Three directors quit Fortis Healthcare board amid takeover battle

Reuters  |  MUMBAI 

(Reuters) - Three directors of Healthcare have quit ahead of a shareholder vote on Tuesday to decide their future, the company said, the latest twist in a prolonged battle for the operator.

Three of those directors -- Harpal Singh, and -- resigned on Sunday citing personal reasons, said in separate statements.

A fourth director, Brian Tempest, still faces a vote on Tuesday.

Fortis Healthcare, which operates about 45 in India, Dubai, and Sri Lanka, has been the target of lengthy tussle involving five suitors.

On May 11, Fortis said it planned to accept an offer from and to together invest 18 billion rupees ($267 million), valuing Fortis at 90 billion rupees.

That decision angered some investors and shares in the fell almost 5 percent

A few days later, India's and private equity firm TPG.UL sweetened their bid for Fortis, sparking a rally in the company's shares.

The keen interest in Fortis has emerged as private in is on the rise, and Indian looks to implement a aimed at providing to hundreds of millions of people in a country that lacks adequate heath facilities.

The scheme is expected to make private hospitals, such as those run by Manipal and Fortis, accessible to millions of poor families, say analysts.

(Reporting by in Mumbai; Additional reporting by Subrat Patnaik; Editing by Darren Schuettler)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, May 21 2018. 13:05 IST