Photographs: Reuters Indulekha Aravind in Bengaluru
Essential to the larger-than-life image of United Breweries Chairman Vijay Mallya cultivated were the appendages -- the yachts, private aircraft and houses all over the world.
Details of each were lapped up by a public eager to get a glimpse into the life of the "King of Good Times", and Mallya himself wasn't complaining -- after all, it amounted to a free branding opportunity for Kingfisher.
But at a time when his various assets face the prospect of being seized by creditors of Kingfisher Airlines, to whom the grounded airline owes Rs 7,500 crore (Rs 75 billion), it appears many of the luxury toys attributed to him are no longer his.
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Vijay Mallya's luxury toys are not his own
Image: Indian Empress.Photographs: Courtesy, Wikimedia Commons
The showpiece of his collection, arguably, was the Indian Empress -- a 95-metre 'megayacht' with a helipad that Mallya is said to have bought from a Qatari sheikh in 2006.
The yacht, it turns out, was sold by Mallya in 2011.
He now merely charters it for 30 days a year in Europe, according to an agreement valid till 2015.
The Kingfisher spokesperson said one of the main reasons for the sale was piracy in the Red Sea 'which precluded the yacht from coming to India'.
The only yacht Mallya now owns is the Kalizma, a vintage motor yacht built in 1906.
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Vijay Mallya's luxury toys are not his own
Photographs: Courtesy, Wikimedia Commons
Private aircraft were supposed to be another indulgence of Mallya's.
But not anymore.
The Boeing 727 and Gulfstream owned by his companies have both been sold.
Mallya now uses an Airbus 319 CJ that he has leased from Deutsche Bank in London, and a Hawker 700 owned by Shaw Wallace, in which Mallya holds 54 per cent.
The other aircraft, the company says, were sold "a long time ago" because they were old.
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Vijay Mallya's luxury toys are not his own
Photographs: Courtesy, Wikimedia Commons
Mallya has also been reported to have snapped up islands at various times -- from one in Lakshadweep to an island in Europe, off Monte Carlo, for which he was rumoured to have paid around Rs 750 crore (Rs 7.5 billion).
The company denied Mallya owned any property in France and added that the land in Tinnakara Island in Lakshadweep had only been leased to build a resort, which never took shape because the issue was entangled in court.
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Vijay Mallya's luxury toys are not his own
Photographs: Softeis/Wikimedia Commons
Other luxury possessions of Mallya's include his vintage car collection and his stud farm at Kunigal, near Bengaluru.
While both are intact, the Karnataka High Court this week rapped the state government for classifying the farm as a heritage site and asked it to explore the option of constructing a rail tunnel under the farm.
The court was responding to a petition by farmers challenging the authorities' decision to change the plan to lay a railway line through the stud farm on the grounds that it was a heritage site.
The image used is for representation only
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Vijay Mallya's luxury toys are not his own
Image: Kingfisher Villa.Photographs: Reuters
Assets that UB Holdings has pledged include Mallya's Kingfisher Villa in Goa, Kingfisher House in Mumbai and the Kingfisher brand, according to a written statement given in Parliament by Minister of State for Finance Namo Narain Meena.
The UB Group has asked the banks to release the security of Kingfisher Villa against equivalent cash collateral value, an offer the company says cannot be 'reasonably denied'.
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Vijay Mallya's luxury toys are not his own
Image: Vijay Mallya speaks to the media.Photographs: Vivek Prakash/Reuters
Last year, Mallya was dropped from Forbes' billionaire list, with his net worth shrinking to $800 million from $1.11 billion in 2011.
In response, Mallya had tweeted: "Thanks to the Almighty that Forbes has removed me from the so-called billionaires list. . . less jealousy, less frenzy and wrongful attacks."
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