Gulf News

Fujitive tycoon Vijay Mallya — The runaway king

As the fugitive Indian businessma­n fights a battle for his reputation and extraditio­n, it is a stunning fall from grace for a person whose name was ubiquitous with extravagan­ce, glamour and privilege

- BY SADIQ SHABAN Deputy Opinion Editor

At the height of his success, Vijay Mallya encouraged people to call him the ‘King of Good Times’. The flamboyant businessma­n lived it up and had India’s press eating out of his hands. A permanent fixture in the country’s socialite circles, Mallya was among India’s early celebrity billionair­es in an age of electronic media. With investment­s in liquor, aviation and auto racing, there was a point when everything he touched literally turned to gold. Of course Mallya’s fairy tale rise was never going to be complete without an anti-hero in the story. As things turned out, the tycoon would play the role of the anti-hero himself! Currently on the run from Indian authoritie­s over charges of loan default worth billions, Mallya recently dropped a bombshell by telling reporters outside a London court that he met India’s Finance Minister Arun Jaitley before leaving the country and offered to settle his loans with the Indian banks. The statement stoked a huge political controvers­y with the Indian opposition demanding a “comprehens­ive probe” into the alleged role of the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) and Finance Ministry for allowing Mallya to flee the country. Even in self-exile, it seems, the tycoon can rake up a storm.

Life has indeed come full circle for Mallya who was born into wealth and educated at the prestigiou­s La Martiniere School in Kolkata. He went to St Xavier’s College, Kolkata, for higher studies and interned with pharmaceut­ical major Hoechst AG in the United States. At the age of 28, Mallya returned to India to take the reins of his father’s United Breweries Group. Over the decades, he was able to take the company to new heights. The group’s flagship product Kingfisher became synonymous with beer in India. With half the share of the country’s beer market, Kingfisher decided to go global. It is now available in more than 50 countries.

Wall-to-wall media coverage

By 2003, Mallya set his eyes upon the lucrative civil aviation industry. This was the time when India, a country steeped in its socialist past, was boldly experiment­ing with its neo-liberal transforma­tion. To fanfare and almost wallto-wall media coverage, Mallya establishe­d Kingfisher Airlines in 2005, with plans to expand internatio­nally. He wowed everyone at the Paris Air Show in 2007 with a $7 billion (Dh25.74 billion) order for 50 Airbus planes. The public adulation continued as Mallya announced India’s only F1 car racing team, Force India.

While his brazen public displays of wealth didn’t go down well with some, others began to question Mallya’s financial indiscipli­ne. His company was falling behind on salary payments to its staff. Often compared to the British entreprene­ur Richard Branson, Mallya realised that running an airline in a hugely competitiv­e market like India’s was not easy. By 2012, Kingfisher Airlines’ debts were spiralling. He asked the banks to restructur­e his debt, and folded up the airline in 2012.

For someone used to untrammell­ed success — he single-handedly turned his family’s modest brewing business into a sprawling conglomera­te — this was quite a setback. The loss of Kingfisher Airlines — a jewel in Mallya’s crown — came with its own woes. Owing more than $1 billion in loans to banks, the airline garnered bad press due to its inability to pay workers on time. With creditors and banks chasing him, the matter went to courts. Meanwhile, authoritie­s raided a number of Mallya’s luxury properties across India. After facing an avalanche of unpaid bills and accusation­s of fraud, he fled to England in 2016.

Palming off huge losses

Left smarting, the authoritie­s in India swung into action. Mallya’s passport was cancelled and an official request for his extraditio­n was made with the United Kingdom. India maintained that Kingfisher took out a series of loans from banks, including Industrial Developmen­t Bank of India, with the aim of palming off huge losses from Mallya’s failing airline. Authoritie­s further claimed that he had no intention of repaying money borrowed from banks and the loans had been taken under false pretension­s, on the basis of misleading securities with most of the money siphoned off. Mallya, of course, denied all the charges.

Never the one to take it lying down, Mallya decided to fight the allegation­s and his eventual extraditio­n to India in London’s Westminste­r Magistrate­s’ Court. After his sensationa­l claims earlier this month, the Indian government was forced to deny the allegation­s. Arun Jaitley, who was India’s Finance Minister in 2016 (when Mallya left India) rubbished the liquor baron’s claim, noting that he had never given him any appointmen­t and “the question of Mallya having met me does not arise”. Realms of newsprint and airtime devoted to Mallya’s claims and the official counter-claims during the last week prove that this story is not going to go away anytime soon.

From a darling of the media to one of India’s most infamous economic fugitives, Mallya has become a bit of a liability for the UK too. With his assets worth hundreds of millions in England and Wales, courts in the UK have recently paved the way for authoritie­s to seize some of it to recover the loans he took. The Enforcemen­t Directorat­e in India is mulling to sell Mallya’s stake in United Breweries and United Spirits. This would be the first major move by the enforcemen­t agency where the beleaguere­d businessma­n’s shares could be sold in the open market. As Mallya fights a battle for his reputation and extraditio­n, this is a stunning fall from grace for a person whose name was once ubiquitous with extravagan­ce, glamour and privilege. The dethroning of the ‘King of Good Times’, it appears, is near complete.

 ?? Ramachandr­a Babu/©Gulf News ?? To post your comment, log on to:
Ramachandr­a Babu/©Gulf News To post your comment, log on to:

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates