Can India enforce its environmental laws?
India has no shortage of environmental laws, but enforcement remains a major challenge with shrinking forests, polluted water bodies and disappearing wetlands.
On this Special Report, India Today’s Munish Pandey provides updates on the intensifying investigation into the Luthra brothers following the tragic Goa club fire. The Enforcement Directorate (ED) is currently conducting raids at eight locations across Goa and Delhi, including residential premises, linked to the brothers and a company director named Mr. Gupta. Munish Pandey reports that the ED has intensified its probe into a money laundering case, stating, 'ED believes that both the brothers have been involved in multi-crore fraud.' The investigation suggests that funds were diverted from banks into personal accounts for private use. The Luthra brothers, who had previously fled to Thailand after the fire incident, are now facing mounting legal trouble as the ED probes allegations of siphoning money. The searches include three premises in Goa and five in Delhi as authorities look for further evidence of financial irregularities linked to their business operations.
India has no shortage of environmental laws, but enforcement remains a major challenge with shrinking forests, polluted water bodies and disappearing wetlands.
In an exclusive chat with Bhavna Agarwal, Nicholas Galitzine and Camila Mendes open up about becoming He-Man and Teela, overcoming self-doubt, redefining masculinity, and why a future sequel should be shot in India with only one condition: a Bollywood dance number.
Three generations of the Aggarwal family were wiped out in the devastating Delhi fire.
A major crisis has erupted within the Karnataka Congress after senior minister Ramalinga Reddy resigned just two days after being sworn in.