Gopichand Hinduja, who acquired & turned around Ashok Leyland, dies
Under his leadership, the group first acquired Gulf Oil in 1984 and then Ashok Leyland in 1987.
PTI
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Gopichand P Hinduja died in a London hospital (PTI)
London, 4 Nov
Gopichand P Hinduja, the head of Britain's richest family,
who was named as an accused in the Bofors scam with his two brothers, died in
London at the age of 85.
Fondly known as 'GP' in business circles, Gopichand PHinduja was unwell for the past few weeks and died in a London hospital,
sources close to his family said.
Born in 1940, Gopichand was the second of the four Hinduja
brothers who built the group into a global conglomerate, spanning automotive,
energy, banking, and infrastructure. After the death of his elder brother
Srichand Hinduja in 2023, he took charge as the chairman of the 35 billion
pound Hinduja Group.
He is survived by his wife, Sunita, sons Sanjay and Dheeraj,
and daughter, Rita.
A graduate of Jai Hind College, Mumbai (1959), Gopichand
began his career in the family's trading business in Tehran before expanding
its reach across continents.
Under his leadership, the group acquired Gulf Oil in 1984,
closely followed by the acquisition of the then-struggling Indian automotive
manufacturer, Ashok Leyland, in 1987, which was the first major NRI investment
in India.
Today, Ashok Leyland is regarded as one of the most
successful turnaround stories ever in Indian corporate history.
He was also the visionary behind the Group's forays into
power and infrastructure sectors, spearheading the task of shaping the
conglomerate's plan for building multi-GW energy generation capacity in India.
Known for his understated style and deep commitment to
family values, he was honoured with an honorary Doctorate of Law from the
University of Westminster and an Honorary Doctorate of Economics from Richmond
College, London, as per the group's website.
He and his two other brothers - Srichand and Prakash Hinduja
- were accused of receiving payments totalling Rs 64 crore in illegal
commissions to help Swedish gunmaker AB Bofors secure an Indian contract. All
three were, however, exonerated by the Delhi High Court in 2005.
Gopichand Hinduja and his family retained their position as
Britain's wealthiest, according to the latest The Sunday Times Rich List,
despite a drop in their overall fortune. The Hinduja family's net worth stands
at 35.3 billion pounds, down from 37.2 billion pounds the previous year.
Their UK property assets include the 67,000 square feet
18th-century Carlton House Terrace near Buckingham Palace and the historic Old
War Office building in Whitehall, now home to the Raffles London hotel, which
opened in September 2023 to great fanfare.
The family, however, feuded over the vast wealth. After the
death of the eldest brother, Srichand, in 2023, it emerged that Gopichand and
his two younger brothers - Prakash, 79, and Ashok, 74, had been fighting over
the past three years with the patriarch and his daughter, Vinoo, over a 2014
letter signed by the four siblings that said assets held by one of them
belonged to all.
While the family called a truce on the bitter power
struggle, reports suggest they're still privately haggling on related issues.
Their father, Parmanand, founded their namesake business in
1914 in the Sindh region of British India, trading in carpets, tea and spices.
In 1919, he moved from Sindh (then in India, now Pakistan) to Iran, and his
sons joined as the group rapidly diversified investments, with early success
distributing Bollywood films outside India.
Parmanand, who died in 1971, instilled in his sons a mantra
they pledged to follow: "Everything belongs to everyone and nothing
belongs to anyone". The siblings, however, feuded over control of the vast
business empire and have reportedly agreed to effectively dump the letter,
raising the prospect of a breakup for their conglomerate.
The Hinduja empire included the only Indian-owned Swiss
bank, SP Hinduja Banquee Privee, with headquarters in Geneva. Its assets
include Mumbai-based lender IndusInd Bank Ltd and a property investment firm
that has bought more than 250 acres of land in major Indian cities.
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