
Saif Ali Khan faces major legal setback as court rules his ₹15,000 crore Bhopal estate as enemy property
Saif Ali Khan, along with his mother Sharmila Tagore and sisters Soha and Saba Ali Khan, had challenged the government's move to label the royal estate as enemy property under the Enemy Property Act. However, the court rejected their plea and upheld the government's position.
The case dates back to 2014, when the Custodian of Enemy Property officially classified the assets of the Bhopal royal family as enemy property.
This was based on the fact that Saif's great-grandmother, Abida Sultan — daughter of Nawab Hamidullah Khan — moved to Pakistan after India's Partition in 1947 and gave up her Indian citizenship.
According to the Enemy Property Act, which was passed in 1958 and later strengthened, the government is allowed to take over property owned by people who moved to countries considered enemies of India, such as Pakistan.
Although a trial court in 2000 had recognised Saif and his family as rightful heirs, the decision was challenged by other family members. They argued that the inheritance should be based on Muslim Personal Law, which considers the actions of Abida Sultan ineligible for inheritance due to her migration.
Saif Ali Khan had previously received a temporary stay order on the property in 2015. But in December 2024, the High Court dismissed his petition and lifted the stay. Although Saif and his family were given 30 days to appeal, no appeal was made. This has allowed the government to move forward with plans to take over the estate.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


United News of India
16 minutes ago
- United News of India
PM Modi warmly welcomed by Brazilian President Lula ahead of key talks
Brasilia/New Delhi, July 8 (UNI) Prime Minister Narendra Modi received a warm welcome from Brazilian President Inacio Lula da Silva at the Alvorada Palace in Brasilia, and was accorded a guard of honour and ceremonial welcome, ahead of their bilateral talks. PM Modi said after the ceremonial welcome that his state visit to Brazil, the first by an Indian Prime Minister in nearly six decades, will add momentum to the bilateral ties. 'This state visit to Brazil will add momentum to our bilateral relations.' The Brazilian President said in a post on X that the two sides are set to ink important agreements. 'Today, I welcome Prime Minister @narendramodi for a State Visit. We will sign new agreements and take another important step in strengthening bilateral relations between Brazil and India.' PM Modi accompanied by President Lula also witnessed an Indian classical music performance at the Alvorada palace. He also received a unique 114-horse welcome as part of his state visit. The MEA spokesperson said in a post on X: 'Broadening the horizons of the Strategic Partnership. PM @narendramodi warmly received by President @LulaOficial and First Lady @JanjaLula at the Alvorada Palace with a guard of honour & ceremonial welcome. 'Bilateral talks lie ahead.' PM Modi arrived in Brasilia on Monday night, from Rio de Janeiro where he attended the two-day 17th BRICS Summit. UNI RN


India Today
18 minutes ago
- India Today
Pak flags a threat at UN: Afghanistan could become a terror hub
The fox has reported a break-in at the henhouse. No phrase captures the absurdity of this moment better than this old cliche. Pakistan has urged the United Nations to prevent Afghanistan from becoming a "breeding ground for terror".The warning, delivered by Pakistan's Ambassador to the UN, Asim Iftikhar Ahmad, focussed on the threat posed by the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and other militants operating from Afghan a UN General Assembly session on Afghanistan, Ahmad claimed that groups like the TTP, al-Qaida, and ISIS-K are exploiting "ungoverned spaces" in Afghanistan to launch attacks, including recent cross-border incursions into Pakistan. He cited "credible evidence" of TTP collaboration with Baloch separatists such as the Baloch Liberation Army to target Pakistani infrastructure. The speech conveniently ignored Pakistan's decades-long support for the Afghan Taliban, which Islamabad nurtured as a proxy is widely known that Pakistan sheltered the Taliban's leaders, from its formation in 1994 to its resurgence in is a parallel truth to it — the very force Pakistan once nurtured now appears increasingly estranged from TTP, an offshoot of the Taliban, has unleashed waves of deadly violence across the country over the years. In 2024, nearly 15,000 Taliban fighters reportedly mobilised towards the Durand Line after Pakistani airstrikes targeted TTP positions inside Pakistan is acting shocked as the blowback hits its own Ahmad's speech also blamed "Indian-backed terrorists" for border infiltrations — a familiar Pakistani trope deflecting blame onto New Delhi. Meanwhile, he glossed over Pakistan's history of harbouring militants such as Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM), which target both India and must also be noted in light of Pakistan's ridiculous claims in the UN is that following the US withdrawal from Afghanistan in August 2021, it was the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) that played a significant role in the ensuing ISI, long accused of maintaining ties with the Taliban, reportedly provided logistical support and strategic guidance to the group during its rapid takeover of involvement helped the Taliban exploit the power vacuum left by the US, enabling their swift return to Pakistani ambassador's plea for international aid to handle Afghan refugees and revive Afghanistan's economy carries its own TTP now conducts daily attacks on military outposts, suicide bombings in urban centres, and targeted assassinations. Over 558 people were killed in 2024 alone by the TTP, while border regions like North Waziristan have reportedly become ungovernable because of the TTP's rise in Pakistan mirrors the Afghan Taliban's Islamabad reckons with its role as an incubator of terrorism, its "warnings", such as the one given at the UN, will continue to be met with scepticism. Pakistan's latest statement at the UN is both historical amnesia and audacious hypocrisy. Terrorism, which Pakistan used as a policy against India, has boomeranged.- EndsMust Watch


India Today
18 minutes ago
- India Today
UK woman slammed over ‘deport non-English-speaking Indian staff at Heathrow' post
A British woman's complaint post about Indian and Asian staff at London's Heathrow Airport not speaking English sparked debate online. Lucy White, who described herself as a Public Policy Specialist, claimed on X that most Heathrow staff were Indian or Asian and 'not speaking a word of English'. 'Just landed in London Heathrow. Majority of staff are Indian/ Asian and are not speaking a word of English,' she said in her post. advertisement White said when she told them to speak English, they accused her of racism. White doubled down in her post, saying, 'They know I'm right, so they have to use the race card.' She went a step further, calling for their deportation. 'Deport them all. Why are they working at the first point of entry to the UK?! What must tourists think,' White said as she concluded her post. Take a look at White's post here: But the internet wasted no time in dissecting her claims. While sveral users agreed with her concerns about language barriers, a section of the internet called out her remarks as "racist" and "ignorant".One of the users pointed out the obvious contradiction, saying, 'They don't speak a word of English but understood you perfectly and called you racist? They should've also called you a fabulist.' Another user said, 'Western countries aren't allowed to be ethnocentric. Be racist, or accept the death of the West.''British locals aren't stepping up for these jobs, which is why Indians and Asians are there. Admit it—it's a fact,' a user said. Countering White's argument, a user explained how Heathrow's location naturally attracts a diverse, multilingual workforce in a lenghty comment. The user reminded White that Britain's economy runs on immigrant labour, particularly in sectors like hospitality, logistics, and healthcare, where ethnic minorities fill roles many locals avoid. They added, 'For visitors and investors, seeing diversity at Britain's ports of entry proves the country's global connection—not the opposite.' 'If I were a tourist, I'd be impressed by how diverse one of Europe's biggest cities is,' one of the users said. See the comments here: While Lucy White accused the staff of failing to represent Britain, the internet felt her outburst said more about outdated attitudes than the people working to keep Heathrow running.- Ends