BFF-27 Indian coffee king’s body found

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BFF-27

INDIA-COFFEE-BUSINESS-MURDER

Indian coffee king’s body found

BANGALORE, India, July 31, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – The body of billionaire Indian
coffee magnate V.G. Siddhartha was found by a river in southern India on
Wednesday, a day after a letter revealed his concerns over deep financial
problems and perceived harassment from tax authorities.

The discovery by fishermen ended a two-day search for the founder of the
Cafe Coffee Day empire, after he was last seen by his driver walking across a
bridge in the city of Mangalaru.

Politicians and business figures called immediately for a probe into
Siddhartha’s death, as well as the allegations in his letter of harassment
from lenders and tax authorities.

“The government should hold a proper investigation into his tragic death,”
former prime minister H.D. Deve Gowda said on Twitter as he expressed
“shock”.

A call for an independent inquiry was raised in parliament by opposition
Congress MP Manish Tewari.

Siddhartha — whose family had been in the coffee business for 130 years –
– opened his first Cafe Coffee Day store in 1996 and went on to become one of
the world’s biggest coffee traders.

He owned Asia’s biggest coffee plantation and his company was India’s
biggest coffee exporter.

The chain has more than 1,700 stores, mainly in India, but also in
Malaysia, Egypt, Czech Republic and Austria, employing more than 30,000
people.

Its shares slumped by 20 percent for the second straight day on Wednesday
as news of the body was released.

– ‘Unbearable stress’ –

Police said Siddhartha, aged about 59, left Bangalore late Monday, telling
his family he was going to a hill resort but instead asked his driver to take
him to Mangaluru.

He ordered the driver to stop the car and started walking along a bridge
as he talked to someone on his phone before disappearing, according to
police.

Fishermen finally found his body early Wednesday on a river bank,
according to police. Siddhartha’s empire came under increasing pressure after
tax authorities launched raids on company offices in 2017.

In a letter to the Cafe Coffee Day board, the 57-year-old chairman had
admitted mistakes in handling his financial affairs.

But he said he had suffered pressure from lenders and Indian tax
authorities.

“I am very sorry to let down all the people that put their trust in me,”
said the letter, which was released by the company as it held an emergency
board meeting on Tuesday.

“I fought for a long time but today I have given up as I could not take
any more pressure from one of the private equity partners forcing me to buy
back shares.”

Siddhartha said he had faced “a lot of harassment” from the Indian tax
authorities.

“My intention was never to cheat or mislead anybody, I have failed as an
entrepreneur,” he said.

Kiran Mazumdar Shaw, head of Biocon, one of Asia’s leading bio-
pharmaceutical companies, said Siddhartha appeared to be under “unbearable
stress” and the circumstances should be investigated.

BSS/AFP/FI/ 1602 hrs