ARTICLE AD BOX
As the fate of Indian nurse Nimisha Priya, who is on death row in Yemen, hangs in the balance, the family of the man she was convicted of murdering has rejected a Kerala cleric’s claim of intervening in the matter.
Last month, the Al-Houthi government in Yemen had postponed the execution of Priya, who had been sentenced for the murder of Talal Abdo Mahdi in 2017. After the execution, scheduled for July 16, was postponed, Kerala Muslim scholar and All India Jamiyyathul Ulama general secretary Kanthapuram A P Aboobacker Musliar had claimed that his intervention had played a role. Last week, the office of Kanthapuram stated that Priya’s death sentence had been revoked, a claim which was later withdrawn.
On Monday, Talal’s brother, Abdul Fatah Mehdi, wrote on Facebook, “We have strictly prohibited any meeting or discussion with the parents of Talal, either directly or through any medium, by the office of Kanthapuram or Habib Omar Ibn Hafeez. The religion of Islam is the religion of truth and not the religion of distortion and falsification. If the news were true, we would have announced it first.”
The reaction comes a day after Kanthapuram reportedly said at a function of his organisation that his efforts were driven solely by a sense of duty, not for any recognition.
Earlier, Kanthapuram had stated that representatives of Yemeni Sufi leader Sheikh Habib Umar Bin Hafiz had met Talal’s family, leading to the reprieve for Priya. Talal’s brother has now denied this claim.
Two days ago, Talal’s brother had stated that he had approached the prosecution authorities seeking to fix the execution date as “there is no substitute for retribution”.
Earlier, India’s External Affairs Ministry had declined to comment on the reported role of Kanthapuram. Ministry spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal told reporters last month that “as far as the role of the entity you mentioned is concerned, I have no information to share”.