Prelims
Information Commission

Central Information Commission (CIC) and State Information Commission (SIC)
- CIC statutory body constituted under Section 12 of RTI Act, 2005; while SIC is constitutedd under Section 15 of the Act.
Objectives
- Exercise powers conferred under RTI Act, 2005
- Receive and inquire complaints from citizens (Section 18).
- Receive and decide second appeal from citizens (Section 19)
- Perform “Monitoring and Reporting” duty (Section 25).
Composition
- Central Information Commission (CIC)
- Chief Information Commissioner and not more than ten Information Commissioners at central level.
- State Information Commission (SIC)
- State Chief Information Commissioner and not more than ten State Information Commissioners at state level.
Appointment
- CIC appointed by President on recommendation of committee
- PM (Chairperson), Leader of Opposition (Lok Sabha), Union Cabinet Minister.
- SIC appointed by Governor on recommendation of committee
- CM (Chairperson), Leader of Opposition (Assembly), State Cabinet Minister.
Eligibility
- Members shall be persons of eminence with wide knowledge in law, science, technology, social service, management, journalism, media, administration.
- Cannot be MP, MLA or hold any office of profit; not connected with political party or pursue business/profession.
Tenure
- Members hold office for term prescribed by Central Government or until age 65, whichever earlier.
Reappointment
- Chief Information Commissioner not eligible for reappointment ensuring independence and rotation of leadership positions.
- Information Commissioner eligible for appointment as CIC; term not more than five years aggregate as IC and CIC.
- State IC eligible as State CIC; term not more than five years aggregate ensuring limited tenure comprehensively.
Removal
- President removes CIC members; Governor removes SIC members if adjudged insolvent, convicted of moral turpitude offense.
- If engaged in paid employment outside duties or declared unfit by infirmity of mind/body requiring removal.
- Removal for misbehavior/incapacity: President/Governor refers matter to Supreme Court for inquiry before final removal.
Salary and Jurisdiction
- Salary, allowances, service conditions prescribed by Central Government (RTI Amendment Act, 2019) ensuring uniformity.
- CIC jurisdiction: extends over all Central Public Authorities; SIC jurisdiction: extends over all State Public Authorities.
Powers and Functions
- Section 18: duty to inquire complaints regarding information requested under RTI Act ensuring transparency.
- Section 19: adjudication in second appeal for giving information protecting citizen rights comprehensively.
- Section 20: imposition of penalties if Public Information Officer not performed duty without reasonable cause.
- Access to all public records during inquiry; can ask records under control of public authority.
- Suo-moto power: can order inquiry into any matter; has powers of civil court for summoning, requiring documents.
- Secure compliance: power to secure compliance with decisions from public authority ensuring implementation effectively.
- Annual Report: CIC submits to Central Government placed before Parliament; SIC submits to State Government placed before State Legislature.
RTI Amendment Act 2019 Changes
- Term: Chief Information Commissioner and IC term prescribed by Central Government modifying earlier provisions.
- State Chief IC and IC term also prescribed by Central Government centralizing control over terms.
- Salary, allowances, service conditions of CIC, SIC members now prescribed by Central Government ensuring uniformity nationwide.
CAG Creates Two New Specialized Cadres

About New Cadres
- CAG granted in-principle approval for creating two new specialized cadres within Indian Audit and Accounts Department.
- Cadres named: Central Revenue Audit (CRA) Cadre and Central Expenditure Audit (CEA) Cadre ensuring specialization.
- Benefits of Centralization
- K. Subramaniam (Deputy Auditor General) stated specialization will lead to deeper domain expertise in revenue/expenditure audits.
- Reform effective from January 1, 2026: aims to build deeper professional expertise and improve audit quality of Central Government finances.
- Current Fragmentation
- Currently: audit of Central receipts and expenditure undertaken by multiple offices with cadre control dispersed across State Civil Audit offices.
- Leads to fragmentation: new cadres will consolidate over 4,000 audit professionals out of total CAG strength of 42,000.
- Measure will reduce dependence on deployment and manage manpower in more flexible manner ensuring operational efficiency.
- Transfer Liability
- Officers in both cadres will be liable for all-India transfers ensuring nationwide mobility and expertise sharing.
Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) of India
- Article 148: CAG heads Indian Audit and Accounts Department (IA-AD) responsible for safeguarding public purse at central/state levels.
- Upholds Constitution and parliamentary laws in financial administration; considered key pillar of India’s democratic system alongside SC, EC, UPSC.
- Governed by CAG (Duties, Powers and Conditions of Service) Act, 1971 with amendments in 1976, 1984, 1987.
- Appointment and Term
- Appointed by President of India by warrant under his hand and seal serving six years or until age 65, whichever earlier.
- Takes oath to uphold Constitution and perform duties impartially, without fear or favour ensuring independence comprehensively.
- Removal possible by President on same grounds as SC judge requiring special majority resolution in both Houses for misbehavior/incapacity.
- Can resign anytime by addressing resignation letter to President ensuring voluntary exit option available.
- Independence
- Removed only by President following constitutional procedure, not at President’s pleasure ensuring job security and autonomy.
- Ineligible for any further office under Government of India or state after leaving office preventing conflict of interest.
- Salary determined by Parliament: equal to SC judge ensuring financial independence and status parity comprehensively.
- President prescribes service conditions for CAG’s staff in consultation with CAG ensuring administrative autonomy effectively.
- Administrative expenses (salaries, allowances, pensions) charged upon Consolidated Fund of India, not subject to Parliamentary vote ensuring financial security.
- No minister can represent CAG in Parliament or take responsibility for actions ensuring complete independence from executive.
- Duties and Powers
- Audits accounts related to expenditure from Consolidated Fund of India and state funds ensuring fiscal accountability comprehensively.
- Audits government corporations, public sector undertakings, bodies substantially funded by government ensuring comprehensive oversight of public finances.
- Provides certificate on net proceeds of taxes/duties; audits transactions related to debt, advances, suspense accounts ensuring accuracy.
- Submits audit reports to President who places them before Parliament; reports examined by Public Accounts Committee ensuring legislative scrutiny.
- Role
- Acts as agent of Parliament ensuring public money spent legally and efficiently with proper authorization and accountability.
- Reviews whether money disbursed was legally available, applied correctly and expenditure conforms to governing authority ensuring compliance.
- Responsible for safeguarding taxpayers’ money ensuring spent in accordance with law and intended purposes preventing misuse.
- Can conduct propriety audits: assess wisdom, faithfulness, economy of government expenditure, comment on wastefulness and extravagance beyond legal compliance.
- Propriety audits discretionary unlike legal/regulatory audits which are obligatory ensuring flexibility in audit approach comprehensively.
- CAG in India performs Auditor-General role only, does not control issuance of funds unlike CAG in Britain which also functions as Comptroller.
- International Audits
- IAEA (2022-2027): CAG is External Auditor for International Atomic Energy Agency promoting safe use of nuclear technologies.
- FAO (2020-2025): CAG audits Food and Agriculture Organization working towards global food security ensuring international credibility.
- Constitutional Provisions
- Article 148: appointment, oath, conditions of service; Article 149: duties and powers of CAG comprehensively.
- Article 150: accounts of Union/States kept in form prescribed by President on advice of CAG ensuring standardization.
- Article 151: CAG’s reports on Union accounts submitted to President, laid before Parliament; state reports to Governor/State Legislature.
- Article 279: CAG certifies calculation of “net proceeds”; certificate is final ensuring authoritative determination.
- Third Schedule Section IV: prescribes oath for SC judges and CAG upon assuming office ensuring constitutional commitment.
- Sixth Schedule: accounts of District/Regional Councils kept in form prescribed by CAG and audited accordingly; reports to Governor/Council.
INS Ikshak

Commissioning Details
- Third vessel of Survey Vessel Large (SVL) class, INS Ikshak commissioned into Indian Navy at Naval Base, Kochi.
Capabilities
- Marks significant step in strengthening India’s hydrographic survey and maritime operational capabilities ensuring enhanced surveillance comprehensively.
- Ship capable of operating as platform for humanitarian assistance, disaster relief, medical support operations ensuring versatility.
Inclusivity Milestone
- INS Ikshak first SVL designed with dedicated women’s accommodation reflecting Navy’s commitment to inclusivity ensuring gender diversity.
Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF)

Context: Centre will soon release national SAF policy.
More in News:
- Global SAF demand currently 2 million tonnes, expected to rise to 183 million tonnes by 2040; India is positioned as an agricultural powerhouse with production potential.
- India has 750 million tonne available biomass and surplus 213 million tonne agricultural residue with adequate manufacturing capacity for sustainable aviation fuel production.
- 1% SAF blending target by 2027 requires 30 million litre; 2% target for 2028 translates to 62 million litre of sustainable aviation fuel domestically.
- Local oil makers collectively have annual production capacity of 70 million litre, sufficient to meet domestic demand and emerge as global SAF player internationally.
About SAF
- Biofuel also known as bio-jet fuel produced from sustainable feedstocks for aviation use reducing carbon emissions.
- Chemistry similar to conventional aviation turbine fuel (ATF) or jet fuel derived from crude oil ensuring compatibility.
- Existing aircraft engines can easily use SAF-ATF blend without requiring engine modifications or infrastructure changes.
- Composition
- Made from renewable biomass and waste resources having potential to deliver performance of petroleum-based jet fuel effectively.
- Indian Context
- Various Indian airlines already operated successfully few test and demonstration flights using jet fuel doped with SAF in various proportions.
- Production
- Can be produced from number of sources (feedstock) including waste oil and fats, green and municipal waste, non-food crops.
- Also produced synthetically via process that captures carbon directly from air ensuring diverse production pathways comprehensively.
Significance
- Environmental Benefits
- Carbon footprint significantly lower than aviation turbine fuel (ATF) reducing greenhouse gas emissions from aviation sector.
- ‘Sustainable’ because raw feedstock does not compete with food crops or water supplies or responsible for forest degradation.
- Decarbonization Potential
- Remains major mature and viable pathway to decarbonize aviation sector ensuring long-term sustainability of air transport.
- Current Status
- SAF accounts for only 0.3% of current fuel use for aviation showing significant potential for expansion and growth.
Abraham Accords

About Abraham Accords
- Historic agreement between Israel, United States, and United Arab Emirates first announced August 13, 2020.
- Term also covers subsequent agreements involving Bahrain, alongside Israel and UAE aimed at normalizing diplomatic relations.
- Official signing took place September 15, 2020 with UAE, Bahrain foreign ministers and Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu as signatories.
Name Significance
- “Abraham Accords” symbolizes shared reverence for patriarch Abraham, regarded as prophet in Judaism and Islam reflecting interfaith recognition.
- Abraham called “Father of Many Nations”: revered figure in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam showing common heritage.
- Name chosen to highlight spirit of reconciliation, mutual respect, possibility of lasting cooperation between signatories comprehensively.
Key Provisions
- Diplomatic exchanges: establish embassies in each other’s countries and appoint ambassadors ensuring formal recognition.
- Collaboration across sectors: work with Israel in trade, tourism, healthcare, technology, security ensuring multi-sectoral cooperation.
- Access to religious sites: allow Muslims worldwide to visit historic sites in Israel, offer prayers at Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa Mosque.
Significance
- Highlights readiness of Arab states to look beyond Palestine issue and establish direct relations with Israel.
- Strategic departure from past policies promoting cordial ties between Israel and Arab nations reducing tensions.
- Potential to reduce tensions, encourage dialogue, promote cooperation in West Asia ensuring regional stability comprehensively.
Impact on India
- Provides India diplomatic space to engage both Israel and Arab states without appearing tilted towards either.
- Israel and Arab nations opening to collaboration; India can strengthen partnerships in trade, investments, energy, defense, technology.
- Agreements work in India’s favor easing diplomatic challenges; allow deepening ties with both blocs while safeguarding strategic interests.
Declaration Principles
- Aim to strengthen peace in Middle East rooted in mutual understanding, coexistence, respect for human dignity/freedom.
- Encourage interfaith and intercultural dialogue among three Abrahamic religions (Judaism, Christianity, Islam) advancing peace culture.
- Emphasize cooperation and dialogue as most effective ways to resolve challenges; friendly relations contribute to lasting peace.
- Advocate tolerance and respect for every individual regardless of race, faith, or ethnicity ensuring dignity and hope.
- Pledge support for science, art, medicine, commerce as means to inspire humanity, unlock potential, strengthen ties.
- Focus on ending radicalization and conflict ensuring safer and more secure environment for future generations globally.
Challenges
- Hamas attack on Israel exposed fragile foundation of Accords; escalations threaten to undo limited progress reinforcing mistrust.
- Palestinians view Accords as tilted in Israel’s favor, sidelining struggle for statehood weakening legitimacy in Arab world.
- Saudi Arabia’s reaction reflects fluid stance of Arab bloc; hardening of position can influence future trajectory of Arab-Israel relations.

