Asil Nadir, Polly Peck tycoon turned fugitive, dies aged 83
Asil Nadir, Polly Peck tycoon turned fugitive, dies aged 83
Asil Nadir, the Turkish Cypriot who built Polly Peck International, once Britain’s fastest-growing company, before going on the run after it was discovered he had stolen millions from the conglomerate, has died. He was 83.Tributes poured in on Monday in the Turkish-held north of Cyprus, where the one-time fugitive businessman was regarded as a hero and for many years had lived in exile and isolation.“Every person is as long-lived as his works. Asil Nadir is immortal with his works,” wrote Hasan Hastürer, a columnist in Kıbrıs Gazetesi, the newspaper once owned by the tycoon
Asil Nadir obituary
Asil Nadir was the stock market poster boy of the 1980s who conned City bankers and private investors, not to mention the Conservative party, then staged a dramatic escape to spend 17 years as a fugitive before returning to the UK to face trial.A Turkish Cypriot immigrant, Nadir, who has died aged 83, was for many years feted as a success in the UK and Turkey. A 1991 biography of him was entitled The Sultan of Berkeley Square. Charismatic, charming and stylish, with playboy looks and lifestyle, plus an air of Midas mystery, Nadir had gone from running a family “rag trade” business in the East End of London to a £2bn global business empire, offices and homes in Mayfair filled with millions in art and antiques, a Palladian mansion in Rutland and another country estate.Few queried how Nadir made his millions – certainly not Tory party fundraisers
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