Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
International

Nizam's Descendants Hope To Get Share In Hyderabad Funds

Darpan News Desk IANS, 03 Oct, 2019 08:02 PM

    With the UK High Court on Wednesday ruling in favour of India in a 70-year-old dispute involving 35 million pounds belonging to the Nizam, over 100 descendants of the last ruler of erstwhile Hyderabad State are hoping to get their due share.


    The court has rejected Pakistan's claim over the funds deposited in a London Bank during Hyderabad's accession to India in 1948.


    The descendants say that they all have the share in the funds and not just Prince Mukarram Jah, the titular eighth Nizam and his younger brother Muffakham Jah.


    Nizam's grandson Nawab Najaf Ali Khan told IANS that they welcome the court verdict.


    "The court has rightly rejected Pakistan's claim in favour of India, and the descendants of Nizam VII. The family has long awaited this judgment," he said


    According to him, there are 120 legal heirs of seventh Nizam, Mir Osman Ali Khan. He hopes that the funds lying in NatWest Bank plc will be distributed among the legal heirs without further legal wrangling.


    The Nizam's family members will wait for the next development in the case known as Hyderabad Funds case. They, however, believe that Pakistan has no strong grounds to challenge Wednesday's court order.


    Claiming the legal right to the funds, they say they were party to a confidential settlement agreement was reached last year between the Indian government and the Nizam Estate.


    After partition of India and before the merger of the then Hyderabad state with India, Nizam's Finance Minister Moin Nawaz Jung had transferred 10,07,940 pounds sterling and nine shillings in the name of then Pakistan High Commissioner in London, H.I. Rahimtoola in the NatWest Bank.


    India raised an objection to the transfer, saying the Nizam was not an independent ruler and prevailed upon the bank to freeze the account. Since then, the matter was hanging fire.


    The Nizam had refused to accede to India after the country's independence on August 15, 1947. He wanted to remain an independent state or join Pakistan. The princely state finally merged with the Indian Union in September, 1948 after an operation by Indian Army.


    The Hyderabad Funds case had reached the House of Lords, which held that the question of who owned the fund could not be decided because Pakistan had claimed sovereign immunity.


    Mir Osman Ali Khan, who was the world's richest man of his times, died in 1967. The efforts to solve the dispute during his lifetime failed as Pakistan never came forward to help unlock the funds.


    The Indian government in 2008 decided to pursue an out-of-court settlement with Pakistan and the heirs of the Nizam.


    Nawab Najaf Ali Khan recalled that the cabinet took the decision after the Nizam's descendants met then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and then Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee.


    In 2012, they had appealed to Pakistan to reciprocate to India's offer of an out-of-court settlement.


    However in 2013, Pakistan waived its sovereign immunity by issuing a claim for the fund. This opened the way for the case.

     

    MORE International ARTICLES

    US House Passes Bill Removing Country-cap On Issuing Green Cards

    US House Passes Bill Removing Country-cap On Issuing Green Cards
    A Green Card allows a non-US citizen to live and work permanently in America.

    US House Passes Bill Removing Country-cap On Issuing Green Cards

    Indian Gets Prison Sentence In Conspiracy To Smuggle People To US

    Indian Gets Prison Sentence In Conspiracy To Smuggle People To US
    An Indian citizen has been sentenced to a year and a day in prison for his role in a conspiracy to smuggle people into the US through Thailand.

    Indian Gets Prison Sentence In Conspiracy To Smuggle People To US

    Wrong Placing Of Height Barrier Blamed For Dubai Bus Crash That Killed 12 Indians

    The lawyers of the Omani bus driver, who rammed the vehicle into a height barrier in Dubai that killed 17 people, including 12 Indians, have told a UAE court that the restriction bar violated the GCC safety guidelines.

    Wrong Placing Of Height Barrier Blamed For Dubai Bus Crash That Killed 12 Indians

    Al-Qaeda Chief Calls for 'Unrelenting Blows' on Army in Kashmir, Chides Pakistan for 'Double Game'

    Ayman al-Zawahiri claimed that the 'fight in Kashmir' is not a separate conflict but instead is part of the worldwide Muslim community's 'jihad against a vast array of forces'.

    Al-Qaeda Chief Calls for 'Unrelenting Blows' on Army in Kashmir, Chides Pakistan for 'Double Game'

    Afghan Peace Talks: Taliban Agrees To Reduce Violence

    The participants from Kabul from politicians, civil society members, and government officials. They attended the intra-Afghan talks with their personal capacity.

    Afghan Peace Talks: Taliban Agrees To Reduce Violence

    US Congress To Vote On Bill To Remove Country-Cap On Green Card Will Benefit High-Tech

    US Congress To Vote On Bill To Remove Country-Cap On Green Card Will Benefit High-Tech
    The US House of Representative will vote on Tuesday on a legislation that seeks to lift the country-cap on issuing green cards.

    US Congress To Vote On Bill To Remove Country-Cap On Green Card Will Benefit High-Tech