Indian Nurse, Nimisha Priya Faces Execution Today

Indian Nurse Nimisha Priya Faces Execution Today as Intervention Fails

by · TFIPOST.com

Indian nurse Nimisha Priya, who was convicted in 2020 for the murder of a Yemeni citizen, is at the brink of execution today in Sanaa Central Jail. Her only chance at survival now lies in last-minute negotiations with the victim’s family, talks that revolve around the payment of ‘blood money’, or diyya, a legal provision under Yemen’s Sharia law.

The Crime and Conviction

Nimisha Priya, a nurse from Palakkad, Kerala, moved to Yemen in the early 2010s, where she opened a clinic with the assistance of Yemeni national Talal Abdo Mehdi. However, the partnership allegedly turned abusive. Priya accused Talal of seizing her passport, falsifying ownership documents, and subjecting her to repeated physical and sexual abuse.

In 2017, in an attempt to recover her passport and escape the country, Priya injected Talal with sedatives, leading to his death by overdose. She later attempted to dispose of his body with the help of another nurse. She was arrested, tried, and in 2020, sentenced to death three times, two of which were upheld by the Yemeni Supreme Court.

The Yemeni President approved the execution in 2024. While the sentence was initially scheduled for July 16, 2025, it was postponed by 24 hours amid diplomatic efforts.

What Is Blood Money?

Under Yemen’s Sharia-based legal system, a convicted person may be spared execution if the victim’s family accepts diyya, or blood money, in exchange for a formal pardon.

Blood money is a monetary compensation paid to the victim’s family, who then have the authority to forgive the convict. If they refuse the offer, the execution proceeds. In Nimisha’s case, the amount demanded was $1 million (approximately ₹8.3 crore).

This is now the only legal path available to halt her execution.

The Negotiations: Race Against Time

With the execution still hanging over Priya, talks are ongoing in Sanaa between the victim’s family and a negotiation team led by Samuel Jerome Bhaskaran, a Yemeni-based social worker appointed by the Save Nimisha Priya International Action Council.

This council, formed in 2020, has spearheaded a global campaign, raised the necessary $1 million through donations and crowdfunding, and engaged with community leaders, scholars, and local mediators in Yemen.

However, the final decision rests with the victim’s family, who must agree to accept the diyya and sign an official pardon. So far, the family has not publicly accepted the offer, and the situation remains tense and uncertain.

Mother’s Plea from the Ground

Nimisha’s mother, Prema Kumari, has been in Sanaa since April, after receiving a special travel exemption from the Indian government. A domestic worker from Kochi, she has personally appealed to the victim’s family and visited her daughter in prison multiple times.

‘She is suffering in silence. This is my final appeal as a mother, please forgive her,’ she said in a heartfelt message on Tuesday.

India’s Role and Limitations

The Indian government has stated that it has exhausted all official diplomatic avenues, given that Yemen, especially under Houthi control, is not diplomatically recognized by India.

Attorney-General R Venkataramani, representing the Centre in the Supreme Court earlier this week, said, ‘We have reached the maximum extent of what is possible. Negotiations are now being handled privately.’

Despite its limited options, the Indian government has remained in constant contact with the Yemeni prosecutor’s office and influential local leaders. The Supreme Court of India has scheduled the next hearing for July 18, but by then, it may be too late.

Appeals from Kerala and Religious Leaders

Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan has personally written to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, calling for an urgent humanitarian intervention. Prominent Indian Muslim leaders, including Kanthapuram A P Aboobacker Musliyar, have appealed to influential Sufi scholars in Yemen to convince the victim’s family to forgive Nimisha.

These religious intermediaries are believed to be playing a vital behind-the-scenes role as today’s deadline looms.

Will She Be Saved?

As the 24-hour postponement expires today, the next few hours will determine whether Nimisha Priya lives or dies. If the victim’s family refuses the blood money offer, Yemeni authorities are expected to carry out the execution immediately.

For Nimisha, her family, and thousands following the case around the world, today marks a critical and potentially final chapter in a saga defined by tragedy, desperation, and now, a fragile hope for mercy.