 Hemant, this is Louise from STTV6. Thank you for joining us from our partner TV studio in New Delhi. We understand that the Indian Supreme Court has very recently cancelled the environmental clearance granted for the development of an international airport in the globally celebrated and popular traveler state of Goa. What was wrong with the said clearance? Well, legally and strictly speaking the Indian Supreme Court did not cancel the environmental clearance but suspended the same with the direction to expert a prison committee to re-examine the sanctions made by it in favor of the clearance. The court felt that there were many procedural failings in the said clearance. The court expressed the concern about the prevalence date of the environment and the need to reconcile it with the public development projects. The court was definitely certainly not against permanently disavowing the international airport construction in Goa. But I felt it was inclined towards imposing perhaps such additional conditions which will effectively save God the fears amongst the... But Hemant, this talk about new airport in Goa is going on for almost two decades now. The existing Dublin airport is quite overburdened and could break down under the mounting capacity of passenger traffic in Goa. What do you say? I agree but the Indian Supreme Court found certain infirmities in the whole process of grant of environmental clearance including lack of public consultation. The court actually noted that the public consultation is a process which is designed to hear the voices of those communities which would be affected by the activity. They may be affected in terms of the air which they breathe, the water which they drink or used to irrigate their lands, the disruption of local habitats and the generation of environmental ecosystems which define their existence and sustain their livelihoods. The court actually equated the health of the environment to the right to life as enshrined in the constitution of India. Thank you, Hemant. See you on the other side of the break.