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Current Affairs

Article
14 Jun 2026

Indian Seafarers' Safety - Government Steps and Challenges

Why in the News?

  • The recent deaths of Indian seafarers Aditya Sharma, Shivanand Chaurashiya, and Patnala Suresh aboard the merchant vessel Settebello have brought urgent attention to the safety of Indian mariners operating in conflict-affected maritime corridors.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • Indian Seafarers (Regulatory Framework, Govt Measures for Safety & Welfare)
  • News Summary (Sanctioned Vessels, Strait of Hormuz Issue, Proposed Framework)

About Indian Seafarers

  • Seafarers are professional sailors who serve aboard merchant ships engaged in international and domestic trade.
  • With over 2.5 lakh seafarers, India ranks among the top three countries supplying skilled maritime workforce globally.

Regulatory Framework

  • The Directorate General of Shipping (DGS) under the Ministry of Ports, Shipping and Waterways is the principal authority responsible for:
    • Certification and training of Indian seafarers.
    • Implementation of the Merchant Shipping Act, 1958.
    • Oversight of seafarer welfare measures.
    • Compliance with international conventions like the Standards of Training, Certification and Watchkeeping (STCW) Convention and the Maritime Labour Convention (MLC), 2006.

Government Steps for Safety and Welfare of Indian Seafarers

  • Regulatory and Institutional Measures
    • Merchant Shipping Act, 1958
      • The principal legislation governing Indian seafarers and merchant shipping.
      • Provides for certification, employment conditions, welfare, and safety standards.
      • Currently undergoing modernisation through the proposed Merchant Shipping Bill to align with international conventions.
    • Directorate General of Shipping (DGS)
      • The regulatory authority for seafarer training, certification, and welfare.
      • Issues Continuous Discharge Certificates (CDCs) to Indian seafarers.
      • Implements the Maritime Labour Convention, 2006 provisions.
      • Maintains a central database of registered seafarers.
    • National Shipping Board
      • Advisory body on matters relating to Indian shipping and merchant marine.
      • Recommends policies for maritime development and seafarer welfare.
    • Skill India Initiative
      • Specialised maritime skill development programmes.
      • Apprenticeship and pre-sea training for aspiring seafarers.
      • Recognition of prior learning (RPL) for experienced mariners.

Safety and Security Measures

  • Maritime Security Coordination
    • Information Fusion Centre - Indian Ocean Region (IFC-IOR) at Gurugram for maritime domain awareness.
    • Coordination among the Indian Navy, Coast Guard, and DGS.
    • Real-time threat assessment and dissemination to shipowners.
  • Anti-Piracy Measures
    • Indian Navy escorts in the Gulf of Aden and Western Indian Ocean.
    • Best Management Practices (BMP) for ships transiting high-risk areas.
    • Armed guards on Indian-flagged vessels in piracy-prone regions.
  • Search and Rescue Operations
    • Indian Coast Guard maintains 24/7 search and rescue capabilities.
    • Maritime Rescue Coordination Centres (MRCC) at strategic locations.
    • Rapid response for distress situations involving Indian seafarers.

News Summary

  • The deaths of three Indian seafarers aboard the merchant vessel Settebello have sparked widespread concern within the maritime community.
  • This incident underscores the human cost of geopolitical conflicts borne by civilian mariners navigating dangerous corridors.
  • The debate following recent attacks on merchant vessels has highlighted misunderstandings about sanctioned vessels.
  • A sanctioned vessel is one designated under an economic, trade, or security sanctions regime imposed by a government or international organisation.

Limited Universal Applicability

  • A vessel sanctioned by one country is not automatically sanctioned everywhere.
  • Unilateral sanctions generally apply only within the jurisdiction of the imposing country.
  • UN Security Council resolutions are binding globally.
  • A vessel sanctioned by the US Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) does not automatically become illegal under Indian law.

Core Issue: Seafarer Safety in Conflict Zones

  • The larger concern is not the legal status of individual ships, but the safety of seafarers operating in regions where commercial shipping is entangled in geopolitical conflict.
  • Expected Indian Response
    • The maritime community expects India to adopt a stronger, more proactive posture:
      • Unequivocal condemnation of attacks on merchant shipping and civilian seafarers, regardless of nationality.
      • Continued advocacy for adherence to international maritime law and freedom of navigation.
      • Raising concerns at multilateral forums, including the UN, IMO, and regional maritime security platforms.
  • Beyond Diplomatic Engagement
    • Diplomatic engagement alone may not suffice. India must:
      • Work closely with flag states, shipowners, and operators.
      • Ensure appropriate security measures for vessels transiting high-risk areas.
      • Prevent Indian seafarers from being compelled to sail through war risk zones without full disclosure of risks and their informed consent.
  • Strengthening Maritime Security
    • There is a growing expectation that India will strengthen its maritime security posture:
      • Enhanced naval deployments in critical regions.
      • Expanded Coast Guard surveillance.
      • Rapid response capabilities.
      • Preparedness for hostage rescue and evacuation operations.
      • Timely dissemination of actionable intelligence to shipowners.
      • Regular threat assessments for operators.

The Strait of Hormuz Question

  • A recurring debate centres on whether Indian seafarers should be prohibited from serving on vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz:
  • Why Blanket Bans Are Not the Solution?
    • The Strait of Hormuz remains one of the world's most critical maritime chokepoints.
    • Handles a substantial share of global energy trade.
    • Thousands of Indian seafarers earn livelihoods aboard vessels transiting the region.
    • Comprehensive prohibition could affect:
      • Employment opportunities for Indian mariners.
      • Global supply chains.
      • India's standing as a leading supplier of maritime manpower.
  • Preferred Approach
    • The industry seeks a calibrated, evidence-based approach:
      • Periodic risk assessments.
      • Clear advisories to shipowners and seafarers.
      • Mandatory informed consent for deployment in high-risk areas.
      • Enhanced security protocols rather than outright restrictions.
      • Temporary advisories if the threat environment deteriorates significantly.

Proposed Framework

  • India would benefit from an inter-ministerial maritime security framework capable of:
    • Escalating measures in proportion to the threat environment.
    • Bringing together maritime regulators, foreign policy officials, defence agencies, intelligence organisations, shipowners' associations, and seafarers' unions.
    • Facilitating real-time decision-making.
  • This integrated approach would ensure:
    • Comprehensive threat assessment.
    • Unified response to maritime emergencies.
    • Better coordination between stakeholders.
    • Faster decision-making in crises.
International Relations

Article
14 Jun 2026

Recognising Unpaid Domestic Labour - SC’s Landmark Ruling on Homemakers’ Economic Value

Why in News?

  • In a significant judgment recently delivered, the Supreme Court (SC) held that unpaid domestic work performed by homemakers has an independent economic value.
  • Hence, it must be adequately recognised while determining compensation in motor accident death cases.
  • The Court fixed a minimum notional income of ₹30,000 per month for homemakers under a newly created compensation head called “Loss of Domestic Care” and directed that this amount be increased by 10% every three years. 

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • Background of the Case
  • Key Directions of the SC
  • Recognition of Homemakers as Economic Contributors
  • Directions to Speed Up Motor Accident Compensation Cases
  • Significance of the Judgment
  • Implications for India
  • Conclusion

Background of the Case:

  • The ruling arose from a motor accident compensation dispute in Punjab involving the death of a homemaker, Reshma, in 2001.
  • Course of litigation:
    • The Motor Accident Claims Tribunal (MACT) awarded a compensation of ₹2.42 lakh in 2003.
    • The Punjab and Haryana High Court enhanced compensation to ₹8.43 lakh with interest in 2024.
    • Dissatisfied with the amount, the deceased’s family approached the SC, which substantially enhanced the compensation to ₹62.78 lakh.
    • It recognised not only the deceased’s household contributions but also the loss of maternal care, spousal companionship, and assistance and support to dependent family members.

Key Directions of the SC:

  • Creation of a new compensation head:
    • The Court introduced a distinct category called “Loss of Domestic Care” in motor accident compensation claims.
    • Under this,
      • Homemakers will be assigned a minimum notional monthly income of ₹30,000.
      • The amount serves as a benchmark for assessing the economic value of unpaid household labour.
      • It will be revised upward by 10% cumulatively every three years.
  • Applicability to working homemakers:
    • Where a homemaker is also engaged in paid employment, compensation under “Loss of Domestic Care” will be awarded in addition to her proven income.
    • Thus, unpaid care work and paid work will be treated as separate contributions.

Recognition of Homemakers as Economic Contributors:

  • The Court emphasised that domestic work supports the functioning of the paid workforce, enables overall economic productivity, and contributes significantly to family welfare and social development.
  • Routine activities such as cooking, cleaning, childcare, elderly care, and household management, have traditionally remained invisible in economic calculations despite their substantial value.
  • The Bench described homemakers as “Nation Builders”: builders of human capital, foundational contributors to society, and essential actors in nurturing future professionals, leaders, artists and citizens.
  • The Court observed that many visible economic achievements rest upon the invisible labour performed within households.

Directions to Speed Up Motor Accident Compensation Cases:

  • Concern over judicial delays:
    • The SC noted that compensation claims often remain pending for years. For example, average pendency before MACTs is about 6 years, and about 8 years before HCs.
    • Prolonged delays defeat the welfare-oriented objectives of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988.
  • Court’s directives:
    • Compensation appeals should ideally not remain pending in HCs for more than four years.
    • Adjournments should be granted only for genuine reasons.
    • Chief Justices of all HCs should prioritise older motor accident compensation cases.
    • HCs should assess the need for additional benches to ensure speedy disposal.

Significance of the Judgment:

  • First concrete benchmark:
    • While previous judicial decisions had recognised that homemakers’ services possess economic value, this judgment is notable because:
      • It establishes a specific minimum monetary benchmark.
      • It formally institutionalises compensation for unpaid domestic labour.
      • It moves beyond symbolic recognition towards measurable economic valuation.
  • Gender justice and social recognition:
    • The ruling advances gender justice, recognition of the care economy, valuation of unpaid household work, and greater sensitivity in compensation jurisprudence.
    • It also aligns with long-standing debates on incorporating unpaid care work into broader measures of economic well-being, beyond conventional indicators such as GDP.

Implications for India:

  • Positive outcomes:
    • Strengthens legal recognition of unpaid domestic labour.
    • Enhances compensation for families of deceased homemakers.
    • Promotes a more realistic assessment of economic dependency.
    • Contributes to gender-sensitive interpretation of welfare laws.
  • Emerging questions:
    • The Court did not provide a precise empirical or mathematical basis for fixing the ₹30,000 benchmark.
    • Future debates may arise regarding regional variations, inflation adjustments, and standardisation of valuation methods.

Conclusion:

  • The SC's judgment marks a transformative step in Indian compensation law by assigning tangible economic value to unpaid domestic work.
  • This decision is likely to influence future jurisprudence on gender equality, labour valuation and welfare-oriented compensation frameworks.
Economics

Article
14 Jun 2026

Assam-Nagaland Oil Deal: Tapping a 30-Year-Old Energy Opportunity

Why in news?

The Union government, Assam, and Nagaland have signed a tripartite Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to restart oil and gas exploration along their disputed border area — something that has been stalled for three decades.

The agreement was signed in the presence of Home Minister Amit Shah, Petroleum Minister Hardeep Singh Puri, Assam CM Himanta Biswa Sarma, and Nagaland CM Neiphiu Rio.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • Background: Why Was This Area Off-Limits for 30 Years?
  • About the New MoU
  • Significance of The New MoU: The Energy Security Angle
  • How Big Is the Potential?
  • Why Does This Matter Beyond Oil?
  • Conclusion

Background: Why Was This Area Off-Limits for 30 Years?

  • The Northeast is called the birthplace of India's oil and gas industry. Assam, in particular, is one of India's major oil and gas producing states.
  • However, a stretch of land along the Assam-Nagaland border — known as the Disputed Area Belt (DAB) — has remained a no-go zone for oil and gas exploration for three decades due to boundary disputes and law and order problems between the two states.
  • This area is believed to hold promising hydrocarbon reserves, but they have remained untapped simply because the two states could not agree on resolving the border dispute first.

About the New MoU

  • The MoU does not resolve the border dispute itself. Instead, it creates a practical working arrangement so that oil and gas exploration can begin despite the unresolved boundary issue.
  • Key features include:
    • It covers more than 1,000 sq km of the disputed border area.
    • It sets up a coordinated framework for mineral oil operations — ensuring smooth operations, safety and security of workers and equipment, and proper coordination between the Centre, Assam, and Nagaland.
    • Importantly, both states have agreed not to let the border dispute become an obstacle to oil exploration — treating these resources as national wealth.
    • Beyond the six already-identified oil and gas fields, Nagaland has agreed to allow oil exploration across the entire state.

Significance of The New MoU: The Energy Security Angle

  • India currently depends on imports for over 88% of its crude oil needs and about half of its natural gas
  • This heavy dependence on imports creates several problems for the economy:
    • When global oil prices rise, India's import bill increases, which widens the trade deficit and puts pressure on foreign exchange reserves and the value of the rupee.
    • It can also push up domestic inflation, since fuel prices affect the cost of almost everything else.
  • This concern has become more urgent recently because of the ongoing West Asia conflict, which has led to the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz — a critical waterway through which much of the world's oil passes.
  • This has caused both higher prices and supply disruptions for countries like India.
  • By boosting domestic production, India can reduce its reliance on such volatile international supply routes — making this MoU a small but meaningful step toward energy self-reliance (Atmanirbharta).

How Big Is the Potential?

  • Assam alone holds nearly 22% of India's crude oil reserves and around 15% of the country's natural gas reserves.
  • Nagaland has major untapped hydrocarbon potential in a geological formation called the Naga-Schuppen Belt, part of the larger Assam-Arakan Basin.
  • Home Minister Amit Shah noted that current oil production from the Northeast stands at just 1,000-1,500 barrels per day, but this agreement could help increase production by more than tenfold over time.
  • He also pointed out that this would mark Nagaland's return to oil production after 31 years.

Why Does This Matter Beyond Oil?

  • The government sees this MoU as more than just an energy deal — it is being framed as a model for resolving development bottlenecks caused by border disputes across the Northeast.
  • Officials indicated that this tripartite cooperation framework could pave the way for similar mineral exploration and mining agreements across the entire Northeast region — a region known to have significant untapped mineral wealth besides oil and gas.
  • For Assam and Nagaland themselves, officials say the agreement opens up a major pathway for economic development — since unresolved disputes had kept valuable resources locked away and held back investment for decades.

Conclusion

For three decades, an unresolved border dispute kept valuable oil and gas reserves buried — both literally and figuratively. By choosing cooperation over confrontation, Assam and Nagaland have unlocked not just hydrocarbon potential, but a template for how India's Northeast can turn old disputes into shared development.

Economics

Article
14 Jun 2026

Anthropic Bars Foreign Access to Its Most Powerful AI Models

Why in news?

The US government has issued an export control order barring all foreign nationals — even those working inside Anthropic, a leading AI company — from accessing its two newest AI models, Fable 5 and Mythos 5.

These were launched recently and are Anthropic's most advanced publicly available AI systems. The order cites national security concerns, but its broad scope has raised fresh questions about how governments can control access to AI technology.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • What Are Export Controls, and Why Is This Different?
  • Export Control Order Banning Access of AI Model
  • Background: Anthropic's Troubled Relationship with the US Government
  • What Are Fable 5 and Mythos?

What Are Export Controls, and Why Is This Different?

  • Export controls are rules that stop certain goods or technologies from being sent to other countries. Normally, they apply to physical items — for example, the US restricts the sale of advanced computer chips to China.
  • This new order is different. For the first time, it controls how an AI software product can be used and by whom — not a physical product.
  • This is being seen as a new and unusual use of export control law, applied to artificial intelligence for the first time in this manner.

Export Control Order Banning Access of AI Model?

  • The order blocks all foreign nationals from using Fable 5 and Mythos 5 — whether they are located inside the US or outside it. This includes Anthropic's own foreign employees.
  • In simple terms, only American citizens or entities can access these two models for now.
  • As per the Anthropic, the government did not give a clear, written explanation. Based on informal communication, the company believes the concern relates to a possible "jailbreak" — a method to bypass an AI model's safety restrictions.
    • This technique works by asking the AI model to read a piece of software code and identify and fix flaws in it.
  • Anthropic has pushed back, stating that this capability is not unique to its models — other publicly available AI systems, including OpenAI's GPT-5.5, can do the same thing.
  • In fact, this kind of capability is used daily by cybersecurity professionals to find and fix software weaknesses.

Background: Anthropic's Troubled Relationship with the US Government

  • This is not the first friction between Anthropic and US authorities. In March 2026, the Pentagon labelled Anthropic a "supply chain risk" — a designation that could limit how much US government agencies can use the company's AI products.
  • This labelling followed a disagreement over military use of Anthropic's AI (Claude).
    • Anthropic had insisted on certain safety conditions — specifically, that its AI should not be used for mass domestic surveillance or to help build fully autonomous weapons systems.
    • The company has reportedly indicated it may legally challenge this "supply chain risk" label.
  • This export control order comes at a sensitive time — Anthropic is preparing for a public stock market listing in the US, and was recently valued at $965 billion.

What Are Fable 5 and Mythos?

  • Anthropic has launched Fable 5 and Mythos 5, its most advanced publicly available AI models.
  • Both are built on the company's new “Mythos-class” architecture, derived from the earlier Mythos Preview model, which was not publicly released due to concerns over potential misuse.
  • Why Was Mythos Preview Not Released?
    • Anthropic had previously claimed that Mythos Preview possessed the capability to identify severe vulnerabilities in major operating systems and web browsers, including some that reportedly remained undetected for years.
    • The company feared that such powerful capabilities could be misused, particularly against critical infrastructure worldwide. As a result, it decided against a public release.
    • Before the launch, Anthropic provided limited access to Mythos Preview through Project Glasswing.
    • In India, the company reportedly discussed sharing the model with a small number of organizations.
  • Key Difference Between Mythos Preview and Fable 5/Mythos 5
    • Although Fable 5 and Mythos 5 are based on the same underlying technology as Mythos Preview, they include additional safety safeguards.
      • Requests related to sensitive cybersecurity issues or biological threats are filtered.
      • When the system detects a potentially high-risk query, it automatically redirects the user to a less capable AI model (Claude Opus 4.8) instead of allowing the full Mythos-level system to respond.
    • The company acknowledges that the safeguards may occasionally block harmless requests.

Conclusion

  • This episode highlights a growing global concern.
  • As AI models become powerful enough to find security flaws in critical software, governments are beginning to treat advanced AI itself as a controlled, sensitive technology — similar to how they treat nuclear technology, advanced weapons, or top-end semiconductor chips.
  • For India, this is a reminder that building indigenous AI capability is no longer optional but a matter of strategic necessity.
Science & Tech

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13 June 2026 MCQs Test

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Current Affairs
June 13, 2026

What is Ingerana occidens?
A researcher recently discovered a new species of frog named Ingerana occidens in the canopy-covered streams of northeastern India.
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About Ingerana occidens:

  • Ingerana occidens, or the western trickle frog, is a new species of frog.
  • It was discovered in the Garo and Khasi Hills of Meghalaya south of the Brahmaputra
  • When comparing the DNA of the newly found southern frogs to the topotypic Ingerana borealis frogs living north of the Brahmaputra River, there is an 18% difference in their genetic code.
  • This confirms that the southern frogs belong to a distinct and previously undocumented species.
  • The species name ‘occidens’ is derived from the Latin word for 'west'. This name was chosen because the frog's habitat marks the westernmost known range of any species in its genus.
Environment

Current Affairs
June 13, 2026

What is Paraquat?
Telangana recently banned paraquat, one of the world's most widely used and highly toxic weedicides, becoming only the third State in India to do so.
current affairs image

About Paraquat:

  • Paraquat, or paraquat dichloride, is a toxic chemical that is used worldwide as an herbicide (plant killer), usually for weed and grass control.
  • Paraquat’s origins date back to the 1880s, when it was first developed as a chemical dye. Its herbicidal properties were discovered in the 1950s.
  • It is a synthetic (human-made) herbicide.
  • It is also used as a desiccant, which dries out the crop before harvest. Paraquat is sometimes used as a plant growth regulator.
  • It may induce or delay flowering. It has no residual activity in soil.
  • Major Concerns:
    • It causes many health issues and human fatalities each year from accidental exposure and suicide.
    • It is known for its extreme toxicity and lack of a specific antidote.
    • When paraquat is ingested, it damages the lining of the mouth, stomach, and intestines upon contact.
    • It then spreads throughout the body, damaging organs, but primarily the lungs, liver, and kidneys.
    • More than 70% of paraquat self-poisonings result in death.
  • Paraquat is banned in many countries.
  • It is not yet banned nationwide in India. In India, Kerala became the first State to ban it in 2011.
  • Other states which banned paraquat are Odisha, Telangana, and Andhra Pradesh.

 

Science & Tech

Current Affairs
June 13, 2026

INS Baaz
The government recently decided to build a new Rs 13,000-crore greenfield civil-military airport as part of the Great Nicobar project instead of expanding the existing naval airfield at INS Baaz.
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About INS Baaz:

  • It is an Indian naval air station located near Campbell Bay, on Great Nicobar Island in the Andaman & Nicobar Islands.
  • It was commissioned in 2012. It is the first air station in the Nicobar Islands.
  • It is the southernmost air station of the Indian Armed Forces.
  • It is under the joint-services Andaman and Nicobar Command (ANC) of the Indian Armed Forces.
  • It significantly enhances India’s capacity for intelligence gathering, surveillance, and reconnaissance across vast areas of the Indian Ocean.
  • It overlooks the Strait of Malacca as well as the Six Degree Channel between Great Nicobar and the Indonesian island of Sumatra.
  • It is used as a base for the Indian Navy's Dornier Do 228 reconnaissance aircraft.
  • It can also operate the Indian Air Force's C-130J Super Hercules transport aircraft.
Science & Tech

Current Affairs
June 13, 2026

Key Facts about Estonia
Estonian government officials and business executives are expressing greater interest in cooperating with India in defence and trade.
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About Estonia:

  • It is a country in northeastern Europe, the northernmost of the three Baltic states.
  • It is bordered by Russia in the east and Latvia in the south.
  • It is also bounded by the Gulf of Finland in the north, the Baltic Sea in the west, and Lake Peipus in the east.
  • Estonia shares its maritime borders with Finland and Sweden.
  • Estonia’s area includes many islands and islets; the two largest of these islands, Saaremaa and Hiiumaa, are off mainland Estonia’s west coast.
  • Capital: Tallinn
  • Official Language: Estonian 
  • Currency: euro (€)

Political System:  It is a parliamentary republic.

  • History:
    • Ruled at various times during the Middle Ages by Denmark, the German knights of the Livonian Order, and Sweden, Estonia ended up part of the Russian Empire in the 18th century.
    • It experienced its first period of independence in 1918, following the end of World War One and the collapse of the Russian Empire.
    • In 1940 it was forcibly incorporated into the U.S.S.R. as one of its constituent republics.
    • Estonia remained a Soviet republic until 1991, when, along with the other Baltic states, it declared its independence.
    • The Soviet Union recognized independence for Estonia and the other Baltic states in 1991, and United Nations membership followed shortly thereafter.
    • Estonia set about transforming its government into a parliamentary democracy and reorienting its economy toward market capitalism.
    • In 2004 joined the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and the European Union (EU). 
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