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‘Bangaluru’s shameless heading’: Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw slams the city’s infrastructure, sharing videos of Ecuador Street

Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw, founder of Bengaluru-based Biocon, slammed the city on Thursday in the city’s infrastructure. Biocon head shared a street video of San Cristobal Island, Ecuador, asking Bengaluru to be ashamed.

Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw posted a video on X showing the beautiful stone roads on the island of Ecuador.

“The clean, well-designed streets in Ecuador’s San Cristobal Island. Bengaluru feels ashamed.”

She also marked the special commissioner of Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike.

Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw’s perspective

Unsurprisingly, Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw’s videos have gained traction on social media, and people like and comment on the post.

One user stressed that other cities in India also have better infrastructure than Bangalore.

User said: “Just visit Mysore, Indore.

To this end, Mazumdar-Shaw replied that Ecuador became a well-maintained one by the authorities in developing countries.

“Yes, but the key is that even Ecuador in developing countries is well maintained by local municipalities,” she said.

The internet is consistent with Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw

Other users agree with Biocon Head.

One commented: “Bangaluru is a broken city. Streets are broken, trails, street lighting, garbage collection, etc. Basic services are destroyed. Due to the intentional ruthlessness of the city government and politicians.”

Another asked, “Jigani Link Road is in a sad state, especially in front of Biocon. You’re very close to CM and DCM, why can’t you fix it.”

“The highest time is to downgrade 1 city. Move businesses to various regions. All regions have top-notch health care n education (the government can work with companies). Each region can be sponsored by a group of companies. Overloading in more than 1 city is meaningless,” one user suggests. ”

However, some users disagree with her.

“Mom, this is a tourist town with about 2 Lac populations. Bangalore has a population of over 10 million. I get your point, but the real reason for all the urban dilemma we’re seeing is due to overpopulation. Things will change only when the population starts to decline, and only when the next century begins to decline.”

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