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India's recent moves are quite aggressive.
Recently, their government launched a major initiative—multi-agency joint training specifically teaching law enforcement how to crack down on crypto crimes. It's not some superficial theoretical class; it's hands-on technical training.
The participating agencies are quite formidable: the Financial Intelligence Unit-India (FIU-IND), the Enforcement Directorate (ED), the Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB)... Basically, all relevant departments have been brought in. Can you imagine? Drug enforcement, anti-money laundering, financial regulators—all learning blockchain together.
What exactly are they learning?
Simply put, four words: On-chain tracking.
This includes blockchain forensic techniques, transaction path analysis, seizure procedures for encrypted assets, and most importantly—how to link wallet addresses to real identities. In the past, they might have only watched funds move on the chain; now, they want to be able to track people along the chain.
Why the sudden urgency?
Because India has mandated that all virtual asset service providers must register with FIU-IND. The regulatory framework is in place, but enforcement capabilities haven't caught up, which is pointless. So now, they are upskilling—learning not only to read reports but also how to freeze wallets, extract on-chain evidence, and complete judicial procedures.
This signals one thing: India does not intend to ban cryptocurrencies, but they want criminals to know that on-chain activity does not mean outside the law. Regulation is shifting from paper rules to practical enforcement tools.