Indian food delivery system Zomato has been cut off from its biggest Chinese investor in the first major example of how Delhiโ€™s new foreign investment laws have hit funding.

In January, Zomato announced it had secured $150m in fresh funding from Ant Financial, the Chinese digital payments giant, Financial Times reported.

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But it has been unable to access $100m of that total, according to two people with direct knowledge of the situation.

In April, Centre announced that it would block โ€œopportunistic takeoversโ€ by requiring official approval for any investment from a country that shares a land border with India.

In recent years, Indian start-ups have depended on significant funding from Chinese investors, including Tencent and Alibaba, which is Ant Financialโ€™s sister company.

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But a wave of anti-China sentiment, particularly following a violent clash between troops from the two countries at Galwan Valley in Eastern Ladakh, has hurt both Chinese companies operating in India and Indian start-ups with Chinese backers.

Zomato employees in Kolkata made headlines this week when they burnt their T-shirts to protest the violence and Chinese investment in the company.