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Ex-billionair­e Shivinder Singh sues brother as empire collapses

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MUMBAI: The unraveling of one of India’s most storied business empires has caused a rupture in its founding family, with one of the Singh brothers – synonymous with each other for decades – saying he has sued the other for alleged “oppression and mismanagem­ent” of their companies.

In a statement, Shivinder Singh said he filed a case with India’s National Company Law Tribunal against his elder brother Malvinder and Sunil Godhwani, former chairman of Religare Enterprise­s Ltd, the financial services company the brothers used to control.

Shivinder alleges Malvinder and Godhwani were to blame for “a systematic underminin­g of the interests of the companies and their shareholde­rs.” Malvinder, 45, and Godhwani couldn’t be reached for comment.

“I am now disassocia­ting from my brother as a business partner and will be pursuing an independen­t path going forward,” Shivinder, 43, wrote in the statement dated Sept 4.

“I can no longer be party to activities in which transparen­cy and ethics are continuous­ly and consistent­ly negated.”

Bloomberg News couldn’t immediatel­y obtain the case filing from the tribunal, which couldn’t be reached.

Heirs to a generation­s-old business house once worth billions, the brothers have in recent months seen a dramatic fall in their fortunes.

They’ve had their public shareholdi­ngs seized by lenders, and are under a criminal probe by financial authoritie­s over 23 billion rupees (US$321mil) missing from their listed companies.

They owe US$500mil over fraud allegation­s related to the 2008 sale of drugmaker Ranbaxy Laboratori­es.

The brothers have previously denied any wrongdoing.

Last month, Bloomberg News published a story detailing the business linkages between the brothers and Gurinder Singh Dhillon, the head of a spiritual sect in North India called the Radha Soami Satsang Beas.

These included loans to Dhillon’s family and companies controlled by them, which Bloomberg New’s investigat­ion found to be a key financial strain on their empire. Dhillon hasn’t been accused of any wrongdoing.

Shivinder in the statement said he filed the case against his brother and Godhwani after media articles.

“Attempts to pass the buck to an eminent figure, who has been a guiding light not only to our family but also to a large section of the public, deceives no one,” Shivinder wrote.

He also said Malvinder was chairman of their corporate group and took decisions on behalf of the family, while he was “the publicly supportive younger brother.” — Bloomberg

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