A good initiative by GoI.
Indian media being sensationalist first pragmatic last as always.

without any verification. Vikas Marg mein to kabhi thhi hi nhi ministry.They are long used to publishing for clicks. It is a business (running a news portal/publication). The verification bit gets lost somewhere in midst of all the "be quick" motto.Indian media being sensationalist first pragmatic last as well.
Till the MCD and local Police Dept. do not take the initiative to assess conditions for themselves, such incidents will keep happening. Corruption and local malpractice will need to be rooted out by the State Govt. Saddening incident. However, there is still time to implement proper policies and enforce them regularly. I hope the Delhi Govt. listens and takes corrective actions.
Till the MCD and local Police Dept. do not take the initiative to assess conditions for themselves, such incidents will keep happening. Corruption and local malpractice will need to be rooted out by the State Govt. Saddening incident. However, there is still time to implement proper policies and enforce them regularly. I hope the Delhi Govt. listens and takes corrective actions.
There is no corruption in India , just corrupt ppl live here.
Man government should put some financial penalties for this on them. Fake news can make a lot of people's investment go to waste..and Gloomberg isn't doing this for the first time. They are a repeated offender.
I have not seen any counter measures being adopted by either Information Broadcasting officials or intervention by other GoI affiliated organisations. The PIB account or RBI can indeed put out clarifications. However, there are no guidelines that prevent outlets from running similar articles. As you stated, accountability is lacking and there seems to be little movement from the GoI regarding such issues. The PMO itself had run a fact check against a CNBC report that had cited "sources" and posted it to their X account. However, from what I remember, an apology was posted and the post deleted....that was the end of it.Man government should put some financial penalties for this on them. Fake news can make a lot of people's investment go to waste..and Gloomberg isn't doing this for the first time. They are a repeated offender.
Ig government doesn't want to get into legal battles over these thingsI have not seen any counter measures being adopted by either Information Broadcasting officials or intervention by other GoI affiliated organisations. The PIB account or RBI can indeed put out clarifications. However, there are no guidelines that prevent outlets from running similar articles. As you stated, accountability is lacking and there seems to be little movement from the GoI regarding such issues. The PMO itself had run a fact check against a CNBC report that had cited "sources" and posted it to their X account. However, from what I remember, an apology was posted and the post deleted....that was the end of it.
