There has to be a Scottish connection - and it's Scotland's First Minister. Although born in Scotland, Humza Yusaf's family are from Pakistan, which I believe is the answer.
It is indeed Pakistan BB. Mostly in the city of Sialkot where they also make kilts at about a quarter of the price quoted in Scotland. Apparently the whole thing started there by supplying firstly the British and then the Indian Army. Over to you.
Cheers cologne - I had no idea about the kilts, probably because I wouldn't wear one in a fit - cheap foreign imports! Which company had the worldwide rights to its name & logo taken away by authorities, and regained it 75 years later at great cost?
The logo on the company's HQ is 51 metres in diameter, with letters 7 metres high, and is illuminated by 1,710 bulbs - apparently the biggest trademark in the world.
Presumably Bayer, then, but I don't know the story. This product of theirs called Heroin sounds interesting according to the adverts from just over a hundred years ago. A suppressant of coughs apparently.
Was running out of clues - my next one was going to be that the football club they sponsor has played one/lost one against Watford. In 1919, the Treaty of Versailles saw Bayer stripped of the rights to their famous logo/trademark - the Bayer Cross - which were sold on to an American company for $250k. In 1994, they paid $1bn to get them back. Over to you
Cheers andy. At 7.75 kilometres, the third longest in the world is in South Africa; At 7.82 kilometres, the second longest is in China; Both are dwarfed by the longest which is 1350 kilometres. What are they and where is the longest?