Important News Articles & Editorial Analysis
📋 Table of Contents
01Bangladesh Failed to Give 'Actionable Response': India — Repatriation ImpasseInt. Relations 02NITI Aayog Flags Low Student Retention, Learning Outcomes 03MGNREGS Scale, Workdays Fell in 2025–26 — VB-GRAM G TransitionEconomy 04The Elephant in India's Data Room — Data Governance CrisisEconomy 05Technology Is Increasingly Turning to Religion to Create Ethical AIS&T / IR 06Editorial: A Watershed Moment in India's Defence Posture — Operation SindoorInternal SecurityBangladesh Failed to Give 'Actionable Response': India
The India-Bangladesh relationship, often cited as a model for "Neighbourhood First" diplomacy, is navigating a period of serious friction. The core issue: 2,862 pending nationality verification cases — a prerequisite for legal deportation of suspected illegal immigrants — with Bangladesh providing no actionable response despite 1,137 diplomatic notes and 456 reminders sent by India since September 2020.
Since Sept 2020: 1,137 Notes Verbale + 456 consolidated reminders sent to Dhaka. India terms repatriation the "core issue" of bilateral ties.
2,862 cases of nationality verification pending with Bangladesh — some stalled for over five years. Without verification, legal deportation is impossible.
Unilateral "push-ins" without nationality verification violate international norms. Bangladesh contests them as breaches of sovereignty and bilateral protocol.
The India-Bangladesh border is 4,096 km long. Despite BSF presence and fencing, its porous nature makes monitoring difficult — continuous friction over "illegal crossings" vs "forced push-backs."
| Flashpoint | India's Position | Bangladesh's Response |
|---|---|---|
| Assam CM Remarks | Repatriation is core issue; "push-back" concerns are a symptom of Bangladesh's administrative delays. | Summoned Indian envoy; put border guards on alert; viewed as threat to sovereignty. |
| New BNP Government (2026) | Pushing for swift resolution given BJP electoral wins in West Bengal & Assam. | Bilateral rapport undergoing recalibration; new government not yet aligned on repatriation. |
| 1972 Bilateral Agreements | Bangladesh has an obligation to expedite verification under existing bilateral framework. | Claims "all measures are in adherence to Indian laws and bilateral arrangements." |
- Security vs. Diplomacy Tension: While India views illegal immigration as a national security concern, aggressive rhetoric risks alienating a partner essential for connectivity and counter-terrorism cooperation in the Northeast.
- International Image: Adherence to "established bilateral arrangements" is crucial for India's image as a responsible regional power respecting international migration norms.
- Neighbourhood First at Risk: The impasse reflects a "trust deficit" that could spill over into other areas of cooperation — water-sharing (Teesta), trade, and anti-insurgency coordination.
- The repatriation standoff links directly to India's domestic politics in border states — Assam's NRC and West Bengal's political landscape both have illegal immigration as a central theme.
- A functional, transparent repatriation mechanism is not just administrative — it is essential for South Asian regional stability and the credibility of SAARC-based frameworks.
- India must balance its security imperatives with diplomatic prudence — ensuring internal political rhetoric does not override formal MEA channels.
MGNREGS Scale, Workdays Fell in 2025–26
FY 2025–26 marks a historic turning point: MGNREGS has seen its sharpest contraction, coinciding with the enactment of the Viksit Bharat–Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission (Gramin) Act, 2025 (VB-GRAM G) to replace the scheme. Civil society studies (LibTech India / NREGA Sangharsh Morcha) document a "paradoxical contraction" causing significant rural income losses despite rising registered households.
From 268.44 crore (2024-25) to 210.73 crore (2025-26). Average days per household fell from 50 to ~43.
44 lakh fewer households and 67 lakh fewer workers found employment — even as registered households rose by 3.2% (14.98 cr → 15.46 cr).
Households completing the full 100-day guarantee dropped from 0.37 crore to 0.22 crore. LibTech India estimates average income loss of ₹1,221 per household.
15 of 20 states recorded a fall. Worst: Tamil Nadu (–42.8%), Haryana (–41.7%). West Bengal generated zero persondays due to fund-stoppage standoff.
| Feature | MGNREGA (Old) | VB-GRAM G (New) |
|---|---|---|
| Guarantee | 100 days per household | 125 days per household |
| Funding Model | Demand-driven (open-ended) | Normative Allocation (capped budget) |
| Cost Sharing | Centre ~90% | 60:40 (Centre:State) |
| Work Window | Year-round | Statutory pause up to 60 days |
| Priority Areas | Various rural works | Water, Infrastructure, Livelihood, Climate |
| Interim Allocation | ₹73,000+ crore (peak) | Only ₹30,000 crore for transition year |
- Fiscal Federalism Burden: The 60:40 cost-sharing ratio places a massive new financial burden on states — many of which already have strained finances.
- Rights-Based to Mission-Based: "Normative allocation" (pre-fixed budgets) effectively ends the "right to work" on demand — turning a legal entitlement into a budget-limited scheme.
- The "Pause" Risk: The 60-day statutory pause during peak agricultural seasons could leave the most vulnerable rural households without a safety net during crises.
- Administrative Friction: New digital requirements (biometrics, eKYC) create access barriers for elderly, disabled, and poorly-connected rural workers.
- No Public Consultation: The NREGA Sangharsh Morcha notes the new scheme was brought in without any meaningful public consultation — a significant democratic deficit.
- MGNREGS is India's largest social protection program — its contraction during a period of rising rural distress (post-conflict supply chain shocks, LPG price spikes) is deeply concerning.
- The transition from a rights-based entitlement to a development-linked mission represents a fundamental philosophical shift in the state's welfare architecture.
- India's rural safety net depends on this scheme working — the "Viksit Bharat @2047" vision cannot be realised on the backs of an impoverished rural workforce.
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The Elephant in India's Data Room
India faces a paradox of the Big Data era: an abundance of information but a scarcity of standardised, usable data. The National Data and Analytics Platform (NDAP) exists, but the core "grammar of governance" — data standardisation — remains neglected. The result: 4–7% annual inflation in government spending due to ghost beneficiaries, missed global rankings, and policy decisions driven by anecdote rather than evidence.
Ministries use different definitions for the same attributes — "household," "time period" — making cross-scheme data unusable. Health data doesn't "talk" to immunisation registries; patients counted multiple times.
Ghost beneficiaries and duplicates inflate spending by 4–7% annually (NITI Aayog, June 2025). Data clean-ups have saved ₹90B (PM-KISAN), ₹210B (PAHAL/LPG), ₹100B/yr (PDS).
OECD estimates: improving public and private data sharing could add 1.5% to 2.5% of GDP. In Global Innovation Index 2024, India's ranking was hampered by missing/outdated data for 10 indicators.
A large share of Parliamentary questions from the 17th Lok Sabha sought basic facts (toilets, pensions, beneficiary counts) that should already exist in a public standardised repository.
| Scheme | Action Taken | Estimated Savings |
|---|---|---|
| PM-KISAN | Deleted 17.1 million ineligible names | ₹90 billion (FY2024) |
| PAHAL (LPG / Ujjwala) | Removed 35 million bogus connections | ₹210 billion (over 2 years) |
| PDS (Ration) | Eliminated 16 million fake ration cards | ₹100 billion (annual) |
- India Data Management Office (IDMO): Under the National Data Governance Framework Policy (NDGFP), IDMO must set binding standards and audit compliance across all Ministries. Must have real authority — not just advisory.
- Scaling data.gov.in: Transition from a simple repository to a centralised, schema-consistent platform enabling real-time, district-level data access for MPs and citizens.
- Data Governance Quality Index (DGQI): NITI Aayog should institutionalise DGQI as an annual benchmark — tying Ministry funding/performance reviews to data quality, triggering "competitive federalism" in data management.
- UN Harmonisation: Aligning domestic data with the UN's System of National Accounts ensures global comparability and improves India's standing in global indices.
- Data standardisation is the prerequisite for a $5 trillion economy — without it, even the most ambitious policy visions are built on shifting sands.
- The "elephant in the data room" is not a technical problem but a governance failure — requiring political will to mandate standards across Ministries that currently guard their data as turf.
- India's digital public infrastructure (DPI) — Aadhaar, UPI, DigiLocker — is world-class; the missing link is standardised, interoperable data governance behind it.
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Technology Is Increasingly Turning to Religion to Create Ethical AI
In a significant departure from Silicon Valley's traditional secularism, major AI firms including OpenAI and Anthropic are seeking ethical guidance from global religious leaders. The inaugural "Faith-AI Covenant" round-table in New York — organised by the Geneva-based Interfaith Alliance for Safer Communities — signals that technical regulation alone may be insufficient to govern AI that mimics human cognition and decision-making.
Legislation moves too slowly for AI development. Religious leaders have millennia of experience "shepherding moral safety" — offering a faster, pre-existing ethical framework.
Companies like Anthropic integrate religious and ethical perspectives into their AI "constitutions" — the rule-sets guiding how AI responds to sensitive queries (e.g., Claude's Constitution).
Alignment with faiths representing billions provides a form of "social license" that purely corporate ethics cannot achieve — essential for public trust in AI systems.
Participants: Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist, Baha'i, Greek Orthodox, Jewish, Mormon representatives. Follow-up dialogues: Beijing, Nairobi, Abu Dhabi.
| Challenge | Analysis |
|---|---|
| Value Pluralism | Faiths share common ground but differ on specific priorities — creating a single "universal" AI ethics framework may be impossible. Whose values? Whose traditions? |
| "Ethics Washing" | Skeptics fear high-level moral dialogue distracts from tangible harms: AI bias, mass surveillance, job displacement — a sophisticated PR exercise rather than substantive reform. |
| The "Why" Question | Discussing how to make AI ethical bypasses the more critical question: whether certain AI systems (autonomous weapons, mass surveillance) should be built at all. |
| The PR Angle | Concerns that this is Silicon Valley's "belated" attempt to soften its "move fast and break things" image after causing significant societal disruptions. |
| Paper | Theme | Relevance |
|---|---|---|
| GS IV — Ethics | Constitutional vs. Religious Morality | Application of moral frameworks in emerging technology governance. |
| GS II — Governance | Multi-stakeholder Regulation | Limitations of traditional legal regulation; rise of international civil society frameworks. |
| GS II — IR | Soft Power & Global Diplomacy | AI ethics as a diplomatic tool — Geneva/Beijing/Abu Dhabi dialogues as geopolitical positioning. |
| GS I — Social | Religion in Modern Society | Role of religious institutions in 21st-century governance of technology. |
- India's diverse religious traditions (Hindu, Buddhist, Sikh, Islamic, Christian) position it uniquely to contribute to global Faith-AI dialogues — this is a soft power opportunity.
- India's AI governance framework (NITI Aayog's National AI Strategy) should incorporate multi-stakeholder consultation including civil society, faith groups, and academia — not just industry.
- The inclusion of Hindu and Sikh representatives in the Faith-AI Covenant dialogue directly links to India's civilisational strengths and its "Mother of Democracy" narrative in global governance forums.
A Watershed Moment in India's Defence Posture
Former Air Chief Marshal R.K.S. Bhadauria analyses Operation Sindoor (May 7–10, 2025) — India's high-intensity, multi-service military response to the Pahalgam carnage of April 22, 2025, in which cross-border terrorists killed 26 civilians. The operation, involving the IAF, Indian Navy, and Indian Army striking nine terrorist targets inside Pakistan, is described as a "doctrinal revolution" — replacing decades of "reactive restraint" with calibrated, proactive deterrence.
India's historical posture: a "dossier approach" — compile evidence, seek international condemnation. Military inaction was often portrayed as restraint and lauded by the West.
PM Modi's declaration: cross-border terrorism = "act of war." Operation Sindoor operationalised this — any act of cross-border terrorism reinforces India's right to retribution.
Phase 1 (May 7): Precision strikes on 9 terror hubs (Bahawalpur, Muridke). Phase 2 (May 9–10): IAF hit 11 PAF airbases (Nur Khan, Sargodha). Pakistan requested ceasefire by noon May 10 — within 88 hours.
IAF (precision strikes), Indian Navy (Karachi blockade posture), Indian Army (LoC operations + S-400 A2/AD zone) operated in seamless coordination — unprecedented integration.
| Parameter | Details |
|---|---|
| Trigger | Pahalgam carnage, April 22, 2025 — 26 civilians killed by cross-border terrorists |
| Commencement | May 7, 2025 at 1:05 AM — surgical, high-intensity strikes |
| Phase 1 targets | 9 terror hubs — Bahawalpur, Muridke (deep inside Pakistan) |
| Phase 2 response | IAF airstrikes on 11 PAF airbases including Nur Khan, Sargodha, Murid |
| Duration | 88 hours — Pakistan requested ceasefire by noon May 10, 2025 |
| Key weapons | BrahMos missiles, Akash air defense, S-400, loitering munitions |
| Defence exports post-op | ₹39,000 crore (2025-26) — 62% surge; global interest in Indian anti-drone and precision systems |
- Indigenous Systems Validated: BrahMos, Akash, and loitering munitions performed at scale — providing a "live" global demonstration of Indian defence technology and energising the domestic ecosystem.
- Defence Exports Surge: ₹39,000 crore in exports (2025–26) — a 62% increase, as global buyers sought Indian-made anti-drone platforms and precision missiles.
- Atmanirbharata Imperative: The operation underscored that strategic autonomy requires the ability to "Innovate, Design, and Manufacture" at scale — MSMEs and startups must now be integrated into the defence ecosystem on a "whole-of-nation" approach.
- To Terrorists: There is no sanctuary, even deep within the adversary's heartland.
- To the Global Community: India will not be deterred by nuclear blackmail — the myth that nuclear-armed states cannot engage in calibrated conventional conflict is shattered.
- To the Pakistani Citizenry: A call to recognise the costs of their military leadership's "reckless involvement" in proxy wars — the operation provided incontrovertible evidence of state-sponsored terror infrastructure.
- Operation Sindoor established a permanent "new normal" — the cost of state-sponsored terrorism is now prohibitively and demonstrably high.
- The "Modi redlines" — zero tolerance for cross-border terrorism — are now backed by demonstrated military capability, not just political rhetoric.
- India's defence industry must now capitalise on this momentum: integrating MSMEs into the supply chain and achieving genuine Make-in-India capability across systems, not just assembly.

