<p>Indian industrialist Gautam Adani is Asia's richest man, with a business empire spanning coal, airports, cement and media now rocked by corporate fraud allegations and a stock market crash.</p>.<p>But the billionaire -- who this week lost $25 billion to his net worth and tumbled from third to seventh place on Forbes' global rich list -- is one of the business world's great survivors.</p>.<p>On New Year's Day in 1998, Adani and an associate were reportedly kidnapped by gunmen demanding $1.5 million in ransom, before being later released at an unknown location.</p>.<p>A decade later, he was dining at Mumbai's Taj Mahal Palace hotel when it was besieged by militants, who killed 160 people in one of India's worst terror attacks.</p>.<p>Trapped with hundreds of others, Adani reportedly hid in the basement all night before he was rescued by security personnel early the next morning.</p>.<p>"I saw death at a distance of just 15 feet," he said of the experience after his private aircraft landed in his hometown Ahmedabad later that day.</p>.<p>Adani, now 60, differs from his peers among India's mega-rich, many of whom are known for throwing lavish birthday and wedding celebrations that are later splashed across newspaper gossip pages.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/gautam-adani-meets-power-minister-amid-stocks-crash-1185078.html" target="_blank">Gautam Adani meets power minister amid stocks crash</a></strong></p>.<p>A self-described introvert, he keeps a low profile and rarely speaks to the media, often sending lieutenants to front corporate events.</p>.<p>"I'm not a social person that wants to go to parties," he told the Financial Times in a 2013 interview.</p>.<p>Adani was born in Ahmedabad to a middle-class family but dropped out of school at 16 and moved to financial capital Mumbai to find work in the lucrative gems trade.</p>.<p>After a short stint in his brother's plastics business, he launched the flagship family conglomerate that bears his name in 1988 by branching out into the export trade.</p>.<p>His big break came seven years later with a contract to build and operate a commercial shipping port in his home state of Gujarat.</p>.<p>It grew to become India's largest at a time when most ports were government-owned -- the legacy of a sclerotic economic planning system that impeded growth for decades and was in the process of being dismantled.</p>.<p>Adani in 2009 expanded into coal, a lucrative sector for a country still almost totally dependent on fossil fuels to meet its energy needs. However, the decision brought international attention as he rose rapidly up India's rich list.</p>.<p>His purchase the following year of an untapped coal basin sparked years of "Stop Adani" protests in Australia after dismay at the project's monumental environmental impact.</p>.<p>Similar controversies plagued his coal projects in central India, where forests home to tribal communities were cut down for mining operations.</p>.<p>Adani's $900 million coastal port project in southern Kerala state was the site of violent clashes between police and a local fishing community demanding a halt to construction.</p>.<p>Adani is seen as an acolyte of Hindu nationalist Prime Minister Narendra Modi, a fellow Gujarat native, and has aligned his own business interests with those of "nation building".</p>.<p>He has invested in the government's strategic priorities, in recent years inaugurating a green energy business with ambitious targets.</p>.<p>Last year he launched and completed a hostile takeover of broadcaster NDTV, a television news service considered one of the few media outlets willing to outwardly criticise India's leader.</p>.<p>Adani batted away press freedom fears, but told the Financial Times that journalists should have the "courage" to say "when the government is doing the right thing every day".</p>.<p>The billionaire has also channelled Modi's strident rhetoric when talking about the historical injustices suffered by India during the era of British rule.</p>.<p>"A country, crushed and drained by its colonial rulers, today stands on the cusp of extraordinary growth," he told a business forum in November.</p>.<p>But Adani Group's rapid expansion into capital-intensive businesses has raised alarms, with Fitch subsidiary and market researcher CreditSights warning last year it was "deeply overleveraged".</p>.<p>This week a bombshell report from US investment firm Hindenburg Research claimed the conglomerate had engaged in a "brazen stock manipulation and accounting fraud scheme over the course of decades".</p>.<p>Hindenburg said a pattern of "government leniency towards the group" stretching back decades had left investors, journalists, citizens and politicians unwilling to challenge its conduct "for fear of reprisal".</p>.<p>Adani Group has lost upwards of $45 billion in market cap since the report's release, and its legal chief announced Thursday that it was exploring punitive action against Hindenburg in US and Indian courts.</p>.<p>The issues now facing Adani's empire "strike at the heart" of India's corporate sector and the dominance of family-controlled firms, Global CIO Office chief executive Gary Dugan told Bloomberg on Friday.</p>.<p>"By their very nature they are opaque, and global investors have to take on trust the issues of corporate governance," he said.</p>
<p>Indian industrialist Gautam Adani is Asia's richest man, with a business empire spanning coal, airports, cement and media now rocked by corporate fraud allegations and a stock market crash.</p>.<p>But the billionaire -- who this week lost $25 billion to his net worth and tumbled from third to seventh place on Forbes' global rich list -- is one of the business world's great survivors.</p>.<p>On New Year's Day in 1998, Adani and an associate were reportedly kidnapped by gunmen demanding $1.5 million in ransom, before being later released at an unknown location.</p>.<p>A decade later, he was dining at Mumbai's Taj Mahal Palace hotel when it was besieged by militants, who killed 160 people in one of India's worst terror attacks.</p>.<p>Trapped with hundreds of others, Adani reportedly hid in the basement all night before he was rescued by security personnel early the next morning.</p>.<p>"I saw death at a distance of just 15 feet," he said of the experience after his private aircraft landed in his hometown Ahmedabad later that day.</p>.<p>Adani, now 60, differs from his peers among India's mega-rich, many of whom are known for throwing lavish birthday and wedding celebrations that are later splashed across newspaper gossip pages.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/gautam-adani-meets-power-minister-amid-stocks-crash-1185078.html" target="_blank">Gautam Adani meets power minister amid stocks crash</a></strong></p>.<p>A self-described introvert, he keeps a low profile and rarely speaks to the media, often sending lieutenants to front corporate events.</p>.<p>"I'm not a social person that wants to go to parties," he told the Financial Times in a 2013 interview.</p>.<p>Adani was born in Ahmedabad to a middle-class family but dropped out of school at 16 and moved to financial capital Mumbai to find work in the lucrative gems trade.</p>.<p>After a short stint in his brother's plastics business, he launched the flagship family conglomerate that bears his name in 1988 by branching out into the export trade.</p>.<p>His big break came seven years later with a contract to build and operate a commercial shipping port in his home state of Gujarat.</p>.<p>It grew to become India's largest at a time when most ports were government-owned -- the legacy of a sclerotic economic planning system that impeded growth for decades and was in the process of being dismantled.</p>.<p>Adani in 2009 expanded into coal, a lucrative sector for a country still almost totally dependent on fossil fuels to meet its energy needs. However, the decision brought international attention as he rose rapidly up India's rich list.</p>.<p>His purchase the following year of an untapped coal basin sparked years of "Stop Adani" protests in Australia after dismay at the project's monumental environmental impact.</p>.<p>Similar controversies plagued his coal projects in central India, where forests home to tribal communities were cut down for mining operations.</p>.<p>Adani's $900 million coastal port project in southern Kerala state was the site of violent clashes between police and a local fishing community demanding a halt to construction.</p>.<p>Adani is seen as an acolyte of Hindu nationalist Prime Minister Narendra Modi, a fellow Gujarat native, and has aligned his own business interests with those of "nation building".</p>.<p>He has invested in the government's strategic priorities, in recent years inaugurating a green energy business with ambitious targets.</p>.<p>Last year he launched and completed a hostile takeover of broadcaster NDTV, a television news service considered one of the few media outlets willing to outwardly criticise India's leader.</p>.<p>Adani batted away press freedom fears, but told the Financial Times that journalists should have the "courage" to say "when the government is doing the right thing every day".</p>.<p>The billionaire has also channelled Modi's strident rhetoric when talking about the historical injustices suffered by India during the era of British rule.</p>.<p>"A country, crushed and drained by its colonial rulers, today stands on the cusp of extraordinary growth," he told a business forum in November.</p>.<p>But Adani Group's rapid expansion into capital-intensive businesses has raised alarms, with Fitch subsidiary and market researcher CreditSights warning last year it was "deeply overleveraged".</p>.<p>This week a bombshell report from US investment firm Hindenburg Research claimed the conglomerate had engaged in a "brazen stock manipulation and accounting fraud scheme over the course of decades".</p>.<p>Hindenburg said a pattern of "government leniency towards the group" stretching back decades had left investors, journalists, citizens and politicians unwilling to challenge its conduct "for fear of reprisal".</p>.<p>Adani Group has lost upwards of $45 billion in market cap since the report's release, and its legal chief announced Thursday that it was exploring punitive action against Hindenburg in US and Indian courts.</p>.<p>The issues now facing Adani's empire "strike at the heart" of India's corporate sector and the dominance of family-controlled firms, Global CIO Office chief executive Gary Dugan told Bloomberg on Friday.</p>.<p>"By their very nature they are opaque, and global investors have to take on trust the issues of corporate governance," he said.</p>