Deccan Chronicle

Give UK fund share to female heirs: Nizam kin

- VUJJINI VAMSHIDHAR­A | DC

Almost 16 months after the UK High Court ruling that that funds of Nizam Osman Ali Khan, since transferre­d to the high commission­er of Pakistan in Britain in 1948, now worth around 35 million pounds, belongs to India, now the great granddaugh­ter of the seventh Nizam, Shafiya Sakina, has approached the Telangana High Court challengin­g the exclusion of the Nizam’s female legal heirs from the funds in NatWest Bank, London.

Shafiya filed a petition before the High Court alleging that Union of India ignored the female legal heirs and had taken away their property rights by entering a confidenti­al settlement with the titular eighth Nizam, Prince Mukarram Jah, and his younger brother Muffakham

Jah.

She urged the court to declare such settlement or agreement as illegal and arbitrary and direct for inclusion of all the beneficiar­ies of Nizam Trusts to get their share of the 35 million pounds.

Complainin­g that 34.5 million have been withdrawn by Prince Mukarram Jah and Muffakham Jah and distribute­d along with the Union of India as per their confidenti­al agreement made at the time of contesting the case at UK court, she requested the High Court to direct them to re-deposit the money. She brought to the notice of the High Court that the court in England had recorded the fact that there was a confidenti­al settlement between the Union of India and the legal heirs of Nizam.

“Only five lakh pounds are to be distribute­d among the other so-called legal heirs of Nizam VII. After deducting the legal expenses the amount would be a paltry 3,47, 118.53 pounds. So it is an unjust and unfair settlement”, Shafiya said. When no Indian court declared that the two brothers were exclusivel­y entitled for the funds in the UK bank and they have not obtained any succession certificat­e in this regard, the Centre’s act to allow the two to withdraw the funds violates the law, she argued.

The seventh Nizam created 28 Trusts and the beneficiar­ies of these Trusts are not just the two brothers and their legal heirs. The Nizam mentioned many other relatives as beneficiar­ies. She wanted to know how the Union Government concluded that only those two were the beneficiar­ies. Moreover, as per the Mohammedan Law, female legal heirs are entitled to 50 per cent of the share of what a male heir is entitled to, she pointed out.

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