The Guardian (USA)

Indian multimilli­onaire ordered to give back pay to superyacht crew

- Rupert Neate Wealth correspond­ent

The crew of Indian multimilli­onaire Vijay Mallya’s superyacht have been awarded almost $1m in back pay after the businessma­n and former Formula One team owner abandoned the vessel and its 40 crew in Malta more than a year ago.

Nautilus, the union representi­ng the crew which includes several Britons, said they would receive a total of $905,000 (£711,000) following the forced sale of Mallya’s $95m Indian Empress yacht.

Mallya abandoned the yacht and its crew in September 2017 following his arrest in connection with a £1bn fraud and is fighting extraditio­n from the UK to India.

A Maltese court ordered the sale of the yacht to secure funds to pay creditors, including the crew. Some of the Indian Empress’s senior crew have not left the vessel since it was abandoned and are owed up to $92,000 each in unpaid wages.

The yacht, which features a 15-seat cinema and Sir Elton John’s baby grand piano, was sold to Maltese-registered firm Sea Beauty Yachting Limited for €35m (£31.2m) in September. It was renamed Neom and listed for private charter at a cost of £670,000-a-week.

Danny McGowan, the internatio­nal organiser of Nautilus, said: “We are glad that we were able to help our members in this way. It is so important that maritime profession­als working onboard superyacht­s join Nautilus before they encounter this type of issue, as waiting until they have a problem normally means that it is too late.

“If the shipowner had a relationsh­ip with Nautilus, we are sure that we could have resolved the issue without resorting to arresting and selling the vessel. Again, we issue our call to superyacht owners, managers and other potential strategic partners to work with us in order to try and prevent situations escalating as they did here.”

Mallya, the self-proclaimed “King of the Good Times”, was arrested in London last year over allegation­s he supported the Force India Formula One team with money-laundered cash.

Indian authoritie­s are seeking his extraditio­n to face trial in India. Mallya, 62, is on bail pending an extraditio­n hearing scheduled to begin in April.

 ??  ?? Vijay Mallya who called himself the King of the Good Times. Photograph: Andrej Isakovic/ AFP/Getty Images
Vijay Mallya who called himself the King of the Good Times. Photograph: Andrej Isakovic/ AFP/Getty Images
 ??  ?? Vijay Mallya abandoned his Indian Empress superyacht in September 2017. Photograph: Diego Tuson/AFP/Getty Images
Vijay Mallya abandoned his Indian Empress superyacht in September 2017. Photograph: Diego Tuson/AFP/Getty Images

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