The Hindu — UPSC Analysis
Monday, 6 July 2026
Bengaluru City Edition · Curated for Prelims & Mains | GS I · II · III · IV
📋 Today's Topics
- The right to belong beyond official documentationGS2
- India–Japan: ring-fencing ties from multilateral accordsGS2
- Hormuz to home: India's resilience in uncertain timesGS3
- A second home for the Asiatic lionGS3
- The Tenth Schedule tangle in MaharashtraGS2
- Questioning U.P.'s "revenue surplus"GS3
- Odisha's SIR draft rolls & 20 lakh deletionsGS2
- EPFO's PF changes: reform or tinkering?GS3
- VB-G RAM G: ₹25,863 crore & centralised planningGS2 · GS3
- Meta & child-abuse ads: intermediary dutyGS2 · GS3
- Gas curbs eased as LNG shipments normaliseGS3
- ISRO tests SOLVE for the Gaganyaan missionGS3
- Climate change & the fall in milk productionGS3
- A synthetic cell that can grow & divideGS3
- The 130th Amendment & the removal of MinistersGS2
- New NPS withdrawal rules for retirementGS3
- Polity, S&T & World RoundupGS2 · GS3
- Quick Prelims Revision (MCQ Bank)Prelims
- FAQsRevision
The right to belong beyond official documentation
Context
An editorial argues that citizenship should rest on "personhood," not paperwork — responding to the MEA's clarification that a passport is not conclusive proof of citizenship, and to citizenship-scrutiny exercises like the SIR and Assam's Foreigners Tribunals.
Background & Key Facts
- The trigger: The MEA said a passport is a "travel document," not a "citizenship document," and that a passport can be cancelled for reasons other than citizenship — raising concern amid the SIR (in Bihar/Bengal) and Assam's citizenship scrutiny.
- Constitutional foundation: The Constituent Assembly rejected a proposal to make citizenship turn on being born to citizen parents; leaders like Nehru opposed a purely religious/exclusionary basis, and Ambedkar steered a nationality clause based on residence and non-discrimination.
- The legal shift: India adopted jus soli at independence; over time the law has moved toward jus sanguinis. The 2019 amendment and rewritten rules, plus Section 6A of the Citizenship Act (upheld by the SC in 2024, effective in Assam), have complicated proof of citizenship.
- The argument: Under the Constitution, basic privileges are premised on personhood (Article 14 guarantees equality "to any person"; Article 21, the right to life and liberty); citizenship should not be reduced to documents alone.
Paperwork ≠ belonging: Making citizenship hinge on fragmentary documents risks excluding genuine citizens, especially the poor.
Constitutional vision: The framers favoured an inclusive, residence-based nationality over an exclusionary one.
Due process: Citizenship determination must protect personhood and equal protection under Articles 14 and 21.
- Ground citizenship determination in due process and personhood.
- Avoid conflating documentation gaps with illegality.
- Provide legal aid and fair appeals in citizenship cases.
Jus soli vs jus sanguinis Section 6A (Citizenship Act) Articles 14 & 21 Foreigners Tribunals
MCQ: Citizenship law
Consider the following statements:
- India adopted the principle of jus soli for citizenship at the commencement of the Constitution.
- Section 6A of the Citizenship Act relates to citizenship of persons covered by the Assam Accord.
- Under the Constitution, the right to equality (Article 14) is available only to citizens.
- 1 and 2 only
- 2 and 3 only
- 1 and 3 only
- 1, 2 and 3
India–Japan: ring-fencing ties from multilateral accords
Context
An editorial ("Two together") notes that during PM Takaichi's visit, India and Japan chose to ring-fence their bilateral ties from multilateral accords — signing 14 agreements and documents, including a joint statement on energy resilience.
Background & Key Facts
- The strategy: Amid Indo-Pacific rivalries and the "Free and Open Indo-Pacific" (FOIP) posture, both sides insulated their bilateral relationship from wider multilateral entanglements, focusing on concrete deliverables.
- Energy resilience: A commitment born of the Hormuz/West Asia crisis — both are import-dependent and sourced crude via the region's chokepoints; Japan backs India's crude stockpiling.
- Regional balance: Japan flagged concern over China's "coercive activities"; the two agreed to connect Japan's tech with India's talent, and to link the India–Japan pipeline (via projects in Bangladesh/Northeast) to the Pacific Ocean.
Pragmatic bilateralism: Ring-fencing shields the relationship from the uncertainties of larger, slower multilateral processes.
Energy security: Joint resilience reflects shared vulnerability to Gulf disruptions and the value of diversification.
China factor: Deeper ties help balance China, even as India manages its own China relationship.
- Deliver on defence, tech and energy deliverables with time-bound execution.
- Deepen supply-chain and connectivity projects (Northeast, Indo-Pacific).
- Balance bilateral depth with multilateral (Quad) engagement.
FOIP Quad Energy resilience Maritime Domain Awareness
MCQ: India–Japan ties
The "Free and Open Indo-Pacific" (FOIP) vision is most closely associated with the foreign policy of:
- Japan
- Russia
- Brazil
- South Africa
Hormuz to home: India's resilience in uncertain times
Context
An opinion piece argues that India navigated the Strait of Hormuz crisis with "remarkable resilience," keeping inflation broadly in check through a calibrated, whole-of-government energy-management strategy. (Opinion; the strategy is exam-relevant.)
Background & Key Facts
- The response: Continuous engagement with shipping companies, diplomatic channels, maritime authorities and international partners ensured the safe movement of Indian-flagged vessels; timely intervention kept confidence high when uncertainty was at its peak.
- Energy-management strategy: A whole-of-government approach — Ministries, State governments, municipal authorities, oil marketing companies and industry — ensured uninterrupted supply while widening diversification; the use of piped natural gas (PNG) helped moderate inflationary pressures.
- Preparedness: India has steadily expanded refining capacity, diversified crude sourcing, strengthened strategic petroleum reserves, built gas infrastructure, and pursued the clean-energy transition — building macroeconomic stability and momentum.
- Macro backdrop: The RBI kept its inflation target broadly on course, and India remained among the fastest-growing major economies, supported by strong domestic demand.
Resilience, not immunity: No economy can fully insulate itself from geopolitical shocks; India's response bought time but underlying import dependence remains.
Coordination pays: A whole-of-government approach and diversified sourcing cushioned the shock.
Structural fix pending: Long-term security needs domestic substitutes (DME), reserves and the energy transition.
- Expand strategic reserves and diversify crude/LNG sourcing.
- Accelerate the clean-energy transition and domestic substitutes.
- Institutionalise whole-of-government crisis coordination.
Strait of Hormuz Strategic Petroleum Reserve PNG / LNG Force majeure
MCQ: Energy security
The term "force majeure," used in the context of gas/energy supply, refers to:
- An unforeseeable event beyond parties' control that excuses contractual obligations
- A government tax on fuels
- A type of pipeline technology
- A trade-surplus condition
A second home for the Asiatic lion
Context
An opinion piece argues that India's conservation of the Asiatic lion — though a success story (population up to ~891) — needs a second home, as concentrating the entire population in Gir makes it vulnerable to a single catastrophic event.
Background & Key Facts
- The risk: The whole wild population lives in and around Gir (Gujarat); concentration in one landscape leaves lions exposed to disease outbreaks (e.g., the 2018 Canine Distemper Virus deaths) and inbreeding.
- The Supreme Court order: In its 2013 judgment, the SC directed the translocation of some lions to Kuno National Park (Madhya Pradesh) for the species' long-term survival — an order Gujarat has resisted.
- The metapopulation approach: Conservation science favours multiple populations across landscapes to reduce disproportionate effects of localised disease or disaster; "one population confined to one landscape is inherently vulnerable."
- From success to security: Establishing a second, free-ranging population is the next conservation step to move from numbers to genuine ecological resilience.
Single-population risk: Numbers alone mask fragility; a disease or disaster could wipe out the species.
Federal & institutional friction: State resistance to a court-ordered translocation reflects "prestige" politics over science.
Science over sentiment: The metapopulation model is the ecologically sound path to resilience.
- Establish a second free-ranging population (e.g., Kuno).
- Implement the metapopulation approach for genetic and disease resilience.
- Resolve Centre–State friction in the species' interest.
Asiatic lion (Gir) Kuno National Park Metapopulation Canine Distemper Virus
MCQ: Wildlife conservation
The Asiatic lion's only wild population in India is found in:
- Gir (Gujarat)
- Kuno (Madhya Pradesh)
- Ranthambore (Rajasthan)
- Bandipur (Karnataka)
The Tenth Schedule tangle in Maharashtra
Context
A "State of Play" piece argues that the "grey areas" in the Tenth Schedule (anti-defection law) need urgent revisiting, drawing on the Maharashtra Legislative Council disqualification tangle.
Background & Key Facts
- The case: An MLC who switched political allegiance faces disqualification proceedings; the dispute turns on the role of the presiding officer (Chairperson/Deputy Chairperson) in deciding disqualification petitions.
- Paragraph 6: Under the Tenth Schedule, the Speaker/Chairperson decides disqualification questions — but a member cannot be disqualified "where his original party members" and the presiding officer's own position are entangled, creating conflict-of-interest and delay.
- SC concern: Courts have repeatedly flagged the tension between the original party and the legislature party, and the indefinite delay in deciding petitions — undermining the anti-defection law's purpose.
Presiding-officer bias: Leaving disqualification to a partisan Speaker/Chairperson invites conflict of interest and delay.
Indefinite delay: The absence of a time limit lets defectors enjoy office while petitions languish — defeating the law's intent.
Original vs legislature party: Ambiguity over which "party" counts fuels litigation and instability.
- Consider an independent tribunal for disqualification (as courts have suggested).
- Impose a time limit for deciding petitions.
- Clarify the "original party" ambiguity through reform.
Tenth Schedule Anti-defection law Presiding officer's role Kihoto Hollohan case
MCQ: Anti-defection
Under the Tenth Schedule, the authority to decide questions of disqualification on the ground of defection rests primarily with the:
- Presiding officer of the House (Speaker/Chairperson)
- Election Commission
- President/Governor
- Supreme Court only
Questioning U.P.'s "revenue surplus"
Context
A Data Point analysis argues that Uttar Pradesh's much-touted "revenue surplus" stems not from prudence but from the State's persistent inability to spend its own budget — a case of "prudence or inefficiency?"
Background & Key Facts
- The claim vs. reality: Drawing on CAG and RBI data, the analysis shows U.P.'s surplus is largely a by-product of underspending against its budget — it consistently spends less than budgeted, especially on capital expenditure.
- Weak revenue effort: Much of the gap between total revenue receipts and revenue expenditure reflects poor own-tax mobilisation and a reliance on central transfers, not efficient governance.
- Capex shortfall: The State's underspending pattern is worse on capital expenditure — the very spending that builds assets and drives growth — undermining development.
Surplus ≠ health: A revenue surplus from underspending signals administrative weakness, not fiscal prudence.
Capex neglect: Underspending on capital expenditure sacrifices long-term growth and infrastructure.
Own-revenue effort: Over-reliance on central transfers reflects weak own-tax mobilisation.
- Improve budget absorption and capital-expenditure execution.
- Strengthen own-tax mobilisation and expenditure quality.
- Report fiscal health beyond headline surplus figures.
Revenue surplus/deficit Capital vs revenue expenditure CAG Own-tax revenue
MCQ: Public finance
A "revenue surplus" arises when:
- Revenue receipts exceed revenue expenditure
- Total receipts exceed total expenditure
- Capital receipts exceed capital expenditure
- Borrowings exceed repayments
Odisha's SIR draft rolls & 20 lakh deletions
Context
Odisha's draft electoral rolls were published after the Special Intensive Revision (SIR), with about 20 lakh names deleted; the BJD criticised the EC over "inconsistency" in the figures.
Background & Key Facts
- The numbers: Over 20 lakh names were removed from Odisha's draft rolls; the CEO cited deaths, permanent migration and untraceable/duplicate electors. Claims and objections can be filed until a stated deadline, with the final roll due later.
- The process: Booth-Level Officers verified enrolment; aggrieved electors can apply (Form-6) to be included, and special camps are to be held to enrol young/eligible voters. Over 37,000 names were also excluded in Sikkim's SIR.
- The dispute: The BJD alleged inconsistency in the figures the EC provided; the exercise mirrors concerns raised in Bihar/Bengal about deletions and disenfranchisement.
Purity vs. inclusion: Cleaning rolls of dead/duplicate/migrated electors is legitimate, but large deletions risk excluding genuine voters.
Transparency: Alleged inconsistencies in figures underline the need for a transparent, verifiable process.
Right to vote: Robust claims-and-objections and enrolment camps are essential to protect the franchise.
- Ensure transparent, verifiable deletion and grievance processes.
- Enable easy re-enrolment of wrongly deleted voters.
- Publish clear, consistent data to build trust.
Special Intensive Revision Booth-Level Officers Form-6 (enrolment) RPA, 1950
MCQ: Electoral rolls
The preparation and revision of electoral rolls is governed primarily by:
- The Representation of the People Act, 1950
- The Representation of the People Act, 1951
- The Delimitation Act
- The Anti-Defection Law
EPFO's PF changes: reform or tinkering?
Context
An editorial ("Old wine, new bottle") argues that the EPFO's recent changes to PF rules amount to signalling, not radical reform — chiefly making PF contributions above the wage ceiling voluntary.
Background & Key Facts
- The change: New rules under the EPF, EPS and EDLI Schemes (aligned with the Code on Social Security, 2020) make contributions above the ₹15,000 wage ceiling voluntary — a flexibility measure rather than a structural overhaul.
- What's unchanged: The long-standing demand to raise the minimum pension (currently ₹1,000) and the wage ceiling was not addressed; unions call the amendments "cosmetic."
- The critique: The editorial argues the government should apply the Code's provisions and simplify claim settlements, and that substantive EPFO reform (adequacy of benefits) remains pending.
Flexibility vs. adequacy: Making excess contributions voluntary offers choice but does nothing for pension adequacy.
Stagnant benefits: A ₹1,000 floor pension and a ₹15,000 ceiling are inadequate amid inflation.
Reform pending: True reform means benefit adequacy, simpler claims and wider coverage.
- Revisit the minimum pension and wage ceiling for adequacy.
- Simplify claim settlement and roll out the Social Security Code.
- Extend coverage toward gig and informal workers.
EPF / EPS / EDLI Code on Social Security, 2020 Wage ceiling ₹15,000 CBT (EPFO)
MCQ: Provident fund
The apex decision-making body of the EPFO is the:
- Central Board of Trustees
- Reserve Bank of India
- Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority
- National Pension System Trust
VB-G RAM G: ₹25,863 crore & centralised planning
Context
The Centre released the first instalment of ₹25,863 crore to States under VB-G RAM G (which replaced MGNREGA on July 1) — even as concerns persist over centralised planning and technological barriers.
Background & Key Facts
- The allocation: Uttar Pradesh received the highest allocation (₹3,210.76 crore), followed by Andhra Pradesh, Rajasthan and Tamil Nadu; Kerala received among the smallest (~₹925.33 crore).
- Planning shift: Work under the new Act is to be planned through a "Viksit Gram Panchayat Plan" (VGPP); a GIS-based, single digital master plan integrates 16 Ministries via PM Gati Shakti — a more centralised, technology-driven approach.
- Concerns: Critics fear centralised planning and a "guarantee-of-work" model shifting to a plan-driven one may weaken the demand-driven nature of the scheme, and that GIS/tech barriers could hamper access in less-connected areas.
Demand-driven vs. plan-driven: A shift toward centralised planning risks diluting MGNREGA's core demand-based guarantee.
Tech access gap: GIS/digital planning could exclude poorly connected panchayats and workers.
Federal balance: Centralised, integrated planning must not override local (gram sabha) priorities.
- Preserve the demand-driven guarantee alongside planning.
- Bridge digital/GIS gaps for equitable access.
- Respect gram-sabha priorities in integrated planning.
VB-G RAM G / MGNREGA PM Gati Shakti GIS-based planning Viksit Gram Panchayat Plan
MCQ: Rural employment
PM Gati Shakti, referenced in planning, is primarily a:
- National master plan for multimodal connectivity/infrastructure integration
- Direct cash-transfer scheme
- Crop insurance programme
- Foreign-trade policy
Meta & child-abuse ads: intermediary duty
Context
The government issued a notice to Meta over advertisements promoting explicit child content (CSEAM) on Instagram, ordering it to disable such ads and explain within seven days, with "further action" to follow.
Background & Key Facts
- The notice: The IT Ministry directed Instagram to disable such advertisements and content; a report had alleged Meta's ad algorithm was promoting child sexual abuse material to platform users.
- The law: Under Meta's own policy, ads must comply with community standards; under the POCSO Act, the IT Act and the IT (Intermediary) Rules, 2021, intermediaries have obligations to observe due diligence, and the safe-harbour exemption can be lost for failure to do so.
- Platform response: Meta said it has a "zero-tolerance" policy and deploys technology to detect such content, but the alleged ad-targeting linked users to channels (e.g., on Telegram) where the material was reportedly available.
Algorithmic harm: Ad algorithms surfacing CSEAM is a grave content-moderation failure demanding strict accountability.
Safe-harbour at stake: Failure of due diligence can strip intermediaries of legal immunity under Section 79.
Child safety first: Proactive detection and swift takedown are non-negotiable.
Sensitive topic; covered only for governance/exam context.
- Mandate proactive detection and rapid removal of CSEAM.
- Enforce intermediary due diligence and accountability.
- Strengthen child-safety-by-design and reporting to authorities.
CSEAM POCSO Act IT (Intermediary) Rules, 2021 Section 79 (safe harbour)
MCQ: Intermediary duty
An online intermediary can lose its "safe harbour" protection under the IT Act if it:
- Fails to observe due diligence or comply with government/court takedown directions
- Earns advertising revenue
- Has foreign investors
- Operates a paid service
Gas curbs eased as LNG shipments normalise
Context
The Union government withdrew most emergency provisions of an emergency natural-gas supply regulation order, as LNG shipments — threatened by the near-closure of the Strait of Hormuz — normalised.
Background & Key Facts
- The order: Under the (Natural Gas Supply Regulation) Order, 2026 — invoking force majeure — the government had allowed domestically produced gas to be sold as a priority to key consumers, diverting cargoes to priority users after the West Asia conflict disrupted supplies.
- Why India was exposed: India is the world's third-largest LNG importer; nearly 65% of its LNG comes via West Asia, so Hormuz disruption threatened supply.
- Normalisation: With shipments restored and traffic through Hormuz resuming, the emergency measures were withdrawn; the crisis had briefly triggered U.S.–Israeli strikes on Iran in February.
Import concentration: Heavy LNG reliance on West Asia leaves India exposed to chokepoint disruptions.
Crisis tools: Force-majeure-based prioritisation cushioned the shock but is a stopgap, not a structural fix.
Diversification imperative: Diversified LNG sourcing and domestic gas are strategic priorities.
- Diversify LNG sourcing and build storage/import terminals.
- Boost domestic gas and pipeline infrastructure.
- Maintain crisis-management protocols for supply shocks.
LNG imports Strait of Hormuz Force majeure Natural gas priority allocation
MCQ: Gas economy
India is among the world's largest importers of LNG. LNG stands for:
- Liquefied Natural Gas
- Low Nitrogen Gas
- Light Naphtha Gasoline
- Liquid Nuclear Generation
ISRO tests SOLVE for the Gaganyaan mission
Context
ISRO successfully conducted the first ground test of the solid motor-based platform SOLVE (Sub-Orbital Launch Vehicle for Experiments), which will be used for parachute tests of the Gaganyaan crew module.
Background & Key Facts
- The platform: SOLVE is derived from the PSLV strap-on motor; it will validate crew-module recovery, deceleration and parachute systems under realistic conditions.
- Integrated Air Drop Test: The crew module will be air-dropped and its parachutes tested at high altitude, before descent and splashdown in the sea — a key step in crew-safety validation.
- Gaganyaan: India's first human spaceflight programme; SOLVE supports the testing of crew-module recovery and human-rating, critical to astronaut safety.
Human-rating rigour: Crew-module recovery and parachute validation are essential to astronaut safety before crewed flight.
Indigenous capability: Deriving SOLVE from PSLV heritage showcases ISRO's cost-effective, self-reliant engineering.
Space ambitions: Gaganyaan anchors India's broader human-spaceflight and space-station roadmap.
- Complete rigorous human-rating and recovery tests.
- Build on Gaganyaan toward a space station and deep-space goals.
- Leverage indigenous, cost-effective engineering.
Gaganyaan SOLVE / PSLV Integrated Air Drop Test Human-rating
MCQ: Space programme
The SOLVE platform, in the news, is derived from which launch vehicle's motor?
- PSLV
- GSLV Mk III / LVM3
- SSLV
- RLV
Climate change & the fall in milk production
Context
A new study finds that global warming acutely affects dairy production across the Global South — especially the high-milk tract of Haryana — as heat stress makes lactating animals divert energy from milk to regulating body temperature, causing a 20–30% decline in milk yield.
Background & Key Facts
- The finding: Published in Scientific Reports, the study (spanning 2004–2019, across 1,148 villages) found high temperatures combined with high humidity in July–August "significantly reduced" milk production in buffaloes and cattle.
- Indigenous resilience: Indigenous cattle were more heat-tolerant, maintained homeostasis and had better evaporative cooling than buffaloes — the study urges conserving them as "reservoirs of climate-resilient traits."
- Economic stakes: India is the world's largest milk producer; a report in The Lancet estimates climate change could cut Indian milk production ~25% by 2085, hitting the livelihoods and nutrition of millions (80 million smallholder dairy farmers).
- Adaptation: Wallowing ponds, agroforestry, sprinklers/foggers, altered feeding and shed management can reduce heat stress.
Livelihood risk: Falling yields threaten smallholder incomes and national nutrition in the world's largest milk economy.
Indigenous breeds: Native cattle's heat tolerance is a genetic asset for climate-resilient dairying.
Adaptation gap: Smallholders often lack resources for cooling and resilience measures.
- Prioritise in-situ conservation of climate-resilient indigenous breeds.
- Support smallholders with heat-stress adaptation (cooling, feed, shed).
- Adopt a coordinated national climate-smart dairy strategy.
Heat stress / homeostasis Indigenous cattle breeds Temperature-humidity index India: largest milk producer
MCQ: Climate & livestock
Consider the following statements:
- India is the world's largest producer of milk.
- Heat stress can reduce milk yield in dairy animals.
- Indigenous cattle breeds were found to be less heat-tolerant than exotic/cross-bred cattle in the study.
- 1 and 2 only
- 2 and 3 only
- 1 and 3 only
- 1, 2 and 3
A synthetic cell that can grow & divide
Context
Researchers have developed a synthetic cell that can grow and divide — a "machine that could" self-replicate — built from a fatty bubble (liposome) containing the necessary machinery to turn genes into proteins.
Background & Key Facts
- The build: The team "started" the cell as a liposome (a small bubble of fats) containing a protein-making system (PURE) and a 90,000-base-pair synthetic DNA — the essential "machinery" of life.
- Grow & divide: By fusing with smaller liposomes and using an engineered mechanism to copy its DNA and split, the synthetic cell could grow and divide into daughter cells — faster-growing cells came to dominate the population (a form of selection).
- Significance: It advances "bottom-up" synthetic biology and understanding of the origins of life, though scientists caution the cell is engineered, not a natural life form.
Frontier science: Building life-like cells deepens understanding of biology and could enable programmable "living" tools.
Ethics & biosafety: Synthetic life raises questions of dual-use risk, biosafety and governance.
Early stage: The cell is a controlled construct, not a self-sustaining organism — hype must be tempered.
- Advance synthetic biology with strong biosafety and ethics frameworks.
- Support responsible dual-use governance.
- Invest in India's synthetic-biology research capacity.
Synthetic biology Liposome Synthetic cell Biosafety
MCQ: Synthetic biology
A "liposome," used in building synthetic cells, is:
- A small vesicle/bubble made of lipids (fats)
- A type of ribosome
- A strand of RNA
- A protein enzyme
The 130th Amendment & the removal of Ministers
Context
Ahead of the Monsoon Session, the ruling side is expected to push the Constitution (130th Amendment) Bill, which provides for the removal of the PM, CMs and Ministers if arrested and detained for 30 consecutive days; the Opposition says it is "prepared."
Background & Key Facts
- The clause: A Minister detained in custody for 30 straight days for serious offences would have to be removed from office.
- JPC process: The Joint Parliamentary Committee examined the Bill; the Opposition (INDIA bloc) largely boycotted, arguing it seeks to "sidestep the Constitution" and could be misused via investigative agencies.
- The debate: Supporters say the 30-day window gives adequate time to seek bail and is not violative of natural justice; critics warn it conflicts with the presumption of innocence and could target Opposition governments.
Integrity vs. innocence: Removing an unconvicted Minister sits in tension with "innocent until proven guilty."
Misuse risk: Central agencies could be used to trigger removals against opponents — a federal and separation-of-powers concern.
Safeguards essential: Any such power needs robust anti-misuse checks and judicial oversight.
- Build strong anti-misuse safeguards and time-bound judicial review.
- Ensure bipartisan scrutiny of constitutional changes.
- Balance probity in public life with due process.
Constitution Amendment (Art. 368) Joint Parliamentary Committee Council of Ministers Presumption of innocence
MCQ: Constitutional amendment
A Constitution Amendment Bill in India is introduced under which Article?
- Article 368
- Article 356
- Article 249
- Article 123
New NPS withdrawal rules for retirement
Context
New norms mean the National Pension System (NPS) "finally treats retirement money the way most people actually need it" — accessible without being reckless, and flexible without being chaotic.
Background & Key Facts
- The change: In December 2025, the PFRDA substantially amended NPS exit/withdrawal norms; the mandatory annuity portion has come down from 40% to 20% of the corpus, with subscribers able to withdraw up to 80% as a lump sum (against ~60% earlier).
- Systematic options: The Systematic Lump Sum Withdrawal (SLW) lets retirees draw down a chosen amount monthly/quarterly/annually up to 75% (now 80% in some cases) till 75, shifting from a one-time payout to a phased, structured drawdown.
- Retirement Income Scheme (RIS): A newer PFRDA option closely resembling a Systematic Withdrawal Plan gives retirees market-linked, flexible income; tax treatment varies by route.
- The trade-off: More access requires discipline — the main thing is that people don't withdraw faster than retirement actually needs.
Flexibility & risk: Higher lump-sum access improves choice but risks people exhausting savings too fast.
Annuity dilemma: Lower mandatory annuitisation gives freedom but less guaranteed lifelong income.
Financial literacy: The benefits depend on retirees managing structured drawdowns wisely.
- Pair flexibility with financial-literacy and advisory support.
- Encourage phased, sustainable drawdowns (SLW/RIS).
- Ensure clarity on tax treatment across withdrawal routes.
National Pension System PFRDA Annuity / SLW Retirement Income Scheme
MCQ: Pension system
The National Pension System (NPS) is regulated by:
- PFRDA
- SEBI
- IRDAI
- RBI
Polity, S&T & World Roundup
Governance & security
- BRICS anti-drugs meet: India hosted a meeting of BRICS Heads of Anti-Drug Agencies in Guwahati to strengthen synthetic-drug intelligence-sharing and operational cooperation — a step in tackling the drug trade.
- Caution on "foreign policy" accounts: The MEA issued a public advisory cautioning against social-media accounts and individuals that falsely claim official "foreign policy" links, amid a trend of impersonation.
Environment & culture
- Kaziranga's patrol elephant: Kaziranga bid farewell to Joymala, one of the longest-serving patrol elephants of the one-horned-rhino reserve — a reminder of the human–animal partnership in conservation.
- Pandavani legend passes: Padma-awardee Teejan Bai, who took the Chhattisgarhi Pandavani folk tradition of narrating the Mahabharata to the world, died at 70 — a note on India's intangible cultural heritage.
The world in brief
- Next India–US talks at Islamabad: Islamabad is emerging as the likely venue for the next round of U.S.–Iran technical negotiations (around July 11), focused on Iran's nuclear programme.
- China–Russia naval drills: China and Russia announced joint naval exercises off China's coast, with some forces moving to the Pacific — a signal of deepening strategic alignment.
BRICS Kaziranga (one-horned rhino) Pandavani (folk art) China–Russia naval drills
MCQ: Current affairs mix
Consider the following statements:
- Pandavani is a folk-singing tradition associated with Chhattisgarh.
- Kaziranga National Park is known for the one-horned rhinoceros.
- BRICS is a grouping that includes India, Brazil, Russia, China and South Africa (among others).
- 1 and 2 only
- 2 and 3 only
- 1 and 3 only
- 1, 2 and 3
📝 Quick Prelims Revision — MCQ Bank
Q1 — Polity
The anti-defection law is contained in which Schedule of the Constitution?
- Ninth Schedule
- Tenth Schedule
- Eleventh Schedule
- Twelfth Schedule
Q2 — Environment
Kuno National Park, in the news for wildlife translocation, is located in:
- Gujarat
- Madhya Pradesh
- Rajasthan
- Maharashtra
Q3 — Science & Tech
Gaganyaan is India's programme for:
- Human spaceflight
- A Mars orbiter
- A lunar rover
- A navigation satellite system
Q4 — Economy
In the National Pension System, the portion that must be used to buy an annuity was recently reduced to:
- 20% of the corpus
- 40% of the corpus
- 60% of the corpus
- 80% of the corpus
Q5 — Citizenship
Section 6A of the Citizenship Act, recently upheld by the Supreme Court, is linked to:
- The Assam Accord
- The Sri Lankan Tamil repatriation
- Overseas Citizenship of India
- The Indus Waters Treaty
❓ FAQs
Frequently asked exam-oriented questions — 6 July 2026 edition
Why does the editorial say citizenship should rest on "personhood," not paperwork?
Why does the Asiatic lion need a "second home"?
Why is U.P.'s "revenue surplus" being questioned?
What has changed in the NPS withdrawal rules?
How did climate change reduce India's milk production?
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Analysis based on The Hindu, Bengaluru City Edition, 6 July 2026. Prepared for academic use. Static background and frameworks added for exam preparation; original article text has been paraphrased, not reproduced.


