City
Epaper

CCS to meet at 7 PM today in national capital amid West Asia conflict

By ANI | Updated: April 1, 2026 14:25 IST

New Delhi [India], April 1 : The Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS) is set to meet at 7 pm ...

Open in App

New Delhi [India], April 1 : The Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS) is set to meet at 7 pm on Wednesday in the national capital to discuss developments amid the ongoing conflict in West Asia.

The situation escalated in West Asia after a joint US-Israel military strike on February 28 on Iranian territory resulted in the death of its Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and other senior figures, prompting a fierce response from Tehran.

A week earlier, Prime Minister Narendra Modi chaired a meeting of the Cabinet Committee on Security to review the situation, the ongoing and proposed mitigating measures in the context of the ongoing West Asia Conflict.

According to the Prime Minister's Office, the Cabinet Secretary gave a detailed presentation on the global situation and the mitigating measures taken so far and being planned by all concerned Ministries/Departments of the Government of India.

The expected impact and measures taken to address it across sectors like agriculture, fertilisers, food security, petroleum, power, MSMEs, exporters, shipping, trade, finance, supply chains and all affected sectors were discussed. The overall macro-economic scenario in the country and further measures to be taken were also discussed.

The ongoing conflict in West Asia will have significant short, medium and long term impact on the global economy and its effect on India was assessed, and counter-measures, both immediate and long-term, were discussed.

A detailed assessment of availability for critical needs of the common man, including food, energy and fuel security, was made. Short term, medium-term and long-term measures to ensure the continued availability of essential needs were discussed in detail.

The impact on farmers and their requirement for fertiliser for the Kharif season was assessed. The measures taken in the last few years to maintain adequate stocks of fertilisers will ensure timely availability and food security. Alternate sources of fertilisers were also discussed to ensure continued availability in the future.

It was also determined that an adequate supply of coal stocks at all power plants will ensure no shortage of electricity in India.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

National14.5 kg of IED recovered & neutralised in J&K's Shopian, averts major terror incident

InternationalWhite House pushed Pakistan to broker US-Iran temporary ceasefire: Report

NationalOver 23 lakh pilgrims paid obeisance at J&K's Shri Mata Vaishno Devi Shrine in 2026

Politics"Mamata Banerjee's ruthless govt created anarchy....": BJP chief Nitin Nabin

Cricket"Very pleased to get over the line": GT captain Shubman Gill after thrilling 1-run win over DC

National Realted Stories

NationalIAEA Director General praises India's major nuclear milestone at Kalpakkam

NationalNIA spl court sentences four Bangladeshi nationals in transnational human trafficking case

NationalED conducts search at premises of Kolkata-based realty firm Merlin Group on PMLA charges

NationalBJP Approaches ECI With Plea To Bar Bengal CM From Campaigning for Specific Period

National'Frivolous and baseless': CBI opposes Kejriwal's plea seeking Justice Sharma's withdrawal from Delhi excise policy case