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14 February 2026

SC seeks CBI report on Manipur | CJI office got 8,630 Complaint | SC: Telecom Service do Not own Spectrum | India Tested by U.S. Sanctions | Labour Codes Empower Workers | Overdue Upgrade | U.S. Trade Pact Is First Step | USEPA Now Voice For Denial

SC SEEKS CBI REPORT ON MANIPUR

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context

  • The Supreme Court directed the CBI to file a status report on investigation and evidence collected in cases of sexual assault during the Manipur ethnic violence (May 2023).
  • 11 sensitive cases were earlier transferred to CBI; 27 cases shifted to Assam for trial.
  • The Court proposed monitoring of trials by the Chief Justices of Manipur and Gauhati High Courts.
  • Emphasis on speedy trial, victim communication, and quality legal aid.

Key Points for Prelims

  • Supreme Court can transfer criminal cases between states under Section 406 CrPC.
  • High Courts can transfer cases within state under Section 407 CrPC.
  • Article 21 includes right to fair and speedy trial (judicial interpretation).
  • Article 142 empowers Supreme Court to do “complete justice”.
  • Section 357A CrPC – Victim Compensation Scheme.
  • Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987 – Free legal aid.
  • CBI functions under the Delhi Special Police Establishment Act, 1946.

Key Issues

  • Judicial monitoring of investigations.
  • Victim-centric criminal justice reforms.  
  • Federal coordination in criminal trials.
  • Gender justice and accountability during internal conflicts.
  • Rule of law in disturbed areas.

Static Dimensions

  • Separation of powers.  Judicial review.
  • Fundamental Rights (Articles 14, 21, 32).  
  • Criminal justice system structure.
  • Speedy trial jurisprudence (Hussainara Khatoon case).
  • Witness protection framework (as per Supreme Court guidelines, 2018).

Constitutional & Governance Significance

  • Strengthens accountability of investigative agencies.
  • Reinforces speedy trial as part of Article 21.
  • Demonstrates Supreme Court’s supervisory jurisdiction.
  • Reflects federal judicial cooperation (transfer to Assam).
  • Focus on access to justice and legal aid.
  • Challenges
    • Delays in investigation and trial.
    • Limited forensic and prosecutorial capacity.  
    • Trauma and secondary victimization.
    • Balancing judicial monitoring with separation of powers.

Way Forward

  • Dedicated fast-track courts for conflict-related sexual crimes.
  • Regular status reporting in sensitive cases.
  • Institutionalized victim communication mechanisms.
  • Strengthening forensic and prosecution infrastructure.
  • Effective implementation of witness protection and compensation schemes.

CJI OFFICE GOT 8,630 COMPLAINTS

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • The Union Law Minister informed the Lok Sabha that the office of the Chief Justice of India received 8,630 complaints against sitting judges in the last decade.
  • Between 2016–2025, 8,360 complaints were recorded against judges of the Supreme Court and High Courts.
  • Complaints related to corruption, sexual misconduct, and other serious impropriety.
  • As per the existing in-house procedure, the CJI and respective High Court Chief Justices examine such complaints.
  • Complaints received via CPGRAMS are forwarded to the concerned judicial authorities.

Key Points

  • Year-wise trend (2016–2025):
    • Peak years: 2024 (1,170), 2025 (1,102), 2019 (1,037).
  • Removal of Judges:
    • Supreme Court Judges – Article 124(4).
    • High Court Judges – Article 217 read with Article 124(4).
    • Grounds: Proved misbehaviour or incapacity.
    • Requires special majority in both Houses of Parliament.
  • Articles 121 & 211: Restrict discussion on conduct of judges in Parliament/State Legislatures except during impeachment motion.
  • Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968: Regulates impeachment procedure.
  • In-house procedure: Not mentioned in Constitution; evolved by Supreme Court (1999; revised 2014).

Static Constitutional Linkages

  • Independence of Judiciary – Basic Structure doctrine (Kesavananda Bharati case).
  • Separation of Powers.
  • Judicial Review (Articles 32 & 226).
  • Article 50 – Separation of judiciary from executive
  • Collegium system (Judges Cases).

Critical Analysis

  • Issues:
    • Lack of statutory backing to in-house procedure.
    • No public disclosure of action taken → transparency concerns.
    • Impeachment process is extremely difficult → limited practical accountability.
    • Increasing complaints may affect public trust. Need for Balance:
    • Judicial independence is part of Basic Structure.
    • Excess executive oversight may compromise independence.
    • However, absence of transparency may weaken legitimacy.

Way Forward

  • Enact Judicial Standards and Accountability legislation.
  • Institutionalised complaint-tracking mechanism with periodic disclosure.
  • Strengthen internal ethics oversight.
  • Promote judicial code of conduct and asset disclosure norms.

SC: TELECOM SERVICE DO NOT OWN SPECTRUM

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • The Supreme Court held that telecom spectrum is not owned by Telecom Service Providers (TSPs) and cannot be treated as their asset under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC), 2016.
  • The case arose from insolvency proceedings involving Aircel group companies.
  • The Court ruled that:
    • Spectrum is a public resource.
    • Legal ownership vests in the Union of India.
    • TSPs have only a limited, conditional, and revocable licence to use spectrum.
    • DoT dues (licence fee and spectrum usage charges) are not operational debt under IBC.

Key Highlights of the Judgment

  • Spectrum is a scarce natural resource held by the Union in trust for the public.
  • Mere accounting recognition as an “intangible asset” does not confer ownership.
  • IBC cannot override the special statutory telecom regime.
  • Licence fee and spectrum usage charges arise from a sovereign function, not a commercial transaction.
  • Therefore, spectrum cannot be sold/transferred as part of liquidation assets.

Legal & Constitutional Dimensions

  • Article 39(b) – Material resources of the community to be distributed for common good.
  • Public Trust Doctrine – State holds natural resources in trust for people.
  • Entry 31, Union List – Telecommunications under Union jurisdiction.
  • Indian Telegraph Act, 1885 – Central government’s exclusive privilege over telegraph (includes spectrum).
  • TRAI Act, 1997 – Regulatory framework for telecom.
  • IBC, 2016 – Defines operational debt and corporate debtor.

Importance

  • Difference between ownership rights and licence rights.
  • Meaning of operational debt under IBC.
  • Role of DoT and TRAI in telecom regulation.
  • Public Trust Doctrine application beyond environment.
  • Union List Entry 31 relevance.
  • Regulatory framework and statutory bodies.
  • Conflict between general law (IBC) and special law (Telecom laws).
  • Judicial interpretation strengthening public trust doctrine.
  • Infrastructure sector (Telecom).
  • Financial stress in telecom sector.
  • Impact on banking sector recovery under IBC. 
  • Natural resource allocation governance.

Critical Analysis

  • Positive Aspects
    • Protects public ownership of spectrum.
    • Prevents private appropriation of national resources.
    • Maintains regulatory clarity between IBC and telecom laws.
    • Strengthens sovereign authority in resource management.
  • Concerns
    • Reduces asset base for lenders during insolvency.  
    • May affect investor confidence in capital- intensive telecom sector.
    • Highlights structural financial stress in telecom industry.

Way Forward

  • Clear statutory harmonisation between IBC and sectoral laws.
  • Strengthening telecom sector financial sustainability.
  • Transparent spectrum allocation and pricing.
  • Balanced approach to protect public interest and creditor rights.
  • Long-term regulatory certainty to attract telecom investments.

INDIA TESTED BY U.S. SANCTIONS

KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
  • In February 2026, India and the United States announced a “Framework for an Interim Agreement on Reciprocal Trade.”
  • The development followed:
    • U.S. imposition of 25% punitive tariffs (August 2025) on Indian goods.
    • Broader tariff pressures (up to 50%) by the U.S. administration.
  • The U.S. indicated withdrawal of certain tariffs subject to:
    • India reducing Russian oil imports.
    • Increased purchase of U.S. oil and goods.
    • Reduction of tariff and non-tariff barriers for U.S. products.
  • India’s Russian crude imports reportedly declined from ~40% (2024) to ~25% (early 2026).

Key Exam-Relevant Dimensions

  1. Trade & WTO Angle
  • MFN Principle: Equal tariff treatment to all WTO members.
  • Exception: Allowed under Article XXIV (FTAs/Customs Unions).
  • Preferential concessions to U.S. may require legal structuring under WTO norms.
  • Risk of trade diversion affecting EU, EFTA, and other FTA partners.
  1. Energy Security
  • India imports ~85% of crude oil (Economic Survey data).
  • Russian crude became significant post-2022 due to discounted pricing.
  • Reduction may affect:
    • Import bill.
    • Current Account Deficit.
    • Domestic fuel prices.
  • Energy security pillars: Availability, Affordability, Accessibility, Sustainability.
  1. Strategic Autonomy
  • India’s foreign policy evolution:
  • Non-Alignment → Strategic Autonomy → Multi- Alignment.
  • Concerns over linkage diplomacy (trade tied to foreign policy alignment).
  • Impact on:
    • BRICS.
    • Chabahar
    • Port (Iran).  
    • Russia relations.
    • Indo-Pacific engagements.
  1. Economic Implications
  • Large U.S. purchase commitments may:
    • Increase trade volume.
    • Crowd out other suppliers.
  • Sectoral impact likely in:
    • Agriculture.
    • Manufacturing.
    • Defence imports.
  • Possible effect on domestic industries (tariff reductions).

Static Linkages

  • Article 51 – Promotion of international peace and security.
  • WTO Principles – MFN, National Treatment.
  • Article XXIV of GATT – FTA exception.  
  • Balance of Payments components.
  • Current Account Deficit.
  • RCEP withdrawal (2019) and domestic industry concerns.
  • Quad and Indo-Pacific strategic framework.

Critical Analysis

  • Positives
    • Immediate tariff relief.
    • Improved market access to U.S.
    • Diversification of crude sourcing.
    • Strengthened bilateral partnership.
  • Concerns
    • Compromise on energy affordability.
    •  Strategic autonomy erosion.
    • WTO compliance issues.
    • Diplomatic cost with Russia, Iran.
    • Precedent for conditional agreements.
    • Potential inflationary pressures if oil import cost rises.

Way Forward

  •  Ensure WTO-compatible framework (Article XXIV).  
  • Maintain diversified oil basket.
  • Sector-wise impact assessment before finalisation.  
  • Protect sensitive domestic industries.
  • Preserve multi-alignment doctrine.
  • Enhance renewable energy capacity (500 GW non-fossil target by 2030)
LABOUR CODES EMPOWER WORKERS
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
  • India consolidated 29 Central labour laws into four Labour Codes to modernise labour governance and expand social security.
  • Key debate centres on:
    • Revised definition of wages (minimum 50% of total remuneration).
    • Gratuity entitlement for fixed-term employees after 1 year.
    • Extension of social security to gig and platform workers.
  • Trade unions have raised concerns, including nationwide strike calls.
  • The reforms are positioned as tools for financial inclusion and formalisation of the workforce.

Key Provisions of the Labour Codes

  1. The Four Labour
  • Codes Code on Wages, 2019
  • Industrial Relations Code, 2020
  • Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code, 2020
  • Code on Social Security, 2020
  1. Reform of Wage Definition
  • “Wages” must be at least 50% of total remuneration.
  • Prevents structuring salary to reduce:
    • Provident Fund (PF) contributions.
    • Gratuity liability.
  • Leads to:
    • Higher PF accumulation.
    • Improved pension and gratuity benefits.
    • Greater long-term income protection.
  1. Gratuity for Fixed-Term Employees
  • Eligible for gratuity after 1 year of service. 
  • Earlier requirement under Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972: 5 years.
  • Recognises contractualisation of labour.
  • Converts short-term employment into asset- building opportunity.
  1. Social Security Expansion
  • First-time recognition of gig and platform workers.
  • Provision for Social Security Fund.
  • Portability of benefits across states (important for migrant labour).
  • Integration with EPFO, ESIC mechanisms.
  1. Universal Wage Protection
  • National floor wage concept.
  • Statutory minimum wages extended across sectors.
  • Limits arbitrary wage deductions.
  • Mandates timely payment of wages.

Macroeconomic Implications

  • Income redistribution towards labour increases:
    • Consumption demand.
    • Savings and financial inclusion.  
    • Domestic multiplier effects.
  • Supports inclusive growth and reduces vulnerability to economic shocks.
  • Encourages labour formalisation and social stability.

Static Linkages

  • Article 38 – Promote welfare of the people.
  • Article 39 – Adequate means of livelihood.
  • Article 41 – Right to work and public assistance.
  • Article 43 – Living wage.
  • Article 23 – Prohibition of forced labour.  
  • Concept of Inclusive Growth (Economic Survey).
  • Financial Inclusion architecture: JAM Trinity.
  • Demographic dividend and human capital formation.

Critical Analysis

  • Positives
    • Enhances financial inclusion of workers.
    • Strengthens long-term social security corpus.
    • Recognises gig economy within labour framework.
    • Simplifies compliance via consolidation.
    • Aligns economic growth with social justice.
  • Concerns
    • Increased compliance cost for MSMEs.  
    • Implementation gaps across states.
    • Trade union concerns regarding labour flexibility.
    • Risk of informalisation if compliance burden rises.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen enforcement and digital compliance.
  • Ensure centre-state coordination for uniform implementation.
  • Periodic revision of floor wages linked to inflation.
  • Expand social security coverage database for gig workers.
  • Promote awareness among workers about new entitlements.
OVERDUE UDGRADE

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) released a new CPI series with base year 2024.
  • Previous base year: 2012 (based on Household Consumption Expenditure Survey 2011–12).
  • New series based on Household Consumption Expenditure Survey (HCES) 2023–24.
  • Reflects structural changes in:
    • Consumption patterns.
    • Expansion of welfare schemes (free foodgrain).
    • Growth of digital and service economy.

Key Features

  • Base Year Updated: 2012 → 2024.
  • Food & Beverages Weight Reduced:
    • Earlier: 45.86%
    • Now: 36.75%
  • Expanded Basket of Goods & Services:
    • Inclusion of OTT subscriptions.
    • Online marketplace transactions.
  • Wider Data Collection:
    • Increased physical markets.
    • Inclusion of 12 online marketplaces.
  • Linking Factor Provided for comparability with old series (back-series not fully released).
  • Importance for Economy
    • More realistic inflation measurement.
    • Reduced volatility in headline inflation (due to lower food weight).
    • Better reflection of services inflation.  
  • Improved accuracy for:
    • Monetary policy (RBI’s MPC decisions).  
    • Fiscal planning and Budget estimates.
    • Dearness Allowance (DA) and Dearness Relief (DR) revisions.

Static Linkages

  • CPI compiled by National Statistical Office (NSO).
  • CPI uses Laspeyres Index method.
  • Inflation Targeting Framework (4% ± 2%) under RBI Act, 1934 (amended 2016).
  • CPI is the nominal anchor for monetary policy.
  • Base year revision required to capture structural economic changes.
  • Service sector contributes more than 50% of GDP (Economic Survey).

Issues & Concerns

  • Absence of full back-series data limits long- term comparison.
  • Lower food weight may understate inflation burden on poor households.
  • Online price data may create sampling challenges.
  • Need for regular 5-year revision (avoid long gap like 2012–2024).

Way Forward

  • Release full historical back-series data.  
  • Ensure 5-year periodic revision.
  • Improve digital data methodology.
  • Track food inflation separately for welfare targeting.
  • Maintain transparency in statistical processes.

U.S TRADE PACT IS FIRST STEP

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • The US and India concluded a trade de- escalation agreement after a period of elevated tariffs and diplomatic strain.
  • US tariffs on Indian exports (earlier raised up to ~50%) have been reduced to around 18%.
  • Additional penalties linked to India’s purchase of Russian oil have been rolled back.
  • Tensions were aggravated by:
    • US remarks regarding mediation in Kashmir.
    • Differences over India’s energy imports from Russia.
  • Despite tensions, defence cooperation continued, including a 10-year defence framework and enhanced Indo-Pacific
  • Maritime Domain Awareness (MDA) cooperation.
  • Possibility of revival of a Quad Leaders’ Summit hosted by India.

Key Points

  • Tariff De-escalation
    • Reduction to 18% lowers trade friction but does not fully restore trust.
    • Lower than tariffs imposed on China/Pakistan, signalling relative strategic preference.
  • Strategic Autonomy
    • India continues diversified energy imports to ensure energy security.
    • Reflects India’s long-standing policy of multi-alignment.
  • Pakistan Optics
    • India rejects third-party mediation in Kashmir.
    • Consistent with bilateral resolution principle (Shimla Agreement, 1972).

Defence Cooperation

    • Foundational agreements: LEMOA, COMCASA, BECA.
    • Increased interoperability and joint military exercises.
    • Indo-Pacific remains central to strategic convergence.
  • Institutional Continuity
    • Bureaucratic and defence mechanisms sustained engagement despite political tensions.

Static Linkages

  • Trade and commerce with foreign countries fall under Union List (Entry 41).
  • Executive power in foreign affairs flows from Article 73.
  • Principle of sovereignty and non-interference under international law.
  • Strategic autonomy as a guiding principle of India’s foreign policy.
  • Energy security linked to economic growth and macroeconomic stability (Economic Survey).
  • Bilateral dispute resolution principle under Shimla Agreement (1972).

Critical Analysis

  • Positives
    • Immediate relief to exporters.
    • Reinforces Indo-Pacific strategic cooperation.
    • Maintains defence partnership momentum.
    • Signals partial diplomatic thaw. Concerns
    • Use of tariffs as coercive tools affects predictability.
    • Trust deficit persists at leadership level.
    • Overexposure to US market risks economic vulnerability.
    • Pakistan-related signalling affects strategic sensitivities.

Way Forward

  • Institutionalise trade dialogue mechanisms.
  • Clear diplomatic signalling on non-mediation in bilateral disputes.
  • Diversify export markets to reduce concentration risk.
  • Strengthen Quad cooperation for strategic anchoring.
  • Enhance energy diversification and domestic capacity.

USEPA NOW VOICE FOR DENIAL

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • The administration of Donald Trump has rolled back the 2009 Endangerment Finding.
  • The Endangerment Finding empowered the United States Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) to regulate greenhouse gases (GHGs) under the Clean Air Act.
  • The rollback weakens emission standards for:
  • Automobiles (transport sector – largest emitter in U.S.)
    • Power plants
    • Oil and gas wells
  • EV subsidies and renewable energy incentives expanded under Joe Biden are being withdrawn.
  • The U.S. is historically the largest cumulative CO₂ emitter and currently the second-largest annual emitter globally.

Key Points

  • Endangerment Finding (2009):
    • Based on scientific assessment that GHGs endanger public health and welfare.
    • Enabled regulation of CO₂ under the Clean Air Act.
  • Transport Sector:
    • Largest source of GHG emissions in the U.S.
  • Paris Agreement (2015):
    • Based on Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs).
    • Non-uniform and nationally decided targets.
  • CBDR Principle:
    • Recognizes historical responsibility and differing capabilities.

Static Linkages

  • Greenhouse gases: CO₂, CH₄, N₂O, water vapour (NCERT Geography).
  • Greenhouse Effect and Global Warming mechanism.
  • Clean Air Act – Pollution control legislation framework.
  • UNFCCC (1992) – Stabilization of GHG concentrations.
  • Paris Agreement – Temperature goal: well below 2°C, pursue 1.5°C.
  • Polluter Pays Principle.
  • Intergenerational Equity (Brundtland Report).

Critical Analysis

  • Implications
    • Weakens science-based environmental regulation.
    • May slow global climate mitigation efforts.  
    • Encourages fossil-fuel dependence.
    • Affects global climate diplomacy and credibility of developed nations.
  • Economic Argument
    • Short-term industrial relief.
    • Energy affordability concerns.
    • Potential slowdown in green innovation and EV transition.
  • Climate Justice Dimension
    • Historical responsibility of developed countries.
    • Burden shifts disproportionately to developing nations.
    •  Intergenerational equity concerns.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen global climate cooperation beyond domestic political cycles.
  • Align sustainability with economic incentives (green jobs, industrial policy).
  • Promote carbon pricing and market-based mechanisms.
  • Ensure just transition for fossil-fuel-dependent communities.
  • Strengthen adaptation and climate finance mechanisms.