"A Night Of Hearing Made The Difference": How Nurse's Execution Was Delayed

A trained nurse who went to Yemen for work in 2008 found herself entangled in an abusive partnership with her Yemeni business associate, Talal Abdo Mahdi.

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Kerala nurse Nimisha Priya.

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Summary is AI-generated, newsroom-reviewed
  • Nimisha Priya's execution in Yemen was deferred after the victim's brother engaged in talks
  • Nimisha was convicted of murder and sentenced to death under Yemeni Sharia law
  • The victim's family can revoke the sentence by accepting 'blood money'
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New Delhi:

Kerala nurse Nimisha Priya News: By the time the sun rose over Sana'a, a door had opened but just slightly, enough for Nimisha Priya to keep fighting.

For days, members of the Save Nimisha Priya International Action Council had been staring at an irreversible deadline - July 16, 2025 - the day Nimisha, a nurse from Kerala convicted of murder in Yemen, was scheduled to be hanged.

But late into the night before her execution, something changed.

"For the first time since the case began, the brother of the victim came to the table," Subhash Chandran, lawyer and core member of the council, told NDTV.

"We talked all night. By late morning, the execution was deferred. We got what we wanted, some time to persuade the family now."

Time, Chandran knows, is everything.

Also Read | "Happy, Relieved": Husband Of Kerala Nurse As Yemen Pauses Her Execution

Nimisha's story is well known now. A trained nurse who went to Yemen for work in 2008, she found herself entangled in an abusive partnership with her Yemeni business associate, Talal Abdo Mahdi. In 2017, she was convicted of sedating him - allegedly to recover her passport - but he died of an overdose. Out of panic, she dismembered his body and attempted to hide the crime. She was eventually awarded the death sentence and then, the date was set.

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But under the Yemeni Sharia law, there remained one lifeline - blood money or diya. If the victim's family accepts compensation and issues a pardon, the sentence can be revoked. Nimisha's supporters reportedly offered up to $1 million.

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For weeks, that door remained firmly shut.

"Diplomacy Had Limits. Faith Stepped In"

According to Chandran, it wasn't embassies or courtrooms that changed the course but it was faith, persistence, and an unlikely hotline between Kerala and Yemen.

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"Diplomacy has its limits in a war-torn country like Yemen," he said. "The Indian government tried its best. But there are challenges, so we turned to backchannels - to religion, to humanity. And that's where the change came from."

Also Read | Can 'Blood Money' Save Kerala Nurse Nimisha Priya? Has It Saved Indians Before?

He singled out the efforts of Kanthapuram A.P. Aboobacker Musliyar, a prominent Indian Muslim cleric, whose intervention - through the Markaz in Kerala - helped establish direct communication with political and religious leaders in Yemen. That led to an overnight negotiation session that finally brought a member of the victim's family to the table.

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"They were under pressure from groups but leaders from Kerala were in touch with Yemen clerics, so they were persuaded," Chandran said, referring to the victim's family. "At first, they didn't want to talk at all. But with persuasion, they listened. That gave us just enough hope."

No More Legal Routes - Only Mercy

Chandran is clear-eyed about the path ahead. "There will be no more hearings. The judiciary has done what it could. Now it's entirely up to the victim's family. If they accept the diya and pardon her, Nimisha lives. If not, we will lose her."

"We are grateful to the Yemeni judicial system for giving us this window. It's all we asked for - one chance to plead, to apologise unconditionally, to show we mean no disrespect, only deep remorse."

Making a direct appeal to the Indian government and the public, Chandran said, "We ask the Government of India, religious leaders, and every person with influence - please help us. The window is open. But we don't know for how long."