Close X
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
ADVT 
International

Swraj Paul's Son Angad Falls To Death In Britain As The Family Business Collapses

Darpan News Desk IANS, 09 Nov, 2015 10:01 AM
    Angad Paul, son of Swraj Paul -- an India-born Britain-based business magnate and philanthropist -- died after falling from his eighth-storeyed penthouse home here, a media report said on Monday.
     
    Angad fell eight storeys on Sunday night, landing on the roof of another building below. Paramedics pronounced the 45-year-old dead at the scene in central London, Mirror Online reported.
     
    Police on Sunday night said there were no suspicious circumstances and they were investigating the incident.
     
    Angad was the CEO of Caparo Industries steel firm situated on Baker Street in London.
     
    Caparo Industries is reported to be on the brink of going into administration as a fallout of the UK steel crisis.
     
     
    Caparo reported an annual operating loss of 700,000 pounds for 2014 as compared with the previous year's profit of 3.1 million pounds.
     
    Its UK operations posted much higher losses at 2.5 million pounds, compared with the 1.7 million pounds profit made the year before.
     
    Its interests include manufacture of car components and steel pipes, hotels and hospitality.
     
    Several other projects include manufacture of superfast cars, films and design.
     
    Britain's steel industry has fallen into a deep crisis due to cheap Chinese imports, higher energy costs and the current strength of the pound sterling.
     
    Losses at UK's largest steelmaker, Tata Steel, have forced it to announce 700 job cuts in Yorkshire and several hundred layoffs at its South Wales plant. The company's losses doubled last year to 768 million pounds.
     
    Caparo, which had an auto ancillary unit in Singur in India's West Bengal state, still has 18 acres of land in the area.
     
     
    Angad married media lawyer Michelle Bonn 10 years ago. He was also the executive producer of a hit movie titled "Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels".

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Eurogroup Meeting Ends Fruitless, Greece Insists It Tabled Proposals

    Eurogroup Meeting Ends Fruitless, Greece Insists It Tabled Proposals
    An emergency Eurogroup meeting in Brussels on the Greek debt deal ended inconclusive on Tuesday, with lenders saying that they expected to discuss Greece's proposals on Wednesday during a Eurogroup teleconference.

    Eurogroup Meeting Ends Fruitless, Greece Insists It Tabled Proposals

    Two Indian Men Jailed For Molestation In Singapore

    Two Indian Men Jailed For Molestation In Singapore
    A court sentenced former gardener Gulcharan Singh, 51, to five months in prison for molesting a 20-year-old student in a lift after stalking her from a bus stop to her housing complex

    Two Indian Men Jailed For Molestation In Singapore

    Personal Artefacts Of Sikh Saint-soldier On Display In Singapore

    Personal Artefacts Of Sikh Saint-soldier On Display In Singapore
    A two-day exhibition was put up at a gurdwara in Singapore on Saturday to display the artefacts belonging to a Sikh saint-soldier.

    Personal Artefacts Of Sikh Saint-soldier On Display In Singapore

    Data Shows Alberta Off-Road Vehicle Use Unsustainable, Environmental Group Says

    Data Shows Alberta Off-Road Vehicle Use Unsustainable, Environmental Group Says
    EDMONTON — Nearly a decade's worth of data and observation from an environmental group suggests Alberta's fragile backcountry is being damaged by unsustainable off-highway vehicle use.

    Data Shows Alberta Off-Road Vehicle Use Unsustainable, Environmental Group Says

    Indian Restaurant In Slovenia Gets Certificate Of Excellence

    Indian Restaurant In Slovenia Gets Certificate Of Excellence
    The only Indian-owned and operated restaurant in Slovenia -- the Taj Mahal in Ljubljana -- has received a Certificate of Excellence from Trip Advisor, with a rating of 4.5/5.00.

    Indian Restaurant In Slovenia Gets Certificate Of Excellence

    Spectre Of 'Ghost Schools' In Afghanistan Doesn't Seem To Spook Canada

    Spectre Of 'Ghost Schools' In Afghanistan Doesn't Seem To Spook Canada
    OTTAWA — Canadian officials are shrugging off U.S. concerns that school enrolment numbers in Afghanistan — one of the most tangible indicators of the impact of millions in aid spending — may have been inflated or falsified outright.

    Spectre Of 'Ghost Schools' In Afghanistan Doesn't Seem To Spook Canada