Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
International

Mumbai-Born British 'Curry King' Noon Dead

Darpan News Desk IANS, 01 Nov, 2015 12:56 PM
    Mumbai-born British businessman Lord Ghulam Kaderbhoy Noon, who earned the moniker 'Curry King' for popularising Indian chicken tikka and curry in Britain and survived the 26/11 terror attacks in Taj Mahal and Palace Hotel in Mumbai, has died in London.
     
    Born in Mumbai on January 24, 1936, the 79-year-old Noon breathed his last in a country he adopted in 1964 on Tuesday after a prolonged battle with cancer.
     
    While on a visit to India and his birthplace Mumbai, Noon was among the thousands of guests trapped inside the iconic Taj Mahal and Palace Hotel facing the Arabian Sea during the November 26-29, 2008, Mumbai terror attacks. He was later rescued by security forces who stormed and neutralised the Pakistani terrorists.
     
    Shiv Sena's youth leader Aaditya Thackeray expressed grief over the death of Noon, a prominent member of the Dawoodi Bohra community who started with a sweetmeat shop in Mumbai nearly six decades ago and went on to lord it over the British culinary business.
     
    "One of the most prominent Indians in Britain, and beyond that all, a very close friend of our family... Noon uncle was the epitome of the 'never give up' spirit of entrepreneurship and humanity," said Aaditya Thackeray.
     
    Migrating to Britain in his teens, Noon founded and ran a number of food product companies in Southall, specialising in Indian cuisine.
     
    His main business 'Noon Products' was established in 1987, manufacturing chilled and frozen ready-to-eat Indian and Thai meals, mostly for British supermarkets.
     
    In 1994, the factory was reduced to ashes in a blaze, but he got it working within 10 weeks and in 2005 it was acquired by Irish food giant Kerry Group.
     
    In 1996, he was made Member of Order of British Empire (MBE), Knight Bachelor in 2002, as Baron Noon in 2011, and finally entered the British House of Lords in January 2011 as a Labour Party leader.
     
    Later, Noon became the chancellor of University of East London, a Fellow of Birkbeck and a trustee of Maimonides Foundation, which promotes dialogue between the Jews and Muslims

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Islamic State Claims it Downed Russian Airliner That Killed All 224 Aboard in Egypt

    Islamic State Claims it Downed Russian Airliner That Killed All 224 Aboard in Egypt
    A Russian airliner crashed in central Sinai in Egypt on Saturday with 224 people on board, all of whom are presumed dead

    Islamic State Claims it Downed Russian Airliner That Killed All 224 Aboard in Egypt

    Nepal's first female president sworn in

    Nepal's first female president sworn in
    Kathmandu: Newly-elected President Bidhya Devi Bhandari was sworn in on Thursday as the first female president of Nepal.

    Nepal's first female president sworn in

    Father of murdered Indian waiter dies waiting for justice

    Father of murdered Indian waiter dies waiting for justice
    London: The father of an Indian-origin waiter, killed 17 years ago in Scotland, has died while waiting for justice for his son, a media report said.

    Father of murdered Indian waiter dies waiting for justice

    Pakistan's death toll from earthquake rises to 272

    Pakistan's death toll from earthquake rises to 272
    Islamabad: The death toll in the 7.5 magnitude earthquake that hit parts of Pakistan on Monday has risen to 272, the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) of Pakistan said on Thursday.

    Pakistan's death toll from earthquake rises to 272

    China to allow two children for all couples

    China to allow two children for all couples
    Beijing: Abandoning its decades-old one-child policy, China will now allow all couples to have two children, according to a communique issued on Thursday by the Communist Party of China, Xinhua reported.

    China to allow two children for all couples

    Imprisoned, flogged Saudi blogger Raif Badawi wins top EU rights prize

    Imprisoned, flogged Saudi blogger Raif Badawi wins top EU rights prize
    BRUSSELS — A Saudi blogger sentenced to 10 years in prison and 1,000 lashes for insulting Muslim clerics has won the European Union's prestigious Sakharov Prize for human rights.

    Imprisoned, flogged Saudi blogger Raif Badawi wins top EU rights prize

    PrevNext