Centre asks Bengal to give report on President’s visit


Centre Asks Bengal to Give Report on President's Visit

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Incident date March 7–8, 2026
Location Darjeeling district, West Bengal
Event International Santal Council Conference
President Droupadi Murmu (in office since July 25, 2022)
Home Secretary (Union) Govind Mohan
West Bengal Chief Secretary Nandini Chakravorty
Document invoked Blue Book (MHA-issued, confidential)
Blue Book covers Security + protocol for President, VP, PM & families
Yellow Book covers Other VIP security guidelines
Parallel document Table of Precedence (MHA) — President = Rank 1
Venue shifted from→to Bidhannagar → Gossainpur (both Darjeeling dist.)
Report deadline 5 p.m., March 8, 2026 (same day)
Officials cited for accountability District Magistrate (Darjeeling), Commissioner of Police (Siliguri), Additional District Magistrate
Article governing President's position Article 52–62 (Part V), Constitution of India
President's immunity Article 361 — no criminal proceedings during tenure

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative / Federalism

Political / Governance

Social / Tribal

Historical


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)

  1. The Blue Book is a confidential MHA document containing security and protocol rules for the President, Vice-President, and Prime Minister and their families.
  2. A separate Yellow Book governs security arrangements for other VIPs (below President/VP/PM level).
  3. President Droupadi Murmu is India's first President from a Scheduled Tribe community (Santali, Odisha/Jharkhand background), in office since July 25, 2022.
  4. The Table of Precedence is maintained by the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA); the President occupies Rank 1.
  5. Under Article 361, the President enjoys immunity from criminal proceedings during tenure.
  6. The President's executive power is vested under Article 53; the President is Head of the Union Executive under Article 52.
  7. The Union Home Secretary who wrote to West Bengal Chief Secretary was Govind Mohan (March 8, 2026).
  8. The West Bengal Chief Secretary to whom the MHA report was addressed was Nandini Chakravorty.
  9. The conference involved was the International Santal Council — the Santals are India's largest single Adivasi group.
  10. Venue was shifted from Bidhannagar to Gossainpur, both in Darjeeling district, West Bengal.
  11. MHA demanded the report within same-day deadline (5 p.m.) — an unusual speed signalling political urgency.
  12. Officials cited for accountability: District Magistrate (Darjeeling), Commissioner of Police (Siliguri), Additional DM — all drawn from All-India Services (Union cadre control applies for major penalties).
  13. Under Article 256, States are obligated to comply with Union executive directions — the MHA letter operationalises this provision.
  14. The Governors' Conduct of Business Rules were last updated in 2018 (from the 1987 base notification).

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping:

Paper Specific Syllabus Heading
GS-II Indian Constitution — features, significant provisions; Centre-State relations; Constitutional posts — functions and powers
GS-II Federalism; Role of Governor/President; Statutory and quasi-statutory bodies
GS-I Role of women and social empowerment; Salient features of Indian society — tribal issues

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "The Blue Book controversy during the President's visit to West Bengal (2026) highlights structural tensions in Indian federalism. Critically examine the constitutional mechanisms available to the Union to enforce protocol compliance by State governments." (GS-II, 250 words)

  2. "The President of India occupies a unique position in the constitutional scheme as both the Head of State and the protector of Scheduled Tribe interests. Analyse this dual role with reference to the Fifth Schedule and recent events." (GS-II/GS-I, 150 words)

  3. "Protocol lapses during visits of constitutional functionaries are not merely administrative failures but potential constitutional crises. Discuss in light of Centre-State relations under Part XI of the Constitution." (GS-II, 250 words)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Centre-State Relations (Part XI, Articles 245–263) The Blue Book episode is a direct exercise of Union supervisory authority over States
All-India Services (IAS/IPS) — Cadre Control Rules Centre's leverage over DM/SP accountability flows through cadre rules, not just political authority
Fifth Schedule and Tribal Governance President Murmu's tribal identity + Santal conference makes this a Fifth Schedule politics issue
Article 356 (President's Rule) Ultimate Centre-State coercive tool; understanding its limits contextualises why the Centre used a softer "report" mechanism
Governor-CM Conflicts in West Bengal (2021–2024) Immediate political backdrop; pattern of constitutional friction in the same state
Table of Precedence & Protocol under MHA Static fact heavily tested in Prelims; Blue Book is the operational document for top-rank protocol
International Santal Council & Scheduled Tribe Rights Substantive issue underlying the incident; connects to PESA Act, Fifth/Sixth Schedule debates
Article 361 — Presidential Immunity Directly relevant to understanding the constitutional stature of the office involved

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Blue Book vs. Yellow Book confusion: Blue Book = President/VP/PM security+protocol. Yellow Book = other VIPs. Aspirants often conflate or invert these. The Blue Book is issued by MHA, not SPG or Rashtrapati Bhavan.

  2. Conflating President's constitutional role with a ceremonial figurehead: The President has substantive constitutional functions (Fifth Schedule, pardons, Article 356 etc.). Calling the President "merely ceremonial" in a Mains answer loses marks.

  3. Wrong ministry: Protocol rules are administered by MHA (Ministry of Home Affairs), not the Ministry of External Affairs (which handles foreign dignitary protocol) or the President's Secretariat.

  4. Jurisdiction error — who controls DM/SP: District Magistrates are IAS (state cadre but Centre controls major penalties under AIS rules), and SPs/CPs are IPS. The Centre's ability to seek action flows through All-India Services rules, not direct command over state police.

  5. Article 256 vs. Article 257 mix-up: Article 256 = States must comply with Union laws + executive directions. Article 257 = States must not impede Union executive power; Union can give directions to States for protection of railways/Union property. The MHA notice most directly invokes Article 256 logic — do not cite 257 as the primary anchor.


11. Sources