APSC Current Affairs: Assam Tribune Notes (17/12/2025)

APSC Current Affairs: Assam Tribune Notes with MCQs and Answer Writing (17/12/2025)

For APSC CCE and other Assam competitive exam aspirants, staying consistently updated with reliable current affairs is essential for success. This blog provides a well-researched analysis of the most important topics from The Assam Tribune dated 17 December 2025. Each issue has been carefully selected and explained to support both APSC Prelims and Mains preparation, ensuring alignment with the APSC CCE syllabus and the evolving trends of the examination.

APSC CCE Prelims Crash Course, 2026

VB-G RAM-G Bill, 2025: Replacing MGNREGA and Its Implications for Rural Employment & Federalism

📘 GS Paper II (Mains): Polity | Governance | Social Justice | Federalism
📘 GS Paper III (Mains): Inclusive Growth | Rural Development
📘 GS Paper V (Assam): Rural Economy | Welfare Schemes
📘 GS Prelims: Government Schemes | Rural Employment | Current Affairs

(Topic chosen strictly from the newspaper heading:
VB-G RAM-G Bill on rural employment introduced in LS”, The Assam Tribune, 17 December 2025)

TG@Assam_Tribune (17-12-2025)


🔹 Introduction

The Union Government has introduced the Viksit Bharat Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission (Gramin) – VB-G RAM-G Bill, 2025 in the Lok Sabha, proposing to replace the 20-year-old Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA). While the Bill promises 125 days of guaranteed rural employment, it has triggered intense political and constitutional debate over rights-based welfare, federal financial responsibility, and dilution of labour entitlements.


🔑 Key Points from the Newspaper

AspectDetails
Proposed LawVB-G RAM-G Bill, 2025
ReplacesMGNREGA, 2005
Employment Guarantee125 days per rural household
Funding PatternCentre’s share proposed to reduce (from ~90% to ~60%)
Key ObjectionRemoval of Mahatma Gandhi’s name
Opposition DemandBill to be referred to Parliamentary Committee
Policy FramingLinked to “Viksit Bharat 2047” vision

🧠 Prelims Pointers

MGNREGA (2005)

Rights-based, demand-driven wage employment law

VB-G RAM-G

Statutory employment guarantee but with altered design

Rural Employment

Part of Concurrent List (Entry 25) implications via funding & implementation

Federal Finance

Any reduction in Centre’s share increases State fiscal stress

Rights-based vs Scheme-based Welfare

Key conceptual distinction for Prelims


📝 Mains Pointers

A. Importance / Significance

1. Rural Livelihood Security

Employment guarantee supports income stability for vulnerable households

2. Asset Creation

Rural infrastructure, soil conservation, water harvesting works

3. Women & Marginalised Groups

MGNREGA historically ensured high female participation

4. Counter-cyclical Safety Net

Acts as buffer during agrarian distress and economic slowdown


B. Concerns & Challenges

IssueExplanation
Dilution of RightsShift from rights-based law to mission-mode framework
Federal StressReduced Centre funding burdens States
AccountabilityIncreased Central control with lower fiscal responsibility
Political SymbolismRemoval of Gandhi’s name seen as erasing legacy
Implementation RiskTransition uncertainty may disrupt rural wages

C. Government’s Rationale

Extended Employment: 125 days instead of 100

Efficiency Focus: Outcome-oriented implementation

Viksit Bharat 2047 alignment

Modernised Framework replacing a 20-year-old Act


D. Way Forward

Parliamentary Scrutiny

Refer Bill to Standing Committee

Protect Rights-Based Nature

Employment must remain legally enforceable

Assured Central Funding

Maintain Centre’s dominant fiscal role

State Consultation

Cooperative federalism in scheme design

Transparency & Social Audit

Retain MGNREGA’s audit and grievance mechanisms


🧭 Conclusion

The VB-G RAM-G Bill represents a critical inflection point in India’s rural welfare architecture. While expanding employment days is commendable, weakening the rights-based foundation and federal funding balance risks undermining rural livelihood security. Any reform must strengthen—not dilute—the constitutional promise of social justice, dignity of labour, and cooperative federalism, especially for states like Assam with high rural dependence.

AIIMS Guwahati Accredited as an Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) Provider Centre

📘 GS Paper II (Mains): Governance | Health | Public Service Delivery
📘 GS Paper III (Mains): Disaster Management | Human Resource Development
📘 GS Paper V (Assam): Health Infrastructure & Regional Development
📘 GS Prelims: Health Institutions | Emergency Care | Assam-specific Current Affairs

(Topic chosen strictly from the newspaper heading:
AIIMS Guwahati accredited as Advanced Trauma Life Support Provider Centre”,
The Assam Tribune*, 17 December 2025)*


🔹 Introduction

AIIMS Guwahati has achieved a major milestone by becoming the first institution in the Northeast to be accredited as an Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) Provider Centre. This accreditation significantly strengthens emergency trauma care capacity in a region prone to road accidents, floods, landslides, and other disasters, while reducing dependence on distant metropolitan centres for specialised trauma training.


🔑 Key Points from the Newspaper

AspectDetails
InstitutionAIIMS Guwahati
AccreditationAdvanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) Provider Centre
Regional SignificanceFirst such centre in Northeast India
LeadershipAccreditation achieved under Executive Director
Core ObjectiveStandardised trauma care training for doctors
BeneficiariesEmergency physicians, surgeons, healthcare workers
Broader ImpactImproved trauma response & survival rates

🧠 Prelims Pointers

ATLS

Global trauma care protocol developed by the American College of Surgeons

Purpose of ATLS

Systematic, prioritised approach to trauma patients

AIIMS Guwahati

Institute of National Importance under Ministry of Health & Family Welfare

Trauma Care in India

Linked with National Health Mission & emergency response systems

Disaster-Prone Region

Northeast vulnerable to earthquakes, floods, landslides, road accidents


📝 Mains Pointers

A. Importance / Significance

1. Strengthening Emergency Healthcare

Improves golden hour management of trauma patients

Standardises trauma response across hospitals

2. Regional Health Equity

Reduces training and referral gap between NE India and metros

3. Disaster Preparedness

Enhances medical readiness for floods, landslides, and mass casualties

4. Capacity Building

Trains doctors, surgeons, and emergency staff in evidence-based protocols


B. Challenges

ChallengeExplanation
Infrastructure GapsTrauma care needs advanced ICUs & logistics
Skilled ManpowerShortage of trained emergency specialists
AccessibilityDifficult terrain delays patient evacuation
CoordinationNeed integration with ambulances & disaster agencies

C. Government Initiatives & Policy Linkages

National Health Mission (NHM)

Emergency & Trauma Care Programme

Disaster Management Act, 2005

Ayushman Bharat – Strengthening tertiary care

AIIMS Expansion Policy – Regional healthcare equity


D. Way Forward

Establish regional trauma networks linked to AIIMS Guwahati

Train district hospital doctors under ATLS protocols

Integrate ATLS with 108 ambulance services

Upgrade trauma centres along national highways

Promote simulation-based emergency training


🧭 Conclusion

The ATLS accreditation of AIIMS Guwahati is a landmark step towards resilient, equitable, and disaster-ready healthcare in the Northeast. By institutionalising global trauma care standards, Assam can significantly reduce preventable deaths and set a benchmark for emergency medical preparedness in vulnerable regions.

Automated SMS-Based Student Absenteeism Alert System in Assam (Shiksha Setu Initiative)

📘 GS Paper II (Mains): Governance | Education | Social Justice
📘 GS Paper III (Mains): Human Resource Development | Digital Governance
📘 GS Paper V (Assam): Education, Social Sector & E-Governance
📘 GS Prelims: Education Schemes | Digital Initiatives | Assam-specific Current Affairs

(Topic chosen strictly from the newspaper heading:
Automated SMS-based alert system launched to curb student absenteeism”,
The Assam Tribune*, 17 December 2025)*


🔹 Introduction

To address persistent student absenteeism and school dropouts, the Assam Government has launched an automated SMS-based absenteeism alert system through the Shiksha Setu application. The initiative aims to ensure early detection of prolonged absence, enable timely parental intervention, and strengthen school–parent engagement, especially among socio-economically vulnerable groups.


🔑 Key Points from the Newspaper

AspectDetails
Implementing DepartmentDepartment of School Education, Assam
Digital PlatformShiksha Setu App
Trigger ConditionStudent absent for 5 consecutive days
Alert Frequency5th, 10th, 15th day and onwards
RecipientsParents/guardians and class teachers
Languages UsedAssamese, Bengali, Bodo, Hindi, English
RationaleUNICEF study citing absenteeism risks
ObjectiveReduce dropouts & improve attendance

🧠 Prelims Pointers

Shiksha Setu: Assam’s digital education governance platform

Student Dropout: Key challenge under SDG-4 (Quality Education)

Multilingual Communication: Enhances inclusion and reach

Early Warning Systems: Prevent dropouts through timely alerts

Digital Governance: Technology-driven service delivery


📝 Mains Pointers

A. Importance / Significance

1. Dropout Prevention

Early alerts enable corrective action before permanent disengagement

2. Parental Involvement

Direct communication improves accountability and awareness

3. Inclusive Education

Multi-language messaging addresses Assam’s linguistic diversity

4. Governance Innovation

Data-driven monitoring enhances policy effectiveness

5. Human Capital Formation

Sustained schooling strengthens long-term socio-economic outcomes


B. Challenges

ChallengeExplanation
Digital DivideLimited phone access in poor households
Data AccuracyDependence on timely school data entry
Behavioural IssuesAlerts may not overcome economic compulsions
Privacy ConcernsStudent data protection needed
Teacher WorkloadAdditional follow-up responsibilities

C. Government Initiatives & Policy Linkages

Samagra Shiksha Abhiyan

Right to Education Act, 2009

NEP 2020 – Emphasis on reducing dropouts

Digital India Programme

SDG 4: Quality Education


D. Way Forward

Combine alerts with school counselling & social work outreach

Link families with welfare schemes to reduce economic dropouts

Ensure data protection protocols

Provide offline follow-up mechanisms

Periodic impact evaluation at district level


🧭 Conclusion

The SMS-based absenteeism alert system represents a low-cost, high-impact digital governance innovation in Assam’s education sector. While technology alone cannot solve structural causes of dropouts, when integrated with welfare support and community engagement, it can play a decisive role in ensuring educational continuity and equity.

Statehood Day for Arunachal Pradesh: Relevance for Federalism, Border Governance & North-East Integration

📘 GS Paper II (Mains): Polity | Federalism | Centre–State Relations
📘 GS Paper III (Mains): Internal Security | Border Area Development
📘 GS Paper V (Assam): North-East India | Regional Cooperation
📘 GS Prelims: Indian Polity | States Reorganisation | NE India

(Topic chosen strictly from the newspaper heading:
Arunachal Pradesh celebrates Statehood Day”,
The Assam Tribune*, 17 December 2025)*


🔹 Introduction

Arunachal Pradesh Statehood Day, observed on 20 February (news contextually highlighted in the Assam Tribune), commemorates the transition of Arunachal Pradesh from a Union Territory to a full-fledged State in 1987 under the State of Arunachal Pradesh Act, 1986. Beyond symbolic importance, statehood has deep implications for federal governance, border management, tribal welfare, and strategic security in India’s sensitive eastern frontier.


🔑 Key Points from the Newspaper

AspectDetails
Statehood Granted20 February 1987
Legal BasisState of Arunachal Pradesh Act, 1986
Strategic LocationEastern Himalayas; borders China (LAC), Bhutan, Myanmar
Governance FocusInfrastructure, connectivity, tribal development
National RelevanceBorder security & Act East Policy
Regional ContextIntegral to North-East integration

🧠 Prelims Pointers

Arunachal Pradesh

Largest state in NE India by area

Shares longest border with China among Indian states

Sixth Schedule

Not applicable to Arunachal Pradesh (important trap)

Special Constitutional Provisions

Article 371H – Special responsibility of Governor

State Reorganisation

Reflects asymmetric federalism in India

Border Area Development Programme (BADP)


📝 Mains Pointers

A. Importance / Significance

1. Federalism & Political Empowerment

Statehood ensures elected government and legislative autonomy

Enables region-specific policymaking for tribal areas

2. Border Governance & Security

Civil administration presence strengthens territorial integration

Development reduces vulnerabilities in border villages

3. Socio-Economic Development

Accelerated infrastructure, health, education outreach

Tribal welfare through customised governance models

4. Act East Policy

Gateway to Southeast Asia via Myanmar

Enhances trade, connectivity, and strategic depth


B. Challenges

ChallengeExplanation
Difficult TerrainInfrastructure development constraints
Border DisputesOngoing tensions along LAC
Connectivity GapsRoad, telecom, and digital access
Administrative CapacityRemote governance challenges
Environmental SensitivityFragile Himalayan ecology

C. Government Initiatives & Frameworks

Vibrant Villages Programme

Border Area Development Programme (BADP)

Act East Policy

North East Special Infrastructure Development Scheme (NESIDS)

Article 371H Safeguards


D. Way Forward

Strengthen border infrastructure with ecological safeguards

Promote border village livelihood clusters

Enhance Centre–State coordination on security

Foster NE regional cooperation including Assam–Arunachal synergy

Invest in human capital & digital governance


🧭 Conclusion

Arunachal Pradesh’s statehood is not merely a constitutional milestone but a strategic imperative for India’s unity, security, and regional development. Strengthening governance, infrastructure, and livelihoods in Arunachal is essential for robust federalism and resilient border management in the North-East.

APSC Prelims MCQs

Topic 1: VB-G RAM-G Bill, 2025 (Replacing MGNREGA)

Q1. The VB-G RAM-G Bill, 2025 seeks to replace which of the following flagship legislations?

A. National Rural Livelihoods Mission
B. Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana (Gramin)
C. Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act
D. Deendayal Antyodaya Yojana

Correct Answer: C


Q2. A key departure of the proposed VB-G RAM-G framework from MGNREGA is:

A. Reduction in guaranteed employment days
B. Shift from rights-based to mission-mode framework
C. Complete withdrawal of Central funding
D. Restriction of employment to women only

Correct Answer: B


Q3. Which of the following concerns has been raised by States regarding VB-G RAM-G?

A. Excessive decentralisation
B. Increased State financial burden
C. Elimination of social audits
D. Privatization of rural employment

Correct Answer: B


Topic 2: AIIMS Guwahati as ATLS Provider Centre


Q4. Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) protocols are originally developed by:

A. World Health Organization
B. Indian Council of Medical Research
C. American College of Surgeons
D. National Institute of Health, USA

Correct Answer: C


Q5. The accreditation of AIIMS Guwahati as an ATLS Provider Centre is significant because it:

A. Replaces district hospitals for emergency care
B. Makes trauma care free across Assam
C. Strengthens golden-hour trauma response in the Northeast
D. Eliminates the need for ambulance services

Correct Answer: C


Q6. Which of the following disasters makes ATLS capacity particularly relevant for the Northeast?

A. Tsunami
B. Volcanic eruption
C. Earthquakes and landslides
D. Coastal cyclones

Correct Answer: C


Topic 3: SMS-Based Student Absenteeism Alert System (Shiksha Setu)


Q7. The automated SMS alert under Assam’s Shiksha Setu initiative is triggered when a student remains absent for:

A. 3 consecutive days
B. 5 consecutive days
C. 7 consecutive days
D. 10 consecutive days

Correct Answer: B


Q8. One key governance objective of the SMS-based absenteeism alert system is to:

A. Penalise parents legally
B. Replace teachers’ attendance registers
C. Enable early intervention to prevent dropouts
D. Promote online education

Correct Answer: C


Q9. Which of the following challenges can limit the effectiveness of the SMS alert system?

A. Lack of national policy support
B. Digital divide and economic compulsions
C. Excessive teacher autonomy
D. Over-centralisation of education

Correct Answer: B


Topic 4: Arunachal Pradesh Statehood Day


Q10. Arunachal Pradesh attained statehood under which legislation?

A. North-Eastern Areas Reorganisation Act, 1971
B. State of Arunachal Pradesh Act, 1986
C. Constitution (Fifty-fifth Amendment) Act
D. Assam Reorganisation Act, 1969

Correct Answer: B


Q11. Which constitutional provision gives special responsibility to the Governor of Arunachal Pradesh?

A. Article 371A
B. Article 371C
C. Article 371H
D. Article 371J

Correct Answer: C


Q12. Arunachal Pradesh is strategically important for India primarily because it:

A. Is the most urbanised NE state
B. Shares India’s longest border with China
C. Hosts maximum Ramsar sites
D. Is covered under the Sixth ScheduleCorrect Answer:B

APSC Mains Practice Question

GS Mains Question

“Replacing rights-based welfare with mission-mode schemes can weaken social security.”
Critically examine this statement in the context of the proposed VB-G RAM-G Bill, 2025.


Model Answer

Introduction

The proposed Viksit Bharat Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission (Gramin) – VB-G RAM-G Bill, 2025 seeks to replace MGNREGA, India’s largest rights-based rural employment law. While the Bill promises enhanced employment days, it raises concerns regarding dilution of legal entitlements and fiscal federalism.


Potential Merits of VB-G RAM-G

  • Increased Employment Guarantee
    • Proposal of 125 days of work compared to 100 days under MGNREGA
  • Outcome-oriented Framework
    • Emphasis on productivity and asset creation
  • Alignment with Viksit Bharat 2047
    • Long-term rural transformation narrative

Key Concerns

  • Erosion of Rights-based Approach
    • Shift from demand-driven, legally enforceable work to mission-mode delivery
  • Federal Fiscal Stress
    • Reduced Central funding increases burden on States like Assam
  • Accountability Deficit
    • Centralised control without commensurate financial responsibility
  • Risk to Vulnerable Groups
    • Women and marginalised workers may lose guaranteed fallback employment

Way Forward

  • Retain statutory right to employment with legal remedies
  • Ensure dominant Central funding share
  • Strengthen social audits and grievance redressal
  • Undertake parliamentary scrutiny and State consultation
  • Integrate reforms without dismantling proven safeguards

Conclusion

Reforming rural employment programmes is necessary, but diluting enforceable rights risks undermining social security. Any transition from MGNREGA must preserve its rights-based core while improving efficiency, ensuring cooperative federalism and inclusive growth.

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