Shirin Akiner was born in 1943 in Dacca, British India. She studied at London University, gaining her first degree in Slavonicphilology, and Turkish language and literature (Ottoman and modern). She gained her doctorate in 1980 from University College London as a researcher of the heritage of the BelarusianLipka Tatars, with her dissertation titled "The religious vocabulary of the British Library Tatar-Byelorussian Kitab".[1]
Her first husband was killed in a car crash just before the birth of their son Metin.[2][3] In 1973, she re-married.[2]
In 2005, human rights groups, non-governmental organizations, and the former British ambassador to UzbekistanCraig Murray, accused her of producing a biased and "propagandist" report on the Andijan massacre in Uzbekistan.[6] Murray called on Colin Bundy, the director of SOAS, to take action against Akiner for allegedly promoting falsehoods, but the latter refused on the grounds that Murray's views were "unsubstantiated".