India`s United Breweries has fired indebted beer baron Vijay Mallya from his non-executive chairman role following an order from the country`s market regulator, it said in a stock exchange filing late Wednesday.


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The UB Group said the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has barred Mallya from holding key managerial roles in any listed company.


Mallya, who made Kingfisher beer a global brand, was known for his flamboyant lifestyle and styled himself as the "King of Good Times".


He owes banks at least $1 billion, fleeing to Britain last March as pressure grew from banks to pay back the loans.


Mallya has repeatedly failed to appear before investigators at the Enforcement Directorate, a financial crimes agency, who suspect him of misusing funds loaned by a state bank.


A UB representative did not immediately respond to an AFP email seeking comment.


The company`s decison follows Karnataka high court issuing a `winding-up` order on United Breweries Holdings Ltd (UBHL), the firm through which Mallya controlled his once-sprawling business empire, directing an official liquidator to take over all assets.


In January, an Indian court ordered a consortium of banks to start the process of recovering roughly $1 billion in loans from Mallya, who refuses to return home from exile.


Mallya, who remains a part-owner of the Force India Formula One team, has come to personify India`s problems with bad debts that are piling up on the balance sheets of banks.


The previous central bank governor, Raghuram Rajan, had made cleaning up the banking sector`s mountain of soured loans -- defined as in default or close to it -- a priority of his tenure.