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Trustee at Tata's charity arm in India calls internal disputes 'unprecedented.'

The Tata Group charity arm's trustee has called the decision to remove him from the board of its $180 billion business empire "unprecedented". He said it signals a new era in the largest boardroom rift that India Inc. has seen in years.

A year after Ratan Tata's death, the discontent at Tata Trusts has fueled fears that a public spat in 2016 between Tata Sons and the charity could repeat itself, damaging the reputation of India’s most respected conglomerate.

Tata Trusts owns a 66% stake in Tata Sons. Tata Sons oversees 30 companies in various industries, from consumer goods and airlines to global brands such as Jaguar Land Rover. Tata Consultancy Services, and Tata Motors.

Reports have revealed that the disagreements in recent weeks concern the trustees who should sit on the Tata Sons board, the general direction of the business taken by the group, and the management of the planned exit of the minority shareholder Shapoorji Pallonji.

In September, the trustees voted to not re-appoint Vijay Singh as Vice Chairman to the Board of Tata Sons, revealing a dispute between senior members of this powerful charity, led by Ratan Tata’s half-brother Noel Tata.

Singh, an insider who has traditionally avoided the spotlight at Tata Trusts, told the Indian Express that the idea of voting in any Tata Trusts matter was unprecedented.

"Ratan Tata believed that consensus and unanimity were essential to any issue. We may be in a new era.

He said that four trustees voted to remove Singh from the Tata Sons Board for reasons which did not seem to be explained.

Tata Trusts & Tata Sons did not reply to email seeking comment on Friday. Singh didn't respond to texts.

In a rare intervention, two senior Indian Ministers urged Tata Trusts this week to resolve internal boardroom conflicts.

Sources with direct knowledge about the problems at Tata trusts have confirmed that two factions exist at the charity's arm, the one headed by Noel Tata, and the other led by Mehli mistry, a trustee.

Source spoke under anonymity because the matter was private. It is unclear how the different factions will align on the issue at hand.

Mehli Mistry was the cousin of Cyrus Mistry who died in 2022. Their family company Shapoorji Pallonji owns an 18% stake in Tata Sons. (Reporting and editing by Clarence Fernandez; Aditya K. Kalra)

(source: Reuters)