Monday, April 12, 2010

Sania Mirza and Shoaib Malik marriage goes viral on internet. Sania Mirza and Shoaib Malik’s marriage has remained the most talked about marriage in Pakistan & India during the last several years. The marriage ceremonies of even wealthiest men and women don’t get the sort of publicity that this marriage has attracted.
Shoaib-Sania nikkah solemnized
Sania Mirza weds Shoaib Malik Today
Tennis star Sania Mirza married Pakistani cricketer Shoaib Malik on Monday, after a romance that saw the groom forced to get a messy divorce from his first wife days before the wedding.
The two wed at a plush hotel in Hyderabad, hometown of Mirza, the poster girl of Indian tennis on whom ride millions of rupees in brand endorsements.
"The nikah (marriage) has been completed, it has just got over. Please pray for the couple," Rucha Naik, a spokeswoman for Mirza, told reporters waiting outside the hotel.
Marriages between people from India and Pakistan, nuclear-armed rivals who have fought three wars, are rare. But this wedding transfixed the two nations as a dramatic revelation came to the fore days after Mirza and Malik said they were marrying.
A Hyderabad woman named Ayesha Siddiqui complained to police, saying she and Malik married in 2002 and that he could not marry again without divorcing her.
Police seized Malik's passport and questioned him after the former Pakistani captain denied knowing the woman.
The two sides repeatedly appeared before TV cameras to refute each other's claims as Muslim clerics weighed into the row.
But last week Malik signed divorce papers in an implicit acknowledgement of his marriage to Siddiqui, who then withdrew her complaint.
Mirza is the first Indian to win a WTA tour event in 2005. Despite initial promise, she now ranks at 89, hamstrung mostly by injuries.
Malik, 28, is fighting a year-long ban by the Pakistan Cricket Board for poor performance and indiscipline.
The couple will settle in Dubai.

Mirza, 23, wore a red embroidered sari from her mother's wedding trousseau 25 years ago. The groom, accompanied by relatives from Pakistan, wore a long black tunic.

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