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SKUAST-K, IIT Jammu kickstart capacity building program to boost startup ecosystem

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Srinagar, Feb 2: In a significant stride toward strengthening the entrepreneurial landscape of Jammu and Kashmir, SKUAST-K, in collaboration with the Institute Incubation & Innovation Council (I3C) at IIT Jammu, launched a week-long Capacity Building Program today.

 

The initiative is being held under the JKCIP framework and is specifically tailored for the capacity building of incubation staff, including scientists and officials from SKUAST-K. Centred on the core themes of incubation, innovation, and entrepreneurship, the program aims to equip participants with the essential skills required to cultivate a thriving and innovative ecosystem across the Union Territory.

 

Prof Arvind, Chief Innovation Officer at I3C, inaugurated the event by outlining a comprehensive structure that features interactive sessions, workshops, and hands-on training. The curriculum focuses on advanced incubation strategies and innovative problem-solving, with a particular emphasis on merging agriculture with modern technology. During his address, Prof Arvind introduced the SKUAST-K delegates to the IIT Jammu Innovation Council, highlighting its pivotal role in nurturing startups and commercializing academic research. He emphasized that through JKCIP, the institutions are laying the vital groundwork for transformative enterprises that will eventually drive regional self-reliance and robust economic growth.

 

The program is currently being hosted at IIT Jammu’s cutting-edge facilities, where twenty selected scientists and officials are participating in the intensive training. This collaboration between SKUAST-K and IIT Jammu promises to forge lasting agri-tech partnerships, marking a bold and strategic step forward for the future of J&K’s entrepreneurial and industrial development.

IUST Holds 12th IQAC Meeting to Review Academic Quality

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Awantipora, February 02: The Islamic University of Science and Technology today held its12th meeting of the Internal Quality Assurance Cell (IQAC) at the main campus. The meeting was chaired by the Hon’ble Vice-Chancellor. The meeting was attended by the Dean Academic Affairs, Registrar, Controller of Examinations, Dean Outreach, Deans of Schools, faculty members, University officers, external members, and a student representative. Welcoming the members, the Chairperson emphasized the critical role of IQAC in strengthening academic quality, governance, transparency, sustainability, and student-centric services in the university. The quarterly meeting of the eighth IQAC highlights the leadership’s commitment to periodic quality review of various issues in the University.

 

Director, DIQA, Dr. Peer Bilal, apprised the Committee of key institutional achievements during 2025. IUST secured first time entry in three categories of NIRF-2025. The University was also conferred the 6th National Water Award in the Best Institution category for its initiatives in water conservation. The Director also presented major academic and institutional milestones, including the introduction of new undergraduate and postgraduate programmes in emerging and interdisciplinary areas, a nearly 70% increase in student admissions over the past two years, and placements reaching 75%.

 

Significant progress in research and innovation has been achieved this academic year with faculty publishing 376 Scopus-indexed research papers, attracting 9,975 citations, and the University’s Scopus h-index rising to 75. During 2025, 35 patents were published and/or granted, and IUST retained its 4-Star rating under the Ministry of Education’s Institutions Innovation Council framework.

 

The IQAC reviewed the Action Taken Report of the 11th IQAC meeting and deliberated on agenda items including a Gender Audit, strengthening of the Plagiarism Policy with AI-related provisions, adoption of a University-wide Waste Management Policy, review of the Student Satisfaction Survey, and implementation of a uniform examination pattern.

 

The Chair emphasized the need for sustained collective efforts, regulatory compliance, and evidence-based planning to further strengthen IUST’s quality assurance framework and national standing. The vote of thanks was presented by Dr. Athar Ud Din (Deputy Director, DIQA)

 

 

NGT Sounds Alarm on Manasbal Lake, Orders Pollution Audit and Action Reports

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Tribunal Flags Sewage Inflow, Ecological Decline at Kashmir’s deepest lake

 

 

FIRDOUS AHMAD

SRINAGAR, Feb 2: The National Green Tribunal (NGT), Principal Bench, New Delhi, has taken serious cognisance of the fast-deteriorating ecological health of Manasbal Lake and issued a series of firm directions to central and Union Territory authorities to assess water quality, identify pollution sources and place on record concrete action taken to protect the notified wetland.

The directions were passed by a Bench comprising Justice Prakash Shrivastava, Chairperson, and Dr A. Senthil Vel, Expert Member, while hearing Original Application No. 74/2026 filed by environmental activist Raja Muzaffar Bhat. The matter was heard on January 30, 2026, and has been listed for further hearing on April 22, 2026.

In his application, the applicant raised grave concerns over the continued discharge of untreated sewage into Manasbal Wetland through the Lar Canal in Ganderbal district. It was alleged that sewage from as many as 14 villages is flowing untreated into the wetland, posing a serious threat to its ecological integrity and public health.

The Tribunal noted that Manasbal Wetland is included in the official list of wetlands outside forest and wildlife protected areas in Jammu and Kashmir under the Wetlands Rules, 2017. It is also part of the National Wetland Atlas of Jammu and Kashmir. Photographs placed on record as Annexure A-3 were relied upon to support the claim that untreated sewage is being discharged into the wetland.

The applicant further relied upon a detailed scientific study titled “Current Status of Macrophyte Diversity and Distribution in Manasbal Lake, Kashmir, India”, which highlights alarming ecological changes within the lake. The study explains that Manasbal Lake currently shows good coverage of macrophytes, but this proliferation is accelerating due to changes in water quality, water level fluctuations, shallowing of the lake caused by sedimentation, and increasing pollution in the form of solid waste entering through inlet tributaries and channels from adjacent habitations and agricultural fields.

The report states that nutrient enrichment of waters, primarily due to domestic sewage and other anthropogenic inputs, has caused drastic changes in aquatic plant biomass and species composition. With eutrophication, macrophyte growth becomes extremely dense, eventually replacing submerged species with emergent macrophytes. According to the study, emergent plant species dominate in shallow waters, floating-leaf macrophytes prevail in deeper waters, while submerged aquatic plants occur in the deepest zones of the lake.

The concluding portion of the study, heavily relied upon by the applicant, reveals that macrophyte proliferation in Manasbal Lake is being driven by nutrient-rich inflows originating from domestic sewage, animal dung used by locals for drying on lake margins, and detergents used for washing clothes directly within the lake. The dominance of Azolla species in terms of density, frequency, abundance and highest Importance Value Index was identified as a serious ecological threat. While Euryale ferox was recorded only at one site, the report attributed its absence elsewhere to increased human interference.

The study further recorded that the highest diversity index values were observed at Kondabal, Gratabal and Jarokabal sites, while areas experiencing higher anthropogenic pressure showed declining diversity. The researchers concluded that Manasbal Lake is evolving at a rapid pace towards increased productivity, clearly indicating ecological stress, and stressed the immediate need for effective conservation and restoration measures. Constant monitoring and development of appropriate management strategies were described as extremely important for the future protection and conservation of the lake.

In addition to the scientific study, the applicant relied upon a newspaper report titled “Manasbal Lake’s Environmental Crisis Demands Immediate Action”, filed as Annexure A-5. This report disclosed the status of the sewage treatment plant meant for Manasbal Lake, revealing that the project was initiated nearly a decade ago and represents a significant infrastructure investment. However, despite substantial progress, the project remains incomplete, and untreated sewage continues to enter the lake.

The report underlined that timely operationalisation of the sewage treatment plant would mark a crucial turning point in Manasbal’s restoration journey. It warned that the current situation, where untreated sewage is being continuously discharged into the lake, highlights the urgent need to expedite the final phases of the project.

Serious concern was also raised about the functioning of the Manasbal Development Authority, which was established as a dedicated institution for lake conservation. The Authority is currently operating under interim administrative arrangements, and the report strongly recommended the appointment of a permanent Chief Executive Officer to strengthen institutional capacity and improve coordination of conservation efforts.

The Kondabal area, one of the four villages surrounding Manasbal Lake, was identified as a major pressure point. The report stated that residents of Kondabal are directly impacting the lake’s ecosystem through unregulated discharge of domestic waste, encroachments along lake boundaries, lack of proper sanitation facilities and unchecked construction activities. It further observed that Kondabal requires immediate relocation and rehabilitation, noting that continued residence in the present location exposes inhabitants to serious health hazards while simultaneously accelerating the degradation of the lake. The report described relocation not only as an environmental necessity but also as a humanitarian imperative.

The study and newspaper report collectively suggested immediate measures, including the emergency appointment of a qualified CEO for the Manasbal Development Authority, time-bound completion of the sewage treatment plant with dedicated resources, formulation and implementation of a comprehensive relocation and rehabilitation plan for Kondabal residents, and coordinated pollution source management addressing direct sewage discharge and agricultural runoff.

The applicant also relied upon the Supreme Court’s landmark order dated February 8, 2017, passed in M.K. Balakrishnan and others versus Union of India and others, wherein the apex court directed that all identified wetlands across the country are required to be protected. The Tribunal noted that since Manasbal Wetland is an identified wetland, it is legally required to be protected in terms of the said order.

After considering the submissions, the Tribunal issued notice to the respondents and directed the applicant to serve copies and file an affidavit of service at least one week before the next date of hearing. The Central Pollution Control Board and the Jammu and Kashmir Pollution Control Committee were specifically directed to ascertain the status of water quality of Manasbal Wetland, identify sources of discharge of pollutants into the wetland and submit a detailed status and action-taken report at least one week prior to the next hearing. Other respondents have also been directed to file their replies by way of affidavits within the same timeframe.

Quoting the conclusion of the report, the Tribunal observed that Manasbal Lake stands at a critical juncture. The report warns that society can either act now to save this ecological treasure or watch it disappear forever. It stresses that restoration of Manasbal Lake is not merely about saving a water body but about preserving Kashmir’s natural heritage, protecting public health and ensuring sustainable development for future generations. Every day of delay, the report cautions, brings the region closer to losing this jewel forever.

With the matter now posted for April 22, 2026, the Tribunal’s intervention has brought renewed focus on Manasbal Lake, raising expectations that long-pending administrative inertia will finally give way to decisive action to protect one of Kashmir’s most ecologically significant wetlands.

 

Winter sports break isolation in snowbound areas along LoC

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Tauseef Ahmad

Bandipora, Feb 2: As winter sports draw thousands of tourists to Kashmir’s famed ski resort Gulmarg and other destinations each season, similar activities are now offering relief and opportunity in the remote, snowbound Gurez Valley along the Line of Control (LoC) in north Kashmir.

Buried under nearly four feet of snow and cut off for months after the Bandipora–Gurez road closes, the valley faces long spells of isolation. This winter, however, snow cricket, skiing have revived the sporting spirit of the border region, turning harsh conditions into a season of sports and enjoyment.

Local youth, with support from the administration and Army, have started winter sports programmes on frozen grounds to keep the region active and slowly attract visitors even during peak winter. Officials say Gurez holds vast potential similar to Gulmarg, which hosts thousands of skiers every year.

“Gurez remains snowbound for months but has huge scope for winter sports. Like earlier years, locals are organising snow cricket tournaments and skiing courses, while the administration is extending support,” an official said.
Snow cricket has emerged as a winter tradition, played on compacted snowfields against towering mountains.

“We wait for this season every year. Playing cricket on snow keeps us motivated during long winters when roads remain closed,” said Irfan Ahmad, a local youth player.

The tournaments, backed by the Indian Army, have seen wide participation, while soldiers have also initiated basic skiing training for locals.

“Skiing feels natural here because snow is part of our life. With proper facilities, many youngsters can excel and even earn livelihoods,” said trainee skier.

Residents say winter sports are becoming not just entertainment but opportunity in a region long affected by remoteness.

They have urged the government to build infrastructure, training centres and accommodation to promote Gurez as a winter sports destination alongside Gulmarg and other resorts.

To ease isolation, helicopter services between Bandipora and Gurez have also been started to maintain connectivity during peak winter months.

MLA Bijbehara Injured After Fall, Hospitalised

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Srinagar, Feb 2: MLA Bijbehara Dr. Bashir Ahmad Veeri sustained injuries on Monday morning after suffering a severe fall while exiting from stadium in Jammu, sources said.

 

 

Sources told that, Dr. Veeri’s right foot got entangled in broken tiles, causing him to lose balance and fall. The incident resulted in a fracture of the nasal bridge causing profuse bleeding.

 

He was immediately shifted to a hospital for medical treatment. Doctors are monitoring his condition, and further medical assessment is underway. -KDC

NIA conducts raids at Six locations across Valley

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KD Correspondent

Srinagar, Feb 2: Teams National Investigation Agency (NIA) on Monday carried out coordinated search operations at six locations across Sopore, Bandipora and Srinagar in north and central Kashmir as part of an ongoing terror conspiracy probe, officials said.

Details reaching to the Kashmir Despatch, said that the searches were aimed at identifying suspected links, logistical networks and individuals allegedly connected to militant activities in Jammu and Kashmir.

Official sources said that the NIA teams, assisted by JKP and paramilitary forces, conducted searches at residential and other premises of suspected individuals.

In Bandipora, NIA personnel searched the residence of Mohd Maqbool Mir, a retired teacher from Ward No. 04, Plan Bandipora. His son, Mubashir Maqbool Mir alias Shubu, is already under detention under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA), sources said.

The operation was still underway at the time of filing this report, and more details are expected.

83.27% Students Qualify Class 11th Exams; Results to Be Declared Shortly

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Srinagar, Feb 2 : As many as 83.27 percent students have qualified the Class 11th examination, the Jammu and Kashmir Board of School Education (JKBOSE) said on Monday, as the results are set to be declared shortly.

 

An official told that, 83.27 percent students have qualified the Class 11th exams, results will be announced shortly around 11:30am today, adding that all formalities for declaration have been completed.

 

 

JKBOSE Chairman Ghulam Hassan Sheikh said the result compilation process has been finalized and the Board is fully prepared to upload the results.

 

“The results are complete and we are hopeful to officially declare them today. The announcement is planned between 11 AM and 12 noon,” he said.

 

The Chairman advised students to check their results only on the official website jkbose.jk.gov.in and cautioned them against clicking on any fraudulent links circulated by scammers ahead of the result declaration.

 

Around 81,469 students had appeared in the Class 11th examination, including 64,007 candidates from Kashmir division and 17,462 students from the winter zone areas of Jammu. (JKNS)

Class 11th Results by Noon Today: JKBOSE Chairman

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Results to be available on jkbose.jk.gov.in, students must not click any fraud links shared by scammers

 

Srinagar, Feb 2 : The Jammu and Kashmir Board of School Education (JKBOSE) is set to declare the Class 11th annual examinations results today, officials said on Tuesday.

 

Chairman JKBOSE Gulam Hassan Sheikh as per news agency Kashmir News Corner — KNC said “Class 11th results are ready and it is being officially declared today, February 2, 2026.”

 

“Giving exact timing is not possible however, it will be declared around noon, between 11:00 am and 12:00 noon,” Sheikh said.

 

The results will be available on the Board’s official website jkbose.jk.gov.in. He advised students not to panic and cautioned them against clicking on any fraudulent links being circulated by scammers ahead of the result declaration.

 

He urged students to rely only on the official JKBOSE website for authentic updates and result-related information. (KNC)

Yuva Shakti-driven Budget Emphasizes ON Government’s ‘SANKALP’ To Focus on Poor, Underprivileged And The Disadvantaged

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Vinod Bhat

New Delhi, Feb 01:

Union Minister for Finance and Corporate Affairs, Smt Nirmala Sitharaman presented the Union Budget 2026-2027 in Parliament today.

 

PART-A

 

On the sacred occasion of Magha Purnima and the birth anniversary of Guru Ravidas, the Finance Minister said, as this is the first Budget prepared in Kartavya Bhawan, it is inspired by 3 kartavya:

 

First kartavya is to accelerate and sustain economic growth, by enhancing productivity and competitiveness, and building resilience to volatile global dynamics.

Second kartavya is to fulfil aspirations of people and build their capacity, making them strong partners in India’s path to prosperity

Third kartavya, aligned with vision of Sabka Sath, Sabka Vikas, is to ensure that every family, community, region and sector has access to resources, amenities and opportunities for meaningful participation.

Presenting the Yuva Shakti-driven Budget which emphasizes on Government’s ‘Sankalp’ to focus on poor, underprivileged and the disadvantaged, the Finance Minister said, India will continue to take confident steps towards Viksit Bharat, balancing ambition with inclusion. As a growing economy with expanding trade and capital needs, India must also remain deeply integrated with global markets, exporting more and attracting stable long-term investment.

 

She also mentioned that the country is facing an external environment in which trade and multilateralism are imperilled and access to resources and supply chains are disrupted. New technologies are transforming production systems while sharply increasing demands on water, energy and critical minerals.

 

The Finance Minister said that after the Prime Minister’s announcement on Independence Day in 2025, over 350 reforms have been rolled out. These include GST simplification, notification of Labour Codes, and rationalisation of mandatory Quality Control Orders. High Level Committees have been formed and in parallel, the Central Government is working with the State Governments on deregulation and reducing compliance requirements.

 

Under the first kartavya to accelerate and sustain economic growth, interventions were proposed in six areas:

 

Scaling up manufacturing in 7 strategic and frontier sectors;

Rejuvenating legacy industrial sectors;

Creating “Champion MSMEs”;

Delivering a powerful push to Infrastructure;

Ensuring long-term energy security and stability; and

Developing City Economic Regions

To develop India as a global Biopharma manufacturing hub, the Biopharma SHAKTI with an outlay of ₹ 10,000 crores to build the ecosystem for domestic production of biologics and biosimilars will be set up over the next 5 years. The Strategy will include a Biopharma-focused network with 3 new National Institutes of Pharmaceutical Education and Research (NIPER) and upgrading 7 existing ones. It will also create a network of over 1000 accredited India Clinical Trials sites. The Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation will be strengthened to meet global standards and approval timeframes through a dedicated scientific review cadre and specialists.

 

For the labour-intensive Textile Sector, an Integrated Programme with 5 sub-parts was proposed: The National Fibre Scheme for self-reliance in natural fibres such as silk, wool and jute, man-made fibres, and new-age fibres; Textile Expansion and Employment Scheme to modernise traditional clusters with capital support for machinery, technology upgradation and common testing and certification centres; A National Handloom and Handicraft programme to integrate and strengthen existing schemes and ensure targeted support for weavers and artisans; Tex-Eco Initiative to promote globally competitive and sustainable textiles and apparels; Samarth 2.0 to modernize and upgrade the textile skilling ecosystem through collaboration with industry and academic institutions.

 

Recognising MSMEs as a vital engine of growth, a dedicated ₹10,000 crore SME Growth Fund was proposed to create future Champions, incentivizing enterprises based on select criteria.

 

The Finance Minister said, Public capex has increased manifold from ₹2 lakh crore in FY2014-15 to an allocation of ₹11.2 lakh crore in BE 2025-26. In FY2026-27, she proposed to increase it to ₹12.2 lakh crore to continue the momentum.

 

Capital-Expenditure.jpg

 

To promote environmentally sustainable movement of cargo, the Finance Minister proposed new Dedicated Freight Corridors connecting Dankuni in the East, to Surat in the West; b) operationalise 20 new National Waterways (NW) over next 5 years, starting with NW-5 in Odisha to connect mineral rich areas of Talcher and Angul and industrial centres like Kalinga Nagar to the Ports of Paradeep and Dhamra. Training Institutes will be set up as Regional Centres of Excellence for development of the required manpower.

 

The Budget aims to further amplify the potential of cities to deliver the economic power of agglomerations by mapping city economic regions (CER), based on their specific growth drivers. An allocation of ₹ 5000 crore per CER over 5 years is proposed for implementing their plans through a challenge mode with a reform-cum-results based financing mechanism.

 

To promote environmentally sustainable passenger systems, seven High-Speed Rail corridors between cities will be developed as ‘growth connectors’, namely i) Mumbai-Pune, ii) Pune-Hyderabad, iii) Hyderabad-Bengaluru, iv) Hyderabad-Chennai, v) Chennai-Bengaluru, vi) Delhi-Varanasi, vii) Varanasi-Siliguri.

 

The Finance Minister said that second kartavya is to fulfil aspirations and build capacity. Close to 25 crore individuals have come out of multidimensional poverty through a decade of Government’s sustained and reform-oriented efforts.

 

To promote India as a hub for medical tourism services, the Finance Minister proposed a Scheme to support States in establishing five Regional Medical Hubs, in partnership with the private sector. These Hubs will serve as integrated healthcare complexes that combine medical, educational and research facilities. They will have AYUSH Centres, Medical Value Tourism Facilitation Centres and infrastructure for diagnostics, post-care and rehabilitation. These Hubs will provide diverse job opportunities for health professionals including doctors and AHPs.

 

To scale up availability of veterinary professionals by more than 20,000, a loan-linked capital subsidy was proposed to support scheme for establishment of veterinary and para vet colleges, veterinary hospitals, diagnostic laboratories and breeding facilities in the private sector.

 

India’s Animation, Visual Effects, Gaming and Comics (AVGC) sector is a growing industry, projected to require 2 million professionals by 2030. The Finance Minister proposed to support the Indian Institute of Creative Technologies, Mumbai in setting up AVGC Content Creator Labs in 15,000 secondary schools and 500 colleges.

 

In Higher Education STEM institutions, prolonged hours of study and laboratory work pose some challenges for girl students. Through VGF/capital support, 1 girls hostel will be established in every district.

 

The Finance Minister proposed to set up a National Institute of Hospitality by upgrading the existing National Council for Hotel Management and Catering Technology. It will function as a bridge between academia, industry and the Government. She further proposed a pilot scheme for upskilling 10,000 guides in 20 tourist sites through a standardized, high-quality 12-week training course in hybrid mode, in collaboration with an Indian Institute of Management.

 

Taking forward the systematic nurturing of sports talent which is set in motion through the Khelo India programme, the Finance Minister proposed to launch a Khelo India Mission to transform the Sports sector over the next decade. The Mission will facilitate: a) An integrated talent development pathway, supported by training centres b) systematic development of coaches and support staff; c) integration of sports science and technology; d) competitions and leagues to promote sports culture and provide platforms; and, e) development of sports infrastructure for training and competition.

 

The Finance Minister said that the Budget’s third kartavya aligns with the vision of Sabka Sath, Sabka Vikas towards a Viksit Bharat. This requires targeted efforts for increasing farmer incomes, empowering Divyangjan, empowering the vulnerable to access mental health and trauma care, focus on the Purvodaya States and the North-East Region to accelerate development and employment opportunities.

 

The Finance Minister proposed Bharat-VISTAAR (Virtually Integrated System to Access Agricultural Resources), a multilingual AI tool that shall integrate the AgriStack portals and the ICAR package on agricultural practices with AI systems. This will enhance farm productivity, enable better decisions for farmers and reduce risk by providing customised advisory support.

 

Building on the success of the Lakhpati Didi Programme, Self-Help Entrepreneur (SHE) Marts will be set up as community-owned retail outlets within the cluster level federations through enhanced and innovative financing instruments.

 

Reaffirming the commitment to Mental Health and Trauma Care, the Finance Minister announced to setup a NIMHANS-2 and also upgrade National Mental Health Institutes in Ranchi and Tezpur as Regional Apex Institutions.

 

She further proposed the development of an integrated East Coast Industrial Corridor with a well-connected node at Durgapur, creation of 5 tourism destinations in the 5 Purvodaya States, and the provision of 4,000 e-buses. She also proposed to launch a Scheme for Development of Buddhist Circuits in Arunachal Pradesh, Sikkim, Assam, Manipur, Mizoram and Tripura. The Scheme will cover preservation of temples and monasteries, pilgrimage interpretation centers, connectivity and pilgrim amenities.

 

Fiscal Consolidation

 

The debt-to-GDP ratio is estimated to be 55.6 percent of GDP in BE 2026-27, compared to 56.1 percent of GDP in RE 2025-26. A declining debt-to-GDP ratio will gradually free up resources for priority sector expenditure by reducing the outgo on interest payments. In RE 2025-26, the fiscal deficit has been estimated at par with BE of 2025-26 at 4.4 percent of GDP. In line with the new fiscal prudence path of debt consolidation, the fiscal deficit in BE 2026-27 is estimated to be 4.3 percent of GDP.

 

Revised Estimates 2025-26

 

The Revised Estimates of the non-debt receipts are ₹34 lakh crore of which the Centre’s net tax receipts are ₹26.7 lakh crore. The Revised Estimate of the total expenditure is ₹49.6 lakh crore, of which the capital expenditure is about ₹11 lakh crore.

 

 

 

Budget Estimates 2026-27

 

 

 

 

Coming to 2026-27, the non-debt receipts and the expenditure are estimated as ₹36.5 lakh croreand ₹53.5 lakh crore respectively. The Centre’s net tax receipts are estimated at ₹28.7 lakh crore.

 

To finance the fiscal deficit, the net market borrowings from dated securities are estimated at ₹11.7 lakh crore. The balance financing is expected to come from small savings and other sources. The gross market borrowings are estimated at ₹17.2 lakh crore.

 

PART-B

 

 

 

 

 

Direct Taxes:

 

In Direct Taxes, many new reforms are proposed in the Union Budget 2026-27. The New Income tax Act, 2025 will come into effect from April 2026. Also the simplified Income Tax Rules and Forms will be notified shortly. The forms for the purpose are redesigned for easy compliance of ordinary citizens.

 

There is also a proposed reduction in the TCS rates. The Overseas tour program package is reduced from the current 5 percent and 20 percent to 2 percent without any stipulation of amount. Further, TCS for pursuing education and for medical purposes under the Liberalized Remittance Scheme (LRS) reduced from 5 percent to 2 percent.

 

It is also proposed that the supply of manpower services to be brought within the ambit of payment to contractors for the purpose of TDS. TDS on these services will be at the rate of either 1 percent or 2 percent only. For small taxpayers, a rule-based automated process will enable obtaining a lower or nil deduction certificate instead of filing an application with the assessing officer. Also, the time available for revising returns is proposed to be extended from 31st December to up to 31st March with the payment of a nominal fee. Further, the timeline for filing of tax returns is to be staggered.

 

To address practical issues of small taxpayers, a One-time 6-month foreign asset disclosure scheme for students, young professionals, tech employees, relocated NRIs, and such others to be introduced to disclose income or assets below a certain size.

 

 

 

Rationalising Penalty and Prosecution

 

With a view to rationalizing penalty and prosecution, the Union Budget 2026-27 proposes to reduce the multiplicity of proceedings. Assessment & penalty proceedings will be integrated by way of a common order for both. Further, the quantum of pre-payment will be reduced from 20 percent to 10 percent, calculated only on core tax demand. In order to reduce litigations, taxpayers will be allowed to update their returns even after reassessment proceedings have been initiated, at an additional 10 percent tax rate over and above the rate applicable for the relevant year.

 

The Budget proposes to extend the provisions for immunity from penalty and prosecution in the cases of under reporting, to misreporting as well. Taxpayer will need to pay 100 percent of the tax amount as an additional income tax over and above the tax and interest due. In addition, prosecution framework under the Income Tax Act will be rationalized. Non-production of books of account and documents, and requirement of TDS payment, where payment is made in kind, will be decriminalised. Non-disclosure of non-immovable foreign assets with aggregate value less than 20 lakh rupees will be provided with immunity from prosecution with retrospective effect from 1.10.2024.

 

 

 

Cooperatives

 

In her Budget speech in the Parliament today, Smt. Nirmala Sitharaman stated that the deduction already available to a primary cooperative society engaged in supplying milk, oilseeds, fruits or vegetables raised or grown by its members, will be extended to also include supply of cattle feed and cotton seed produced by its members. Inter-cooperative society dividend income will be allowed as deduction under the new tax regime to the extent it is further distributed to its members. In addition, an exemption of three years is to be allowed to dividend income received by a notified national cooperative federation, on their investments made in companies up to 31.1.2026, for dividends further distributed to its member co-operatives.

 

 

 

Supporting IT sector as India’s growth engine

 

Underscoring the significance of the IT sector for India’s growth trajectory, the Budget proposes to club software development services, IT enabled services, knowledge process outsourcing services and contract R&D services relating to software development under a single category of Information Technology Services with a common safe harbour margin of 15.5 percent. Further, the threshold for availing safe harbour for IT services will be enhanced from 300 crore rupees to 2,000 crore rupees. Safe harbour for IT services shall be approved by an automated rule-driven process, and once applied by an IT Services company, the same safe harbour can be continued for a period of 5 years at a stretch.

 

Unilateral Advanced Pricing Agreement (APA) process for IT services is proposed to be fast-tracked with an endeavour to conclude it within two years, which can be extended by 6 months on taxpayer’s request. Further, the facility of modified returns available to the entity entering APA is to be extended to its associated entities.

 

 

 

Attracting global business and investment

 

While presenting the Union Budget 2026-27 in the Parliament today, the Union Finance and Corporate Affairs Minister said that any foreign company that provides cloud services to customers globally by using data centre services from India will be provided tax holiday till 2047. She added that a safe harbour of 15 percent on cost is to be provided if the company providing data centre services from India is a related entity. Moreover, a safe harbour will be provided to non-residents for component warehousing in a bonded warehouse at a profit margin of 2 percent of the invoice value. The resultant tax of about 0.7 percent will be much lower than in competing jurisdictions, the Union Minister said.

 

The Budget proposes to provide exemption from income tax for 5 years to any non-resident who provides capital goods, equipment or tooling, to any toll manufacturer in a bonded zone. To encourage vast pool of global talent to work in India for a longer period of time, exemption will be provided to global (non-India sourced) income of a non-resident expert, for a stay period of 5 years under notified schemes. Further, all non-residents who pay tax on presumptive basis, will be exempted from Minimum Alternate Tax (MAT).

 

 

 

Tax Administration

 

In a significant step towards strengthening tax administration, the Budget proposes the constitution of a Joint Committee of Ministry of Corporate Affairs and Central Board of Direct Taxes for incorporating the requirements of Income Computation and Disclosure Standards (ICDS) in the Indian Accounting Standards (IndAS) itself. Separate accounting requirement based on ICDS will be done away with from the tax year 2027-28. The definition of accountant for the purposes of Safe Harbour Rules will also be rationalized.

 

 

 

Other Tax Proposals

 

In the interest of minority shareholders, the Union Budget 2026-27 proposes that buyback for all types of shareholders will be taxed as Capital Gains. It requires promoters to pay an additional buyback tax, making effective tax 22 percent for corporate promoters and 30 percent for non-corporate promoters.

 

Smt. Nirmala Sitharaman said that TCS rate for sellers of specific goods namely alcoholic liquor, scrap and minerals will be rationalized to 2 percent and that on tendu leaves will be reduced from 5 percent to 2 percent. Another notable tax proposal is the move to raise STT on Futures to 0.05 percent from present 0.02 percent. STT on options premium and exercise of options will also be raised to 0.15 percent from the present rate of 0.1 percent and 0.125 percent, respectively.

 

To encourage companies to shift to the new regime, the Budget proposes that the set-off of brought forward MAT credit is to be allowed to companies only in the new regime. Set-off using available MAT credit will be allowed to an extent of 1/4th of the tax liability in the new regime. Proposing to make MAT the final tax, Smt. Sitharaman said that there will be no further credit accumulation from 1st April 2026. The rate of final tax will be reduced to 14 percent from the current MAT rate of 15 percent. Further, the brought forward MAT credit of taxpayers accumulated till 31st March 2026, will continue to be available to them for set-off as above.

 

 

 

Indirect Taxes:

 

The Finance Minister stated that the proposals for Customs and Central Excise aim to further simplify the tariff structure, support domestic manufacturing, promote export competitiveness, and correct inversion in duty.

 

 

 

Rationalisation of Custom Duties:

 

In Marine, Leather, and Textile products, the limit for duty-free imports of specified inputs used for processing seafood products for export, is to be increased from the current 1 per cent to 3 per cent of the FOB value. The duty-free imports of specified inputs, which is currently available for exports of leather or synthetic footwear will be allowed.

 

In Energy sector, the basic customs duty exemption given to capital goods used for manufacturing Lithium-Ion Cells for batteries will be extended and the basic customs duty on import of sodium antimonate for use in manufacture of solar glass will be exempted.

 

The Finance Minister added that the existing basic customs duty exemption on imports of goods required for Nuclear Power Projects will be extended till the year 2035 and the basic customs duty on specified parts used in the manufacture of microwave ovens will be exempted.

 

The basic customs duty to the import of capital goods required for processing of critical minerals will be exempted and the entire value of biogas while calculating the Central Excise duty payable on biogas blended CNG will be excluded.

 

In the Civil and Defence Aviation sector, the basic customs duty on components and parts required for the manufacture of civilian, training and other aircrafts will be exempted and the basic custom duty on raw materials imported for manufacture of parts of aircraft to be used in maintenance, repair, or overhaul requirements by Units in the Defence sector will be exempted.

 

Further, a special one-time measure, to facilitate sales by eligible manufacturing units in Special Economic Zone to the Domestic Tariff Area (DTA) at concessional rates of duty is proposed.

 

To enhance the Ease of Living, the Finance Minister stated that the tariff rate on all dutiable goods imported for personal use will be reduced from 20 per cent to 10 per cent. The basic customs duty on 17 drugs or medicines will be exempted. 7 more rare diseases will be added for the purposes of exempting import duties on personal imports of drugs, medicines and Food for Special Medical Purposes (FSMP) used in their treatment.

 

 

 

Custom Processes:

 

The Custom processes to have minimal intervention for smoother and faster movement of goods. Further, Duty deferral period for Tier 2 and Tier 3 Authorised Economic Operators, known as AEOs, is to be enhanced from 15 days to 30 days. Same is extended to the eligible manufacturer-importers. The Validity period of advance ruling, binding on Customs, is proposed to be extended from the present 3 years to 5 years. The government agencies will be encouraged to leverage AEO accreditation for preferential treatment in clearing their cargo.

 

The Budget also proposes that the Customs warehousing framework is to be transformed into a warehouse operator-centric system with self-declarations, electronic tracking and risk-based audit.

 

 

 

Ease of Doing Business:

 

Multiple initiatives have been taken in the Ease of Doing Business sector. For instance, Cargo clearance approvals from various Government agencies to be seamlessly processed through a single and interconnected digital window by the end of the financial year. For goods not having any compliance requirement, clearance is to be done by Customs immediately after online registration is completed by the importer. The Customs Integrated System (CIS) is to be rolled out in 2 years as a single, integrated and scalable platform for all the customs processes. Also, the Utilization of non-intrusive scanning with advanced imaging and AI technology for risk assessment is to be expanded in a phased manner with the objective to scan every container across all the major ports.

 

The Union Budget 2026-27 makes the Fish catch by an Indian fishing vessel in Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) or on the High Seas free of duty. Landing of such fish on foreign port will be treated as export of goods. The budget also proposes complete removal of the current value cap of ₹10 lakh per consignment on courier exports-supports aspirations of India’s small businesses, artisans and start-ups to access global markets through e-commerce

 

The Provisions governing baggage clearance are also to be revised during international travel. Revised rules to enhance duty-free allowances in line with the present day travel realities. Further, Honest taxpayers, willing to settle disputes will be able close cases by paying an additional amount in lieu of penalty.

 

 

 

***

 

HIGHLIGHTS OF UNION BUDGET 2026-27

01 FEB 2026 New Delhi

 

PART-A

 

Union Minister for Finance and Corporate Affairs, Smt. Nirmala Sitharaman tabled the Union Budget 2026-27 in the parliament today. The highlights of the budget are as follows:

 

The first Budget prepared in Kartavya Bhawan, is inspired by 3 kartavyas:

 

First kartavya is to accelerate and sustain economic growth, by enhancing productivity and competitiveness, and building resilience to volatile global dynamics.

Second kartavya is to fulfil aspirations of people and build their capacity, making them strong partners in India’s path to prosperity

Third kartavya, aligned with vision of Sabka Sath, Sabka Vikas, is to ensure that every family, community, region and sector has access to resources, amenities and opportunities for meaningful participation.

Budget Estimates

 

The non-debt receipts and the total expenditure are estimated as ₹36.5 lakh crore and ₹53.5 lakh crore respectively. The Centre’s net tax receipts are estimated at ₹28.7 lakh crore.

The gross market borrowings are estimated at ₹17.2 lakh crore and the net market borrowings from dated securities are estimated at ₹11.7 lakh crore.

The Revised Estimates of the non-debt receipts are ₹34 lakh crore of which the Centre’s net tax receipts are ₹26.7 lakh crore.

The Revised Estimate of the total expenditure is ₹49.6 lakh crore, of which the capital expenditure is about ₹11 lakh crore.

The fiscal deficit in BE 2026-27 is estimated to be 4.3 percent of GDP.

In RE 2025-26, the fiscal deficit has been estimated at par with BE of 2025-26 at 4.4 percent of GDP.

The debt-to-GDP ratio is estimated to be 55.6 percent of GDP in BE 2026-27, compared to 56.1 percent of GDP in RE 2025-26.

 

 

 

 

First Kartavya is to accelerate and sustain economic growth and proposes 6 interventions

 

1. Scaling up manufacturing in 7 strategic and frontier sectors

 

Biopharma SHAKTI (Strategy for Healthcare Advancement through Knowledge, Technology and Innovation) announced, with an outlay of ₹ 10,000 crores over the next 5 years to develop India as a global Biopharma manufacturing hub.

A Biopharma-focused network to be created with 3 new National Institutes of Pharmaceutical Education and Research (NIPER) and upgrading 7 existing ones.

A network of over 1000 accredited India Clinical Trials sites to be created

 

 

India Semiconductor Mission (ISM) 2.0 to be launched to produce equipment and materials, design full-stack Indian IP, and fortify supply chains with focus on industry led research and training centres to develop technology and skilled workforce.

 

 

The Electronics Components Manufacturing Scheme outlay increased to ₹40,000 crore.

 

 

Dedicated Rare Earth Corridors to be established, to support the mineral-rich States of Odisha, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu to promote mining, processing, research and manufacturing.

 

 

Government to launch a Scheme to support States in establishing 3 dedicated Chemical Parks, through challenge route, on a cluster-based plug-and-play model.

 

 

Strengthening Capital Goods Capability

 

 

Hi-Tech Tool Rooms to be established by CPSEs at 2 locations as digitally enabled automated service bureaus that locally design, test, and manufacture high-precision components at scale and at lower cost.

A Scheme for Enhancement of Construction and Infrastructure Equipment (CIE) to be introduced, to strengthen domestic manufacturing of high-value and technologically-advanced CIE.

A Scheme for Container Manufacturing announced, to create a globally competitive container manufacturing ecosystem, with a budgetary allocation of over ₹10,000 crore over a 5 year period.

 

 

Integrated Programme for the Textile Sector announced

 

 

The National Fibre Scheme for self-reliance in natural fibres such as silk, wool and jute, man-made fibres, and new-age fibres.

 

 

Textile Expansion and Employment Scheme to modernize traditional clusters with capital support for machinery, technology upgradation and common testing and certification centres.

 

 

Mega Textile Parks to be setup in challenge mode with focus on bringing value addition to technical textiles.

Mahatma Gandhi Gram Swaraj initiative announced, to strengthen khadi, handloom and handicrafts.

Initiative to help in global market linkage, branding and will streamline and support training, skilling, quality of process and production.

 

 

2. Rejuvenating legacy industrial sectors

 

A Scheme to revive 200 legacy industrial clusters announced, to improve their cost competitiveness and efficiency through infrastructure and technology upgradation.

 

 

3. Creating “Champion SMEs” and supporting micro enterprises

 

 

 

A dedicated ₹10,000 crore SME Growth Fund, to be introduced, to create future Champions, incentivizing enterprises based on select criteria.

Self-Reliant India Fund to be allocated with additional ₹2,000 crore, to continue support to micro enterprises and maintain their access to risk capital.

Government to facilitate Professional Institutions such as ICAI, ICSI, ICMAI to design short-term, modular courses and practical tools to develop a cadre of ‘Corporate Mitras’, especially in Tier-II and Tier-III towns.

 

 

4. Delivering a powerful push to Infrastructure

 

 

 

Public capital expenditure to be increased to ₹12.2 lakh crore in FY 2026-27.

Government to set up an Infrastructure Risk Guarantee Fund to strengthen the confidence of private developers regarding risks during infrastructure development and construction phase.

Government to accelerate recycling of significant real estate assets of CPSEs through the setting up of dedicated REITs.

To promote environmentally sustainable movement of cargo, following measures are proposed:

 

New Dedicated Freight Corridors to be established connecting Dankuni in the East, to Surat in the West

 

 

20 new National Waterways (NW) to be operationalised over next 5 years, starting with NW-5 in Odisha to connect mineral rich areas of Talcher and Angul and industrial centres like Kalinga Nagar to the Ports of Paradeep and Dhamra.

 

Training Institutes to be set up as Regional Centres of Excellence for development of the required manpower.

Further, a ship repair ecosystem catering to inland waterways to be set up at Varanasi and Patna

 

 

A Coastal Cargo Promotion Scheme to be launched for incentivising a modal shift from rail and road, to increase the share of inland waterways and coastal shipping from 6% to 12 % by 2047.

Incentives to be provided to indigenize manufacturing of seaplanes and enhance last-mile and remote connectivity, and promote tourism.

Seaplane VGF Scheme to be introduced to provide support for operations.

 

 

5. Ensuring long term energy security and stability

 

An outlay of ₹20,000 crore over the next 5 years, announced for Carbon Capture Utilization and Storage (CCUS) technologies.

6. Developing City Economic Regions

 

An allocation of ₹5000 crore over 5 years, per city economic regions (CER) announced, for implementing their plans through a challenge mode with a reform-cum-results based financing mechanism.

Government to develop Seven High-Speed Rail corridors between cities as ‘growth connectors’ to promote environmentally sustainable passenger systems. These include:

Mumbai-Pune

Pune-Hyderabad,

Hyderabad-Bengaluru,

Hyderabad-Chennai

Chennai-Bengaluru,

Delhi-Varanasi,

Varanasi-Siliguri.

 

 

Government to setup a “High Level Committee on Banking for Viksit Bharat”, to comprehensively review the sector and align it with India’s next phase of growth, while safeguarding financial stability, inclusion and consumer protection.

Government to restructure the Power Finance Corporation and Rural Electrification Corporation to achieve scale and improve efficiency in the Public Sector NBFCs.

A comprehensive review of the Foreign Exchange Management (Non-debt Instruments) Rules is proposed, to create a more contemporary, user-friendly framework for foreign investments, consistent with India’s evolving economic priorities.

 

 

Kidnapping Thwarted in Ganderbal as Police Rescue Minor Within an Hour; One Accused Held

0

 

 

Touseef Wani

 

Ganderbal, Feb 1 : In a swift and decisive operation, Ganderbal Police on Sunday foiled a kidnapping attempt by rescuing a minor boy within an hour of the incident and arresting one of the accused, underscoring the district police’s rapid response and effective coordination in handling serious crimes.

 

Ganderbal Police achieved a swift breakthrough in a Kidnapping Case by rescuing a minor boy within one hour of the incident and arresting One Accused Person involved in the crime.

 

An application was received at Police Station Lar from a complainant (name withheld) stating that his nephew (name withheld) had been kidnapped by unknown persons near his residence at Chanthan Gulabpora, Lar today at around 06:30 pm, police said.

 

Acting promptly on the complaint, FIR No. 03/2026, under relevant sections of law was registered at Police Station Lar and investigation was immediately taken up, police official said.

 

Under the directions of SSP Ganderbal Shri Khalil Ahmad Poswal-JKPS, a special investigation team was constituted. Through swift action, coordinated efforts, and technical as well as ground-level investigation, the kidnapped boy was successfully recovered safely within one hour of the incident, police said.

 

During the operation, one accused person identified as Ishfaq Ahmad Teeli S/O Ab Jabbar Teli R/O Kurhama was arrested. The vehicle used in the commission of the offence was also seized near Barsoo Chowk.

 

Further investigation is in progress, and efforts are underway to apprehend other accused persons involved in the crime, it said.

 

Ganderbal Police reiterates its commitment to ensuring the safety and security of the public and urges citizens to promptly report any suspicious activity to the nearest police station.