Blog Archive

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Karnataka High Court on Crowd Management SOP

 

Karnataka High Court on Crowd Management SOP


The Karnataka High Court directed that the Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) for crowd control and mass gathering management — submitted by the State government — must be enforced until a formal crowd management law is enacted.

This came while disposing of a suo motu PIL following the tragic stampede outside M. Chinnaswamy Stadium (June 4, 2025) that claimed 11 lives.


๐Ÿ›️ What Exactly Did the Court Say?

✔ SOP shall be implemented and operationalised
✔ Valid till legislation is passed
✔ Liberty granted to amicus curiae to revive petition if needed

Significance:
Judicial push for immediate executive action in public safety.


๐Ÿ“œ Background of the Case

  • Court took suo motu cognisance of stampede

  • Examined:
    ✔ Crowd safety lapses
    ✔ Event management failures
    ✔ Emergency preparedness


⚖️ Role of Suo Motu PIL (UPSC Gold)

Meaning:
Court initiates proceedings on its own, without a filed petition.

Why important?
✔ Protects public interest
✔ Addresses systemic failures
✔ Prevents recurrence of tragedies


๐Ÿงญ Why SOP Instead of Waiting for Law?

Because legislation takes time, while:

✔ Public events continue
✔ Risk persists
✔ Immediate safeguards needed

๐Ÿ‘‰ SOP acts as interim regulatory framework


๐Ÿ“‘ SOP vs Proposed Bill

Amicus Curiae observed:

✔ SOP provisions stronger than Bill
✔ Legislature panel advised to incorporate SOP measures

UPSC Insight:
Executive guidelines sometimes more detailed than statutory drafts.


๐Ÿ›️ Constitutional Principles Involved


1️⃣ Article 21 — Right to Life

Includes:

✔ Safety in public spaces
✔ Protection from preventable hazards

๐Ÿ‘‰ Stampedes = violation of life protection duty


2️⃣ State’s Positive Obligation

State must:

✔ Prevent foreseeable harm
✔ Ensure crowd regulation
✔ Provide emergency response systems


3️⃣ Article 38 (DPSP)

Promote welfare & social order based on justice.


๐Ÿšจ Crowd Disasters — A Recurring Challenge

India has witnessed stampedes at:

  • Religious gatherings

  • Festivals

  • Stadiums

  • Political rallies

Common Causes:

❌ Poor planning
❌ Overcrowding
❌ Entry/exit bottlenecks
❌ Panic triggers
❌ Lack of coordination


๐Ÿ›ก️ What Crowd Management SOP Typically Covers

✔ Capacity assessment
✔ Entry/exit flow design
✔ Barricading & zoning
✔ Emergency evacuation plans
✔ Medical aid stations
✔ Communication systems
✔ Police deployment strategy


⚖️ Governance & Administrative Relevance (GS-II)


Key Issues

✔ Accountability of authorities
✔ Inter-agency coordination
✔ Event permissions & compliance
✔ Disaster risk reduction


Institutions Involved

  • Police

  • District administration

  • Disaster Management Authority

  • Event organisers


๐Ÿง  GS-III Linkages

✔ Disaster management
✔ Urban governance
✔ Public safety infrastructure
✔ Technology in crowd analytics (AI/CCTV/drones)


⚖️ Judicial Activism Dimension

Court ensuring:

✔ Executive does not delay safeguards
✔ Preventive governance
✔ Protection of Fundamental Rights


๐Ÿงฉ Ethics (GS-IV) Perspective


Ethical Questions

✔ Was tragedy preventable?
✔ Who bears responsibility?
✔ Profit vs safety?
✔ Duty of care by organisers?


Core Values

✔ Responsibility
✔ Public safety
✔ Accountability
✔ Compassionate governance


๐Ÿ”ฎ Long-Term Implications


✅ 1️⃣ Institutionalisation of Crowd Safety

✔ SOP → Law → Binding compliance


✅ 2️⃣ Better Event Governance

✔ Scientific crowd modelling
✔ Mandatory safety audits


✅ 3️⃣ Legal Accountability

✔ Clear liability standards


⚠ Potential Challenges

  • Enforcement gaps

  • Political/event pressure

  • Resource constraints


๐Ÿ“ UPSC Prelims Pointers

✔ Suo motu PIL → Court-initiated
✔ Article 21 → Public safety
✔ SOP → Interim executive instrument
✔ Crowd management → Disaster prevention


๐ŸŽฏ Possible UPSC Questions


Prelims MCQ

Suo motu cognisance means:

a) Case filed by NGO
b) Court acts on its own knowledge
c) Action initiated by police
d) Petition filed by State

✅ Answer: b)


Mains (GS-II)

“Stampede incidents reflect governance and regulatory failures.” Discuss.


Mains (GS-III)

Discuss the importance of crowd management in disaster risk reduction.


Ethics (GS-IV)

Examine ethical responsibilities of authorities in preventing crowd disasters.


๐Ÿ Conclusion

The Karnataka HC ruling reinforces:

Right to Life includes Right to Safety in Mass Gatherings

It highlights the importance of:

✔ Preventive governance
✔ Immediate executive action
✔ Legislative backing for SOPs

Suspected Tetrodotoxin (TTX) Poisoning in Kerala

 

Suspected Tetrodotoxin (TTX) Poisoning in Kerala

A recent incident in Vizhinjam (Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala) involving deaths and acute neurological illness after consuming seafood has raised concerns of marine neurotoxin contamination, with doctors suspecting tetrodotoxin (TTX).

This topic is highly relevant for GS-II (Governance), GS-III (Food Safety & Health), Prelims (Science + Polity), Essay, and Ethics.


๐Ÿšจ Incident Snapshot (Exam-ready facts)

✔ Several individuals hospitalised after seafood consumption
✔ Rapid onset of symptoms
✔ Predominantly neurological manifestations
✔ Deaths within hours
✔ Suspected culprit: Fish roe (eggs)
✔ Likely toxin: Tetrodotoxin (TTX)
✔ Chemical analysis awaited for confirmation


๐Ÿงฌ What is Tetrodotoxin (TTX)?

Definition:
A naturally occurring, extremely potent marine neurotoxin.

Found in:

  • Pufferfish (most famous source)

  • Certain marine organisms

  • Occasionally in contaminated seafood/roe


⚠️ Key Properties (UPSC favourite)

One of the most powerful neurotoxins known
Heat-stable → Cooking does NOT destroy it
No specific antidote
✔ Causes rapid paralysis


๐Ÿฉบ Clinical Features of TTX Poisoning

Early SymptomsSevere Effects
Tingling/numbnessParalysis
DizzinessRespiratory failure
VomitingCardiac complications
Neurological signsDeath (in severe cases)

Important Clue:
๐Ÿ‘‰ Rapid onset + neurological dominance + death within hours


๐Ÿ”ฌ Why TTX & not typical food poisoning?

Food safety officials ruled out:

❌ Spoilage
❌ Bacterial contamination

Doctors observed:

✔ Very short incubation period
✔ Neurological symptoms
✔ Quick deterioration

๐Ÿ‘‰ Clinically consistent with neurotoxin poisoning


๐ŸŒŠ Marine Toxins & Seafood Safety


1️⃣ Tetrodotoxin (TTX)

  • Blocks sodium channels in nerves

  • Causes paralysis


2️⃣ Ciguatoxin

Previously suspected due to detection in:

✔ Red snapper samples (TN coast)

Effects:

  • Neurological + gastrointestinal symptoms

  • But typically slower progression


Clinical Distinction (Exam Insight)

FeatureTTXCiguatoxin
OnsetVery rapidSlower
Dominant symptomsNeurologicalMixed
Heat stabilityYesYes

⚖️ Governance & Food Safety Angle


๐Ÿ›️ Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI)

Food Safety and Standards Authority of India regulates:

✔ Food safety standards
✔ Seafood safety
✔ Contaminant limits
✔ Surveillance & sampling


๐Ÿšจ Administrative Response Includes

✔ Restaurant inspection
✔ Sample collection
✔ Toxicological analysis
✔ Tracing seafood source
✔ Medical monitoring


❗ Challenges Highlighted

  • Difficulty detecting marine biotoxins

  • Limited routine testing for rare toxins like TTX

  • Traceability of seafood supply chains

  • Public awareness gaps


๐Ÿงญ Public Health Implications

✔ High fatality potential
✔ No antidote → Only supportive care
✔ Rapid ICU intervention required
✔ Vulnerable populations at greater risk


๐Ÿง  UPSC Mains Perspectives


GS-II (Governance)

  • State duty to protect life (Article 21)

  • Food safety enforcement

  • Crisis response mechanisms


GS-III (Science & Tech / Health)

  • Marine biotoxins

  • Food contamination

  • Toxicology & emergency medicine

  • Heat-stable toxins


Essay Themes

  • “Food Safety vs Food Consumption Habits”

  • “Emerging Public Health Risks”

  • “Regulating the Blue Economy”


๐Ÿงฉ Ethics (GS-IV) Angle

Dilemmas:

✔ Business interests vs safety
✔ Regulation vs compliance burden
✔ Accountability in deaths


๐ŸŽฏ Possible Prelims MCQs


1️⃣ Tetrodotoxin (TTX) is best described as:

a) Bacterial toxin
b) Marine neurotoxin
c) Heavy metal contaminant
d) Synthetic pesticide

✅ Answer: b) Marine neurotoxin


2️⃣ Which property makes TTX especially dangerous?

a) Destroyed by heat
b) Easily detectable
c) Heat-stable & no antidote
d) Only causes mild symptoms

✅ Answer: c)


3️⃣ TTX primarily affects:

a) Liver
b) Kidneys
c) Nervous system
d) Endocrine glands

✅ Answer: c)


๐Ÿงญ Policy Lessons

✔ Strengthen marine toxin surveillance
✔ Improve seafood traceability
✔ Rapid toxicology diagnostics
✔ Restaurant safety audits
✔ Public advisories on risky seafood


๐Ÿ Conclusion

The Vizhinjam case highlights an under-discussed but critical issue:

Naturally occurring toxins can be as lethal as chemical contaminants

For UPSC aspirants, this case connects:

✔ Food safety governance
✔ Toxicology
✔ Marine ecology
✔ Public health preparedness

Interfaith Live-in Relationships & Constitutional Liberties

 

Interfaith Live-in Relationships & Constitutional Liberties

The Allahabad High Court recently granted police protection to 12 interfaith live-in couples, observing that no religious conversion had occurred, and therefore the Uttar Pradesh Prohibition of Unlawful Conversion of Religion Act, 2021 was not attracted. The Court emphasised that adults voluntarily cohabiting cannot be deprived of their life, liberty, and privacy.

This judgment is highly relevant for GS-II (Polity & Governance), GS-IV (Ethics), Essay, and even Prelims (FR & case law).


๐Ÿ›️ Constitutional Foundations

1️⃣ Article 21 — Right to Life & Personal Liberty

Expanded judicially to include:

✔ Right to privacy
✔ Right to dignity
✔ Right to choose a partner
✔ Right to cohabit without marriage

Key Principle:
State must protect citizens from threats — including familial/social interference.


2️⃣ Article 14 — Equality Before Law

  • No discrimination on religious grounds

  • Interfaith couples entitled to equal protection


3️⃣ Article 19 — Freedoms

  • Freedom of expression & association

  • Choice of partner linked to autonomy


4️⃣ Article 25 — Freedom of Religion

  • Protects voluntary conversion

  • Anti-conversion laws regulate coercion/fraud, not consensual relationships


⚖️ Court’s Key Observations

✔ Petitioners viewed as adults, not religious identities
✔ Live-in relationship ≠ unlawful
✔ Anti-conversion law applies only when conversion occurs
✔ Even interfaith marriage not prohibited

Critical Line of Reasoning:

Freedom of choice of a major individual is integral to constitutional liberty.


๐Ÿ“œ Legal Context: Anti-Conversion Law

Purpose of the Act

Prevent conversions through:

❌ Force
❌ Fraud
❌ Coercion
❌ Misrepresentation
❌ Allurement


Court’s Clarification

✔ No conversion → No offence
✔ Relationship itself not criminal
✔ Procedural requirements irrelevant absent conversion


๐Ÿงญ Broader Legal Precedents (UPSC Gold)

CasePrinciple Established
K.S. Puttaswamy (2017)Right to Privacy (Art 21)
Shafin Jahan / Hadiya (2018)Right to choose partner
Navtej Johar (2018)Consensual adult autonomy
Lata Singh (2006)Protection of inter-caste/interfaith couples

๐Ÿ‘ฅ Adults’ Rights vs Duties to Society

✅ Rights of Adults

✔ Autonomy
✔ Privacy
✔ Choice of partner
✔ Freedom from coercion


⚖️ Do Adults Have Duties?

Article 51A (Fundamental Duties) — though non-justiciable:

✔ Promote harmony
✔ Renounce practices derogatory to dignity
✔ Uphold unity in diversity

UPSC Insight:
Duties guide civic morality but cannot override Fundamental Rights.


๐ŸŒ Societal & Cultural Dimensions

Traditional Social Structure

  • Marriage-centric legitimacy

  • Family/community approval dominant

  • Religious endogamy common


Emerging Social Trends

✔ Individualism
✔ Urbanisation
✔ Live-in relationships
✔ Interfaith unions


๐Ÿ”ฎ Long-Term Social Impact

1️⃣ Strengthening Individual Autonomy

Courts reaffirm:

✔ Personal liberty > societal disapproval
✔ Adults ≠ property of families/community


2️⃣ Redefinition of Social Norms

Gradual normalisation of:

✔ Live-in relationships
✔ Interfaith partnerships


3️⃣ Reduced Scope for Moral Policing

Judicial protection limits:

❌ Harassment
❌ Vigilantism
❌ Familial coercion


4️⃣ Tensions & Backlash

Possible:

⚠ Cultural resistance
⚠ Political debates
⚠ Misuse allegations


⚖️ Governance & Administrative Implications

✔ Police protection responsibilities
✔ Balancing law & liberty
✔ Preventing honour crimes
✔ Sensitisation of law enforcement


๐Ÿง  Ethical Dimensions (GS-IV)

Values Involved

✔ Autonomy
✔ Tolerance
✔ Pluralism
✔ Dignity


Ethical Dilemma

Tradition vs Constitutional morality

Exam Phrase:

Constitutional morality must prevail over social morality.


๐Ÿ“ UPSC Mains Angles

GS-II

  • FR vs State regulation

  • Judicial activism

  • Privacy jurisprudence


GS-IV

  • Individual liberty vs societal norms

  • Ethical governance


Essay Themes

  • “Freedom of Choice in a Diverse Society”

  • “Privacy & Morality”

  • “Changing Nature of Indian Family”


๐ŸŽฏ Possible UPSC Questions

Prelims MCQ:
Right to choose a partner is primarily protected under:

a) Article 14
b) Article 19
c) Article 21
d) Article 25

✅ Answer: c) Article 21


Mains (GS-II):
Discuss how Indian courts have expanded Article 21 to protect personal relationships.


Mains (GS-IV):
“Constitutional morality may conflict with social morality.” Examine.


๐Ÿงฉ Conclusion

The judgment reinforces a transformative constitutional idea:

Adults’ freedom of choice, dignity, and privacy are non-negotiable

While society evolves gradually, courts continue to anchor governance in:

✔ Liberty
✔ Equality
✔ Pluralism
✔ Rule of Law

Monday, February 23, 2026

Reintroducing the Cheetah to India — history, Project Cheetah timeline & latest update

 

Reintroducing the Cheetah to India — history, Project Cheetah timeline & latest update 

Quick headline: A batch of eight cheetahs is scheduled to be translocated from Botswana to Kuno National Park on 28 February 2026 — the third African source country to send cheetahs under India’s Project Cheetah. Once these animals arrive, the national cheetah population is expected to rise to around 46 (recent births at Kuno have also boosted numbers).


1. Why this matters (short answer for prelims/mains)

  • The cheetah’s return is a landmark species reintroduction programme — the species had gone locally extinct in India in the mid-20th century and its revival raises questions of conservation science, ethics, land-use policy and international wildlife cooperation.


2. Historical background (concise, factual)

Asiatic cheetah in India

  • India’s native subspecies was the Asiatic cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus venaticus). Over the 19th–20th centuries, hunting, habitat loss and prey depletion caused severe declines. The last well-documented killings of wild cheetahs in central India date to the 1940s; the species was formally declared extinct in India in the mid-20th century.

Why they disappeared

  • Large-scale hunting (including capture for royal coursing), rapid agricultural expansion, fragmentation of open grassland habitats and decline of prey species (blackbuck, chinkara, nilgai) removed the ecological basis for cheetahs’ survival.


3. Project Cheetah — timeline & milestones

Origins & legal clearance

  • The idea to reintroduce cheetahs to India dates back to academic and policy discussions in the 2000s. After legal scrutiny and a Supreme Court clearance for a trial translocation, the project moved ahead in 2022.

Major translocation batches

  • September 2022: First batch of eight cheetahs from Namibia arrived and were placed in quarantine/enclosures at Kuno.

  • February 2023: Twelve cheetahs flew in from South Africa (second major source). Releases into the wider park followed in 2023.

  • Feb 2026 (upcoming): Eight cheetahs from Botswana — third African partner — scheduled for Kuno on 28 Feb 2026, taking the total in India close to 46 (combined with recent cub births).

Breeding & in-situ reproduction

  • Multiple litters have been reported at Kuno since 2023 (including recent births in February 2026), which is central to Project Cheetah’s objective of establishing a self-sustaining population. Reports indicate dozens of cubs born since translocation began, though survivorship has varied.


4. Latest update (Feb 2026) — facts you can quote in answers

  • Date of arrival: 28 February 2026 (scheduled).

  • Source country: Botswana (third African partner after Namibia and South Africa).

  • Expected national count after arrival: ~46 cheetahs (figures combine adults translocated + recent cubs born at Kuno).


5. Conservation science: successes, challenges & data points

Successes

  • Live births at Kuno — first cheetah cubs born in India in over 70 years (since reintroduction began), showing potential for reproduction in the new environment.

  • International cooperation — agreements with southern African countries for technical support, veterinary care and translocations.

Challenges & concerns

  • Mortality in initial phases: Some cheetahs died in early months — causes ranged from infections to collar-related injuries and adaptation stress. These deaths prompted scrutiny and adaptive management changes.

  • Genetics & subspecies debate: India reintroduced African cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus jubatus), not the Asiatic subspecies — a point of scientific/ethical discussion about genetic suitability and IUCN translocation guidelines.

  • Habitat & prey base: Ensuring adequate grassland area (degree of human-wildlife coexistence), robust ungulate prey populations, and connectivity is essential for long-term viability.

  • Human dimensions: Relocation of people, livestock grazing, and anti-poaching enforcement are sensitive governance issues that affect project outcomes.


6. Wider policy & governance implications (UPSC angles)

Biodiversity policy

  • Project Cheetah intersects with Species Recovery, Habitat Restoration, Protected Area Management, and International Treaties.

Federal-state coordination

  • Union and state (Madhya Pradesh) coordination on land management, funding, and community outreach is critical — a good case study for Centre–State relations in environmental governance.

Constitutional & ethical questions

  • Balancing conservation priorities with local livelihoods, compensation, and resettlement decisions raises ethical and policy trade-offs (GS II/III answer fodder).


7. How to use this topic in your answers (Mains + Essay prompts)

Mains (GS-III) — Possible angle: “Project Cheetah is a pioneering example of species reintroduction in India. Discuss the scientific, socio-economic and governance challenges involved.”
Structure: definition → brief history → project milestones → science & management → policy recommendations → balanced conclusion.

Essay — Themes: “Conservation in a crowded country”, “India and international environmental cooperation”, or “Restorative justice for lost species”.

Prelims tips

  • Remember translocation chronology: Namibia (2022)South Africa (2023)Botswana (2026).

  • Key place: Kuno National Park (Madhya Pradesh) is the primary release site.


8. Quick revision checklist (bullet points for answer writing)

  • Last native cheetah extinction in India: mid-20th century (last documented killings in the 1940s; declared extinct by early 1950s).

  • Project Cheetah started translocations in 2022 (Namibia).

  • Third source country Botswana sending 8 animals on 28 Feb 2026 → national count ≈ 46.

  • Key issues: mortality, subspecies/genetics, prey base, habitat size, community engagement, anti-poaching.



PRAHAAR: India’s First National Anti-Terror Policy

 

PRAHAAR: India’s First National Anti-Terror Policy 

The Union Home Ministry’s release of PRAHAAR, India’s first-ever comprehensive anti-terror policy, marks a significant evolution in the country’s national security doctrine. The policy recognises that threats today extend beyond traditional cross-border terrorism to include cyber-attacks, drones, and hybrid warfare tactics.


๐Ÿ“œ Historical Background: Evolution of India’s Counter-Terror Framework

India’s approach to terrorism has developed in response to decades of security challenges:

๐Ÿ”น 1980s–1990s: Rise of Internal Security Threats

  • Insurgency in Punjab

  • Militancy in Jammu & Kashmir

  • North-East insurgencies

Legislative Responses:

  • TADA (1985) → Lapsed due to misuse concerns

  • POTA (2002) → Repealed in 2004


๐Ÿ”น Post-1999: Kargil & Institutional Reforms

  • Kargil conflict exposed intelligence & coordination gaps

  • Creation of:

    • Multi-Agency Centre (MAC)

    • Strengthened intelligence sharing


๐Ÿ”น Post-2008 Mumbai Attacks

Key Reforms:

  • Establishment of National Investigation Agency (NIA)

  • Strengthening of coastal security

  • Expansion of NSG hubs


๐Ÿ”น 2010s–2020s: Hybrid & Tech-Driven Threats

  • Lone-wolf attacks

  • Radicalisation via internet

  • Use of encrypted apps

  • Emergence of drone-based smuggling & attacks

  • Increasing cyber-terror capabilities


๐Ÿšจ Why PRAHAAR Matters

PRAHAAR signals a shift from reactive responses → strategic, doctrine-based counter-terrorism.

Key Recognition:
✔ Terror threats across water, land, air
✔ Cyber domain as a critical battleground
✔ Role of state & non-state actors


๐ŸŒ Expanding Threat Landscape

1️⃣ Cross-Border Sponsored Terrorism

  • Persistent infiltration attempts

  • Use of proxies & sleeper cells


2️⃣ Drone-Enabled Terrorism

Concerns:

  • Arms & narcotics drops

  • Surveillance

  • Low-cost asymmetric warfare


3️⃣ Cyber-Terror & Criminal Hackers

  • Attacks on:
    ✔ Power grids
    ✔ Financial systems
    ✔ Critical infrastructure

Actors Identified:

  • Nation-states

  • Criminal hacker networks


4️⃣ Terror–Crime Nexus

  • Organised crime aiding logistics & recruitment

  • Money laundering channels


๐Ÿญ Protection of Critical Sectors

PRAHAAR highlights safeguarding:

Power & energy
Railways & aviation
Ports & maritime assets
Defence & space
Atomic energy

UPSC Link: Critical Infrastructure Security


๐Ÿงญ Policy Principles

✅ Terrorism Not Linked to Religion

A crucial doctrinal statement:

“India does not link terrorism to any specific religion, ethnicity, nationality or civilisation.”

Exam Relevance:

  • Secular constitutional ethos

  • Prevents communal framing of security discourse


✅ Recognition of Global Terror Networks

Mentions threats from groups like:

  • al-Qaeda

  • Islamic State

Concern: Radicalisation & sleeper cells


⚙️ Strategic Implications

✔ Integrated multi-domain security
✔ Focus on emerging technologies
✔ Improved intelligence fusion
✔ Inter-agency coordination


๐Ÿ“ UPSC Prelims Pointers

  • PRAHAAR = First national anti-terror policy

  • Multi-domain threat recognition

  • Cyber-terror emphasis

  • Critical infrastructure protection


๐Ÿ“ UPSC Mains Themes

GS-II (Governance/Internal Security)

  • Institutional coordination

  • Federal challenges


GS-III (Security)

  • Hybrid warfare

  • Cyber security

  • Drone threats

  • Terror financing


Essay Topics

  • “Changing Nature of Terrorism”

  • “Technology & National Security”

  • “Balancing Security & Civil Liberties”


๐ŸŽฏ Possible Exam Questions

Prelims MCQ:
Which domains are identified in India’s PRAHAAR policy as terror threat fronts?
a) Land only
b) Land & Air
c) Water, Land & Air
d) Cyber only

✅ Answer: c) Water, Land & Air


Mains (GS-III):
Discuss the impact of emerging technologies like drones and cyber tools on India’s internal security.


๐Ÿงฉ Conclusion

PRAHAAR reflects India’s transition toward:

Proactive, Technology-Driven, Multi-Domain Counter-Terror Strategy

For UPSC aspirants, this policy is highly relevant for Prelims (current affairs) and Mains (internal security analysis).

Karnataka High Court on Crowd Management SOP

  Karnataka High Court on Crowd Management SOP The Karnataka High Court directed that the Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) for crowd con...