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	<title>Lord Bilimoria of Chelsea, CBE, DL &#187; television interview</title>
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		<title>Interview &#8211; Murnaghan</title>
		<link>http://www.lordbilimoria.co.uk/interview-murnaghan-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.lordbilimoria.co.uk/interview-murnaghan-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 07 Nov 2014 12:18:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jack Tindale]]></dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.lordbilimoria.co.uk/?p=491</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Lord Bilimoria was a guest on Sky News&#8217; flagship &#8216;Murnaghan&#8217; programme on Sunday 2nd November, where he was interviewed about the positive aspects of immigration following a recent study by UCL about British attitudes towards migrants from various EU and non-EU nations. He was joined by the Bulgarian Ambassador to the United Kingdom. Konstantin Dimitrov, <span class="ellipsis">&#8230;</span> <span class="more-link-wrap"><a href="http://www.lordbilimoria.co.uk/interview-murnaghan-2/" class="more-link"><span>Read More &#8594;</span></a></span>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Lord Bilimoria was a guest on Sky News&#8217; flagship &#8216;Murnaghan&#8217; programme on Sunday 2nd November, where he was interviewed about the positive aspects of immigration following a recent study by UCL about British attitudes towards migrants from various EU and non-EU nations.</p>
<p>He was joined by the Bulgarian Ambassador to the United Kingdom. Konstantin Dimitrov, and Labour MP Barbara Roche, the former Immigration Minister.</p>
<p>The following transcript was kindly provided by Sky News.</p>
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<p style="padding-left: 30px;">DERMOT MURNAGHAN: Well immigration is one of the most divisive issues in politics at the moment but does our opinion of immigrants change depending on what country people come from to the UK?  Well a poll for this programme suggests that of course it does.  In the exclusive YouGov poll carried out for this programme people were asked ‘Do you think that immigrants from each of the following countries make a positive or negative contribution to life in Britain today?’  Well Australia, the United States and Germany came out top, at least 50% of people think they do make a positive contribution, immigrants from India and Poland also did pretty well coming out at 44% but the figure was much lower for immigrants from Bulgaria and Romania, just 18% of people think they make a positive contribution to life in Britain and in fact more people think they actually have a negative impact.  So why is that?  Well I am joined now by Bulgaria’s Ambassador to the UK, Konstatin Dimitrov, by the Labour MP Barbara Roche who is a former immigration minister and chair of the campaign group, the Migration Matters Trust and by Lord Bilimoria, an Indian born British businessman of course who is chairman amongst other things of Cobra Beer, a very good morning to you all.  Well Ambassador I want to start with you, first of all your reaction to that poll in that your countrymen and women when they come to the UK, they aren’t really rated very highly?</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">KONSTANTIN DIMITROV: Yes, I’m not surprised, it’s a combination of the brutal anti-Bulgarian propaganda for years now by certain politicians and media whose name I will not mention for obvious reason and the second point, a simple lack of personal knowledge of Bulgarians by many Brits.  Why?  Because there are only about 60,000 Bulgarians working in the UK in a population of 64 million so there is a very low chance for anyone to have met a Bulgarian or worked with a Bulgarian person and moreover, one other thing, it is exactly in places where there are no Bulgarians that people are very much prejudiced against Bulgarians unlike centres of mixed communities where Bulgarians are seen as very …</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">DM: You just tell us, I know you’ve told me before, that the majority of Bulgarians who come to the UK come here to get jobs and when the jobs disappear or when they have worked long enough, they go back to Bulgaria.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">KONSTANTIN DIMITROV: Exactly, just 1080 people have been registered to receive substantial work benefits in the UK last year, imagine, 1080 people, that’s absolutely negligible.  Our compatriots are primarily between 18 and 35 years of age, single and they come here to work primarily as a result of an a priori agreed upon contract.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">DM: Barbara, you come in to this, clearly there are different perceptions of different nationalities here, do you think we need some cool heads when it comes to discussing this issue, in particularly migration from within the European Union?</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">BARBARA ROCHE: Oh absolutely, I absolutely agree with what the Ambassador has had to say and indeed when I was a Member of Parliament and now in my role as Chair of Migration Matters, that’s what we actually try and argue.  We just need to look at the facts and I also think it’s time that all political parties know and say what’s in their heart of hearts, that actually legal migration can be a very positive good for this country both in our public services and for our economy so the more we know the facts, the better.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">DM: Do you think there is any point trying or should we not even try at all to limit migration from within the European Union and in particular underlying these figures, these findings we’ve got in particular to restrict Bulgarians, Romanians and a lot of East Europeans?</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">BARBARA ROCHE: I think the difficulty is that when we talk about this, and I am somebody who actually does believe in freedom of movement within the European Union, I think it is one of the fundamental tenets.  I remember one of my very first votes as a young woman was to vote for Britain to actually stay in the Union and not only is freedom of movement a good thing but we actually don’t often discuss the fact that there are very many British people who are working elsewhere in the European Union, particularly young people, and they value their freedom of movement and we would lose that.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">DM: Lord Bilimoria, you come in, are you heartened by the fact – and this then begs the question, is it just a matter of time of the indigenous population so to speak getting to know the immigrant population – India is pretty popular, it features up there along with the Poles coming in at 44% approval?</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"> LORD BILIMORIA: Well that doesn’t surprise me at all and I am relieved to hear that the Indian community is being appreciated for the contribution that it has made for decades to this economy and I would think this immigration debate has become so dangerous now particularly driven by UKIP, where everyone is being tarred with the same brush and you don’t look at the good immigration that has helped this country become great.  I mean look at Bulgaria, I know a very, very impressive young Bulgarian banker who works for the Queen’s bank who is highly impressive, you’d want somebody like that in this country.  We look at countries on this league table that you have just put up, you’ve missed out Bangladesh.  This evening I am going to be speaking at the Bangladesh Caterers Association annual awards dinner, over 1000 Bangladeshi restaurateurs from around the country, they are the ones – over two-thirds of restaurants are owned by Bangladeshis – they are the ones who actually brought curry to our homes, we love that food and yet they can’t bring in the skilled chefs that they need.  Look at Tata who own Jaguar Land Rover, a company six years ago nobody wanted to buy, now it is so successful.  Who is the Chief Executive of Tata Jaguar Land Rover in this country?  A German, Ralf Speth.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"> DM: Just to stay with this, Lord Bilimoria, do you think it is some of the perceptions and misperceptions if I can coin that phrase, that go around especially this idea that the vast majority of immigrants some people think come here to claim benefits, to sponge off society.  When people get to know for instance the South Asian community, let’s lump them all together, they are very hard working, there is a lot of productivity going on there.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">LORD BILIMORIA: Hard work, family values, education.  Look at foreign students, we still include international students in our immigration figures and the government has got this ridiculous target and one of the biggest mistakes that David Cameron has made is to put up this target of reducing immigration to the tens of thousands.  They are more than double that figure, they are never going to hit that figure.  I think that was a huge mistake to make and they are paying the price for that right now.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">DM: Ambassador, what do Bulgarians, your nationals who come along to you, what do they tell you about the way they are treated by the UK population because there is that classic case where you might answer a survey like ours and say I am not very keen on Bulgarians and Romanians and others but when you actually have met someone or worked alongside one of them as you mentioned, you think they are okay.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">KONSTANTIN DIMITROV: I would revert back to the last point I made, those who have worked with Bulgarians are very open and many Brits, 400,000 Brits a year go to Bulgaria to spend their time there, to have their holidays there, to even buy properties there.  If there is some inborn antipathy no one would do that.  The problem is those who are objects of propaganda and indeed those who haven’t met any Bulgarians at all, statistically these are quite convincing parameters as only 60,000 people in your country out of a country of 64 million, how could you possibly have an idea as to the contribution of such a small batch of people to your economy or to the texture of your society?</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">LORD BILIMORIA: And if you look at it, the other point is if you ask Theresa May, tell me the number of illegal immigrants in this country she wouldn’t have a clue, her department wouldn’t have a clue.  They don’t know whether it’s half a million, a million, a million and a half because we have lost control of immigration in that sense.  We still don’t have exit checks at our borders.  We would have a queue of Indian IT companies ready to do that job so that we can scan everyone’s passport when they come from wherever in the world, scan everyone’s passport when they have gone and then we would know who shouldn’t be here who are still here.  We should be attracting the best and the brightest people to this country.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">DM: Barbara Roche, there is an absolute numbers argument going on here as well.  If you get net migration of 250,000, just do the maths, over 20 years you end up with millions more people here and whatever nation they come from it just means that particularly public services are put under enormous strain.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">BARBARA ROCHE: You have to look at it two ways, first of all it is absolutely right that countries, and we need to control our borders and certainly when I was the Immigration Minister that was a tenet.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">DM: But how would you stop it?</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">BARBARA ROCHE: Well what you have to do first of all is also to acknowledge that people come and people go, we live in a global world and …</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">DM: But you just said that you don’t support stopping Europeans coming in and they are the vast majority of migrants so how do you control your borders?</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">BARBARA ROCHE: I actually think, I want to go back to the question that you asked about public services, you were talking about the strain on public services.  What the figures show and what the OECD says is that actually migrants contribute more to public services than they take out.  I think it is estimated that nearly 40% of our doctors, nearly 40% are migrants so the question is, are we asking the right questions about the effects on our public services?  If we stopped migration tomorrow our public services would be worse and our debt would be worse and I also would say if you stopped migration here, what is going to happen to all those people who want their holidays [inaudible] … the European Union?</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">DM: Okay, quick thoughts on that Ambassador, I know you want to come in on that.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">KONSTANTIN DIMITROV: That is right and also let us face a truth, outsiders, foreigners, come to work here because there are niches that the Brits wouldn’t like to take up, they wouldn’t like to go to the agricultural sector because there is no interest in such positions so of course legally our working citizens of the European Union will continue to come here to fill in the niches which are not wanted for other reasons by the Brits.  If the Brits started filling those niches in, there would be no need for such immigration as we talk about.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">DM: So market forces can deal with it.  Last point to you Lord Bilimoria.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">LORD BILIMORIA: Well I think it’s across the board. It’s what the Ambassador has just spoken about but also I mentioned the Chief Executive of Jaguar Land Rover, my joint venture partners at Cobra Molson Coors, we had a worldwide search for our UK chief executive, who is he?  A Belgian.  We want the brightest and the best across the board, from the Commonwealth, from the European Union and the biggest advantage of this country is that we are an open economy and that’s why we are still number two, number two inward investment country in the world today is this tiny country.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">DM: Oh well pointed out, I didn’t know that.  Listen, I must end it there, thank you very much to you Lord Bilimoria, good to see you, Konstantin Dimitrov, Ambassador and Barbara Roche, thank you very much indeed.</p>
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		<title>Interview &#8211; London Loves Business</title>
		<link>http://www.lordbilimoria.co.uk/interview-london-loves-business/</link>
		<comments>http://www.lordbilimoria.co.uk/interview-london-loves-business/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 08 Jul 2014 11:34:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jack Tindale]]></dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.lordbilimoria.co.uk/?p=428</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Lord Bilimoria was recently interviewed by &#8216;London Loves Business&#8217; &#8211; a leading publication for the financial and commercial community in London &#8211; regarding his stance on the government&#8217;s immigration policy, his advice for succeeding in business and his thoughts on the future of British politics. The effervescent chairman and founder of Cobra Beer speaks out <span class="ellipsis">&#8230;</span> <span class="more-link-wrap"><a href="http://www.lordbilimoria.co.uk/interview-london-loves-business/" class="more-link"><span>Read More &#8594;</span></a></span>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="standfirst">Lord Bilimoria was recently interviewed by &#8216;London Loves Business&#8217; &#8211; a leading publication for the financial and commercial community in London &#8211; regarding his stance on the government&#8217;s immigration policy, his advice for succeeding in business and his thoughts on the future of British politics.</div>
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<p style="font-weight: bold;">The effervescent chairman and founder of Cobra Beer speaks out</p>
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<p>If you’ve ever dined in an Indian restaurant in Britain with a pint of beer then you are most likely to have seen Cobra Beer.</p>
<p>It’s stocked in 98.6% of Indian restaurants in this country.</p>
<p>The beer brand, which was founded by Lord Karan Bilimoria CBE in 1989, is exported to over 45 countries including Chile, New Zealand and Japan. And plans are afoot to increase the beer’s presence in pubs across the UK.</p>
<p>Since first entering the Monde Selection Awards in 2001, Cobra Beer has now won a total of 78 gold medals, making it one of the most awarded beers in the world. The company also saw a 20% rise in sales this year compared with a year ago.</p>
<p>But Cobra Beer hasn’t always been this buoyant. It’s been at the brink of closure – three times.</p>
<p>How did it survive? We ask Lord Bilimoria:</p>
<p><strong>Q. You’ve nearly lost your business thrice. How have you managed to survive?</strong></p>
<p>Yes, I’ve nearly lost my business three times but I’ve managed to resuscitate it each time.</p>
<p>The first time was in 1998-99 when Cobra was boycotted by all Indian restaurants. I had started a trade magazine called Tandoori for the Indian restaurant sector. I owned 45% of it but never got involved in the editorial side. There was an article published in the magazine that upset the Indian restaurants, very understandably. Once they realised I was one of the co-owners, Cobra was boycotted by thousands of restaurants for a whole year.</p>
<p>We overturned the ban by going restaurant to restaurant and [we] convinced the owners that we wouldn’t do anything to upset our consumers. The editors apologised and we were able to claim our innocence – it was a painful process but we made it through.</p>
<p>My company by then had its own depot, distribution network and sales force around the country. We had 120 employees and went down to only 17 because we had to close down all our depots. Before the incident, we were growing 70% year-on-year for three years. That’s all the past now and now we share a very good rapport with all the restaurants.</p>
<p>The second time was in 2009 just before Lehman Brothers went bankrupt. The onset of the financial crisis led to one of the world’s biggest drinks giants pulling out of a deal with us at the eleventh hour.</p>
<p>The third time was in 2009 when we had to restructure the company in a horrible way. We were going through a company voluntary arrangement, which requires 75% of your creditors to agree. Ninety per cent of creditors agreed but in the end one creditor, without warning, tried to close down the business. Therefore, we had to abandon that route. So the only route left for us was a pre-pack administration.</p>
<p>The problem with pre-pack administration is that it has a bad reputation because people misuse it. But we gave a whole week to people to bid for the business. PwC and Rothschild phoned, proactively, every single bidder interested in buying the company. In June 2009, Molson Coors &#8211; the giant behind beer brand Carling &#8211; and Cobra formed a joint venture. The secured creditors have all been settled and I am settling the unsecured creditors. Everyone has been looked after.</p>
<p>That’s all in the past now and I’ve learnt a great deal from the tough times. There’s no looking back now.</p>
<p><strong>Q. You are looking to break into the pub and bar market this year. How’s that coming along?</strong></p>
<p>The Indian restaurants are Cobra’s foundation because they are very popular in Britain. In the nineties, there were 3,000 restaurants in the country compared to 10,000 Indian restaurants today.</p>
<p>We sell to 98.6% of Indian restaurants, so why not pubs and bars? We’re already in 4,000 outlets and are recognised as one of the leading beer brands.</p>
<p>We’re only in a few hundreds pubs and bars as opposed to 7,000 Indian restaurants.  There is a big potential here and it’s the next big step for Cobra. We’re getting repeat orders from pubs and bars which have stocked our beer. For example, the Montpellier Group in Scotland. We’re trialling it in Liverpool and even within London.</p>
<p>When I started Cobra, we couldn’t even afford beer glasses. The only marketing tool we had was a flimsy blue table card. Now we have a multi-million-pound advertising spend every year.</p>
<p><strong>Q. You’ve been in the House of Lords since 2006 &#8211; tell us about your work in Parliament</strong>…</p>
<p>In 2006, I was appointed an independent crossbench peer in the House of Lords. In that period, I’ve focussed on business, immigration, entrepreneurship and higher education.</p>
<p><strong>Q. What are your thoughts on immigration?</strong></p>
<p>This government has got immigration absolutely wrong. They are damaging the reputation of Britain because we are losing out on all the good immigration that every country needs.</p>
<p>I led a debate in Parliament recently on the phenomenal contribution of ethnic minorities and religious communities. To curb immigration to hit a target and to tar everyone with the same brush sends out a very negative signal.</p>
<p>For example – [the number of] international students coming to Britain has dropped for the first time in history because the perception being sent out is that Britain doesn’t want foreign students.</p>
<p>Back in 2007, in my first question in Parliament, I highlighted how Scotland was allowing its graduates to stay on for the two years and that so should we. I got cross-party support in the Lords and the then-Minister for Schools Lord Andrew Adonis introduced the post-study work visa scheme for foreign students to stay in the country for two years after they finished their course. I regard that as one of my biggest achievements. But now that’s gone and students are given just six months within which they need to find a job and convince an employer to sponsor their visa.</p>
<p>This government keeps coming up with ridiculous processes that it later U-turns. For example, the £3,000 bond for Indians to come to the UK, [and] the vans going around saying “illegal immigrants, go back”.</p>
<p><strong>Q. Do you think Vince Cable is doing a good job?</strong></p>
<p>The government is doing a lot to encourage entrepreneurship. I put an idea to Vince Cable about launching a competition in Britain for fast-growth companies who can get places on the business growth programme in Cranfield University and the post-graduate diploma in entrepreneurship at Cambridge University. He loved the idea but the civil servants sent me a long letter giving me bureaucratic reasons about why they can’t give one university preference over the other.</p>
<p>Cable needs to implement more ideas like this to encourage entrepreneurialism &#8211; there’s a lot more he can do.</p>
<p><strong>Q. The general elections are less than a year away. Who do you think would make a good PM?</strong></p>
<p>At the moment, I would say that David Cameron has been trying to champion entrepreneurship.</p>
<p>Some of the things Ed Miliband is saying are very worrying for business and I would be extremely worried if he becomes Prime Minister. His proposals about bringing back the 50p tax [are] disastrous. I think we should be back to 40p.</p>
<p>It worries me that we have career politicians who haven’t had any exposure to business. Ed Miliband hasn’t had any exposure to business in any way &#8211; he’s been a career politician. He lacks understanding of the real world of business.</p>
<p>Having said that, I am the chairman of the UK India Business Council [and have been] for quite a few years and have worked with David Cameron, Tony Blair and Gordon Brown. So even if it’s Miliband who I have to work with, I will be fine.</p>
<p><strong>Q. What are your thoughts about UKIP?</strong></p>
<p>I have debated with Farage on Newsnight and completely disagree with UKIP’s immigration policies. His comments on LBC Radio about living next door to Germans worry me. It worries me that a party like his gets as many votes as they do. Forget the European Elections &#8211; they came second in the recent by-election.</p>
<p>Say what you want to about them, but the reality is that people are voting for them.</p>
<p>However, I don’t think UKIP is capable of getting a single seat at the general elections. Do they have the ability to have a credible cabinet of ministers who we can trust to run this country? I’m sorry, I don’t think so. They are not a credible party and Farage can never be Prime Minister.</p>
<p><strong>Thanks for your time.</strong></p>
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		<title>Interview &#8211; Murnaghan</title>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 11 May 2014 15:20:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jack Tindale]]></dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.lordbilimoria.co.uk/?p=398</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[On Sunday 11th May, Lord Bilimoria was interviewed on Sky News&#8217; flagship &#8220;Murnaghan&#8221; programme regarding the on-going Indian General Election. A transcript of the interview can be seen below. DERMOT MURNAGHAN: Now the General Election in India is of course a huge operation and we’re often told it’s the world’s largest democracy where over 800 <span class="ellipsis">&#8230;</span> <span class="more-link-wrap"><a href="http://www.lordbilimoria.co.uk/interview-murnaghan/" class="more-link"><span>Read More &#8594;</span></a></span>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="color: #222222;">On Sunday 11th May, Lord Bilimoria was interviewed on Sky News&#8217; flagship &#8220;Murnaghan&#8221; programme regarding the on-going Indian General Election. A transcript of the interview can be seen below.</p>
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<p style="color: #222222; padding-left: 30px;">DERMOT MURNAGHAN: Now the General Election in India is of course a huge operation and we’re often told it’s the world’s largest democracy where over 800 million people are eligible to vote, that’s more than the entire population of Europe.  Well now after five weeks of voting the election is almost over so who’s going to win power and how could it affect Britain?  Well I’m joined now by the British businessman, Lord Bilimoria, co-founder and chairman of Cobra Beer, he was born in Hyderabad in India of course and has just returned from India.  You were there at the start of the elections which were way back, what, at the beginning of April?</p>
<p style="color: #222222; padding-left: 30px;">LORD BILIMORIA: April 7th, yes.</p>
<p style="color: #222222; padding-left: 30px;">DM: My goodness me.  So where do you see the momentum now, is it with the BJP?</p>
<p style="color: #222222; padding-left: 30px;">LORD BILIMORIA: Yes, very much the consensus is that Narendra Modi, the primary candidate for the BJP, is predicted to win.  It’s a question of how much his BJP party wins because there are 543 seats and they have to get 272 to get a majority.  In September they predicted, oh if he gets over 180 he’ll be able to form a coalition, well now that went up and he’ll definitely get over 200 now, they are even talking about his NDA, his Alliance which is made up of 27 parties, possibly getting an outright majority from day one.</p>
<p style="color: #222222; padding-left: 30px;">DM: What could that mean for India?  He has been described in the past as a Hindu nationalist, he had his right to visit the UK, he even had his passport … they wouldn’t allow him in, it is said that he actually could be divisive for India.</p>
<p style="color: #222222; padding-left: 30px;">LORD BILIMORIA: Well he has been Chief Minister of Gujarat State in western India, a very successful Chief Minister, he was re-elected, is in his third term now and as a state it has actually done very well from a business point of view.  Yes, of course he was Chief Minister in 2002 soon after he was appointment when those awful, awful incidents took place which were tragic not just from India’s point of view but from the whole world, he was Chief Minister then but in the ten years that the Congress party have been in power he has not been convicted so we in Britain do business with Gujarat.  When I was Chairman of the UK India Business Council I was not allowed to take delegations to Gujarat, now we have…</p>
<p style="color: #222222; padding-left: 30px;">DM: There are 150 million Muslims within India, I know it is  a vast population, well over a billion as we know but nevertheless, can he heal or exacerbate those tensions?</p>
<p style="color: #222222; padding-left: 30px;">LORD BILIMORIA: Well India is a secular country, no one can lead India without having a pluralist and secular attitude because of the vast number of minorities, of which the Muslims are the largest.  It is one of the largest Muslim populations in the world and I think if he comes to power he will have to work with everybody and of course, what’s really complicated about India is it’s 35 states and union territories and each one of these states is like a country.  The Chief Minister of a state is Prime Minister of that state and has a lot of autonomy as well, so you have got to work with the states and politically it is very complicated.  Here it is relatively simple with the Conservatives, Labour, Lib Dems and UKIP, in India there are so many parties.  Here we get excited if Boris Johnson is perhaps standing as MP and being Lord Mayor for one year, you’ve got members of the Upper House in India now standing for [loads?] of our seats, you’ve got people who stand for more than one seat, you’ve got people who are trying to make a stand by standing in contentious seats to just make a point and it’s so complicated.  The figures, 815 million people being able to vote, the largest election in the history of the world.</p>
<p style="color: #222222; padding-left: 30px;">DM: But those complications lead and also have a bearing on one of the age old problems for India which Narendra Modi would have to wrestle with, the issue of corruption.  He’s an outsider it seems, he is not one of those Delhi elitists is he, does that help?</p>
<p style="color: #222222; padding-left: 30px;">LORD BILIMORIA: Well it helps for example that he has actually run a state for over a decade and being Chef Minister of State, you’re actually governing that state.  One of the criticisms about President Obama of course is he was never a governor of a state, he’d never run anything before he became President of the country and I think that’s to his credit that he’s been Chief Minister of State and he has got that experience but that’s different running one state to running a country of 1.25 billion and all its diversity.</p>
<p style="color: #222222; padding-left: 30px;">DM: And just tell me from a business perspective, you are ideally placed of course having business interests there and here, would he improve that environment, the relation between India and UK in terms of trade?</p>
<p style="color: #222222; padding-left: 30px;">LORD BILIMORIA: There is no question, every single business person I’ve spoken to in India wants Narendra Modi to be Prime Minister because they see him as being pro-business, as promoting business, promoting exports, promoting inward investment and from India and UK’s point of view, here in the UK we have over one and a half million people of Indian origin, it is the largest ethnic minority population in the country which I’m proud to say does incredibly well here in Britain and I think a lot of those are Guajarati’s as well and for them to have Narendra Modi, somebody from their state becoming Prime Minister I think there will be a huge, huge surge in business between the UK and India.  In fact the stock market is already predicting his becoming Prime Minister and exit polls are now allowed, they are only allowed after the voting finishes on the 12th and then the election results are announced on the 16th so when the exit polls are released and of course when that result comes out on the 16th, they are predicting the stock market in India is going to rocket.</p>
<p style="color: #222222; padding-left: 30px;">DM: Okay, we’ll await those results with interest.  Thank you very much indeed for your predictions and your analysis, Lord Bilimoria there.</p>
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		<title>Interview &#8211; BBC Hardtalk</title>
		<link>http://www.lordbilimoria.co.uk/interview-bbc-hardtalk/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 12 Mar 2013 16:26:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jack Tindale]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[BBC]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[immigration]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[television interview]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[After visiting India with the Prime Minister, Lord Bilimoria was interviewed about immigration on BBC News&#8217; HARDtalk program. In it, Karan spoke about how best to reform the present immigration system in Britain in a way that would limit illegal entry into the United Kingdom, whilst allowing the brightest and best to contribute to the <span class="ellipsis">&#8230;</span> <span class="more-link-wrap"><a href="http://www.lordbilimoria.co.uk/interview-bbc-hardtalk/" class="more-link"><span>Read More &#8594;</span></a></span>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>After visiting India with the Prime Minister, Lord Bilimoria was interviewed about immigration on BBC News&#8217; HARDtalk program. In it, Karan spoke about how best to reform the present immigration system in Britain in a way that would limit illegal entry into the United Kingdom, whilst allowing the brightest and best to contribute to the economy and wider society.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-radio-and-tv-21753219">A clip of the interview can be found here.</a></p>
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