Close X
Tuesday, October 1, 2024
ADVT 
International

Indian-Origin Businessman Rajesh Gupta's Company Assets Seized In South Africa

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Aug, 2015 12:34 PM
    The assets of a mining company, whose non-executive board members include Indian-origin businessman Rajesh Gupta and South African President Jacob Zuma's son Duduzane Zuma, have been attached following a court order, media reported.
     
    JIC Mining Services' assets were attached on Wednesday after the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA) found that the company's mining captain, Clinton Cilliers, had been unlawfully dismissed, allafrica.com reported on Thursday citing a law firm representing Cilliers.
     
    Cilliers was dismissed in August 2014 for "gross misrepresentation, dishonesty and gross dereliction of duties", according to fin24.com. He then lodged a complaint with the Rustenburg-based CCMA.
     
    The commission dismissed the charges against Cilliers and ordered JIC Mining Services to pay Cilliers "costs in respect of this postponement".
     
    But JIC lodged an application for a review of the ruling in the labour court and threatened to launch an urgent application to stay the execution.
     
    Rajesh Gupta, along with brothers Ajay and Atul, relocated to South Africa in the 1990s and soon their parent company, Sahara Group, rose to prominence in that country with business interests in mining, air travel, energy, technology and media.
     
    The company employs some 10,000 people, according to a BBC report.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Typhoon-hit Japan asks a million to evacuate

    Typhoon-hit Japan asks a million to evacuate
    More than one million people have been told by authorities to leave their homes as a powerful typhoon hit south-west Japan, BBC reported Sunday....

    Typhoon-hit Japan asks a million to evacuate

    Gaza blockade must end to enable its reconstruction

    Gaza blockade must end to enable its reconstruction
    A seven-year blockade on the Gaza Strip must end to enable reconstruction and a political solution must be found to resolve the conflict, a UN official said Saturday....

    Gaza blockade must end to enable its reconstruction

    Officials: 17-year-old Boy arrested in Death, Sexual Assault of 6-year-Old Washington Girl

    Officials: 17-year-old Boy arrested in Death, Sexual Assault of 6-year-Old Washington Girl
    BREMERTON, Wash. - Authorities say a 17-year-old has been arrested in the death and sexual assault of a 6-year-old girl whose body was found near the mobile home park she vanished from last weekend.

    Officials: 17-year-old Boy arrested in Death, Sexual Assault of 6-year-Old Washington Girl

    Authorities: Woman, 78, caught with $41,000 in cash in Girdle, Bra, Bag at Detroit Airport

    Authorities: Woman, 78, caught with $41,000 in cash in Girdle, Bra, Bag at Detroit Airport
    ROMULUS, Mich. - A 78-year-old Florida woman tried to fly on an international trip to the Philippines from Detroit Metropolitan Airport with almost $41,000 in cash hidden inside her girdle, bra and carry-on bag, federal authorities said.

    Authorities: Woman, 78, caught with $41,000 in cash in Girdle, Bra, Bag at Detroit Airport

    Tropical storm spares popular Hawaii areas, but rural Big Island struggles with Power Outages

    Tropical storm spares popular Hawaii areas, but rural Big Island struggles with Power Outages
    Tourists in Oahu and other popular parts of Hawaii got back to their beach vacations and residents lined up to vote in primary elections Saturday, a day after Tropical Storm Iselle swept through the islands without causing a widespread disaster.

    Tropical storm spares popular Hawaii areas, but rural Big Island struggles with Power Outages

    US Bots Flagged Ebola Before Outbreak in West Africa Days Before Outbreak Announced

    US Bots Flagged Ebola Before Outbreak in West Africa Days Before Outbreak Announced
    The Ebola outbreak in West Africa is focusing a spotlight on an online tool run by experts in Boston that flagged a "mystery hemorrhagic fever" in forested areas of southeastern Guinea nine days before the World Health Organization formally announced the epidemic.

    US Bots Flagged Ebola Before Outbreak in West Africa Days Before Outbreak Announced