This is proved that Tumhari yehi auqat hai, tum looq kabhi Ghand say agaay baher hi nahi saktay... kabhi apan DNA bhi ker wa lanay aur apni Amma say hi poch laana kay, haqqat kia hai.
One more thing, jaisa leader aisay ghihia chaalay.
This story is very similar, to your leader, LA court can also ask for DNA.
A woman who successfully fought a seven-year legal battle to prove she was the daughter of the former king of Belgium, Albert II, will learn next month whether, against the wishes of her father, she will be able to use the titles Her Royal Highness and the Princess of Belgium.
Delphine Boël, 52, an artist and sculptor, whose mother had an extra-marital affair with Albert in the 1960s and 70s, argued in the Brussels court of appeal that she should also be able to use her biological father’s surname of Saxe-Coburg. The court will give its judgment on 29 October.
King Albert, 86, who abdicated from the Belgian throne in 2013, was forced to acknowledge he was Boël’s biological father after a court-ordered DNA test last January.
Boël, who had spent time with Albert as a child, nicknaming him Papillon (butterfly), had sought acknowledgment more than 20 years ago but her requests had been rejected. She launched a legal battle to prove paternity in June 2013, after the elder of her two children, Joséphine, was admitted to the hospital with pneumonia, and she felt the absence of her biological father.
Boël’s claim received a vital boost last autumn when the court of appeal ruled that Jacques Boël, with whom she grew up, was not her biological father and instructed an expert to carry out a test to compare her DNA with Albert’s.
The king agreed to provide a saliva sample – which proved his paternity – after the courts threatened to fine him €5,000 (£4,370) for every day he refused.