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HK$26.19b windfall for Indian princesses

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An Indian man walks past the premises of the Faridkot House complex in New Delhi on Monday. Photo AFP

An Indian court has ruled that the daughters of a late Maharaja should inherit his 200-billion-rupee (HK$26.19 billion) estate because his will was forged, ending a 21-year legal battle, reports say.

A magistrate in the northwestern city of Chandigarh ruled last Thursday that the will of the Maharaja of Faridkot had been faked to award his fortune to a trust managed by his servants and lawyers.

Neither his wife, mother, nor daughters were named as beneficiaries of his assets, which included forts, a palace, vintage cars and prime property in the capital, the Press Trust of India news agency reported.

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Vikas Jain, a lawyer representing Amrit Kaur, one of his two daughters, announced the verdict on Sunday, saying that the will had been declared as “fictitious” and “void”.

Harinder Singh Brar was a ruler of the princely state of Faridkot in the wealthy northwestern state of Punjab before India’s independence from British colonial rule in 1947.

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The fortune, which includes cash, jewellery and even an aerodrome in Faridkot city, will be shared with his other daughter Deepinder Kaur.

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