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Arbitrator's award restored
The Supreme Court last week set aside the judgement of the Rajasthan high court and restored the award of the arbitrator in the case, Indian Hume Pipe Co Ltd vs State of Rajasthan. The company was granted contract for laying pipeline in the Kota division. Following disputes between the company and the state government, the matter was referred to three arbitrators. They allowed the claim of the company along with interest from the pre-reference period, during the arbitration and ‘future interest’ from the date of the award till the date of payment. On appeal by the state government, the high court set aside the award of interest at the above three stages. The company appealed to the Supreme Court. It ruled that the arbitrator has the power to award interest at all the three stages.

Figo-ing places
Ford has spent considerable time and energy (and scarce cash) to develop the Figo. Can it fend off competition?

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ING Q3 net profit at euro 499 mn
Dutch financial services firm ING today reported euro 499 million profit for the third quarter, helped by strong performance in banking and insurance business.
Small Business

Bharti keen on buying African telecom PSUs

The Bharti group, which has just acquired a majority stake in the Bangladeshi mobile operator Warid Telecom, is on the lookout to acquire government-owned telcos in developing countries like Africa which are up for divestment. - Bharti: Looking out - Trai contemplating regulations for telecom tower biz - Reliance Infratel IPO gets Sebi"s nod - More time needed for Bharti Airtel check, auditor tells DoT - GTL-Aircel tower deal confirmed for Rs 8,400 cr - Newsmaker: Sanjay Kapoor">Newsmaker: Sanjay Kapoor "If the government in any other developing country like Africa, Bangladesh etc are looking for disinvestment in PSU telcos then it can be looked at. But it would only be in mobile services and not in fixed lines," Bharti Enterprises managing director Rajan Bharti Mittal told reporters on the sidelines of a Ministry of Commerce and Ficci event here. Reflecting on the failure of his company"s talks with South African telco MTN twice, he said, "you always have a look out. MTN (which also holds Nigeria) did not happen. But if given an opportunity, we will look at it." Mittal, however, ruled out any fresh talks with MTN saying, "that chapter is closed. But we are always going to look at new opportunities. "As you are aware, we have just done the Bangladesh deal. We want to go into a continent and this is a continent that attracts us." Bharti last week signed a pact to acquire 70 per cent stake in Bangladesh’s fourth largest telco Warid Telecom from the Dhabi Group for $300 million. Bharti’s first foray outside the country was Sri Lanka where it entered last January. Bharti Airtel chief executive Manoj Kohli had already said that his company’s only strategy is to focus on emerging markets and not any big or small buys.


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