India Offers Full Assistance to Yemeni Death Row Inmate Nimisha Priya

India extends full support to Nimisha Priya, a death row inmate in Yemen, as her family seeks to raise blood money for her release. [Image via Indian Express]

The Indian government is extending all possible help in the case of Nimisha Priya, an Indian national on death row in Yemen, the external affairs ministry said on Tuesday hours after the Yemeni president approved her death sentence.

Priya, 36, who is from Palakkad in Kerala, was arrested in July 2017 in connection with the murder of a Yemeni citizen. She was sentenced to death by a Yemeni court in 2020. After efforts to secure her release through the Islamic tradition of “diyat”, or paying “blood money” to the victim’s family, failed, Yemen’s President Rashad al-Alimi approved her death sentence on Monday.

Also See: FIR Against Indian Police Officer, Khan, for Sexually Exploiting IIT-Kanpur Student

Responding to the development, external affairs ministry spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal said the government is extending all help in Priya’s case while her family explores “relevant options”.

Jaiswal said: “We are aware of the sentencing of Ms Nimisha Priya in Yemen. We understand that the family of Ms Priya is exploring relevant options.” He added, without giving details, “The government is extending all possible help in the matter.”

Nimisha Priya is currently on death row in the central prison in the Yemeni capital of Sana’a. Her mother, Prema Kumari, 57, went to Sana’a earlier this year to try to avert the death penalty by negotiating the payment of blood money to the victim’s family. Kumari is being helped in these efforts by a body set up by expatriate Indians in Yemen.

After going to Yemen in 2009 to work as a nurse, Priya set up a clinic in Sana’a in 2015 along with Yemeni national Talal Abdo Mehdi, whom she was later accused of murdering. Media reports have said there was a falling out between Priya and Mehdi in 2017 over his alleged embezzlement of funds. Priya was arrested along with another Yemeni national in connection with the murder.

Priya’s husband Tomy Thomas and her daughter returned from Yemen in 2014, while she stayed behind. Yemen’s Supreme Judicial Council dismissed Priya’s appeal against her death sentence in November 2023 but kept open the option of paying blood money to the victim’s family.

According to reports, Priya’s family was required to pay $40,000 to Mehdi’s relatives following negotiations with the dead man’s kin and tribal elders. A sum of more than $19,800 was raised by Priya’s family through collective efforts and paid in July. However, the rest of the money could not be raised, the reports said.

This news is sourced from Hindustan Times and is intended for informational purposes only.

News Desk

Your trusted source for insightful journalism. Stay informed with our compelling coverage of global affairs, business, technology, and more.

Recent

From The Periphery to the Center: What People at Our Margins Endure

The South Asia Times (SAT) hosted a national webinar titled “From the Periphery to the Center: What People at Our Margins Endure,” spotlighting how Pakistan’s border regions, Balochistan, Gilgit-Baltistan, Azad Jammu & Kashmir, and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, face deep-rooted governance challenges, economic neglect, and communication voids. Experts called for shifting from a security-centric to an inclusion-driven policy model to rebuild trust, empower youth, and turn Pakistan’s peripheries into engines of national resilience.

Read More »

The Indian Muslim: Living Between Faith and Fear

In September 2025, a simple expression of faith became a crime. When a devotional social media trend, the ‘I Love Muhammad’ campaign, went viral, it was deliberately framed as a provocation by authorities. The state’s response was swift and brutal: mass arrests and punitive demolitions that turned a peaceful act of devotion into a national flashpoint, revealing a clear intent to police and punish Muslim identity itself.

Read More »
Pakistan’s Stability: A Silent Pillar of US Strategic Interests

Pakistan’s Stability: A Silent Pillar of US Strategic Interests

Long seen through a security lens, Pakistan is now redefining its role in US strategy, as a supplier of critical minerals, a connectivity hub between Central and South Asia, and a stabilizing force in a volatile region. Amid global competition with China and shifting energy dynamics, Washington increasingly views Pakistan’s stability not as a choice but as a strategic necessity anchoring its economic and geopolitical interests across Asia.

Read More »
The Nobel Peace Prize or War Prize? A History of Controversial Laureates.

The Nobel Peace Prize or War Prize? A History of Controversial Laureates

Far from being an impartial recognition of pacifism, the Nobel Peace Prize’s legacy is marred by controversial laureates whose actions have been linked to immense violence. The prize is not a universal arbiter of peace but a political instrument reflecting a Western-centric worldview, rewarding figures who align with its geopolitical interests, regardless of the blood on their hands.

Read More »