Saif Ali Khan’s Bhopal Property Worth 15000 Crores Will Be Sold By The Government, Calling It ‘Enemy Property’
The life of one of the popular Bollywood actor and the Nawab of Pataudi, Saif Ali Khan does not seem to be going well. For the past few days he and his family have been facing multiple issues and things are worsening only. Now the life of Saif has taken another turn, actually, the Pataudi family has ancestral property worth Rs 15,000 crore in the city of Bhopal which was under ban by the government. Now after years, the ban on this property has been lifted.
Saif Ali Khan
Let us tell you that the Madhya Pradesh High Court has lifted the ban on the property of the actor which is worth crores, paving the way for the government’s acquisition. The appeal done by the family is not valid since the period of appeal also ended on January 13. Now the government can take possession of Nawab Mansoor Ali Khan Pataudi and his family’s property in Bhopal, 80 percent of whose land has already been sold.
Saif Ali Khan
This incident of property acquisition happened amid the ongoing investigation of the case in which the actor was brutally stabbed by a man. The Bangladeshi man entered his house and attacked Saif with a knife during an attempted robbery and kidnapping of his younger son Jeh. The actor suffered serious injuries and was operated upon at Lilavati Hospital. At the same time, the actor has returned home from the hospital and the investigation of the case is going on.
Saif Ali Khan
Talking about the property, let us tell you tell you that Saif Ali Khan’s property worth crores is in the name of his mother, sister, and relatives. The Pataudi family has sold 80 percent of its property of more than 100 acres to other people. The Pataudi family has property from Bhopal to Chiklod. The Madhya Pradesh High Court (Jabalpur Bench) has ordered actor Saif Ali Khan, his mother Sharmila Tagore, sisters Soha and Saba Ali Khan, and Pataudi’s sister Sabiha Sultan to present their case before the appellate authority in the enemy property case.