Google top India counsel quits in latest departure amid regulatory hurdles, sources say

Visitors walk near a logo of Google at Bharat Mandapam, one of the venues for AI Impact Summit, in New Delhi, India, February 17, 2026. REUTERS
NEW DELHI, March 26 (Reuters) – Google’s top India counsel, Bijoya Roy, has resigned after 16 months ​in the role, two sources said, a ‌high-profile exit in a key market where the U.S. tech giant is facing regulatory hurdles and also lacks a ​government relations head.
India is crucial for Alphabet’s ​Google since most smartphones in the country ⁠run on its Android operating system, even as ​Apple’s share is growing steadily.
Google also faces antitrust cases in ​India, legal challenges over AI training and stricter-than-ever content takedown regulations that started applying to tech companies from February.
Roy quit last ​month for personal reasons to start her own ​venture, said one of the sources on Thursday. The two ‌sources ⁠declined to be named as the decision is not public.
Google did not respond to a request for comment, while Roy declined to comment.
Last year, Google’s ​head of ​public policy ⁠in India, Sreenivasa Reddy, quit, the second departure for that role in around two ​years. The company has still not ​filled ⁠the role.
In October, Google said it would invest $15 billion over five years to set up an artificial ⁠intelligence ​data centre in India’s southern ​state of Andhra Pradesh, its biggest ever investment in the world’s most ​populous nation.

Reporting by Aditya Kalra; Editing by Arun Koyyur

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