Business as usual for Mallya’s Force India

April 17, 2016 12:08 am | Updated November 17, 2021 04:53 am IST - LONDON:

Vijay Mallya

Vijay Mallya

India's move to suspend embattled tycoon Vijay Mallya’s diplomatic passport made headlines in Mumbai and New Delhi on Friday but it was business as usual for his Force India Formula One team in China.

Mallya has yet to attend a grand prix this year, absent from the season-opener in Australia and Bahrain, and the team said the 60-year-old never had any intention of travelling to Shanghai for Sunday's third round.

“He does not usually attend this race,” said a team spokesman after the day's free practice sessions. Mallya's immediate whereabouts were unclear and he was not available for comment.

Deputy team principal Bob Fernley told Reuters this month that Mallya, who is a member of the upper house of India's parliament, had no plans to travel to any races until the Spanish Grand Prix in Barcelona on May 13-15.

That follows on from Russia as the fifth round of the championship and start of the main European season. The beer baron's financial problems have been mounting steadily and he left India last month amid pressure from lenders to repay about $1.4 billion in debt owed by his defunct Kingfisher Airlines. On Friday, India's foreign ministry gave Mallya a week to answer why his passport should not be impounded or revoked.

Force India's other main co-owner is the Sahara conglomerate, whose founder Subrata Roy was arrested in March 2014 after the company failed to comply with a court order to refund money raised from millions of small investors.

“Obviously money isn't lavished upon us but the team has done very well over the last few years in constantly moving up and increasing its revenues from the constructors' championship,” Fernley told Reuters after Bahrain grand prix.

“We actually have a significant amount of revenue coming in from the commercial side and we are pretty close to being self-sufficient,” Mr. Femley said.

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