Akbar is considered the star orator of the MIM, which holds seven assembly seats and has one MP in Asaduddin Owaisi. While Hyderabad has a Muslim population of 41 per cent, the Old City area has a 70 per cent Muslim population. It has always been an MIM bastion. Though a breakaway group called Majlis Bachao Tehreek (MBT), formed by Mohammed Amanullah Khan in 1993, has some presence and Urdu dailies Siasat and Munsif oppose the MIM, the party is considered to be the main voice of poor Muslims in the Old City. It had a tie-up with the tdp in 1999 and subsequently with the Congress in 2004. Its recent break-up with the Kiran Kumar government is said to owe to a clutch of related issues—the Bhagyalakshmi temple, the arrests of MIM mlas near the Charminar on the temple issue and communal incidents in Telangana. Political observers, however, trace the tipping point in the strained ties to when the Owaisis sought land for their Deccan College of Medical Sciences, Dar-Us-Salam Educational Trust, Etemaad daily and Salar-E-Millat Educational Trust. In all, they sought 16 acres in the city valued at `4,000-odd crore. Letters to this effect addressed to the CM were leaked to the media, which reportedly left the Owaisis furious. After snapping ties with him, Asaduddin called Kiran Kumar a Sangh parivar man, a worthy successor to P.V. Narasimha Rao.