APSC Current Affairs: Assam Tribune Notes (25/04/2025)

APSC Current Affairs: Assam Tribune Notes with MCQs and Answer Writing (25/04/2025)

For APSC CCE and other Assam Competitive examinations aspirants, staying updated with current affairs is vital. This blog covers most important topics from the Assam Tribune today (25-04-2025). These issues are key for both APSC Prelims and Mains preparation, offering insights into the APSC CCE Syllabus.

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đŸ‡ŽđŸ‡ŗ Terror Attack in Pahalgam and India-Pakistan Fallout

📘 GS Paper 2: International Relations | Internal Security | Federalism
📘 GS Paper 3: Security Challenges | Terrorism | Disaster Management


🔹 Introduction

The terror attack in Pahalgam, Jammu & Kashmir, which claimed 26 civilian lives, including tourists and a naval officer, has triggered a diplomatic crisis between India and Pakistan. In retaliation, India suspended the Indus Waters Treaty, expelled diplomats, and closed trade routes. Pakistan responded by putting the Simla Agreement on hold, suspending airspace access, and escalating rhetoric.


🔑 Key Developments

EventDetail
Date of Attack22 April 2025, Pahalgam, J&K
Casualties26 dead, including Indian Navy officer Lt Vinay Narwal
PerpetratorResistance Front (TRF), proxy of Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT)
India’s Actions
â€ĸ Suspended Indus Waters Treaty
â€ĸ Expelled Pakistani diplomats
â€ĸ Closed Attari border
Pakistan’s Response
â€ĸ Put Simla Agreement on hold
â€ĸ Closed Wagah border and airspace
â€ĸ Declared Indian military advisers persona non grata
Assam Govt Action₹5 lakh ex gratia per family to terror victims’ kin (symbolic solidarity)

âš™ī¸ Strategic and Policy Implications

AreaImpact
India-Pakistan RelationsEscalation to near Cold Peace levels; bilateral mechanisms suspended
Diplomatic FalloutDowngrading of missions and visa bans (SAARC Visa Exemption Scheme halted)
Water DiplomacyPotential disruption to Indus River Basin cooperation
Border VigilanceAssam enhances security along Bangladesh border amidst fears of spillover

🧠 Prelims Pointers

Indus Waters Treaty (1960):

Brokered by World Bank

India gets exclusive control of Eastern Rivers (Ravi, Beas, Sutlej)

Pakistan controls Western Rivers (Indus, Jhelum, Chenab)

Simla Agreement (1972):

Post-1971 war accord; mandates peaceful resolution of issues

Recognized Line of Control (LoC) in J&K

TRF & LeT:

TRF: Shadow outfit of Lashkar-e-Taiba, active post-2019 Article 370 abrogation

TRF declared a terrorist group under UAPA & US Terror Watchlist

SAARC Visa Exemption Scheme:

Allows select categories (MPs, journalists, businessmen) to travel across SAARC nations without visa


📝 Mains Pointers

A. Implications for India’s Security Framework

Rise in hybrid terrorism and use of soft targets (tourists, civilians)

Highlights need for intelligence coordination, especially inter-agency and inter-state

Calls for upgrading civilian protection measures in conflict zones

Impetus for reviewing bilateral agreements in light of national interest

B. India’s Soft vs Hard Power Response

TypeResponse
Soft PowerGlobal diplomacy; solidarity with victim families; reinforcing India’s moral high ground
Hard PowerDiplomatic downgrades, revocation of treaties, border closures, intelligence action against proxies

C. Challenges Ahead

Balancing retaliation with international norms and restraint

Avoiding full breakdown of water and trade treaties that could escalate war

Managing communal tensions domestically (e.g., AIUDF MLA arrested for pro-Pak remarks)


🧭 Way Forward

Multilateral Engagement

Engage UNSC, FATF, and G20 partners to build pressure on Pakistan to act against terror

Legal Sanctions Expansion

Widen UAPA coverage to include hybrid actors like TRF and their social media proxies

People-Centric Diplomacy

Use victims’ stories to counter Pakistani narratives in global media

Border Management in Assam

Assam Govt rightly boosted Bangladesh border vigilance after increased Indo-Pak tensions


🧩 Conclusion

The Pahalgam attack is not just a tragedy but a test of India’s diplomatic maturity and internal unity. As India recalibrates its Pakistan policy by suspending key treaties, the focus must remain on ensuring justice, maintaining deterrence, and preserving peace in volatile border states like Assam.

âš–ī¸ AIUDF MLA Arrested Over Pro-Pakistan Remark: Politics, Free Speech & National Security

📘 GS Paper 2: Polity | Indian Constitution | Freedom of Speech vs Public Order
📘 GS Paper 3: Internal Security | Role of Media & Communication | Ethics in Public Life


🔹 Introduction

An AIUDF MLA from Assam’s Barak Valley was arrested after allegedly making a pro-Pakistan statement in the wake of the Pahalgam terror attack. The arrest has sparked debate around the limits of free speech, use of UAPA/sedition laws, and the responsibility of public representatives during national crises.


🔑 Key Developments

AspectDetails
Who Was ArrestedSitting MLA from AIUDF, accused of “glorifying Pakistan” during a public rally
When & WherePost-Pahalgam attack, remarks made in Karimganj, Assam
Arrested UnderSection 153A (promoting enmity), Section 505 (inciting fear), and UAPA provisions
Govt StanceAssam CM: “Free speech cannot be anti-national; public figures must uphold national interest”
AIUDF’s ResponseCalled arrest politically motivated, claimed misinterpretation of speech
Security AngleAssam Police fears such rhetoric may trigger communal tension in sensitive districts

🧠 Prelims Pointers

Article 19(1)(a): Guarantees freedom of speech and expression

Article 19(2): Allows reasonable restrictions for public order, morality, sovereignty, etc.

UAPA (Unlawful Activities Prevention Act): Anti-terror law; allows preventive detention and seizure of assets in cases threatening India’s sovereignty

Section 153A IPC: Deals with promoting enmity between groups on grounds of religion, race, language, etc.

Section 505 IPC: Penalizes speech that spreads fear, alarm, or incites offence against the State


📝 Mains Pointers

A. Why This Incident Matters in Assam’s Context

ContextRelevance
Border SensitivityAssam’s proximity to Bangladesh makes it vulnerable to radical messaging
Communal DynamicsPolitical speeches can polarize along ethnic and religious lines
Role of Public FiguresMLAs and MPs are expected to uphold constitutional values and avoid incendiary rhetoric
Institutional ResponseShows assertiveness of state machinery in countering any speech seen as anti-national

B. Debate: Free Speech vs National Security

ArgumentPerspective
In Favor of ArrestUpholds national sovereignty, especially during a terror crisis; discourages glorification of hostile states
Against ArrestCould be seen as misuse of UAPA to silence opposition; chilling effect on political discourse
Balanced ViewIntent, platform, and potential to disturb public order must be assessed before invoking harsh laws

C. Legal and Ethical Implications

Due Process: Arrest must be based on clear threat perception, not political vendetta

Ethical Responsibility: Elected representatives have greater duty to maintain unity and sensitivity

Law vs Morality: Some expressions may be legally protected but socially or morally unacceptable


D. Way Forward

Judicial Oversight of UAPA Use

Ensure District Magistrate or High Court review for political cases under national security laws

Political Code of Conduct

Develop an Ethical Charter for Legislators, especially during conflict or terror incidents

Speech vs Sedition Guidelines

Define thresholds for hate speech, disruptive speech, and prohibited speech under IPC

Community Engagement

Counter radical narratives through civil society and interfaith dialogue platforms


🧩 Conclusion

The arrest of the AIUDF MLA reflects the delicate balance between free speech and national unity. In a volatile state like Assam—where identity, religion, and politics intersect—leaders must exercise measured expression. The State, in turn, must enforce law with restraint and responsibility, ensuring that justice is neither politicized nor paralyzed.

🌾 Assam Govt Launches Corpus for Climate-Resilient Agriculture

📘 GS Paper 3: Agriculture | Environment | Climate Change | Disaster Management
📘 GS Paper 2: Government Policies | Schemes for Farmers | Inclusive Growth


🔹 Introduction

The Assam government has announced the creation of a dedicated corpus fund to promote climate-resilient agriculture practices, especially in flood-prone and drought-affected areas of the state. This initiative comes amid growing concern over erratic rainfall, frequent floods, and declining traditional paddy cultivation in Assam.


🔑 Key Highlights

AspectDetails
InitiativeCorpus Fund for Climate-Resilient Farming
Fund Size₹100 crore (initial allocation)
Focus RegionsBarpeta, Morigaon, Dhemaji, Lakhimpur, Dhubri — prone to flood/drought cycles
Practices Supported

Flood-resistant rice (e.g., Swarna Sub1)

Agroforestry

Integrated farming systems (rice + fish + duck)

Micro-irrigation

Community seed banks
| Implementation Agencies | Dept. of Agriculture, Krishi Vigyan Kendras, and FPOs


🧠 Prelims Pointers

Swarna Sub1: A flood-tolerant variety of paddy developed by IRRI and ICAR

Agroforestry: Integrating trees with crops/livestock for climate resilience

eNAM: Electronic National Agriculture Market — enables farmers to sell directly

PM-Krishi Sinchai Yojana (PMKSY): Promotes per drop more crop through micro-irrigation

Assam SAPCC (State Action Plan on Climate Change): Includes goals for sustainable agriculture


📝 Mains Pointers

A. Why Climate-Resilient Agriculture is Critical in Assam

ConcernImpact
Flood-Drought DualityBrahmaputra and Barak basins face both floods and prolonged dry spells
Crop DamageOver 60% of Sali paddy crops affected in 2023 due to waterlogging
Decline in Traditional FarmingMarginal farmers shift to non-farm jobs due to low yield + high risk
Food SecurityDependency on food imports increases vulnerability during disasters

B. Core Components of the Scheme

InterventionOutcome
Seed ResiliencePromote climate-proof varieties via KVKs
Agroecological FarmingCombine livestock, aquaculture, and multi-cropping
Water EfficiencySubsidize solar pumps, drip irrigation, farm ponds
Community OutreachEmpower Farmer Producer Organisations (FPOs) to act as knowledge hubs
Digital IntegrationUse weather forecasting apps, soil health cards, crop insurance tech

C. Challenges to Implementation

Lack of Technical Know-how at village level

Financial Constraints for small and marginal farmers

Fragmented Landholdings reduce scalability of tech-based interventions

Institutional Coordination gaps between revenue, irrigation, and agriculture departments

Monitoring Issues – No geotagging or independent audit for scheme tracking


D. Way Forward

Scale-Up KVK Involvement

Conduct block-level demonstration projects on climate-resilient models

Financial Inclusion of Farmers

Link with Kisan Credit Cards, NABARD-backed SHGs, and Agri-Startups

Satellite-Based Farm Monitoring

Use GIS and drones to assess damage and guide response

District-Level Agriculture Climate Plans

Customize strategies as per flood risk, crop pattern, and tribal zone

Youth Involvement

Launch ‘Green Agri Fellows’ to deploy young agri graduates in rural tech extension


🧩 Conclusion

Assam’s climate-resilient agriculture corpus marks a policy shift from reactive relief to proactive adaptation. To succeed, it must combine science, sustainability, and grassroots participation. Climate resilience is no longer optional for Assam—it is the key to its agrarian revival and rural stability.

đŸĨ Rising Cases of Hepatitis in Assam: Public Health Alert

📘 GS Paper 2: Health | Government Schemes | Issues Related to Children and Women
📘 GS Paper 3: Human Development | Public Health | Environmental Sanitation


🔹 Introduction

Assam has reported a spike in hepatitis infections, especially among children and adolescent girls, sparking concern among public health officials. Experts attribute the rise to poor sanitation, low vaccination coverage, and lack of preventive health education, especially in flood-affected and urban-slum pockets.


🔑 Key Developments

IndicatorDetails
Areas AffectedBarak Valley, Dibrugarh, Guwahati outskirts
Groups Most VulnerableGirls aged 10–19, malnourished children, slum residents
Type of HepatitisPrimarily Hepatitis A and E (spread via contaminated food & water)
Health Expert OpinionLack of routine handwashing, open defecation, and stagnant water exposure to blame
Current Govt Measures

Intensified routine immunization

Awareness via Anganwadi and ASHA networks

Medical camps in schools


🧠 Prelims Pointers

Hepatitis A & E:

Transmitted via fecal–oral route

Preventable through safe drinking water, sanitation, and hygiene

No specific treatment—focus on hydration, nutrition, and prevention

Hepatitis B & C:

Spread via blood, body fluids; more chronic and life-threatening

HBV vaccine is part of India’s Universal Immunization Programme (UIP)

POSHAN Abhiyan:

Govt’s flagship nutrition scheme targeting children and adolescent girls

Health & Wellness Centres (HWCs):

Sub-centres and PHCs upgraded under Ayushman Bharat to include screening and preventive care


📝 Mains Pointers

A. Why Hepatitis Spike Is a Concern for Assam

FactorImpact
Climate LinkFloods lead to water contamination; Hepatitis A outbreaks follow
Urban Sanitation GapsSlums lack toilets, clean drinking water access
Poor Menstrual HygieneGirls in puberty face compounded risks
Weakened ImmunityMalnutrition lowers resistance to infection
School DropoutsHealth conditions indirectly lead to absenteeism, especially among girls

B. Structural Health System Gaps

GapConsequence
Low Vaccine CoverageNot all Hepatitis A vaccines covered under UIP
Weak School Health ProgrammeLimited convergence with education dept
Inadequate SurveillanceSporadic cases often go unreported or undiagnosed
Shortage of Doctors in PHCsPreventive screening often delayed

C. Way Forward

Include Hepatitis A Vaccine under UIP in NE States

Target high-risk districts with catch-up campaigns

Swachh Vidyalaya + Swachh Bharat Sync-Up

Prioritize WASH infrastructure in rural and urban schools

School-Based Health Education

Make hand hygiene, safe water use, and food safety part of Life Skills Curriculum

Mobile Health Clinics

Deploy vans with screening + health promotion kits in remote areas

Nutrition–Sanitation Convergence

Link POSHAN Abhiyan outcomes with local water and sanitation drives


🧩 Conclusion

The rise in hepatitis cases is not just a medical issue—it reflects Assam’s wider sanitation and nutrition crisis. The state must move from reactive treatment to proactive prevention, especially for vulnerable children and adolescent girls. Clean water, empowered health workers, and informed citizens will be Assam’s best vaccine.

APSC Prelims Practice Questions

đŸ‡ŽđŸ‡ŗ Topic 1: Pahalgam Terror Attack & India–Pakistan Tensions

Q1. With reference to the Indus Waters Treaty (IWT), consider the following:

  1. It was brokered by the World Bank in 1960.
  2. India controls the western rivers—Indus, Jhelum, and Chenab.
  3. The treaty has survived multiple wars between India and Pakistan.

Which of the statements is/are correct?
A. 1 and 3 only
B. 1 and 2 only
C. 2 and 3 only
D. All of the above

✅ Answer: A

🧠 Explanation:

  • Statement 1 ✅: IWT was brokered by the World Bank.
  • Statement 2 ❌: India controls eastern rivers (Ravi, Beas, Sutlej); Pakistan controls western rivers.
  • Statement 3 ✅: The treaty has survived multiple conflicts, including wars in 1965, 1971, and Kargil.

Q2. Which of the following best defines “persona non grata” in international diplomacy?

A. A citizen who cannot vote in their country
B. A foreign official deemed unacceptable by the host country
C. A person denied refugee status
D. A UN-sanctioned terrorist individual

✅ Answer: B

🧠 Explanation:
“Persona non grata” is a diplomatic term for a foreign diplomat or official expelled from the host country, usually for misconduct or hostile actions.


âš–ī¸ Topic 2: AIUDF MLA Arrested & Free Speech

Q3. Which of the following provisions of the Indian Constitution allows the government to impose reasonable restrictions on the freedom of speech and expression?

A. Article 14
B. Article 19(1)(a)
C. Article 19(2)
D. Article 21

✅ Answer: C

🧠 Explanation:

  • Article 19(1)(a) guarantees free speech
  • Article 19(2) allows the State to impose reasonable restrictions in the interest of sovereignty, public order, morality, etc.

Q4. The Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA) can be invoked for:

  1. Promoting enmity between religious groups
  2. Disrupting the sovereignty and integrity of India
  3. Posting seditious content on social media
  4. Engaging in peaceful protest without prior permission

A. 1, 2 and 3 only
B. 2 and 3 only
C. 1 and 4 only
D. All of the above

✅ Answer: A

🧠 Explanation:

  • UAPA is an anti-terror law for activities that threaten sovereignty and integrity of India.
  • Peaceful protest without permission may attract other laws (e.g., Section 144), but not UAPA unless linked to terror or sedition.

🌾 Topic 3: Climate-Resilient Agriculture in Assam

Q5. Which of the following practices help build climate resilience in agriculture?

  1. Use of flood-tolerant rice varieties like Swarna Sub1
  2. Integrated farming systems (e.g., rice + fish + duck)
  3. Agroforestry
  4. Excessive use of chemical fertilizers

A. 1, 2 and 3 only
B. 2 and 4 only
C. 1 and 3 only
D. All of the above

✅ Answer: A

🧠 Explanation:

  • Practices like flood-resilient seeds, multi-input farming, and agroforestry are key to climate-resilient agriculture.
  • Excessive chemical fertilizers harm soil health and increase emissions, not resilience.

Q6. Which of the following are components of PM Krishi Sinchayee Yojana (PMKSY)?

  1. Micro-irrigation
  2. Watershed development
  3. Promotion of drip and sprinkler irrigation
  4. Procurement of rice and wheat at MSP

A. 1, 2 and 3 only
B. 1 and 4 only
C. 2 and 3 only
D. All of the above

✅ Answer: A

🧠 Explanation:

  • PMKSY focuses on “More crop per drop”, i.e., irrigation efficiency and water conservation.
  • MSP procurement is part of food policy, not PMKSY.

đŸĨ Topic 4: Hepatitis Outbreak in Assam

Q7. Hepatitis A and E are primarily transmitted through:

A. Sexual contact
B. Contaminated food and water
C. Mosquito bites
D. Blood transfusion

✅ Answer: B

🧠 Explanation:

  • Hepatitis A & E are water-borne diseases caused by fecal-oral transmission through unsafe water and poor sanitation.

Q8. Under India’s Universal Immunization Programme (UIP), which of the following vaccines are included?

  1. Hepatitis B
  2. Polio
  3. Measles
  4. Hepatitis A

A. 1, 2 and 3 only
B. 2 and 3 only
C. 1 and 4 only
D. All of the above

✅ Answer: A

🧠 Explanation:

Hepatitis A vaccine is not yet universal in India, though administered privately or in select states.

Hepatitis B, Polio, and Measles are included in UIP.

APSC Mains Practice Question

📝 Mains Question (GS Paper 3 – Agriculture | Climate Change | Governance)

“Climate-resilient agriculture is not a luxury but a necessity in the face of growing ecological uncertainty.”
Critically analyze Assam’s initiative to establish a Climate-Resilient Agriculture Fund. Discuss the importance of such efforts for agrarian sustainability in Northeast India.


✅ Model Answer


🔹 Introduction

Climate change is no longer a distant threat but a lived reality, especially for agrarian states like Assam, where floods, droughts, and crop failures have become seasonal concerns. In this context, Assam’s decision to create a dedicated ₹100 crore Climate-Resilient Agriculture Fund marks a significant policy step toward aligning agriculture with climate adaptation and disaster risk reduction.


🔹 Why Assam Needs Climate-Resilient Farming

ChallengeImpact
Flood–Drought DualityBarak and Brahmaputra valleys see alternating floods and dry spells
Declining Paddy YieldUnpredictable rainfall and soil degradation affecting Sali and Boro crops
Labour MigrationSmall farmers abandoning farming due to losses
Food Security RiskIncreased dependence on food imports from other states

🔹 Key Components of Assam’s Climate-Resilient Agriculture Plan

InterventionDescription
Climate-Proof SeedsPromote varieties like Swarna Sub1 (flood-tolerant rice)
Integrated Farming SystemsMix of rice-fish-duck, horticulture, agroforestry
Water EfficiencySubsidy for micro-irrigation, solar pumps, and farm ponds
FPO InvolvementUse Farmer Producer Organisations to spread awareness and scale adoption
Digital AdvisoryMobile-based weather alerts, soil health cards, and pest control tips

🔹 Significance for Assam and Northeast India

  • Builds resilience against crop loss and income shocks
  • Encourages return to agriculture through profitability
  • Promotes low-input farming suited to hill and tribal ecosystems
  • Enhances carbon sequestration through agroforestry and wetland restoration
  • Strengthens climate justice for vulnerable farming communities

🔹 Challenges to Effective Implementation

ChallengeExplanation
Capacity DeficitLack of trained agri-extension staff at block and panchayat level
Fragmented LandholdingsLimits adoption of irrigation and mechanized techniques
Monitoring GapsNo real-time tracking of fund usage or survival rate of plantations
Awareness DeficitFarmers often unaware of new seeds or practices
Lack of Market LinkageWithout price assurance, diversification may fail

🔹 Way Forward

  1. Institutionalize Climate Plans at District Level
    • Prepare District Agro-Climatic Action Plans with KVKs and FPOs
  2. Community-Led Monitoring
    • Use SHGs, Gaon Panchayats to verify fund utilization and crop outcomes
  3. Digital Farmer Tools
    • Roll out AI-powered crop advisory apps with voice-based interfaces in Assamese/Bodo
  4. Climate-Linked Crop Insurance
    • Promote area-based insurance schemes with faster claim settlement
  5. Partnerships with Research Institutes
    • Collaborate with ICAR, IIT-Guwahati, and IARI for innovation in NE-specific crops

🔹 Conclusion

Assam’s corpus for climate-resilient farming represents a paradigm shift from relief to resilience. But success will depend on bottom-up planning, real-time implementation, and integration of traditional knowledge with new science. In the Northeast, such reforms are not only ecological imperatives but also socio-economic lifelines.

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