Subrata Roy, 75, the founder of Sahara India Pariwar, died on Tuesday. He had been receiving treatment at a private hospital in Mumbai for some time.
Roy, who was born on 10 June 1948, in Araria, Bihar, was a prominent figure in the Indian business landscape, having built a vast empire that included finance, real estate, media and hospitality.
Roy's journey began with his mechanical engineering education at the Government Technical Institute in Gorakhpur. In Gorakhpur, he started a business before taking over Sahara Finance, a struggling chit-fund company in 1976. By 1978, he had renamed it Sahara India Pariwar, and it had grown to become one of India's largest conglomerates.
Sahara expanded into a variety of businesses under Roy's leadership. In 1992, the group launched the Hindi language newspaper Rashtriya Sahara and in the late 1990s, it launched the ambitious Aamby Valley City project near Pune, later renamed Sahara One. Sahara made international headlines in the 2000s when it purchased iconic properties such as London's Grosvenor House Hotel and New York City's Plaza Hotel.
Roy's legal difficulties did not overshadow his contributions to business. He was awarded an honorary doctorate in business leadership from the University of East London, as well as the Business Icon of the Year award at the Powerbrands Hall of Fame Awards in London. He was also a regular on India Today's list of the country's most powerful people.
Roy looked to the future in his later years, with ventures such as Sahara Evols, which offered a range of electric vehicles and plans to enter the online education sector with Edunguru, targeting small towns and villages.