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Home » Newspaper Notes » Daily Newspaper Notes: February 19, 2026

Daily Newspaper Notes: February 19, 2026

Diversity-Oriented Judicial Appointments and Regional Benches of the Supreme Court

Newspaper Notes
Context: A private member Bill seeks constitutional amendments to promote social diversity in judicial appointments and establish regional benches of the Supreme Court to improve access and address pendency.
Source: The need for diversity in the judiciary, The Hindu

Core Points

  • Private member Bill introduced by P. Wilson (DMK) to amend the Constitution.
  • Objectives: bring diversity in judicial appointments and set up regional benches of the Supreme Court.
  • Constitutionally, the President appoints judges after consultation with specified authorities (Articles 124 and 217).
  • Seat of the Supreme Court is in Delhi or other places as decided by the CJI with Central government approval (Article 130).
  • Collegium system evolved through Supreme Court judgments (First, Second, and Third Judges cases).
  • Collegium ensures judicial independence but faces criticism for lack of transparency and accountability.
  • NJAC (99th Constitutional Amendment, 2014) attempted to replace collegium but was struck down in 2015.
  • Bill mandates proportionate representation of SC, ST, OBC, religious minorities, and women in appointments.
  • Bill sets a 90-day timeline for the Central government to notify collegium recommendations.
  • Bill proposes regional benches of the Supreme Court at New Delhi, Kolkata, Mumbai, and Chennai.
  • Regional benches to have full jurisdiction except constitutional matters, which remain with the Constitution Bench in Delhi.
  • Judiciary, through the collegium, bears primary responsibility for ensuring social diversity.
  • Long-term reform suggested: revive NJAC with broader, more inclusive composition.
  • Regional benches can be set up under existing constitutional provisions.
Key Details
  • Collegium composition:
    • Supreme Court appointments: CJI + four senior SC judges.
    • High Court appointments: CJI + two senior SC judges.
  • If the collegium reiterates a recommendation returned by the Centre, the appointment must be made.
  • Judges appointed to higher judiciary (2018–2024):
    • About 20% from SC, ST, OBC.
    • Women less than 15%.
    • Religious minorities less than 5%.
  • Supreme Court pendency: over 90,000 cases (as of January 2026).
  • NJAC proposed composition: CJI, two senior judges, Union Law Minister, two eminent persons.

Governance Challenges and Guardrails for Military Artificial Intelligence

Newspaper Note
Context: India abstained from a global declaration on governing AI in warfare, highlighting difficulties in regulating military AI amid strategic, technological, and security considerations.
Source: “Military AI and urgency of guardrails”, The Hindu

Core Points

  • India did not sign the ‘Pathways to Action’ declaration at the third REAIM summit.
  • Governance of military AI often remains outside broader AI regulation debates despite national security implications.
  • Only about one-third of participating countries signed the declaration this year.
  • Dual-use nature of AI complicates verification of compliance with military AI restrictions.
  • AI is increasingly viewed as a ‘game-changing’ technology with wide-ranging military applications.
  • States perceive military advantage from AI and are reluctant to accept constraints.
  • Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems (LAWS) remain the most controversial military AI use case.
  • UN CCW Group of Governmental Experts failed to reach conclusions or recommendations on LAWS.
  • No international consensus exists on the definition of LAWS.
  • Countries with limited AI capacity seek binding regulation, while technologically advanced states prefer higher thresholds or oppose binding frameworks.
  • India maintains that a legally binding instrument on LAWS is premature.
  • India aligns with ideas of ‘responsible’ AI use but has not signed recent non-binding blueprints or declarations.
  • Moral arguments for banning military AI are unlikely to succeed due to weak norms.
  • Non-binding mechanisms are suggested as a practical starting point.
  • India could push for a non-binding framework consistent with its interests and principles of accountability.
  • Binding frameworks may be possible after norms evolve and more deployment experience emerges.
Key Details
  • Previous summit: 60 countries signed a blueprint for action.
  • Current summit: 35 of 85 countries signed the ‘Pathways to Action’ declaration.
  • Proposed non-binding provisions:
    • AI-augmented autonomous decision-making not to be used with nuclear forces.
    • Voluntary confidence-building mechanisms for sharing data on military AI development.
    • Creation of an accepted risk hierarchy of military AI use cases.

India’s “Third Way” Approach to AI Governance

Newspaper Note
Context: At the AI Impact Summit, India presents a distinct governance model that seeks to balance innovation, inclusive development, and risk management, differing from existing global approaches.
Source: “A Third Way for AI governance”, The Hindu

Core Points

  • Global debate exists on the “right” model for AI governance amid risks and opportunities.
  • India positions itself as offering a “Third Way” for AI governance.
  • Existing models: EU’s compliance-heavy regime, U.S.’s hands-off approach, China’s centralised state model.
  • India’s approach recognises that these models do not suit the global majority.
  • In November 2025, India released AI governance guidelines.
  • Guidelines are a governance framework, not merely regulatory.
  • Framework covers adoption, diffusion, diplomacy, and capacity-building.
  • Focus on scaling AI for inclusive development in healthcare, agriculture, education, and public administration.
  • Designed to work through existing legal structures and remain agile and forward-looking.
  • India emphasises strategic autonomy, public-private partnerships, and local-context governance.
  • India can convene coordination among middle powers on AI safety and governance.
  • Governance coordination is limited if worker protection and social safeguards are absent.
  • Need for minimum measures on transparency, accountability, whistleblower protection, and safeguarding vulnerable groups.
  • A people-centred framework must accompany innovation-driven governance.
  • Next 12 months critical for testing viability of India’s model.
Key Details
  • February 10 amendments to IT (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules:
    • Mandatory labelling of AI-generated information.
    • Three-hour takedown window for harmful content.
  • First instance of a government mandating AI-generation disclosure.
  • Challenges in implementation and enforcement without international coordination.
  • Proposed coordination elements:
    • Shared safety evaluation frameworks.
    • Collaborative research networks.
    • Mechanisms to pool expertise on AI risks.

India–France Special Global Strategic Partnership and Strategic Convergence

Newspaper Note
Context: India and France have elevated their ties to a Special Global Strategic Partnership, reflecting durable relations, shared strategic autonomy, and expanding cooperation in defence, AI, and emerging domains.
Source: “The chemistry, economics and strategic convergence of Delhi’s tango with Paris”, The Indian Express

Core Points

  • Elevation of ties signals durability of relationship and shared commitment to strategic autonomy.
  • Partnership avoids rigid bloc politics and goes beyond a purely bilateral framework.
  • France remains one of India’s most dependable partners.
  • PM Narendra Modi and President Emmanuel Macron held talks in Mumbai with focus on defence and AI.
  • Long-term convergence articulated in the Horizon 2047 Roadmap.
  • Strategic convergence shaped by shared assessment of a strained international order.
  • Defence ties continue to be upgraded between the two countries.
  • India seeks to diversify defence imports and reduce dependence on Russia.
  • Cooperation spans emerging technologies, critical minerals, space, climate action, global health, and AI.
  • France respects India’s strategic autonomy, including India’s choices regarding Russia.
  • India and France reaffirm commitment to a “rules-based order in the Indo-Pacific region”.
  • India views Europe as an independent strategic actor, not merely aligned with a US-led West.
  • India–France partnership acts as a conduit for deeper India–Europe engagement.
Key Details
  • PM Modi visited France a year earlier to co-chair the AI Action Summit in Paris.
  • At that summit, both sides committed to jointly develop nuclear reactors and deepen defence cooperation.
  • Defence Acquisition Council cleared proposal to procure 114 Rafale aircraft from France.
  • 36 Rafale jets already in service with the Indian Air Force.
  • Indian Navy set to induct 26 Rafale Marine aircraft.
  • France–Russia ties have deteriorated after the invasion of Ukraine.
  • China is France’s largest trading partner in Asia.
  • Modi–Macron meeting followed the signing of the India–EU FTA in January.