, 2 and 3
Navy foils piracy in the Gulf of Aden
Context
The Indian Navy's INS Trikand foiled a piracy attempt on the Thoothukudi-bound bulk carrier MV Golden Arsenal in the Gulf of Aden; the International Maritime Organization (IMO) warned that three other ships remain held by pirates — one with an Indian crew member.
Background & Key Facts
- The operation: Responding to a distress call, INS Trikand (deployed for anti-piracy patrols) swiftly intercepted, launched its helicopter and secured the vessel; the crew (including five Indians) sheltered in the ship's "citadel" (fortified refuge).
- IMO alert: The IMO urged coordinated international intervention to secure the release of crews across three vessels held by pirates, amid rising incidents in the region.
- India's role: The operation reflects India's posture as a "net security provider" and "first responder" in the Indian Ocean Region, safeguarding merchant shipping and countering piracy off the Horn of Africa.
Resurgent piracy: A rise in Gulf of Aden/Somali-coast piracy threatens global trade and Indian seafarers, demanding sustained naval presence.
Net security provider: Rapid Indian Navy response reinforces India's credibility in Indian Ocean maritime security.
Coordination: Multi-national cooperation and the IMO's role are essential to secure hostages and deter piracy.
- Sustain anti-piracy patrols and maritime domain awareness.
- Deepen multi-national coordination and IMO-led frameworks.
- Protect Indian seafarers and merchant shipping.
Gulf of Aden IMO Net security provider Anti-piracy operations
MCQ: Maritime geography
The Gulf of Aden lies between the Arabian Peninsula and which region?
- The Horn of Africa
- The Persian Gulf
- The Bay of Bengal
- The Mediterranean coast
GST's import-driven surge & inflation
Context
An editorial ("Unwelcome surge") notes that June's 13.9% GST growth, "largely driven by imported inflation," is a concern — because the buoyancy is powered by rising import values rather than robust domestic demand.
Background & Key Facts
- Import-led jump: Domestic-transaction GST grew a modest 6.5%, while petroleum and other import-linked collections rose sharply; June crude and oil imports were elevated (West Asia crisis), so higher import prices mechanically raised the tax base.
- Inflation, not demand: A large slice of the "surge" reflects imported inflation and price effects rather than a genuine rise in domestic consumption or output.
- Unfinished reforms: After nine years, GST still faces an inverted duty structure (worsened after last September's rate rationalisation), input-tax-credit issues, and multiple registrations; petroleum, electricity, fertilizers and refinery products remain outside/partly outside GST.
Misleading buoyancy: Headline growth driven by imported inflation overstates economic health and can mask weak domestic demand.
Structural drag: The inverted duty structure blocks working capital and hurts domestic manufacturing competitiveness.
Reform imperative: Bringing petroleum/ATF into GST and fixing refunds would deepen the tax and cut cascading.
- Correct the inverted duty structure and speed input-tax-credit refunds.
- Phase petroleum/natural gas into GST via Council consensus.
- Strengthen domestic manufacturing to reduce import reliance.
Imported inflation Inverted duty structure Input Tax Credit GST Council
MCQ: Taxation
"Imported inflation" occurs when:
- A rise in the prices of imported goods raises domestic price levels
- The government imports inflation-indexed bonds
- Domestic demand alone drives up prices
- Exports become cheaper
Uniform rules for cell & gene therapies
Context
The Centre amended the Drugs Rules to bring cell-derived products, gene-therapeutic products and other emerging technologies under the ambit of the Central Licence Approving Authority (CLAA) framework — strengthening regulatory oversight.
Background & Key Facts
- The change: The amendment brings stem-cell-derived products, gene-therapy products and other novel biologicals under uniform national regulation via the CLAA, aimed at consistent, advanced oversight.
- Why it matters: Cell and gene therapies (CGTs) are a fast-emerging frontier of medicine (e.g., CAR-T for cancers); uniform standards are needed to ensure safety, efficacy and quality while enabling innovation.
- Scope: The rules can be expanded to cover additional emerging technologies, keeping regulation abreast of scientific advances.
Safety & innovation balance: Uniform national oversight prevents a patchwork of standards while safeguarding patients from unproven therapies.
Regulatory capacity: Regulating complex biologicals demands specialised scientific expertise and testing infrastructure.
Access & cost: CGTs are expensive; regulation must be paired with affordability and equitable access.
- Build specialised regulatory capacity for advanced biologicals.
- Balance rigorous safety with speed to enable innovation.
- Address affordability and ethical oversight of gene therapies.
Cell & gene therapy CLAA / Drugs Rules CDSCO Biologicals
MCQ: Biotech regulation
"Gene therapy," in the news, refers broadly to:
- Treating disease by modifying or introducing genetic material into a patient's cells
- Genetic modification of crops only
- DNA fingerprinting for forensics
- A method of vaccine cold-chain storage
Citizenship & the burden of proof (Assam)
Context
The External Affairs Ministry clarified that a passport was not proof of citizenship for a resident of Assam who could not convince the Gauhati High Court that the 15 documents he possessed established him as an Indian, not a foreigner.
Background & Key Facts
- The case: A Bench of the Gauhati High Court upheld a Foreigners Tribunal order declaring the man a foreigner, finding "inconsistencies" in his documents; his 15 papers included a 1951 National Register of Citizens (NRC) entry, land records, voter-identity cards, a permanent-account-number card and an original land purchase deed of 1973.
- Passport not conclusive: The MEA reiterated that a passport is not conclusive proof of citizenship — a recurring theme amid the SIR and citizenship-documentation debates.
- Wider context: Assam's Foreigners Tribunals and the NRC process place the burden of proof on the individual, making documentary consistency critical.
Documentation burden: Placing the onus on individuals — often poor and with fragmentary records — risks wrongful exclusion of genuine citizens.
Passport paradox: Even holders of multiple official documents can be declared foreigners, exposing gaps in how citizenship is proved.
Due process: Consistency requirements and tribunal procedures need safeguards against arbitrary determinations.
- Ensure fair, well-reasoned tribunal procedures and appeals.
- Clarify which documents establish citizenship and residence.
- Provide legal aid to those facing citizenship determination.
NRC Foreigners Tribunals Citizenship Act Burden of proof
MCQ: Citizenship
Consider the following statements:
- A passport is conclusive proof of Indian citizenship.
- Foreigners Tribunals in Assam adjudicate questions of nationality.
- The National Register of Citizens relates to the identification of citizens.
- 2 and 3 only
- 1 and 2 only
- 1 and 3 only
- 1, 2 and 3
EPFO's new PF Rules & the pension question
Context
The Labour Ministry notified new PF Rules (EPF, EPS, EDLI Schemes, 2026) to replace the old rules of 1952 — but unions allege there is "no word" on a hike in the minimum pension.
Background & Key Facts
- New rules: Aligned with the Code on Social Security, 2020, they cover the EPF Scheme 2026, the Employees' Pension Scheme 2026 and the EDLI Scheme; the Central Board of Trustees (CBT) approved them, and the Ministry says they provide a legally sound framework.
- Pension unchanged: The current EPS provision that 8.33% of the employer's contribution goes to the pension fund, with the Central government contributing 1.16% up to a wage ceiling of ₹15,000, remains — the long-standing demand to raise the minimum pension (currently ₹1,000) is not addressed.
- Union view: Trade unions call the amendments "cosmetic," saying they fail to increase the minimum pension or raise the wage ceiling; the government says the wage ceiling and pension "can be changed" later.
Adequacy gap: A ₹1,000 minimum pension is widely seen as inadequate for dignified retirement, especially amid inflation.
Code alignment: Aligning rules with the Social Security Code is a step toward consolidation, but implementation and benefit levels matter most.
Wage ceiling: The ₹15,000 ceiling limits pension benefits for many formal-sector workers.
- Review the minimum pension and wage ceiling for adequacy.
- Complete rollout of the Social Security Code with clear benefits.
- Extend coverage toward informal and gig workers.
EPS / EPF / EDLI Code on Social Security, 2020 Central Board of Trustees Wage ceiling ₹15,000
MCQ: Social security
Consider the following statements:
- The Employees' Pension Scheme (EPS) is administered by the EPFO.
- The Code on Social Security, 2020 is one of the four labour codes.
- The EPFO functions under the Ministry of Finance.
- 1 and 2 only
- 2 and 3 only
- 1 and 3 only
- 1, 2 and 3
Fuel prices, OMC losses & the crude lag
Context
The Petroleum Minister said domestic fuel prices "will fall only after cheaper crude reaches India," as Oil Marketing Companies (OMCs) were selling fuel derived from crude bought months ago at elevated prices — incurring a ₹74,781-crore loss in the June quarter on petrol, diesel and LPG.
Background & Key Facts
- The lag: Prices reflect crude bought earlier when prices were elevated (West Asia crisis); relief will come only when cheaper crude physically arrives — a "stock lag."
- OMC losses: OMCs booked losses of about ₹41.45 lakh crore-scale figures across products — roughly ₹19,900 crore on petrol, ₹31,000 crore on diesel and ₹24,148 crore on LPG (the LPG price was held under a control order).
- Sourcing shift: India bought crude "at the price available," including buying Russian gasoline and sourcing through traders — reflecting supply-chain adjustments amid the Hormuz-linked disruption. India held stocks sufficient for ~76–80 days.
Import vulnerability: With ~90% crude import dependence, geopolitical price spikes hit fiscal balances and consumer prices with a lag.
OMC finances: Holding prices to shield consumers erodes OMC profits and may need eventual pass-through or subsidy.
Diversification imperative: The episode reinforces the case for diversified sourcing and strategic reserves (and domestic substitutes like DME).
- Expand the strategic petroleum reserve and diversify crude sources.
- Accelerate renewables, EVs and domestic substitutes to cut import dependence.
- Balance consumer relief with OMC financial health.
Oil Marketing Companies Strategic Petroleum Reserve Crude import dependence Under-recovery
MCQ: Energy economy
Consider the following statements:
- India imports the bulk of its crude oil requirements.
- Oil Marketing Companies (OMCs) refine and retail petroleum products.
- Domestic retail fuel prices instantly reflect changes in global crude prices on the same day.
- 1 and 2 only
- 2 and 3 only
- 1 and 3 only
- 1, 2 and 3
Adani–IHC's $11.5-bn aluminium project
Context
Adani Enterprises and Abu Dhabi's International Holding Company (IHC) Group signed an MoU to develop an integrated greenfield aluminium project in Odisha worth about $11.5 billion (₹1.08 lakh crore).
Background & Key Facts
- The venture: A proposed 50:50 joint venture to build an integrated smelter, alumina refinery, captive power (~4,000 MW) and a bauxite mine — a rare integrated metallurgical complex; it marks the first Foreign Direct Investment in metals by IHC in India.
- Rationale: Adani cites low-cost, growing-demand energy as the advantage; aluminium is entering an "already crowded market" but is a strategic metal for green transition (EVs, grids, solar).
- Location logic: Odisha offers bauxite, an enabling industrial ecosystem and infrastructure; the project would be supported by a dedicated industrial park.
FDI & value addition: Large integrated investment can deepen India's metals value chain and create jobs, aiding "Make in India."
Green-transition metal: Aluminium demand is rising for EVs and renewables, but smelting is energy-intensive — decarbonisation is key.
Environmental & social care: Bauxite mining and large power needs require strict environmental and community safeguards.
- Pursue low-carbon, energy-efficient smelting.
- Ensure environmental clearances and community rights (Fifth Schedule areas).
- Leverage aluminium for the green-transition value chain.
Bauxite / aluminium Greenfield FDI Odisha minerals Captive power
MCQ: Minerals & industry
Bauxite is the principal ore of which metal?
- Copper
- Aluminium
- Zinc
- Iron
Submarine cable linking India, Malaysia, Singapore
Context
A consortium including Microsoft, Singtel, Tata Communications and AI connectivity platform Lightstorm unveiled a submarine cable system connecting India, Malaysia and Singapore.
Background & Key Facts
- The system (I2SEA): Designed to cater to the rapidly growing demand from hyperscalers, GPU infrastructure and enterprises, it aims to make India's emerging data hubs a landing zone across the India–Southeast Asia corridor.
- Dual landings: The cable will feature two low-latency east-coast landings in India (Visakhapatnam and Chennai), connecting directly to Singapore and Malaysia via a diverse route, boosting resilience.
- Why it matters: Submarine cables carry the vast majority of international data; more low-latency capacity underpins the AI/cloud economy, digital services and India's ambition as a data-centre destination.
Digital backbone: Undersea cables are strategic infrastructure; more capacity strengthens India's role in the global data economy.
AI/data-centre push: Low-latency links are essential for hyperscale cloud and AI workloads — tying into India's data-centre and sovereign-compute ambitions.
Security & resilience: Cable routes are vulnerable to damage and geopolitics; route diversity and protection are vital.
- Expand submarine-cable and data-centre infrastructure with route diversity.
- Strengthen cable-protection and cyber-security frameworks.
- Leverage capacity for the AI/cloud and digital-services economy.
Submarine cables Hyperscalers / data centres Latency Digital infrastructure
MCQ: Digital infrastructure
Submarine communication cables primarily carry:
- Electricity for offshore platforms only
- The bulk of international internet and data traffic
- Only military communications
- Freshwater between countries
Space oncology: cancer research in microgravity
Context
As India's cancer burden rises (an estimated 1.87 million new cases likely by 2026), "space oncology" — studying how microgravity and cosmic radiation affect cancer progression and treatment — is a rapidly emerging field.
Background & Key Facts
- What it is: Space is a natural laboratory for studying cancer biology; microgravity changes how tumour cells adhere, migrate, proliferate and express genes, revealing signalling pathways central to metastasis and drug resistance.
- Faster drug discovery: Microgravity enables more uniform protein crystals and better-quality biologics; it can hasten drug discovery and reduce animal testing, and helps grow 3D "organoid" tumour models that behave more like real tumours.
- Investments & approvals: The US FDA has approved space-grown crystal-based versions of some cancer drugs; agencies (NASA, ISRO) and companies are investing. The space-oncology market (~$1.5 billion in 2025) is projected to reach ~$9.8 billion by 2034, aided by falling launch costs and commercial space stations/CubeSats.
- Regulation: Regulators (US FDA, UK CAA/MHRA) are streamlining inter-agency frameworks; "dual-regulation" hurdles previously slowed space-based pharmacology.
New frontier: Microgravity research can accelerate cancer drug discovery and better tumour models — valuable given India's rising cancer burden.
Cost & access: High launch and manufacturing costs (falling, but real) and regulatory complexity remain barriers.
Opportunity for India: With growing space (ISRO) and pharma strengths, India could participate in this emerging biotech-space convergence.
- Leverage India's space (ISRO) and pharma strengths for space-based research.
- Streamline regulation for space-based pharmacology.
- Invest in low-cost access (CubeSats, commercial platforms).
Microgravity Space oncology Protein crystallisation Organoids / CubeSats
MCQ: Space science & health
"Microgravity," used in space research, refers to:
- A condition of apparent weightlessness where gravitational effects are very small
- The complete absence of any gravity
- The gravity of very small planets
- A type of cosmic radiation
Strait of Hormuz: approved routes & the Doha talks
Context
Iran told tankers to use its designated (approved) routes through the Strait of Hormuz, coordinating with the newly created Persian Gulf Strait Authority; separately, Qatar reported "positive progress" in U.S.–Iran indirect talks in Doha.
Background & Key Facts
- Iran's directive: Iran's military command asked ships to comply with its "safe response" and use only its approved navigation routes, warning of a "forceful response" otherwise — reasserting control over transit.
- The talks: Negotiators reported "positive progress" in Doha; parties agreed to continue, but talks are not expected to involve high-level Iranian officials directly, and centre on implementing the interim MoU.
- India stakes: The uncertainty directly affects India's crude/LPG supply and shipping (Indian ships have awaited transit clearances), reinforcing the fuel-price and freight pressures seen elsewhere.
Control asserted: Mandating "approved routes" institutionalises Iran's grip over the strait, testing freedom of navigation under UNCLOS.
Fragile de-escalation: "Positive progress" is welcome, but the absence of high-level engagement leaves the situation precarious.
India's exposure: Continued Hormuz uncertainty keeps energy-security and shipping risks elevated.
- Support a stable, UNCLOS-consistent transit framework.
- Diversify energy imports and build domestic substitutes.
- Protect Indian shipping via diplomacy and contingency planning.
Strait of Hormuz UNCLOS Persian Gulf Strait Authority Freedom of navigation
MCQ: Maritime chokepoints
Which of the following borders the Strait of Hormuz?
- Iran
- Oman
- United Arab Emirates
- 1 and 2 only
- 1 and 3 only
- 2 and 3 only
- 1, 2 and 3
Welfare promises vs fiscal constraints (States)
Context
An economic note argues that the West Bengal government's strategy — relying on higher central transfers and a sharp projected rise in tax collections to fund pre-poll welfare promises while cutting the deficit — could put both its fiscal targets and political commitments under pressure.
Background & Key Facts
- The balancing act: The first Budget of the new WB government tries to accommodate pre-poll promises (e.g., dearness-allowance hikes for staff) while simultaneously reducing the fiscal deficit — budgeting total expenditure of about ₹4.28 lakh crore.
- Revenue optimism: A projected ~9.85% GSDP growth and a sharp rise in tax collections (~₹75,618 crore) are needed to fund the plan; but if these projections fail, either the deficit target or the welfare promises will come under strain.
- Scheme choices: The Lakshmir Bhandar scheme (covering ~2.4 crore women) contrasts with a smaller Annapurna Yojana; the government has raised the DA by 20% and announced the 7th Pay Commission, adding to committed expenditure.
- Capex squeeze: Capital expenditure is proposed to rise ~2 percentage points, but committed spending (salaries, pensions, interest, welfare) limits fiscal space.
Welfare vs. capex: Heavy committed and welfare spending crowds out capital expenditure needed for growth and jobs.
Optimistic assumptions: Fiscal plans hinge on ambitious growth and tax-buoyancy projections that may not materialise.
Federal dependence: Reliance on central transfers ties State finances to the Centre's devolution decisions.
- Improve own-tax buoyancy and realistic revenue projections.
- Protect capital expenditure while sustaining essential welfare.
- Adhere to a credible fiscal-consolidation path.
Fiscal deficit Committed vs capital expenditure Tax buoyancy Central transfers
MCQ: State finances
Consider the following statements:
- Capital expenditure creates assets or reduces liabilities.
- Salaries, pensions and interest payments are examples of committed (revenue) expenditure.
- "Tax buoyancy" measures how tax revenue responds to changes in GDP/the tax base.
- 1 and 2 only
- 2 and 3 only
- 1 and 3 only
- 1, 2 and 3
Manipur's renewed Kuki–Naga violence
Context
Manipur's trail of violence widened after an armed group attacked and torched a Kuki village in Noney district around 3 a.m., signalling a fresh Kuki–Naga dimension to the State's long conflict.
Background & Key Facts
- The attack: Armed Naga groups allegedly torched the Kuki village (Phaimol); Kuki extremists reportedly destroyed Naga villages elsewhere. The incident happened near the India–Myanmar border, where camps sheltering Burmese refugees were also reportedly burnt.
- Groups involved: The National Socialist Council of Nagaland (Isak-Muivah faction) and the Shanni Nationalist Army were named; villagers armed with sophisticated firearms tried to defend the village.
- Trigger: The incident followed the vacating of an Assam Rifles post; the Kuki Inpi condemned the "inadequate security arrangements" and demanded immediate government intervention.
Widening fault lines: A Kuki–Naga dimension adds to the Meitei–Kuki conflict, complicating an already fragile situation.
Security vacuum: The withdrawal of a security post preceded the attack, underscoring the need for sustained security presence.
Border & refugee dimension: Cross-border links (Myanmar, refugees, arms) deepen the internal-security challenge.
- Restore security presence and protect vulnerable villages.
- Pursue inclusive dialogue and confidence-building across communities.
- Address border management, arms flows and rehabilitation.
Manipur ethnic conflict NSCN (IM) Assam Rifles India–Myanmar border
MCQ: Northeast security
The Assam Rifles, deployed in the Northeast, is:
- A State police force of Assam
- A Central Armed Police Force administered by the Ministry of Home Affairs (operationally under the Army)
- A wing of the Indian Navy
- A paramilitary force under the Ministry of Defence only
Polity, Economy & World Roundup
Polity & governance
- VB-G RAM G rolled out from an A.P. village: The Union Agriculture Minister launched the nationwide Viksit Bharat-Guarantee for Rozgar and Aajeevika Mission (Gramin) from Mukkavaripalli village (Tirupati district); the CM said spending on the scheme is "not a burden but a responsibility" of States (₹7,700 crore by the Centre, ₹4,000 crore borne by States).
- West Bengal UCC Bill panel: The WB Cabinet cleared a committee (headed by a retired SC judge) to study the draft Uniform Civil Code Bill, likely to be introduced in the Assembly, examining marriage, succession and live-in relationships (with tribal communities exempted).
- Maharashtra withholds RTI amendments: The State said it will restore the position that existed before recent amendments to the RTI Rules — a transparency-related climb-down.
Security & the world
- Amarnath Yatra begins: Over 4,800 pilgrims set off from Jammu in a convoy of 259 vehicles; security on the twin routes was stepped up using AI technology and drones.
- Nord Stream sabotage ruling: German prosecutors said the Ukrainian state ordered the 2022 bomb attacks on the Nord Stream gas pipelines, as Russia hammered Kyiv and Ukraine struck Moscow's oil sector — deepening the energy-war dimension of the conflict.
- Sarla Bhat chargesheet: The J&K SIA filed a chargesheet in the 1990 killing of a young Kashmiri Pandit nurse — among the first targeted attacks on Pandits after the 1989 insurgency — seen by her family and community as "a step towards justice."
VB-G RAM G Uniform Civil Code RTI Act Nord Stream
MCQ: Current affairs mix
Consider the following statements:
- The Amarnath Yatra is undertaken in the Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir.
- The Nord Stream pipelines were built to carry natural gas from Russia to Europe.
- A Uniform Civil Code is referred to in the Fundamental Rights chapter of the Constitution.
- 1 and 2 only
- 2 and 3 only
- 1 and 3 only
- 1, 2 and 3
📝 Quick Prelims Revision — MCQ Bank
Q1 — International relations
The Quad comprises which of the following countries?
- India, Japan, USA, Australia
- India, Japan, USA, South Korea
- India, China, Russia, Japan
- India, Japan, France, Australia
Q2 — Constitution
The right against prolonged undertrial detention is best anchored in which Article?
- Article 14
- Article 19
- Article 21
- Article 25
Q3 — Health
HPV vaccination is primarily aimed at preventing which cancer?
- Lung cancer
- Cervical cancer
- Skin cancer
- Blood cancer
Q4 — Geography
The Bab-el-Mandeb strait connects the Red Sea to which body of water?
- The Persian Gulf
- The Gulf of Aden
- The Mediterranean Sea
- The Caspian Sea
Q5 — Economy
Bauxite, in the news, is chiefly associated with the production of:
- Steel
- Aluminium
- Copper
- Cement
❓ FAQs
Frequently asked exam-oriented questions — 3 July 2026 edition
Why did the Supreme Court set aside the NCLT order that used AI-generated case law?
Why is prolonged undertrial imprisonment a constitutional concern?
What makes Mandsaur's HPV vaccination model important for UPSC?
Why is a passport not conclusive proof of Indian citizenship?
How do the India–Japan summit and the Hormuz crisis connect for exam answers?
Take the Next Step
Qualify Prelims? Start Mains Prep with Legacy IAS
Expert faculty, structured GS & Optional guidance, and Bangalore's most trusted UPSC coaching — all under one roof.
Jayanagar, Bengaluru · Classroom & Online · legacyias.com
Analysis based on The Hindu, Bengaluru City Edition, 3 July 2026. Prepared for academic use. Static background and frameworks added for exam preparation; original article text has been paraphrased, not reproduced.


