The Hindu — UPSC Analysis
Friday, 19 June 2026
Bengaluru City Edition · Curated for Prelims & Mains | GS I · II · III · IV
📋 Today’s Topics
- Iran–U.S. Accord Signed: Hormuz Tolls, UNCLOS & the Nuclear PledgeGS2 · GS3
- Cough Syrup Prescription Rule: A ‘Lopsided’ Fix?GS2 · GS3
- India Overhauls Its Statistical SystemGS3
- NFHS-6: Progress Amid the Nutrition ChallengeGS2 · GS3
- The Real Barriers to Trade Are No Longer TariffsGS2 · GS3
- Telegram ‘New Dark Web’ & Section 69AGS2
- Are Graduates Outpacing Job Creation?GS3
- India–U.K. CETA & the Double Contribution ConventionGS2 · GS3
- Mental Health of Adivasi YouthGS1 · GS2
- PM-VBRY: ₹2,400-Crore Employment IncentiveGS3
- Amarnath Yatra: Mountain Rescue Teams & Disaster ManagementGS3
- ‘Free Media Cannot Be Free’ — SM vs Mainstream MediaGS2 · Essay
- Economy · Polity · IR — Quick RoundupGS2 · GS3
- Quick Prelims Revision (MCQ Bank)Prelims
- FAQsRevision
Iran–U.S. Accord Signed: Hormuz Tolls, UNCLOS & the Nuclear Pledge
Context
U.S. President Trump and Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian signed a memorandum of understanding to end the West Asia war — Trump signing at a candlelit dinner at the Palace of Versailles after the G7 summit. Pakistan’s PM Shehbaz Sharif, who mediated, said it enters into force “with immediate effect”; an official ceremony and technical talks follow in Switzerland.
Background & Key Facts
- Core bargain: Iran agrees to dilute its enriched uranium (under IAEA supervision; the IAEA’s Rafael Grossi will define “concrete steps”) in return for large-scale economic relief.
- Hormuz reopening: Iran instantly reopens the Strait of Hormuz; the U.S. immediately lifts its naval blockade and waives oil sanctions during talks.
- Reconstruction fund: once a final nuclear agreement is reached, the U.S. facilitates a $300 billion reconstruction fund supported by regional nations.
- Missiles excluded: Iran said its missile programme “will not be part” of future talks — a key gap.
- Transition windows: a 30-day transition to clear mines/technical obstacles; a 60-day toll-free passage window while nuclear talks continue.
The Hormuz Tolls Question — UNCLOS & Innocent Passage
- Pre-war norm: merchant vessels transited Hormuz without mandatory tolls; the central channel handled ~130 transits daily.
- New claim: the MoU recognises Iran as a “central stakeholder” and lets it open dialogue with Oman/Gulf states on managing the strait; Iran has signalled it may levy service charges via a new Persian Gulf Strait Authority after the 60-day window.
- UNCLOS: under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, straits like Hormuz should allow transit passage not subject to tolls. Crucially, the U.S. has not ratified UNCLOS, and Iran has signed but not ratified it.
- Safety risk: Bimco notes the central strait remains mined; only inshore traffic zones near Oman/Iran are reportedly clear — congestion and incident risks persist.
- Precedent fear: shipping bodies (Intertanko, MASSA) warn a fee could set a precedent for other chokepoints (Malacca–Singapore, even the English Channel).
Strategic win for Iran: The formal recognition of Iran as a Hormuz stakeholder — more than any fee — advances Tehran’s view of the strait as a strategic guarantor against future attacks.
Freedom of navigation at stake: A toll on a natural strait would unsettle the customary right of free transit; legal ambiguity (non-ratification by both) muddies enforcement.
Domestic pushback: Republican hawks (Senators Cassidy, Cruz, Graham) call it weak — echoing their critique of Obama’s 2015 JCPOA — citing sanctions relief and the $300bn fund without firm enrichment/missile curbs.
- India should secure safe transit for its energy/fertilizer vessels and continue diversifying crude/LNG sourcing.
- Support an international coordination body for safe Hormuz transits and uphold UNCLOS-based freedom of navigation.
- Back a verifiable, durable nuclear settlement and West Asian stability (links to SDG 7, SDG 16).
UNCLOS & transit passage Innocent passage IAEA Strait of Hormuz JCPOA (2015)
MCQ: UNCLOS & the Law of the Sea
With reference to the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), consider the following statements:
- ‘Transit passage’ applies to straits used for international navigation and cannot be suspended.
- ‘Innocent passage’ applies to a coastal state’s territorial sea.
- The United States has ratified UNCLOS, whereas Iran has not.
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Cough Syrup Prescription Rule: A ‘Lopsided’ Fix?
Context
To restore confidence in India’s pharmaceutical supply chain, the government now requires a doctor’s prescription to buy syrup-based medicines — removing “syrup” from Schedule K of the Drugs Rules, 1945. An editorial argues the move is “defensive rather than reformist”.
Background & Key Facts
- The trigger: ethylene glycol (EG) and diethylene glycol (DEG) contamination in India-made cough syrups killed over 300 children across several countries since 2022; WHO issued warnings in 2022 and 2023.
- Formulation risks: many OTC cough syrups are ‘cocktails’ of bronchodilators, antihistamines and decongestants; the American Academy of Pediatrics says cough suppressants are largely ineffective and possibly dangerous for children under six (can mask pneumonia/asthma).
- Root cause: the contamination stemmed from failures in manufacturing quality control, raw-material testing and regulatory oversight — not consumer access.
- Enforcement gap: India has ~three dozen State drug controllers, chronically understaffed; without a larger inspectorate, the notification may be ignored in rural areas.
Treating the symptom: A prescription rule may curb misuse but “could never prevent contaminated products from reaching the market in the first place”.
Lobby vs quality: The government still tolerates the argument that high-end testing requirements would bankrupt smaller manufacturers — even as the Indian Pharmacopoeia updated EG/DEG detection methods.
Reputation at stake: Subpar enforcement is dangerous for a country aspiring to remain “the world’s pharmacy”.
- Mandate raw-material (solvent) testing and rigorous batch testing with strong enforcement.
- Significantly expand and strengthen the State drug-controller inspectorate.
- Align export quality controls with WHO standards (links to SDG 3).
Schedule K (Drugs Rules 1945) EG / DEG Indian Pharmacopoeia CDSCO / State drug controllers
MCQ: Drug Regulation
Consider the following statements:
- Diethylene glycol (DEG) and ethylene glycol (EG) are toxic industrial solvents that have contaminated some cough syrups.
- The Indian Pharmacopoeia prescribes standards for drugs manufactured and marketed in India.
- Schedule K of the Drugs Rules, 1945 lists drugs that are completely banned in India.
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India Overhauls Its Statistical System
Context
The government has implemented long-overdue upgrades across India’s key economic statistics — GDP, IIP, CPI, WPI — updating base years, methods and data sources, and bringing them closer to international best practice.
Background & Key Facts
- Base-year refresh: earlier base years of 2011/2012 were updated — GDP and IIP to 2022-23, CPI to 2024 (more inclusive basket, accurate weights).
- Methodology: the new national accounts adopt the long-demanded double-deflator approach (backed by the IMF).
- WPI & PPI: the Commerce Ministry released a new WPI series and a new Producer Price Index (PPI) — the standard in developed economies — to replace the WPI within five years.
- Why it matters: accurate CPI/WPI yield a better GDP deflator, improving real GDP growth estimates; the IMF may upgrade its recurring “C” grade for India’s national accounts.
- Next step: a time-bound release of the new Census, without further delays.
Credibility dividend: Updated, granular data improve policy calibration (e.g., interest-rate decisions hinge on accurate retail inflation) and restore confidence in official statistics.
Implementation lag: Upgrades are “welcome, albeit long overdue”; sustained quality depends on timely Census data and continued methodological reform.
- Complete the delayed Census on a fixed timeline and integrate it into the national accounts.
- Ensure transparency, periodic base-year revisions and independence of the statistical machinery.
GDP deflator Double-deflator method CPI / WPI / IIP / PPI MoSPI Base year
MCQ: Economic Indicators
Consider the following statements:
- The GDP deflator is derived using price indices such as the CPI and WPI.
- A Producer Price Index (PPI) measures price changes at the producer/wholesale stage and is the standard in many developed economies.
- The Index of Industrial Production (IIP) is released by the Reserve Bank of India.
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NFHS-6: Progress Amid the Nutrition Challenge
Context
The NFHS-6 report offers a “mixed progress card” — gains in child stunting, institutional births and immunisation, but persistent weaknesses in feeding practices and diet quality.
Background & Key Facts
- Stunting: declined from 35.5% to 29.3% among under-fives; wasting shows no change except for severe forms.
- Maternal & child health: institutional births at 90% (public facilities 58%); 91% deliveries with skilled personnel; 95% mothers had ≥1 antenatal visit; 87% of children aged 12–23 months fully vaccinated (private facilities only ~3% — reflecting ASHA/AWW/ANM outreach).
- Feeding gaps: only ~50% of newborns breastfed within the first hour; ~60% of 6–8-month-olds get solid/semi-solid food; only 15% of 6–23-month-olds receive an adequate diet.
- First 1,000 days: pregnancy to age two is the critical window; disaggregated 0–2 data are currently unavailable.
- Processed-food trap: spending is shifting from cereals to dairy, processed foods and beverages — diversity that is not nutritional adequacy (ICMR-NIN dietary guidelines).
- Maternal time poverty: ~30% of women did paid work in the past year, understating their unpaid labour burden; absence of crèches harms feeding.
Health care ≠ nutrition: Gains owe to better health access, immunisation and sanitation; feeding practices and diet quality remain the binding constraint.
POSHAN’s focus: The scheme prioritises treating severe malnutrition; prevention of growth faltering needs greater priority, with early identification of weight/length stagnation.
Convergence weak: Multisectoral coordination (water, sanitation, Anganwadi infrastructure) remains poor; crèches are social infrastructure that also enables women’s work.
- Strengthen frontline workers (AWW/ASHA/ANM); add district-level nutritionists and data analysts; use digital counselling tools.
- Culturally grounded behaviour-change communication (e.g., annaprasana) and locally available affordable diets.
- Make child nutrition a standing Gram Sabha agenda; expand crèche models (links to SDG 2, SDG 3, SDG 5).
NFHS-6 Stunting / wasting POSHAN Abhiyaan ICMR-NIN guidelines First 1,000 days
MCQ: Child Nutrition
Consider the following statements:
- ‘Stunting’ refers to low height-for-age, reflecting chronic undernutrition.
- ‘Wasting’ refers to low weight-for-height, reflecting acute undernutrition.
- The ‘first 1,000 days’ refers to the period from a child’s first to third birthday.
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The Real Barriers to Trade Are No Longer Tariffs
Context
An op-ed argues that in today’s hyper-regulated global economy, tariffs “barely matter” — the real obstacles are non-tariff barriers (NTBs): technical regulations, certifications, standards and testing procedures.
Background & Key Facts
- Scale of NTBs: since the WTO’s establishment in 1995, average tariffs have fallen ~half, yet NTBs now affect ~90% of global trade (a sixfold rise in three decades); WTO members filed 7,700+ NTB/health notifications in 2025 (10× the 1995 level).
- Coverage by economy: NTBs cover ~94% of EU imports, ~77% of U.S. imports and ~45% of India’s.
- Different tools: EU — environmental/chemical rules, CBAM, EU Deforestation Regulation; U.S. — export controls, entity lists, semiconductor/AI-chip restrictions; India — rising quality regulations on electronics, machinery, chemicals.
- India’s FTA record: ASEAN-India FTA (since 2010) preferential utilisation below 50%; overall FTA utilisation ~25% (vs 70–80% in developed economies) — NTBs make benefits commercially impractical.
- Newer deals tackle NTBs: the India-UAE CEPA mandates automatic recognition of medicines approved by major regulators; the India-EFTA TEPA (in force October 2025) makes NTB reduction a legally binding obligation with a dedicated sub-committee.
Quiet protectionism: Unlike transparent tariffs, NTBs operate “within the system” and disproportionately raise compliance costs for smaller exporters.
Legitimacy vs misuse: Environmental/consumer protections are valid, but must be transparent and proportionate, or they fragment global markets.
Policy reorientation: India must move beyond headline tariff bargaining toward mutual recognition of standards and conformity assessment.
- Pursue mutual recognition agreements and streamlined conformity assessment in new FTAs.
- Build domestic testing/certification capacity to ease compliance for MSME exporters.
- Make NTB-reduction a standing, binding element of trade pacts (links to SDG 8, SDG 17).
Non-tariff barriers CBAM EU Deforestation Regulation India-EFTA TEPA FTA utilisation
MCQ: Trade & NTBs
Consider the following statements:
- The Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) is a measure of the European Union.
- Non-tariff barriers include technical regulations, standards, and certification requirements.
- India’s overall utilisation of its Free Trade Agreements is higher than that of most developed economies.
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Telegram ‘New Dark Web’ & Section 69A of the IT Act
Context
The Centre told the Delhi High Court that Telegram had become the “new dark web” — its architecture and privacy features making it a tool for cybercriminals, fraud networks, extremist groups and exam-paper-leak operators. Justice Tejas Kataria reserved judgment after questioning a platform-wide block.
Background & Key Facts
- Legal basis: a temporary ban till June 22 under Section 69A of the IT Act, 2000, which lets the government block content for sovereignty/integrity, defence, security, public order or to prevent incitement of a cognizable offence.
- I4C data: NCRP complaints involving Telegram rose from 75,688 (2023) to 2.75 lakh (2025), with reported fraud crossing ₹3,000 crore in 2025; 88,000+ complaints by May 2026.
- Why hard to track: a channel’s ~lakh-strong audience can move to a new channel in seconds; one account can create 40 bots (vs one per user on WhatsApp); cloud architecture hampers tracing.
- Telegram’s defence: the government must show why specific content could not be blocked instead of the whole platform; the court asked how the rights of 150 million users can be curtailed.
- Key precedents: Anuradha Bhasin v Union of India — internet restrictions must meet the proportionality test (necessary, least-restrictive, judicially reviewable); Section 79 provides intermediary safe harbour if due diligence is exercised.
Article 19 concerns: A blanket ban affects 19(1)(a) free speech and 19(1)(g) livelihoods of creators/educators/entrepreneurs running broadcast groups.
Procedural safeguards: Section 69A orders must follow the 2009 Blocking Rules and satisfy proportionality — the judicial check here is important.
Platform duty vs over-blocking: Genuine criminal misuse must be curbed without disproportionate restriction of lawful users.
- Prefer targeted, time-bound content/channel takedowns and rapid platform cooperation over full bans.
- Enforce intermediary due diligence under the IT Rules, 2021, with accountable timelines.
- Strengthen I4C-platform coordination and metadata accuracy (links to SDG 16).
Section 69A & 79, IT Act Anuradha Bhasin case Safe harbour I4C / NCRP IT Rules 2021
MCQ: IT Act & Intermediaries
Consider the following statements:
- Section 69A of the IT Act, 2000 empowers the government to issue blocking directions to intermediaries.
- Section 79 provides ‘safe harbour’ protection to intermediaries for third-party content, subject to due diligence.
- In Anuradha Bhasin v Union of India, the Supreme Court held that indefinite suspension of internet services is permissible.
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Are Graduates Outpacing Job Creation? (Parley)
Context
India has seen an unprecedented higher-education expansion, yet “nearly one in three graduates are unemployed”. A Parley discussion examines whether India is producing more graduates than the economy can absorb.
Background & Key Facts
- Widening gap: engineering graduate numbers rose sharply while job creation lagged; IT-services hiring slowed even as banking, finance, manufacturing, defence and space recruited more.
- Capital-intensive growth: recent investment in semiconductors and advanced manufacturing is capital-intensive — large investments don’t translate proportionately into jobs.
- AI disruption: employers want graduates who can work with, and validate, AI systems and use responsible/ethical AI — skills not widely taught four years ago.
- Employability mismatch: graduates often lack lab/manufacturing exposure, teamwork and real-world problem-solving; firms run their own training to bridge the gap.
- Manufacturing 4.0: automation, robotics and digital systems reduce labour needs even as factories expand output.
- The fix: invest in R&D and indigenous design; deepen industry-academia collaboration; build a stronger entrepreneurship ecosystem and sovereign AI (UPI cited as proof India can build world-class platforms).
Jobless growth risk: Employment growth may not automatically match economic growth as automation reduces labour requirements.
Value migration: Countries controlling IP and technology create far more engineering opportunities than those that only manufacture — India must move up from “manufacturing products designed elsewhere”.
Scale problem: India’s design/R&D capabilities (Tata, Mahindra) exist, but advanced R&D roles are fewer than the high-quality graduates produced.
- Significantly increase R&D investment and align curricula with industry through internships and skill development.
- Foster deep-tech entrepreneurship with early-stage risk capital.
- Build indigenous design and sovereign-AI capabilities for global markets (links to SDG 4, SDG 8, SDG 9).
Jobless growth Industry 4.0 Sovereign AI Demographic dividend Employability vs employment
MCQ: Employment & Skilling
Which of the following statements is/are correct?
- ‘Jobless growth’ describes a situation where the economy grows without a commensurate rise in employment.
- ‘Industry 4.0’ refers to the integration of automation, robotics, IoT and data in manufacturing.
- Capital-intensive investment generally creates more jobs per unit of investment than labour-intensive investment.
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India–U.K. CETA & the Double Contribution Convention (Effective 15 July)
Context
The India–U.K. social-security agreement, effective 15 July alongside the CETA, will save Indian companies and workers about $500 million in social-security payments they would otherwise pay in the U.K.
Background & Key Facts
- The Double Contribution Convention (DCC): signed July 2025; exempts U.K. employers from paying social security for temporary Indian workers, provided they contribute in India.
- Revised limit: exemption raised from 3 to 5 years, covering ~90–95% of temporary Indian workers in the U.K. (over 75,000 workers; 900+ Indian companies operate there).
- Why it mattered: without the DCC, workers paid double social security — and U.K. benefits accrue only after 10 continuous years, so they got no U.K. benefit.
- Steel snag resolved: a fresh U.K. steel-tariff regulation (not part of CETA) had stalled implementation; resolved via country-specific quotas, residual quotas and authorised-use schemes. Of ~$890 million of steel exports, $137 million was affected; 85% of exports fell outside the measure.
Mobility gains: The DCC materially benefits Indian professionals and services exporters — a long-standing demand in India’s trade diplomacy.
Post-signing risks: The steel episode shows FTAs can be destabilised by unilateral regulatory changes, requiring continuous management.
- Build robust consultation/dispute mechanisms to absorb post-signing regulatory shifts.
- Help MSMEs and services firms leverage CETA and DCC through awareness and compliance support.
- Use momentum to advance the India–EU FTA (links to SDG 8, SDG 17).
India–U.K. CETA Double Contribution Convention Tariff-rate quotas Authorised-use scheme
MCQ: India–U.K. DCC
Consider the following statements regarding the India–U.K. Double Contribution Convention:
- It exempts eligible temporary Indian workers from paying social security in both countries for a specified period.
- The exemption period has been revised from three to five years.
- It will come into force along with the India–U.K. CETA.
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Beyond ‘Depression’ and ‘Anxiety’: Mental Health of Adivasi Youth
Context
Mental-health conversations remain urban and privileged, leaving Adivasi youth largely invisible. India has the world’s largest indigenous population, yet data on their mental health are scarce — even as these communities face deep inequities.
Background & Key Facts
- Global & national burden: mental-health problems affect ~1 in 7 adolescents (10–19) worldwide; the 2015-16 National Mental Health Survey estimated 7% of adolescents (13–17) experience such problems, most without formal care.
- Higher Adivasi burden: a survey across Gujarat, Tamil Nadu and Meghalaya found a 16% prevalence of mental disorders (over double the national estimate); 12% of adolescent girls in rural Adivasi Jharkhand blocks showed emotional/behavioural distress.
- Poverty & early responsibility: financial insecurity is the norm; premature “maturity” often masks chronic anxiety and emotional exhaustion; seasonal migration adds loneliness, grief and interrupted education.
- Idioms of distress: distress is communicated through local idioms, bodily complaints, silence, irritability or withdrawal — not psychiatric labels; systems “often do not know how to hear them”.
- Eroding spaces: intergenerational learning spaces (evenings with elders) are weakening as youth turn to smartphones.
System blind spot: Mental-health systems assume distress presents in clinically recognisable forms; cultural mismatch makes communities appear “silent”.
Beyond clinical care: Expanding psychiatric services alone is insufficient — social and economic precarity must be reduced.
Dignity & justice: It is “a question of dignity, justice, cultural continuity” and whether youth can imagine a future beyond survival.
- Strengthen community spaces and community-led mental-health initiatives.
- Train workers to listen to local languages of distress; create safe, stigma-free systems.
- Address structural precarity — livelihoods, education continuity, substance-use support (links to SDG 3, SDG 10).
National Mental Health Survey Mental Healthcare Act 2017 Idioms of distress PVTGs
MCQ: Mental Health
Consider the following statements:
- The Mental Healthcare Act, 2017 decriminalised attempted suicide in most circumstances.
- The Act guarantees the right to access mental healthcare.
- India has the largest indigenous (Adivasi) population in the world.
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PM-VBRY: ₹2,400-Crore Employment Incentive Disbursed
Context
PM Modi will disburse ₹2,400 crore in incentives under the Pradhan Mantri Viksit Bharat Rojgar Yojana (PM-VBRY), with 15 lakh beneficiaries receiving Direct Benefit Transfers, and will interact with first-time employees and employers.
Background & Key Facts
- Outlay: total scheme outlay ₹99,446 crore, targeted to create 3.5 crore jobs in two years.
- Benefits: first-time employees get up to ₹15,000; employers receive up to ₹3,000 per month per new employee.
- Goal: boost employment, especially in the manufacturing sector.
Demand-side push: Employer-linked incentives can nudge formal hiring, but durable jobs depend on sustained demand and competitiveness, not subsidies alone.
Formalisation potential: First-job incentives may aid the transition from informal to formal employment if monitored for genuine net job creation.
- Pair incentives with skilling and apprenticeships aligned to industry needs.
- Monitor for additionality (net new jobs) and avoid deadweight/substitution effects (links to SDG 8).
PM-VBRY Direct Benefit Transfer Formalisation of employment
MCQ: Employment Schemes
Consider the following statements regarding the PM-VBRY:
- It provides incentives to both first-time employees and employers.
- Benefits are disbursed through Direct Benefit Transfer.
- It primarily aims to promote agricultural employment.
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Amarnath Yatra: Mountain Rescue Teams & Disaster Management
Context
For the first time, 45 specialised mountain rescue teams will be deployed at 21 locations along the twin Amarnath Yatra routes (beginning 3 July) — against the backdrop of the 2025 Pahalgam terror attack and militants’ shift to jungle warfare.
Background & Key Facts
- Capabilities: teams trained in high-altitude rescue, rope techniques, avalanche awareness and disaster management; positioned for rapid response to accidents and adverse weather.
- Natural hazards: DGP flagged dangers from cloudbursts and landslides; the SDRF cited the May rescue of 300 tourists after the Gulmarg gondola breakdown.
- Security context: the April 2025 Pahalgam attack left 26 dead; emphasis on interoperability among security agencies.
Dual threat: The Yatra faces both security threats and Himalayan natural hazards (cloudbursts, landslides, avalanches) — demanding integrated disaster-and-security preparedness.
Proactive shift: Pre-positioned specialised teams mark a move from reactive to anticipatory disaster response in fragile mountain terrain.
- Strengthen early-warning systems for cloudbursts/landslides and inter-agency coordination.
- Institutionalise specialised high-altitude rescue capacity for all Himalayan pilgrimages (links to SDG 11, SDG 13).
SDRF / NDRF Cloudburst & landslide Disaster Management Act 2005 Amarnath Yatra
MCQ: Disaster Management
Consider the following statements:
- A cloudburst is a sudden, very heavy rainfall over a small area in a short period.
- The State Disaster Response Force (SDRF) functions under State governments.
- The National Disaster Management Authority is chaired by the Prime Minister.
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‘Free Media Cannot Be Free’: Social Media vs Mainstream Media
Context
A ‘Notebook’ essay argues that the horizontal flow of information across peers on social media (SM) is now more impactful than the vertical flow of mainstream media (MSM) — democratising information but also creating “information anarchy” (evident in the NEET-leak and CBSE answer-sheet episodes).
Background & Key Facts
- The crisis: the public “berates MSM but trusts SM forwards from any source”; misinformation circulates alongside genuine insight, creating panic.
- MSM mimicry: media houses chase reels, personality cults, clickbait and algorithm-driven advertising — “piggybacking on Big Tech” — hastening their own decline.
- Operation Sindoor example: channels behaving “like SM trolls” created diplomatic embarrassment, showing the cost of abandoning professional mediation.
- The proposed cure: a subscription/user-pays model — “media is, and can only be, free when the user is paying for it” — as both a market and democratic imperative.
Governance link: Deliberately weakening government-public communication (beat reporting) helps avoid accountability but creates governance crises.
Public good vs profit: When both SM and MSM profit from prejudice and ignorance, the independent-mediator role for the public good erodes.
Personal cost: “Free” information has a price — quick health fixes from SM can lead to serious medical harm.
- Build credible subscription-based revenue models to restore professional, independent journalism.
- Strengthen media literacy and fact-checking ecosystems.
- Restore structured government-public communication to pre-empt misinformation (links to SDG 16).
Media literacy Misinformation / disinformation Press freedom
MCQ: Media & Information
Which of the following statements is/are correct?
- ‘Misinformation’ refers to false information shared without intent to deceive, while ‘disinformation’ is deliberately deceptive.
- Freedom of the press in India is derived from Article 19(1)(a) of the Constitution.
- Freedom of the press is an absolute right not subject to any restrictions.
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Economy · Polity · IR — Quick Roundup
UAE Bans Social Media for Under-15s (GS2 — Digital Governance)
- The UAE announced a social-media ban for children under 15, joining Australia, Britain and Canada; platforms must monitor and disable under-15 accounts or risk being blocked.
Direct Tax & EPF (GS3 — Economy)
- Net direct tax collection grew 14.64% to over ₹5.21 lakh crore (till June 17) on higher advance tax; net corporate tax up 22%; STT up 45%.
- The government ratified an 8.25% EPF interest rate for FY2025-26 — the third consecutive year at this rate — for 7 crore+ members.
Japanese Encephalitis in Assam (GS3 — Health)
- Seven JE deaths and 32 AES deaths reported in Assam this year (to June 17); ~62% of India’s JE deaths since 2018 have been in Assam; JE is one cause of AES, not the only one.
DGCA — Uncontrolled Airstrips (GS3 — Aviation Safety)
- DGCA ordered an immediate safety review of uncontrolled airstrips (those without a functional ATC tower), citing the January 2026 Baramati crash that killed Maharashtra Deputy CM Ajit Pawar and four others.
SC on Advocates’ Registry & IRDAI AI Group (GS2 / GS3)
- The SC sought responses from the Centre, BCI, State Bar Councils and UGC on a plea for an authoritative national database of advocates and a code for lawyers’ social-media use.
- IRDAI constituted a seven-member AI working group (chaired by IIIT-Hyderabad’s Sandeep K. Shukla) to frame an AI governance framework for the insurance sector.
Hegseth’s NATO Force Review (GS2 — IR)
- The U.S. will review its force presence in Europe within six months, pressing allies to take primary responsibility for Europe’s defence and meet spending targets; U.S. dues (~$790 million in 2026) made “contingent” on allies’ spending.
Securities Transaction Tax EPFO / CBT Japanese Encephalitis / AES DGCA Bar Council of India NATO
MCQ: Mixed Current Affairs
Consider the following statements:
- Japanese Encephalitis is a vector-borne viral disease transmitted by mosquitoes.
- The interest rate on the Employees’ Provident Fund is decided by the Central Board of Trustees and ratified by the government.
- The Bar Council of India is a statutory body that regulates the legal profession and legal education in India.
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📝 Quick Prelims Revision — MCQ Bank
Q1 — UNCLOS
The regime of ‘transit passage’ under UNCLOS applies primarily to:
- The high seas
- Straits used for international navigation
- A country’s internal waters
- The contiguous zone
Q2 — GDP Deflator
The GDP deflator is best described as:
- A measure of retail inflation only
- The ratio of nominal GDP to real GDP, capturing overall price changes
- The wholesale price index of manufactured goods
- The producer price index of services
Q3 — Section 69A
Section 69A of the Information Technology Act, 2000 deals with:
- Penalties for identity theft
- The power to issue directions for blocking public access to online information
- Intermediary safe-harbour protection
- Data localisation requirements
Q4 — Non-Tariff Barriers
Which of the following is a non-tariff barrier to trade?
- Customs import duty
- Ad valorem tariff
- Technical regulations and product-certification requirements
- Tariff-rate quota duty
Q5 — Nutrition Indicators
‘Stunting’ in children is an indicator of:
- Acute undernutrition (low weight-for-height)
- Chronic undernutrition (low height-for-age)
- Overnutrition
- Micronutrient excess
❓ FAQs
Frequently asked exam-oriented questions — 19 June 2026 edition
Can Iran legally levy a toll on ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz?
Why is the prescription rule for cough syrups called a ‘lopsided’ solution?
What changed in India’s statistical system, and why does it matter?
Why are non-tariff barriers more important than tariffs today?
Why does the NFHS-6 show progress yet persistent nutrition problems?
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Analysis based on The Hindu, Bengaluru City Edition, 19 June 2026. Prepared for academic use. Static background and frameworks added for exam preparation; original article text has been paraphrased, not reproduced.


