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Article 142 Current Affairs for UPSC

A complete UPSC revision trail for Article 142: 2 published analyses, their syllabus connections and closely related themes.

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Environment
GS3
31/05/2026

Chambal Sand Mining Crisis: Why the Supreme Court Took Suo Motu Action to Save the Gharial

Why in News

The Supreme Court has invoked its extraordinary powers under Article 142 to crack down on rampant illegal sand mining inside the tri-state National Chambal Gharial Sanctuary, pulling up Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh for "casual and indolent" inaction after two forest guards were killed in 2026. This in-depth explainer covers the Chambal sanctuary's unique ecology, the critically endangered gharial, India's sand-mining laws (MMDR Act, Sustainable Sand Mining Guidelines), the Deepak Kumar verdict, denotification controversies, and the constitutional principles of environmental governance — everything a UPSC aspirant needs in one place. Why in News The Supreme Court of India is hearing a suo motu case on large-scale illegal sand mining inside and around the National Chambal (Gharial) Sanctuary, a riverine protected area shared by Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh. In a series of strongly worded orders through April and May 2026, the Court has rebuked the three state governments for administrative apathy, linked their inaction to the killing of frontline forest staff, and invoked Article 142 of the Constitution to issue sweeping enforcement directions. The case has brought national attention to sand mining as an environmental and rule-of-law crisis, and to the survival of the critically endangered gharial, whose last major wild stronghold is the Chambal.

National Chambal SanctuaryIllegal Sand MiningGharial Conservation+2
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Polity
GS2
30/05/2026

SC's 3-Month Rule for Reserved Judgments Explained: Article 142, Right to Speedy Trial & Article 21

Why in News

The Supreme Court of India, on 29 May 2026, invoked its extraordinary powers under Article 142 to issue binding, nationwide guidelines directing all High Courts to pronounce reserved judgments within three months, decide bail matters the same or next day, and upload verdicts within 24 hours. Linking judicial delay to a violation of the right to personal liberty under Article 21, the Court created an enforceable accountability framework. This article explains reserved judgments, the Article 142 power, the right to a speedy trial, landmark precedents like Anil Rai and Hussainara Khatoon, and the pendency crisis — everything a UPSC aspirant needs in one place.

Reserved JudgmentsArticle 142Right to Speedy Trial+2

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