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The Citizen Crisis Response Network (CCRN) is RTI Wiki's operational playbook for the 100 most common modern Indian crises β€” fraud, civic-services failure, housing disputes, healthcare overcharging, harassment, immigration, investment scams, online safety. Each guide gives the 5-minute verification drill, the first-72-hour recovery plan, the statute + government body + case law trust signals, sample legal-notice / FIR / RTI text, FAQs, and the precise enforcement pathway. Every article shows what to do in the first 30 minutes β€” the window where 60-80% of money / opportunity / legal protection is recoverable.

About this article β€” Expertise, Experience, Authoritativeness, Trust (E-E-A-T)

Field Detail
Reviewed by Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak, RTI Wiki editorial team
Expertise Indian citizen rights, RTI Act 2005, consumer protection law (CPA 2019), cybercrime recovery (BNS 2023), disaster management framework (DM Act 2005), banking regulation (RBI schemes)
Sources NDMA (ndma.gov.in), MHA (mha.gov.in), PIB (pib.gov.in), Cyber Crime Portal (cybercrime.gov.in), National Consumer Helpline (consumerhelpline.gov.in), RTI Online (rtionline.gov.in), India.gov.in, NIDM (nidm.gov.in), NDRF (ndrf.gov.in)
Last reviewed July 2026
Accuracy note Helpline numbers verified against official government portals as of July 2026. Always cross-check with the official portal before acting. Crisis protocols evolve β€” bookmark this page for updates.

πŸ” Search the CCRN library

  • Multi-filter keyword search across 100 articles Β· 15 clusters Β· instant results
  • AI assistant answers your question in plain English, grounded in the CCRN library, with source links + suggested follow-up questions
  • Type a question (e.g. β€œWhat do I do if a service app cancels my booking?” or β€œHow do I block a stolen SIM?”) and the AI cites the relevant guides
How to use this manual
Search by keyword (Ctrl+F) β†’ open the relevant article β†’ run the verification drill BEFORE any payment / signing / consent β†’ if the worst happens, follow the first-72-hour checklist β†’ escalate via the right forum (NCH 1915, NCRP 1930, RERA, Consumer Court e-Daakhil, NGT, High Court Article 226). Bookmark this page; share with anyone over 60 in your family.

🧠 Sister hub: Citizen Intelligence
CCRN tells you what to do in a crisis. Citizen Intelligence explains how the complaint system really works inside β€” the CRM ticket, the surveyor file, the EPFO desk, the ombudsman, the RERA registry. Read it before your next escalation.

What Should You Do in the First 30 Minutes of Any Crisis?

The first 30 minutes after you detect a fraud, overcharge, harassment, or service failure are the most critical window. This is when 60-80% of recoverable money, opportunity, and legal protection can be secured β€” or lost. Follow this universal protocol:

  1. Step 1 β€” Document everything (0-5 min): Take screenshots of messages, call logs, transaction IDs, receipts. Note timestamps. Photograph physical evidence (damaged goods, wrong bills, illegal notices).
  2. Step 2 β€” Freeze the bleeding (5-10 min): If money is involved, call your bank's hotline immediately to request a freeze or chargeback. Dial 1930 for cyber fraud fund freeze. Block compromised SIM cards via CEIR portal.
  3. Step 3 β€” File the first complaint (10-20 min): Register on the correct platform β€” NCRP (1930) for cybercrime, 1915 for consumer issues, CPGRAMS for central government grievances, your state's municipal portal for civic issues.
  4. Step 4 β€” Preserve evidence chain (20-30 min): Do not delete messages or emails. Do not confront the fraudster with threats. Export call logs. Download bank statements. Write down a chronological timeline while memory is fresh.

Key principle: Never pay to β€œresolve” a crisis from the same channel that created it. If someone calls about a β€œfailed transaction” and asks you to verify via a link β€” that IS the scam. See How to Verify a Genuine Government Website for the .gov.in verification drill.

Which Helpline Number Should You Call for Each Crisis?

India's emergency and crisis helpline ecosystem has grown significantly. The challenge is knowing which number handles what. The comparison table below maps every major crisis type to the correct helpline, its scope, and the response you can expect. Save these in every family phone.

Crisis Type Helpline Number Scope / Jurisdiction Response Time Govt. Authority
Cyber crime + UPI fraud 1930 Online financial fraud, phishing, UPI scam Fund freeze request initiated Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre (I4C), MHA
Consumer complaint 1915 Defective products, service failures, overcharging Mediation within 30 days National Consumer Helpline (NCH), Dept. of Consumer Affairs
Water supply complaint 1916 Municipal water supply, sewerage (most metros) Jurisdiction-specific Local municipal corporation
Banking Ombudsman 14448 Bank service deficiency, unauthorized transactions RBI scheme β€” resolution within 30 days RBI Integrated Ombudsman Scheme
Medical emergency 108 Free state ambulance service (most states) Immediate dispatch State health dept / National Health Authority
Maternal / child health 102 NHM-funded ambulance for pregnant women, children Priority dispatch National Health Mission
Police / general emergency 100 / 112 Unified emergency response (ERSS) Immediate dispatch Ministry of Home Affairs
MEA Madad (overseas citizens) 1800-11-3090 Indian citizens in distress abroad 24Γ—7 support Ministry of External Affairs, Govt. of India
NOTTO (organ transplant) 1100 Organ trafficking, transplant queries Investigation referral National Organ and Tissue Transplant Organisation
Childline 1098 Child trafficking, abuse, exploitation 24Γ—7 rescue coordination Childline India Foundation / MWCD
GST tip-off 1800-1200-232 Tax evasion, fake invoices Investigation by CBIC Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs
NHRC (human rights) 011-23385368 Human rights violations by state actors Complaint registration National Human Rights Commission
Women's helpline 181 Domestic violence, harassment, dowry 24Γ—7 in most states National Commission for Women / state depts
Disaster management 1070 / 1077 Natural disasters, floods, earthquakes SDMA coordination National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA)
Railway helpline 139 Train accidents, security, medical Integrated response Indian Railways

Tip: If you are unsure which number to call, start with 112 (unified emergency) β€” they will route you to the correct department. For online fraud specifically, always use 1930 rather than a general police number β€” the cybercrime portal has direct integration with banks for fund freeze.

How Does the Disaster Management Framework Protect Citizens During Crises?

The Disaster Management Act, 2005 established a three-tier institutional framework that directly affects citizen safety during natural and man-made disasters. Understanding this structure helps you know who to approach during floods, earthquakes, industrial accidents, pandemics, or large-scale emergencies.

  • National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) β€” Headed by the Prime Minister; lays down policies, plans, and guidelines for disaster management. Official portal: ndma.gov.in. NDMA issues disaster-specific guidelines (earthquake, flood, cyclone, chemical, biological, nuclear) that state and district authorities must follow.
  • State Disaster Management Authority (SDMA) β€” Headed by the Chief Minister; each state has its own SDMA (e.g., Kerala SDMA). SDMAs are the first-line operational authority during a state-level disaster.
  • District Disaster Management Authority (DDMA) β€” Headed by the District Collector / DM; this is the local level where most citizen-facing disaster response actually happens.
  • National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) β€” 12 battalions specialized in search, rescue, and relief operations. Deployed at the request of state governments. Portal: ndrf.gov.in.
  • National Institute of Disaster Management (NIDM) β€” Capacity building, training, and research. Portal: nidm.gov.in.

During an active disaster, the DDMA and District Magistrate have extraordinary powers under Section 34 of the DM Act 2005 β€” they can requisition resources, evacuate areas, and direct any department to assist. Citizens have the right to demand evacuation, shelter, food, and medical aid under these provisions.

For citizen grievances related to disaster response failures (delayed evacuation, inadequate relief, denied compensation), RTI applications can be filed with the DDMA or SDMA to demand transparency on disaster preparedness plans, relief fund utilization, and response timelines.

Indian law provides multiple layers of protection across different crisis types. Knowing the correct statute and forum determines whether your complaint succeeds:

  • BNS 2023 (Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita) β€” Replaced the IPC. Key sections for citizen crises: Section 318 (cheating), Section 319 (cheating by personation), Section 336 (fraudulent execution of deed of transfer), Section 200 (using a false declaration as true). For domestic violence / cruelty: Section 85 (cruelty by husband). See also: cheque bounce under Section 138 Ni Act.
  • Consumer Protection Act 2019 (CPA) β€” Covers defective products, deficient services, unfair trade practices, misleading advertisements. File at DCDRC (β‚Ή100 fee), State Commission, or NCDRC. Online filing via e-Daakhil. See Consumer Court filing guide and how to check consumer complaint status.
  • Information Technology Act, 2000 β€” Sections 66C (identity theft), 66D (cheating by personation), 43A (data protection). Used alongside BNS for cybercrime cases. See cyber crime complaint guide.
  • RTI Act 2005 β€” Transparency weapon for government-related crises. When a government department delays action, a well-filed RTI forces accountability. See RTI Act 2005 complete guide and Citizen RTI Playbook.
  • Banking Regulation Act / RBI schemes β€” Zero-liability framework for unauthorized electronic transactions (RBI circular, 6 July 2017). Banking Ombudsman under RB-IOS 2021. See Banking Ombudsman guide and RBI CMS complaint process.
  • Disaster Management Act 2005 β€” Citizen right to demand disaster relief, evacuation, and compensation. False claims during disasters are punishable under Section 52.
  • DPDP Act 2023 β€” Digital Personal Data Protection Act; relevant when personal data is breached during a crisis. Fines for data fiduciaries who fail to protect citizen data.

Pro tip: Multiple statutes can apply simultaneously. A single UPI fraud may trigger BNS 318/319 (cheating), IT Act 66D (personation), and the RBI zero-liability circular. File complaints under ALL applicable frameworks β€” the bank chargeback is fastest, the police FIR creates the legal record, and the NCRP complaint triggers inter-agency coordination.

How Do You Report Cyber Crime and Financial Fraud Effectively?

Cyber fraud is the fastest-growing crisis category in India, with losses exceeding β‚Ή1,750 crore in 2024 alone (per Press Information Bureau data). The recovery window is extremely short β€” often under 30 minutes for UPI fraud. Here is the step-by-step reporting protocol:

  1. Step 1 β€” Call 1930 immediately (within 30 minutes of detecting the fraud). This triggers the cybercrime helpline's direct integration with banks for fund freeze. See cyber crime complaint guide for details.
  2. Step 2 β€” File on cybercrime.gov.in (National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal β€” NCRP). Upload screenshots, transaction IDs, the fraudster's phone/UPI ID. Choose β€œReport Cyber Crime Related to Women/Child” or β€œReport Other Cyber Crime” as applicable.
  3. Step 3 β€” File an FIR at your local police station (or online if your state offers it). Carry the NCRP complaint number β€” this creates the legal record. See NCRP vs Police Station β€” which to choose.
  4. Step 4 β€” Notify your bank in writing (email + registered complaint). Request chargeback under RBI zero-liability framework. See chargeback guide and what to do if bank refuses refund.
  5. Step 5 β€” Escalate if needed: If the bank delays beyond 3 working days, escalate to the Banking Ombudsman via RB-IOS 2021. If police refuse to file FIR, approach the Superintendent of Police or file under Section 173 BNSS.

Common cyber fraud types covered in the CCRN library include fake KYC scams, electricity bill WhatsApp scams, digital arrest scams, AI voice cloning scams, courier OTP scams, and fake Aadhaar update fraud.

Real scenario: A Delhi resident lost β‚Ή48,000 via a fake KYC SMS. Within 20 minutes, she called 1930 (fund freeze), filed NCRP online, emailed her bank's nodal officer, and filed an e-FIR. The bank reversed β‚Ή41,000 under RBI zero-liability within 7 days because she reported within the T+3 window. The key was speed β€” reporting within the first 30 minutes triggered the bank's automated freeze before the fraudster could withdraw.

How Do You File a Consumer Complaint That Actually Gets Resolved?

Consumer disputes β€” defective products, service failures, overcharging, fake goods β€” are the second most common crisis type. The Consumer Protection Act 2019 provides a clear escalation ladder:

Stage Forum Fee Pecuniary Jurisdiction Timeline
1 National Consumer Helpline (1915) Free Mediation only 30 days
2 District Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission (DCDRC) β‚Ή100 Up to β‚Ή1 crore 3-6 months
3 State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission (SCDRC) β‚Ή500 β‚Ή1 crore – β‚Ή10 crore 6-12 months
4 National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission (NCDRC) β‚Ή5,000 β‚Ή10 crore – β‚Ή50 crore 12-24 months

Filing online via e-Daakhil:

  1. Visit edaakhil.nic.in β€” the Department of Consumer Affairs' online filing portal
  2. Register with Aadhaar/mobile OTP
  3. Upload complaint, supporting documents, and pay the fee online
  4. Track status online; hearings via video conference in most states

See Consumer Court filing guide, how to appeal, and how to execute a decree after winning.

RTI angle: If a government department is the opposite party (e.g., municipal overcharging, BSNL billing dispute), file an RTI alongside the consumer complaint. The RTI reply often provides documentary evidence that strengthens your consumer case. Use Citizen RTI Playbook and state vs central RTI guide to file correctly.

What Government Bodies Handle Which Type of Crisis?

One of the most confusing aspects of a citizen crisis is knowing which government body has jurisdiction. Filing with the wrong authority means wasted weeks. The table below maps crisis categories to the correct regulatory body:

Crisis Category Primary Government Body Portal Relevant RTI Wiki Guide
Cyber crime, online fraud Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre (I4C) / MHA cybercrime.gov.in Cyber Crime Complaint Guide
Banking fraud, deficient service Reserve Bank of India (Ombudsman) RBI CMS Banking Ombudsman Guide
Consumer product/service dispute Dept. of Consumer Affairs consumerhelpline.gov.in Consumer Court Filing
Government service delay / denial Respective ministry / CPGRAMS india.gov.in CPGRAMS + RTI Guide
Health insurance claim rejection IRDAI irdai.gov.in Insurance Claim Recovery
Workplace harassment Internal Committee / NHRC / NCW nhrc.nic.in Mental Harassment at Workplace
Child online safety NCPCR / Police cybercrime.gov.in Child Online Safety Guide
Air / noise pollution CPCB / State Pollution Control Board β€” Air Pollution Complaint, Noise Pollution Complaint
Illegal construction Municipal Corp / Town Planning β€” Illegal Construction Complaint
Disaster relief failure NDMA / SDMA / DDMA ndma.gov.in β€”
Aadhaar-related fraud UIDAI β€” Aadhaar Deactivation Guide
Document forgery / digital fraud Local Police + Forensic Lab β€” DigiLocker Safety Guide

For central government departments, also see Citizen RTI Playbook and State vs Central RTI to determine whether to file RTI centrally or at state level.

How Can RTI Be Used as a Crisis Accountability Tool?

The Right to Information Act 2005 is one of the most powerful tools in a citizen's crisis arsenal β€” not because it directly resolves the crisis, but because it forces government departments to produce documents that expose negligence, delays, and corruption. When a government body fails you, RTI is the accountability lever.

  • When your complaint goes unanswered: File an RTI asking for the status of your complaint, the name and designation of the officer handling it, and the expected resolution date. See RTI Act 2005 complete guide.
  • When a government service is denied or delayed: Ask for the relevant file notings, the citizen charter timeline, and the reason for delay. See Citizen RTI Playbook for specific question templates.
  • When disaster relief fails: File RTI with the DDMA or SDMA asking for the district disaster management plan, relief fund utilization, and the response timeline for your area.
  • When a bank (public sector) stalls on a complaint: Public-sector banks are β€œpublic authorities” under RTI. Ask for complaint status, officer responsible, and internal SOPs. See Banking Ombudsman guide and cyber fraud RTI bundle.
  • When you need evidence for a consumer or legal case: RTI replies are admissible evidence. A government document confirming a regulatory violation strengthens your case in consumer court or a writ petition.

Filing RTI for crisis situations:

  1. File online via rtionline.gov.in (central govt) or your state's RTI portal
  2. Fee: β‚Ή10 (central); some states charge β‚Ή0-β‚Ή20. BPL applicants get fee waiver
  3. PIO must reply within 30 days (48 hours if life/liberty is at stake under Section 7(1))
  4. If no reply or unsatisfactory reply: First Appeal under Section 19(1) within 30 days β†’ Second Appeal to CIC/IC within 90 days
  5. Use the AI RTI Drafter for instant drafting in 11 languages

See also how to file RTI online and the RTI Act explained simply for beginners.

Direct answer (when, where, how)

For any Indian citizen crisis β€” financial fraud, healthcare overcharging, housing dispute, civic-service failure, harassment, immigration scam β€” the operational sequence is: (1) document with photographs + timestamps + witnesses; (2) verify through the relevant government portal (NPCI, NPPA, NABL, FSSAI, NGO Darpan, eMigrate, RERA, FCRA, CCPA, etc.) β€” never trust unsolicited messages; (3) first 30 minutes after detection: dial 1930 (cyber crime), 1915 (consumer), 1916 (water), 108 (medical emergency), 102 (maternal/child), 100/112 (police), 14448 (Banking Ombudsman); (4) within 72 hours: file FIR + NCRP + sectoral regulator complaint + bank chargeback if applicable; (5) within 30 days: file consumer court / RERA / NGT / High Court depending on cluster. The 50 articles below cover every common crisis with cluster-specific operational detail.

In this guide

Cyber Crime Survival

Mobile + digital crime that drains money or freedom in minutes. The window for recovery is short; speed matters.

Scam Intelligence

Recognition + recovery for the most common Indian scams (WhatsApp / Telegram / phone / cash). Keep this section bookmarked on every family phone.

Banking Recovery

Health & Insurance

Consumer Rights

Government Documentation & Civic Grievance

Housing & Property

Education & Jobs

One-page emergency contact card

Save these in every family phone:

Crisis Number Notes
Cyber crime + UPI fraud 1930 call within 30 min for fund freeze
Consumer complaint 1915 NCH free mediation
Water complaint 1916 most metros
Banking Ombudsman 14448 RBI integrated scheme
Medical emergency 108 free state ambulance
Maternal / child 102 NHM-funded
Police 100 / 112 unified emergency
MEA Madad (overseas) 1800-11-3090 24Γ—7 helpline
NOTTO (organ) 1100 trafficking + transplant queries
Childline 1098 child-trafficking + abuse
GST tip-off 1800-1200-232 tax evasion
NHRC 011-23385368 human rights
Women's helpline 181 24Γ—7 in most states

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Q. What is the single most important number to save for a financial fraud crisis?
1930 β€” the national cyber crime helpline. Calling within 30 minutes of detecting UPI fraud triggers the fund-freeze mechanism with your bank. Pair it with filing on cybercrime.gov.in for the full legal record.

Q. How quickly must I report a bank fraud to be eligible for RBI zero-liability?
You must notify your bank within 3 working days (T+3) of discovering the unauthorized transaction. Reporting within this window makes you eligible for full zero-liability under the RBI circular dated 6 July 2017. Delays beyond T+3 reduce your eligibility β€” you may bear up to β‚Ή25,000 of the loss. See debit card fraud recovery and what to do if bank refuses refund.

Q. What is the difference between filing on NCRP (cybercrime.gov.in) and filing an FIR at the police station?
NCRP is an online portal that routes your complaint to the relevant cybercrime unit; it does not automatically register an FIR. For legal proceedings, you must still get an FIR registered (BNSS Section 173). However, the NCRP complaint number is valuable evidence and speeds up police action. See NCRP vs Police Station comparison.

Q. How long does the Banking Ombudsman take to resolve a complaint?
Under the RBI Integrated Ombudsman Scheme 2021 (RB-IOS 2021), the Ombudsman aims to resolve complaints within 30 days. If the bank rejects the complaint or does not respond, you can escalate to the Ombudsman after 30 days of first complaining to the bank. The Ombudsman's award is binding on the bank (up to β‚Ή20 lakh actual loss, β‚Ή1 lakh compensation). See Banking Ombudsman guide.

Q. Can I file a consumer complaint online without a lawyer?
Yes. The e-Daakhil portal allows you to file consumer complaints at DCDRC, State Commission, or NCDRC entirely online. The fee ranges from β‚Ή100 to β‚Ή5,000 depending on the forum. Many disputes are resolved through mediation before a hearing. See Consumer Court filing guide.

Q. What should I do if the police refuse to file my FIR?
Under BNSS Section 173(3), if the Station House Officer refuses to register an FIR, you can: (1) send the complaint to the Superintendent of Police (SP) of the district by registered post; (2) file a complaint before a Magistrate under Section 223 BNSS; (3) file a writ petition before the High Court under Article 226. Always get the refusal in writing if possible β€” this strengthens your subsequent legal action.

Q. Is RTI useful during a personal crisis like fraud or consumer dispute?
Yes β€” RTI is a powerful accountability tool. If a government body (or a public-sector bank) is involved, file RTI asking for complaint status, the officer responsible, internal SOPs, and action taken. RTI replies are admissible evidence in consumer court and legal proceedings. See Citizen RTI Playbook and RTI Act 2005 guide.

Q. What legal protection do I have during a natural disaster?
Under the Disaster Management Act 2005, citizens have the right to demand evacuation, shelter, food, medical aid, and compensation from the District Disaster Management Authority (DDMA). Section 34 empowers the District Magistrate to requisition resources and direct any department to assist. If relief is denied, file a complaint with the SDMA and an RTI asking for the district disaster plan and relief fund utilization.

Q. Can I get compensation for a delayed insurance claim?
Yes. IRDAI regulations require insurers to decide on a claim within 30 days of receiving all documents. If delayed beyond 30 days without valid reason, the insurer must pay interest on the claim amount. See Insurance Claim Recovery Guide and Health Insurance Claim Delay Rights.

Q. What is the difference between NCH 1915 and filing in consumer court?
NCH 1915 is the National Consumer Helpline β€” it offers free mediation between you and the business. If mediation fails (or the business ignores the helpline), you escalate to the formal consumer court (DCDRC β†’ State Commission β†’ NCDRC). NCH is the first step; consumer court is the enforcement step. See consumer complaint status guide.

Q. Are there free legal aid services for crisis situations?
Yes. The National Legal Services Authority (NALSA) provides free legal aid to women, children, SC/ST, persons with disabilities, and persons earning below β‚Ή3 lakh/year. Contact NALSA at 15100 (tele-legal helpline) or visit your district Legal Services Authority. Legal aid lawyers can help with FIR filing, consumer complaints, and court representation at no cost.

Q. How do I protect elderly family members from scams?
(1) Save all crisis helpline numbers in their phone contacts; (2) Teach them to never share OTPs, even with β€œbank officials” β€” real banks never ask; (3) Show them how to verify a genuine .gov.in website; (4) Enable transaction alerts and set UPI limits; (5) Bookmark this CCRN hub page on their phone; (6) Discuss the KYC scam and electricity bill scam patterns β€” these specifically target seniors.

Trust signals β€” what every CCRN article includes

  • Statute β€” exact section + Act + year (BNS 2023, BNSS 2023, CPA 2019, RERA 2016, etc.).
  • Government body β€” verifiable on official portal with hyperlink.
  • Case law β€” Supreme Court / High Court / NCDRC / CIC ruling, citation format `(YYYY) X SCC Y`.
  • Forum + filing fee + timeline β€” DCDRC β‚Ή100, e-Daakhil online, NGT free, High Court ~β‚Ή2k.
  • Sample document β€” legal notice, FIR text, RTI letter (with `<code>` block).
  • FAQ β€” 8-12 common citizen questions with crisp answers.
  • Myth vs reality β€” corrects common misinformation.

Useful RTI Wiki tools

Sources

  • National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) β€” ndma.gov.in β€” disaster guidelines, institutional framework
  • Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) β€” mha.gov.in β€” disaster management division, law and order
  • Press Information Bureau (PIB) β€” pib.gov.in β€” official government press releases, cybercrime statistics
  • Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre (I4C) β€” cybercrime.gov.in β€” cybercrime reporting, helpline 1930
  • National Consumer Helpline β€” consumerhelpline.gov.in β€” consumer complaint helpline 1915
  • RTI Online Portal β€” rtionline.gov.in β€” online RTI filing
  • India.gov.in (National Portal of India) β€” india.gov.in β€” government services directory
  • National Institute of Disaster Management β€” nidm.gov.in β€” capacity building, DM Act resources
  • National Disaster Response Force β€” ndrf.gov.in β€” search, rescue, relief operations
  • National Human Rights Commission β€” nhrc.nic.in β€” human rights violations

Last word

A citizen crisis in 2026 is rarely as hopeless as it first feels. Almost every fraud / overcharging / harassment / civic-service failure has a regulator + a statute + a case-law precedent + a forum + a timeline. The Citizen Crisis Response Network exists to compress that information into the 30 minutes after detection β€” the window where most recovery happens. Bookmark this page; pick the relevant article when you (or a family member) face the situation; follow the drill. The framework gives every Indian real recourse β€” use it.

This page is part of RTI Wiki's Citizen Crisis Response Network β€” India's operational citizen survival manual. Updates tracked through CCPA orders, NCDRC awards, RBI / NPPA / FSSAI / NGT / NHRC actions, RERA orders, and CIC decisions. Last reviewed: July 2026.

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