📊 Index & Rankings
The Asian Development Bank (ADB) released its flagship Asian Development Outlook (ADO) April 2026 report titled ‘The Middle East Conflict Challenges Resilience in Asia and the Pacific’, revising India’s GDP growth forecast for FY2026–27 upward from 6.5% to 6.9% — a gain of 40 basis points. The upgrade reflects strong private consumption, continued public investment, and anticipated government salary revisions.
| Indicator | Details |
|---|---|
| India FY27 GDP Forecast | 6.9% (revised up from 6.5%) |
| India FY28 GDP Projection | 7.3% |
| India Inflation FY26 | 2.1% |
| India Inflation FY27 | 4.5% (food prices + crude surge) |
| India Inflation FY28 | 4.0% (easing) |
| Developing Asia CY26 Growth | 5.1% (down from 5.4% in CY25) |
- Report title: ‘The Middle East Conflict Challenges Resilience in Asia and the Pacific’ — underscores regional macro risks from geopolitical tensions
- ADB profile: Established 1966; HQ Manila, Philippines; India is a founding member; President: Masato Kanda (2024)
- Growth drivers: Private consumption momentum, government infrastructure spending, and salary revision boost to disposable income
- Inflation caveat: Food price rebound and crude oil surge push FY27 inflation to 4.5%, easing to 4% in FY28 as supply stabilises
The ADB’s revised 6.9% estimate is broadly aligned with IMF and World Bank projections for India in FY27, reinforcing India’s status as the fastest-growing major economy amid global headwinds from the Middle East conflict affecting energy and trade flows.
ADB raised India FY27 GDP forecast to 6.9% (from 6.5%) — +40 bps. FY28 projection: 7.3%. Report: ADO April 2026. ADB: est. 1966, HQ Manila, President Masato Kanda. India is a founding member. Developing Asia CY26 growth: 5.1%.
🇮🇳 National News
Vice President of India C.P. Radhakrishnan released the updated edition of the Constitution of India in Sindhi language on Sindhi Bhasha Diwas (10 April 2026) at Uprashtrapati Bhawan, New Delhi. The release covers both the Devanagari Script (1st edition) and the Persian Script (2nd edition), marking the first-ever release of the Constitution in Sindhi in Devanagari script since Independence.
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Released by | VP C.P. Radhakrishnan |
| Date & Occasion | 10 April 2026 — Sindhi Bhasha Diwas |
| Scripts | Devanagari (1st ed.) & Persian Script (2nd ed.) |
| Constitutional basis | 21st Constitutional Amendment Act, 1967 |
| Ministry | Ministry of Law & Justice (Legislative Dept.) |
| MoS attending | Arjun Ram Meghwal |
- Sindhi Bhasha Diwas: Observed on 10 April to honour the cultural significance of the Sindhi language
- Eighth Schedule status: Sindhi is the only 8th Schedule language without a dedicated state; it was added via the 21st Constitutional Amendment Act, 1967
- Total 8th Schedule languages: 22 languages currently listed
- Recent translations: Constitution has been translated into Bodo, Dogri, Santhali, Tamil, Gujarati, and Nepali in recent years under the Viksit Bharat vision
The Eighth Schedule of the Indian Constitution lists 22 officially recognised languages. Originally, it had 14 languages (1950). Sindhi was the 15th addition in 1967. The most recent additions were Bodo, Dogri, Maithili, and Santhali in 2003 via the 92nd Constitutional Amendment Act.
Sindhi added to 8th Schedule via 21st Constitutional Amendment, 1967. Sindhi Bhasha Diwas = 10 April. Released by VP C.P. Radhakrishnan. Sindhi = only 8th Schedule language without a dedicated state. 8th Schedule has 22 languages. Ministry of Law & Justice; MoS: Arjun Ram Meghwal.
Doordarshan (DD), operating under Prasar Bharati, and the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR) signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) in April 2026 to promote Indian art, culture, and heritage globally through enhanced collaboration in broadcasting and cultural exchange programmes.
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Signed by (DD) | K. Satish Nambudiripad, DG, Doordarshan |
| Signed by (ICCR) | K. Nandini Singla, DG, ICCR |
| Venue | Doordarshan Bhawan, New Delhi |
| Validity | 3 years with provision for extension |
- Scope: Leverage Doordarshan’s TV, radio, and digital platforms to amplify ICCR cultural content via Indian Missions abroad; joint perpetual content rights; long-term archiving and cross-platform promotion
- ICCR profile: Indian Council for Cultural Relations; established 1950; HQ New Delhi; under Ministry of External Affairs (MEA); promotes India’s cultural diplomacy globally
- Prasar Bharati: India’s public broadcaster; established under Prasar Bharati Act, 1990; encompasses Doordarshan (TV) and All India Radio (AIR)
This MoU operationalises India’s soft power strategy — using Doordarshan’s global reach (DD India, DD Kisan, DD Sports) in tandem with ICCR’s network of 36 cultural centres and Indian Missions in 130+ countries to project Indian civilisational heritage abroad.
Doordarshan under Prasar Bharati + ICCR under MEA signed MoU. ICCR est. 1950. Prasar Bharati Act: 1990. Validity: 3 years. Signed by DG DD K. Satish Nambudiripad and DG ICCR K. Nandini Singla.
The Science and Technology Department of Gujarat Government signed a MoU with Allegiance International Company Limited (Taiwan-linked) to develop an Indo-Taiwan Industrial Park in the Sanand-Dholera region of Gujarat. The park is expected to attract over Rs 1,000 crore in Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in semiconductor and electronics manufacturing over the next 5 years.
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Signed by (Taiwan side) | Simone Lee, VP, Taiwan Chamber of Commerce in India & Chairman, Allegiance Group |
| Signed by (Gujarat) | P. Bharathi, Secretary, Dept. of Science & Technology, Gujarat |
| Location | Sanand-Dholera Region, Gujarat |
| Expected FDI | Rs 1,000 crore+ over 5 years |
| Focus sectors | Semiconductor & electronics manufacturing |
- Dholera SIR: Dholera Special Investment Region — India’s first greenfield smart city; part of the Delhi-Mumbai Industrial Corridor (DMIC)
- Strategic goal: Strengthen Gujarat’s semiconductor ecosystem; facilitate joint ventures between Indian and Taiwanese enterprises
- National context: Aligns with India’s India Semiconductor Mission (ISM) to build domestic chip design and manufacturing capacity
India Semiconductor Mission (ISM), launched under MeitY, provides financial support under the Semicon India programme. Dholera is a key node alongside Micron’s plant in Sanand (Gujarat) and the Tata-PSMC fab being set up in Dholera — making this industrial park strategically significant.
Indo-Taiwan Industrial Park at Sanand-Dholera, Gujarat. Rs 1,000 crore FDI. Focus: semiconductors & electronics. Dholera SIR = India’s first greenfield smart city; part of DMIC. MoU between Gujarat S&T Dept. & Allegiance International.
Housing and Urban Development Corporation (HUDCO) and NBCC (India) Limited — both Navratna CPSEs under the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs (MoHUA) — signed two strategic MoUs on 11 April 2026 for urban redevelopment and asset monetisation in Delhi.
| MoU | Scope |
|---|---|
| MoU 1 – Redevelopment | Redevelopment of ~18,830 sq. mt. leasehold land at August Kranti Bhawan, Bhikaji Cama Place, New Delhi; techno-economic feasibility, construction & asset monetisation |
| MoU 2 – Asset Monetisation | Asset monetisation for NBCC self-sustainable projects; HUDCO provides funding; NBCC manages execution & consultancy; validity: 2 years each |
- Signed by: Sanjay Kulshrestha, CMD HUDCO; K.P. Mahadevaswamy, CMD NBCC
- HUDCO profile: Established 1970; Navratna PSU under MoHUA; provides loans for housing and urban infrastructure projects across India
- NBCC profile: NBCC (India) Limited; Navratna CPSE under MoHUA; specialises in project management, construction, and real estate development
- Validity: 2 years each, with mutual scope for extension
This MoU is part of India’s larger push for urban asset monetisation under the National Monetisation Pipeline (NMP) and the PM-UDAY (Pradhan Mantri Unauthorised Colonies in Delhi Awas Yojana) framework — repurposing underutilised government land for productive, revenue-generating urban infrastructure.
HUDCO est. 1970; Navratna PSU. NBCC = Navratna CPSE. Both under MoHUA. Two MoUs signed 11 April 2026. CMDs: Sanjay Kulshrestha (HUDCO) & K.P. Mahadevaswamy (NBCC). Site: August Kranti Bhawan, Bhikaji Cama Place.
India concluded the 22nd Senior Asian Wrestling Championships 2026, held in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan (6–12 April 2026), with a tally of 17 medals (2 Gold, 6 Silver, 9 Bronze), finishing 5th overall in the medal standings. The event was organised by the Asian Associated Wrestling Committee (AAWC) under United World Wrestling (UWW).
| Rank | Country | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Iran | 6 | 6 | 6 | 18 |
| 2 | Japan | — | — | — | 15 |
| 3 | China | — | — | — | 14 |
| 5 | India | 2 | 6 | 9 | 17 |
- India Gold medalists: Sujeet Kalkal (65 kg Men’s Freestyle); Abhimanyou Mandwal (70 kg Men’s Freestyle)
- Notable silver: Meenakshi Goyat won Silver in Women’s Wrestling
- India squad: 30-member contingent across Men’s Freestyle, Women’s Wrestling, and Greco-Roman
- Event scale: 324 wrestlers from 21 countries; 30 gold medals on offer across three disciplines
The Asian Wrestling Championships covers three Olympic disciplines: Greco-Roman (upper body only, no leg holds), Men’s Freestyle (full body), and Women’s Wrestling (freestyle rules). India’s medal haul was concentrated in Men’s Freestyle and Women’s Wrestling, with limited success in Greco-Roman — a consistent pattern for Indian wrestlers.
India finished 5th with 17 medals (2G-6S-9B). Gold: Sujeet Kalkal (65 kg) & Abhimanyou Mandwal (70 kg). Venue: Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan. 22nd edition. Organised by AAWC under UWW. Iran topped (18 medals, 6 gold).
India concluded the Asian Boxing Championships 2026 in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia (28 March–11 April 2026) in 2nd place with 16 medals (5 Gold, 3 Silver, 8 Bronze). The event was the inaugural Elite edition — the first continental boxing event aligned with the World Boxing ranking system, organised by the Mongolian Boxing Federation.
| Rank | Country | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Kazakhstan | — | — | — | 15 |
| 2 | India | 5 | 3 | 8 | 16 |
| 3 | Uzbekistan | — | — | — | 14 |
- Inaugural Elite edition: First Asian Boxing Championships aligned with World Boxing ranking system — marks a new governance framework for continental boxing
- Qualification pathway: Finalists in approved weight categories earned direct qualification for Commonwealth Games 2026 (Glasgow, Scotland) and Asian Games 2026 (Aichi-Nagoya, Japan)
- India’s performance: 5 gold medals placed India ahead of Uzbekistan (14) in overall count despite Kazakhstan topping the table
World Boxing is the newer international federation (est. 2023) formed after the IOC suspended the International Boxing Association (IBA/AIBA) over governance concerns. India’s boxing federation has affiliated with World Boxing, making this championship — and the qualifications it offers — significant for India’s Olympic and multi-sport event preparations.
India 2nd place with 16 medals (5G-3S-8B). Venue: Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. Inaugural Elite edition. Kazakhstan 1st (15 medals). Organised by Mongolian Boxing Federation under World Boxing. CWG 2026: Glasgow; Asian Games 2026: Aichi-Nagoya.
The Clinical Laboratory at Central Ayurveda Research Institute (CARI), Bengaluru — under the Ministry of Ayush — achieved ISO 15189:2022 accreditation in both Biochemistry and Haematology, becoming the first institute under CCRAS (Central Council for Research in Ayurvedic Sciences) to earn this global quality distinction in April 2026.
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Accreditation | ISO 15189:2022 (Biochemistry & Haematology) |
| Accredited by | NABL (National Accreditation Board for Testing & Calibration Laboratories) |
| Institution | CARI Bengaluru, under CCRAS, Ministry of Ayush |
| FY2025-26 scale | 1.52 lakh+ investigations; 9,300+ patients served |
- ISO 15189:2022: International standard for medical laboratories; focuses on quality management systems and technical competence in diagnostic services
- Previous firsts: CARI Bengaluru was also the first CCRAS institute to secure both NABH and NABL entry-level certifications (2021–22)
- Digital services: Reporting via SMS/email/WhatsApp for patients; modernised diagnostic workflow
- CCRAS profile: Central Council for Research in Ayurvedic Sciences; under Ministry of Ayush; established 1978; DG: Prof. Rabinarayan Acharya
This accreditation is a milestone in India’s strategy of integrating evidence-based Ayurveda with modern diagnostics — using internationally recognised laboratory standards to lend scientific credibility to Ayurvedic clinical research. Ministry of Ayush has been pushing CCRAS institutes toward NABH/NABL benchmarks since 2020.
First CCRAS institute with ISO 15189:2022. Accredited by NABL. Under Ministry of Ayush. CCRAS est. 1978; DG: Prof. Rabinarayan Acharya. Scope: Biochemistry & Haematology. Previously first for NABH & NABL entry-level (2021–22).
💼 Business & Economy
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) unveiled its medium-term strategy ‘Utkarsh 2029’ covering April 2026 to March 2029, outlining 49 deliverables across 6 pillars to reinforce its position as a world-class, full-service central bank. The strategy was announced by RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra.
| # | Pillar |
|---|---|
| 1 | Robust Regulations |
| 2 | Customer Centricity and Inclusive Finance |
| 3 | Competitive Markets |
| 4 | Effective Technology Adoption |
| 5 | Human Capital Development |
| 6 | Global Integration |
- Project Sa-Mudra: Modernise RBI’s currency management operations
- CBDC expansion: Digital Rupee (e₹) for efficient cross-border payments
- Unified Lending Interface (ULI): Scale-up for wider credit access across India
- AI & Quantum Computing: Develop regulatory frameworks for emerging technologies in finance
- Internationalisation: Promote global usage of the Rupee and UPI abroad
- Previous framework: Utkarsh 2025 was RBI’s first medium-term strategy (2019–2022, later extended to 2025)
Reserve Bank of India: established 1 April 1935 (originally in Kolkata, shifted to Mumbai); nationalised 1949; governed by the Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934. Current Governor: Sanjay Malhotra (25th Governor; took charge December 2024, succeeding Shaktikanta Das).
Utkarsh 2029: April 2026–March 2029; 49 deliverables; 6 pillars. Announced by Governor Sanjay Malhotra. Predecessor: Utkarsh 2025 (2019–22, extended). Key initiatives: Project Sa-Mudra, CBDC, ULI, Rupee internationalisation. RBI est. 1 April 1935; nationalised 1949.
SEBI Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey launched three new IT platforms in March 2026 under the ‘SEBI 2.0’ digital transformation initiative to strengthen market regulation, streamline compliance, and enhance cybersecurity oversight across India’s capital markets.
| Platform | Full Name | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| SUPCOMS 2.1 | Single Universal Platform for Communications | Replaces email-based compliance; unified dashboard for all regulatory filings & query resolutions with SEBI |
| e-Adjudication Portal | — | Transparent, paperless platform for quasi-judicial proceedings; faster adjudication |
| C-SAC | Cyber-Sec Audit Compliance | AI-based platform for automated analysis of cyber audit reports; identifies compliance gaps & risk areas |
- SEBI 2.0: Broader digital transformation initiative to modernise regulatory infrastructure, reduce manual intervention, and increase transparency
- C-SAC significance: AI-driven cybersecurity audit tool — first of its kind for Indian securities regulator; auto-generates actionable insights from submitted audit reports
- SEBI profile: Established 12 April 1988 (executive); statutory powers from 30 January 1992 via SEBI Act, 1992; HQ Mumbai; under Ministry of Finance
- Chairman: Tuhin Kanta Pandey — 1987-batch IAS, Odisha cadre; 11th Chairman; took charge 1 March 2025 (succeeded Madhabi Puri Buch)
These platforms are part of SEBI’s push to become a paperless, AI-augmented regulator. The e-Adjudication portal reduces the backlog of quasi-judicial proceedings (penalty orders, show-cause notices) while C-SAC strengthens India’s resilience against cyber threats targeting market infrastructure — a growing concern post global ransomware incidents.
SEBI launched SUPCOMS 2.1 (compliance), e-Adjudication Portal, and C-SAC (AI cyber audit) under SEBI 2.0. Chairman: Tuhin Kanta Pandey (11th, since 1 March 2025). SEBI est. 12 April 1988; statutory from 30 Jan 1992; HQ Mumbai; under Ministry of Finance.
Paytm (One 97 Communications Limited) introduced biometric authentication for UPI payments — using Face ID or fingerprint in place of a UPI PIN — and cardless ATM withdrawals in April 2026, aligning with RBI’s 2-Factor Authentication rules effective 1 April 2026.
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Biometric UPI | Face ID or fingerprint replaces UPI PIN; limit: Rs 5,000 per transaction (NPCI guidelines) |
| Cardless ATM | QR code scan at supported ATMs + biometric verification; limit: Rs 10,000 per transaction |
| RBI mandate | 2-Factor Authentication rules effective 1 April 2026 |
- Biometric UPI limit: Rs 5,000 per transaction per NPCI guidelines; UPI PIN remains available for higher amounts
- Cardless ATM: User scans QR code at supported ATMs and verifies with biometrics — no physical debit/credit card needed; limit Rs 10,000
- Market context: PhonePe (46% UPI market share) launched biometric UPI in February 2026; Paytm follows in compliance with RBI mandates
- Parent company: One 97 Communications Limited (OCL); Paytm brand; listed on NSE/BSE
UPI processed over 17 billion transactions in March 2026, with PhonePe, Google Pay, and Paytm as the top three players. Biometric authentication is expected to expand UPI access to first-time users uncomfortable with numeric PINs, particularly in semi-urban and rural areas where feature phones with fingerprint sensors are now common.
One 97 Communications = Paytm parent. Biometric UPI limit: Rs 5,000 (NPCI). Cardless ATM: Rs 10,000. RBI 2F rules effective 1 April 2026. PhonePe = 46% UPI market share. Both biometric and cardless features use Face ID/fingerprint.
🌐 International News
All four crew members of NASA’s Artemis II mission safely splashed down in the Pacific Ocean off San Diego, California on 10 April 2026, completing a 10-day journey around the Moon aboard the Orion spacecraft named ‘Integrity’. It was the first crewed lunar mission in over 50 years, setting a new record of 252,756 miles (406,900 km) from Earth — the farthest any humans have travelled.
| Crew Member | Role | Agency |
|---|---|---|
| Reid Wiseman | Commander | NASA / USA |
| Victor Glover | Pilot | NASA / USA |
| Christina Koch | Mission Specialist | NASA / USA |
| Jeremy Hansen | Mission Specialist | CSA / Canada |
- Distance record: 252,756 miles (406,900 km) — surpasses the previous record set by Apollo 13 (248,655 miles) in 1970
- Launch: 1 April 2026 from Launch Pad 39B, Kennedy Space Center, Florida; carried by Space Launch System (SLS) rocket
- Spacecraft name: Orion ‘Integrity’ — first Orion to carry humans to lunar distance
- Historic communication: First ship-to-ship call between a human lunar mission and the ISS — Christina Koch (Artemis II) spoke with Jessica Meir on ISS
- Recovery: USS John P. Murtha; crew then transported to NASA Johnson Space Center, Houston
- Jeremy Hansen: First Canadian to fly to the Moon
The Artemis programme aims to return humans to the lunar surface for the first time since Apollo 17 (December 1972). Artemis II was the crewed flight test (no lunar landing). Artemis III — the planned Moon landing — is scheduled for 2027. The programme includes a Lunar Gateway space station in lunar orbit and deep-space exploration goals toward Mars.
Record: 252,756 miles farthest from Earth. Previous: Apollo 13 (1970). Commander: Reid Wiseman. Orion spacecraft: ‘Integrity’. Launch: 1 April 2026, Pad 39B. First crewed lunar mission since Apollo 17 (1972). Jeremy Hansen = first Canadian to Moon. Splashdown: 10 April 2026.
Djibouti President Ismail Omar Guelleh was re-elected for a sixth consecutive term after winning 97.81% of the vote in the presidential election held on 10 April 2026. His only opponent, Mohamed Farah Samatar (Unified Democratic Centre, CDU), received 2.19%. Voter turnout was 80.33%.
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Winner | Ismail Omar Guelleh (IOG) — 97.81% votes |
| Election date | 10 April 2026 |
| Term | 6th consecutive presidential term |
| In power since | 1999 (27 years) |
| Constitutional change | Oct 2025 amendment removed 75-year age limit |
| Capital | Djibouti City |
- Constitutional change: An October 2025 constitutional amendment removed the 75-year presidential age limit, enabling the 78-year-old Guelleh to contest
- Background: Guelleh has ruled Djibouti since 1999 (27 years); party: UMP (Union for Presidential Majority); succeeded uncle Hassan Gouled Aptidon
- Strategic location: Djibouti sits at the Bab-el-Mandeb strait, Horn of Africa — a critical chokepoint for global shipping between the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden
- Foreign bases: Hosts military bases of USA, France, China, Japan — the country with the most foreign military bases relative to its size globally
Located at the Bab-el-Mandeb strait connecting the Red Sea to the Gulf of Aden, Djibouti controls a shipping lane through which approximately 10% of global trade passes. Its port and rail connectivity (Addis Ababa–Djibouti Railway) makes it the primary trade gateway for landlocked Ethiopia, one of Africa’s fastest-growing economies.
Guelleh’s 6th term; in power since 1999. Election: 10 April 2026; won 97.81%. Constitutional amendment (Oct 2025) removed age limit. Bab-el-Mandeb strait location. Capital: Djibouti City; currency: Djiboutian Franc. Hosts most foreign military bases: USA, France, China, Japan.
📅 Important Days
Bohag Bihu (also known as Rongali Bihu) is the most celebrated of Assam’s three Bihu festivals. Manuh Bihu (Assamese New Year) falls on 15 April 2026, while Goru Bihu (cattle worship) was observed on 14 April. Bohag Bihu marks the beginning of the Assamese calendar year and the spring sowing season for rice cultivation.
| Bihu Festival | Month | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Bohag / Rongali Bihu | April | Spring sowing; Assamese New Year |
| Kati / Kongali Bihu | October | Solemn; no harvest yet |
| Bhogali / Magh Bihu | January | Harvest feast |
- Seven days (Shat Bihu): Goru Bihu (cattle); Manuh Bihu (humans/New Year); Gosain Bihu (idols) — each day has a distinct ritual; celebrated collectively for 7 days
- Celebration: Bihu dance; folk music with dhol, pepa, gogona; exchange of Gamosa (white cloth with red border); feasts with Jolpan, Til Pitha, Narikolor Laru
- Bank holiday: State gazetted holiday on 15 April 2026 in Assam, West Bengal, Tripura, Manipur
- Static GK: Gamosa = symbol of Assamese cultural identity; Bihu dance = Assam’s state dance; Bohag Bihu also celebrated in parts of Arunachal Pradesh
Bihu is not merely a harvest festival but an expression of Assamese identity and community cohesion. The Gamosa — a hand-woven white cloth with red borders — is the central cultural symbol gifted during Manuh Bihu and is also presented to dignitaries as the highest mark of Assamese respect. In 2023, Bihu dance was inscribed on UNESCO’s Intangible Cultural Heritage list.
Manuh Bihu = 15 April. Three Bihu: Bohag (April), Kati (October), Bhogali (January). Bihu dance = Assam state dance. Gamosa = cultural symbol. Bank holiday in Assam, WB, Tripura, Manipur. UNESCO ICH listed (2023).
Himachal Day is observed every year on 15 April to commemorate the formation of Himachal Pradesh as a Chief Commissioner Province on 15 April 1948. In 2026, it marks the 78th year of the province’s formation. HP subsequently became a Union Territory in 1956 and achieved full statehood on 25 January 1971.
| Milestone | Date | Detail |
|---|---|---|
| Chief Commissioner Province | 15 April 1948 | HP Day; First Chief Commissioner: N. C. Mehta |
| Union Territory | 1956 | States Reorganisation Act |
| Full Statehood | 25 January 1971 | HP became India’s 18th state; First CM: Dr. Y.S. Parmar |
- First Chief Commissioner: N. C. Mehta (1948)
- First Chief Minister: Dr. Y.S. Parmar (on statehood, 1971)
- Capitals: Shimla (summer capital); Dharamshala (winter capital since 2017)
- Etymology: Hima (snow) + Achal (lap/mountain) = “Lap of the Himalayas”
- HP = 18th state of India (ranked by order of statehood)
Himachal Pradesh, bordering China (Tibet) and Pakistan to the north and west, is strategically significant. Known for its hydropower potential, apple cultivation (largest apple-producing state in India), and tourism. The state borders Punjab, Haryana, Uttarakhand, Jammu & Kashmir, and Ladakh.
Himachal Day = 15 April 1948 (province formation). Statehood Day = 25 January 1971 (18th state). First Chief Commissioner: N. C. Mehta. First CM: Dr. Y.S. Parmar. Capitals: Shimla (summer), Dharamshala (winter). 2026 = 78th year of province formation.
World Art Day is observed on 15 April every year to promote awareness of creative artistic expression globally. The date honours the birth anniversary of Leonardo da Vinci (born 15 April 1452), widely regarded as the greatest artist and polymath of the Italian Renaissance.
- Established by: International Association of Art (IAA/AIAP) — a UNESCO-affiliated NGO
- First observed: 15 April 2012
- Leonardo da Vinci: Italian Renaissance painter, sculptor, architect, scientist, and engineer; known for Mona Lisa and The Last Supper; born in Vinci, Tuscany
- UNESCO significance: Day links art, education, culture, and sustainable development goals — reinforcing the role of arts in inclusive human development
Leonardo da Vinci (1452–1519) was the quintessential Renaissance man. Beyond painting, he made pioneering contributions to anatomy, hydraulics, optics, and flying machines — many of his designs anticipating inventions by centuries. The Mona Lisa (in the Louvre, Paris) remains the world’s most visited and recognised painting.
World Art Day = 15 April. Established by IAA/AIAP (UNESCO-affiliated). First observed: 2012. Tied to Leonardo da Vinci’s birthday (15 April 1452). Famous works: Mona Lisa, The Last Supper. Born: Vinci, Tuscany, Italy.
World Haemophilia Day is observed on 17 April every year — on the birthday of Frank Schnabel, founder of the World Federation of Hemophilia (WFH). The 2026 theme is ‘Access for All: Partnership. Policy. Progress.’ — emphasising equitable access to diagnosis and treatment for inherited bleeding disorders.
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Observed on | 17 April (birthday of Frank Schnabel) |
| 2026 Theme | ‘Access for All: Partnership. Policy. Progress.’ |
| WFH founded | 1963, HQ: Montreal, Canada |
| Disease type | X-linked recessive genetic disorder (blood clotting deficiency) |
| Primarily affects | Males (females are typically carriers) |
- Haemophilia: X-linked recessive genetic disorder causing deficiency in blood clotting factors (Factor VIII = Haemophilia A; Factor IX = Haemophilia B); predominantly affects males
- WFH profile: World Federation of Hemophilia; established 1963; HQ Montreal, Canada; works in 140+ countries for patient access to treatment
- Frank Schnabel: Canadian businessman and haemophilia patient who founded WFH in 1963 to advocate for bleeding disorder patients worldwide
- Theme focus: Highlights gaps in diagnosis and treatment access in low- and middle-income countries; partnership between governments, industry, and patient groups
Haemophilia affects approximately 1 in 5,000 males worldwide for Type A (Factor VIII deficiency). India has the second-largest haemophilia patient population globally (after USA), with an estimated 1 lakh+ patients — many undiagnosed due to low awareness in rural areas. Treatment involves regular infusion of clotting factor concentrates.
World Haemophilia Day = 17 April. 2026 theme: ‘Access for All: Partnership. Policy. Progress.’ Founded by Frank Schnabel. WFH est. 1963, HQ Montreal, Canada. Haemophilia = X-linked recessive; affects males predominantly. Haemophilia A = Factor VIII deficiency; B = Factor IX.
🕊️ Obituaries
Asha Bhosle, legendary playback singer and Padma Vibhushan awardee, passed away on 12 April 2026 at the age of 92 in Mumbai. Born on 8 September 1933 in Sangli, Maharashtra (then a princely state), she recorded over 12,000 songs in more than 20 languages across an eight-decade career spanning 1943 to the 2020s.
| Award / Recognition | Year |
|---|---|
| Padma Vibhushan (Arts) | 2008 |
| Dadasaheb Phalke Award | 2000 |
| Guinness World Record (Most recorded artist) | 2011 |
| Filmfare Lifetime Achievement Award | 2001 |
| Lata Mangeshkar Award | 1989, 1999 |
| Filmfare Awards (Best Female Playback) | 7 awards (total) |
- Career span: 1943–2020s; over 12,000 songs in Hindi, Marathi, Bengali, Urdu, and 20+ languages
- Guinness recognition (2011): Most recorded artist in music history — a record she held globally
- Versatility: Film songs, classical, ghazals, pop, cabaret, folk, and bhajans; particularly renowned for energetic cabaret numbers in Bollywood
- Family: Daughter of classical singer Dinanath Mangeshkar; younger sister of Lata Mangeshkar; both are towering figures of Indian playback singing
- Dadasaheb Phalke Award: India’s highest honour in cinema; awarded by the Government of India at the National Film Awards
Asha Bhosle began her career at age 10 (1943) under difficult personal circumstances, eventually becoming the most versatile playback singer in Bollywood history. While often compared to her elder sister Lata Mangeshkar, Asha carved a distinct identity — particularly excelling in cabaret, qawwali, and contemporary pop genres. Her international collaborations, including with Boy George and Kronos Quartet, brought her global recognition.
Asha Bhosle: Passed away 12 April 2026, age 92. Born 8 September 1933, Sangli, Maharashtra. Padma Vibhushan (2008). Dadasaheb Phalke Award (2000). Guinness Record (2011) — most recorded artist. 12,000+ songs, 20+ languages. Sister of Lata Mangeshkar. Father: Dinanath Mangeshkar.
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