A fierce battle is raging for control of a local fried chicken empire. A contractor has come forward claiming he and his mother had developed the secret original recipe for the popular Japs Fried Chicken. However, businessman Nicholas "Japs" Thomas, 63, is refuting claims that Bhagwatee Maraj and her son, Darryl Mahabir, managing director of Japs Fried Chicken and Thomas' stepson of four years, were the recipe's inventors. "Darryl was only ten years old at the time," Thomas said. "How could he come up with the recipe for Japs Fried Chicken? His only contribution was a garlic sauce as a side."
Thomas said he and his mother, Irene, developed the recipe when they opened a fast food outlet, Jap's Fast Food in Sangre Grande in 1979. Thanks to the wonderful taste and secret recipe of Jap's Fast Food, the business grew rapidly, and became known as Japs Fried Chicken. When asked to comment on Thomas' claim, Darryl Mahabir replied: "As far as I know, my mother had the original recipe and I replenished and improved on it to what our customers know and love as the tender and tasty Japs Fried Chicken taste today."
In 1980 Thomas rented his aunt Dolly Prieto's property, at the corner of Foster and Brierly Streets, Sangre Grande, which eventually became his. He then renovated the property and relocated Japs Fried Chicken there. This is the present location and head office of Japs Fried Chicken, now operated by Mahabir and his mother. Thomas said he befriended Maraj around 1985, when she was an insurance agent with British American and patronised his business. Maraj left her insurance job and worked with Thomas in his business around 1987. She became known as "Madame Japs" because of her relationship with Japs.
"She never created any recipe for Japs Fried Chicken," Thomas said emphatically.
"She didn't know anything about the restaurant business. I taught her everything she knows." During their brief relationship, Maraj bore two children for Thomas, Alvin and Kevin. When their relationship ended around 1989, Thomas left Maraj in the business, with the stipulation that when their sons turned 18, the business and building would be turned over to them. "She hasn't done this up to now," Thomas revealed.
"My sons don't have anything. The business rightfully belongs to them."Darryl Mahabir now owns 100 per cent controlling interest in the company.
Thomas' attorney, Vitti Furlonge-Kelly, has issued two pre-action protocol letters to Mahabir and Maraj to cease and desist from using the name Japs Fried Chicken and to vacate the premises at Foster Road, Sangre Grande, since the property belongs to his client and his sons, Kevin and Alvin Thomas.