Balendra “Balen” Shah Sworn In as Nepal’s 47th and Youngest Prime Minister — A Rapper-Engineer Rewrites Himalayan Politics
Balendra Shah, popularly known as Balen, was appointed Nepal’s 47th Prime Minister on 27 March 2026 by President Ram Chandra Paudel under Article 76(1) of the Constitution of Nepal. The swearing-in ceremony was held at 12:34 PM — a time chosen by Hindu priests as numerologically auspicious — at the President’s Office, Sheetal Nivas, Kathmandu. At 35 years of age, Balen Shah becomes Nepal’s youngest-ever Prime Minister.
Why this matters for India: Nepal is India’s most strategically critical neighbour — sharing an open border, deep cultural ties, and significant water and trade interdependence. India’s PM Narendra Modi was among the first to congratulate Shah on X, stating: “Your appointment reflects the trust reposed in your leadership by the people of Nepal.” India-Nepal relations will be a key foreign policy watch point in 2026.
Who is Balen Shah? The Extraordinary Biography
Balen Shah is a structural engineer, rapper, and politician — a combination without parallel in Himalayan political history. Born on 27 April 1990 in Mahottari district in the Madhes region of Nepal, he pursued a degree in engineering before gaining national fame as a rapper with politically conscious lyrics. He entered formal politics as an independent candidate in the 2022 Kathmandu Metropolitan City election, winning the mayorship — the first independent candidate to hold that office. As mayor, he introduced reforms in waste management, traffic enforcement, and illegal structure demolition, building a reputation for results-driven governance. He was included in TIME Magazine’s Top 100 list in 2023.
In December 2025 he formally joined the Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP) and resigned as Mayor of Kathmandu in January 2026 to contest the 2026 Nepalese General Election as the RSP’s Prime Ministerial candidate. He stood against four-time former PM K.P. Sharma Oli in the high-profile Jhapa-5 constituency, defeating him with 68,348 votes — the highest vote total ever recorded in Nepal’s parliamentary election history, with a margin of 49,614 votes. The RSP won 182 of 275 seats in the House of Representatives — a near-supermajority — qualifying for government formation under Article 76(1). Balen was officially elected to the House on 7 March 2026.
Balen Shah is also Nepal’s first Madhesi Prime Minister — representing the historically marginalised Terai plains communities that border India. His diverse cabinet of 15 ministers includes five women. Finance Minister is Swarnim Wagle (RSP Vice-Chair); Foreign Minister is Shishir Khanal; Home Minister is Sudan Gurung, who rose to prominence during the Gen-Z protests.
The Gen-Z Uprising That Made This Possible
The political context of Shah’s rise is inseparable from Nepal’s September 2025 Gen-Z protests — a youth-led anti-corruption movement that toppled the K.P. Sharma Oli government, leaving 76 people dead. While Balen did not directly participate, he publicly supported the demonstrators and emerged as a voice of generational change. The 2026 general election — Nepal’s first since the protests — became a verdict on the political establishment. RSP’s landslide devastated the traditional parties: Nepali Congress and CPN (UML). On the eve of his swearing-in, Shah released a new rap song titled “Jay Mahakaali” with lines about unity and hope for Nepal, which garnered nearly three million views within hours.
PM-KUSUM 2.0: India’s Farm Solar Revolution Gets Battery Storage, ₹50,000 Crore Boost as Original Scheme Expires
The Pradhan Mantri Kisan Urja Suraksha evam Utthaan Mahabhiyan (PM-KUSUM) scheme, launched in 2019 by the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE), reached the end of its original tenure on 31 March 2026. As the scheme concludes, the government has finalised and is rolling out PM-KUSUM 2.0 — a significantly revamped and better-funded successor that addresses the original scheme’s shortcomings, particularly around the mismatch between when solar energy is generated and when farmers actually need electricity.
What Did PM-KUSUM 1.0 Achieve — and Where Did It Fall Short?
The original PM-KUSUM scheme had an ambitious target of adding 34,800 MW of solar capacity by March 2026, backed by a central financial support of ₹34,422 crore. Progress, while real, fell short of targets. By February 2026, only 12,164 MW — approximately 35% of the target — had been installed. The scheme covered three components: Component A (10,000 MW decentralised solar plants on agricultural land), Component B (installation of 14 lakh standalone solar pumps in off-grid areas), and Component C (solarisation of 35 lakh grid-connected pumps). Over 10 lakh solar pumps were installed/solarised in total, with FY25 recording a 4.2-fold jump in Component B installations — but overall targets remained unmet due to financial closure delays, coordination gaps between central and state agencies, and high upfront costs for farmers.
The structural problem PM-KUSUM 2.0 must solve is an energy timing mismatch: agricultural electricity demand peaks in the early morning and persists through the day, while solar generation peaks around midday and tapers off by evening — precisely when some farm operations continue. Without storage, much of the solar energy generated goes unused or is fed to the grid at low tariffs, undermining the economic case for farmers.
PM-KUSUM 2.0: Key Upgrades
The defining new feature of PM-KUSUM 2.0 is the integration of Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS). However, even this has exposed an inter-ministerial dispute: the Ministry of Power proposes 4 hours of battery backup, while MNRE recommends a 2-hour capacity — reflecting different assessments of operational requirements and cost viability. The government is expected to resolve this shortly. Other upgrades include: a ₹50,000 crore total outlay (a ~45% increase from ₹34,422 crore), an annual budget allocation of ₹5,000 crore (double the previous ₹2,600 crore), sharper focus on agrivoltaics (growing crops under elevated solar panels), stronger private sector participation, and improved financial mechanisms to reduce farmer upfront costs from 40% to a smaller share through enhanced bank financing.
UPSC GS-III Exam Angle: PM-KUSUM connects to India’s renewable energy targets (500 GW non-fossil by 2030), agricultural income doubling, farmer welfare, energy security, MNRE vs Ministry of Power policy tension, and agrivoltaics as dual land-use strategy. The funding model: Central Govt 30% subsidy + State Govt 30% + Farmer 40% (bank-financed). Implemented by MNRE.
Central Armed Police Forces (General Administration) Bill 2026: IPS Primacy, CAPF Reform, and a Constitutional Controversy
The Central Government introduced the Central Armed Police Forces (General Administration) Bill, 2026 in the Rajya Sabha on 30 March 2026. The legislation provides a comprehensive statutory framework governing the recruitment, promotion, posting, and service conditions of Group ‘A’ General Duty Officers and other personnel across India’s Central Armed Police Forces (CAPFs).
What Are CAPFs and Why Does This Bill Matter?
India’s CAPFs are the six paramilitary organisations that constitute the backbone of India’s internal security architecture: the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), Border Security Force (BSF), Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP), Central Industrial Security Force (CISF), Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB), and the National Security Guard (NSG). Together they employ approximately 9-10 lakh personnel. The CAPFs operate under the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA).
The Bill’s core provision is that Director General (DG) and Additional Director General (ADG) level posts across CAPFs shall be held by Indian Police Service (IPS) officers on deputation — effectively codifying the existing but contested practice of IPS primacy in paramilitary leadership. The legislation also mandates that Inspector General (IG) level posts will see mandatory two-year central stints for IPS officers to build operational familiarity with CAPF structures.
The Controversy: CAPF Cadre vs IPS Deputation
The Bill has attracted sharp criticism from CAPF officers who argue it institutionally disadvantages the dedicated cadre. Officers who enter CAPFs through direct recruitment often wait decades for senior promotions, since the top tiers are now being legally reserved for IPS deputation. Critics also point out that the Bill appears to directly contradict the Supreme Court’s 2025 Sanjay Prakash judgment, which directed the government to progressively reduce IPS deputation at the IG level within two years. The legislation’s opponents argue that an IPS officer trained in district policing may not possess the specialised skills required for border guarding (BSF), industrial security (CISF), or counterterrorism (CRPF) roles.
UPSC GS-II Mains Angle: This Bill tests themes of federal relations, civil services reform, parliamentary legislation vs judicial direction, India’s internal security architecture, and debates over IPS dominance in paramilitary forces. Key question format: “Centralised IPS control over CAPFs may ensure coordination but risks undermining institutional capacity. Critically examine.”
Great Indian Bustard Chick Born in Gujarat After a Decade — Conservation “Jumpstart” Technique Scores a Breakthrough
In a landmark conservation achievement, a Great Indian Bustard (GIB) chick was successfully born in Gujarat after a gap of nearly ten years, using a specialised technique known as the “jumpstart” approach. The event has energised India’s critically endangered species recovery programme and offers renewed hope for a bird that has come to symbolise the crisis of open-grassland habitats in the Indian subcontinent.
About the Great Indian Bustard
The Great Indian Bustard (Ardeotis nigriceps) — known as Godawan in Rajasthan — is one of the heaviest flying birds on the planet and one of the most endangered. It is the State Bird of Rajasthan. The species is listed as Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List, with an estimated wild population of fewer than 150 individuals remaining — primarily in the Thar Desert grasslands of Rajasthan, with smaller groups in Gujarat, Maharashtra, Karnataka, and Madhya Pradesh. Key threats include habitat destruction (grassland conversion to agriculture and solar farms), power line collisions, hunting, feral dogs, and pesticide contamination of food sources.
The Supreme Court of India has been monitoring GIB protection, including orders on underground power line diversion in critical GIB habitats in Rajasthan — a contentious intersection between renewable energy development and wildlife conservation. The bird is also protected under Schedule I of the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 and listed under CITES Appendix I.
The “Jumpstart” Technique and Conservation Breeding
The “jumpstart” technique involves collecting eggs from wild GIB females, incubating them under controlled conditions, and then re-introducing the chicks into protected enclosures before eventual release into suitable wild habitat. The approach is modelled on conservation breeding programmes successfully employed for other critically endangered species globally. In India, the government’s GIB conservation breeding programme, operating at the Desert National Park (DNP), Jaisalmer, under the Wildlife Institute of India (WII), and now extended to Gujarat, has been the primary vehicle for this effort.
UPSC Mains + Prelims Angle: GIB is a perennial exam favourite. Key facts: IUCN — Critically Endangered · WPA Schedule I · CITES Appendix I · State Bird of Rajasthan · Ardeotis nigriceps · Population under 150. Conservation: Desert National Park, Jaisalmer + Project Great Indian Bustard. SC has ordered underground power lines in GIB habitats.
Agnikul Cosmos Tests 3D-Printed ‘Agnite’ Booster Engine — India’s Private Space Sector Claims Another First
Chennai-based space startup Agnikul Cosmos successfully tested its ‘Agnite’ booster engine — a 3D-printed rocket engine — marking another significant milestone in India’s growing private space ecosystem. The test advances Agnikul’s programme to develop fully configurable small satellite launch vehicles for the commercial space market.
About Agnikul Cosmos and the Significance of 3D Printing in Rocketry
Agnikul Cosmos, founded in 2017 and incubated at IIT Madras, has been at the forefront of India’s private space revolution. The company is developing the Agnibaan — a semi-cryogenic, fully configurable small satellite launch vehicle targeting the rapidly growing global market for dedicated small satellite launches. Agnikul became globally recognised in May 2024 when it conducted the world’s first flight of a single-piece 3D-printed rocket engine, the Agnilet, aboard a sub-orbital demonstration vehicle.
The Agnite is the next-generation, higher-thrust booster engine in Agnikul’s propulsion family. Three-dimensional printing (additive manufacturing) allows rocket engine components to be manufactured as single integrated units, dramatically reducing part counts, assembly time, and manufacturing cost — while enabling geometric complexity impossible through traditional machining. This approach is central to reducing the cost of access to space, a core requirement for commercial viability.
Regulatory context: Agnikul operates under India’s reformed space regulatory framework — the Indian Space Policy 2023 and the Space Activities Act (proposed) — with IN-SPACe (Indian National Space Promotion and Authorisation Centre) as the nodal agency for private sector authorisation. ISRO provides launch facility access and technical mentorship. Agnikul has a dedicated launch pad at Sriharikota (SDSC-SHAR) — INDIA’S FIRST PRIVATE LAUNCH PAD.
ASI Begins Major Excavation at Balirajgarh, Bihar — Searching for the Ancient Videha Kingdom
The Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) launched a large-scale excavation at Balirajgarh in Madhubani district, Bihar in March 2026 — deploying modern technologies including satellite mapping and scientific trenching to investigate one of eastern India’s largest and least-understood ancient mound complexes.
About Balirajgarh and Its Historical Significance
Balirajgarh is a 176-acre fortified archaeological mound — one of the largest of its kind in eastern India. It was declared a protected archaeological site by ASI in 1938. The site has long been associated in local tradition and some scholarly literature with the ancient Videha Kingdom — the realm associated with King Janaka, father of Sita in the Ramayana, and the setting of significant events in the Vedic and epic periods of Indian history. While not yet conclusively proven, the association makes Balirajgarh a site of both archaeological and cultural-heritage importance.
The excavation aims to reach what archaeologists call “virgin soil” — the deepest, undisturbed base layer of the site — to determine the earliest period of human settlement. Preliminary analysis suggests habitation potentially dating back to the Iron Age (1000–800 BCE). Evidence of continuous occupation across five major historical phases has already been identified: Mauryan (NBPW ware), Sunga, Kushan, Gupta, and Pala periods — spanning over 1,500 years of urban continuity. The use of satellite imagery and systematic scientific trenching marks a significant methodological advancement over earlier excavation approaches at the site.
UPSC Prelims + Mains Angle: Balirajgarh connects to themes of India’s archaeological heritage, ASI’s role, evidence-based archaeology, Northern Black Polished Ware (NBPW) as a Mauryan cultural marker, the Videha Kingdom, and the Ramayana’s geographical context. This topic may also appear in Bihar State PSC exams. NBPW (Northern Black Polished Ware) pottery is a key diagnostic tool for identifying Mauryan-era archaeological layers.
Prahaar LMG Delivery to Indian Army + Euthalia zubeengargi Butterfly Discovery in Arunachal Pradesh
Adani Defence Delivers Prahaar LMG — Make in India Milestone
Adani Defence and Aerospace has manufactured and delivered the first batch of the ‘Prahaar’ Light Machine Gun (LMG) to the Indian Army under the Make in India initiative. This is a significant step in India’s defence indigenisation journey. The Prahaar LMG is designed for infantry use, providing high sustained firepower in combat scenarios. Its delivery marks Adani Defence’s entry into the small arms segment for the Indian Army — complementing the company’s existing aerospace and defence manufacturing capabilities.
The LMG delivery directly supports India’s Atmanirbhar Bharat goals in defence manufacturing. The Indian Army has long sought to indigenise its LMG inventory, having relied on the Soviet-era RPK and imported platforms. Adani Defence operates facilities in Hyderabad and has partnerships with global OEMs for technology transfer in areas including helicopters (AH-64 Apache sub-components), ammunition, and now small arms.
Euthalia zubeengargi — New Butterfly Species Discovered in Arunachal Pradesh
Scientists have discovered a new butterfly species named Euthalia zubeengargi in Arunachal Pradesh — named in honour of renowned Assamese musician and singer-songwriter Zubeen Garg. The species belongs to the family Nymphalidae, and its discovery adds to the remarkable biodiversity of India’s northeastern region. Arunachal Pradesh, part of the Eastern Himalayan Biodiversity Hotspot, is one of the world’s most biodiverse regions and regularly yields new species to science. This discovery underscores the urgency of conservation efforts in a region under pressure from infrastructure development and climate change.
Earlier in 2024, a butterfly was discovered in Assam and named after Zubeen Garg’s mother Majoni Garg. The tradition of naming newly discovered species after cultural and artistic figures helps generate public awareness and connect communities to conservation priorities.
Test Yourself: 10 MCQs on 30 March 2026 Current Affairs
30 March 2026 — Quick Quiz
10 exam-style MCQs on Balen Shah, PM-KUSUM 2.0, CAPF Bill, GIB, Agnikul, Balirajgarh, Prahaar LMG and more. Nail every mark!





