The Asian Age

Nizam’s funds return welcome

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Along complex case spread across time and place has finally reached a verdict in London yesterday. A verdict most welcome. Justice Marcus Smith, judge in a high court in United Kingdom, opined that Pakistan has no claim over the £1 million wired to a bank in London in September, 1948, which has now grown to a sizeable £35 million (over `305 crores), famously known as the Hyderabad fund.

The money belongs to India, and the descendent­s of the last Nizam of Hyderabad, Nizam VII, His Excellency, Mir Osman Ali Khan, and not to Pakistan, to whose high commission in London, the-then finance minister of the Nizam wired the fund. For India, it is a moral victory too, because as a crow flies back in time to the tumultuous period of Partition and the consolidat­ion of the Indian nation under Sardar Vallabhai Patel, some sore critics make unfounded allegation­s that Hyderabad’s accession into India after a police action lacked firm legality. The wise judgment of Justice Smith ensures another tiny endorsemen­t of India’s ethical, moral and legal correctnes­s in its post-Partition consolidat­ion of a modern nation, not that it was needed.

Another feather in the cap for Harish Salve, the rockstar legal luminary, who has now smacked Pakistan twice in a row in an internatio­nal court, the previous one over the Kulbhushan Jadav row in the Internatio­nal Court of Justice in Hague. Pakistan will be very wary giving him an opportunit­y for a hat-trick.

The big question now should be about the monies. Do the funds belong equally between the government of India and the heirs of the Nizam, or only private individual­s, nearly a score and a quarter, who are the descendent­s of the former ruler of Hyderabad? Should individual­s be allowed to inherit a piece of history, which should belong to all people of Hyderabad, and of India? The jury is still out.

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