Oman Daily Observer

Peugeot buys India’s iconic Ambassador car for $12m

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MUMBAI: India’s Hindustan Motors has sold its Ambassador car to France’s Peugeot for just $12 million, capping a spectacula­r downfall for a vehicle once emblematic of the country’s political class.

The CK Birla group, the owners of Hindustan Motors, have sold the car brand for 800 million rupees to the French auto makers, a company spokesman confirmed to AFP on Sunday.

Hindustan Motors, India’s oldest car maker, stopped production of the Ambassador in 2014 citing debt and lack of demand for the vehicle which was designed on Britain’s long-defunct Morris Oxford.

“We have sold it for just 800 million rupees but we had already stopped production at the plant nearly three years back. The plant has been closed since,” the official said. Last month, the Birla group had signed a separate agreement with Peugeot to set up two joint ventures with production capacity initially estimated at 100,000 vehicles per year by 2020.

The PSA Group, which makes Peugeot and Citroen cars, said at the time it had not yet decided which model it will build in India. The curvy Ambassador once ruled India’s roads and for years was the only car driven by politician­s and senior government officials.

But the car was muscled out over the years by the entry of more modern vehicles, particular­ly SUVs increasing­ly favoured by senior bureaucrat­s. The car still remains popular with some taxi drivers and politician­s and tourists looking for nostalgia.

The PSA group was among the first foreign car manufactur­ers to make a foray into India in the Nineties after the government opened up investment.

But after a fall-out with their local partners, the company withdrew from India in 1997.

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 ?? — AFP ?? An Ambassador in front of the federal secretaria­t in New Delhi.
— AFP An Ambassador in front of the federal secretaria­t in New Delhi.

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