Prelims-Pinpointer-for-17-NOV-2025

Introduction

  • The National Investigation Agency (NIA) is India’s federal counter-terrorism law enforcement agency.
  • It has extensive powers to investigate terror activities anywhere in India.
  • NIA can register cases and arrest individuals without State government permission.
  • It is considered a professional investigative agency matching international standards.

Establishment and Administrative Control

  • NIA is a statutory body created under the NIA Act, 2008.
  • It functions under the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA).
  • NIA was established after the 26/11 Mumbai terror attack, which exposed limitations in intelligence coordination.

Statutory Powers (NIA Act, 2008)

  • Investigation Powers
    • On receiving a State report, the Central Government may direct NIA to investigate.
    • Centre may also suo motu direct investigation, without State report.
    • NIA may investigate connected offences committed by the accused.
    • States must extend assistance to NIA.
    • For offences under UAPA, NIA requires sanction of Central Government.
    • After investigation, cases are placed before NIA Special Court.
  • Schedule of the Act includes laws like:
    • Atomic Energy Act, 1962,
    • Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967,
    • Anti-Hijacking Act, 1982, etc.
  • NIA (Amendment) Act, 2019: 
    • Expanded mandate to include new scheduled offences
  • Human trafficking,
  • Counterfeit currency offences,
  • Manufacture/sale of prohibited arms,
  • Cyber-terrorism,
  • Explosive Substances Act offences.
  • NIA can investigate offences outside India, subject to treaties and foreign laws.
  • Both Central and State governments may designate Sessions Courts as Special Courts.

Difference Between NIA and CBI

NIACBI
Statutory agency under NIA Act, 2008.Not statutory; derives power from DSPE Act, 1946.
Under Ministry of Home Affairs.Under Ministry of Personnel.
Investigates terrorism and terror-funding.Investigates corruption and economic crimes.
Can investigate offences without State consent.Requires State consent, except court orders.

Context: Nearly 27 lakh MGNREGS workers deleted from database between October 10-November 14, coinciding with Centre’s e-KYC push to weed out ineligible beneficiaries amid concerns.

More in News:

  • Deletions far exceeded 10.5 lakh additions during same period.
  • First six months of FY 2025-26 recorded net additions of 83.6 lakh workers (98.8 lakh added, 15.2 lakh deleted); by mid-November net additions fell to 66.5 lakh.
  • Six lakh deleted beneficiaries were active workers defined as those who worked at least one day in past three years, raising concerns about genuine worker exclusion.
  • Union Rural Development Ministry ruled out correlation between e-KYC drive and deletions, stating job card verification is continuous process with onus on State governments and gram panchayats.
  • e-KYC process requires MGNREGS supervisors (mates) to click worker photographs and upload on National Mobile Monitoring System (NMMS) to match with Aadhaar data for verification.
  • Aadhaar Based Payment System (ABPS) made mandatory from beginning of 2023, using 12-digit Aadhaar number as financial address requiring exact matching of name and demographic details.
  • Government introduced e-KYC as additional verification layer after discovering NMMS platform misuse; aimed at eliminating “ghost and duplicate job cards” but led to genuine worker exclusion.

MGNREGA (Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act 2005)

  • Law passed in 2005 guaranteeing “right to work” to rural Indian citizens.
  • Assures minimum 100 days unskilled manual work to adult member of eligible rural household.
  • Main objective: provide employment to rural citizens improving their economic conditions significantly.
  • Mazdoor Kisan Shakti Sangathan (MKSS), Jean Drèze championed right to work cause.
  • Eligibility Criteria
    • Must be Indian citizen, 18+ years, rural household, willing to do unskilled work.
  • Employment and Allowances
    • Guarantees 100 days employment at government-set minimum wage for willing rural citizens.
    • Unemployment allowance: 1/4th minimum wage (first 30 days), half thereafter if work not provided within 15 days.
    • Work within 5 km radius of village; travel allowance provided beyond this distance.
  • Governance
    • Section 17 mandates social audit of all works ensuring transparency and accountability.
    • Panchayati Raj Institutions lead planning, implementation, monitoring; Gram Sabhas suggest works, execute half.
    • Payments weekly, cannot delay beyond 15 days; compensation for delays; complaints addressed within 7 days.
  • Significance
    • Infrastructure development: improved rural infrastructure, natural resource base, accessibility to water/sanitation/housing services.
    • Compensating income loss: helped compensate 20-80% income loss during COVID-19 lockdown (Azim Premji study).
    • Prevents rural-urban migration by utilizing untapped rural labor resources effectively.
    • Right-based approach: combats chronic poverty giving citizens legal right to work unlike previous schemes.
  • CPCB is a statutory organisation established in September 1974.
  • It was constituted under the Water (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1974.
  • CPCB also works under the Air (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1981.
  • It provides technical services to the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change under the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986.
  • Principal Functions
    • Promote the cleanliness of streams and wells by controlling water pollution.
    • Improve air quality and prevent air pollution.
    • Advise the Central Government on matters related to air and water pollution control.
    • Coordinate with State Pollution Control Boards (SPCBs) and assist in conflict resolution.
    • Delegate powers under pollution control laws to regional administrations in Union Territories.
  • Standard Development Activities
    • Develop and revise environmental standards.
    • Upgrade the Comprehensive Industrial Document (COINDS) and provide guidelines for industrial environmental management.
    • Prepare manuals, codes, and guidance for sewage, trade effluents, and air emissions.
  • Standards Developed by CPCB
    • National Ambient Air Quality Standards.
    • Water Quality Criteria from various sources.
    • Emission/Discharge Standards for pollutants from industries.
    • Standards for biomedical waste treatment and disposal.
    • Emission and noise limits for diesel engines, LPG, and CNG generators.
    • Minimal National Standards (MINAS) for effluents, emissions, noise, and solid waste in industries.

Establishment and Legal Framework

  • Established under Section 44 of Disaster Management Act, 2005 for specialized disaster response.
  • Aimed at providing specialized response to natural and man-made disasters across India.

Organizational Structure

  • Initially established in 2006 with 8 Battalions; now expanded to 16 Battalions nationwide.
  • Battalions drawn from Central Armed Police Forces (CAPF): BSF, CRPF, CISF, ITBP, SSB, Assam Rifles.
  • Functions under Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) and headed by Director General for coordination.

Role and Capabilities

  • Multi-skilled, highly specialist force capable of handling all disaster types effectively.
  • Responds to floods, cyclones, earthquakes, landslides, building collapse, train/road accidents and similar disasters.
  • Strategic deployment characterized by “proactive availability” and “pre-positioning” during imminent disaster situations.
  • Proven instrumental in mitigating damages caused by natural calamities across the country.

International Operations

  • Active in responding to disasters under multilateral and bilateral agreements at international level.
  • Responded during Fukushima, Japan triple disaster (2011): earthquake, tsunami, radiation leakage combined.
  • Deployed during Nepal earthquake in 2015 providing crucial disaster response and relief operations.

Origins of Article 32

  • Article 32 emerged from Dr. B.R. Ambedkar’s interventions during the Constituent Assembly debates.
  • Ambedkar held that “rights without remedies are meaningless”, stressing enforceability over mere declaration.
  • He argued the Objective Resolution (1946) lacked mechanisms for protecting rights, leading to incorporation of Article 32.

Purpose and Significance

  • Enables citizens to directly approach the Supreme Court for enforcement of fundamental rights.
  • Described by Ambedkar as the “heart and soul of the Constitution” for guaranteeing judicial remedies.
  • Forms a core part of India’s constitutional remedy framework, unique among democracies.

Broader Constitutional Vision

  • Ambedkar noted the Objective Resolution also failed to ensure social and economic equality, later embedded in Directive Principles (Part IV).
  • Justice Gavai emphasised India’s constitutional philosophy rests on four pillars — justice, liberty, equality, fraternity.

Amendment Framework

  • Constitution designed as a living and evolving document, reflected in Article 368.
  • Ambedkar’s balanced stance on amendment powers faced criticism for being simultaneously too flexible and too rigid.

Right to Constitutional Remedies (Article 32)

  • Guarantees the right to move the Supreme Court for enforcing Fundamental Rights.
  • Empowers SC to issue directions, orders, or writs for enforcement of rights.
  • Parliament may authorise other courts to issue writs without limiting SC’s powers.
  • Right under Article 32 cannot be suspended except as provided by the Constitution.
  • During National Emergency, the President may suspend this right.
  • Nature and Significance
    • Makes protection of rights itself a Fundamental Right.
    • Dr. Ambedkar called Article 32 the “heart and soul of the Constitution.”
    • SC becomes the defender and guarantor of Fundamental Rights.
    • Jurisdiction is Original, Wide, but Not Exclusive.
    • Only Fundamental Rights (not legal/constitutional rights) can be enforced through Article 32.
    • The SC has held Article 32 to be a basic feature, beyond amendment.
  • Writs in India: Issued by Supreme Court (Art 32) and High Courts (Art 226)
    • Habeas Corpus – orders production of detained person; protects liberty.
    • Mandamus – commands public authority to perform legal duties.
    • Prohibition – prevents lower courts/tribunals from exceeding jurisdiction.
    • Certiorari – transfers a case or quashes an order for legal error/jurisdictional defect.
    • Quo Warranto – questions authority of person holding a public office.
  • Writ Jurisdiction: SC vs HC
    • Scope: SC only for Fundamental Rights; HC for FRs and other legal rights.
    • Territorial reach: SC across India; HC limited to its jurisdiction.
    • Discretion: SC cannot refuse; HC may refuse.
  • Importance of Writs
    • Ensure protection of Fundamental Rights and judicial review.
    • Maintain checks and balances and prevent abuse of power.
    • Promote administrative accountability, fairness, and access to justice.

Early Life and Background

  • Raja Ram Mohan Roy (1772–1833) is regarded as the Father of Indian Renaissance.
  • Born in Radhanagar, Bengal, into an orthodox and affluent Brahmin family.
  • Received wide-ranging education in Sanskrit, Persian, Arabic, and English, shaping his reformist worldview.
  • His service in the East India Company (till 1814) exposed him to colonial injustices and fuelled his reform agenda.

Social Reform Initiatives

  • Atmiya Sabha (1814): Formed to debate idolatry, caste rigidity, and meaningless rituals.
  • Abolition of Sati (1829): Led a relentless campaign exposing its cruelty; influenced Regulation XVII passed by Lord William Bentinck.
  • Opposed child marriage and polygamy, while strongly supporting women’s education as a tool of empowerment.

Religious Reform

  • Advocated monotheism, deeply influenced by Islamic and Christian ethical teachings.
  • Authored Tuhfat-ul-Muwahhidin (1803) promoting rational religious thought.
  • Criticised idol worship as promoting superstition over philosophy.
  • Encouraged interfaith dialogue and religious tolerance; analysed Christian scriptures in Precepts of Jesus (1820).
  • Founded the Brahmo Samaj (1828) promoting monotheism, rationalism, and humanism.

Educational Contributions

  • Established the Anglo-Hindu School (1822) promoting Western sciences alongside traditional learning.
  • Founded Vedanta College (1826) to teach Vedantic philosophy with modern subjects.
  • Persistently advocated female education for social progress and equality.

Political and Economic Reform

  • Championed civil rights, just governance, and Indian representation in administration.
  • Strong supporter of freedom of the press, founding journals such as Samvad Kaumudi and Mirat-ul-Akbar.
  • Criticised oppressive zamindari taxation and demanded fair rentals and abolition of unjust levies.

Literary and Ideological Contributions

  • Promoted vernacular languages to democratise knowledge.
  • Contributed through translations, philosophical essays, and socio-political writings.
  • His ideology centred on monotheism, rationalism, women’s rights, social equality, and religious harmony.

Context: China Coast Guard conducted “rights enforcement patrol” through Japan-administered Senkaku Islands (Diaoyu), escalating tensions after Japanese PM’s remarks on Taiwan defense triggering Beijing’s anger.

Senkaku Islands

  • Location and Composition
    • Uninhabited island group in the East China Sea, 90 nautical miles north of the Yaeyama Islands.
    • Located 120 nautical miles northeast of Taiwan in a strategically important maritime zone.
    • Known as Diaoyu Islands (China), Diaoyutai Islands (Taiwan), and Pinnacle Islands by observers.
    • Total land area 6.3 square kilometres; the largest Uotsuri Island is 3.6 square kilometers.
  • Geological Features
    • Consists of conglomerate sandstone, tuff, andesite, andesitic lava, elevated coral outcroppings.
    • Coral outcroppings elevated above sea level during the Holocene era geological period.
    • Highly volcanic surrounding area with faults associated with volcanic activity affecting land formation.
  • Territorial Dispute
    • Islands are the focus of territorial disputes between Japan-China and Japan-Taiwan nations.

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