Details sought on inquiry, prosecution wings of the Lokpal
Details Sought on Inquiry & Prosecution Wings of the Lokpal
1. At a Glance
- Lokpal is India's apex anti-corruption ombudsman established under The Lokpal and Lokayuktas Act, 2013, to receive and investigate complaints of corruption against public servants including the Prime Minister, Ministers, MPs, and Group A/B/C/D officers. [S1]
- The Act mandates two statutory wings — an Inquiry Wing (Section 11) and a Prosecution Wing — to operationally discharge its investigative and prosecutorial functions; neither has been fully operationalised over a decade since enactment. [S2][S4]
- A Parliamentary Standing Committee (160th Report, March 2026) has formally flagged the incomplete operationalisation, making this an active accountability/governance flashpoint. [S4]
- UPSC relevance: tested under GS-II (Statutory Bodies, Governance, Transparency, Accountability) and GS-IV (Ethics in Public Administration).
2. Why in the News
- March 23, 2026: The Department-related Parliamentary Standing Committee on Personnel, Public Grievances, Law and Justice, in its 160th Report, sought details from the government on steps taken to fully operationalise the Lokpal's inquiry and prosecution wings — more than a decade after the Act came into force (January 1, 2014). [S4]
- The panel noted that appointment of the Director of Inquiry and staffing of the inquiry wing per the approved organogram is still in process as of 2026. [S4]
- The prosecution wing was formally constituted through an order dated June 6, 2025, but remains newly stood up. [S4]
- The committee further noted that prosecution matters are currently being routed through the CBI, underscoring the Lokpal's continued operational dependence on existing agencies. [S4]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1966 | First Administrative Reforms Commission recommends creation of a Lokpal on lines of Scandinavian Ombudsman |
| 1968–2011 | Eight Lokpal Bills introduced in Parliament; all lapse without enactment |
| 2011 | Jan Lokpal Bill movement (Anna Hazare) catalyses political will [S3] |
| December 2013 | Lokpal and Lokayuktas Act, 2013 passed |
| January 1, 2014 | Act comes into force |
| 2014–2019 | Institution remains headless; no chairperson/members appointed |
| March 27, 2019 | Lokpal begins functioning with appointment of chairperson (Justice Pinaki Chandra Ghose, retd.) and members |
| 2019–2025 | Inquiry wing staffing in process; prosecution matters handled via CBI |
| June 6, 2025 | Prosecution wing formally constituted by order |
| March 2026 | Parliamentary committee (160th Report) flags continued gaps |
4. Core Static Facts
Governing Law - The Lokpal and Lokayuktas Act, 2013 (also called the Lokpal Act) [S1][S2] - Came into force: January 1, 2014 - Lokpal began functioning: March 27, 2019
Structural Wings
| Wing | Statutory Basis | Head | Rank Requirement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Inquiry Wing | Section 11 of the Act | Director of Inquiry | At least Additional Secretary rank [S1] |
| Prosecution Wing | Separate provision in the Act | Director of Prosecution | At least Additional Secretary rank [S1] |
Functions - Inquiry Wing: Conducts preliminary inquiry into corruption-related offences; must complete inquiry within 60 days of reference [S1] - Prosecution Wing: Initiates prosecution of public servants before Special Courts set up under the Act [S1][S2] - Full investigation (post-preliminary inquiry, delegated to CBI/other agencies): to be completed within 6 months [S1]
Jurisdiction - Public servants covered: PM (with conditions), Union Ministers, MPs, Group A/B/C/D Central Government employees, employees of Central PSUs/autonomous bodies - Offences: Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988
Administrative Ministry - Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT), Ministry of Personnel, Public Grievances and Pensions
Parliamentary Oversight - Department-related Standing Committee on Personnel, Public Grievances, Law and Justice (Joint Committee of both Houses)
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- Lokpal is a statutory body (not a constitutional one); derives authority entirely from the 2013 Act — any structural gap directly impairs its statutory mandate. [S1][S2]
- Section 11 creates a mandatory obligation ("shall constitute") — the decade-long delay in staffing the inquiry wing raises questions of statutory non-compliance. [S4]
- Prosecution before Special Courts (designated under the Act) requires a functional prosecution wing; routing via CBI is a workaround, not a statutory solution. [S4]
Ethical / Governance
- The Lokpal was conceived as India's apex anti-corruption watchdog with structural independence from executive interference; incomplete operationalisation undermines that independence. [S2][S4]
- Dependence on CBI for prosecution creates a conflict-of-interest risk: CBI itself is under the executive's supervisory control, diluting Lokpal's autonomous prosecutorial authority. [S4]
- Parliamentary scrutiny (160th Report) reflects the accountability deficit — the very body meant to ensure accountability has not been held accountable for its own operationalisation. [S4]
Administrative
- Gap between law on paper (2013) and law in operation (2019 onwards, and still partial) is a classic implementation failure — reflects bureaucratic inertia, inter-agency turf issues. [S4]
- Approved organogram exists but staffing remains incomplete even after 7 years of functional existence (since 2019). [S4]
- Coordination with CBI, ED, and State police is mandated but informal in practice due to absence of the inquiry wing's full complement. [S1]
Historical
- India's Lokpal trajectory spans nearly six decades (1966–2019) — among the longest gestational periods for any anti-corruption institution globally. [S3]
- Comparator: Scandinavian Ombudsman model (Sweden 1809) — original inspiration; fully staffed and empowered within its first year of operation. [S3]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- June 6, 2025: Prosecution wing of the Lokpal formally constituted by an order — a significant (if belated) structural step. [S4]
- March 23, 2026: Parliamentary Standing Committee's 160th Report (on Personnel, Public Grievances, Law and Justice) tabled — flagged:
- Inquiry wing appointment/staffing still in process
- Prosecution matters still being handled through CBI
- Committee "desires to be apprised" of present status and steps taken [S4]
- Committee specifically asked for coordination framework with existing investigative agencies to be clarified. [S4]
7. Prelims Hooks
- The Lokpal and Lokayuktas Act, 2013 came into force on January 1, 2014. [S1]
- Lokpal began functioning (with its first chairperson) only on March 27, 2019 — over five years after enactment. [S4]
- First Lokpal Chairperson: Justice Pinaki Chandra Ghose (retd. Supreme Court judge).
- The Inquiry Wing is mandated under Section 11 of the Lokpal Act. [S4]
- The Inquiry Wing is to be headed by a Director of Inquiry of at least Additional Secretary rank. [S1]
- Preliminary inquiry by the Inquiry Wing must be completed within 60 days of reference. [S1]
- Full investigation (delegated to agencies like CBI) must be completed within 6 months. [S1]
- The Prosecution Wing was formally constituted by an order dated June 6, 2025. [S4]
- Prosecution is initiated before Special Courts designated under the Lokpal Act. [S1]
- As of March 2026, prosecution matters are being handled through the CBI — not the Lokpal's own prosecution wing. [S4]
- The Parliamentary panel that flagged the gaps is the Standing Committee on Personnel, Public Grievances, Law and Justice. [S4]
- The relevant report is the committee's 160th Report (referenced March 2026). [S4]
- Lokpal's jurisdiction covers offences under the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988. [S1][S2]
- Lokpal is a statutory body, not a constitutional body — no Article of the Constitution directly establishes it. [S1]
- The Jan Lokpal movement of 2011 (Anna Hazare) was the direct catalyst for passage of the 2013 Act. [S3]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper: GS-II (Governance, Constitution, Polity, Social Justice)
Syllabus Headings: - "Statutory, regulatory and various quasi-judicial bodies" - "Transparency and accountability in governance" - "Government policies and interventions for development"
Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "More than a decade after the Lokpal and Lokayuktas Act, 2013 came into force, the Lokpal's inquiry and prosecution wings remain incompletely operationalised. Critically examine the structural and governance challenges that have hobbled the institution." (250 words, GS-II) 2. "The routing of Lokpal prosecution cases through the CBI undermines the spirit of the anti-corruption law. Do you agree? Discuss the implications for institutional independence." (150 words, GS-II/GS-IV) 3. "Trace the evolution of the Lokpal institution in India from 1966 to 2026 and evaluate the gap between legislative intent and administrative reality." (250 words, GS-II)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 (and 2018 amendments) | Primary law under which Lokpal investigates; essential for jurisdiction understanding |
| Central Vigilance Commission (CVC) | Parallel anti-corruption body for central services; compare mandate, powers, and independence |
| Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) | Current de facto investigation arm for Lokpal cases; structural dependence raises independence questions |
| Lokayukta (State level) | State-level equivalent mandated by the same 2013 Act; varying implementation across states |
| Second Administrative Reforms Commission (2nd ARC) Recommendations | Key reform recommendations on anti-corruption architecture |
| Whistleblowers Protection Act, 2014 | Complementary legislation; protects those who report corruption to bodies like Lokpal |
| Parliamentary Standing Committees — Role and Powers | Context for understanding how the 160th Report fits into legislative oversight |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Constitutional vs. Statutory: Aspirants confuse Lokpal with a constitutional body — it is purely statutory (created by an Act of Parliament, not the Constitution). Contrast with CAG (Article 148) or UPSC (Article 315).
- Date confusion: The Act came into force January 1, 2014; Lokpal started functioning March 27, 2019 — these are two different dates often conflated.
- Section number: The Inquiry Wing is mandated under Section 11 (not Section 14 or other provisions). Prosecution wing is a separate provision — do not club them under one section.
- CBI vs. Lokpal's own wings: Many aspirants assume Lokpal investigates cases itself — in practice, it refers cases to CBI/other agencies for investigation, and prosecution is also currently routed through CBI, not the Lokpal's own prosecution wing (which was only constituted June 2025). [S4]
- Lokpal ≠ Lokayukta: Lokpal covers Union (Central) public servants; Lokayuktas are State-level bodies established under the same 2013 Act (or separate State laws). The 2013 Act mandates states to set up Lokayuktas within one year — compliance has been uneven.
11. Sources
- [S1] PRS India — Lokpal Act — https://prsindia.org/articles-by-prs-team/lokpal-act — (Tier 1/2 equivalent: Tier 2 reference)
- [S2] PRS India — All You Wanted to Know About the Lokpal Bill — https://prsindia.org/articles-by-prs-team/all-you-wanted-to-know-about-the-lokpal-bill — (Tier 2 reference)
- [S3] PRS India — FAQ on Lok Pal Bill — https://prsindia.org/theprsblog/faq-lok-pal-bill — (Tier 2 reference)
- [S4] The Hindu — "Details sought on inquiry, prosecution wings of the Lokpal" — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-03-23/th_international/articleGG5FOJ824-13954914.ece — (Tier 4: Indian journalism; article excerpt supplied as primary source)