“One of Kashmir’s most prominent separatist voices — sentenced to life imprisonment after decades of legal proceedings under India’s anti-terrorism framework.” — On Asiya Andrabi’s conviction, March 24, 2026
On March 24, 2026, a special NIA (National Investigation Agency) court sentenced Asiya Andrabi to life imprisonment for her involvement in terrorist activities in Kashmir. The conviction follows charges under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA) and related statutes, covering offences including funding terrorism, waging war against India, and links to Pakistani intelligence and terrorist organisations. Andrabi — the founder of Dukhtaran-e-Millat (Daughters of the Faith) and one of the most prominent female figures in the Kashmiri separatist movement — had been in NIA custody since 2018. Her sentencing marks one of the most significant terrorism-related convictions involving a Kashmiri separatist leader in recent years.
👤 Who Is Asiya Andrabi?
Asiya Andrabi was born in 1962 in Sopore, Baramulla district, Jammu and Kashmir. Trained as a pharmacist, she became one of the most radical voices of the Kashmiri separatist movement beginning in the 1980s — one of the few prominent women in a movement historically dominated by men. She has been consistently vocal in demands for an independent or Pakistan-merged Kashmir.
She has been designated as a terrorist by the Ministry of Home Affairs under the UAPA schedule — and separately designated a Specially Designated Global Terrorist (SDGT) by the United States Treasury Department, one of the few Kashmiri separatist leaders to receive this designation from the US government. Andrabi had been arrested multiple times over the decades before her final arrest by the NIA in 2018, along with two associates.
In the context of Kashmiri separatism, most prominent figures have been men from political or militant backgrounds. Asiya Andrabi was unusual — a formally educated woman who built an all-women organisation and became one of the movement’s most uncompromising voices. Her conviction matters not just as a legal outcome but as a marker of how the Indian state has prosecuted the UAPA framework against separatist leadership over the past decade.
📌 Dukhtaran-e-Millat: The Organisation
Dukhtaran-e-Millat — which translates from Urdu/Kashmiri as “Daughters of the Faith” — was founded by Andrabi in 1987 as an all-women Islamist organisation in Kashmir. It became known for several activities that brought it into conflict with Indian law:
- Enforcing conservative Islamic dress codes, including reported attacks on women found violating its standards
- Opposing co-education and mixed-gender public spaces
- Organising protests and demonstrations demanding azaadi (independence)
- Distributing material that Indian authorities characterised as pro-Pakistan and anti-India propaganda
Dukhtaran-e-Millat has been declared an unlawful association by the Government of India and is banned under the UAPA. It is a distinct organisation from the Hurriyat Conference — though Andrabi had associations with Hurriyat factions at various points in her political career.
Three distinctions that appear in MCQs — all trap-worthy:
Trap 1: Dukhtaran-e-Millat ≠ Hurriyat Conference. These are different organisations. Andrabi founded Dukhtaran-e-Millat. While she had associations with Hurriyat at various points, her organisation is specifically Dukhtaran-e-Millat. Do not equate the two.
Trap 2: NIA was established after 26/11 Mumbai attacks (2008) — NOT after any Kashmir-specific incident. This is the triggering event that led to the NIA Act, 2008.
Trap 3: Special NIA courts are constituted under Section 11 of the NIA Act — NOT directly under the UAPA. The UAPA is the substantive law; the NIA Act creates the court framework.
⚖️ Charges and Legal Proceedings
The NIA investigation against Andrabi, which began following her 2018 arrest, covered a wide range of serious charges under Indian anti-terrorism law:
- Funding of terrorism — channelling funds to militant activities in Kashmir
- Waging war against the Government of India — one of the most serious offences under the Indian Penal Code
- Conspiracy to commit terrorist acts
- Possession and distribution of seditious material
- Links to Pakistani intelligence and terrorist organisations
The proceedings were conducted before a special NIA court, which has exclusive jurisdiction over NIA-filed cases under scheduled offences including UAPA. The life sentence is the maximum non-capital punishment in Indian law.
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Organisation founded | Dukhtaran-e-Millat, 1987 |
| Meaning of name | Daughters of the Faith |
| Organisation type | All-women Islamist separatist group |
| Status under Indian law | Banned — declared unlawful association under UAPA |
| Andrabi’s MHA designation | Terrorist — listed in UAPA schedule |
| US Treasury designation | SDGT — Specially Designated Global Terrorist |
| NIA arrest | 2018 — along with two associates |
| Sentencing | Life imprisonment — March 24, 2026 |
📜 The NIA and Special Courts: Institutional Framework
The National Investigation Agency (NIA) was established under the NIA Act, 2008, enacted in the aftermath of the 2008 Mumbai attacks (26/11) — the single most devastating terrorist attack on Indian soil, which exposed critical gaps in India’s counter-terrorism investigative architecture.
The NIA’s defining feature is its pan-India jurisdiction for scheduled offences — it can investigate and prosecute terrorism and related offences anywhere in the country without requiring permission from the relevant state government. This is a significant departure from the normal federal arrangement, where law and order is a state subject under the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution.
Special NIA courts are constituted under Section 11 of the NIA Act. These are designated courts — typically presided over by a Sessions Court judge — with exclusive jurisdiction over NIA-filed cases. The special court framework is designed to ensure faster, more focused proceedings than regular criminal courts, and to handle the technical complexity of terrorism-related evidence and law.
The NIA’s pan-India jurisdiction without state government permission was controversial when enacted in 2008 — critics argued it undermined federalism by allowing the central government to bypass state police and judicial processes. Proponents argued that terrorism, by its cross-border and inter-state nature, cannot be effectively investigated by a single state agency. Does India’s experience with the NIA over 17 years support the federalism-security trade-off that the NIA Act represents?
🌍 UAPA: India’s Primary Anti-Terrorism Statute
The Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA) is India’s primary counter-terrorism and anti-secession law. Originally enacted in 1967 to deal with secessionist movements, it has been significantly amended — most significantly in 2004, 2008, 2012, and 2019 — to expand its scope to cover terrorism financing, designation of individual terrorists (not just organisations), and enhanced investigative and detention powers.
Key features of the UAPA relevant to this case:
- Unlawful association declaration: The government can ban organisations by declaring them unlawful associations — Dukhtaran-e-Millat was banned under this provision
- Individual terrorist designation: The 2019 amendment allowed the MHA to designate individuals (not just organisations) as terrorists — Andrabi is listed under this schedule
- Extended detention: UAPA allows detention without bail for up to 180 days pending investigation — longer than standard CrPC provisions
- Bail restrictions: Courts cannot grant bail to UAPA accused unless the prosecution is heard and the court is satisfied there are reasonable grounds to believe the accused is not guilty
Key Links for MCQs: NIA Act → 2008 → post-26/11. Special NIA Courts → Section 11 NIA Act (NOT UAPA). UAPA → bans organisations + designates individuals as terrorists. Dukhtaran-e-Millat → 1987 → Andrabi → banned under UAPA → NOT the Hurriyat Conference.
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Dukhtaran-e-Millat translates as “Daughters of the Faith.” It was founded by Asiya Andrabi in 1987 as an all-women Islamist separatist organisation in Kashmir. It is banned under the UAPA as an unlawful association.
The NIA was established under the NIA Act, 2008 — enacted following the 26/11 Mumbai attacks (November 26, 2008). It was not triggered by any Kashmir-specific incident. The attacks exposed critical gaps in India’s counter-terrorism investigative framework.
Special NIA courts are constituted under Section 11 of the NIA Act — NOT directly under the UAPA. The UAPA defines the scheduled offences; Section 11 of the NIA Act creates the court framework with exclusive jurisdiction to try NIA cases.
Andrabi is designated a terrorist by India’s MHA under the UAPA schedule, AND designated a Specially Designated Global Terrorist (SDGT) by the US Treasury Department. Both designations — one domestic, one international — make her case distinctive among Kashmiri separatist figures.
Dukhtaran-e-Millat and the Hurriyat Conference are different organisations. Andrabi specifically founded Dukhtaran-e-Millat in 1987. While she had associations with Hurriyat factions at various points, they are distinct entities. Equating the two is a common exam trap.