Current Affairs 05 January 2026
Content Venezuela V-P to Take Over as Maduro Held in U.S. Jail Delhi Government to Declare Rabies a Notifiable Disease Ghost SIM Cards and Internal Security Risks Wolf Supermoon — First Full Moon of the Year Somnath Swabhiman Parva — Civilisational Significance of Somnath Temple Nanobots in Targeted Cancer Treatment Saudi-Backed Forces Regain Control of Hadramout Province (Yemen) Venezuela V-P to take over as Maduro held in U.S. jail Why in News ? Venezuela’s Supreme Court appointed Vice-President Delcy Rodríguez as Acting President after President Nicolás Maduro was detained by U.S. authorities in New York during a covert night-time operation. The U.S. move — conducted without Congressional approval — led Venezuela to term it an “imperialist intervention.” India expressed concern for the well-being of Venezuelan people and called for dialogue and regional stability. Relevance GS-II | International Relations, Global Politics, India’s Foreign Policy Power transition, legitimacy & constitutional processes in foreign states U.S. interventionism vs sovereignty debate Political instability, sanctions, oil geopolitics, migration crisis India’s energy stakes & strategic neutrality Basics — Political Context of Venezuela System: Presidential Republic under the Bolivarian Constitution. Ruling establishment: United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV). Maduro Presidency: Since 2013, succeeding Hugo Chávez. Venezuela faces: hyperinflation economic sanctions oil-sector collapse mass outward migration (~7.7 million people since 2015, per UNHCR) Economic & Security Context Venezuela holds the world’s largest proven oil reserves (~303 billion barrels, OPEC). Oil output fell from ~3.2 million bpd (1998) to ~0.8–0.9 million bpd (2024, OPEC estimates) due to sanctions + infrastructure decline. Political instability worsens: currency collapse food & fuel shortages social protection stress India’s Position India called for: peace, dialogue, and stability protection of Venezuelan people’s interests India has energy-economic stakes: historic crude imports & investments by ONGC Videsh in Venezuelan fields (affected by sanctions). Global Reactions — Likely Trajectories Supportive Western blocs may justify action under anti-narcotics/security framing. Russia, China, and regional allies likely to condemn U.S. intervention as sovereignty violation. Risk of: internal political uncertainty elite realignments street-level mobilisation or repression Venezuela Location & Region Located in northern South America; coastline along the Caribbean Sea & Atlantic Ocean. Lies north of the Equator; part of the Tropical zone. Neighbouring Countries (Clockwise) Colombia (W & SW) Brazil (S & SE) Guyana (E) — includes the disputed Essequibo region. Strategic Geography Access to Caribbean maritime routes and Atlantic oil-shipping lanes. Close proximity to Panama Canal trade corridor (regional relevance). Major Physical Features Orinoco River Basin (one of South America’s largest river systems). Guiana Highlands & tepui plateaus in the southeast. Llanos grasslands in central Venezuela. Andes extensions in the west (Merida Andes). Natural Resources Orinoco Belt → among the world’s largest heavy-oil reserves. Mineral resources concentrated in Guiana Shield region. Geopolitical Hotspots Guyana–Essequibo territorial dispute (east). Migration corridors toward Colombia & Brazil (west/south crossings). Delhi govt. to declare rabies a notifiable disease to prevent deaths, improve surveillance Why in News ? The Delhi Government is set to declare rabies a notifiable disease to improve surveillance, mandatory case reporting, early detection, and death prevention, as announced by Health Minister Pankaj Kumar Singh. The move follows Supreme Court directions on stray-dog management and rabies deaths, including the death of a six-year-old child taken up suo motu. Aim: Zero human deaths from rabies in Delhi through strengthened public-health response. Relevance GS-II | Welfare, Health Systems, Governance & Public Policy Disease surveillance, mandatory reporting, One-Health coordination Urban governance, judicial-policy linkage (Supreme Court context) GS-III | Public Health, Disaster & Social Sector Zoonotic diseases, preventive care, epidemiology, vaccination ecosystem Basics — What is a “Notifiable Disease”? A disease that must be mandatorily reported by: government & private hospitals medical colleges & clinics individual practitioners Reporting supports: real-time surveillance trend mapping outbreak response resource allocation (Comparable examples: TB, measles, dengue — notified under various state/national frameworks.) Rabies — Public Health Basics Cause: Viral zoonotic disease transmitted mostly via dog bites. Fatality: ~100% fatal once symptoms appear. Prevention: Completely preventable through timely PEP (post-exposure prophylaxis) — wound wash, anti-rabies vaccine, and rabies immunoglobulin when indicated. WHO Target: Zero human deaths from dog-mediated rabies by 2030. What the Delhi Notification Will Do ? Mandatory reporting of suspected, probable, and confirmed human rabies cases. Coverage includes all government and private health facilities. Enables: case tracking & disease mapping coordination between human & animal health systems (One Health approach) targeted preventive action in high-risk localities India — Key Facts & Data on Rabies India’s global share Accounts for ~36% of global rabies deaths (WHO estimates). Global deaths ≈ 59,000/year → India contributes ~18,000–20,000 deaths annually, mostly dog-mediated. Burden profile >90% human rabies cases follow dog bites. Children & rural poor are the most affected groups. Under-reporting remains high due to weak surveillance and deaths occurring outside hospitals. Bite incidence National bite-case load estimated at 15–17 million dog-bite cases/year (IDSP & State surveillance compilations). Global Context India contributes a significant share of global rabies deaths, largely dog-mediated. Notification aligns with: National Action Plan for Rabies Elimination (NAPRE) WHO “Zero by 2030” goal Ayushman Bharat–public health surveillance strengthening Way Forward Scale-up PEP access & supply chains (ARV + RIG). Mass dog vaccination & sterilisation with reliable enumeration. Time-bound reporting protocols & digital case registry. Community awareness on: immediate wound-washing early hospital reporting Inter-departmental joint action under One-Health framework. Ghost SIM Cards Why in News ? Investigations into the Red Fort blast module (Nov 2025) revealed that the accused allegedly used “ghost SIM cards” and encrypted apps to communicate with handlers in Pakistan . These SIMs were issued using misused Aadhaar identities and remained active on messaging apps even without being physically present in the device — creating a serious traceability gap. Following this, the Centre issued a directive (28 Nov 2025) requiring app-based communication services to remain linked to an active physical SIM to curb such misuse. Relevance GS-III | Internal Security, Cybersecurity & Terror Networks Identity theft, encryption misuse, traceability loopholes Tech-enabled radicalisation & cross-border communication Regulation of telecom-KYC and digital governance What is a Ghost SIM Card? A SIM obtained or operated without verifiable, lawful user identity, or one that continues to enable communication after decoupling from the device/SIM holder. Typically created through: Aadhaar/KYC identity theft or forgery SIM mule networks issuing connections in others’ names Decoupled messaging logins (apps running without a live SIM) Purpose: anonymity, evasion of lawful interception, cross-border covert communication. How Ghost SIMs Work ? — Operational Mechanisms Dual-phone / dual-identity protocol Clean phone → in real name, normal activity Terror / crime phone → ghost SIM + encrypted apps only App–SIM Decoupling WhatsApp/Telegram accounts continue after SIM removal Handlers can retain control from outside India Cross-border persistence SIM registered in India → account active across PoK KYC Exploitation SIMs issued using stolen Aadhaar details of unsuspecting civilians Why Ghost SIMs Are a Security Risk ? Breaks subscriber traceability Enables anonymous cross-border direction Shields operatives using professional cover (“white-collar modules”) Exploits encryption + identity fraud + telecom loopholes Complicates forensics, metadata mapping, & legal intercept Way Forward Stronger KYC accountability periodic audits, retailer licensing, strict penalties Device-binding & anomaly detection auto-logout on SIM removal / geo-anomaly SIM lifecycle risk scoring flag multi-state / multi-device behaviour Cross-platform traceability protocols lawful metadata-sharing timelines Public awareness protection of Aadhaar credentials, reporting misuse Capacity building ATS/SIT cyber-forensics & telecom-analytics units The Wolf Supermoon Why in News ? The first full moon of 2026 — popularly called the Wolf Moon — coincided with the Moon being close to perigee, producing what is popularly termed a “Wolf Supermoon.” It reached peak brightness on January 2, 2026 (IST) and appeared slightly larger and brighter than an average full moon. Relevance GS-I | Geography — Earth–Moon System & Natural Phenomena Perigee–apogee, orbital mechanics, tides, perception vs physical reality Basics — What is a “Wolf Moon”? Traditional name for the first full moon of January. Origin traced to seasonal folklore and almanacs in northern cultures, where: winter camps reported wolves howling more frequently in harsh winters. Important: The name is cultural, not scientific — the Moon itself does not change behaviour. What is a “Supermoon”? The Moon’s orbit is elliptical (oval), not circular. Two key orbital positions: Perigee → Moon is closest to Earth Apogee → Moon is farthest from Earth When a full moon occurs near perigee, it is popularly called a Supermoon. Observable Effects Appears ~7–14% larger and ~15–30% brighter than a micromoon (at apogee). Difference is subtle to the naked eye, clearer in side-by-side photographs. (Term “supermoon” is popular rather than official; astronomers call it a Perigee-Syzygy full moon.) Wolf Supermoon — What People Actually See ? Slight increase in: apparent angular size surface brightness Moon Illusion Effect The Moon appears larger near the horizon due to human visual-perception bias, not astronomy. Scientific Concepts Linked Kepler’s Laws & Tides Perigee moons slightly enhance ocean tides (perigean spring tides) — but changes are modest. Earth–Moon Distance Range Perigee ≈ ~356,500 km Apogee ≈ ~406,700 km Lunar Phase + Orbit Interaction Supermoon requires phase alignment + orbital position. Comparative Terms Micromoon → full moon near apogee (smaller & dimmer). Blue Moon → second full moon in a month (calendar term). Harvest Moon → full moon closest to autumn equinox (seasonal term). Why These Names Matter ? Reflects interaction of culture, nature observation, and early time-keeping. Demonstrates how popular astronomy terms differ from scientific terminology — important for science communication. Somnath Swabhiman Parva Why in News ? The article reflects on the civilisational and cultural significance of the Somnath Temple in Gujarat, particularly in the context of: 1,000 years since the first major attack on the temple (1026 CE by Mahmud of Ghazni). The temple’s repeated destruction and reconstruction across centuries, symbolising resilience of faith, culture, and national spirit. Contemporary relevance — Somnath as a symbol of civilisational continuity, unity, and cultural revival in modern India. Relevance GS-I | Indian Culture, Heritage & Architecture Jyotirlinga tradition, temple architecture, historical continuity GS-I / GS-II | Nation-building & Post-Independence Consolidation Cultural resilience, identity revival, leadership roles (Patel–Munshi) Basics — About the Somnath Temple Location: Prabhas Patan, Gir Somnath district, Gujarat (Western coast of India). One of the 12 Jyotirlingas of Lord Shiva. Ancient coastal pilgrimage and trade hub. Architecture: Rebuilt in Chaulukya (Solanki) style using pink sandstone. Governance: Managed by Shree Somnath Trust. Historical Timeline — Destruction & Reconstruction 1026 CE — Mahmud of Ghazni invades; temple looted and destroyed. Subsequent medieval periods — Multiple attacks by foreign invaders; repeated rebuilding by local rulers and devotees. Late 19th century — Swami Vivekananda visits ruins; emphasises spiritual-civilisational strength. Post-Independence reconstruction Leadership of Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel (1947 onwards). Supported by K.M. Munshi and others. Re-consecrated and reopened in 1951. Seen as a symbol of national resurgence and cultural self-assertion. Civilisational Themes Somnath as a symbol of resilience Represents faith surviving conquest, plunder, and colonial suppression. Cultural continuity Despite repeated destruction, the temple was rebuilt again and again — reflecting collective civilisational memory. Nation-building symbolism Reconstruction linked to: self-confidence after independence reclaiming heritage and identity restoring dignity after centuries of subjugation Nanobots in targeted cancer treatment Why in News ? Researchers at IISc Bengaluru, led by Dr. Ambarish Ghosh, are developing medical nanobots capable of navigating through blood, tissues, and cells to deliver high-precision, minimally invasive cancer therapy. The work recently received the 2025 Tata Transformation Prize, highlighting its translational potential in next-generation cancer care. Relevance GS-III | Science & Technology, Biotechnology & Robotics Medical nanorobotics, precision oncology, translational research GS-II | Health & Innovation Policy Affordable care, regulatory approval, ethical-safety considerations What are Medical Nanobots? Microscopic robotic devices engineered at the nano/micro-scale. Designed to swim or move inside the body, guided by magnetic fields or other stimuli. Can be functionalised with drugs, biomolecules, or nano-heaters to perform targeted therapeutic actions. How These Nanobots Work? Inspired by bacterial flagella / helical propellers → move through tissue and fluids. Controlled externally via magnetic navigation systems. Can: Deliver drugs directly to tumour sites Generate localised heat (hyperthermia) to kill cancer cells Act as MRI-visible beacons for precision tracking Aim: Maximum tumour kill with minimal damage to healthy tissue. Why They Matter ? Targeted therapy → reduces side-effects vs systemic chemotherapy. Minimally invasive → avoids large incisions or radiation spread. Precision medicine enabler → integrates imaging + navigation + therapy. Potentially lower long-term treatment costs and better survival outcomes. Challenges & Risks Biocompatibility and immune response Safety clearance & regulatory approval Scalability, cost, and clinician adoption Need for long-term toxicity and clearance data. Saudi-backed forces regain control of Hadramout province (Yemen) Why in News ? Saudi-backed National Shield Forces retook the port city of Mukalla and regained control of Hadramout province in Yemen after it was seized earlier by southern separatists. The development follows Saudi airstrikes and the withdrawal of forces aligned with the Emirati-backed Southern Transitional Council (STC). Significance: reflects shifting power dynamics in Yemen’s civil war and the Saudi–UAE rivalry within the anti-Houthi bloc. Relevance GS-II | International Relations & West Asia Geopolitics Yemen civil war dynamics, Saudi-UAE divergence, proxy actors Security of Arabian Sea–Gulf of Aden region GS-I | World Geography / Places in News Hadramout province, Mukalla port city, Arabian Sea littoral geography Places in News Hadramout (Hadhramaut) Province Largest governorate of Yemen (by area), located in the eastern part of the country. Borders: Saudi Arabia (N), Oman (E), Arabian Sea (S), Yemeni governorates to the west. Known for desert plateaus (Hadramawt valley) and historic trading towns. Mukalla Capital of Hadramout province and a strategic port city on the Arabian Sea. Major coastal hub for trade, fishing, and logistics. Has previously been a stronghold for Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) (2015–16 period — prelims-relevant).