DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 28th March 2026

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  • March 31, 2026
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(PRELIMS  Focus)


Zojila Pass: Strategic Gateway to Ladakh & India’s Longest Road Tunnel Project

UPSC Syllabus Coverage:

  • Subject: Geography (Paper I) & Current Affairs

News Context:
The Zojila Pass has been in the news for two reasons: (1) A tragic accident on March 27, 2026, renewed calls for the speedy completion of the Zojila Tunnel ; (2) The project achieved 60% physical progress, with excavation less than 1 km remaining, aiming for a breakthrough by April–May 2026.

Key Details & Facts:

  • Location & Geography:
    • Altitude: ~11,575 feet (3,528 metres) in the Zanskar Range (Greater Himalayas).
    • Connectivity: Lies on NH-1, connecting Srinagar (Kashmir Valley) with Leh (Ladakh) via Drass and Kargil.
    • Status: Historically closed for ~6 months (Nov-May) due to heavy snowfall and avalanches. Historic feat: Remained open in February 2025 for the first time.
  • Zojila Tunnel Project:
    • Length: 13.15 km (Horseshoe-shaped, single tube, 2-lane). Note: Some sources mention 14.15 km including approaches.
    • Cost: ~₹6,809 crore.
    • Status: Breakthrough expected by April–May 2026; Completion targeted by late 2027/early 2028.
    • Impact: Reduces travel time from ~3.5 hours to 15 minutes; Provides all-weather connectivity to Ladakh.

Relevant Keywords for Prelims:

  • Pass Range: Zanskar Range (Zojila), Pir Panjal (Banihal), Karakoram (Khardung La).
  • Historical Context: Battle of Zojila (1948) – Indian Army used Stuart Light Tanks at high altitude (World first).
  • Agencies: NHIDCL (Nodal), MEIL (Contractor), BRO (Road maintenance).
  • Other Passes in J&K/Ladakh: Fotula, Khardung La, Chang La, Umling La (world’s highest motorable).

Core Theme (Headings):

  1. Strategic Chokepoint: Lifeline for military logistics (Kargil War 1999) and civilian supplies; closes winter, isolating Ladakh.
  2. Engineering Marvel: The Zojila Tunnel will be Asia’s longest bi-directional tunnel; features advanced safety (CCTV, fire suppression, ventilation).
  3. Historical Legacy: Site of the decisive Battle of Zojila (1948) where India repelled Pakistani raiders, securing Ladakh.

UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static-Dynamic Linkage):

  • Static: Difference between Zanskar Range and Pir Panjal. Mapping: NH-1 route (Srinagar-Leh) vs. Manali-Leh Highway (HP).
  • Dynamic: Border Infrastructure: Along with Atal Tunnel (Rohtang) and Z-Morh Tunnel (Sonamarg), the Zojila Tunnel is part of India’s strategy to ensure rapid troop mobilization to LAC (China) and LoC (Pakistan).

Source/Reference: https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/jammu-and-kashmir/traffic-management-of-unpredictable-zojila-pass-comes-under-scanner-as-avalanche-toll-touches-7/article70796321.ece


Helium Shortage: An Invisible Bottleneck Threatening Global Tech Supply Chains

Subject:  Science & Technology (Paper III) & Current Affairs

News Context:
A global helium shortage has emerged following Iranian strikes on Qatar’s Ras Laffan gas facility (early March 2026) amid ongoing Middle East conflict. Qatar supplies ~30-33% of global helium. The disruption coincides with effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, stranding ~200 specialized helium transport containers. 

US distributor AirGas declared force majeure on March 17, 2026, cutting some customers to 50% of normal supply with additional surcharges.

Key Details & Facts:

  • Production & Supply: Helium is a non-renewable byproduct of natural gas processing via cryogenic distillation. Major producers: US (domestic focus), Qatar (Asia’s core supplier), Russia (reduced due to sanctions/investment issues).
  • Critical Applications:
    • Semiconductors/AI Chips: Cooling during wafer etching; flushing toxic residues. Essential for TSMC, Samsung, SK Hynix, Nvidia AI servers.
    • Healthcare: Liquid helium cools superconducting magnets in MRI machines (boiling point: -269°C, lowest of any element).
    • Aerospace: Pressurizing fuel tanks in rockets; cooling systems.
  • Vulnerable Economies: South Korea imports ~65% of helium from Qatar; Japan ~28-33%; Taiwan heavily reliant.
  • Supply Constraints: No substitute exists. Storage requires near-absolute zero; inventory limited to ~1.5 months before warming/expansion risks. Spot prices have reportedly doubled.

Relevant Keywords for Prelims:

  • Element Properties: Noble gas, inert, atomic number 2, second lightest element after hydrogen, lowest boiling point.
  • Production: Cryogenic distillation, byproduct of natural gas.
  • Geopolitical Terms: Force majeure, supply chain resilience, critical raw materials.
  • Infrastructure: Ras Laffan (Qatar), Strait of Hormuz.

Core Theme (Headings):

  1. Geopolitical Trigger: Iran’s strikes on Qatar’s LNG infrastructure disrupted 1/3rd of global helium supply.
  2. Tech Industry Exposure: Asia’s AI chip manufacturing hub (Korea, Taiwan) faces potential production halts without alternative coolant.
  3. No Quick Fix: Unlike oil, helium cannot be stockpiled long-term; rebuilding Qatari capacity could take years.

UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static-Dynamic Linkage):

  • Static: Periodic table – noble gases (Group 18). Physical properties: boiling point, density, inertness. Difference between helium and hydrogen (flammability).
  • Dynamic: Resource geopolitics – dependence on single region for critical mineral; India’s healthcare vulnerability (MRI scans) as imported helium is affected. Link to India’s critical minerals mission and push for self-reliance in strategic resources.

Source/Reference: https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/helium-shortage-has-started-impacting-tech-supply-chains-execs-say-2026-03-26/


Deceptive Similarity’ in Pharma Trademarks: The Ozempic–Olymviq Legal Battle

Subject:  Polity & Governance / Economy (Paper II & III) & Current Affairs

News Context:
Following the expiry of Novo Nordisk’s patent on semaglutide (March 20, 2026), Indian generic manufacturer Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories launched its version. Novo Nordisk filed a trademark infringement suit in the Delhi High Court, arguing that Dr. Reddy’s brand name ‘Olymviq’ was phonetically and visually similar to its blockbuster drug ‘Ozempic’.

Key Details & Facts:

  • The Dispute: Novo Nordisk (Denmark) vs. Dr. Reddy’s (India). The contested mark: ‘Olymviq’.
  • Court’s Observation: Justice Jyoti Singh noted, “I really will have to strain myself to find the difference—structurally, visually, and phonetically”.
  • Outcome: Dr. Reddy’s conceded and agreed to rename the product to ‘Olymra’. The court directed a halt on manufacturing/market release of ‘Olymviq’.
  • Existing Stock Issue: The court refused to order destruction of existing ‘Olymviq’ inventory, stating: “We are dealing with a product consumed by diabetic patients… There can be nothing worse than destroying it”.
  • Legal Precedent (Cadila Case): The Supreme Court (2001) held that a lower threshold for ‘deceptive similarity’ applies to pharmaceutical products due to the risk of physical harm.

Relevant Keywords for Prelims:

  • Acts: Trade Marks Act, 1999 (Section 13 – INN protection); Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940.
  • Concepts: Deceptive Similarity, Passing off, International Non-proprietary Names (INN), Patent vs. Trademark.
  • Cases: Cadila Healthcare Ltd. v. Cadila Pharmaceuticals Ltd. (2001).
  • Drug: Semaglutide (GLP-1 agonist for diabetes/obesity).

Core Theme (Headings):

  1. The Conflict: Patent expiry opened generic market; Trademark law used as a secondary barrier.
  2. The Legal Standard: In pharma, ‘phonetic similarity’ is sufficient for injunction (higher public safety standard).
  3. Balancing Act: Court protected IP rights (blocked new sales) but prioritized patient access (allowed existing stock).

UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static-Dynamic Linkage):

  • Static: Difference between Patent (protects invention/process – expired here) and Trademark (protects brand identity – the subject of this dispute).
  • Dynamic: India’s role as the ‘Pharmacy of the World’ vs. strict IP enforcement post-TRIPS. The case highlights how Indian courts balance commercial interests with the Right to Health (Article 21).

Source/Reference: https://indianexpress.com/article/explained/explained-law/ozempic-trademark-dispute-novo-nordisk-dr-reddys-delhi-hc-10603733/


Bond Yields vs. Monetary Tightening: The Inverse Policy Dance

Subject:  Economy (Paper III) & Current Affairs

News Context:
The RBI has been in a monetary tightening cycle (raising repo rates) to combat inflation. However, bond yields (especially the 10-year benchmark) have shown resistance or erratic movement. This disconnect is in the news because the upcoming Union Budget and the government’s fiscal consolidation path will determine the future trajectory of yields.

Key Details & Facts:

  • The Inverse Relationship (Textbook): When RBI hikes the Repo Rate (policy rate), it makes new money expensive. Bond prices fall, and bond yields rise.
  • The Current Anomaly: Despite rate hikes, yields have not spiked proportionally. This is primarily due to:
    • Demand-Side Support: Inclusion of Indian bonds in Global Indices (JP Morgan, Bloomberg) brings in passive foreign flows.
    • Liquidity Management: RBI uses Open Market Operations (OMOs) and the Operation Twist (buy long-term bonds, sell short-term) to manage the yield curve.
  • Yield Curve: A graph plotting yields against maturities. Inverted Yield Curve (short-term yields > long-term yields) is a classic predictor of recession.

Relevant Keywords for Prelims:

  • Concepts: Repo Rate, Reverse Repo, G-Sec (Government Securities), Yield to Maturity (YTM) , Coupon Rate, Duration.
  • Operations: OMOs, Operation Twist, Standing Deposit Facility (SDF).
  • Indices: JP Morgan GBI-EM, Bloomberg Emerging Market (EM) Local Currency Index.
  • Terminology: Fiscal Consolidation (Govt reducing debt), Current Account Deficit (CAD).

Core Theme (Headings):

  1. Monetary Tightening (RBI): Raising rates to suck out liquidity and control inflation (demand side).
  2. Fiscal Policy (Govt): High borrowing (fiscal deficit) increases supply of bonds, pushing yields up.
  3. The Conflict: RBI is tightening (bad for bonds), but Global Index inclusion is bringing demand (good for bonds). The net effect decides the yield.

UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static-Dynamic Linkage):

  • Static: Difference between Coupon Rate (fixed interest paid) vs. Yield (current market return). Why bond prices move inversely to interest rates.
  • Dynamic: Link to Inflation: High inflation -> RBI hikes repo rate -> Short-term yields rise. If markets believe inflation will cool later, long-term yields may stay stable (flattening yield curve).

Source/Reference: https://indianexpress.com/article/business/market/bond-yields-hit-6-94-amid-fears-of-inflation-monetary-tightening-10605497/


Jan Vishwas Bill 2.0: Decriminalising 717 Provisions to Boost Ease of Doing Business

UPSC Syllabus Coverage:  Polity & Governance (Paper II) & Economy (Paper III) & Current Affairs

News Context:
The Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Bill, 2026 was introduced in the Lok Sabha on March 27, 2026, by Minister of State for Commerce and Industry Jitin Prasada. This is the second edition of the decriminalisation push, following the Jan Vishwas Act, 2023, which decriminalised 183 provisions across 42 laws. The Bill was earlier withdrawn on March 17, 2026, to incorporate recommendations of the Select Committee.

Key Details & Facts:

Particulars Details
Scope Amends 79 Central Acts (administered by 23 Ministries)
Total Provisions Amended 784 provisions
Provisions Decriminalised 717 provisions (for Ease of Doing Business)
Provisions Amended 67 provisions (for Ease of Living)
Imprisonment Removed 57 provisions
Fines Removed 158 provisions
Imprisonment Reduced 17 provisions
Imprisonment + Fine converted to Penalty 113 provisions
Previous Act (2023) Decriminalised 183 provisions across 42 laws (e.g., IT Act, IP laws) 

Major Sectoral Amendments Proposed:

  1. Motor Vehicles Act, 1988: 30-day grace period after driving licence expiry; First-time traffic/pollution violations: ₹10,000 fine + 3-month licence disqualification (instead of 3 months jail).
  2. Electricity Act, 2003: Non-compliance penalty: ₹10,000 to ₹10 lakh (instead of 3 months jail); Mandatory compounding for first-time power theft.
  3. Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act, 2016: Removal of 1-year imprisonment for allottees non-compliance with Tribunal orders; Penalty up to 10% of property cost.
  4. Cattle Trespass Act, 1871 (153-year-old law): Jail terms replaced with monetary penalties; fines directed towards animal welfare.
  5. Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006: Jail term for tampering seized items reduced from 6 months to 3 months.
  6. Slum Areas Act, 1956: Fine up to ₹10,000 per instance (instead of imprisonment); continued violation: ₹1,000/day (capped at ₹1 lakh).
  7. Public Premises Act: Unauthorised occupation penalty: up to 40x licence fee in first month; 10% monthly increase thereafter.
  8. Delhi Municipal Corporation Act, 1957: Fine for unleashed dogs increased from ₹50 to ₹1,000.
  9. Metro Railways Act, 2002: Penalty for drunkenness/offensive material increased from ₹500 to ₹2,500.

Relevant Keywords for Prelims:

  • Acts Referenced: Motor Vehicles Act (1988), Electricity Act (2003), RERA (2016), MSMED Act (2006), Legal Metrology Act (2009), Cattle Trespass Act (1871), NDMC Act (1994).
  • Concepts: Decriminalisation, Trust-based Governance, Ease of Doing Business (EoDB), Ease of Living (EoL), Compounding of Offences, Select Committee.
  • Government Initiatives: Jan Vishwas Act 2023, National Litigation Policy, Compliance Burden Reduction.
  • Institutions: Ministry of Commerce and Industry, Lok Sabha, Select Committee.

Core Theme (Headings):

  1. Scope & Scale: Building on the 2023 Act, the 2026 Bill proposes the largest decriminalisation exercise yet—amending 79 laws and decriminalising 717 provisions.
  2. Philosophical Shift: Moving from punitive criminal sanctions to civil penalties (fines/warnings) for minor, technical, or procedural defaults, while retaining criminal penalties for serious offences.
  3. Graded Penalty Framework: First-time violations often attract warnings or reduced fines; repeat offences invite higher monetary penalties and possible imprisonment.

UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static-Dynamic Linkage):

  • Static: Difference between criminal liability (requires mens rea – guilty intent) and civil/administrative liability. Constitutional basis for decriminalisation under Articles 19(1)(g) (right to practice any profession) and 21 (right to speedy trial).
  • Dynamic: Link to Ease of Doing Business rankings (World Bank discontinued but India’s internal metrics continue). Complementarity with National Education Policy (experiential learning) and Vivad se Vishwas schemes (reducing litigation). Critics argue that monetary penalties may be treated as “cost of doing business” by large corporations, weakening deterrence.

Source/Reference: https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/india/jan-vishwas-2-0-government-seeks-to-decriminalise-717-provisions/articleshow/129852913.cms?from=mdr


(MAINS Focus)


North-South Divide: Reconciling Prosperity with Political Representation

UPSC Mains Subject: GS Paper I – Society (Regionalism) | GS Paper II – Polity (Federalism)
Sub-topic: Regional Disparities; Federal Relations; Delimitation

 

Introduction

India’s developmental narrative assumed the south’s economic dynamism would pull the north forward. Instead, the gap between the Peninsular states (high per capita income, advanced HDI) and the Great Indian Plain (sub-Saharan Africa-like metrics) has calcified into an existential fault line. 

With delimitation looming, an economically prosperous minority faces subsidizing a politically dominant but impoverished majority—a trajectory threatening the Indian Union.

 

Main Body

The Two Indias

Parameter Peninsular States (South) Great Indian Plain (North)
Per Capita Income Double or more than north Significantly lower
Human Development Upper-middle-income country levels Sub-Saharan Africa levels
Population Growth Stabilized High fertility

Core Problem: Economic prosperity decoupled from political power—a rare and dangerous asymmetry.

The Existential Crisis

Healthy Federations (US, Canada) India’s Path (USSR, Yugoslavia)
Prosperous regions hold majority population Prosperous minority subsidizes poor majority
Natural alignment of wealth & representation Wealth creators’ voice muffled by demographic weight

Post-Delimitation Risk: South’s parliamentary seats will fall dramatically. Productive minority forced to subsidize politically dominant poor majority. South could be viewed as an “extractive colony” for the Hindi heartland.

Proposed Solution: Digressive Proportionality

  • Larger states get more seats but fewer per person
  • Smaller states get fewer seats but more representation per person
  • Balances population size with state equality

The South’s Own Crisis: Middle-Income Trap

Issue Evidence
Extractive growth TN per capita income triple Bihar’s, but daily wage not even double
Narrow elite capture Fruits of growth skimmed by few (Kerala exception)
Persistent social hierarchies Caste discrimination in rural TN; law flouting in Bengaluru, Chennai
Uneven development Wealth concentrated in 3-4 urban districts
Literacy gaps Dharmapuri (TN) lower literacy than dozens of UP districts

Paradox: The south has failed to translate economic wealth into social transformation.

Why Natural Convergence Fails

Scenario Why It Fails
North catches up 300% income differential; takes generations
Population movement Migrants become “internal outsiders,” still vote in north
South pulls north up South punching below weight due to weak institutions

Way Forward

For Central Government:

  • Avoid hegemonic control
  • Consider digressive proportionality for delimitation

For Southern States:

  • Focus on internal inclusivity
  • True progress = daily wage of agricultural labourer + literacy of poorest district (Kerala model)
  • Dismantle extractive structures; strengthen rule of law

For National Unity:

  • “Grand bargain” must be a social contract, not just political deal
  • Ensure prosperity shared by many, not just few

 

Critical Analysis

Strengths Gaps
Recognizes structural asymmetry rare in federations Underplays central tax devolution as mitigator
Proposes concrete solution (digressive proportionality) Political feasibility uncertain
Acknowledges south’s internal inequality Kerala’s lessons could be extracted further

 

Conclusion

India’s north-south divide is not a regional squabble but a profound asymmetry threatening the Union. The coming delimitation could exacerbate this fault line. The south must address its internal inequalities, while the center must embrace creative solutions like digressive proportionality. Only a social contract ensuring shared prosperity—not just a political deal—can bridge the divide.

 

UPSC Mains Practice Question

  1. “India is treading the dangerous path once walked by the USSR and Yugoslavia—where an economically prosperous minority subsidizes a politically dominant but impoverished majority.” Critically examine this statement in the context of the upcoming delimitation exercise. (250 words, 15 marks)

 

Source: https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/beyond-the-rhetoric-of-the-north-south-divide/article70793560.ece


War Comes to India: Energy Security, Economic Panic, and Strategic Maturity

UPSC Mains Subject: GS Paper II – International Relations | GS Paper III – Security (Energy Security)

Sub-topic: Geopolitical Shocks; Energy Security; India’s Foreign Policy; Diaspora and Social Cohesion

 

Introduction

The war in Iran has transcended distant geopolitics to directly impact India’s domestic stability, triggering fuel shortage fears, economic uncertainty, and panic reminiscent of the COVID-19 lockdown. While India retains strategic exemptions allowing ship movement through the Strait of Hormuz, restricted access and elevated oil prices threaten prolonged economic pain. Simultaneously, the author critiques India’s tendency to re-hyphenate itself with Pakistan—a strategic regression—and warns against indulging in “dalal nation” rhetoric. The piece underscores the need for strategic maturity, energy resilience, and social cohesion amid external shocks.

 

Main Body

Geopolitical Fallout: When War Arrives Home

Impact Area Analysis
Energy Supply Rumours of LPG/petrol shortages sparked panic, queues, and demands for a COVID-style lockdown—officially denied but revealing systemic anxiety
Economic Vulnerability Even if war stops, restricted Hormuz movement will affect India for months; rising oil prices worsen CAD and inflation
Strategic Exemption Iran allows Indian ships to pass—a diplomatic dividend—but movement remains dangerous and restricted
Leadership Reassurance PM’s claim of “60-day fuel reserves” is hardly reassuring; panic persists without visible crisis management

Lesson: India’s energy import dependence (over 85% crude) makes domestic stability hostage to distant conflicts.

Strategic Maturity: De-hyphenation vs. Re-hyphenation with Pakistan

Historical Milestone Implication
US-India Civil Nuclear Deal (2008) Dr. Manmohan Singh defied allies; world de-hyphenated India from Pakistan
Pakistan’s Rejection Told “different rules for different countries” due to India’s different history
Current Trend Hindutva-era discourse risks re-hyphenation—comparing India with Pakistan on diplomatic roles

Critique of EAM’s “Dalal Nation” Remark:

  • Comment on Pakistan acting as US-Iran peacemaker inadvertently revealed it bothered India
  • India itself offered to broker Russia-Ukraine peace—a “dalal” role by definition
  • Core Argument: Last thing India needs today is to talk about Pakistan; focus on urgent domestic challenges

Social Cohesion Amidst Crisis: A Counter-Narrative

Positive Sign Significance
Ram Navami in Ayodhya Thousands watched sunlight tilak on deity—normalcy despite war
Eid in UP Muslims prayed; Hindus showered rose petals—even in a state known for bulldozer politics
Secular Social Life Book launches, dinner parties continue—but TVs show war reminding “we no longer live in normal times”

Takeaway: India’s social fabric, while strained, shows resilience. Communal harmony during festivals is a bulwark against external shocks.

The Threat of “Holy War” Escalation

  • Trump’s language (“more fun to sink the ship,” Iran “begging” for a deal) treats war as a video game
  • Evangelical Christian support framing conflict as a “crusade” or “holy war” is deeply dangerous
  • Religious fanaticism eliminates rational solutions; wars become endless

Way Forward: Policy Imperatives for India

Priority Action
Energy Security Accelerate strategic petroleum reserves; diversify imports (Russia, South America); boost renewables + storage
Crisis Communication Transparent, calibrated messaging to prevent panic and lockdown-like trauma
Strategic Autonomy Avoid re-hyphenation with Pakistan; focus on India’s own interests, not comparative grievances
Diplomatic Maturity India can mediate (Russia-Ukraine) without being defensive about “dalal” label
Social Resilience Protect communal harmony; prevent external wars from inflaming internal fault lines

 

Critical Analysis: Strengths & Gaps in the Argument

Strengths Gaps
Correctly identifies energy import dependence as strategic vulnerability Underplays India’s proactive diplomacy (I2U2, West Asia Quad) as mitigating factor
Highlights danger of re-hyphenation with Pakistan Does not fully engage with legitimate security concerns from state-sponsored terrorism
Recognizes social cohesion as national asset Over-romanticizes communal harmony in UP; isolates exceptions
Warns against holy war escalation—timely and urgent Limited policy prescription beyond critique

 

Conclusion

The Iran war has brought geopolitical reality to India’s doorstep—fuel panic, economic uncertainty, and social anxiety. India’s strategic maturity demands that it resist re-hyphenation with Pakistan, avoid defensive “dalal” rhetoric, and focus on energy resilience, transparent crisis communication, and protecting social cohesion. 

As religious fanaticism threatens to escalate conflicts into endless “holy wars,” India’s ancient civilizational wisdom—of coexistence, strategic patience, and self-reliance—must guide its response. Normal times are over; mature times must begin.

 

UPSC Mains Practice Question

  1. “External geopolitical shocks have direct domestic ramifications for India’s energy security, economic stability, and social cohesion.” In light of the recent Iran war and its impact on India, critically examine the interlinkages between global conflicts and India’s internal resilience. Suggest a policy framework to mitigate such vulnerabilities. (250 words, 15 marks)

 

Source: https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/tavleen-singh-writes-israel-iran-war-india-10606891/

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