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Search resuls for: "Cyrus Mistry"


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Ratan Tata, the former Tata Group chairman who put a staid and sprawling Indian conglomerate on the global stage with a string of high-profile acquisitions, has died, the Tata Group said in a statement late on Wednesday. Ratan Tata "was a visionary business leader, a compassionate soul and an extraordinary human being," Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on social media platform X. He founded telecommunications firm Tata Teleservices in 1996 and took IT firm Tata Consultancy Services, the group's cash cow, public in 2004. Tata Motors then acquired British luxury auto brands Jaguar and Land Rover from Ford Motor Co in 2008 for $2.3 billion. The Tata Group said Mistry had failed to turnaround poorly performing businesses while Mistry accused Ratan Tata, who was chairman emeritus of the conglomerate, of interfering and creating an alternate power center at the group.
Persons: Ratan Tata, Ratan, Narendra Modi, Telco, J.R.D, Tata, Tata Teleservices, Tetley, Ratan Tata's, Cyrus Mistry, Shapoorji Pallonji, Mistry, Ola Organizations: Tata Group, Ratan Naval Tata, Cornell University, Tata, Tata Motors Ltd, Tata Steel Ltd, National Radio & Electronics Company, Tata Consultancy Services, Stanford Graduate School of Business, Corus, Tata Motors, Rover, Ford Motor Co, India —, Tata Sons, Urban Company Locations: India, Dutch, Indian
A billboard of ride-hailing service Uber is pictured on a highway in New Delhi, India, April 19, 2016. The move comes amid a growing road-safety push in India, the world's fourth-largest car market. India already has rules mandating passengers in the back seat to wear seatbelts but only a few comply. In most cases, car and taxi owners put seat covers atop seatbelts on their back seats, making them inaccessible for use. Uber told drivers in its advisory to ensure backseat seatbelts were installed, adding "if the belt is hidden under the seat cover, please remove the cover".
New Delhi/Hong Kong (CNN Business) Cyrus Mistry, the Indian scion of one of the country's most prominent empires, died in a road accident on a highway near Mumbai on Sunday, according to Maharashtra police. Mistry, 54, was one of two people who died when the car they were traveling in hit a barrier between two lanes, according to Shrikant Shinde, a Maharashtra police official. Two other people in the vehicle were injured and taken to hospital, he added. Autopsies would be carried out on the two deceased at a hospital in Mumbai, said Pradeep Dhodhi, a Palghar district medical official. Mistry was best known as the former chairman of Tata Sons , the massive Indian conglomerate that owned Jaguar, Land Rover and the Taj hotels.
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