This flurry of investigative and proscriptive activity is only to be expected when set against the international embarrassment the incident has caused to the Indian pharma industry. India is the world’s fourth-largest producer of pharma products and one of the biggest exporters of generic drugs. According to the WHO, two toxic contaminants, diethylene glycol and ethylene glycol, were found in four cough syrups manufactured by the Delhi-headquartered company at its facility in Haryana, and they may have caused acute kidney failure in the Gambian children who died. In addition, the CDSCO probe found, among other things, that the date of manufacture printed on the drug product label (December 2021) predated the batch manufacturing date (2022). If investigation into one of Maiden’s multiple product portfolios — it also makes tablets, gels and injectables — has revealed so many transgressions, it is clear that the company has many questions to answer for its entire business. Equally, so do the state and central drug regulators.