Centre tightens norms for foreign donations
The Government of India has notified major changes to the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act (FCRA) Rules to tighten the monitoring and transparency of NGOs that receive foreign funding. Under the new rules, it is no longer enough for an NGO to be registered under five broad categories; it must now operate strictly within the scope of specific activities and geographical areas determined by the government. A minimum fine of ₹1 lakh has been introduced for rule violations, alongside far stricter disclosure and accountability of publications.
1. Key Amendments to the FCRA Rules
- Activity-Specific Schedules: Within each of the five categories (social, economic, educational, cultural, religious), the Ministry of Home Affairs has, for the first time, issued a specific list (schedule) of permitted activities. NGOs must limit themselves only to these notified tasks.
- Geographical Scope & Multiple Fees: NGOs must now clarify which State/UT they will operate in, and pay separate fees for each specific purpose and each State/UT — replacing the earlier single registration fee.
- Strict Disclosure of Publications: Recipients must fully declare their websites, social media accounts, and all materials published through the year — books, magazines, newspaper articles.
- Compliance Timeline: New applicants must comply immediately; existing NGOs get one year to adopt the changes.
2. Expanded Definition of ‘Key Functionaries’
- Broad Scope: ‘Key functionary’ now extends beyond directors/chairpersons to include trustees, partners, Karta/heads of Hindu Undivided Families (HUFs), governing-body members, and anyone managing or controlling the organisation.
- Restrictions on Foreign Nationals: If a foreign national (excluding Persons of Indian Origin) is a key functionary, the NGO is generally ineligible for FCRA registration or Prior Permission unless the Centre specifically permits it.
3. Permitted Activities by Category
| Category | Permitted Activities | Key Conditions / Caveats |
|---|---|---|
| Educational | 22 activities | Awareness programmes on constitutional rights, fundamental duties and civic responsibilities must be entirely non-political. |
| Cultural | 18 activities | Promotion of contemporary arts inspired by Indian traditions must carry no political or ideological content. |
| Religious | 16 activities | Religious education, satsang, discourses and meditation camps are permitted, but proselytisation (conversion) is strictly prohibited. |
| Economic | 19 activities | Works related to economic development and livelihoods. |
| Social | 30 activities | Social welfare and upliftment of marginalised sections. |
4. Heavy Penalties for Violations
- Misuse of Funds: Using foreign funds for an unintended purpose or in a non-notified State attracts a fine of 30% of the misused amount or ₹1 lakh, whichever is higher.
- Administrative Expense Limit: A minimum fine of ₹1 lakh applies even for spending beyond the prescribed administrative-expense ceiling.
5. Critical Analysis
Greater transparency in foreign-fund flows; a check on money laundering and shell NGOs; and assurance that foreign money is not channelled into anti-national activity or forced conversions affecting sovereignty and internal security.
Civil-society experts warn of a heavier compliance burden — per-State fees, disclosure of even social-media/newspaper articles, and rigid activity compartments. Legitimate human-rights bodies face possible harassment based on how “non-political” is interpreted.
Foreign funding to the civil-society sector runs into thousands of crores annually. A tighter, activity-mapped FCRA regime can plug genuine leakages, but the State must avoid a chilling effect on grassroots trusts in education, health and disaster relief. The balance between national security and a vibrant civil society directly shapes India’s democratic credibility and its standing on global civil-liberty indices.
Q. Which statement is correct regarding activities permitted under the ‘religious’ category of the amended FCRA Rules?
- (a) Proselytisation is permitted.
- (b) Only the construction of places of worship is permitted.
- (c) Satsangs, religious education and meditation camps are permitted, but religious conversion is prohibited.
- (d) Religious organisations cannot receive foreign contributions.
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Ban on Telegram stretched the meaning of ‘information’ under the IT Act
The Delhi High Court (order dated 19 June 2026) upheld the Centre’s temporary ban on the messaging app Telegram, imposed to protect the integrity of the NEET (UG) re-examination. The case marks a major shift in how the Information Technology (IT) Act, 2000 is read: the term “information” has been expanded so broadly that it now covers an entire intermediary platform rather than a single message or post — reigniting the debate over digital freedom, national security and the principle of proportionate restrictions.
1. The Legal Expansion of ‘Information’
| Aspect | Traditional Reading | New Government Argument |
|---|---|---|
| Meaning of ‘information’ | Under Sec. 2(1)(v), small units: data, messages, text, images, sound, codes, programmes, software, databases. | An app like Telegram is an ‘aggregation’ of all these units — so the entire platform itself is “information”. |
| Use of Sec. 69A | Block a specific piece of content (e.g., a leaked paper). | Block the entire Telegram app, treating the whole ecosystem as blockable ‘information’. |
2. The Delhi High Court’s Stance
The Court held that the blocking power under Section 69A is not confined to individual pieces of content; given its broad legislative scope, it is deemed to include the software architecture, codebase, database and programmatic ecosystem that make up an entire application.
3. Telegram’s Position
- Against ultra-expansive reading: Section 69A allows blocking only of specific content, not an entire platform or the company as a legal entity.
- Proportionality: Citing the Supreme Court’s Anuradha Bhasin case, restrictions on internet/digital rights must be proportionate and use the least restrictive measure. Shutting the whole app is excessive.
4. Socio-Economic Impact
- Students and teachers: Ironically, the very examinees the ban sought to protect bore the brunt of it.
- Large user base: Telegram has roughly 150 million (15 crore) users in India — a large share being students and teachers who shared study material and notes. The sudden ban disrupted their academic work.
5. Critical Analysis
To stop paper leaks or mass cheating in national exams, the State needs swift power. Telegram’s encryption and anonymity make tracking specific groups technically hard, so a temporary blanket block was arguably the only practical option.
- Precedent: Treating an entire software ecosystem as ‘information’ hands the State a tool to ban any app (WhatsApp, Signal, X) in future.
- Free speech: It risks violating Articles 19(1)(a) and 19(1)(g), disrupting the communication of crores of innocent users over the acts of a few.
The judgment sets a powerful, citable precedent for platform-level blocking. As India drafts the proposed Digital India Act, the unresolved ‘platform-versus-content’ question will determine whether future internet shutdowns remain narrow and proportionate or become sweeping. The outcome bears directly on India’s digital economy, investor confidence in its platform regulation, and citizens’ fundamental rights online.
Q. The “Principle of Proportionality” is most closely associated with which of the following?
- (a) Fairness in taxation
- (b) Independence of the judiciary
- (c) Reasonable and minimal restrictions on fundamental rights
- (d) Division of powers within the federal structure
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India’s experience in diabetes care could guide other countries
With the burden of Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs) rising globally and diabetes turning pandemic, a research paper by Chennai-based diabetologist Dr. V. Mohan was published on 23 June 2026 in the journal Diabetologia. Drawing on four decades of ground-level experience, he argues that India can now guide global health policy by offering an affordable, integrated and tech-enabled model of diabetes control to other Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs).
1. Heterogeneity of Diabetes in South Asia
- Diabetes at lower BMI: South Asians develop diabetes despite a lower Body Mass Index.
- Visceral fat: Higher internal fat around organs and greater predisposition to insulin resistance.
- Lifestyle factors: High intake of refined carbohydrates (white rice, maida) and low physical activity drive the disease — so India needs region-specific screening and treatment.
2. The ‘Total Diabetes Care’ Model
- Integrated approach: Screening, treatment, patient education, lab tests, plus ophthalmology, kidney, podiatry and nutrition services together.
- Less fragmentation: Prevents fragmented care, cuts delays in treating complications, and makes delivery efficient.
3. ‘Task Shifting’ to Solve Specialist Shortage
With a severe shortage of diabetologists, general physicians, diabetes educators and technicians are specially trained — moving advanced diabetes care out of large tertiary hospitals to primary and secondary centres at the grassroots.
4. Technology & Digital Health Interventions
| Tool | Role in Diabetes Management |
|---|---|
| Electronic Medical Records (EMR) | Digitally securing patients’ health histories. |
| AI Chatbots | Quick resolution of patient doubts and continuous communication. |
| Telemedicine | Tele-ophthalmology in remote areas, especially screening for diabetic retinopathy. |
| Decision-Support Tools | AI tools helping doctors accurately classify diabetes subtypes. |
5. From ‘One-Size-Fits-All’ to Precision Medicine
Because each patient’s clinical profile, complication risk and drug response differ, treatment must move toward a customised, precision-medicine approach rather than uniform prescriptions.
India carries one of the world’s largest diabetes burdens, making an affordable, scalable model a domestic necessity as much as a global export. The ‘total care’ plus ‘task-shifting’ template aligns directly with Ayushman Bharat’s Health & Wellness Centres and supports SDG-3 (Good Health). It positions India as a thought-leader for the Global South in democratising healthcare with limited resources.
Q. ‘Task Shifting’ in healthcare refers to:
- (a) Transferring the health budget to the States
- (b) Trained health workers performing tasks usually done by specialist doctors
- (c) Handing over health services to private hospitals
- (d) Digitisation of health services
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India’s patchy industrial climate strategy
India’s headline ambitions — Make in India, Viksit Bharat (2047) and Net-Zero (2070) — place industrial decarbonisation at the heart of its long-term climate goals. But a major policy gap remains in India’s industrial climate strategy: a large share of industrial emissions is left unaddressed by existing mechanisms.
1. Current Emission Profile of Industry
- More than 20% of India’s total carbon emissions in 2022 came directly from the industrial sector.
- Manufacturing & Construction fuel use: 13% of national emissions.
- Industrial Processes & Product Use (IPPU): 9% of total emissions.
2. Mitigation Schemes & Their Transformation
| Mechanism | Coverage | Focus |
|---|---|---|
| PAT (Perform, Achieve & Trade) | Originally 13 energy-intensive industries | Reducing specific energy consumption. |
| CCTS (Carbon Credit Trading Scheme) | 9 sectors — Aluminium, Cement, Fertilizer, Iron & Steel, Petrochemicals, Petroleum Refining, Pulp & Paper, Textile, Chlor-Alkali | Reducing emission intensity (PAT is transitioning into CCTS). |
| Remaining under PAT | 4 sectors — Thermal Power, Railways, Discoms, Commercial Buildings | Continue under the PAT framework. |
3. The Core Crisis: ‘Non-Specific Industries’
- Traditional focus only: PAT and CCTS target well-defined heavy emitters (cement, steel, refineries).
- 40% grey area: NITI Aayog’s India Climate & Energy Dashboard (ICED) shows ~55% of manufacturing/construction emissions come from specified industries, but over 40% originate from an ambiguous ‘non-specific industries’ category — a pattern seen in 2014, 2016, 2019 and 2020.
- Left out of policy: Lacking sub-sectoral definition, this 40% block stays outside the mandatory purview of PAT and CCTS — untouched by the green transition.
4. Why Transparency Matters Domestically
Transparency’s real value is domestic: it tells policymakers which sectors are moving correctly and where course-correction is needed. Precise knowledge of these ‘passive outliers’ is indispensable for building a low-carbon economy.
5. Way Forward
- Disaggregated data: Break the “non-specific industries” category into granular classifications.
- Identify sub-sectors: Pinpoint which small/medium sub-sectors drive the 40% and where their carbon footprint is highest.
- Inclusive policies: Expand CCTS (or similar) to make these sectors accountable and energy-efficient.
Net-Zero by 2070 cannot be reached by decarbonising only steel and cement giants. Leaving 40% of industrial emissions invisible undermines the Viksit Bharat goal and weakens India’s credibility in carbon-border-adjustment-driven global trade. A comprehensive, data-driven CCTS expansion is essential to align industrial growth with both economic prosperity and climate commitments.
Q. What is the primary objective of the “Public Trust Doctrine”?
- (a) Protection of private property
- (b) Treating the State as a trustee of public resources
- (c) Increasing corporate taxation
- (d) Privatisation of local bodies
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El Niño: 111 districts in 12 States of ‘primary concern’
An El Niño-driven weak onset of the Southwest Monsoon in June 2026 has left the country with nearly 43% less rainfall than normal so far, with the IMD forecasting continued weakness through the week ending 2 July 2026. The Centre has identified 315 ‘vulnerable’ districts, of which 111 across 12 States fall in the high-priority ‘Primary Concern’ category. Rather than waiting for the crisis to deepen, the government has begun proactively rolling out the District Agriculture Contingency Plan.
1. Classification of Districts by Irrigation Capacity
| Priority | Districts | Irrigation Coverage | Key Features / Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| High Priority | 111 | Below 25% | The ‘Primary Concern’ zone; largely rain-fed. 20 districts are in Maharashtra alone. |
| Medium Priority | 76 | 25%–50% | Partial groundwater/canal cover; a severe deficit could intensify the crisis. |
| Low Priority | 128 | Above 50% | Dams and canals make irrigation status better and risk relatively lower. |
Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Karnataka, Bihar, Jharkhand, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh and Odisha.
2. El Niño’s Impact on Indian Agriculture
- Weak monsoon: El Niño — warming of the Pacific surface — weakens the Indian monsoon, producing 43% less rainfall this June.
- Kharif crisis: June–July are crucial for sowing paddy, maize, millet, soybean, cotton and arhar. Rain deficits shrink sown area and hit productivity, especially in rain-dependent regions.
3. Crisis Management: The Contingency Plan
- Alternative crops: Less water-intensive, short-duration crops (Shree Anna/coarse grains, pulses, oilseeds).
- Crop diversification: Move away from a single traditional crop (paddy) to spread risk.
- Optimal water use: Micro-irrigation — drip and sprinkler systems.
- Additional income: Animal husbandry, poultry and allied activities to cushion crop failure.
4. Convergence with Rural Development Schemes
- MGNREGA: Priority to water conservation/harvesting works — generating rural jobs while boosting water storage.
- VB-GRAMG: Priority to reviving water bodies and building check dams so water reaches fields during the crisis.
With over half of India’s net sown area rain-fed, an El Niño year threatens food-grain output, rural incomes and food inflation simultaneously. Proactive contingency planning, drought-resistant seeds and expanded micro-irrigation (‘Per Drop More Crop’) are key to insulating agriculture — and to keeping CPI food inflation and the rural demand cycle stable for the wider economy.
Q. Which statement is correct regarding the Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS)?
- (a) It applies only to the renewable energy sector.
- (b) Its objective is to reduce the emission intensity of industrial sectors.
- (c) It is designed solely for the transport sector.
- (d) It abolishes the PAT scheme.
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India’s next challenge — from invention to global scale
India has never lacked technological vision or scientific talent — it has often recognised revolutionary technologies long before they entered the mainstream. Yet in many critical sectors it has struggled to convert early leadership into large-scale global industries. As India enters semiconductors, AI, quantum computing and space tech, the editorial (by Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw) argues a vital lesson from the past: invention alone is not enough — real success lies in scaling globally.
1. Ahead of Time, Behind in Scale: Lessons from the Past
| Endeavour | The Vision | Why Scale Failed |
|---|---|---|
| SCL (1970s) | India saw ICs as the digital foundation long before Taiwan/South Korea, founding Semiconductor Complex Limited. | Limited capital, inadequate scale, inconsistent policy and an inward-looking public-sector approach — while TSMC and Samsung built empires. |
| ECIL (1967) | Indigenous computers and strategic electronics during an era of sanctions. | Focus stayed on strategic needs, not globally competitive products; excellence stayed locked in institutions. |
| Simputer (1998) | Anticipated many smartphone/tablet features years before the iPhone. | Immature venture capital, software platforms, supply chains and consumer market — it stayed a prototype while Apple captured the market. |
2. India’s Models of Success
- Pharmaceuticals: Mass manufacturing of generics and vaccines made India the “Pharmacy of the World”.
- Supercomputing & DPI: The indigenous PARAM programme, plus UPI and Aadhaar, show that technology designed for scale transforms a nation and sets a global benchmark.
3. Strategy for Future Technologies
- Artificial Intelligence: The race is won by making intelligence affordable and accessible (as DeepSeek showed), not by the largest model — India should “democratise intelligence” with low-cost, energy-efficient models on UPI lines.
- Quantum Computing: Cut the cost of quantum infrastructure and target practical uses in healthcare, materials science, climate modelling and drug discovery.
- Space Technology: Building on Chandrayaan/Mangalyaan’s frugal innovation, lead in space-based data centres, orbital computing and space-based quantum communication.
4. Key Policy Lesson: “Stopping Too Soon”
India’s greatest weakness has been celebrating technological prowess before building a global ecosystem. The next phase must marry self-reliance with global ambition: the challenge is no longer just to invent, but to commercialise and build globally competitive enterprises.
For Viksit Bharat @2047, technological self-reliance must translate into globally competitive industries that shape the technologies of the future. This demands patient capital, deeper private-sector participation, coherent and stable policy, and a mindset shift from ‘jugaad’ prototypes to large-scale manufacturing and global brands — precisely the gap that determined India’s past misses in semiconductors and electronics.
Daily Current Affairs • The Hindu Analysis for HPAS, HAS & Allied Services
