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Originally Posted by Sudan_NFS As far as I know they are have demolished the factory in chennai (guindy) and they are building a new.so 2004 is of no chance. |
Must have been fake Campa

. I was at our village in Haryana in 2004 and went to the local drinks man. I wanted some large plastic (PET) bottles of drink (I think they hold a litre or 2). The guy pulled out large plastic bottles with Campa written on them. He had one which looked like a Cola type drink and another with orange liquid in it.
I think Campa Cola were independent. The company was owned by Charanjit Singh of Delhi who's family own a hotel in Connaught Place (I think).
Looks like I could have been correct if we read the following story. Us Haryanvis still have access to Campa.
Outfought in battle of bottles, Campa survives as a relic in CP shop Outfought in battle of bottles, Campa survives as a relic in CP shop
On the fringes of Connaught Place’s Super Bazar, a tiny shack continues to hold the connecting threads to decades gone by. Located on the western end of the defunct Campa-Cola factory, the shop — run by employees of the company — sells the drink that was once one of the most popular aerated drinks across the country.
Today, there are no Campa drinks in the Capital, but this corner shop seems to defy reality.
After the Coca-Cola and Pepsi entered the country in the 1990s, Campa suffered major losses and eventually shut down in 2000. In 2003, its owners sold the franchise to a company called Satya Beverages and Distilleries, which now produces the soft drink in Hisar, Haryana.
The drinks available at the shop in Connaught Place are also sourced from the Hisar factory. And the range is complete with what you got in the eighties: Sun Dew, Campa Orange and, of course, Campa Cola — all of them displaying the once-iconic caption ‘The Fine Indian Taste’.
Rinku, the shop attendant, said: “Some people still come from faraway places to buy Campa. They say no other cola tastes as good.”
Newsline found a decent crowd when it visited the shop. “Every time I come to Connaught Place, I make it a point to visit this shop and drink Campa,” said Satbir Singh, a resident of Pitampura, West Delhi, who bought a two-litre pet bottle.
A company spokesperson said, “The drink is mostly sold in our target markets like Haryana and Himachal Pradesh.”
The Delhi factory, meanwhile, resembles a ghost building, with lonely spiral staircases and a lift that stopped working long ago. “All the machinery was sold — there is nothing inside but cobwebs and rats,” a former employee said.
Even today, former workers drop in to claim compensation. “One worker came just last week — he worked here almost 10 years ago,” said Balram Sharma, one of the three guards at the factory entrance. “He heard that some compensation was being given; we asked him to bring proof of employment and a picture.”
The guards draw a blank when asked what they are guarding, with all people and machinery from the factory long gone. “We are paid our salaries, and are asked to do this job,” Sharma said. “That is all that matters to us.”
Sharma and the other two guards are perhaps the last regular employees of the factory that once employed 1,000 people. “We are here today and might be gone tomorrow,” a second guard philosophised.
Outside, the alphabets on the Campa signboard are falling off, and soon this last physical relic of a long-dead cola may be gone.