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FC Kohli, the first chief executive of Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), on Wednesday rebutted ousted chairman Cyrus Mistry's claim that Tata Group at one point wanted to sell the software major to global tech giant IBM.
In a media statement issued by TCS, Kohli said he was actively involved in the 1991-92 joint venture between Tata and IBM for hardware manufacturing in India, which was an untapped industry at that time.
On Tuesday, Cyrus Mistry's office had released a statement raising questions over a host of business decisions taken by Ratan Tata over the years. In the statement, Mistry claimed Ratan Tata had proposed selling TCS to IBM, calling it a "near death experience" for the company. He said Kohli's illness during the period prevented any progress on the matter.
Mistry made his allegations, purportedly, to rebut the charge of not contributing materially to the growth of TCS and JLR.
Cyrus Mistry's office responded to the statements put out by the two Tata Group companies, stating that the ousted chairman of Tata Sons had never claimed that the group intended to sell TCS to IBM.
(With inputs from BloombergQuint)