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Colonial-era Indian royalty and Pakistan fight in court for $45 million stashed in London bank

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Legal teams from India and Pakistan are awaiting a historic court judgment on the fate of $45 million that has been hidden away in a London bank since the partition of the two countries in 1947.

The case, which may finally be resolved in the U.K. High Court after decades of rivalry and diplomatic grandstanding, involves a $1.3 million transaction made by the Nizam Osman Ali Khan, the last monarch of the princely state of Hyderabad, to the Pakistan High Commissioner in London in 1947.

mir-osman-ali-khan-bahadur-gty-jc-190625_hpMain_4x3_992.jpg
Keystone-france/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images
Mir Osman Ali Khan, the seventh Nizam of Hyderabad, and one of the richest men in the world between 1920 and 1949.
(MORE: Narendra Modi claims victory in Indian election)
The royal Nizams of Hyderabad were among the richest dynasties in colonial-era India, known for their grand Chowmahalla Palace residence and lavish displays of wealth. The seventh and final Nizam, who in the 1940s was one of the wealthiest men in the world, gave Queen Elizabeth II a diamond tiara and a diamond necklace made by Cartier as a wedding gift when she married Prince Philip.

queen-elizabeth-prince-philip-wedding-portrait-gty-jc-190625_hpEmbed_1x1_992.jpg
Keystone/Getty Images
Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh pose for a photo at Buckingham Palace, London, after their wedding ceremony at Westminster Abbey, Nov. 20, 1947.more +
But in 1947, when the British Empire collapsed and the modern, independent India was preparing to take back Hyderabad from princely rule, Nizam feared for his financial interests and sent money to London for safe keeping. When Nizam asked for it back a few years later the Pakistani authorities refused.

The money has been tied up in a National Westminster bank account to this day. After 70 years of steadily growing interest, the account is now worth a staggering $45 million.

(MORE: Indian conservationists credit sewage runoff with rise in flamingo populations)
Nizam's grandsons could stand to inherit the money. However, the case is by the fact that Pakistan was helping to smuggle arms into Hyderabad before the Indian invasion of 1948, and the money could be construed as a payment for services.

When Nizam Osman Ali Khan tried to recover the funds from the bank account in the 1950s, Pakistan refused. The case then went to the House of Lords, then the highest court in the land, and Pakistan successfully argued that as a sovereign nation it could not be sued, meaning the money would be locked away, with neither party able to access it for the foreseeable future.

chowmahalla-palace-india-gty-jc-190625_hpEmbed_5x3_992.jpg
Noah Seelam/AFP/Getty Images, FILE
An Indian woman collects leaves fallen on the lawns of the Chowmahalla Palace in the old city of Hyderabad on Nov. 19, 2008.
But in 2013, Pakistan launched a legal challenge to try and unlock the funds in order to claim full ownership of the $45 million. This, in the judge's view, waived Pakistan's right to not be sued, the current Indian legal team, led by Paul Hewitt, a partner at Withers LLP, told ABC News. An opportunity then opened up for two of the Nizam's grandsons, the eighth Nizam, 84, and Prince Muffakham, 80, to reclaim the money.

(MORE: Why India and Pakistan are fighting in Kashmir and what's at stake)
But the legal team representing Pakistan argues that "international, military and political context" makes the case more complicated.

"Pakistan had assisted Hyderabad in her attempts at self-defense against Indian aggression by arranging the supply and transportation of arms to Hyderabad," Khawar Qureshi, QC, a barrister at Serle Court Chambers representing the Pakistan government, told The Times newspaper. "[The] fog of war and the clandestine operations which it entails inevitably loom large."

A judgment in the case is expected in about six weeks.

The judge could rule in favor of the eighth Nizam or the state of Pakistan. The funds could also remain frozen in the London bank account. But after the 2013 judgment, it is far more likely the $45 million will be freed up to whomever the British High Court finally decides is the rightful owner.

https://abcnews.go.com/Internationa...lty-pakistan-fight-court-45/story?id=63930443
 
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Legal teams from India and Pakistan are awaiting a historic court judgment on the fate of $45 million that has been hidden away in a London bank since the partition of the two countries in 1947.

The case, which may finally be resolved in the U.K. High Court after decades of rivalry and diplomatic grandstanding, involves a $1.3 million transaction made by the Nizam Osman Ali Khan, the last monarch of the princely state of Hyderabad, to the Pakistan High Commissioner in London in 1947.

mir-osman-ali-khan-bahadur-gty-jc-190625_hpMain_4x3_992.jpg
Keystone-france/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images
Mir Osman Ali Khan, the seventh Nizam of Hyderabad, and one of the richest men in the world between 1920 and 1949.
(MORE: Narendra Modi claims victory in Indian election)
The royal Nizams of Hyderabad were among the richest dynasties in colonial-era India, known for their grand Chowmahalla Palace residence and lavish displays of wealth. The seventh and final Nizam, who in the 1940s was one of the wealthiest men in the world, gave Queen Elizabeth II a diamond tiara and a diamond necklace made by Cartier as a wedding gift when she married Prince Philip.

queen-elizabeth-prince-philip-wedding-portrait-gty-jc-190625_hpEmbed_1x1_992.jpg
Keystone/Getty Images
Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh pose for a photo at Buckingham Palace, London, after their wedding ceremony at Westminster Abbey, Nov. 20, 1947.more +
But in 1947, when the British Empire collapsed and the modern, independent India was preparing to take back Hyderabad from princely rule, Nizam feared for his financial interests and sent money to London for safe keeping. When Nizam asked for it back a few years later the Pakistani authorities refused.

The money has been tied up in a National Westminster bank account to this day. After 70 years of steadily growing interest, the account is now worth a staggering $45 million.

(MORE: Indian conservationists credit sewage runoff with rise in flamingo populations)
Nizam's grandsons could stand to inherit the money. However, the case is by the fact that Pakistan was helping to smuggle arms into Hyderabad before the Indian invasion of 1948, and the money could be construed as a payment for services.

When Nizam Osman Ali Khan tried to recover the funds from the bank account in the 1950s, Pakistan refused. The case then went to the House of Lords, then the highest court in the land, and Pakistan successfully argued that as a sovereign nation it could not be sued, meaning the money would be locked away, with neither party able to access it for the foreseeable future.

chowmahalla-palace-india-gty-jc-190625_hpEmbed_5x3_992.jpg
Noah Seelam/AFP/Getty Images, FILE
An Indian woman collects leaves fallen on the lawns of the Chowmahalla Palace in the old city of Hyderabad on Nov. 19, 2008.
But in 2013, Pakistan launched a legal challenge to try and unlock the funds in order to claim full ownership of the $45 million. This, in the judge's view, waived Pakistan's right to not be sued, the current Indian legal team, led by Paul Hewitt, a partner at Withers LLP, told ABC News. An opportunity then opened up for two of the Nizam's grandsons, the eighth Nizam, 84, and Prince Muffakham, 80, to reclaim the money.

(MORE: Why India and Pakistan are fighting in Kashmir and what's at stake)
But the legal team representing Pakistan argues that "international, military and political context" makes the case more complicated.

"Pakistan had assisted Hyderabad in her attempts at self-defense against Indian aggression by arranging the supply and transportation of arms to Hyderabad," Khawar Qureshi, QC, a barrister at Serle Court Chambers representing the Pakistan government, told The Times newspaper. "[The] fog of war and the clandestine operations which it entails inevitably loom large."

A judgment in the case is expected in about six weeks.

The judge could rule in favor of the eighth Nizam or the state of Pakistan. The funds could also remain frozen in the London bank account. But after the 2013 judgment, it is far more likely the $45 million will be freed up to whomever the British High Court finally decides is the rightful owner.

https://abcnews.go.com/Internationa...lty-pakistan-fight-court-45/story?id=63930443

45 Million in 1947 wont be 45 Million in 2019.
 
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So islamic republic of Pakistan should take 1.5 million ,give the remaining amount to us , interest is not haram in our constitution

where is the kin of this nizam?
 
. . . .
yeah legally it can only go to him. he is Last listed owner in the books.

indian laws dont apply
It does , constitution ended all the royalties and titles and i am an Indian i might be knowing slightly better than you
 
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It does , constitution ended all the royalties and titles and i am an Indian i might be knowing slightly better than you

yes i am not saying who knows better.

i am saying what natural law will dictate this. you were a dominion back then.

paisa chaiye? hum dedenge tension na lo
 
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So islamic republic of Pakistan should take 1.5 million ,give the remaining amount to us , interest is not haram in our constitution

Us? It's a case between children of the royalty of Hyderabad and Pakistan, not India and Pakistan.
 
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Might be still living in Hyderabad but all of his properties and wealth was nationalized after independence
I think he lives in Australia .Guess now where this money will go..........
 
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