DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 8th April 2026

  • IASbaba
  • April 8, 2026
  • 0
IASbaba's Daily Current Affairs Analysis

Archives


(PRELIMS  Focus)


One Health: India’s Framework for Pandemic Preparedness and Zoonotic Disease Control

UPSC Prelims Syllabus Coverage:

  • Subject: Social Justice (Health) / Environment & Ecology / Science & Technology
  • Micro-topic: Public Health; Zoonotic Diseases; Pandemic Preparedness; Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR); Government Policies

News Context:
On World Health Day (April 7, 2026) , the WHO called on member states to “Invest in One Health” to prevent pandemics, safeguard populations, and strengthen health collaboration. This aligns with India’s ongoing efforts under the National One Health Mission, which has been hosting workshops and mock drills across the country to translate vision into actionable state-level strategies.

 

What is the One Health Concept?

One Health is an integrated, unifying approach that aims to sustainably balance and optimize the health of people, animals, plants, and ecosystems. It recognizes that the health of humans, domestic and wild animals, and the wider environment are closely linked and interdependent.

Origins and Evolution:

  • The term gained prominence in 2003-2004 following the SARS epidemic.
  • A key milestone was the 2004 Manhattan Principles from the Wildlife Conservation Society, which explicitly recognized the link between human and animal health and the threats diseases pose to food supplies and economies.
  • Global Framework: The One Health Joint Plan of Action (2022-2026) was launched by the Quadripartite – FAO, UNEP, WHO, and WOAH (formerly OIE).

 

Why is One Health Important? The Evidence

Zoonotic Disease Burden:

  • 60-75% of emerging infectious diseases in humans are zoonotic (originating in animals).
  • Zoonotic diseases affect over 2 billion people and claim over 2 million lives annually worldwide.

Other Interconnected Threats:

  • Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR): Could cause 10 million deaths annually by 2050 if unchecked. It cuts across human medicine, veterinary use, agriculture, and wastewater systems.
  • Food Safety: Approximately 600 million people fall ill from unsafe food each year.
  • Environmental Health: In the Western Pacific alone, 3.5 million people die annually from preventable environmental causes like air pollution and unsafe water.

 

India’s One Health Architecture: Institutions and Initiatives

  1. National One Health Mission (NOHM):
  • Genesis: Approved through the Prime Minister’s Science, Technology and Innovation Advisory Council (PM-STIAC) .
  • Implementing Agency: Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR).
  • Governance Structure:
    • Executive Committee: Chaired by the Union Minister of Health and Family Welfare.
    • Scientific Steering Committee: Chaired by the Principal Scientific Adviser (PSA) to the Government of India.
  • Key Goals: Integrated disease control, early warning systems, cross-sector data linkages, R&D for vaccines/diagnostics, and community participation.
  1. Key Institutions:
  • National Institute of One Health (NIOH), Nagpur: Established under the Department of Health Research (DHR) to anchor the mission’s efforts.
  • Centre for One Health (NCDC): Works under the National Centre for Disease Control, coordinating programmes like National Rabies Control, Leptospirosis, and Snakebite Envenoming.
  1. Priority Zoonotic Diseases for India:
    A national multisectoral study (2025) involving 50 experts prioritized 40 zoonotic diseasesbased on severity, economic burden, pandemic potential, and prevention capacity. The Top 10 priority diseasesfor India are:
  1. Zoonotic Influenza (e.g., Avian flu H5N1)
  2. Anthrax
  3. Japanese Encephalitis
  4. Leptospirosis
  5. Brucellosis
  6. Dengue Fever
  7. Rabies
  8. Scrub Typhus
  9. Plague
  10. Crimean-Congo Hemorrhagic Fever (CCHF)
  1. Mock Drills and Preparedness:
    As part of the National One Health Mission, two national-level mock drills were conducted:
  • “Vishanu Yudh Abhyas” (August 2024)
  • “Viral Sankraman Abhyas” (November 2025)
  • Recent Workshop (March 2026): Hosted by DAHD to address gaps identified in these drills, focusing on operational readiness, inter-sectoral coordination, and BSL-3 lab networks.
  1. Policy Integration:
  • National Action Plan on Antimicrobial Resistance 2.0 (2025-29): Developed with input from over 20 ministries, embedding One Health principles into AMR policy.

 

Challenges in Implementation (Critical Analysis)

  • Siloed Surveillance: Human health, veterinary, and wildlife monitoring systems largely operate in parallel, not as interoperable networks.
  • Uneven Capacity: State and district administrations vary sharply in readiness for cross-sector planning.
  • Data Gaps: Environmental intelligence (e.g., wastewater signals, ecological risk) is not yet routinely integrated into public health practice.
  • Funding Fragmentation: Investments remain siloed rather than pooled across sectors.

 

Global and Diplomatic Context

  • WHO Pandemic Agreement (May 2025): Codifies One Health as essential; becomes legally binding upon ratification.
  • One Health Summit (Lyon, April 2026): Co-hosted by France and Indonesia – the highest-level gathering ever to advocate for the One Health agenda, aligning with France’s G7 Presidency.
  • India’s G20 Presidency (2023): Drew global attention to One Health, AMR, and climate-resilient health systems.

 

Static-Dynamic Linkage for Mains

Static Link:

  • Article 47 (DPSP): Duty of the State to raise the level of nutrition and standard of living and to improve public health.
  • Epidemiology: Chain of infection – reservoir, zoonotic spillover, transmission dynamics.
  • Seventh Schedule: Union List Entry 29 (prevention of zoonotic diseases); State List Entry 6 (public health and sanitation).

Dynamic Link:

  • Post-COVID Lessons: The pandemic underscored the need for integrated surveillance and early warning systems.
  • India’s G20 Presidency (2023): Health Working Group priorities included One Health and AMR.
  • WHO Pandemic Agreement (2025): Legally binding framework requiring multisectoral planning for pandemic prevention.
  • India’s 2026 World Health Day theme alignment: “Together for health. Stand with science” – focusing on One Health and scientific collaboration.

 

Source/Reference:

https://www.who.int/news-room/events/detail/2026/04/09/default-calendar/climate-resilient-and-low-carbon-health-systems-as-a-practical-one-health-solution


Mahatma Jyotirao Phule (1827-1890): Pioneer of Social Reform & Women's Education

Why in News?

  • March 2025: Maharashtra Legislative Assembly unanimously passed a resolution recommending the Bharat Ratna (India’s highest civilian award) for Mahatma Jyotirao Phule and Savitribai Phule .
  • November 2025: Tributes were paid across India on his 135th death anniversary (November 28) .
  • April 2025: The Prime Minister paid tribute on his 198th birth anniversary (April 11) .

 

Who Was Jyotirao Phule?

Jyotirao Govindrao Phule (11 April 1827 – 28 November 1890), also known as Jyotiba Phule, was a prominent Indian social activist, anti-caste social reformer, writer, and thinker from Maharashtra . The honorific “Mahatma” (great-souled) was first applied to him in 1888 at a special program in Mumbai .

Dr. B.R. Ambedkar, in his 1946 book Who Were the Shudras?, dedicated the work to Phule, calling him the “Greatest Shudra of Modern India” because he “made the lower classes of Hindus conscious of their slavery to the higher classes” .

 

Key Contributions as a Social Reformer

  1. Educational Reforms (Pioneer of Women’s Education)
  • 1848: At age 21, along with his wife Savitribai Phule, he established India’s first indigenously-run school for girls in Pune at Bhidewada .
  • The couple also started schools for children from “untouchable” castes (Mahar, Mang) and night schools for working-class adults .
  • Significance: This was a radical step at a time when education was restricted to privileged castes . The conservative society forced his family to ostracize him, but friends like Usman Sheikh and Fatima Sheikh provided shelter and helped run the school .
  1. Fighting Caste Discrimination
  • Phule launched a powerful critique of the caste system and Brahmanical dominance. He attacked the Vedas, considering them a form of false consciousness that justified oppression .
  • He is credited with introducing the Marathi word “Dalit” (meaning “broken” or “crushed”) as a descriptor for those outside the traditional varna system .
  • He opened his house and water well to members of exploited castes, breaking the stigma of untouchability .
  1. Women’s Welfare & Social Justice
  • 1863: He started a home for pregnant widows to give birth safely, along with an infanticide prevention centre to reduce the killing of female infants .
  • He championed widow remarriage and opposed the shaving of widows’ heads .
  1. Satyashodhak Samaj (Society of Truth Seekers)
  • Founded in 1873: This association aimed to secure equal rights for people from lower castes (Shudras, Ati-Shudras, and Dalits) .
  • It rejected idolatry and promoted rationalist, egalitarian spiritual practices. People from all religions and castes could join.
  1. Literary Contributions
  • Gulamgiri (Slavery, 1873): His most famous work, critiquing the caste system and comparing the plight of Dalits to slavery in America. He dedicated the book to the people of the US working to end slavery .
  • Shetkaryancha Aasud (Farmer’s Whip, 1881): Addressed the exploitation of farmers by moneylenders and the British .
  • Brahmananche Kasab (1869): A critique of Brahminical exploitation .
  • Sarvajanik Satya Dharma Poostak: A rationalist work on social justice .

 

Static-Dynamic Linkage for Mains

Static Link:

  • 19th Century Social Reform Movements: Phule was a contemporary of other reformers like Mahadev Govind Ranade and Gopal Krishna Gokhale, but his anti-caste critique was more radical.
  • Comparison with Ambedkar: Ambedkar acknowledged Phule as his guru and predecessor in the anti-caste struggle.
  • Women’s Education Movement: Phule’s work parallels that of Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar (Bengal) and Savitribai Phule (Maharashtra).

Dynamic Link (Current Affairs):

  • Bharat Ratna Demand (2025): Maharashtra Assembly’s unanimous resolution reflects ongoing recognition of Phule’s contributions .
  • Phule’s Ideals in Contemporary Policy: Several state governments (Telangana, Maharashtra) have schemes named after Phule for BC welfare and overseas scholarships .
  • Continued Relevance: Activists continue to invoke Phule’s ideals in protests against educational policies that may marginalize poor students .

 

Source/Reference:

https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/phules-life-and-thought-a-constitutional-project-10624518/


Prakash Purab of Guru Tegh Bahadur: 405th Birth Anniversary (April 2026)

UPSC Prelims Syllabus Coverage:

  • Subject: History (Medieval India) / Art & Culture
  • Micro-topic: Sikh Gurus; Bhakti Movement; Religious Freedom Movements; Mughal Period

News Context:
On April 7, 2026, leaders including Narendra Modi and Amit Shah paid tributes to Guru Tegh Bahadur on his Prakash Purab, honouring his courage and sacrifice, following his 350th martyrdom commemoration in 2025.

 

Who Was Guru Tegh Bahadur (1621–1675)?

Guru Tegh Bahadur was the ninth of the ten Sikh Gurus. He was born on April 1, 1621 (or April 21, 1621 as per other sources) in Amritsar to Mata Nanki and Guru Hargobind (the sixth Sikh Guru, who raised an army against the Mughals and introduced the concept of warrior saints) . Originally named Tyag Mal due to his ascetic nature, he distinguished himself in battle at the age of just 13 .

His term as Guru ran from 1665 to 1675. He was an excellent warrior, thinker, and poet. 115 or 116 of his hymns are incorporated into the Guru Granth Sahib, the holy scripture of Sikhism . He was also an avid traveler and founded the town of Chak-Nanki in Punjab, which later became part of Anandpur Sahib .

 

The Supreme Sacrifice: Martyrdom in 1675

The Trigger:

  • Kashmiri Pandits, facing religious persecution and forced conversion by Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb, approached Guru Tegh Bahadur for help .
  • The Guru stood up for their right to religious freedom, refusing to convert to Islam.

The Execution:

  • In 1675, Guru Tegh Bahadur was publicly executed (beheaded) on the orders of Aurangzeb in Chandni Chowk, Delhi .
  • He earned the title “Hind di Chadar” (literally “Shield of India” or “Protector of Hind”) for defending religious freedom and opposing forced conversions .
  • Gurdwara Sis Ganj Sahib (Chandni Chowk) marks the site of his execution, and Gurdwara Rakab Ganj Sahib marks the site of his cremation .

 

Impact of His Martyrdom (Historical Significance)

  • The execution hardened the resolve of Sikhs against religious oppression and persecution .
  • His martyrdom helped consolidate the Sikh Panths, making the protection of human rights central to Sikh identity.
  • Inspired by his sacrifice, his nine-year-old son, Guru Gobind Singh Ji (the tenth and last Sikh Guru), eventually organized the Sikh community into the Khalsa (a distinct, formal, martial community) in 1699 .
  • In the words of Noel King of the University of California, “Guru Tegh Bahadur’s martyrdom was the first-ever martyrdom for human rights in the world” .

 

Key Facts for Prelims: At a Glance

Birth and Childhood:

  • Born: April 1, 1621 (or April 21, 1621), Amritsar 
  • Parents: Guru Hargobind (6th Guru) and Mata Nanki 
  • Original Name: Tyag Mal 

Guruship:

  • Term: 1665 to 1675 
  • Writings: 115/116 hymns in Guru Granth Sahib 

Martyrdom:

  • Date: November 24, 1675 (Shaheedi Divas) 
  • Ordered by: Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb 
  • Place: Chandni Chowk, Delhi 
  • Title: “Hind di Chadar” (Protector of Hind) 

Associated Sites:

  • Gurdwara Sis Ganj Sahib – Execution site, Delhi 
  • Gurdwara Rakab Ganj Sahib – Cremation site, Delhi 
  • Anandpur Sahib – Town founded by him 
  • Gurdwara Sri Dhamtan Sahib (Jind) & Gurdwara Sri Sheeshganj Sahib (Ambala) – Sites in Haryana associated with his travels 

 

Static-Dynamic Linkage

Static Link:

  • Medieval Indian History: Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb’s religious policies; Sikhism’s evolution under the Gurus.
  • Art & Culture: Guru Granth Sahib (scripture), Khalsa tradition, Anandpur Sahib as a pilgrimage site.
  • Modern History: 19th & 20th century social reform movements drew inspiration from Sikh martyrs.

Dynamic Link (Current Affairs):

  • April 2026 – Prakash Purab commemorations by top political leadership highlight the government’s emphasis on Sikh heritage and martyrdom.
  • November 2025 – 350th Martyrdom Anniversary saw unprecedented state-level events (Punjab Assembly session outside capital), showing continued political and cultural salience.
  • Hind di Chadar – The title is invoked in contemporary discourse on religious freedom and human rights.

 

Source/Reference:

https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2249531&reg=3&lang=1


Project Hail Mary & The Science of 40 Eridani: Habitable Zones, Alien Life & Astrophysics

UPSC Prelims Syllabus Coverage:

  • Subject: Science & Technology
  • Micro-topic: Basics of Astronomy; Extra-Solar Planets (Exoplanets); Habitable Zone; Astrophysics

News Context:
The film Project Hail Mary (based on Andy Weir’s novel) has sparked public interest in the science of exoplanets. The movie features an alien named “Rocky” from the star system 40 Eridani A (the same system famously associated with Spock’s home planet Vulcan in Star Trek). The article explains the astrophysical feasibility of such a planet.

 

What is a Habitable Zone (Goldilocks Zone)?

  • Definition: The region around a star where temperatures are just right for liquid water to exist on a planet’s surface.
  • Importance: Liquid water is considered essential for life as we know it.
  • For 40 Eridani A: The habitable zone is located 101.7 million km from the star.

 

How Could Life Survive? (The “Venus” Solution)
For a planet so close to its star to support life, the author hypothesised:

  1. High Atmospheric Pressure: Like Venus, a thick atmosphere traps heat but also allows liquids to exist at higher temperatures.
  2. Strong Magnetic Field: Protects the atmosphere from being blown away by stellar winds.
  3. Ammonia Atmosphere: Instead of nitrogen/oxygen, Weir imagined an atmosphere of ammonia to suit the hot environment.
  4. Temperature: Approx. 210° Celsius.

 

Source/Reference: thehindu.com


Space-Based Solar Power (SBSP): Lunar Ring Proposal vs. Terrestrial Economics

UPSC Prelims Syllabus Coverage:

  • Subject: Science & Technology / Geography / Economy
  • Micro-topic: Renewable Energy; Space Technology; Solar Power; Energy Security

 

News Context:
Shimizu Corporation proposed the “Lunar Ring”—an 11,000 km solar belt on the Moon built using regolith, beaming energy to Earth via microwaves. However, SBSP remains economically unviable due to high costs, transmission losses, and cheaper terrestrial solar alternatives.

 

What is Space-Based Solar Power (SBSP)?

Concept:

  • Launch large arrays of satellites to collect sunlight 24/7 (no night, no clouds, no seasons).
  • Convert solar energy into microwave radiation (or lasers).
  • Beam the energy to receiving stations (rectennas) on Earth.

Lunar Ring Variant (Shimizu Corporation):

  • Location: Moon’s equator (not Earth orbit).
  • Length: 11,000 km belt of solar power plants.
  • Construction: Robots using lunar soil (in-situ resource utilization).
  • Advantage over orbital SBSP: Avoids space debris collision risk? (Partially – Moon has no debris issue, but transport from Earth to Moon remains costly).

 

The Physics (How It Would Work)

Component Function
Solar Panels (Space/Lunar) Capture sunlight 24/7 (no atmospheric loss)
Microwave Transmitter Converts DC electricity to microwave beam
Rectenna (Earth) Ground-based antenna array that converts microwaves back to electricity

Key Advantage over Terrestrial Solar:

  • Capacity Factor: Space solar can achieve ~90%+ (vs. ~15-25% for Earth solar due to night and weather).

 

Daunting Hurdles (Why It’s Not Viable Yet)

  1. Staggering Cost
  • Transporting thousands of tonnes of hardware to the Moon or orbit is prohibitively expensive.
  • Even with reusable rockets (like Starship), the logistics are unprecedented.
  • Lunar Ring: 11,000 km of infrastructure – cost would run into trillions of dollars.
  1. Energy Loss During Beaming
  • Microwave transmission through Earth’s atmosphere loses significant energy as heat.
  • Efficiency drops sharply over distance (inverse square law applies).
  • Net delivered energy may not justify the investment.
  1. Space Debris Risk (Orbital SBSP)
  • A single collision with space debris could cripple a billion-dollar array.
  • Lunar Ring avoids debris but still faces meteorite risk.
  1. Extreme Maintenance Costs
  • Repairing or replacing components on the Moon is orders of magnitude more expensive than on Earth.
  • Robotic maintenance is unproven at this scale.
  1. Terrestrial Solar is Winning the Economics Race
  • Solar PV costs have fallen by ~90% in the last decade.
  • Battery storage costs are also plummeting, solving intermittency.
  • Terrestrial solar + storage is now cheaper than coal in most markets.
  • Why invest in a complex, risky lunar facility when Earth-based renewables are already cost-effective?

 

India’s Relevance (Static Link)

Terrestrial Solar Leadership:

  • India is a global leader in low-cost solar power (through SECIKUSUMPM Surya Ghar schemes).
  • National Solar Mission target: 500 GW non-fossil fuel capacity by 2030.
  • No current SBSP program – India focuses on Earth-based renewables, though ISRO has studied space solar concepts theoretically.

ISRO’s Role in Lunar Exploration:

  • Chandrayaan series (1, 2, 3) demonstrated India’s capability to reach and study the Moon.
  • Lunar soil (regolith) characterization – relevant if lunar resource utilization ever becomes viable.
  • However, India is not pursuing SBSP actively.

 

Source/Reference: The Hindu 


 

(MAINS Focus)


Mahatma Jotirao Phule: A Constitutional Project Before the Constitution

UPSC Mains Subject: GS Paper I – Society (Social Reformers) | GS Paper II – Polity (Constitutional Vision)
Sub-topic: Social Justice; Caste Reform; Constitutional Morality; Foundational Thinkers

 

Introduction

As we mark the bicentenary of Mahatma Jotirao Phule, he must be seen not just as a reformer but as a thinker who envisioned a proto-constitutional order grounded in equality, dignity, and redistribution of power. His work highlights how caste, economic exploitation, and state indifference are deeply interconnected.

 

Main Body

From Personal Experience to Intellectual Critique

Born into Injustice:

  • Phule was born into a Shudra community and experienced firsthand the injustices of a graded caste society
  • His lived experience of oppression became the raw material for a systematic critique

Encounter with New Intellectual Resources:

  • Reading English classic texts furnished him with a vocabulary of rights, equality, and justice
  • A transformational moment was his engagement with Thomas Paine’s Rights of Man in 1847

Paine’s Influence on Phule:

  • Paine argued that every individual possesses natural rights due to “his existence” and civil rights for “being a member of society”
  • Paine understood a constitution as a foundational structure of political power—a “body of elements” containing principles on which government is organised to promote “the general happiness”
  • Phule adopted this constitutional imagination for India’s context

Phule’s Constitutional Interventions: Institutional and Structural

Key Actions Rooted in Constitutional Thinking:

  • Establishment of schools for women and oppressed castes
  • Opening of public wells to those deemed “untouchable”
  • Advocacy for widow remarriage alongside critique of child marriage

Submissions to the Education Commission (1882):

  • Argued for compulsory primary education up to the age of 12
  • Insisted that higher education must be within reach of all
  • Proposed targeted government scholarships for communities “amongst whom education has made no progress”
  • Called for “more liberal” and proactive measures to advance women’s education

Key Insight: Phule’s interventions were not merely charitable acts but institutional and structural efforts aimed at promoting the rights of all through state action.

Global Constitutional Vision: Transnational Emancipation

Gulamgiri (Slavery), 1873:

  • Phule situated the struggle against caste oppression within a transnational history of emancipation
  • In the preface, he referred to the abolition of slavery in the United States

Dedication of the Book:

  • Dedicated Gulamgiri to “the good people of the United States, as a token of admiration for their sublime disinterested and self-sacrificing devotion” against slavery
  • Expressed an “earnest desire that my countrymen may take their noble example as their guide in the emancipation of their Sudra brethren from the trammels of Brahmin thraldom”

Significance:

  • Phule was one of the earliest Indian thinkers to envision constitutional responses to the oppression of marginalised communities
  • He looked to global constitutional developments for inspiration while adapting them to Indian realities

Material Conditions: Caste, Labour, and Agrarian Economy

Shetkaryacha Asud (Cultivator’s Whipcord), 1883:

  • Exposed how caste domination operates within the agrarian economy
  • The Shudra farmer, he wrote, is so burdened by exploitation and deprivation that even the possibility of sending his children to school is foreclosed

Critique of Colonial Administrators:

  • Directed sharp criticism at White officers who had neither the time nor the inclination to inquire into the conditions of cultivators
  • Identified state indifference as a key pillar of systemic injustice

Core Insight:

  • Social hierarchy, economic exploitation, and state indifference are mutually reinforcing
  • The failure of governance to respond to systemic injustice perpetuates oppression

Phule’s Enduring Legacy: From Phule to Ambedkar to the Constitution

Phule’s Call:

  • Implicitly called for a reordering of state priorities to focus on the lived conditions of the most vulnerable
  • Recognised that constitutional guarantees without social transformation are insufficient

Ambedkar’s Continuation:

  • B R Ambedkar drew upon Phule’s vision of social transformation
  • Gave it concrete expression in constitutional guarantees
  • The Indian Constitution’s provisions on equality (Article 14-18), affirmative action (Article 15(4), 16(4)), and directive principles bear the imprint of Phule’s constitutional imagination

Contemporary Relevance:

  • Phule’s bicentenary places upon us a renewed responsibility to confront continuing challenges of inequality
  • His insight—that hierarchy, exploitation, and state indifference reinforce each other—remains urgently relevant

 

Why Phule is Not Just a Social Reformer:

  • Unlike many social reformers who focused on religious or cultural change, Phule targeted the state as an instrument of transformation
  • He advocated for targeted government scholarships—an early articulation of affirmative action
  • He understood that education, law, and public policy must work together to dismantle caste hierarchy
  • He looked to global constitutional developments (US abolition) as a model for India

 

Way Forward: Honouring Phule’s Constitutional Vision

For Policymakers:

  • Recognise that social hierarchy, economic exploitation, and state indifference remain interconnected
  • Ensure that constitutional guarantees translate into material improvements for marginalised communities

For Educators:

  • Teach Phule not merely as a social reformer but as a constitutional thinker
  • Include his submissions to the Education Commission in policy curricula

For Civil Society:

  • Draw upon Phule’s framework of targeting state action toward the most vulnerable
  • Advocate for policies that address the intersection of caste, class, and state indifference

 

Conclusion

Mahatma Jotirao Phule envisioned a proto-constitutional order based on equality, dignity, and social justice, influenced by Thomas Paine and global anti-slavery movements. His ideas on education, caste, and agrarian reform shaped the constitutional vision later articulated by B. R. Ambedkar. They remain relevant in addressing enduring social inequalities.

 

UPSC Mains Practice Question

  1. Discuss how Mahatma Jotirao Phule’s ideas can be seen as a proto-constitutional vision. In what ways did his thought shape India’s constitutional principles, and how relevant are they today? (250 words, 15 marks)

 

Source: https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/phules-life-and-thought-a-constitutional-project-10624518/


Custodial Deaths: Sattankulam Killings and the Long Road to Reckoning

UPSC Mains Subject: GS Paper II – Polity & Governance (Criminal Justice) | GS Paper IV – Ethics
Sub-topic: Custodial Violence; Police Reforms; Human Rights; Due Process

 

Introduction

The Sattankulam custodial deaths exposed deep-rooted police impunity. While the conviction of nine officers offers some closure, it must trigger wider reform, as custodial violence remains a persistent failure of the rule of law in India.

 

Main Body

The Sattankulam Case: What Happened

The Incident:

  • June 2020, Sattankulam, Tamil Nadu
  • P Jayaraj was picked up outside his shop for allegedly violating Covid curfew rules (CBI later found this charge to be false)
  • His son Benicks went to inquire about his father a day later and was also detained
  • Both men were severely tortured and succumbed to their injuries

The Investigation:

  • Case was handed over to the CBI
  • Became a test for the justice system vis-à-vis police impunity

The Verdict:

  • Six years later, a Madurai court convicted nine police officers for murder
  • Provides a measure of closure to the victims’ families

Significance:

  • Convictions in custodial death cases are rare
  • This verdict breaks the pattern of impunity, at least in this instance

The Scale of the Problem: National and State-Level Data

Tamil Nadu’s Record:

  • Accounts for the highest number of custodial deaths (judicial and police custody) among southern states
  • 490 custodial deaths between 2016 and 2022

Other States with Poor Records:

  • Uttar Pradesh
  • Bihar
  • Rajasthan

National Context:

  • Custodial deaths are not a regional phenomenon but a national failure
  • The Sattankulam case is a “particularly chilling example of a rot that runs deep”

Constitutional and Legal Guardrails (That Failed)

Article 22 Rights:

  • Arrested person must be informed of alleged crime
  • Must be presented before a magistrate within 24 hours
  • Must be provided legal counsel

Supreme Court Guidelines (D K Basu v State of West Bengal, 1997):

  • Laid down mandatory procedures to prevent custodial torture
  • Expanded the scope of Article 22 protections
  • Required written arrest memos, informing family members, and providing legal aid

Institutional Safeguards:

  • Judicial magistrates are the first and most important line of defence
  • National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) can take up rights issues
  • State Human Rights Commissions have concurrent jurisdiction

The Gap:

  • In Sattankulam, as with many others, these guardrails fell short
  • The chasm between best intentions, rules, and the reality of the police station remains unbridged

Why Guardrails Fail: Systemic Issues

Police Culture:

  • Culture of violence and impunity that treats custody as a zone of unaccountable power
  • Torture as an accepted method of interrogation or punishment

Weak Accountability:

  • Convictions are rare; police officers rarely face consequences for custodial violence
  • Internal departmental inquiries are often opaque and ineffective

Magisterial Failure:

  • Magistrates often fail to conduct independent inquiries into arrest and detention conditions
  • Routine production of arrested persons without scrutiny of torture allegations

Human Rights Commissions’ Limitations:

  • NHRC and SHRCs have recommendatory powers only
  • Cannot prosecute or compel action; rely on state governments for compliance

Witness Intimidation:

  • Victims’ families and witnesses fear retaliation from police
  • Medical evidence is often suppressed or manipulated

The Way Forward: Bridging the Chasm

Strengthen Magistrates’ Role:

  • Mandate independent, surprise inspections of police lock-ups
  • Require magistrates to physically examine arrested persons for injuries
  • Hold magistrates accountable for failures to detect custodial torture

Mandatory Videography:

  • All interrogations and arrests must be videographed
  • Custody proceedings and lock-up conditions must be recorded

Independent Oversight:

  • Establish independent police complaints authorities at state and district levels
  • Empower them with prosecution powers, not just recommendations

Medical Safeguards:

  • Arrested persons must be examined by an independent doctor (not police-employed)
  • Medical reports must be submitted directly to the magistrate

Legal Reforms:

  • Amend the Indian Evidence Act to shift burden of proof in custodial death cases
  • Presumption of custodial violence unless police prove otherwise

Conviction as Deterrence:

  • The Sattankulam conviction must not remain an exception
  • Consistent, speedy convictions are the only long-term deterrent

 

Conclusion

The conviction in the Sattankulam custodial deaths is a rare step against impunity but not systemic reform. Despite safeguards like Article 22 and the D. K. Basu vs State of West Bengal guidelines, custodial violence persists due to weak enforcement and lack of accountability. Bridging this gap requires mandatory videography, independent oversight, stricter accountability, and shifting the burden of proof.

 

UPSC Mains Practice Question

  1. Critically examine the failure of constitutional and legal safeguards in preventing custodial violence in light of the Sattankulam custodial deaths. Why do these protections fall short, and what reforms are needed to ensure accountability? (250 words, 15 marks)

 

Source: https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/editorials/a-conviction-a-reckoning-in-tamil-nadu-10624486/

https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/editorial/systemic-reckoning-on-the-verdict-in-the-sattankulam-murder-case/article70834745.ece

 

Search now.....

Sign Up To Receive Regular Updates