Asiya Andrabi, second left, chief of Kashmiri women’s separatist group Dukhtaran-e-Milat, or Daughters of the Nation, shout freedom slogans along with supporters during a protest...
AP Photo/Dar Yasin
Asiya Andrabi, third left, chief of Kashmiri women’s separatist group Dukhtaran-e-Milat, or Daughters of the Nation, shout freedom slogans along with supporters during a protest ...
AP Photo/Dar Yasin
Day In Pictures
Aasiya Andrabi, center, chief of Dukhtaran-e-Milat (Daughters of Nation), a Muslim women pro-Pakistan organization, speaks to media persons at a hideout in Srinagar. Andrabi condem...
Rafiq Maqbool/ AP
Asiya Andrabi, left, chief of the radical Islamic women group Dukhtaran-e-Milat, addresses the press at an undisclosed location in Srinagar. Asiya appealed to the people of Kashmir...
Mukhtar Khan/ AP
Week In Pictures
Tuesday 30 AugustMembers of Dukhtaran-e-Milat, a Kashmiri women separatist group, come out of a hotel after a raid in Srinagar. Asiya Andrabi, chief of the group, said that they ha...
AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool
Saturday 17 SeptemberVeiled Kashmiri college girls participate in a protest demonstration demanding the release of Kashmiri separatist leader Aasiya Andrabi in Srinagar. Andrabi, t...
The residential property of Asiya Andrabi, who is under judicial custody in Tihar Jail in Srinagar, is alleged to have been acquired from proceeds of terror funds.
Andrabi has solicited help from proscribed terrorist organizations and along with her associates has entered into a criminal conspiracy to wage war against the Government of India, the FIR alleged.
In her first major interview to the mainstream Indian media, the Dukhtaran-e-Millat leader reveals the Talibanesque mindset of a woman who's known as Malka-ul-Maut (Angel of Death)...