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JANUARY 17, 2026 Current Affairs
Lokpal of India
- Lokpal of India observed its Foundation Day on 16 January 2026, marking the day the institution legally came into force in 2014.
Lokpal of India:
- A statutory, independent anti-corruption ombudsman at the Union level.
- Designed as a sui generis institution to inquire into and investigate allegations of corruption against specified public functionaries, including those at the highest political and bureaucratic levels.
Established in:
- Created under the Lokpal and Lokayuktas Act, 2013.
- Came into force on 16 January 2014 through commencement of Section 3 of the Act.
Historical evolution:
- The idea of an ombudsman-type body was first proposed in 1963.
- The First Administrative Reforms Commission (1966) recommended a two-tier mechanism—Lokpal at the Centre and Lokayuktas in States.
- Multiple Lokpal Bills were introduced and lapsed between 1968 and 2011, reflecting prolonged political and parliamentary debate.
- The Act was finally passed in December 2013 and operationalised in January 2014, responding to sustained public demand for an autonomous anti-corruption authority.
Composition and members:
- Consists of a Chairperson and up to eight Members.
- Includes an equal balance of Judicial Members and Non-Judicial Members.
- Appointed by the President of India on the recommendation of a statutory Selection Committee.
- Tenure is five years or up to the age of 70, whichever is earlier.
Eligibility criteria:
- Chairperson must be a former Chief Justice of India or a Judge of the Supreme Court.
- Judicial Members must be former Supreme Court Judges or former Chief Justices of High Courts.
- Non-Judicial Members must be persons of impeccable integrity with at least 25 years of experience in specified fields such as public administration, vigilance, law or finance.
Jurisdiction and coverage:
- Covers allegations against the Prime Minister, Union Ministers, Members of Parliament, and Central Government officials in Groups A, B, C and D.
- Extends to officials of PSUs, autonomous bodies, trusts and societies established or funded by the Union Government.
- Also covers certain bodies receiving foreign contributions beyond the prescribed threshold.
Key functions and powers:
- Receives complaints relating to offences under the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988.
- Orders preliminary inquiries through its Inquiry Wing or other authorised agencies.
- Directs investigations, including referral to agencies such as the CBI, where a prima facie case exists.
- Exercises limited superintendence and direction over the CBI for cases referred by it.
- Possesses powers akin to a civil court for summoning, document production and examination on oath during inquiry.
- Can authorise search, seizure and provisional attachment of assets as per statutory provisions.
- Has exclusive authority to grant sanction for prosecution in cases before it, reducing procedural delays.
- May recommend departmental action, prosecution or closure, and can proceed against complainants filing false or vexatious complaints.
Central Vigilance Commission (CVC)
- Shri Praveen Vashista, IPS (Bihar cadre, 1991 batch), has been appointed as Vigilance Commissioner in the Central Vigilance Commission and took oath on 16 January 2026.
Central Vigilance Commission (CVC):
- The apex integrity and vigilance institution of the Government of India.
- Mandated to promote integrity, transparency and accountability in public administration and to prevent corruption in Central Government organisations.
Established in:
- 1964 as an executive resolution of the Government of India.
- Given statutory status by the Central Vigilance Commission Act, 2003.
Historical background:
- Originated from the recommendations of the Santhanam Committee (1962–64) on Prevention of Corruption.
- Initially functioned without statutory backing, limiting its authority.
- Became a statutory and independent body in 2003, strengthening its supervisory and advisory role in vigilance administration.
Composition and members:
- Headed by a Central Vigilance Commissioner (Chairperson).
- Assisted by not more than two Vigilance Commissioners (Members).
- Appointed by the President of India on the recommendation of a high-level committee.
- Tenure is four years or up to 65 years of age, whichever is earlier.
Organisational structure:
- Secretariat headed by a Secretary with supporting officers.
- Chief Technical Examiners’ Wing (CTE) to examine technical aspects of works contracts.
- Commissioners for Departmental Inquiries (CDIs) who act as Inquiry Officers in disciplinary proceedings.
- Network of Chief Vigilance Officers (CVOs) in ministries, departments, PSUs and public sector banks, acting as the extended arm of the CVC.
Jurisdiction:
- Covers All India Services and Group ‘A’ officers of the Central Government.
- Includes senior officials of Central Public Sector Undertakings, Public Sector Banks, RBI, NABARD, SIDBI, LIC, General Insurance Companies, and specified societies and autonomous bodies controlled by the Union Government.
- Exercises superintendence over CBI investigations relating to offences under the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988.
- Conducts preliminary inquiries on complaints referred by the Lokpal in respect of Group A, B, C and D officials.
Key functions:
- Supervises and coordinates the vigilance machinery across Central Government organisations.
- Inquires or causes inquiry/investigation into corruption complaints within its jurisdiction.
- Tenders vigilance advice to ministries, departments and PSUs.
- Exercises superintendence over the CBI for corruption-related investigations.
- Reviews progress of investigations and pendency of prosecution sanctions under the Prevention of Corruption Act.
- Recommends appointments to senior posts in the CBI and Directorate of Enforcement through statutory committees.
- Acts as the authority for complaints under the Public Interest Disclosure and Protection of Informers (PIDPI) Resolution, providing whistle-blower protection.
Coconut root wilt disease
- Coconut Root Wilt Disease is in the news due to its rapid spread across major coconut-growing regions of Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Karnataka, affecting lakhs of palms.
Coconut root wilt disease:
- A debilitating, non-fatal disease of coconut caused by a phytoplasma (phloem-limited pathogen), leading to chronic decline and major yield loss.
- Infected palms often remain alive but become long-term inoculum sources, enabling continued spread through vectors.
Origin and spread:
- First reported over 150 years ago from Erattupetta (Kerala) and has remained a persistent endemic problem.
- Spread is vector-borne, and is accelerated by continuous coconut belts, wind-assisted vector movement, and rising abiotic stress (temperature extremes) plus biotic stress (new sucking pests like whiteflies) that increase palm susceptibility.
Vector:
- Transmitted through sap-sucking insect vectors; commonly cited vectors in endemic areas include Stephanitis typica and Proutista moesta.
Key symptoms:
- Leaves look weak and droopy: The small leaf strips lose stiffness and hang down instead of standing firm — this is usually the first visible sign.
- Leaves turn yellow from the tips: Yellowing starts at the ends of leaves and slowly spreads inward; in later stages, parts of the leaves dry up and die.
- Leaves curl and cup inward: The leaf strips bend inward, making the whole leaf look ribbed or cup-shaped.
- Poor flowering and nut fall: The tree produces fewer flowers, nuts fall prematurely, and overall yield drops sharply.
- Tree slowly weakens: Roots start decaying, growth becomes poor, and in some cases the top of the trunk becomes thin and tapered.
Solutions and management:
- Select and multiply tolerant palms: Palms that continue to yield well despite disease pressure should be identified in farmers’ fields, scientifically confirmed, and multiplied through local nurseries.
- Good field and crop management: Remove badly affected, low-yielding palms to reduce disease spread. Improve soil health using green manure crops, ensure regular irrigation, proper drainage, and follow suitable intercropping to reduce stress on coconut palms.
- Strengthen palms with organic nutrition: Apply farmyard manure or green manure along with neem cake every year. Healthy soil and strong roots help palms tolerate disease better even if infection occurs.
Dugongs
- The Union government’s Expert Appraisal Committee (MoEFCC) has asked Tamil Nadu to revise the design of the proposed International Dugong Conservation Centre at Manora (Thanjavur).
Dugongs:
- Dugong is a large, slow-moving marine mammal, commonly called a “sea cow”, that feeds exclusively on seagrass.
- It is a keystone species, playing a vital role in maintaining healthy seagrass meadows.
- Scientific name: Dugong dugon
Habitat:
- Found in warm, shallow coastal waters of the Indian and western Pacific Oceans.
- Lives mainly in seagrass meadows, estuaries, lagoons, and nearshore areas.
- Unlike manatees, dugongs are strictly marine and do not enter freshwater.
- IUCN status: Vulnerable.
Key characteristics of dugong:
- Large, plump body with paddle-like flippers and a whale-like tail fluke.
- Grows up to 3 metres in length and can weigh 400 kg or more.
- Gentle, herbivorous grazer that feeds almost continuously on seagrass.
- Acts as an ecosystem engineer, helping seagrass regenerate and supporting marine biodiversity.
- Holds cultural significance for many coastal and indigenous communities and is linked to ancient mermaid legends.
Sammakka–Saralamma Jatara
- Telangana is preparing for the biennial Sammakka–Saralamma Jatara beginning 28 January 2026, alongside a large-scale redevelopment of the sacred precinct at Medaram.
Sammakka–Saralamma Jatara:
- A biennial tribal spiritual festival honouring Sammakka and Saralamma, revered as ancestral goddesses of the Koya Adivasi community.
- Recognised as Asia’s largest tribal festival and one of the largest human congregations in the world.
Held in:
- Celebrated at Medaram village in Mulugu district, Telangana, located inside the Eturnagaram Wildlife Sanctuary, part of the Dandakaranya forest belt.
- Conducted during the full moon of the Hindu month of Magh.
Origin:
- Rooted in Koya tribal history and legend, centred on Sammakka, a forest-born woman adopted by tribals, and her daughter Saralamma.
- According to tradition, they resisted the Kakatiya rulers’ tax oppression, attained martyrdom, and are remembered as symbols of tribal resistance and sacrifice.
- The deities are not worshipped permanently in temples; instead, they are symbolically brought from the forest to stay with the people for a few sacred days.
Key features:
- Rituals are conducted exclusively by Koya tribal priests, following indigenous customs.
- Devotees offer “Bangaram” (jaggery) instead of gold or money, symbolising equality and agrarian life.
- Worship centres around sacred trees, bamboo totems, flags (dalgudda) and clan symbols rather than idols.
- Attracts over one crore devotees, second only to the Kumbh Mela in scale within India.
- The festival space has recently expanded with arches, platforms and granite flooring to manage massive crowds.
Significance:
- Represents tribal identity, collective memory and resistance against historical injustice.
- Preserves an animistic, kinship-based belief system, where deities are treated as family members.
Mount Elbrus
- A controlled (artificially triggered) avalanche was carried out on Mount Elbrus in Russia to safely release accumulated snow after heavy snowfall.
Mount Elbrus:
- Mount Elbrus is the highest mountain in Europe and an ancient, extinct volcano with two distinct peaks (East and West).
- It is part of the Caucasus mountain system and a major centre for mountaineering and alpine tourism.
Located in:
- Southwestern Russia, in the Caucasus Mountains, just north of the Georgia border.
- Lies between the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea mountain corridor.
Key geological features:
- A twin-coned stratovolcano formed over 2.5 million years ago.
- Highest peak reaches 5,642 metres, the second peak 5,595 metres.
- Covered by 22 glaciers, which feed rivers like the Kuban and Terek.
- Though dormant for nearly 2,000 years, sulphurous gases and mineral springs are still present.
Significance:
- Recognised as Europe’s highest peak, making it one of the Seven Summits for climbers.
- A key site for glaciological and climate research, including studies observed from the International Space Station.
- Economically important for tourism and adventure sports in the Caucasus region.
Recalibrating India’s Critical Minerals Diplomacy
- Context (TH): India’s clean-energy transition increasingly depends on imported critical minerals, and tightening export controls have made supply security a strategic priority.
- A critical mineral is a metallic or non-metallic element crucial for modern technologies, economies, and national security, with the potential risk of disruptions to its supply chains.
Significance of Minerals Diplomacy for India
- Import Dependence: India is 100% import-dependent for key minerals like lithium, cobalt and nickel, making energy transition supply chains externally vulnerable.
- China Dominance: China controls about 81% of the processing capacity of key critical minerals, turning minerals into a geopolitical choke point, not just a trade item.
- Downstream Supply Vulnerability: In 2024–25, India imported 53,000+ tonnes of rare earth magnets, with over 90% sourced from China, risking disruption for EVs, wind turbines and electronics.
India’s Region-Wise Critical Mineral Partnership Assessment
Australia
- Reliable Upstream Partner: Australia offers stable politics and large reserves, making it a credible long-term supplier anchor for India’s transition needs.
- Investment Track: Under the India-Australia Critical Minerals Investment Partnership (2022), five target projects were identified for possible investment in lithium and cobalt.
Japan
- Resilience Template: Japan’s response to rare earth disruption focused on diversification, stockpiling, recycling and long-term R&D rather than reactive buying.
- Upgraded Cooperation: Partnership is expanding towards joint extraction/processing and possible stockpiling arrangements, including in third countries.
Africa
- High Potential: Africa’s mineral abundance and rising demand for local value addition offer long-run opportunities beyond transactional ore extraction.
- India’s Push: Deals with Namibia (lithium, rare earths, uranium) and talks in Zambia (copper, cobalt).
United States
- Dialogue Heavy: Friend-shoring has struggled to move beyond discussions, as tariffs, trade rules and policy volatility reduce long-term reliability.
- Key Frameworks: TRUST Initiative and Strategic Minerals Recovery Initiative propose joint work on rare-earth processing and recycling tech.
European Union (EU)
- Alignment Need: India must align with lifecycle environmental norms to plug into EU standards.
- Key Platforms: Critical Raw Materials Act & European Battery Alliance offer a structured supply-chain.
West Asia (Gulf)
- Midstream Potential: UAE and Saudi Arabia are building battery materials and refining capacity, offering processing partnerships for mineral ores.
- Gap: Institutional depth remains limited, so India needs structured rather than ad-hoc arrangements.
Russia
- Partnership: Russia has sizeable reserves and scientific linkages with India, offering diversification.
- Constraints: Sanctions, financing and logistics reduce reliability, making Russia a hedge partner.
Latin America
- New Frontier: Argentina, Chile, Peru and Brazil are becoming central to global rare earth strategies.
- Early Stage: KABIL signed a ₹200 crore exploration agreement in Argentina (Catamarca lithium blocks).
Canada
- Re-emerging Partner: Canada has strong reserves of nickel, cobalt, copper and rare earths and could become a stable partner post ties restoration.
- Risk Factor: Political stability in bilateral relations is key, else diplomacy could remain underutilised.
Way Forward
- Processing Capacity: Prioritise domestic refining and separation to reduce exposure to external chokepoints; E.g., build REE magnet and lithium refining clusters with assured offtake.
- Value-Chain Deals: Shift from MoUs to bankable projects with equity, technology and offtake terms; E.g., mining-to-processing packages instead of extraction-only contracts.
- Recycling Scale: Build urban mining capacity for batteries and magnets to reduce import dependence.
- Institutional Clarity: Create a single strategic command for minerals diplomacy & domestic mining policy integration; E.g., a Critical Minerals Board linking MEA, Mines, Commerce, and industry.
Report on Road Accidents in India
- The Ministry of Road Transport and Highways (MoRTH) and SaveLIFE Foundation released a report analysing road-accident severity in India.
- It highlights that structural issues undermine India’s road safety efforts and suggests improved coordination and resource use to reduce fatalities.
- The report aims to provide a data-driven roadmap to achieve ‘Zero-Fatality Districts’.
Key Findings
- Geographic Concentration: Over 25% of India’s road deaths occur in just 100 districts. Uttar Pradesh has the most severe districts, followed by Tamil Nadu and Maharashtra.
- Nashik Rural and Pune Rural recorded the highest severity.
- Key Causes: Nearly 59% of fatalities occur without traffic violations, highlighting poor road design, including inadequate illumination, as a primary cause.
- High-Risk Timing: Around 53% of deaths occur between 6 PM and midnight due to poor visibility, fatigue, and night traffic.
- Corridor Concentration: Only 18 target corridors of NHAI and state PWD roads are responsible for around 54% of fatalities.
- Vulnerable Groups: Pedestrians and two-wheeler riders form a disproportionate share of deaths, accounting for 90% fatalities in Pune in 2025.
- Medical Response Gaps: The government’s 108 ambulance service fails to reach about 80% of accident victims, leading to critical delays during the “Golden Hour.”
Aquatic Biodiversity Conservation Initiatives Launched Under Namami Gange
- Several aquatic biodiversity conservation initiatives were launched at the Wildlife Institute of India (WII), Dehradun, under the Namami Gange Mission.
Key Initiatives Launched
- Aqua Centre: Aqua Life Conservation Monitoring Centre was established as a national research and policy hub for freshwater biodiversity conservation.
- Framework: It operates under the Namami Gange Programme and has laboratories for ecotoxicology, aquatic ecology, spatial ecology, and microplastics analysis.
- Dolphin Response: A Dolphin Rescue Ambulance was launched to provide rapid emergency response to distressed Gangetic dolphins.
- Skimmer Project: A conservation project for the Indian Skimmer birds was launched in collaboration with the Bombay Natural History Society.
- Habitat Frameworks: New conservation frameworks were introduced to support habitat restoration for the critically endangered Gharial.
- Afforestation: ‘Ek Ped Maa Ke Naam’ campaign was initiated to support river ecosystem conservation.
About Namami Gange
- Origin: Namami Gange is a central sector programme launched in 2014 to rejuvenate the River Ganga and its tributaries.
- Implementing Agency: It is implemented by the National Mission for Clean Ganga under the Ministry of Jal Shakti.
- Core Objectives: Two primary objectives are (1) Pollution abatement and (2) River Rejuvenation, including biodiversity conservation.
- Pillars: The scheme is based on 8 strategic pillars, i.e. sewerage infrastructure, biodiversity conservation, afforestation, riverfront development, Ganga Gram, effluent monitoring, awareness, and river-surface cleaning
- Extension: The programme has been extended up to March 2026 as Namami Gange Mission-II.
NASA’s Chromospheric Magnetism Explorer (CMEx) Mission
- NASA has selected the Chromospheric Magnetism Explorer (CMEx) mission for an extended concept study.
- Mission Objective: CMEx aims to study the magnetic nature of the Sun’s chromosphere to better predict space weather events.
- Observation Focus: It is designed to perform the first continuous, high-resolution observations of the solar chromosphere.
- Primary Goal: The mission maps the chromospheric magnetic fields to understand how solar eruptions and flares are triggered.
- Key Technique: It uses ultraviolet spectropolarimetry to measure light polarisation and infer properties of magnetic fields.
- Forecast Value: Data generated by CMEx is intended to improve the accuracy of space weather forecasts and increase warning lead time.
About Chromosphere
- Layer Position: The chromosphere is a thin atmospheric layer of the Sun located between the photosphere and the outer corona.
- Extent: It extends approximately 2,000-3,000 kilometres above the photosphere.
- Visual Feature: The chromosphere appears as a reddish-pink rim during total solar eclipses due to hydrogen-alpha emission.
- Thermal Profile: Unlike lower layers, the chromospheric temperature increases with height, from about 4,000 K to 25,000 K.
- Plasma Makeup: It is primarily composed of hydrogen and helium in an ionised plasma state.
- Magnetic Role: Chromosphere is considered the Sun’s magnetic heart, where solar flares and prominences (loops of gas) commonly originate.
- Dynamic Activity: The layer contains spicules, i.e., fast plasma jets that rise at 20-30 km/s and carry energy upward.
Finke River
- The Finke River in central Australia is widely regarded as the world’s oldest river system still flowing, dating back around 300–400 million years.
About the Finke River
- Type: About 600–640 km, a major but intermittent (not perennial) river of central Australia.
- Indigenous Name: Larapinta, named by the indigenous Arrernte people.
- Key Tributaries: Ellery Creek, Palmer River, and Hugh River feed into the Finke system.
- Antecedence: The river existed before mountains rose, & Its uniqueness lies in its extreme geological persistence, as it maintained the same broad course since ancient time despite major land uplift events.
Course of the River
- Origin Region: Starts in the MacDonnell Ranges (Northern Territory).
- Formation Point: Begins where Davenport Creek and Ormiston Creek meet.
- Flow Direction: Runs southwest towards South Australia and the Simpson Desert region.
- Flood Extension: During major floods, flow can reach the Macumba River and ultimately Lake Eyre.
Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956
- The Supreme Court held that a widowed daughter-in-law can claim maintenance from her father-in-law’s estate under the Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956.
- The Court clarified that “any widow of his son” qualifies as a dependant, irrespective of whether widowhood occurred before or after the father-in-law’s death.
- The Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956, codifies adoption and maintenance obligations as part of the Hindu Code Bills, which standardised Hindu personal laws.
- The Act applies to Hindus, Buddhists, Jains, and Sikhs; it excludes Muslims, Christians, Parsis, and Jews.
- Section 19 of the Act mandates that a father-in-law maintain a widowed daughter-in-law lacking independent means, and Section 22 requires heirs of his estate to support all dependents.
Robotsystem 15 (RBS-15) Missile
- Swedish aerospace and defence company Saab showcased the RBS-15 missile’s capability to destroy the Russian S-400 system.
- About Missile: Robotsystem 15 (RBS-15) is a long-range, fire-and-forget anti-ship missile with land-attack capability, developed by the Swedish defence firm Saab Bofors Dynamics.
- Operational Design: The missile is designed to operate effectively in complex littoral and coastal environments like the Baltic Sea.
- Platforms: RBS-15 can be launched from naval ships, combat aircraft, and land-based mobile launchers.
- Speed Range: It operates at high subsonic speed near Mach 0.9, with an operational range exceeding 300 kilometres.
- Sea Skimming: The missile flies extremely close to the water’s surface to evade radar detection.
- Geographic Optimisation: Unlike open-ocean missiles, the RBS-15 is optimised for narrow straits and island-dense Scandinavian archipelagos.
General Studies