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Tata Motors MD Karl Slym dies after fall from 22nd floor in Bangkok hotel

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Karl Slym, managing director of Tata Motors Ltd, died after falling from a hotel room in Bangkok in what police said on Monday could be possible suicide.

Karl Slym, 51, had attended a board meeting of Tata Motor’s Thailand unit in the Thai capital and was staying with his wife in a room on the 22nd floor of the Shangri-La hotel. Hotel staff found his body on Sunday on the fourth floor, which juts out above lower floors.

“We didn’t find any sign of a struggle,” Police Lieutenant Somyot Boonyakaew, who is heading the investigation, said.

“We found a window open. The window was very small so it was not possible that he would have slipped. He would have had to climb through the window to fall out because he was a big man. From my initial investigation we believe he jumped.”

The police found a three-page note, written in English, which they were translating into Thai. An autopsy on Karl Slym’s body should begin on Monday.

A spokeswoman for Tata Motors, declined to comment on the possible cause of Karl Slym’s death. A company statement on Sunday said Slym had provided leadership in a challenging market environment.

TURNING THE CORNER

Slym, a British national, was hired in 2012 to revive Tata’s flagging sales and market share in India. Tata Motors is part of the Tata conglomerate.

“His death comes at a time when the company seems to be close to turning the corner,” said Anil Sharma, an analyst with researchers IHS Automotive. “It comes before his efforts bear fruit. We should be able to see the results in a year or two.”

Tata Motors recently introduced a new petrol engine for its passenger vehicles and was planning to launch a hatchback and compact sedan this year, the first all-new Tata-branded passenger vehicles since 2010.

Karl Slym led the automaker’s operations in India and international markets including South Korea, Thailand and South Africa, but he did not look after the Jaguar and Land Rover (JLR) luxury unit that Tata Motors acquired in 2008.

The Thai police said they were called to the Shangri-La hotel around 7.45 am on Sunday after staff

ound Karl Slym’s body. They woke up Slym’s wife, who looked shocked when she was told what had happened to her husband.

Tata Motors had lost traction in the Indian passenger vehicle market as domestic and foreign rivals rolled out new models while it mostly tweaked existing models and offered heavy price discounts.

The firm has not had a hit car at home since 1998. Sales of the Nano, the world’s cheapest car which it unveiled in 2008, have been lacklustre.

Karl Slym previously worked with Toyota in the UK and General Motors for 17 years in Canada, Poland, India and China. He served as the chief of GM’s India unit between 2007 and 2011, before moving to China for about a year as the executive vice-president of a GM joint venture company. However, at the request of ex-Tata Group chairman Ratan Tata, Slym returned to India to head Tata Motors’ domestic and global businesses (except Jaguar Land Rover). “(Slym) was providing leadership to the company through a challenging market environment,” a Tata Motors statement said.

A Stanford alumnus and a Sloan fellow, Slym was highly respected within auto industry circles and was known for his wit and cheerful demeanour.

Condoling the death of Slym, Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers (SIAM) president Vikram Kirloskar said, “We have lost a well-wisher in Karl at a time when the company as well as the industry most needed his global expertise, leadership and guidance.”

He had earlier served as chairman of SIAM Passenger Car Council. He also served on the SIAM Executive Committee since 2007 as an elected member.

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