GG Power List 2022

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Celebrating Britain’s

101

Asians 2022

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Celebrating Britain’s

101

Asians 2022

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Editor-in-chief

Ramniklal Solanki CBE

1931-2020

Managing Editor

Kalpesh R Solanki

Executive Editor

Shailesh R Solanki

Digital Manager

Aditya Solanki

EDITORIAL

Contributors

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Contents

22

Industry

Advocate

10

Heir

Apparent

44

Haute

Couture

42

Breaking

Boundaries

29

Banking

Guru

100

Prodigal

Daughter 62

Consumer

King

16

Migration

Matters

Power List GG2

2022 | GG2 Power List

Visit our website

www.royalnavy.mod.uk/careers

@royalnavy

“THE ONLY THING

THAT’S UNIFORM

ABOUT THE ROYAL

NAVY, IS THE

UNIFORM”

“We were born in

Middlesbrough, but

Made in the Royal Navy”

WELCOME to this the 11th GG2

Power List.

We publish this list in perhaps

the darkest of times on our conti-

nent since the Second World

War. The war in Ukraine is a sad

reminder that national and eth-

nic conflict remain a dark stain

on humanity and that we must

continue to work for under-

standing, acceptance and cour-

age in dispelling distrust and fear

as any sort of guide for human

behaviour.

That said, this publication

comes out on UN International

Women’s Day (March 8) and it is

great to celebrate the rise

of women in all walks

of life in Britain. You

will find a fair few

in this list.

The struggle

for equality con-

tinues and we

must elevate those

who break barriers

and create pathways

for others to follow.

In many ways what strikes us

is how many women of colour

have made such successful ca-

reers in politics.

We have a female home secre-

tary in Priti Patel and a female

attorney general in Suella

Braverman. Whatever their

politics, you still have to admire

the way they have come through

the system and made it in a very

male orientated and tough

environment.

There are lessons for business

surely. The appointment of Lee-

na Nair as CEO of Chanel is a

tremendous advance but at the

same time it shows how far we

have fallen as a society. We must

encourage and enable women to

achieve their full potential.

In similar ways, the diversity

cause has to be furthered – and it

was always our intention – and

remains so - to draw attention to

high-fliers and path breakers

with the GG2 Power List.

Our father, Ramniklal Solanki,

(inset) founded the company and

his example has always guided

and inspired us. He was awarded

a CBE in for his services to the

community and publishing. We

remain extremely proud of his

achievements. It is the first time

we are meeting again since his

sad passing in March 2020.

He was always a

community champion

and set up his first

publication, Garavi

Gujarat with our

mother, Parvatiben

and the two worked

tirelessly to give us

the foundation that

has enabled us to be

where we are today.

Identifying the 101 most influ-

ential Asians in this brilliant

country of ours is no easy task –

we try to look everywhere for

shining stars and those who have

achieved – and along with our

GG2 Leadership and Diversity

Awards, they represent a unique

and very special snapshot of a

community that continues to ex-

cel and prosper. We should all

take pride in these 101 individu-

als and their achievements.

Just as our dear father did wh-

en he first landed on these shores

with not much else...Enjoy!

Kalpesh R Solanki

and Shailesh R Solanki

Our panel of experts

The GG2 Power List was extensively researched and

compiled by a team of journalists, with the final

rankings adjudicated by an experienced panel...

A special snapshot

of Asian community

KALPESH R SOLANKI is group managing

editor of the Asian Media Group (AMG). He

graduated with a law degree (LLB Hons)

from Queen Mary College, London, and qual­

ified as a barrister from the Inner Temple.

Kalpesh is responsible for the strategy and

growth of AMG operations over three coun­

tries – America, Britain and India. He sits on

the board of the charity Pratham UK.

SHAILESH R SOLANKI is AMG’s executive

editor. He has 30 years experience in journal­

ism, overseeing titles, including Eastern Eye,

Garavi Gujarat, Asian Trader, Pharmacy Bu­

siness, Asian Hospitality and the Asian Rich

List. He has a keen interest in diversity and is

vice chair of the thinktank British Future, an

advisor to the Rare Dementia Support chari­

ty and on the board of Pratham UK.

AMIT ROY is one of the most experienced

journalists to have covered the Asian

community. He is the editor­at­large at

Eastern Eye and has also worked as a

foreign correspondent for The Daily

Telegraph, The Daily Mail, The Sunday

Times and The Sunday Telegraph. Amit

has covered wars all over the world and has

written economic reports on India.

RITHIKA SIDDHARTHA edits GG2 and

Eastern Eye, the consumer titles published

by AMG. She began her journalism career in

India, working at The Asian Age newspaper

in Bangalore and New Delhi, before moving

to London. She secured exclusive inter­

views with prime ministers David Cameron

and Theresa May ahead of the 2015 and

2017 general elections, respectively.

BARNIE CHOUDHURY is an award­win­

ning journalist who worked for the BBC

for 24 years. He is currently a communica­

tions’ consultant and editor­at­large for

Eastern Eye. Barnie worked for the current

Commonwealth secretary­general as her

director of media and PR, and he was part

of the senior leadership team in several in­

stitutions. He is a professor of professional

practice at the University of Buckingham.

SARWAR ALAM is AMG’s digital editor.

Under his leadership, Eastern Eye has

grown its online reach with the use of

newsletters and videos. He project managed

both editions of the Asian Rich List 2021 as

well as this issue of the GG2 Power List. He

began his career on ITV and has done

stints at Eurosport and ESPN, where he

covered major sporting events.

Power List GG2

2022 | GG2 Power List

by AMIT ROY

AMID speculation that the chancellor Rishi Su-

nak may become Britain’s first prime minister

of Asian origin, even Boris Johnson’s critics will

give him his due. Whatever his other faults, he

has headed the most diverse government in

British history.

While Sunak (1) heads the 2022 GG2 Power

List of the 101 most influential Asians in the

UK, he is followed by the health secretary Sajid

Javid (2) and the home secretary Priti Patel (3).

The author and former Tory party chairman,

Lord Ashcroft, was quick to bring out the first

biography of the chancellor, Going for Broke:

The Rise of Rishi Sunak.

Ashcroft has piranha teeth. Let’s say he has

been kinder to Sunak than he has been to the

prime minister’s spouse in First Lady: Intrigue

at the Court of Carrie and Boris Johnson.

It is worth remembering Sunak, who was

born on 12 May 1980, and won William Hague’s

seat, Richmond in North Yorkshire, in 2015, has

been an MP for barely seven years.

Ashcroft maintains Sunak’s ethnicity is no

longer an important factor: “Having spent

years doing political research, as well as being

involved in politics more generally, I honestly

don’t think those things matter to the vast ma-

jority of voters. People like Rishi because they

think he’s doing a good job.

“At the beginning hardly anyone outside

Westminster and Yorkshire had heard of Ri-

shi Sunak – then all of a sud-

den he was one of the most

powerful and influential fig-

ures in a government facing a

national crisis. I thought peo-

ple would be interested to

know more about him and

how he achieved such a me-

teoric rise.”

Ashcroft pointed out: “He’s only just 41 and

is clearly going to be a key player on the politi-

cal scene for some time to come. Depending

how things go, there may well be scope for a

second instalment of my book.”

Others who have Johnson to thank for their

chauffeur-driven ministerial limousines in-

clude Alok Sharma (14), who sits in cabinet

with the climate change brief, having been

COP26 president in 2021; the attorney general

Suella Braverman (16); foreign office minister

Lord Tariq Ahmad (21); and Ranil Jayawardene

(38), minister for international trade.

From Labour ranks, the Power List includes

the mayor of London, Sadiq Khan (4), though

no one thinks of him any more as the son of a

Pakistani bus driver, an advantage in life he

shares with the health secretary (David Camer-

on called them “the new Etonians”). Anas Sar-

war (94) could not be left out – after all, he is

leader of the Scottish Labour party.

The year 2022 marks the 50th anniversary of

the arrival of some 30,000 Ugandan Asian refu-

gees in Britain. They have certainly helped to

transform the economic landscape. This was a

country where shops shut at 5.30pm and any-

one who had the courage to go in, say, at

5.25pm to get a bottle of milk was likely to get

an unfriendly look from a grumpy shopkeeper.

Although the Ugandan Asians were British

passport holders, they still had to fight to get in.

They certainly did not receive the warm wel-

come that has been extended to those fleeing

Afghanistan and now Ukraine in a much less

racist Britain.

Today, it is generally recognised that Asians

are pretty good at doing business. Compared

with America, though, it has not been easy for

Asians to break through the glass ceiling in cor-

porate Britain but as this year’s Power List

demonstrates, the winds of change are blowing

through the boardrooms.

The highest new entry this year at 9 is C S

Venkatakrishnan, who has taken over as CEO

of the Barclays Group, one of the biggest banks

in the world. Also, at Barclays, Ashok Vaswani

(30) has become chief digital officer.

It is worth recalling when the Ugandan

Asians arrived penniless in 1972, the banks

were loath to give them loans.

It took a few years to build up a relationship

of mutual trust.

At Reckitt Benckiser, the multinational con-

sumer goods company, Laxman Narasimhan

(41) has replaced another Asian, Rakesh Ka-

poor, as CEO.

Adar Poonawalla, CEO of the Serum Institute

of India, the world’s biggest vaccine manufac-

turer, is a new entrant at 15. Though his UK

subsidiary, Serum Life Sciences, he has al-

ready committed himself to

investing £240m in the UK.

He has given £50m to Oxford

University and put in £50m in

Oxford Biomedica, which will

create “120 new, highly

skilled jobs”.

Incidentally, Poonawalla

happens to be a Parsi belonging to the Zoroas-

trian faith – just like Lord Karan Bilimoria (6),

who has certainly made a difference as presi-

dent of the Confederation of British Industry.

He has managed to push the cause of ethnic

diversity in British boardrooms, especially the

FTSE100 and FTSE250 companies, as well at

senior executive level. Before Bilimoria’s arriv-

al, the focus was almost exclusively on gender

diversity. Maybe had the president of the CBI

not been an Asian, the priorities would have

remained unchanged. With his ability to argue

his case eloquently, logically and politely, Bili-

moria will probably go down as a very success-

ful CBI president. He apparently worked close-

ly with Sunak when the chancellor was intro-

ducing furlough and other schemes to help or-

dinary working people through the pandemic.

In the world of science, academia and medi-

cine, Asians have made their mark.

For example, the attempt to devise personal-

ised treatment for cancer by Prof Sir Shankar

Balasubramanian (22), the Herchel Smith Pro-

fessor of Medicinal Chemistry at the Yusuf

Hamied department of chemistry at Cambridge

University, will benefit all of mankind. Inciden-

tally, his department is named after Yusuf

Hamied (66), head of the pharma giant, Cipla,

who also figures on the Power List.

Among scientists whose advice was much

sought by the media during the pandemic is

Sunetra Gupta (74), infectious disease

epidemiologist and a professor of theoretical

epidemiology at the Department of Zoology at

Oxford University.

Among the scientists behind the develop-

ment of the Oxford-AstraZaneca vaccine has

been Maheshi Ramasamy (48), a principal

investigator in the group who led on adult clin-

ical trials.

From all the top economists in Britain and

indeed around the world, the treasury picked

Sir Partha Dasgupta, the Frank Ramsey Profes-

sor Emeritus of Economics at Cambridge Uni-

versity, to deliver his landmark report, “The

Economics of Biodiversity”, on the existential

Love in the time of pandemic

Those who helped country tide over the crisis represented the best of UK

GG2 Power List

GG2 Power List | 2022

All of a sudden

he (Sunak) was a

powerful figure

Prince Charles with Rishi and

Akshata Sunak; (below) Duchess of

Cornwall, Prince of Wales, Natasha

Poonawalla and Adar Poonawalla

© Tristan Fewings/Getty Images

“Making quality healthcare an affordable and

accessible reality throughout the world”

The GG2 Leadership

& Diversity Awards

2022

Proud Sponsors of:

Celebrating the Outstanding

Achievements in Science

www.morningsidepharm.com

threat facing humanity from climate change.

The arts have long been considered the ex-

clusive preserve of white people, as have the

media, especially Fleet Street and the world of

national newspapers, where popular percep-

tions are shaped and prejudices confirmed.

Thus, Krishnendu Majumdar’s arrival as the

first non-white chairman of Bafta has been like

a breath of fresh air. He has initiated changes

both in front and behind the camera.

The Power List is being released on March 8,

2022 – international women’s day. A third of

the Power List is made up of women. For exam-

ple, Leena Nair (18) is the CEO of the French

luxury brand, Chanel.

Chila Burman (81) and Rana Begum (87) are

big name artists. Captain Preet Chandi (17) of

the British Army – better known as “Polar

Preet” – is proving to be a remarkable role

model after trekking 700 miles solo to the south

Pole. And the comedienne Sindhu Vee (71), a

familiar figure on television, has explained why

her surname – Venkatanarayanan – is not al-

ways easy to give out over the telephone when

making credit card purchases. Enabling Asians

to laugh at themselves is a cathartic exercise.

A common question to us is, “How do you

compile your Power List?”, followed by, “How

do you rank people?”

Most years we begin with several hundred

names and then whittle them down to a final

Power List of 101. Our selection panel has had

more meetings than I can remember as it be-

came progressively harder to remove people

from the shortlist.

Most years we try and offer a snapshot of

what Asian movers and shakers have been up

to in the previous 12 months. We also endeav-

our to give the list a fresh look with a 25-30 per

cent change from one year to the next.

But Covid put paid to the normal way in

which the Power List is compiled.

We would soon discover the pandemic was

taking a heavy toll among British Asians. It was

not known immediately that living in multi-

generational households or having underlying

conditions, such as diabetes or heart disease,

made Asians more vulnerable to Covid-19.

Lack of proper Personal Protection Equipment

(PPE) put frontline NHS staff, especially Asian

doctors and nurses, at even greater risk.

In the early days of the pandemic, there was

tragedy after tragedy. Dr Abdul Mabud Chowd-

hury, a Bangladeshi-origin consultant urologist

at Homerton University Hospital, east London,

died, aged 53, on April 8, 2020.

It emerged he had written to “Dear and Re-

spectable Prime Minister Boris Johnson”

pleading for better PPE: “Please ensure urgent-

ly Personal Protective Equipment for each and

every NHS health worker in the UK. Remember

we may be doctor/nurse/HCA/allied health

workers who are in direct contact with patients

but we are also human beings.”

Dr Manjeet Singh Riyat, an emergency care

consultant at the Royal Derby Hospital, died,

aged 52, on 20 April 2020. His colleagues said

that “Manjeet was considered the father of the

current emergency department in Derby.”

There were many other losses. On 12 May,

2020, Dr Poornima Nair, a GP at the Station

View medical centre in Bishop Auckland,

County Durham, became the first female doc-

tor to die from Covid-19.

Her son, Varun Nair Balupuri, 28, a data sci-

entist, said: “My mother was kind, caring and

loving to her family, friends and patients, as ev-

idenced by the hundreds of tributes and me-

morials to her. In her 56 years of life, she ac-

complished more than most can even imagine

while always having time and love for those

around her. Her passion for

life and the integrity in which

she faced challenges will

serve as an inspiration to me

and many others.”

That old saying – “Cometh

the hour, cometh the man” –

has certainly been true in the

case of Dr Chaand Nagpaul

(5), who has been chairman of the British Med-

ical Association, during this critical phase.

He is the first non-white BMA chairman in

the history of the organisation, which was set

up in 1832.

He told the BMJ which kept a roll call of doc-

tors lost during the pandemic: “The vast major-

ity who have sadly died are from a BAME back-

ground, with many coming from overseas to

contribute their valuable skills and expertise to

the NHS to save the lives of others, only to trag-

ically lose their own.”

When GG2 interviewed Nagpaul for the

Power List, he revealed he very nearly did not

make it as a GP. Despite qualifying with a bril-

liant academic record from the elite St Bar-

tholomew’s Hospital Medical College,

he received “nine rejections in a

row” when he applied for a place

on the GP training scheme.

Someone explained the

sticking point to him: “It’s

your name.”

Nagpaul hadn’t en-

countered such racism

before: “It didn’t strike me that my name would

be a barrier.”

He pressed the government to procure safer

and adequate PPE for doctors. He also sought a

level playing field for Asian and black doctors

by starting to tackle the racism in the NHS laid

bare by the pandemic.

“Sadly, in the NHS, there is plenty of evi-

dence that the experience of BAME doctors is

not equal,” said Nagpaul, who persuaded the

government to introduce more “culturally sen-

sitive” Covid messaging.

The pandemic has thrown up new figures,

such as Dr Nikita Kanani (23), medical director

of NHS England, who has sometimes been by

the prime minister’s side during his live brief-

ings from Downing Street.

The Britain of 2022 may not be recognised

by those who came to these shores more than

50 years ago from India, Paki-

stan and East Africa. The days

of “No dogs or coloureds” in

rented accommodation have

long since gone. The changes

in British society plus the bat-

tles fought by black people

from the Caribbean and from

Africa on behalf of the ethnic

minorities have ushered in radical changes. To

the credit of the indigenous British folk, it also

has to be recognised that the seeds of Asian

success have been planted in fertile soil.

That said, many racist attitudes remain en-

trenched, often at the higher levels of society.

There is, for example, a refusal to recognise

that the British Empire was not always a force

for good, as argued in Sathnam Sanghera’s (64)

Empireland: How Imperialism Has Shaped

Modern Britain.

Many on the Power List have risen despite

the obstacles they have encountered. As East-

ern Eye reports have revealed, there clearly is

an entrenched problem in the legal world,

where senior white judges find it all too easy to

bully junior Asian colleagues, especially if

they are women. We also saw how See-

ma Misra and other subpostmasters

and subposmistresses, many of

them Asian, were wrongly accused

of theft by the Post Office and

even sent to prison by a vengeful

white coterie consisting of the

CEO Paula Vennells and her sen-

ior executives.

However, Asians who ran cor-

nershops and convenience

stores – rightly deemed an “es-

sential service” – did a heroic job

during the long, dark months of

lockdown. The way that the

Asian community came to-

gether to see the coun-

try through the pan-

demic represent-

ed the best of

Britain.

GG2 Power List

GG2 Power List | 2022

Her passion for

life and integrity

will inspire many

Dr Chaand Nagpaul with wife;

(right, from left) Shlokarth

Balupuri, Dr Poornima Nair,

and Varun Nair Balupuri

Harpreet

Chandi; (inset

right) Rana

Begum

© Royal Academy

CONGRATULATIONS

to all the nominees

Proud to support the

GG2 Leadership Awards 2018

GG2 Leadership Awards 2019

Proud to support the

Proud to support the

GG2 Leadership &

Diversity Awards 2022

Rishi Sunak

Politics

FOR those watching closely, the two most

powerful politicians in the United Kingdom,

who live next door to one another, may soon

have to have a reckoning.

The big political question this year is: did Ri-

shi betray Boris, or did he say what was on eve-

ryone’s mind, but they were too scared to put

their head above the parapet?

For the past few months, the Conservative

party has been in free-fall since the revelations

that the prime minister was involved in a series

of potential breaches of lockdown rules. So

much so, the Metropolitan Police are investi-

gating a sitting prime minister, and it could

cost Johnson his premiership if he is found to

have misled parliament.

Not only that, the prime minister also tried

to divert attention by making a fake slur against

the Labour leader, for which he will not apolo-

gise. In the middle of this series of unfortunate

political errors, his neighbour at Number 11

was asked whether the prime minister should

apologise and withdraw his allegation that Keir

Starmer was responsible for not prosecuting

the serial sex offender, Jimmy Savile. “Dishy”

Rishi, as he is known responded, “Being hon-

est, I wouldn’t have said it and I’m glad the PM

clarified what he meant.”

It has divided the party, and the man who is

so careful, may have made an error of judge-

ment, no matter how true his answer.

Valentine’s Day will forever have an added

piquancy for the current occupant of Number

11 Downing Street. It was the day when his

very good friend, and then boss, Sajid Javid, re-

signed after the prime minister ordered him to

fire his aides. Johnson immediately promoted

Sunak from Treasury chief secretary to chan-

cellor. The MP for Richmond in north Yorkshire

had just four weeks to deliver his first budget,

something his predecessor never got to do. Not

only that, Sunak had to do so in the middle of a

global pandemic, and he won huge plaudits on

his side of the aisle, business and the NHS.

“The biggest rabbit he pulled out of the hat,

which was the furlough scheme, is undoubted-

ly one of the things I would say has been pivot-

al in retaining some economic stability and

personal security for a lot of people in the

country,” says one Westminster insider, who

did not wish to be named.

“To do that as a relatively new chancellor – at

that point he wasn’t even 40 years old – it was a

huge responsibility on relatively young, let’s be

clear, pretty inexperienced, shoulders.”

Sunak cuts a dashing figure; some have desc r-

i b ed him as the Conservative equivalent of Lab o-

ur’s Tony Blair when he took over his party in

1994. Indeed, the Daily Mail, the bastion of wh i-

te, middle England, heralded him “PM in waiti-

ng”. Speak to many and, at this moment, the mo-

st used word to describe Sunak is “impressive”.

Sunak has achieved more in his 40 years

than many of us will in a lifetime. Head boy at

the independent boarding school, Winchester

Prime minister in waiting?

Chancellor Sunak is poised for the top job

COMMITTED:

Rishi Sunak

GG2 Power List

10

GG2 Power List | 2022

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