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BUSINESS NEWS ARCHIVE 2007
 
 
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  Business News Archive 2007 -> Migrant worries follow killer fire at Asian-owned warehouse  
 
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CASE STUDIES

Pharma Families: The Kenyan Asian Story (05/04)

The Man from the Priory - Dr Chai Patel (04/04)

Karan Bilimoria - Bottled for Business (02/07)

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Mayank Patel - Currencies Direct (01/07)

Mike Jatania - Lornamead Group (01/07)


2007 ARTICLES

Vikram Pandit named Citigroup CEO (12/07)

British consumers victims of credit card fraud in India

Vodafone to outsource jobs to India (12/07)

Scottish Asian Business Awards 2007 (12/07)

Asian Businesses key to London's Economy (12/07)

Tata wins key union backing in Jaguar, Land Rover sale

Going global, Indian firms create jobs in US (11/07)

Hindujas on billion pound spending spree in UK

Jagriti Yatra 2007 searchs for India's real heroes

Vijay Mallya foraying into luxury retail segment

The Indus Nano-Tech Association launched

Entrepreneur Reuben Singh declared bankrupt (11/07)

Killer fire at Asian-owned warehouse (11/07)

Microsoft signs $500-mn IPTV deal with Reliance

National mission to make India a global nano hub

Jet Airways targets $3 billion revenue in 3 years

Hindujas to expand hospital business (10/07)

Indian stock markets break all records (10/07)

Cisco to triple headcount to 10,000 in India (10/07)

Child labour in Delhi forces 'Gap' to withdraw clothes

Cobra Beer bets high on India (10/07)

British NHS patients favour India for treatment (10/07)

Mukesh Ambani soon to join world's 10 richest (10/07)

Indian handicrafts: weaving their way to slow death?

India to set up centralised drug licensing authority

'BPOs no longer career choice for Indian youths'

GVK launches centre for US Pharms Giant, Wyeth

India to tap funds in Britain for infrastructure (09/07)

India not easy to do business in: World Bank

Don't fret about Wal-Mart: Lord Swaraj Paul (09/07)

Vijay Mallya wants India racing on F1 tracks (09/07)

India most acquisitive of emerging economies

Globalisation is two-way traffic: Azim Premji (09/07)

Indo-British bilateral trade up 30 percent (09/07)

Hero Group buys Scotland's top call centre operator

Indian Ruling against Novartis a victory (08/07)

Founders quit as Goldshield settles NHS claim (06/07)

Ethnic Minority Business Task Force Launched

Female wealth creation driven by business success.

Barclays launches retail banking in India (05/07)

Sanjeev Shah to head Fidelity's Fund (05/07)

Indian Nano-Tech business starts in the UK (05/07)

Punjab National Bank launches in the UK (05/07)

Asian Business Awards 2007 (05/07)

Indian Biotech sector to be $5 bn industry by 2010

A business school for India's rural women (05/07)

UK customers unhappy with Indian call centres (05/07)

Uganda woos Indian investors, says Indians safe

Reliance Money enters gold retailing business (05/07)

Mayor rejects UK Post Office privatisation (04/07)

Vedanta buys Sesa, India's largest iron ore producer

Infosys targets $4 billion revenue in 2008 (04/07)

Jet buys Sahara for Rs.14.5 billion ($336 million)

GSK signs outsourcing deal with Indian Firm (03/07)

India's biotech industry emerging as world innovator

Patak's up for sale at £200 million (03/07)

Cobra Beer to set up two breweries in India (03/07)

Lloyds TSB launches Muslim Business Bank Account

Dr Reddy's eyes generics arm of Merck (02/07)

UK retailer Argos set to enter India (02/07)

Bharti & Wal-Mart close to a Cash-&-Carry deal (02/07)

Vijay Mallya to buy Whyte & Mackay (02/07)

Vodafone acquires Hutch Essar in India (02/07)

1000 strong network of women entrepreneurs

64% of Business retirees have no exit plan (02/07)

Small firms to get I.P health checks (02/07)

Indian entrepreneurs riding wave of innovation (02/07)

India's Global Services Economy (01/07)

First Asian Woman CEO of a FTSE Company (01/07)

Tata finally acquires Corus at 6.08p/share (01/07)

Gita Patel's Trapezia Fund hits £4.5M target (01/07)

Bank for India's Rural Women: 10th anniversary


ARCHIVED ARTICLES

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KILLER FIRE AT ASIAN-OWNED WAREHOUSE
London, November 5, 2007 (IANS)

FiremanThe death of four firemen at a warehouse owned by one of Britain's wealthiest Asian men - with the possibility of the death toll rising Monday - has raised questions over working conditions for migrants in Britain. Four part-time firemen were killed Friday trying to fight a blaze that swept the warehouse at Atherstone-on-Stour and reports said more bodies could be found as firemen gained access to the gutted building.

The warehouse belongs to Wealmoor Atherstone Ltd., a vegetable and exotic fruit company owned by 77-year-old Rati Dhanani, a London-based businessmen ranked 177th on the Asian rich list in Britain with an estimated wealth of 5.2 million pounds (Rs.430 million). Dhanani's company admitted the lack of a water sprinkler or misting system in the warehouse, while rescue crews who had entered the building searching for the firemen's bodies said the death toll could rise because a number of vegetable packers could have failed to escape.

The company, Europe's biggest fruit and vegetable wholesaler, which sources exotic fruits from throughout the world and its own farms in Kenya and the Gambia, is facing accusations over work conditions.

John McGhee of the Fire Brigades Union said there was growing concern about the use of migrant workers in warehouses. "The fact is that there are unscrupulous employers, allowing people to sleep in their premises and it is an issue for us. We need to know when we arrive at a premises whether there are people in there and the more accurate the information the better," he said.

But Avnish Malde, a company director, said he was unaware of any workers having been caught in the blaze. "I'm not aware of anyone staying overnight; at that time of day it would have been an end of shift so there would've been a few people there," he said

The company is said to employ many migrant labourers - among tens of thousands who toil away across Britain for very low wages usually picking or packing fruits and vegetables. There have been no breaches of employment regulation at Atherstone since Dhanani took over business in July from a company called Bomford, which had gone into administration.

However, the previous owners were thought to have been guilty of multiple breaches. The Daily Mail reported four years ago that migrant workers from Poland, Lithuania, Ukraine, Latvia and Bangladesh were being paid a pitiful £14 a day by Bomford for backbreaking work. The migrants were working seven days a week for as little as £100 pounds, the paper said. Many of the workers, bussed in from Coventry, Warwick and other towns at dawn, used to put in a 10-hour-day without holiday pay.

The current owners are said to employ 300 workers at the warehouse, a former Royal Air Force hangar.

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