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24 Jun 2026

Reproductive Autonomy of Women with Intellectual Disabilities: Law, Courts, and the Consent Dilemma

Why in news?

The Karnataka High Court recently permitted a total abdominal hysterectomy — surgical removal of the uterus — for a 23-year-old woman with severe intellectual and developmental disabilities.

Her parents had approached the court arguing that their daughter's cognitive impairments made her incapable of understanding or managing menstrual hygiene, causing recurring infections and medical complications. A multidisciplinary medical board confirmed she lacked the capacity for informed consent and recommended the surgery. The court allowed the procedure.

This judgment is part of a larger pattern of courts navigating the deeply sensitive intersection of law, medicine, and human rights for women with intellectual disabilities.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • The Core Legal Problem: Consent and Intellectual Disability
  • The Legal Framework Protecting Disabled Persons
  • The Abortion Dilemma: A Separate and Complicated Legal Terrain
  • Landmark Cases: Reproductive Rights of Intellectually Disabled Women
  • The Recurring Tension: Autonomy vs. Best Interests

The Core Legal Problem: Consent and Intellectual Disability

  • Informed consent is the cornerstone of medical ethics and law. Before any significant medical procedure, a patient must understand its nature, risks, and consequences — and agree to it voluntarily.
  • A difficult situation arises when a person's intellectual disability is so severe that she cannot understand or give informed consent.
  • Neither caregivers nor doctors can then take a unilateral decision. The law requires court intervention.
  • In such cases, courts invoke the doctrine of parens patriae — a Latin term meaning "parent of the nation."
  • Under this doctrine, the court steps into the role of a guardian for individuals who cannot care for themselves.
  • The court does not simply impose its own judgment. It conducts an inquiry to determine what is in the "best interests" of the person — prioritising their health, dignity, and bodily integrity.

The Legal Framework Protecting Disabled Persons

  • Section 10 of the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016 (RPwD Act 2016), is the key provision here.
  • It explicitly prohibits subjecting any person with disability to a medical procedure leading to infertility without their free and informed consent.
  • This was enacted precisely because women with intellectual disabilities have historically been vulnerable to forced sterilisations — often justified by caregivers as a matter of convenience or as protection from the consequences of sexual abuse.
  • The law thus creates a strong presumption in favour of the disabled person's autonomy. Any deviation requires judicial scrutiny.
  • Supreme Court Guidelines on Hysterectomies (2023)
    • In Dr Narendra Gupta v. Union of India (2023), a PIL brought to the Supreme Court highlighted that unnecessary hysterectomies were being performed on women — particularly from marginalised communities — under government health insurance schemes, often in private hospitals, without informed consent or disclosure of side-effects.
    • The Supreme Court held this to be a serious violation of the fundamental right to health under Article 21.
    • It directed all states and Union Territories to strictly implement the Union Health Ministry's 2022 Guidelines to Prevent Unnecessary Hysterectomies.
    • It also mandated the formation of hysterectomy monitoring committees at national, state, and district levels, and directed the blacklisting of hospitals performing such procedures without medical necessity or consent.

The Abortion Dilemma: A Separate and Complicated Legal Terrain

  • Most judicial decisions involving women with intellectual disabilities in India arise not from hysterectomy cases, but from pregnancies resulting from sexual assault.
  • The Medical Termination of Pregnancy Act, 1971 (MTP Act) allows termination of pregnancy with the written consent of a guardian if the pregnant woman has a mental illness.
  • However, this guardian-consent provision does not extend to women with intellectual disabilities.
  • For them, their own consent remains an absolute legal requirement for abortion — regardless of their cognitive capacity. This creates a significant legal gap that courts have repeatedly had to navigate.

Landmark Cases: Reproductive Rights of Intellectually Disabled Women

  • Suchita Srivastava v. Chandigarh Administration (2009) - A rape survivor with mild intellectual disability wished to keep her child. The Supreme Court upheld her choice, ruling reproductive decisions are protected under Article 21. Key distinction established: intellectual disability ≠ mental illness.
  • Z v. State of Bihar (2017) - A disabled HIV-positive rape survivor sought abortion, but hospital demanded third-party consent — illegally. The pregnancy crossed the legal limit. The Supreme Court condemned this as negligence and awarded compensation.
  • Orissa High Court (2020) - Termination of a 24-week pregnancy was denied on medical safety grounds. The court ordered state compensation and postnatal care instead.
  • Gujarat High Court (2024) - A 28-week abortion was permitted for a 15-year-old tribal girl with intellectual disability, based on medical board findings of physical and psychological harm from continuing the pregnancy.

The Recurring Tension: Autonomy vs. Best Interests

  • These cases reveal a fundamental tension in law and ethics — between two principles that are both important but can point in opposite directions.
  • Reproductive autonomy holds that every woman — including one with a disability — has the right to make decisions about her own body.
  • This principle is grounded in Article 21 and supported by international human rights law, including the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD), to which India is a signatory.
  • Best interests, on the other hand, is the principle courts apply when a person lacks the capacity to decide for themselves. It requires the court to act as a guardian and determine what would best serve the person's health, dignity, and welfare.
  • The courts have tried to balance both — giving maximum weight to the woman's own expressed wishes where possible, and resorting to the best interests standard only when she truly cannot communicate a decision.
Social Issues

Article
24 Jun 2026

Meta-CRED Deal: What It Means for India's Digital Economy

Why in news?

Meta Platforms — the parent company of WhatsApp, Facebook, and Instagram — has announced a $900 million (approximately ₹8,550 crore) investment in CRED, a Bengaluru-based fintech company.

Simultaneously, CRED's founder Kunal Shah has been appointed as the global CEO of WhatsApp, succeeding Will Cathcart. Meta will acquire a roughly 20% minority stake in CRED, valuing the company at approximately $4.5 billion (₹38,000 crore).

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • What Is CRED?
  • Why Has Meta Invested in CRED?
  • Structure of the Deal
  • Concerns: Data Sovereignty and Foreign Control
  • Regulatory and Governance Dimensions

What Is CRED?

  • CRED was founded in 2018 and originally targeted India's creditworthy consumers — rewarding them for paying credit card bills on time.
  • Over the years, it expanded into lending, UPI payments, rent payments, bill payments, and wealth management services.
  • Key numbers: CRED has 1.7 crore (17 million) members and controls over 40% of India's credit-card bill payments.
  • This makes it one of the most valuable financial data platforms in the country.

Why Has Meta Invested in CRED?

  • India is WhatsApp's largest market globally, with over 500 million active users. It is also one of the world's fastest-growing digital payments markets.
  • Meta has been expanding aggressively in India for years. In 2020, it invested ₹43,500 crore ($5.7 billion) in Jio Platforms. The CRED deal is the next step in deepening that presence.
  • WhatsApp's Ambition: Beyond Messaging
    • WhatsApp crossed 3 billion monthly active users globally in 2025. But Meta sees it as far more than a messaging app.
    • The company wants to transform WhatsApp into a platform for business messaging, digital commerce, and payments.
    • India — with its massive UPI ecosystem and mobile-first consumers — is the ideal testing ground for this vision.
    • CRED's user base is particularly attractive. Its members are financially active, credit-aware, and high-value consumers — exactly the segment Meta wants to engage through WhatsApp Pay and future commerce features.
  • Payments + Messaging + AI: The Convergence Play
    • The deal brings together three dominant themes in the global technology industry: messaging, payments, and artificial intelligence.
    • Meta is betting that integrating CRED's fintech expertise with WhatsApp's massive reach could create a powerful super-app ecosystem in India — combining customer communication, shopping, financial services, and AI-powered experiences on a single platform.

Structure of the Deal

  • Meta acquires a minority stake (~20%) in CRED. CRED has clarified that Meta will not receive access to customer data as part of this arrangement, and Meta will not take a board seat.
  • Kunal Shah will step away from his day-to-day operational role at CRED and relocate to Meta's headquarters in Menlo Park, California, to lead WhatsApp globally.

Impact on India's Digital Payments Landscape

  • India's UPI-based digital payments market is large but already concentrated and foreign dominated.
  • PhonePe — backed by Walmart — and Google Pay together account for the lion's share of UPI transactions. Other players include Paytm, Amazon Pay, WhatsApp Pay, and CRED.
  • The Meta-CRED deal further consolidates foreign ownership in this space. The pattern is striking.
  • India's digital payments ecosystem — built on public infrastructure like Aadhaar, UPI, and India Stack — is increasingly dominated by platforms linked to American corporations: Walmart (PhonePe), Google (Google Pay), and now Meta (WhatsApp Pay + CRED).
  • Some analysts believe the combined strength of Meta's global reach and CRED's high-value user base could challenge PhonePe and Google Pay's dominance.
  • However, gaining meaningful market share in UPI transactions takes time, and no specific product integration between CRED and WhatsApp Pay has yet been announced. The competitive outcome remains to be seen.

Concerns: Data Sovereignty and Foreign Control

Concern 1 — Creeping Foreign Control Over Indian Fintech

  • The CRED investment would further entrench foreign technology giants in a sector that was built on Indian public digital infrastructure — paid for by Indian taxpayers and Indian policy choices.

Concern 2 — Indian Startups as Acquisition Targets, Not Champions

  • Experts have pointed to a troubling pattern: many Indian fintech startups appear to be building companies not for long-term domestic ownership, but for eventual sale to foreign buyers.
  • The CRED deal fits this pattern — a high-profile Indian startup founded on Indian public infrastructure, now partially owned by a US technology giant.
  • India risks becoming a market for foreign digital companies rather than a producer of globally owned digital platforms.

Concern 3 — Future Data Access Risk

  • CRED has stated that Meta will not access customer data today.
  • However, over time, CRED's rich financial data — covering credit card behaviour, spending patterns, and financial profiles of 1.7 crore users — could directly or indirectly become accessible to Meta, which could potentially use it to train AI models or monetise it through targeted advertising.
  • Financial data is among the most sensitive categories of personal data. Its linkage with a global advertising-and-AI platform raises legitimate regulatory questions.

Regulatory and Governance Dimensions

  • Data Protection: India's Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 governs the handling of personal data. Cross-border data flows, especially involving financial information, require careful regulatory oversight. The CRED-Meta arrangement will be closely watched to ensure compliance.
  • FDI in Fintech: Foreign direct investment in the fintech sector is regulated by RBI and SEBI guidelines. A 20% stake acquisition by a foreign entity in a company handling large-scale credit card data raises questions about sectoral caps, beneficial ownership norms, and data localisation requirements.
  • Competition Law: The Competition Commission of India (CCI) would need to assess whether the deal creates anti-competitive advantages through the combination of WhatsApp's messaging dominance and CRED's payments position.
  • India Stack and Public Infrastructure: UPI, Aadhaar, and the broader India Stack were built as public goods using public investment. The question of who ultimately benefits from the commercial value generated on top of this infrastructure is a live policy debate.
Economics

Current Affairs
June 23, 2026

What is the Anthropological Survey of India (AnSI)?
Human skeletal remains excavated from the archaeological site of Rakhigarhi in Haryana have been formally handed over by the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) to the Anthropological Survey of India (AnSI) recently.
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About Anthropological Survey of India (AnSI):

  • It is a government-funded organization that conducts anthropological research and studies on the diverse cultures of India.
  • It is the only research organization to pursue anthropological research in the Central Government under the Ministry of Culture.
  • Headquarters: Kolkata, West Bengal.
  • It was established in 1945 under the leadership of Dr. S.C. Roy, a renowned anthropologist.
  • AnSI was initially set up to study the tribes and castes of India and their way of life.
  • AnSI’s early research focused on collecting ethnographic data on the different tribes and castes of India, including their social structure, kinship system, religious beliefs, and economic activities.
  • Over the years, AnSI has expanded its research ambit to include the study of the entire gamut of Indian society, including the rural and urban population, the marginalized sections, and the diaspora.

Principle Objectives of AnSI:

  • To research the tribes and other groups that make up India’s population from a biological and cultural perspective.
  • To examine and conserve human skeletal remains from both contemporary and archaic times.
  • To gather examples of Indian tribal arts and crafts.
  • To serve as a training ground for management and advanced anthropology students.
  • To publish the research’s findings.
  • AnSI has several branches located in different parts of India, including Delhi, Lucknow, Shillong, and Pune.
  • AnSI has a multidisciplinary team of anthropologists, sociologists, linguists, archaeologists, and other allied professionals who conduct research and studies on various aspects of Indian society.
  • AnSI’s research findings are published in its various publications, including the Journal of Anthropological Survey of India, Occasional Papers, and Monographs.
Polity & Governance

Current Affairs
June 23, 2026

What is Apristurus drona?
Scientists recently identified a new species of deep-sea catshark from the Arabian Sea off the Sakthikulangara harbour on the Kollam coast and named it Apristurus Drona, or the Arabian slender catshark.
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About Apristurus drona:

  • Apristurus Drona, or the Arabian slender catshark, is a new species of deep-sea catshark.
  • It was discovered in the Arabian Sea off the Sakthikulangara harbour on the Kollam coast of Kerala.
  • The species forms a distinct evolutionary lineage and is closely related to catshark species found in the Pacific Ocean and New Zealand.
  • It appears to be extremely rare, occurring along the continental slope off Kollam and around the Wadge Bank.
  • It has no commercial value and is only occasionally encountered in fishery bycatch.

What are Catsharks?

  • A catshark is any of more than 150 species of small mottled sharks (order Carcharhiniformes).
  • They have slender bodies and eyes that are elongated, giving them a catlike appearance.
  • Cat sharks prey on invertebrates and small fishes.
  • They have been found in all major marine environments of the tropical and temperate regions, although many bottom-dwelling species are rare and poorly understood.
  • No species is known to be aggressive toward humans.
Environment

Current Affairs
June 23, 2026

Key Facts about Vaigai River
Residents of Nelpettai recently condemned the Madurai corporation administration for converting the stretch of Vaigai River into a garbage dumping zone by placing more than 10 trash bins there.
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About Vaigai River:

  • It is an important river in Tamil Nadu
  • Course:
    • It begins its journey in the Varusanadu Hills, which are part of the Western Ghats.
    • It flows east across the state, passing by the famous city of Madurai.
    • Eventually, the Vaigai River flows into the Palk Strait, near the Ramanathapuram district.
  • The river also creates the beautiful Vattaparai Falls.
  • Vaigai gets major feed from the Periyar Dam in Kumuli, Kerala.
    • Water from the Periyar River in Kerala is diverted into the Vaigai River via a tunnel through the Western Ghats.
  • Major Tributaries: Suruli River, Mullaiyaar River, Varaha River, and Manjal River.
  • The Vaigai Dam is built across the river near Andipatti, in the Theni district of Tamil Nadu.
    • It provides water for irrigation for the Madurai district and the Dindigul district as well as drinking water to Madurai and Andipatti.
Geography

Current Affairs
June 23, 2026

Sarinda
Tripura’s rich cultural heritage has received a major boost with the traditional Tripura Sarinda being granted the Geographical Indication, or GI, tag.
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About Sarinda:

  • It is a bowed string musical instrument which is crafted from a single block of wood with a hollow resonator.
  • It is associated with the indigenous communities of Tripura an used during folk performances and other indigenous musical expressions.
  • It is also known as Sarinda Uakhrap.
  • Features of Sarinda:
    • It is specially made of bamboo.
    • It also has an oval shaped void wooden vibrating chamber which is covered with a thin skin.
    • The middle portion is large and the edges are wide. The cave portion is uncovered.
    • In the top portion three pegs are fitted in order to fasten the strings. The strings are either metal or of the thread of Muga or animals gut.
  • It is played by a crude "bow" that is made of horse hair.
  • Other GI-tagged products from Tripura: Tripura Queen Pineapple, Risa and Pachra, also known as Rignai, and Matabari Peda.
Art and Culture

Current Affairs
June 23, 2026

Ecologically Sensitive Area
The Western Ghats one of the world's biodiversity hotspots, may soon receive stronger legal protection in at least three states through the notification of Ecologically Sensitive Areas (ESAs).
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About Ecologically Sensitive Area:

  • ESAs, also called Eco-Sensitive Zones (ESZs) are designated regions identified for special environmental protection because of their rich biodiversity, fragile ecosystems or critical ecological functions.
  • The Central Government can notify certain areas as Ecologically Sensitive Areas under the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986.
  • Under this recognition certain activities are prohibited, some are tightly regulated, while others are encouraged to ensure development does not come at the cost of ecological damage.
  • Getting an ESA status also means that any development project in the area will be subject to stricter environmental scrutiny.
  • Significance of ESZ:
    • Eco-Sensitive Zones are created as “shock absorbers” for the protected areas, to minimize the negative impact on the “fragile ecosystems” by certain human activities taking place nearby.
    • These areas are meant to act as a transition zone from areas requiring higher protection to those requiring lesser protection.
Environment

Current Affairs
June 23, 2026

Nirbhay Chetna Initiative
Recently, the central government rolled out ‘Nirbhay Chetna’ to sensitise 17.5 lakh male elected representatives.
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About Nirbhay Chetna Initiative:

  • It is a key intervention under the Nirbhay Raho initiative.
  • It is a first-of-its-kind national initiative implemented under the Nirbhaya Fund.
  • Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Panchayati Raj
  • It seeks to strengthen gender-responsive governance through Panchayati Raj Institutions by building awareness, accountability and community leadership among elected representatives.
  • It is a landmark national initiative on the sensitisation of men towards women-related issues, including women’s safety and security that aims to strengthen gender-responsive governance at the grassroots level.
  • Components of Nirbhay Raho:
    • Nirbhay Chetna seeks to sensitise elected male representatives on gender equality and women’s safety;
    • Nirbhay Netri focuses on capacity-building and legal awareness among elected women representatives;
    • Nirbhay Drishti envisages the installation of CCTV cameras at strategic rural locations to strengthen technology-enabled safety infrastructure in Panchayats.
Polity & Governance

Current Affairs
June 23, 2026

Lake Baikal
Researchers said ancient DNA obtained from bodies interred in four burial sites in the Lake Baikal area revealed the ‌presence of the oldest-known strains of Yersinia pestis, the plague bacterium.
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About Lake Baikal:

  • Location: It is located in the southern part of eastern Siberia, south-central Russia, near the border with
  • It is the oldest existing freshwater lake on Earth.
  • It is the world’s largest freshwater lake. 
  • It is also the world’s deepest lake.
  • There are 45 islands and islets in Lake Baikal, of which Olkhon is the largest island.
  • Rivers: Barguzini, Selenga, Upper Angara, Sarma, and Turka are the major rivers that drain into the lake.
  • It has only one outlet, the Angara River.
  • It is also home to the Buryat people, who follow the Tibetan Buddhist religion and reside on the eastern side of the lake, rearing goats, camels, cattle, and sheep.
  • The lake was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1996.
Geography

Current Affairs
June 23, 2026

Ambubachi Mela
The annual Ambubachi Mela which is one of the largest and most significant religious gatherings in eastern India started at the revered Kamakhya Temple.
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About  Ambubachi Mela:

  • The Ambubachi festival is held during the monsoon, generally in June at the Kamakhya Temple in Guwahati, Assam.
  • It is a shrine to the Goddess Kamakhya and one of the most important centres of Tantrik Shaktism.
  • The period of Ambubachi is believed to be the period of the goddess’s annual menstruation, and the shrine is closed for this.
  • The festival is associated with fertility, with the onset of monsoon, and the common historical association across cultures of the Earth as a fertile woman. The name ‘Ambubachi’ itself translates to water flowing.

Key Facts about the Kamakhya Temple  

  • Location: It is situated on Nilachal Hill and adjoining the southern bank of the Brahmaputra River.
  • It is one of the most revered centres of Tantric practices. It is regarded as one of the oldest of the 51 Shakti Peethas in India. 
  • Temple Architecture of Kamakhya Temple:
    • It had been modelled out of a combination of two different styles namely, the traditional nagara and Saracenic or Mughal style of architecture.
    • This unusual combination has been named the Nilachala Style of Architecture.
    • This is the only temple of Assam having a fully developed ground plan.
    • It consists of five chambers, garbhagriha, antarala, Jagan Mohan, bhogmandir  and natmandir or opera hall for performing traditional dance and music associated with sukti temples.
    • The superstructure of each of the above chambers exhibits different architectural features.
    • The main temple contains a modified Saracenic dome, the antarala carries a two-roofed design, the bhogmandir with five domes similar in appearance to the main temple and the natmandir having a shell-roof with apsidal end similar to some of the impermanent namghars or prayer halls found in Assam.
History & Culture
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