For 30 years, Kuldeep Yadav has been a peon at a bank in Madhya Pradesh. This morning, raids at three of his six homes in Gwalior revealed assets worth Rs. three crore and counting.
In raids that began at 3 am this morning, the Lokayukta or anti-corruption police have found documents for a duplex bungalow, five big houses, two luxury cars, cash, jewllery and bank lockers.
It was an anonymous complaint that tipped off the police about Mr Yadav's undetected millions, according to officials Mr Yadav's wealth is estimated to be around seven crores. The police said at a salary that is not more than Rs. 20,000 a month, Mr Yadav couldn't possibly have made more than Rs. 15 to 17 lakh in three decades.
To get a full grip of this please watch India Shinning a pocketfilms.in production.
India Shining is about the consequences of corruption, and how it comes back to harass the corrupt.
A boy eats a dosa everyday after school. He buys it from the pocket money given to him by his father who is a constable. The constable regularly takes 'hafta' from the dosawalla, which leads to increasing dosa prices. How does the boy cope with this?
Watch this independent film at the following link ( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nO-Hozd92sM ).
Remember, corruption starts, if we let it! Only U can stop it!
In raids that began at 3 am this morning, the Lokayukta or anti-corruption police have found documents for a duplex bungalow, five big houses, two luxury cars, cash, jewllery and bank lockers.
It was an anonymous complaint that tipped off the police about Mr Yadav's undetected millions, according to officials Mr Yadav's wealth is estimated to be around seven crores. The police said at a salary that is not more than Rs. 20,000 a month, Mr Yadav couldn't possibly have made more than Rs. 15 to 17 lakh in three decades.
To get a full grip of this please watch India Shinning a pocketfilms.in production.
India Shining is about the consequences of corruption, and how it comes back to harass the corrupt.
A boy eats a dosa everyday after school. He buys it from the pocket money given to him by his father who is a constable. The constable regularly takes 'hafta' from the dosawalla, which leads to increasing dosa prices. How does the boy cope with this?
Watch this independent film at the following link ( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nO-Hozd92sM ).
Remember, corruption starts, if we let it! Only U can stop it!