There are three friends, a Sardar, Pathan and English Man (born and brought up in India). They are thick friends with staunch beliefs of their own, but being secular and living in the UK, they celebrate each others festivals. They are friends in need and friends indeed. However during minor altercations between the Pathan and the Sardar, it's the Englishman who soothes the ruffled feathers and mockingly chides them with a threat of deportation. They share a strong friendship with their families.
The Englishman has a daughter. The Pathan has two daughters. The Sardar has a son.
Sunny who is the Sardar's son comes to the UK for further studies. The parents have little time for their children as they are busy with their own lives. However they do indulge their children and try to fulfill their demands. The Englishman's daughter is about to get married in a Church. His Asian friends get together to do the Asian functions of Gidda, Bidai etc. Sunny and Sameera, the Pathan's daughter, meet for the first time and cupid strikes. They meet in college and their attraction for each other increases. They are young, in love and enjoy living. They go to clubs, pubs and restaurants and go for picnics. The Pathan and the respective families are not happy about the growing friendship between Sunny and Sameera.
The friendship develops into a full blown love-affair and both can't live without each other. The parents strongly oppose the relationship. Love has its own reasons and the couples believe and are confident that their parents will be liberal and will not object to their marriage but destiny has something else in store for them. The parents take a firm stand and their love is doomed. They can't marry, because they are from different communities.
The friendship between the parents of the couple turns into bitter enmity. They don't listen to their English friend's advice who ultimately advises the lovers to elope and get married...