Ministry of Civil Aviation & DIAL Launch AIR SUVIDHA 2.0 Portal for Ebola Health Screening at Points of Entry (PoEs) in India

I now have sufficient facts from Tier 1 and Tier 2 sources. Writing the study note.


AIR SUVIDHA 2.0 Portal — UPSC Study Note

Ministry of Civil Aviation & DIAL | Ebola Health Screening at PoEs | June 2026


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Portal Name AIR SUVIDHA 2.0
Full Form Passenger Health Self-Declaration Portal
Launch Date 25 June 2026 [S1]
Launching Agencies Ministry of Civil Aviation + DIAL [S1]
Developed With DGHS, Ministry of Health & Family Welfare [S1]
Trigger WHO PHEIC declaration — Ebola/BVD outbreak (17 May 2026) [S2]
Disease Bundibugyo Virus Disease (BVD) — a species of Ebola [S3]
Target Users All international arriving passengers
Mechanism Mandatory online Health Self-Declaration (contactless)
Legal Framework International Health Regulations (IHR) 2005 [S2][S4]
WHO Article Invoked Article 12, Para 2 of IHR 2005 (PHEIC determination) [S2]
Outbreak Origin Mongbwalu HZ, Ituri Province, DRC [S3]
Outbreak Declaration DRC's 17th Ebola outbreak [S3]
Countries Confirmed DRC (primary), Uganda (imported case) [S3]
High-Risk Border Country South Sudan [S1]
Confirmed Cases (as of 21 May 2026) 85 confirmed (2 in Uganda); 746 suspected [S3]
Deaths 10 confirmed deaths (1 in Uganda); 176 suspected-case deaths [S3]
CFR (confirmed) ~12% [S3]
Vaccine/Treatment No licensed vaccine or specific therapeutics for BVD [S2][S3]
Predecessor AIR SUVIDHA 1.0 (COVID-19 era)

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Scientific / Technological

Geopolitical / Strategic

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative / Governance

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)

  1. AIR SUVIDHA 2.0 was launched on 25 June 2026 by the Ministry of Civil Aviation and DIAL. [S1]
  2. It is a contactless Passenger Health Self-Declaration Portal for international arriving passengers at Indian PoEs. [S1]
  3. Developed in collaboration with DGHS, Ministry of Health & Family Welfare — not independently by civil aviation. [S1]
  4. The Ebola/BVD outbreak was declared a PHEIC on 17 May 2026 — the trigger for India's response. [S2]
  5. The PHEIC was declared under Article 12, paragraph 2 of IHR 2005. [S2]
  6. The disease is Bundibugyo Virus Disease (BVD) — a species of Ebola — not the more common Zaire strain. [S3]
  7. The outbreak's origin: Mongbwalu Health Zone, Ituri Province, DRC. [S3]
  8. This is DRC's 17th Ebola outbreak. [S3]
  9. Uganda confirmed 1 imported case (died in Kampala) — making it a multi-country PHEIC. [S3]
  10. As of 21 May 2026: 746 suspected cases, 85 confirmed cases, CFR ~12% across DRC and Uganda. [S3]
  11. No licensed vaccine or specific therapeutics exist for Bundibugyo virus disease. [S2][S3]
  12. WHO's IHR Emergency Committee did NOT recommend flight suspensions — only health screening at PoEs. [S4]
  13. Countries bordering DRC/Uganda — including South Sudan — assessed as high-risk for transmission. [S1]
  14. DIAL (Delhi International Airport Limited) is the private airport operator partner — a GMR Group-led consortium operating IGIA, Delhi.
  15. AIR SUVIDHA 2.0 is an upgrade of AIR SUVIDHA 1.0, which was launched during the COVID-19 pandemic. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping:

GS Paper Relevant Syllabus Heading
GS-II Government policies & interventions for development in various sectors; bilateral/international relations; international institutions (WHO, IHR)
GS-II Health governance — role of central government, PPP in health infrastructure
GS-III Science & Technology — developments and applications; awareness in biotechnology, emerging diseases

Plausible Mains Questions:

  1. "India's rapid deployment of AIR SUVIDHA 2.0 in response to the 2026 Ebola PHEIC reflects both institutional learning from COVID-19 and the imperatives of IHR 2005 compliance. Examine." (GS-II, ~250 words)

  2. "Discuss the role of Points of Entry (PoE) surveillance in India's public health security architecture. How does the International Health Regulations (IHR) 2005 framework shape India's obligations in this regard?" (GS-II, ~250 words)

  3. "In the absence of a licensed vaccine for Bundibugyo Virus Disease, what should be India's multi-layered strategy to prevent importation of the 2026 Ebola outbreak? Analyse from a public health and governance perspective." (GS-III/GS-II, ~250 words)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
International Health Regulations (IHR) 2005 The foundational treaty under which AIR SUVIDHA 2.0 obligations arise; PHEIC is an IHR concept
Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC) — historical list Contextualises the 2026 BVD PHEIC within WHO's prior declarations (H1N1, COVID-19, Mpox etc.)
National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) India's nodal agency for disease surveillance; partner in PoE health measures
COVID-19 Health Surveillance Architecture in India AIR SUVIDHA 1.0's predecessor and the institutional learning that enabled 2.0
Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 Governs collection of health data (self-declarations) at Indian airports
Integrated Disease Surveillance Programme (IDSP) India's primary disease surveillance network; interfaces with airport health screening data
One Health Framework Bundibugyo virus is a zoonotic pathogen; One Health links human-animal-environment disease risk
GMR Group / DIAL & PPP in Airport Infrastructure Tests knowledge of India's airport privatisation model and PPP governance in critical infrastructure

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Bundibugyo ≠ Zaire Ebola: Aspirants may confuse the 2026 outbreak strain (Bundibugyo virus, no vaccine) with the Zaire Ebola strain (for which rVSVΔG-ZEBOV vaccine exists). The distinction is examinable.

  2. Ministry confusion: AIR SUVIDHA 2.0 is launched by Ministry of Civil Aviation (not Ministry of Health). Health content/protocol is by DGHS/MoHFW — both ministries have distinct roles. A common trap.

  3. PHEIC date vs. Portal launch date: PHEIC declared 17 May 2026; AIR SUVIDHA 2.0 launched 25 June 2026 — a gap of ~5 weeks. Confusing these two dates is a likely trap.

  4. DIAL ≠ AAI: DIAL (Delhi International Airport Limited, GMR-led) operates IGI Airport Delhi — it is a private operator, not Airports Authority of India (AAI). The PPP distinction matters.

  5. IHR does NOT ban flights: A common misconception. The IHR Emergency Committee explicitly stated that flight suspensions are NOT recommended — only health screening at PoEs. India's response (portal, not ban) is aligned with this. [S4]


11. Sources


Note: PIB page [S1] returned HTTP 403 on direct fetch; facts were triangulated from the user-supplied excerpt, the PIB search result snippet (PRID=2277648), and cross-verified against WHO sources [S2][S3][S4].