http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/asia/article4810644.ece

September 23, 2008
CEO murdered by mob of sacked Indian workers
Rhys Blakely, Bombay

Corporate India is in shock after a mob of sacked workers bludgeoned to 
death the chief executive who had dismissed them from a factory in a 
suburb of Delhi.

Lalit Kishore Choudhary, 47, the head of the Indian operations of 
Graziano Transmissioni, an Italian-headquartered manufacturer of car 
parts, died of severe head wounds on Monday afternoon after being 
attacked by scores of laid-off employees, police said.

The incident, in Greater Noida, just outside the Indian capital, 
followed a long-running dispute between the factory's management and 
workers who had demanded better pay and permanent contracts.

It is understood that Mr Choudhary, who was married with one son, had 
called a meeting with more than 100 former employees - who had been 
dismissed following an earlier outbreak of violence at the plant - to 
discuss a possible reinstatement deal.

A police spokesman said: "Only a few people were called inside. About 
150 people were waiting outside when they heard someone from inside 
shout for help. They rushed in and the two sides clashed. The company 
staff were heavily outnumbered."

Other executives said they were lucky to escape with their lives. "I 
just locked my room's door from inside and prayed they would not break 
in. See, my hands are trembling even three hours later," an Italian 
consultant, Forettii Gatii, told a local newspaper.

More than 60 people were arrested and more than 20 were in hospital 
yesterday.

A spokesman for the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and 
Industry said: "Such a heinous act is bound to sully India's image among 
overseas investors."

The murder has stoked fears that outbreaks of mob rule risk jeopardising 
the subcontinent's economic rise.

In the most high-profile incident so far, thousands of violent 
protestors recently forced Tata, the Indian conglomerate that owns Land 
Rover and Jaguar, to halt work on the plant being built to produce the 
world's cheapest car - the £1,250 Nano. The move could result in nearly 
£200 million in investment written off.

Tata halted work three weeks ago, claiming it could not guarantee its 
workers safety at the factory in the state of West Bengal. In a rare 
show of support for a competitor, the billionaire industrialist Mukesh 
Ambani, one of India's most powerful businessmen, said that the Nano 
crisis showed how protestors were creating a "a fear-psychosis to 
slow-down certain projects of national importance."

Other companies, including Vedenta, the London-listed mining company, 
have encountered similar problems in India.

In a statement issued from Rivoli in Italy, Graziano said that some of 
Mr Choudhary's attackers had no connection to the company. It added that 
the chief executive was killed by "serious head injuries caused by the 
intruders."

"We absolutely condemn the attack," Marcello Lamberto, the head of 
Oerlikon Segment Drive Systems, which owns Graziano, said.

"This is by no means a regular labour conflict but is truly criminal 
action. The whole of Oerlikon Group is close to the family of Mr 
Chaudhary in this terrible moment."

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