HomeEntertainmentSaif Ali Khan loses claim to Rs 15,000 crore Bhopal property as court declares it enemy property

Saif Ali Khan loses claim to Rs 15,000 crore Bhopal property as court declares it enemy property

In a major legal setback, Saif Ali Khan and his family have been barred from inheriting their ₹15,000 crore Bhopal estate, as the court declared it "enemy property."en

July 10, 2025 / 00:17 IST
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Saif Ali Khan loses claim to Rs 15,000 crore Bhopal property as court declares it enemy property
Saif Ali Khan loses claim to Rs 15,000 crore Bhopal property as court declares it enemy property

In a significant legal blow to Bollywood actor Saif Ali Khan, the Madhya Pradesh High Court has ruled that his family's sprawling ancestral estate in Bhopal, valued at an estimated Rs 15,000 crore, falls under the purview of "enemy property." This decision means that Saif, his mother Sharmila Tagore, and sisters Soha and Saba Ali Khan cannot inherit the property.

The judgment comes after years of legal wrangling over the ownership of the royal assets. The roots of the case trace back to 2014, when the Custodian of Enemy Property classified the assets of the Bhopal royal family as enemy property under the Enemy Property Act. This law, originally enacted in 1950 and later amended, empowers the Indian government to seize properties belonging to individuals who migrated to enemy nations, notably Pakistan.

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Central to the case is Saif's great-grandmother, Abida Sultan, daughter of Nawab Hamidullah Khan, the last ruling Nawab of Bhopal. Abida Sultan migrated to Pakistan in 1950 and renounced her Indian citizenship. The government's classification is based on this move, arguing that since she left for Pakistan, her share of the estate—and by extension, the entire property—falls under the Enemy Property Act.

While a trial court in 2000 had earlier recognized Saif and his family as rightful heirs, the decision was challenged by other family members. They contended that inheritance should follow Muslim Personal Law, under which Abida Sultan's migration disqualified her and her descendants from succession.