NATIONAL – DAIRY OF EVENTS

Nalanda University: History and Revival

  • Background: Prime Minister commended Nalanda University for reviving the ancient Indian tradition of ‘Shastrarth’ (intellectual debate).

About Shastrarth

    • Shastrarth is an ancient Indian tradition involving the discussion and exchange of ideas regarding sacred texts and philosophical concepts.
  • It was a key method for teaching, learning, and testing knowledge through logical debate at the ancient universities of Nalanda and Vikramshila.
  • This tradition was revived through the ‘Shastrarth 2026’ event, held prior to the third convocation ceremony of the modern Nalanda University.

About Nalanda University

    • Nalanda University was the world’s first residential university (where students lived and studied on campus).
  • It was established in 427 CE by Kumaragupta I at Rajgir, Bihar.
  • The university served as a major center of learning for over 800 years, until the 12th century CE.
  • It is estimated to have had around 2,000 teachers and 10,000 students.
  • Students and scholars came here from countries such as China, Korea, Japan, Tibet, Mongolia, Sri Lanka, and Southeast Asia.
  • The Chinese scholar Xuanzang provided significant accounts of Nalanda; he took numerous Buddhist texts back to China and translated them into the Chinese language.

Revival of Nalanda

  • In 2006, former President A.P.J. Abdul Kalam proposed reviving this ancient university. 
  • The Indian Parliament passed the ‘Nalanda University Act, 2010‘; this paved the way for the establishment of the modern Nalanda University.

 

Unified Health Interface (UHI)

  • Background: Recently, the Union Minister for Health and Family Welfare launched the Unified Health Interface (UHI).

About UHI

  • A digital health network operating under the Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission (ABDM).
  • Integrates various health applications and services onto a single platform.
  • Helps people easily discover verified healthcare providers.
  • Functions as a service layer of the ABDM.

Functioning of UHI

  • Operates through the ABDM gateway managed by the National Health Authority (NHA).
  • Routes user requests to registered healthcare providers.
  • Enables the discovery, booking, and availing of healthcare services through any UHI-enabled application.
  • Uses ABHA as the patient’s unique health identity.
  • Verifies doctors via HPR and hospitals via HFR.
  • Shares health records only with the patient’s consent.

Objectives

  • Interoperability: Works across all UHI-enabled applications.
  • Equal Access: Provides equal visibility to all verified providers.
  • Verification: Permits only verified doctors and hospitals.
  • Open System: Supports application development in any language and on any device.

 

New FCRA 2.0 Portal & e-OCI Card (2026)

  • Context: Union Home Minister and Minister of Cooperation Shri Amit Shah launches FCRA 2.0 Portal and e-OCI Card.

About FCRA 2.0 Portal

  • FCRA = Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act, 2010
  • Regulates foreign donations received by NGOs, associations, and individuals.
  • Objective: Ensure foreign funds are used legally and transparently.

Key Features of FCRA 2.0

  • Fully digital end-to-end portal.
  • Online registration and licence renewal.
  • Online filing of annual returns.
  • Aadhaar-based authentication.
  • e-Sign facility.
  • OCR-based document verification.
  • Hosted on MeghRaj (Government Cloud).
  • Integrated with PAN, Aadhaar, OCI, NGO Darpan, banks, and ICAI UDIN.
  • AI chatbot and FCRA mobile app to be introduced.
  • Reduces paperwork and speeds up approvals.
  • Enables real-time monitoring of foreign contributions. 

About  e-OCI Card(OCI = Overseas Citizen of India)

  • A digital version of the OCI card that simplifies services for Overseas Citizens of India.

Key Features

  • Benefits over 50 lakh OCI cardholders.
  • Digital verification.
  • Unique lifelong registration number.
  • No need to reissue the OCI booklet after getting a new passport (after 20 years, as per the new system).
  • Eliminates the risk of losing or damaging physical documents.
  • Faster and more convenient online services. 

Governance

  • Digital governance
  • Ease of doing compliance
  • Transparency
  • Citizen-centric administration

Legislative measures

  • FCRA Act, 2010
  • OCI provisions under the Citizenship Act, 1955

Prelims One-Liners

  • FCRA – Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act, 2010
  • Ministry: Ministry of Home Affairs
  • FCRA 2.0 launched: 30 June 2026
  • Purpose: Digital monitoring of foreign contributions
  • e-OCI: Digital Overseas Citizen of India Card
  • Beneficiaries: More than 50 lakh OCI cardholders
  • Government Cloud: MeghRaj

Authentication: Aadhaar + e-Sign + OCR

 

EPFO CITES Upgrade 

  • Context: The Employees’ Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO) upgraded its IT system under the Centralised IT-Enabled System (CITES) project. Due to database consolidation, some online services were temporarily unavailable from 26 June to 1 July.

About CITES

  • CITES = Centralised IT-Enabled System.
  • Developed by the Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (C-DAC).
  • Aim: Create one national EPFO database and provide faster, transparent, and paperless services.

Key Features of the New System

  • One national centralised database.
  • Members can visit any EPFO office in India.
  • Online KYC updates and claim processing.
  • Unified digital portal using the existing UAN and password.
  • Faster PF transfers and claim settlements.
  • Online query resolution with fewer claim rejections.
  • Complete service history and PF balance visible in one place.

Benefits

  • Faster and paperless services.
  • Greater transparency.
  • Reduced physical visits.
  • Easier transfer of PF accounts.
  • Better service delivery through automation.

Prelims One-Liners

  • EPFO – Employees’ Provident Fund Organisation.
  • CITES – Centralised IT-Enabled System.
  • Developed by – Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (C-DAC).
  • Objective – Centralise EPFO services and improve efficiency through automation.
  • Key Benefit – One national database and seamless online PF services.

 

New Criminal Laws & ICJS 

  • Context: From 1 January 2027, all investigations, police procedures, and criminal trials under India’s new criminal laws will be conducted through a digital workflow.

Interoperable Criminal Justice System (ICJS)

  • ICJS = Interoperable Criminal Justice System.
  • Integrates: Police, Courts,Prisons,Forensic Laboratories,Prosecution
  • Data will be stored on the Government cloud platform MeghRaj.

New Criminal Laws (Effective: 1 July 2024)

  • Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) → Replaced Indian Penal Code (IPC), 1860.
  • Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS) → Replaced Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC), 1973.
  • Bharatiya Sakshya Sanhita (BSS) → Replaced Indian Evidence Act, 1872.

Important Features

  • Digital FIRs and online case management.
  • Zero FIR has statutory recognition under BNSS.
  • FIRs can be filed in 23 languages.
  • Bhashini App translates FIRs into the local language.
  • Police cannot refuse to register a Zero FIR.
  • Data accessible nationwide through a unified platform.

Forensic Reforms

  • Forensic investigation is mandatory for offences punishable with 7 years or more.
  • 25 new Forensic Science Laboratories (FSLs) added (129 in 2023 → 154 in 2025).
  • More than 700 Mobile Forensic Units deployed.

Achievements

  • 74.66 lakh FIRs registered under BNS.
  • 63,572 Zero FIRs registered under BNSS.
  • National implementation score increased from 46.47% (Jan 2025) to 70.06% (June 2026).
  • 46.5 lakh digital evidence (Sakshya) IDs generated.
  • 56.74 lakh e-summons served.

Prelims One-Liners

  • ICJS – Interoperable Criminal Justice System.
  • Government Cloud – MeghRaj.
  • Effective date of new criminal laws1 July 2024.
  • Digital criminal justice rollout1 January 2027.
  • Zero FIR – Can be filed at any police station regardless of jurisdiction.
  • Forensic investigation – Mandatory for offences punishable with 7 years or more.
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