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JANUARY 26, 2026 Current Affairs
Rajasthan’s Disturbed Areas’ Bill, 2026
- Rajasthan plans to introduce a ‘Disturbed Areas’ Bill, 2026, drawing from Gujarat’s 1991 law, to curb “demographic imbalance” triggering civil liberty concerns.
What is the Disturbed Areas Act?
- A law in Gujarat to control communal polarisation and maintain demographic stability in specific areas affected by past communal riots.
Key Provisions of the Act
- Under this Act, the district collector designates an area as ‘disturbed’ due to communal tensions.
- Any transfer of immovable property in these areas requires prior permission from the collector under Section 5 (a) and (b) of the Act.
- The seller must submit an affidavit confirming the voluntary sale and a fair market price.
- The Collector conducts an inquiry before either approving or rejecting the property sale.
Amendments and Strengthened Powers (2020)
- The amendments granted the Collector enhanced authority to scrutinise property transactions for potential communal clustering.
- The state government can now review the Collector’s decisions, even without an appeal being filed.
- Violation penalties were raised from six months to three to five years in prison.
Need for the Law in Rajasthan
- Distress Sale Prevention: To protect vulnerable property owners from being forced into below-market sales during communal tension or localised unrest.
- Communal Stability: To provide an administrative tool aimed at preventing sudden displacement that could trigger social friction in sensitive localities.
- Orderly Urbanisation: To regulate rapid, unplanned property transfers in mixed neighbourhoods, which the State views as destabilising settlement patterns.
Concerns Within the Act
- Demographic Policing Risk: The Act enables indirect regulation of who can buy property where, potentially reshaping neighbourhood composition through administrative discretion.
- Fundamental Rights Conflict: Restrictions raise serious concerns under Article 19(1)(e) (right to reside and settle freely) and Article 15 (non-discrimination on religious grounds).
- Judicially Stayed Logic: Rajasthan’s use of terms like “improper clustering” mirrors language from Gujarat’s 2020 amendment, which remains stayed by the High Court.
- Chilling Effect on Transactions: Genuine, voluntary inter-community property sales face delays, uncertainty, and fear of rejection despite free consent and fair value.
Joining Pax Silica & Critical Minerals Strategy of India
- India joined Pax Silica (US-led capability club) and also participated in G7 critical minerals talks to counter China’s dominance
- But India’s external diplomacy is ahead of its domestic readiness: exploration is low, timelines are long, and mining policy credibility is weak.
About Pax Silica Initiative
- It is a US-led strategic initiative to secure the end-to-end silicon and AI supply chain, from critical minerals and energy inputs to semiconductors and logistics.
- The goal is to reduce coercive dependencies, safeguard AI-critical materials and capabilities, and enable trusted partners to develop and deploy advanced technologies at scale.
Key Issues in India’s Critical Minerals Plan
- Exploration & Project Pipeline
- Low Exploration Base: Less than 20% of India’s geological potential has been explored; capacity remains dominated by public agencies like the Geological Survey of India (GSI).
- Weak EL Incentives: Exploration Licence (EL) lacks preferential right to mine and offers only 50% cost reimbursement capped at ₹20 crore vs ~₹150 crore exploration cost, deterring serious explorers.
- Long Project Timelines: Global average mining project cycle from discovery to production is 16+ years (IEA); India often takes longer due to approvals and litigation.
- Mining Allocation & Market Design
- Auction Model Weakness: Post-2015 auction-only concessions create high upfront capital risk and don’t attract serious merchant miners or junior explorers.
- Bid Distortion: Overbidding (sometimes exceeding reserve valuation) skews blocks toward captive miners, who can offset losses via downstream industry, hurting open-market competition.
- Cancelled Pipeline Shock: Around 66,000 pending applications from the pre-2015 First-Come, First-Served regime were auto-cancelled, deepening investor uncertainty.
- Taxation & Federal Uncertainty
- High Effective Tax Burden: Despite rationalised critical mineral royalties (2–4%), overall statutory burden makes effective tax rate ~60–65% for mining firms.
- Federal Tax Risk: Supreme Court (2024) upheld states’ power to levy additional taxes (royalty not a tax), raising cost unpredictability and discouraging mine operationalisation.
What has India Improved Recently?
- Policy Push: MMDR Amendment Bill, 2025 prioritised critical minerals and aimed to streamline concessions, signalling urgency for energy transition supply chains.
- Private Entry: Six minerals removed from the “atomic minerals” list, allowing private participation.
- Market Flexibility: Captive mines can now sell in the open market without caps, improving commercial viability and reducing downstream distortions.
- Overseas Asset Focus: National Mineral Exploration Trust (NMET) has been repositioned to fund international mineral projects, strengthening India’s resource diplomacy and supply security.
Way Forward
- Exploration Mission: Launch time-bound exploration drive for critical minerals using private tech, satellite & geophysics via GSI + private Joint Venture model.
- Shared Risk Model: Fund projects on a pari passu (equal sharing) basis, so both Centre and private miners share costs and risks from the start.
- Auction Redesign: Shift two-stage iterative bidding into a single sealed-bid to curb overbidding.
- EL Incentive Upgrade: Provide preferential rights or tax rebates for junior explorers to offset losses; E.g., Australia/Canada-style exploration incentive frameworks.
India–UK Education Partnership
- The UK announced a new International Education Strategy to raise education exports, with India among the five focus countries.
- Education cooperation is a key pillar under India–UK Vision 2035.
Why India is a Focus Country?
- Scale Demand: India aims to rapidly expand its ~40 million student base and needs ~30 million new student places, creating huge partnership space for foreign providers.
- Campus Expansion: 9 UK universities are set to open campuses in India, signalling a shift towards transnational education delivery and capacity support.
- Student Mobility: Estimates based on UK student visas suggest ~1,70,000 Indian students are currently in the UK, making India a top source market
Significance of Partnership for India
- Capacity Creation: India’s higher education network has ~1,100+ universities and 45,000+ colleges, yet seat demand is rising, so foreign campuses can ease access pressure.
- Quality Upgrade: India’s Gross Enrolment Ratio (GER) is ~28% (2021–22), so global institutions can support faster expansion with stronger quality benchmarks.
- Skill Readiness: India has one of the world’s youngest populations, with ~65% below 35 years, so global curricula can improve job-readiness at scale.
- Research Boost: India spends only ~0.65% of GDP on R&D, so university partnerships can improve research capacity, labs and innovation output.
Significance of Partnership for the UK
- Export Growth: UK targets education exports of £40 billion/year by 2030, signalling education as a national economic driver like IT and services.
- Economic Value: Education exports already generate ~£32 billion/year, making it more valuable than several traditional UK export sectors.
- Revenue Stability: In 2021–22, international education supported ~758,000 jobs in the UK, so overseas expansion protects employment and income flows.
- Global Brand: The UK hosts 4 of the world’s top 10 universities in many major rankings, so offshore campuses extend strong reputation-based demand.
India–UK Areas of Cooperation
- Geopolitical: UK supports India’s UNSC permanent membership and collaborates in forums like the AUKUS alliance, G20, Commonwealth, and Indo-Pacific initiatives.
Economic:
- Record Trade: Bilateral trade reached a significant milestone of USD 21.34 billion in 2023–24.
- Major Trading Partner: India is the UK’s 11th largest trading partner.
- Defence: The Defence and International Security Partnership (DISP) 2015 enhances cooperation, with ~70 UK firms supplying critical components for Indian aircraft.
- Health: Partnerships like the AstraZeneca-SII vaccine collaboration address healthcare challenges.
- Climate: The India-UK Green Growth Equity Fund and OSOWOG initiative target renewable energy and sustainable development.
- Diaspora: The ~1.9 million Indian diaspora in the UK significantly contributes to British society.
Agarwood
- Union Minister laid the foundation stone of the ₹80 crore Agarwood Value Chain Development Scheme in Tripura to strengthen the sector from farm to global markets.
Agarwood: What it is?
- Agarwood (also called oud, gaharu, aloeswood) is a highly fragrant, resinous heartwood formed in Aquilaria trees when they are wounded and infected by fungi, triggering a defensive resin response.
Origin:
- Mentioned in ancient Ayurvedic texts such as the Susruta Samhita and in early Islamic literature, agarwood has been traded for thousands of years across Asia and the Middle East.
Habitat:
- Found mainly in South and Southeast Asia, including India (Tripura, Assam and the Northeast), Bangladesh, Vietnam, Indonesia, Malaysia and China.
- Aquilaria species thrive in tropical evergreen and semi-evergreen forests.
Key features:
- Resin formation is rare in nature (only ~10% of wild trees), making agarwood extremely valuable.
- Natural agarwood can take 20–50 years to develop, prompting artificial induction (biological, chemical and physical methods).
- Listed under CITES Appendix II due to overexploitation and illegal trade risks.
Applications
- Perfumery: High-end fragrances and essential oils, especially in the Middle East.
- Incense & rituals: Widely used in religious and cultural ceremonies.
- Medicine: Traditional Ayurvedic, Chinese and Unani systems (bioactive compounds like chromones and terpenoids).
- Trade & exports: One of the most expensive forest products, with premium agarwood oil fetching very high prices globally.
RBI Report on State Budgets and Fiscal Performances
- The Reserve Bank of India released its annual report, “State Finances”, for the fiscal year 2025-26 to assess states’ fiscal health and budgetary priorities.
Fiscal Performance of States
- Fiscal Deficit: The consolidated Gross Fiscal Deficit of states is budgeted at 3.3% of GDP for FY25, up from 3% over the previous three fiscals.
- Capital Spending: State capital expenditure is projected at 3.2% of GDP, with a focus on long-term public asset creation.
- Central Support: Growth in state capital expenditure is supported by 50-year interest-free loans under the SASCI scheme.
- Debt Levels: Total outstanding state liabilities stand at 29.2% of GDP, exceeding the fiscal prudence target of 20% recommended by the FRBM Review Committee (2017)
- Tax Structure: State Goods and Services Tax (SGST) has emerged as the primary tax source; its growth has slowed, and its share in SGDP remains below pre-GST levels.
- Non-tax revenue sources have declined steadily over the past decade.
Demographic Transition
- Young States: States with youthful populations like Bihar and Uttar Pradesh must increase education and skills spending to utilise their working-age populations.
- Ageing States: States like Kerala and Tamil Nadu are facing rising fiscal pressure from pension and geriatric healthcare demands.
- Transition States: Demographically transitioning states like West Bengal and Maharashtra need to adjust their fiscal strategies for long-term revenue sustainability.
Major Concerns
- Expenditure Rigidity: High committed expenditure on salaries, pensions and interest payments restricts fiscal space for development projects.
- Subsidy Quality: Expansion of non-merit subsidies and freebies risks crowding out productive investments in the social sector.
- Discom Stress: Persistent financial losses of power distribution companies create large contingent liabilities for state finances.
- Transparency Gaps: Inconsistent disclosure of off-budget borrowings obscures the true extent of state indebtedness and fiscal risks.
Policy Recommendations
- Fiscal Path: States should adopt a time-bound fiscal consolidation roadmap to reduce debt-to-GDP ratios to sustainable levels.
- Revenue Base: Strengthening non-tax revenue sources is essential to reduce dependence on central transfers and borrowings.
- Climate Budgeting: States should integrate climate-sensitive budgeting to mitigate fiscal shocks caused by frequent disasters.
- Digital Systems: Stronger digital public financial management systems can improve the efficiency of tax collection and subsidy targeting.
Bactrian Camel
- Two Bactrian camels named ‘Galwan’ and ‘Nubra’ will feature in the Republic Day Parade 2026 on Kartavya Path as part of the Army’s Animal Contingent, highlighting Ladakh’s unique cold-desert heritage.
Bactrian Camel: What it is?
- A double-humped camel adapted to extreme cold and arid conditions of Central Asian cold deserts.
Found in:
- India: The species is found only in Ladakh (Nubra Valley) in India, making its appearance nationally significant.
- Global: Mongolia, China, Kazakhstan, parts of Central Asia.
Origin:
- Domesticated ~5,000–6,000 years ago in Central Asia (around modern Uzbekistan–West Kazakhstan region).
- Named after Bactria, an ancient Central Asian region.
IUCN Status:
- Wild Bactrian camel (Camelus ferus): Critically Endangered.
Types
1. Wild Bactrian Camel: Camelus ferus (Critically Endangered).
2. Domestic Bactrian Camel: Camelus bactrianus (Common, domesticated).
Key characteristics
- Two humps: Store fat (not water), providing energy during long periods of food scarcity in cold deserts.
- Cold tolerance: Long, shaggy winter coat insulates against sub-zero temperatures and is shed in summer to prevent overheating.
- Water efficiency: Can drink up to ~35 gallons at once and safely consume saline water unavailable to most animals.
- Diet adaptability: Tough, leathery lips allow it to eat thorny, bitter and highly saline desert vegetation.
- Desert adaptations: Broad hooves prevent sinking in sand, while long eyelashes and a third eyelid protect eyes from sandstorms.
Role in Indian history:
- Integral to Silk Road trade, linking India–Central Asia–China; famed as the “ships of the Silk Road”.
- Used by caravans that enabled movement of goods (jade, horses), ideas, and monks (e.g., Buddhist pilgrims to India).
- In Ladakh, supported trans-Himalayan commerce and connectivity before mechanisation.
Lambadas Tribe
- A Special Leave Petition (SLP) in the Supreme Court challenges the inclusion of Lambadas in Telangana’s Scheduled Tribes (ST) list.
About Lambadas
- Other Names: Sugalis / Banjaras; a major ST community across Telangana and Andhra Pradesh.
- Community Type: Traditionally a nomadic/trading community with a distinct socio-cultural identity.
- Origin: Believed to have originated from the Marwar region of Rajasthan.
- Traditional Occupation: Semi-nomadic community historically engaged in caravan-based transport of goods, which declined under British rule.
- Language Spoken: Speak “Gor Boli” / Lambadi, a distinct dialect used within the community.
- Cultural Identity: Known for distinct dress, rich embroidery & traditional music performed by Dappans.
Europe’s new Space Phone Line
- The European Space Agency (ESA) inaugurated New Norcia 3 (NNO3), a deep-space communication antenna described as a “permanent space phone line”.
- It is the fourth deep-space antenna in the Estrack network, complementing sister stations to provide uninterrupted 24/7 global coverage.
- The antenna is located at the New Norcia Ground Station in Western Australia.
- Estrack is ESA’s global network of ground stations that provide communication links between mission control and spacecraft across the Solar System; it currently tracks over 20 missions.
- Advanced Technology: It features a 35-metre reflector dish and cryogenic cooling to about −263 °C, enabling detection of weak signals.
- AI Integration: It is ESA’s first antenna to use AI for noise filtering and more precise auto-tracking.
- Partnerships: The antenna is operated locally by CSIRO, Australia’s national science agency.
- Significance: It enhances Estrack’s data-handling capacity and can provide cross-support to NASA, JAXA, and ISRO, thereby strengthening international space cooperation.
The Padma Awards
- The Padma Awards 2026 were announced on the eve of Republic Day, with the President approving 131 awards across Padma Vibhushan, Padma Bhushan and Padma Shri categories.
The Padma Awards: What it is?
- One of India’s highest civilian honours, conferred to recognise distinguished and exceptional service involving an element of public service across diverse fields.
- Established in: 1954 by the Government of India.
History:
- Initially, two civilian awards were instituted in 1954: Bharat Ratna and Padma Vibhushan.
- Padma Vibhushan originally had three classes, which were renamed in 1955 as:
- Padma Vibhushan
- Padma Bhushan
- Padma Shri
- Awards are announced annually on Republic Day, with brief interruptions during 1978–79 and 1993–97.
Categories & purpose:
- Padma Vibhushan: Exceptional and distinguished service
- Padma Bhushan: Distinguished service of a high order
- Padma Shri: Distinguished service in any field
Eligibility criteria:
- Open to all persons irrespective of race, gender, occupation or position.
- Government servants (including PSU employees) are generally not eligible, except doctors and scientists.
- Normally not conferred posthumously, but allowed in exceptional cases.
- A minimum gap of 5 years is required for a higher Padma category, unless relaxed in deserving cases.
- The award is for “excellence plus” — lifetime achievement with clear public service impact, not merely long service.
Fields recognised:
- Art (music, cinema, theatre, painting, sculpture, etc.)
- Social Work
- Public Affairs
- Science & Engineering
- Trade & Industry
- Medicine (including AYUSH systems)
- Literature & Education
- Civil Service
- Sports
- Others (culture, human rights, environment, wildlife conservation, etc.)
Key features of the awards:
- Conferred by the President of India at ceremonial functions held at Rashtrapati Bhavan.
- Awardees receive a Sanad (certificate) and a medallion; the award does not constitute a title and cannot be used as a prefix or suffix.
- Total annual awards capped at 120, excluding posthumous and foreign/NRI/OCI awardees.
- Selection is based on recommendations of the Padma Awards Committee, constituted annually by the Prime Minister and headed by the Cabinet Secretary.
- Public nominations, including self-nominations, are permitted, reinforcing transparency and inclusiveness.
Jeevan Raksha Padak Awards
- President of India has approved the conferment of the Jeevan Raksha Padak Series of Awards–2025 to 30 individuals for acts of exceptional courage in saving lives.
- The awards include 6 Sarvottam, 6 Uttam, and 18 Jeevan Raksha Padaks, with six honours awarded posthumously.
Jeevan Raksha Padak Awards : What it is?
- A civilian life-saving gallantry award series recognising meritorious acts of humane nature involving personal risk to save another person’s life.
- Established in: 1961, as an offshoot of the Ashoka Chakra series of Gallantry Awards.
Categories
- Sarvottam Jeevan Raksha Padak: Conspicuous courage in saving life under very great danger to the rescuer.
- Uttam Jeevan Raksha Padak: Courage and promptitude under great danger to the rescuer.
- Jeevan Raksha Padak: Courage and promptitude involving grave bodily injury risk to the rescuer.
Eligibility:
- Open to persons of all genders and walks of life.
- Can be conferred posthumously.
- Acts considered include rescues during drowning, fires, accidents, electrocution, mine rescues and natural calamities.
Key features:
- Nominations are invited annually from States/UTs and Union Ministries.
- Recommendations are examined by the Jeevan Raksha Padak Awards Committee within two years of the act.
- Final approval is given by the Prime Minister and the President of India.
- Award consists of a medallion and certificate, along with a one-time monetary allowance:
- Sarvottam: ₹2 lakh
- Uttam: ₹1.5 lakh
- Jeevan Raksha: ₹1 lakh
- No additional service concessions (rail/airfare, etc.) are attached.
Significance:
- Encourages civic courage, altruism and humanitarian values in society.
- Formally recognises ordinary citizens performing extraordinary acts, strengthening the culture of compassion and public responsibility.
Narayan Ramachandran Committee
Source: PIB
- The PFRDA has constituted the Committee for Strategic Asset Allocation and Risk Governance (SAARG) to comprehensively review and modernise National Pension System (NPS) investment guidelines.
- The SAARG committee, chaired by Narayan Ramachandran, will submit its recommendations within 9 months.
Narayan Ramachandran Committee : What it is?
- A high-level expert committee titled Strategic Asset Allocation and Risk Governance (SAARG) to review and reform NPS investment guidelines across Government and Non-Government sectors.
- Constituted by: PFRDA, the statutory regulator for pension funds in India.
Aim:
- To strengthen NPS investment architecture by aligning it with global pension best practices, the evolving Indian capital market, and long-term subscriber needs.
Key functions / mandate:
- Foundational review & global benchmarking: Assess adequacy of current NPS guidelines and benchmark them with leading global pension systems.
- Asset class review & expansion: Review existing asset classes and recommend new asset classes to improve diversification and resilience.
- Strategic asset allocation: Propose optimal allocation across equity, debt, money market and alternatives with prudential limits.
- Performance & accountability: Reform benchmarking and evaluation methods for Pension Funds under NPS.
- Risk management & ALM: Recommend comprehensive market, credit, liquidity and operational risk frameworks aligned with pension liabilities.
- Governance & intermediaries: Review custodial architecture and end-to-end investment process across NPS intermediaries.
- Sustainability integration: Embed climate transition risks and net-zero pathways into NPS investment decisions.
Lakkundi Excavation
- Recent excavations at Lakkundi in Karnataka have unearthed Neolithic-era artefacts, strengthening the State’s push to include Lakkundi in UNESCO’s World Heritage Site list.
Lakkundi Excavation : What it is?
- An Archaeological Survey of India (ASI)–supervised excavation at the Kote Veerabhadreshwar (Veerabhadraswamy) Temple, aimed at uncovering buried structures and cultural layers to support heritage conservation and UNESCO nomination.
Located in:
- Lakkundi village, Gadag district, Karnataka, about 12 km from Gadag town; historically known as Lokkigundi.
History of the place:
- A major economic, religious and cultural centre from the 10th–13th centuries.
- Flourished under the Kalyana Chalukyas and later the Hoysalas; famous as the “village of a hundred wells and temples”.
- Associated with Queen Attimabbe (11th century), noted Jain patron and philanthropist.
- Home to Hindu temples, Jain basadis, stepwells, and later even a Muslim dargah, reflecting religious pluralism.
- Known for the “Lakkundi school” of Chalukyan temple architecture.
Discoveries made at Lakkundi
- Neolithic artefacts: broken grey clay pot, stone axe, cowrie shells, cross-shaped pedestal.
- Early historic–medieval finds: stone pedestal carved with a Jina figure, inscriptions, buried temple remains.
- Confirms continuous human occupation from prehistoric to early medieval periods.
Significance:
- Pushes Lakkundi’s history far beyond the medieval period, adding prehistoric depth to its heritage value.
- Strengthens Karnataka’s case for UNESCO World Heritage nomination of a group of monuments at Lakkundi.
General Studies