Plea against declaring Dilip’s Pak house as heritage dismissed
BY Agencies8 Oct 2015 11:11 PM GMT
Agencies8 Oct 2015 11:11 PM GMT
A Pakistani court on Wednesday rejected a writ petition against declaring the ancestral house of legendary Indian actor Dilip Kumar as national heritage.
The house is located in <g data-gr-id="67">Mohallah</g> Khudadad area in Peshawar where the 92-year-old actor was born and spent his early formative years.
The Peshawar High Court on Tuesday summoned the secretary of the culture and archaeology department of Khyber <g data-gr-id="66">Pakhtukhwa</g> (KP) to appear before it and explain if the government was still interested in acquiring the house.
The court comprising Justice Nisar Hussain and Justice Rohul Amin was hearing the writ petition filed by local trader Lal Muhammad through his counsel Shahnawaz Khan. The trader claimed that the property belonged to him.
A representative of the KP culture department appeared in the court on Wednesday and informed that the provincial archives department has already taken the custody of the house of Kumar’s in Mohallah Khuddadad on the back of historic Qissa Khwani bazar and proper notification has already been issued by the KP Government.
The notification of the KP Government stated that no one is allowed to make any alteration in the said house nor could sell it out to anyone.
After hearing the arguments, the court disposed of the petition and directed the petitioner to approach the concerned department to this effect.
The petitioner in his writ argued the house being affiliated with Kumar in Chowk Nasir Khan was his property. He claimed that the property was purchased by his father.
His lawyer had said the house in question could not be called Kumar’s ancestral property as his father had sold it out within three days of purchase.
The petitioner had requested the court to direct the government to cancel the acquisition and release the property to the petitioner for his use, sale, transfer, reconstruction and development.
The then provincial government in 2012, on the 89th birthday of Kumar, issued a notification under Section 4 of the Land Acquisition Act 1894 regarding the house.
It initially agreed to pay Rs 30 million to the petitioner for the house but after meetings with the attorney of the petitioner, the government then made an offer of Rs 11.224 million which was then raised to Rs 14.246 million.
The actor, who was born as Yousuf Khan in Peshawar in 1922, is enormously loved in both India and Pakistan and for years there have been requests in Pakistan for salvaging his ancestral home.
Kumar, also known as ‘Tragedy King’ was conferred Pak’s highest civilian award, Nishan-e-Imtiaz (Order of Excellence) in 1998.
Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif had last year declared Kumar’s house a ‘national heritage,’ that can promote close cultural relations between India and Pakistan.
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