Mumbai Terrorist Attack-News stories and timeline

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Prem
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Re: Mumbai Terrorist Attack-News stories and timeline

Post by Prem »

‘I loathed India from childhood’
http://www.thehindu.com/arts/books/i-lo ... 329667.ece
Tell me about your training, Mr Headley,’ Behera said. ‘You clearly had a lot of training with Lashkar-e-Taiba, and they must have trusted you a lot.’
Headley beamed. ‘Yeah, they trusted me.’
‘So what kind of training did you get exactly?’
After the first two preliminary stages — the Daura-e-Amma and Daura-e-Sufa — I progressed to the next. The training became much more practical, and I learned to translate my acceptance and belief in Salafi Islam and radical ideology into action. In April 2003, I volunteered for the Daura-e-Khaassa in Muzaffarabad in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir. There were thirty or forty of us in the group that underwent the Daura-e-Khaassa training, which lasted for a full three months. During that time, we were taught the importance of being soldiers of Islam... But the one thing that some individuals in the group had trouble dealing with was the bloodshed. They kept asking themselves, and each other, and our masters and trainers and teachers, if it was acceptable to kill human beings, and if so, why. Movies on atrocities
This was what Daura-e-Khaassa was all about. The earlier Dauras were orientation programmes, this was the real induction into jehad. We were told that it was not just okay to kill others, it was actually an act of worship—it needed to be done to avenge the wrongdoings against Muslims. The LeT established this primarily by showing us very gory and violent movies about atrocities against Muslims.
One of those movies that I still remember vividly was the one on Babu Bajrangi and atrocities in Gujarat. He was involved in killing innocent Muslims in Gujarat; he had been caught on a hidden camera saying that he didn’t mind if he was hanged, but before he was, he wanted to be given a couple of days so he could go and kill as many Muslims as he could. Despite overwhelming evidence, the Gujarat state and the Indian government did not act against him. My hatred for and rage at India increased manifold during those three months. We were also shown some of the innumerable inflammatory speeches made by the Maharashtrian goondas of the Shiv Sena and their supremo Bal Thackeray. Hafiz Saeed was the one who showed us the damage that Bal Thackeray had done to the Muslim ummah. I know now that they were shown to us primarily to motivate us. And after everything that we saw on those videos, all our reservations were washed away, and we were fuelled by an unnatural, powerful rage. As it is, I had nursed a hatred against India ever since I was a child and my school had been bombed, but now, my loathing and animosity towards it were reinforced and with good reason.
Finally, after graduating from the Daura-e-Khaassa, we were taken to a mountain in Muzaffarabad. At first, I thought the next part of our training would be in a cave, as it looked like that was where we were headed. We soon found out that it was much more. It was a self-sustained branch of the Lashkar-e-Taiba. The sheer grandeur of the place took my breath away — it appeared to be more like a palatial fortress than anything else.
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Re: Mumbai Terrorist Attack-News stories and timeline

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India to seek access to Rana - Economic Times
India on Thursday said it will seek access to Tahawwur Rana, an accomplice of convicted terrorist David Headley from the US and maintained that its demand for their extradition "continues to stand" to take forward its legal processes in Mumbai terror strike cases.

Asserting that bringing to justice the perpetrators of 26/11 was work in progress which India intends to take to its logical conclusion, official spokesperson in the Ministry of External Affairs said the country will once again seek US government's support for access to Rana and also further access, as may be deemed necessary, to Headley.

He was asked about India's view on recent remarks made by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton during her global town hall that Headley has got the best possible sentence, indicating that he will not be extradited to India.

"Our objective has been that the processes initiated with the filing of charge sheet against nine individuals by the NIA special court regarding the conspiracy surrounding the Mumbai terror attacks is taken forward. And that is our goal.

"Two of these charge sheets are against Headley and Rana. The US has been helpful, thus far, within the limits of their own laws. They have enabled us access to Headley. Our officials have been able to spend seven days questioning him.

"However, we have not been able to question Rana earlier given his rights as an accused under US laws but now that he is a sentenced prisoner, we will once again seek US government's support for access to him and also further access as may be deemed necessary to Headley," the spokesperson said.

He also said India intends to work closely with the US to take the legal process forward and added that "our demand for extradition for Rana and Headley continues to stand."

Though India had limited access to 52-year-old Pakistani -American Headley, who recced the 26/11 Mumbai terror attack targets for LeT, but it has so far not been able to quiz his Pakistani-Canadian businessman friend Rana.
chaanakya
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Re: Mumbai Terrorist Attack-News stories and timeline

Post by chaanakya »

chaanakya wrote:
The idea of queue system is probably floated by some smart alek in MHA to get out of afzal logjam.
Once that smart Alek is out of MHA `queue explanation has been thrown out. Also it seems right that Former President had issues with not deciding mercy petition. Pranab da is taking some of the hard decisions and leaving it to congis to explain the delay.
Dossamaster , now in MOF, is cutting defence budget as usual. ( any way they cant spend it quickly)

Afzal hanging is a good thing and it doesnt mean congis have grown spine or gut.
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Re: Mumbai Terrorist Attack-News stories and timeline

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Pakistan Judicial Panel's [second] India Visit may be Delayed - ToI
A Pakistani judicial commission's visit to India in connection with the Mumbai attacks case is likely to be delayed as an anti-terrorism court today sought an assurance that members of the panel will be allowed to cross-examine key Indian witnesses.

Prosecutors informed the court conducting the trial of seven suspects charged with involvement in the Mumbai attack that they would provide an undertaking from the Indian government that the panel will have the power of cross-examination.

Chief prosecutor Chaudhry Zulifqar Ali told Judge Chaudhry Habib-ur-Rehman that Pakistani authorities were awaiting India's formal response on the issue.

The Pakistani commission is set to make a second visit to Mumbai to record the statements of four witnesses because the anti-terrorism court rejected a report submitted after its first visit on the ground that the panel was not allowed to conduct any cross-examination.

Ali argued during today's hearing that the Indian government had stated it would allow the cross-examination of witnesses.

He further said a previous agreement that barred cross-examination would not have any bearing on the judicial commission's second visit.

Khwaja Haris Ahmed, the counsel for Lashkar-e-Taiba commander Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, insisted that a "written document" from the Indian government about the cross-examination should be presented in court.

Ali said he would submit a "written assurance" from the Indian side at the next hearing.

Judge Rehman, who is conducting the trial behind closed doors at Adiala Jail in Rawalpindi, adjourned the case till March 2 and directed the prosecution to submit the Indian government's written assurance.

After the hearing, Ali told PTI that the Pakistan government had written a letter to Indian authorities on February 12 seeking written permission for the judicial commission to cross-examine witnesses.
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Re: Mumbai Terrorist Attack-News stories and timeline

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26/11 attacks trial adjourned till March 16 at Adiala - ToI
The trial of seven Pakistanis charged with involvement in the 2008 Mumbai attacks was today adjourned for two weeks after prosecutors informed the judge that they were awaiting an undertaking from Indian authorities regarding the visit of a Pakistani judicial commission.

Anti-terrorism court Judge Chaudhry Habib-ur-Rehman, who is conducting proceedings behind closed doors at Adiala Jail in Rawalpindi, put off the case till March 16 after prosecutors failed to submit an undertaking from Indian authorities that the Pakistani commission would be allowed to cross-examine four key witnesses in Mumbai.

Chief prosecutor Chaudhry Zulifqar Ali told the court that the Indian government was yet to respond to Pakistan's request for a written assurance regarding the cross-examination of witnesses in Mumbai.

"We are awaiting the Indian government's response," he said.

Defence lawyer Riaz Cheema told PTI after the proceedings that the ball was now in the Indian government's court.

"It (the Indian government) accuses us of delaying the case but now it is taking too much time to entertain the Pakistani request," he said.

"We don't want to repeat this exercise (of visiting India) if we are not given the statements of the witnesses and allowed to cross-examine them," Cheema said.
See here for a chronology of court drama in Pakistan
ramana
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Re: Mumbai Terrorist Attack-News stories and timeline

Post by ramana »

Hope returns to household
In four years, Gudi Padwa passed by without the familiar aroma of 'basundi puri' at the Salaskar residence in Goregaon, and without the french window of their sixth-floor Aarey Road apartment being festooned with the traditional gudi. On Thursday, both returned to the Salaskar household.

Of the many Hindu festivities, Gudi Padwa (Maharashtrian New Year) was the only festival when encounter specialist Vijay Salaskar insisted on a traditional lunch.

Salaskar died on the night of November 26, 2008 during the terror attacks on Mumbai. Four months after terrorist Ajmal Kasab was executed, his family, comprising his wife and recently-married daughter, celebrated its first festival in over four years.

Kasab was one of the two terrorists who ambushed and killed Salaskar and two other senior IPS officials, former ATS Hemant Karkare, and additional commissioner Ashok Kamte on the road leading to Cama Hospital.

The family had decided to celebrate Gudi Padwa only after Kasab, the lone terrorist to have been captured alive and brought to trial, was brought to justice. "How do I say it? Should I use the term a little...maybe yes," says Salaskar's wife Smita. "It's in some way a little justice for us after the terrorist was sentenced and executed."

She recalled how Vijay would wake up early and prepare the gudi.

"He loved it the most. It symbolises victory. For him, Diwali and many other festivals were spent at work, sometimes very late into the evening. It was only Gudi Padwa where he would wait to have traditional lunch of basundi puri. The execution of Kasab, and later Afzal Guru, showed the government's stand on such matters and for us it was significant. For us this gudi symbolises victory," she says.

"This year my daughter and my son-in-law took charge. It was a very satisfying day," she adds.

She says the day just went through quickly. Her hands did shiver while making the dish. "It still is difficult for me. Memories of this day came rushing and I had to keep a smile on my face. It's mostly tears inside. For a wife it will always remain difficult," she said. "He loved traditional Indian sweets. How he would wait to have it on this day."

Salaskar's daughter Divya, who married a family friend in an arranged marriage this February, says it was a very emotional moment to see the gudi going up the bamboo stick.

"It was emotional. There is no other way I can explain it. I have seen my father doing it all my life. Today I did it. It took a lot of courage. A lot," she says.

"I still will not call it closure. It is too big a word. But yes, it is symbolic for us today. In a way that morning when we heard Kasab's execution it helped us to adjust... that the system had shown movement and the terrorist was brought to justice. Look at it as a daughter of a slain police officer. It is significant. When the gudi went up today, that is the thought that helped me. Victory."

The family held a prayer for Salaskar before they moved on to lunch. "It had all his favourites. In our hearts it was for him," added Smita.
Happy Ugadi folks.


Some solace for the family. Hope there was similar soalce for the other victims families.
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Re: Mumbai Terrorist Attack-News stories and timeline

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Pakistani Witness Identifies Man Who Bought Boats Used by 26/11 Terrorists - ToI
A witness on Saturday identified one of seven Pakistani men charged with involvement in the 2008 Mumbai attacks as the person who had bought inflatable boats used by the terrorists involved in the assault on India's financial hub.

Prosecutors said the witness, whom they did not name for security reasons, had identified accused Shahid Jamil Riaz during proceedings conducted behind closed doors at Adiala Jail in Rawalpindi by anti-terrorism court judge Chaudhry Habib-ur-Rehman.

The witness told the judge that Riaz and 10 other people had bought 11 inflatable boats, saying they were to be used for fishing. The witness further told the judge he had never seen these persons returning from sea with any fish.

A total of four private witnesses testified during the hearing.

Another witness told the judge that he had sold the accused a Yamaha boat engine for Rs 1.6 lakh and yet another witness said he had sold the accused six pumps, prosecutors told .

The witnesses also identified 10 men, including Amjad Khan and Atiqur Rehman, who were allegedly involved in planning and executing the Mumbai attacks on November 26, 2008 that left 166 people dead.

These 10 men were earlier declared "proclaimed offenders" or fugitives by the anti-terrorism court.

"The 10 proclaimed offenders were either trainers or facilitators of the accused who launched the attacks in Mumbai," chief prosecutor Chaudhry Zulifqar Ali told .

One witness told the court that Amjad Khan had obtained from him a "port clearance certificate" for Al-Hussaini, a fishing boat used by the terrorists.

Amjad Khan was also involved in purchasing the inflatable boats, another witness said.

Though chief prosecutor Ali identified the four private witnesses as Hamza Bin Tariq, Muhammad Ali, Mohammad Saifullah Khan and Umer Draz Khan, he refused to go into details of their individual testimony for security reasons. All the witnesses belong to the port city of Karachi.

Additional Director Altaf Hussain of the Federal Investigation Agency, who played a key role in probing the Mumbai attacks, was present during the hearing but the judge did not allow him to testify as a defence lawyer argued that Hussain should record his statement after the private witnesses
See here for a chronology of court drama in Pakistan
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Re: Mumbai Terrorist Attack-News stories and timeline

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India seeks access to Headley & Rana - New Indian Express

India has sought access from the US to the 26/11 Mumbai terror attack convict David Headley and his accomplice Tahawwur Rana - both of whom were sentenced by a Chicago court after being found guilty of terrorism charges.

While there was no official word from either side on the issues discussed in particular those with reference to Headley and Rana, officials said it was prominently raised by Home Minister Sushilkumar Shinde during his meeting with US Attorney General Eric Holder here.

"Shinde and Holder agreed that the Ministry of Home Affairs and the Department of Justice should work together institutionally, so as to ensure the best possible outcomes within the laws of the two countries, to address pending issues relating to extradition, execution of Letters Rogatory and Red Corner Notices, as well as other areas of cooperation in law enforcement, counter terrorism and judicial processes," an official Indian statement said.

Though India got access to Headley, who carried out a recce of the 26/11 targets for the Pakistan-based terror outfit Lashkar-e-Taiba, the US has not given any opportunity to question Pakistani-Canadian Rana, Headley's US-based wife Shazia, his girlfriend Portia Peter and another female friend.

Indian investigators believe that if they could further quiz Headley and others, many hidden information could come into light.

The Home Minister also met FBI Director Muller during which the two sides reviewed areas of cooperation and issues of mutual interest.
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Re: Mumbai Terrorist Attack-News stories and timeline

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Trial of Pakistani Suspects adjourned till June 1 - ToI
The trial of seven Pakistani suspects, including Lashkar-e-Taiba commander Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, charged with involvement in the 2008 Mumbai attacks was today adjourned till June 1 as the government is yet to appoint a chief prosecutor to handle the case.

The trial suffered a major setback when chief prosecutor Chaudhry Zulfiqar Ali of the Federal Investigation Agency was gunned down by suspected militants in Islamabad on May 3.

Judge Chaudhry Habib-ur-Rehman of the Rawalpindi-based anti-terrorism court adjourned the case for a week without any proceedings during today's hearing.

The judge also reserved his decision on an application filed by the slain chief prosecutor to transfer the case to a court in Islamabad.

"As the jurisdiction of the case within Islamabad because the FIR was registered there, Chaudhry Zulfiqar Ali had filed an application for transferring the case," Khwaja Haris Ahmed, the lawyer for Lakhvi, told PTI.

Paying tribute to the slain prosecutor, Ahmed said: "Chaudhry Zulifqar was a dedicated prosecutor and he was handling a number of high-profile cases professionally".

He said Ali's assassination was a huge loss to the country.

Asked about the impact of the assassination on the case, Ahmed said: "Certainly, it will have an impact as Ali was conducting the case very well".

Another lawyer associated with the case told PTI that the incoming PML-N government was expected to appoint a new chief prosecutor to handle the Mumbai case.

"The PML-N government, which is likely to take charge by June 1, will appoint the new prosecutor," said the lawyer, who did not want to be named.
See here for a chronology of court drama in Pakistan
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Re: Mumbai Terrorist Attack-News stories and timeline

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26/11 Attacks Case in the US: Pakistan Court Adjourns Hearing on Hafiz Saeed's Plea - ToI
A Pakistani court has adjourned for nearly four months the hearing of a petition filed by Lashkar-e-Taiba founder Hafiz Mohammad Saeed seeking legal aid from the government to defend himself in a US lawsuit over the 2008 Mumbai attacks. {With Nawaz Sharif installed as PM, one can expect Professori receiving funds from the federal budget !}

A Deputy Attorney General told Lahore High Court Chief Justice Umar Ata Bandial yesterday that the US State and Justice Departments had challenged the American court's jurisdiction for issuing summons to former Inter-Services Intelligence chief Ahmed Shuja Pasha and other Pakistani officials over the Mumbai attacks.

The Lahore High Court should wait till the challenge to the US court's jurisdiction is decided before moving on Saeed's petition, the Deputy Attorney General said.

The Chief Justice then adjourned the matter till September 24.

The US lawsuit was filed by relatives of two Jewish victims of the Mumbai attacks, which were carried out by members of the Pakistan-based LeT.

A total of 166 people were killed in the attacks in India's financial hub in November 2008.

US nationals Rabbi Gabriel Noah Holtzberg and his wife Rivka were killed in the attacks. Their relatives filed nine claims against LeT members and several ISI officials.

They were accused of providing material support to the attackers.

The US court issued summons to Hafiz Saeed, former ISI chiefs Ahmad Shuja Pasha and Nadeem Taj and other Pakistani.

The Pakistan government had earlier informed the Lahore High Court that it will only provide legal aid to serving and former government officials and not to private individuals like Saeed.
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Re: Mumbai Terrorist Attack-News stories and timeline

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Trial at Adiala adjourned until June 15 - ToI
The trial of seven Pakistani suspects, including Lashkar-e-Taiba commander Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, charged with involvement in the Mumbai attacks was on Saturday adjourned till June 15 as the government is yet to appoint a chief prosecutor to handle the case.

Judge Chaudhry Habib-ur-Rehman of the Rawalpindi-based anti-terrorism court adjourned the case for a fortnight without any proceedings during Saturday's hearing.

The court is also yet to decide on an application to transfer the case to a court in Islamabad.

The trial suffered a setback when chief prosecutor Chaudhry Zulfiqar Ali of the Federal Investigation Agency was gunned down by suspected militants in Islamabad on May 3.

The FIA is yet to appoint anyone to replace Ali. Sources said a new prosecutor is expected to be appointed only after the PML-N government assumes office next week.

Before his death, prosecutor Ali had filed an application for transferring the case from Rawalpindi to Islamabad on the ground that the case was filed in the federal capital.

The seven Pakistani suspects have been charged with planning, financing and executing the attacks that killed 166 people in Mumbai in November 2008.
See here for a chronology of court drama in Pakistan
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Re: Mumbai Terrorist Attack-News stories and timeline

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India asks US to temporarily hand over Headley - The Hindu
India has asked the United States to “temporarily” hand over LeT terrorist David Headley for a year and extradite his accomplice Tahawwur Hussain Rana to get more information about the conspiracy hatched to carry out Mumbai terror attacks.

In its fresh efforts to get access to the Pakistani American terrorist, India has conveyed to the American interlocutors to “temporarily” hand over Headley for a year after the US expressed its inability to extradite him.

The request was made during the Indo-US Homeland Security Dialogue held in Washington between May 20-22.

“The US interlocutors assured us to actively consider the request,” a top Indian official, who participated in the meeting, told PTI.

Washington also assured New Delhi to positively consider the request to extradite Headley’s Pakistani-Canadian friend Rana, who helped Headley to recce the 26/11 targets for Pakistan-based terror outfit Lashkar-e-Taiba.

Following India’s consistent persuasion, the US has indicated to interlocutors that India could be given access to Headley for the second time to get more information about the conspiracy hatched to carry out the 2008 attack.

So far, the US has not given any opportunity to question Rana, who was sentenced by an American court for his involvement in a terror plot in Denmark.

Indian investigators believe that if they could quiz Rana, many hidden information could come into light as he was a close associate of Headley.

The investigators believe that Headley and Rana have a lot of information and their interrogations could throw more light on the conspiracy hatched to carry out the worst terror strike in India and role of those behind it.

51-year-old Headley had pleaded guilty to 12 terrorism charges, including his involvement in the November 2008 attacks that claimed 166 lives. He had, however, entered into plea bargain with US authorities.

A court in the US had sentenced 52-year-old Rana to 14 years in jail followed by five years of supervised release.

Rana was convicted for providing material support to LeT and for backing a “dastardly” plot to attack a Danish newspaper but not convicted for the Mumbai terror attack despite being a close associate of Headley.
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Re: Mumbai Terrorist Attack-News stories and timeline

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SSridhar wrote:Trial at Adiala adjourned until June 15 - ToI
The court is also yet to decide on an application to transfer the case to a court in Islamabad.
The court has now decided.
26/11 Trial Shifted to Islamabad Court
In a move with significant ramifications, the trial of seven Pakistanis, including LeT commander Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, charged with involvement in the Mumbai attacks was today shifted from a court in Rawalpindi to a new anti-terrorism court in the capital here.

Judge Chaudhry Habib-ur-Rehman of the Rawalpindi-based anti-terrorism court accepted an application from the prosecution to move the case to the anti-terrorism court of Judge Kausar Abbas Zaidi in Islamabad, sources told PTI.

Judge Zaidi’s court was established recently to hear a case filed against former President Pervez Musharraf under the Anti-Terrorism Act.

Till then, Islamabad had no anti-terrorism court and all terrorism cases were heard by courts in Rawalpindi.

Legal experts said fresh proceedings would have to begin in the court in Islamabad and the judge would take some time to acquaint himself with the details of the case.

There were no other proceedings during today’s hearing conducted by Judge Rehman behind closed doors.

The government is yet to appoint a new chief prosecutor to replace Chaudhry Zulfiqar Ali of the Federal Investigation Agency, who was assassinated by militants in Islamabad on May 3.

Besides the Mumbai attacks, Ali was also handling the Benazir Bhutto assassination case.

Islamabad Police have arrested a militant with links to the Taliban for alleged involvement in Ali’s murder.


The Rawalpindi-based anti-terrorism court has been handling the Mumbai attacks case since 2009 though the judge has been changed five times.

Ali’s killing also caused a setback for the case.
We are back to square one now.

See here for a chronology of court drama in Pakistan
ramana
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Re: Mumbai Terrorist Attack-News stories and timeline

Post by ramana »

This is a bit rich. To claim they needed NSA monitoring on their own double agent despite the Brits having alerted them about their own guy!!!

Defenders of NSA surveillance omit most of Mumbai plotter’s story
Officials say National Security Agency intercepts stopped David Coleman Headley’s planned attack in Denmark, but sources say a tip from the British led to his capture after the U.S. failed for years to connect multiple reports of terror ties

Defending a vast program to sweep up phone and Internet data under antiterror laws, senior U.S. officials in recent days have cited the case of David Coleman Headley, a key plotter in the deadly 2008 Mumbai attacks.

James Clapper, the director of national intelligence, said a data collection program by the National Security Agency helped stop an attack on a Danish newspaper for which Headley did surveillance. And Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., the Senate intelligence chairwoman, also called Headley's capture a success.

But a closer examination of the case, drawn from extensive reporting by ProPublica, shows that the government surveillance only caught up with Headley after the U.S. had been tipped by British intelligence. And even that victory came after seven years in which U.S. intelligence failed to stop Headley as he roamed the globe on missions for Islamic terror networks and Pakistan's spy agency.

Supporters of the sweeping U.S. surveillance effort say it’s needed to build a haystack of information in which to find a needle that will stop a terrorist. In Headley’s case, however, it appears the U.S. was handed the needle first — and then deployed surveillance that led to the arrest and prosecution of Headley and other plotters.

Failure to connect

As ProPublica has previously documented, Headley’s case shows an alarming litany of breakdowns in the U.S. counterterror system that allowed him to play a central role in the massacre of 166 people in Mumbai, among them six Americans.

A mysterious Pakistani-American businessman and ex-drug informant, Headley avoided arrest despite a half dozen warnings to federal agents about extremist activities from his family and associates in different locales. If those leads from human sources had been investigated more aggressively, authorities could have prevented the Mumbai attacks with little need for high-tech resources, critics say.

“The failure here is the failure to connect systems,” said a U.S. law enforcement official who worked on the case but is not cleared to discuss it publicly. “Everybody had information in their silos, and they didn’t share across the silos. Headley in my mind is not a successful interdiction of a terrorist. It’s not a great example of how the system should work.”

Officials from Clapper’s office reiterated last week that he was referring to the prevention of Headley’s follow-up role in a Mumbai-style attack against Denmark’s Jyllands-Posten newspaper, a prime target because it published cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad that many Muslims found offensive. To that extent, Clapper’s comment shed a bit of new light on this aspect of a labyrinthine case.

Separately last week, NSA Director Gen. Keith Alexander told a Senate committee that surveillance conducted by his agency helped disrupt “dozens” of attacks aimed at the U.S. and elsewhere. According to The Washington Post, Alexander cited the Headley case and promised to make more information public about the success of the NSA’s phone surveillance program, which captures “metadata” such as number, time and location of but not the content of calls.

In January, a federal judge in Chicago imposed a 35-year prison sentence on Headley, 51, for his role in Mumbai and the foiled newspaper plot. He got a reduced sentence because he testified at the federal trial in Chicago of his accomplice, Tahawurr Rana, who was sentenced to 15 years in prison.

Headley confessed to doing undercover surveillance in Mumbai for the Lashkar-e-Taiba terrorist group and Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate (ISI). U.S. officials also charged a major in the ISI with serving as Headley’s handler before the attack in November 2008. Pakistan denies involvement.

Detected by the British

In early 2009, according to trial testimony, Lashkar and the ISI sent Headley on a surveillance mission to Denmark. After he returned to Pakistan, his Lashkar and ISI handlers backed off. But Headley continued the plot with support from al-Qaida, whose leaders wanted a team of gunmen to attack the newspaper offices in Copenhagen, take hostages and throw their severed heads out of the windows.

Headley returned to Europe from Chicago for a second reconnaissance mission that July. The official version has been that he was detected at this point — but not by U.S. agencies.

Instead, U.S. and European counterterror officials have told ProPublica in interviews that British intelligence learned of Headley’s contact with al-Qaida operatives near Manchester, England, who were already under surveillance. Headley planned to meet with the extremists in hopes they would supply money, arms and personnel for the Denmark attack.

“Headley was an unknown until not long before his arrest,” a senior U.S. counterterrorism official told ProPublica in 2010.

“He came to light because of the British. They knew him only as ‘David the American.’ [The British] MI5 [security service] detected that he was in contact with a group in the U.K. that they were watching ... David had made direct contact with two of the main targets of the U.K. investigation.”

Scandinavian visits

On July 23, 2009, the FBI asked U.S. Customs and Border Protection analysts in Washington, D.C., for assistance in identifying a suspect who would travel shortly from Chicago via Frankfurt to Manchester, according to U.S. officials interviewed in 2011. The tip described a suspected American associate of Lashkar or al-Qaida with only his first name, flight itinerary and the airline, officials said. The customs analysts identified Headley through their databases containing records of his previous travel and interviews by U.S. border inspectors.

Headley went on to Sweden and Denmark. Alerted by U.S. agencies, Danish intelligence officers followed him as he scouted targets in Copenhagen and tried to find sources for guns, according to court records and interviews with counterterror officials. In the United States, court-approved FBI surveillance continued after his return in August and until his arrest that October, according to counterterror officials and court records.

Officials in Clapper’s office declined to comment on accounts of the British tip. But they said that information lawfully gathered under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act was integral to disrupting the attempted attacks on the Danish newspaper. This does not rule out other sources of information at other points in the investigation, the officials said.

Separately, the U.S. law enforcement official familiar with the case also said last week that a British communications intercept first detected Headley. Because the NSA works closely with its British counterparts, at that point U.S. intelligence agencies likely became involved in reviewing communications records to identify Headley and begin tracking his movements and associates, the official said.

“It was a communications intercept involving a bad guy in England,” the law enforcement official said. “It was the Brits who passed us the info. Without knowing all the gritty technical details, [Clapper's depiction] definitely fits with my understanding.”

The 30,000-page case file in Chicago remains wrapped in secrecy. Prosecutors have not said how investigators first detected Headley. Once he was under investigation by the Chicago field office of the FBI, agents intercepted his calls and emails and retrieved NSA intercepts of previous communications to build the case, according to court documents and ProPublica interviews. During questioning after his arrest, FBI agents confronted him with information from NSA intercepts as well as foreign intelligence agencies, the senior counterterror official said.

“What it may have allowed them to do is to go back and find emails and calls and map his movements,” said Charles Swift, a lawyer for Rana, the Chicago accomplice.

Headley began cooperating after his arrest, turning over his computer and giving the FBI access to his email accounts. Swift said he is not aware of anything in the case to suggest that the disputed NSA programs identified Headley, though he acknowledged that defense lawyers were not shown the government application for a warrant to monitor Headley under FISA.

Missed Mumbai

Swift called the case a dramatic example of the limits of the U.S. counterterror system because both high-tech and human resources failed to prevent the Mumbai attacks.

“You have to know what you are looking for and what you are looking at,” Swift said. “Headley’s the classic example. They missed Mumbai completely.”

The Headley case is also problematic because of his murky past.

The convicted drug smuggler radicalized and joined Lashkar in Pakistan in the late 1990s while spying on Pakistani heroin traffickers as a paid informant for the Drug Enforcement Administration. His associates first warned federal agencies about his Islamic extremism days after the Sept. 11 attacks. Investigators questioned him in front of his DEA handlers in New York, and he was cleared.

U.S. prosecutors then made the unusual decision to end Headley’s probation for a drug conviction three years early. He then hurried to Pakistan and began training in Lashkar terror camps. Although the DEA insists he was deactivated in early 2002, some U.S., European and Indian officials suspect that he remained an informant in some capacity and that the DEA or another agency sent him to Pakistan to spy on terrorists. Those officials believe his status as an operative or former informant may have deflected subsequent FBI inquiries.

The FBI received new tips in 2002 and in 2005 when Headley’s wife in New York had him arrested for domestic violence and told counterterror investigators about his radicalism and training in Pakistan. Inquiries were conducted, but he was not interviewed or placed on a watch list, officials have said.

Headley was recruited in 2006 by ISI officers, who with Lashkar oversaw his missions, according to Headley's trial testimony and other court records.

In late 2007 and early 2008, another wife told U.S. embassy officials in Islamabad that Headley was a terrorist and a spy, describing his frequent trips to Mumbai and his stay at the Taj Mahal Palace Hotel. In fact, Headley was conducting meticulous surveillance on the Taj and other targets for an impending attack by a seaborne squad of gunmen.

Once again, U.S. agencies say they did not question or monitor him because the information from the wife was not specific enough.

‘Double agent’

Senior Indian officials believe the U.S. government did not need high-tech resources to spot Headley. They have alleged publicly that he was a U.S. double agent all along. U.S. officials strenuously deny that. They say Headley simply slipped through the cracks of a system in which overwhelmed agencies struggle to track threats and to communicate internally and with each other.


The final tip to authorities about Headley came from a family friend days after the Mumbai attacks. This time, FBI agents in Philadelphia questioned a cousin of Headley’s. The cousin lied, saying Headley was in Pakistan when he was actually at home in Chicago, according to trial testimony and court documents. The cousin alerted Headley about the FBI inquiry, but Headley went to Denmark as planned.

U.S. agencies did not find Headley or warn foreign counterparts about him in the first half of 2009 while he conducted surveillance in Denmark and India and met and communicated with ISI officers and known Lashkar and al-Qaida leaders.
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India agrees to Pakistan panel quizzing of 26/11 witnesses - Sandeep Joshi, The Hindu
India has given a written assurance to Pakistan to let its judicial commission to cross-examine witnesses in the 26/11 Mumbai attacks case.

The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) has obtained a written consent from the Bombay High Court to let the Pakistani judicial commission cross-examine the witnesses that would strengthen the cases against the seven Pakistani accused being tried before a Rawalpindi court.

“We have sent the High Court’s communication and the statements of the four witnesses [in the Mumbai attacks case] to Pakistan for submission before a Rawalpindi court… We are now awaiting Islamabad’s communication as to when the Pakistani judicial commission will visit India,” a senior MHA officer told journalists here.

It would be the commission’s second visit to Mumbai. India has been pressing for an early conclusion of the trial.

The trial has been going on in a special court in Rawalpindi against the seven alleged terrorists — including Lashkar-e-Taiba operations commander Zaki-ur Rehman Lakhvi — who have been charged with planning, financing and executing the Mumbai attacks in November 2008.

Notably, the first Pakistani judicial commission’s report was rejected by an anti-terrorism court in Pakistan after it noted that it had not cross-examined the Indian witnesses.

The Pakistan investigating commission will be examining metropolitan magistrate Rama Vijay Sawant-Waghule, who recorded the confessional statement of Ajmal Kasab, chief investigating officer Ramesh Mahale, and two doctors from the government-run Nair and J.J. Hospitals who had conducted autopsies of nine Pakistani terrorists who carried out the attack at various locations.
See here for a chronology of court drama in Pakistan
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Four 26/11 witnesses get ready for Pak grilling - ToI
Expectations of the 26/11 attacks trial in Pakistan moving forward grew in the city after Delhi forwarded a Bombay high court order allowing a Pakistani judicial commission to cross-examine four witnesses.

India has also sent certified copies of statements of all the four witnesses — investigating officer Ramesh Mahale, magistrate R V Sawant Waghule, doctors Shailesh Mohite and Ganesh Nithurkar — to Islamabad. Pakistan will produce these documents before its anti-terror court in Rawalpindi and decide on the date of visit of its judicial commission.

Mahale had filed the chargesheet in the terror case, Waghule recorded the confessional statement of Ajmal Kasab and the doctors had conducted autopsies of the nine other terrorists.

An earlier judicial commission from Pakistan had recorded the statements of the witnesses in March last year. The commission, including five advocates representing the seven persons charged with conspiracy in the 26/11 attack on Mumbai, two Pakistani public prosecutors and a court officer, was not allowed to cross-examine the witnesses.

The Rawalpindi court had refused to accept the statements on the grounds that a trial is incomplete without cross-examination by defence.

"A few months ago, special public prosecutor Ujjwal Nikam visited Pakistan and had a discussion with his Pakistani counterparts on this issue," said Mahale, who quit the police force voluntarily on May 23 this year.

Mahale played a key role in the investigations, having interrogated Kasab and his handler Abu Jundal alias Zabihuddin Ansari. He filed the chargesheet in the special court, along with statements of over 400 witnesses, including victims from abroad.

"I have done my job and am ready for cross-examination. Let the panel come and we will tell about our investigation," said Mahale.

Magistrate Waghule had recorded Kasab's confession on February 21, 2009, and appeared before the first Pakistani judicial commission. In September 2009, she had told the special trial court that Kasab had "confessed voluntarily" to his crime.

Dr Mohite, head of forensic medicine at Nair Hospital, has preserved all his notes on the 22 autopsies at the hospital after the 26/11 attack. "I had prepared well for the Pakistan judicial commission earlier, and I will be ready this time too," he said.

Forensic experts have to certify whether the bullets recovered from the victims and those fired by the terrorists are the same. "Ascertaining firearm injuries in such cases becomes a significant piece of evidence, and we had managed to conclude that. We were asked about the nature of injuries and cause of deaths during the last deposition before the commission," said Dr Nithurkar, now an assistant professor at the forensic department of J J Hospital.
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26/11 Trial Adjourned Until June 29th - Business Line
The trial of seven Pakistanis, including Lashkar-e-Taiba commander Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, charged with involvement in the Mumbai attacks was today adjourned for a week as the new judge hearing the case was on leave.

The case was shifted from an anti-terrorism court in Rawalpindi to a new anti-terrorism court in Islamabad last week.

Judge Kausar Abbas Zaidi, who is currently hearing the case, was on leave and there were no proceedings today, sources told PTI.

Besides, the Government is yet to appoint a new chief prosecutor to replace Chaudhry Zulfiqar Ali of the Federal Investigation Agency, who was assassinated by militants in Islamabad on May 3.

The sources said that the case would be taken up by Judge Zaidi on June 29. Zaidi’s court was established recently to hear a case filed against former President Pervez Musharraf under the Anti-Terrorism Act. Till then, Islamabad had no anti-terrorism court and all terrorism cases were heard by courts in Rawalpindi.

Legal experts believe fresh proceedings will have to begin in the court in Islamabad and the judge will take some time to acquaint himself with the details of the case.
See here for a chronology of court drama in Pakistan
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Post by arun »

Ed Royce, Chairman of the US Legislature’s House Foreign Relations Committee , "There are seven individuals that need to be brought to justice (for their role in the 26/ 11 attack case)," ………….. "If Pakistan cannot try them, turn them over to international criminal court for crimes against humanity, for what they did in their collusion, in their culpability for what happened,":

'If Pakistan can't try 26/11 jihadis, let ICC take over'
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Post by Sushupti »

@ajayrdave: @mediacrooks Col. Purohit of Military Intelligence's Arrest. Was it to facilitate attack on Mumbai by LeT? http://t.co/Vueb8FpvZc
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Post by vishvak »

Sushupti wrote:@ajayrdave: @mediacrooks Col. Purohit of Military Intelligence's Arrest. Was it to facilitate attack on Mumbai by LeT? http://t.co/Vueb8FpvZc
^^
Indian Politicians: Pakistan's Proxy Soldiers
Col. Purohit of the Military Intelligence was implicated for his association with ‘Abhinav Bharat’, an organization labeled by the authorities as progenitor of so-called ‘Hindu Terror’. It is another matter that more than 50 officers of the army in the Court of Inquiry have vouched for the fact that he had kept all the relevant authorities in loop regarding his infiltration into the said organization. The officer also had very successfully infiltrated the Indian Mujahideen (IM) and was regularly invited by the Maharastra ATS to conduct lectures on IM and LeT. A fortnight before 26/11, Col Purohit was arrested. As a consequence the Military Intelligence of India was intimidated and paralyzed. Was it to facilitate the attack on Mumbai by the LeT?

Now there is an attack on the core of internal security, i.e. Intelligence Bureau of India. Its sin being that it provided ‘specific intelligence’ with regard to the plans by an itinerate module comprising four LeT terrorists, two Pakistanis and also an Indian woman Ishrat Jahan to kill the Chief Minister of a state of Union of India. It is another matter that this Chief Minister happens to be Narendra Modi. The dispensation in Delhi seems to convey ‘death to Modi, long live LeT’. The love or fear of LeT has impelled the quarters to consciously wreck the internal security apparatus of the country.

Even as the embers of the targeting of the IB fly in and outside the country, an Inspector of Punjab Police, Surjit Singh, has claimed that he has carried out 83 fake encounters at the behest of his bosses during the‘Sikh Freedom Movement’. The timing of the smote on the conscience and the moral churning process of this Inspector clearly indicates the identity of his benefactors. The ISI’s desperate bid to revive militancy in Punjab through its strategic arm LeT has been widely reported in the media. This seems to be yet another attempt by the ISI and LeT to destroy the security apparatus in Punjab so as to make uncontested in-roads.

The targets have been carefully selected i.e the Military Intelligence, the Intelligence Bureau and the state police forces, which includes the Gujarat Police, where nearly a dozen officers have been hounded and intimidated by the Center. The only officer who has found favour of the Center was the one demanding a Black Berry phone from a political party to settle political scores.

The common enemy of these agencies is the LeT. It is the same LeT (Markaz-e-Taiba), which has received Rs.61 million by the Punjab government in Pakistan as grant-in-aid in the current fiscal. The tragedy is that it is not only Pakistan establishment which grovels to the head of LeT, Hafiz Saeed, but the Indian establishment as well.

The love or fear of LeT has impelled the quarters to consciously wreck the internal security apparatus of the country.

Ishrat Jahan, a 19 year old girl from Mumbai was killed with LeT terrorists in Ahmedabad in an encounter on 15 June 2004. The family members in hindsight allege that Ishrat was abducted by the IB. It is queer that once she went missing her family members did not deem it fit to lodge an FIR with the Mumbai Police. Their inaction and silence on the issue can also be construed that the links with LeT run much deeper and wider.

The dispensation by attacking the Special Director of the Intelligence Bureau, Rajendra Kumar, has attacked the core of India’s internal security intelligence. All for whom, but the LeT! Mr Rajendra Kumar’s failing has been his being professional and conscientious. In that he acquired intelligence from ‘sources’, informed the higher-ups in Delhi, which includes his seniors and in-turn the Ministry of Home Affairs. His main failing however was that, in the process, he was not saving a Chief Minister but Narendra Modi. If he had acted in the same manner to save the life of some privileged ‘democratic-monarchs’ of the country, he would have been awarded Padma Vibhushan and in the case of highest monarch a ‘ Bharat Ratna.’ After all the same dispensation rewarded Mr Brajesh Mishra with Padma Vibushan for his Boston rescue operation of the ‘Yuvraj’. Readers with little research can know the truth.

Never before in the history of India, an IB or R&AW official was asked to submit before the CBI for interrogation on professional matters. Is it a ploy to unravel the entire intelligence framework of the country? This author who served with R&AW would have preferred to kill himself rather than submit to the CBI for interrogation of sensitive matters that are vital to Indian security interests. If this author was the head of the IB, the Special Director would have reported to the CBI over his dead body. The CBI has absolutely no competence to interrogate an IB and R&AW official on matters of internal and external security. By sheer level of politicization, the mediocre content of the job of the CBI, it is ill-equipped to deal with IB and R&AW officials.

If the CBI cannot be trusted with Arushi murder case or the Nithari case pertaining to Moninder Singh Pandher, what is its credibility! The whole world knows the truth in these cases sans the CBI. Can the Prime Minister at the current stage of his life cross his heart and vouch that he does not know the truth in these two cases? How has suddenly the CBI become the repository of the national conscience, which includes the IB and the R&AW?

The IB has been pitted against the CBI. In the case of blasts in Malegaon in 2006, the NIA has been pitted against the Maharastra ATS and the CBI. And earlier in Col Purohit’s case the Mahrastra ATS was pitted against the Military Intelligence. The effect of the orchestrated attrition is already beginning to tell.


This systematic destruction of India’s internal security apparatus is not only for vote-bank politics as most commentators are suggesting. Of course the Modi-phobia is a factor but not the sole reason.It has a larger dimension which is evident from the nervousness displayed by the dispensation with regard to ISI, Hafiz Saeed and David Headley. Do they know too much? Were they used to stage 26/11 to counter Jehadi terror by creating the specter of ‘Hindu Terror’? How does David Headley have the gumption to abuse Indian interrogators? Are the services of the ISI and LeT being obtained to influence vote-bank politics? Is the LeT and the ISI asking too much in return? These are questions which readers must ponder upon.

While the readers do so, their benchmark should be the fact that if Ajmal Kasab had not developed cold feet and caught alive, all preparations has been made to label 26/11 as act of ‘Hindu Terror’. Books to this effect were pre-written and the choice of the Chief Guest decided. Till today nobody has questioned as to how an unconstitutional authority was indirect communication with the Maharastra ATS Chief Hemant Karkare, and eliciting sensitive security details. If this politician cannot explain this he should be treated like any other terrorist.

..
By targeting the IB, the Military Intelligence, the state security apparatus of Gujarat and the previous Maharastra ATS, the dispensation has intimidated the entire intelligence network of India. India is now an open and defenseless target. The traitors as of now have prevailed!

No intelligence official now will provide or share information with the same degree of sincerity and patriotism. The Indian intelligence community is now a scared community. Nationalism and patriotism have become criminal attributes. Things have gone so anti-national that the most sensitive information was being leaked by the CBI pertaining details of Ishrat Jahan case and there were media houses, flaunting documents which should have been only for the consumption of Prime Minister and the Home Minister. The Pakistan or the ISI connection of some of these news channels and journalists is too well known.

Ishrat Jahan and her associates were nothing but tools of proxy war by Pakistan. Anybody with a modicum of understanding of terrorism will understand that the role of Ishrat was to act as suicide-bomber, as revealed by David Headley. There are any number of such modules waiting to strike. Rajiv Gandhi too was eliminated by eliciting the services of one such suicide bomber through the aegis of LTTE. This could not have happened without unsuspecting facilitators within.

Indian should realize that this is an era of proxy wars. A civilized country to retain its civility has to fight with uncivilized ‘proxy soldiers’, the kind of Ishrat Jahan. In this proxy war, which is also referred to as ‘intelligence wars’, the role of intelligence agencies is predominant. In dealing with such adversaries, there are methods, which have been used in the past to bring back civility, whose peace dividends people of India including the politicians, the civil activists and the vocal media continue to enjoy. One such region is the Punjab province of India. The dispensation at the behest and blackmail of external enemies has by design destroyed the entire internal security apparatus assiduously built over the years for the LeT and vote-bank politics.

India now stands exposed. Whenever there is the next blast or terrorist attack don’t expect too much from Indian intelligence framework. It stands intimidated and unraveled.
It will be extremely difficult for the Indian security apparatus to recover from this wreck.

The ISI and LeT has won!

The views expressed in this article are of the author and not of sify.com

Also by R S N Singh:

Why are some of our politicians so afraid of Hafiz Saeed?

NEET-PG exam: A weekend fraud on India?

The magnitude of threat Maoists pose
China's strategic thrust In Ladakh

A comparative look at the blasts in Boston and Bangalore

'Peace lobby' is criminally neglecting danger to India

To prevent balkanization, India needs to reclaim its secularism

Kidnappings: India must not negotiate with Maoists

RSN Singh is a former military intelligence officer who later served in the Research and Analysis Wing, or R&AW. He is the author of two books: Asian Strategic and Military Perspective and Military Factor in Pakistan.

More articles by the same author
Another point is from where does the frothing-at-mouth inbred two-bit barbarians like Hafeez Saeed get information from that is used to blackmail.

The accusations against Narendra Modi, an elected CM of a state, versus awards for saving yuvaraj, who can't rule a state, is well made. That career politicians from the country are accused and mistreated while yuvaraj-a novice from Nehru-Maino family is protected - would result in political stagnation as many worthy politicians from India would be discouraged from coming up from time to time.
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Re: Mumbai Terrorist Attack-News stories and timeline

Post by Anindya »

Very worrisome....
all preparations has been made to label 26/11 as act of ‘Hindu Terror’. Books to this effect were pre-written and the choice of the Chief Guest decided. Till today nobody has questioned as to how an unconstitutional authority was indirect communication with the Maharastra ATS Chief Hemant Karkare, and eliciting sensitive security details. If this politician cannot explain this he should be treated like any other terrorist.
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Post by ramana »


Is this a joke like red herring?

And why did the under Secy pass on the request without demanding the relevance of pink foam? What relevance has pink foam got to do with the terrorist attack?

How come the Ind Express did not see fit to seek what is "pink foam" and just psoted a new report and wasted subscriber's money?
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Post by Atri »

A new hit job...

Govt behind Parliament attack, 26/11: Ishrat probe:officer
NEW DELHI: In what is certain to escalate the already vicious fight between the CBI and the IB over the IshratJahan "fake encounter case", a former home ministry officer has alleged that a member of the CBI-SIT team had accused incumbent governments of "orchestrating" the terror attack on Parliament and the 26/11 carnage in Mumbai.

R V S Mani, who as home ministry under-secretary signed the affidavits submitted in court in the alleged encounter case, has said that Satish Verma, until recently a part of the CBI-SIT probe team, told him that both the terror attacks were set up "with the objective of strengthening the counter-terror legislation (sic)".

Mani has said that Verma "...narrated that the 13.12. 2001(attack on Parliament) was followed by Pota (Prevention of Terrorist Activities Act) and 26/11 2008 (terrorists' siege of Mumbai) was followed by amendment to the UAPA (Unlawful Activities Prevention Act)."

The official has alleged Verma levelled the damaging charge while debunking IB's inputs labelling the three killed with Ishrat in the June 2004 encounter as Lashkar terrorists.

Contacted by TOI, Verma refused to comment. "I don't know what the complaint is, made when and to whom. Nor am I interested in knowing. I cannot speak to the media on such matters. Ask the CBI," said the Gujarat cadre IPS officer who after being relieved from the SIT is working as principal of the Junagadh Police Training College.

Mani, currently posted as deputy land and development officer in the urban development ministry, has written to his seniors that he retorted to Verma's comments telling the IPS officer that he was articulating the views of Pakistani intelligence agency ISI.

According to him, the charge was levelled by Verma in Gandhinagar on June 22 while questioning Mani about the two home ministry affidavits in the alleged encounter case.

In his letter to the joint secretary in the urban development ministry, Mani has accused Verma of "coercing" him into signing a statement that is at odds with facts as he knew them. He said Verma wanted him to sign a statement saying that the home ministry's first affidavit in the Ishrat case was drafted by two IB officers. "Knowing fully well that this would tantamount to falsely indicting of (sic) my seniors at the extant time, I declined to sign any statement."

Giving the context in which Verma allegedly levelled the serious charge against the government, Mani said the IPS officer, while questioning him, had raised doubts about the genuineness of IB's counter-terror intelligence. He disputed the veracity of the input on the antecedents of the three killed in June 2004 on the outskirts of Ahmedabad with Ishrat in the alleged encounter which has since become a polarizing issue while fuelling Congress's fight with Gujarat CM Narendra Modi.

Gujarat Police has justified the encounter citing the IB report that Pakistani nationals Zeeshan Zohar, Amzad Ali Rana and Javed Sheikh were part of a Lashkar module which had reached Gujarat to target Modi and carry out terrorist attacks.

In its first affidavit, filed in August 2009, the home ministry had cited IB inputs that those killed with Ishrat in the alleged encounter were part of a Lashkar sleeper cell, and had objected to a CBI probe into the "encounter".

In its second affidavit, filed in September 2009, the home ministry, irked by the Gujarat government treating the first affidavit as justification of the encounter, said the IB input did not constitute conclusive proof of the terrorist antecedents of those killed. It supported the demand for a CBI probe.

Mani said Verma doubted the input saying MHA's first affidavit was actually drafted by IB officer Rajinder Kumar, who looked after IB's operations in Gujarat at the time of Ishrat "encounter" and now runs the serious risk of being chargesheeted by the CBI for hatching the conspiracy behind the alleged extra-judicial killings.

Mani said Verma stuck to his guns even after being told that the home ministry did not need outside help. The former home ministry official said Verma insisted that the "input" was prepared after the encounter.
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Re: Mumbai Terrorist Attack-News stories and timeline

Post by vishvak »

Is it even legal to give out names of IB officers.
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Re: Mumbai Terrorist Attack-News stories and timeline

Post by Virupaksha »

vishvak wrote:Is it even legal to give out names of IB officers.
IB /RAW dont have any acts but executive actions. One cannot punished without law/acts.
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Post by ramana »

NEW DELHI: In what is certain to escalate the already vicious fight between the CBI and the IB over the IshratJahan "fake encounter case", a former home ministry officer has alleged that a member of the CBI-SIT team had accused incumbent governments of "orchestrating" the terror attack on Parliament and the 26/11 carnage in Mumbai.

R V S Mani, who as home ministry under-secretary signed the affidavits submitted in court in the alleged encounter case, has said that Satish Verma, until recently a part of the CBI-SIT probe team, told him that both the terror attacks were set up "with the objective of strengthening the counter-terror legislation (sic)".

Mani has said that Verma "...narrated that the 13.12. 2001(attack on Parliament) was followed by Pota (Prevention of Terrorist Activities Act) and 26/11 2008 (terrorists' siege of Mumbai) was followed by amendment to the UAPA (Unlawful Activities Prevention Act)."...
So this is the fundamental charge by this officer that the Central Govt allows or attacks its own people to pass toothless legislation like the UAPA!!!!

Also if he is off that mind why is he still working in that government? Shouldn't he resign in protest?

The toothless UAPA was passed as a measure by the politicians to pretend to be reactive in wake of the horrific attack.
with guys like him in IB no wonder its in state of disarray.
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Post by SSridhar »

Suddenly our law-enforcing and intel agencies have dscended to the depths, charging and counter-charging. There might have been some inter-agency rivalry but the upcoming elections and the fear of loss are driving the ruling political dispensation to act recklessly even at country's cost.
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Post by deepan gill »

The 5th Column

Are many Congress Netas on ISI payroll or are they being blackmailed? I mean how can Digvijay Singh claim that 26/11 was a Hindu conspiracy???? Only a desperate man, or a man who knows he can get away with it can say something like this.

With all the scams and corruption, how hard is it for ISI to have COngress big-wigs on their payroll?
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Post by ramana »

I think the 19 Sept 2008, Batala House Police raid on Ind Muj led to the postponement of the Mumbai terrorist attack to Nov 2008.

Ind Muj is/was has links to ISI.
Mumbai terrorist attack was ISI operation
They even claimed Deccan Mujhedin were the attackers till Kasab was caught.
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Re: Mumbai Terrorist Attack-News stories and timeline

Post by RamaY »

Nothing to worry.

For a moment, let us agree that 11/26 is a GoI job. Then we need answers on
- who approved this job, MMS or SG or NAC?
- how did they get kasab, does it mean INC/GoI has assets in Pakistan?
- how did the SC prosecute Kasab, did they get paid by INC/GoI?
- how did the president of India approve Kasab's hanging?

Perhaps it is time INC start answering the questions raised by human rights activists.
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Post by Prem »

All the answers about 26/11 can be found in few streets of Azamgarh. The road from Xongi I and IS I inetercsect there.
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Post by ramana »

I think that Sri Tukaram Omble capturing Kasab alive destroyed many objectives for many people.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tukaram_Omble

We see the current instability in New Delhi is due to that great martyr.
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Re: Mumbai Terrorist Attack-News stories and timeline

Post by chaanakya »

Tunda undergoes pacemaker implant surgery at AIIMS


I think someone mentioned on BRF that something like this would happen. This is part of Papi jappi or what?? This congi govt is too much.

PTI | Aug 24, 2013, 05.38 PM IST

Tunda, who was arrested from the India-Nepal border last Friday, is a close to underworld don Dawood Ibrahim and one of 20 terrorists India had asked the Pakistan government to hand over after the 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks.


NEW DELHI: Lashker-e-Taiba (LeT) operative Abdul Karim Tunda, who is admitted at AIIMS here, underwent a surgery on Sunday to implant a pacemaker in his heart.

70-year-old Tunda, who was admitted to Safdarjung Hospital on Thursday night after he complained of severe chest pain and shifted to All India Institute of Medical Sciences on Friday afternoon, was detected with complete heart block, hospital sources said.


His condition was stated to be stable after the surgery.

"Tunda was taken to the cath lab at around 2.45pm on Saturday from the cardiac care unit following which the doctors implanted a pacemaker in his heart," they said.

He underwent the procedure in the supervision of cardio consultants Dr Nitish Naik and Dr Gautam Sharma.


A pacemaker is a small device implanted in the patient to control heartbeat.

Complete heart block occurs when the electrical signal can't pass normally from the atria, the heart's upper chambers, to the ventricles or lower chambers.

A heavy contingent of armed police guards were deployed outside the ward where Tunda is being treated.

Earlier during the day, a magistrate visited Tunda in hospital and remanded him in judicial custody till September 7.

Tunda, who was arrested from the India-Nepal border last Friday, is a close assistant of underworld don Dawood Ibrahim and one of 20 terrorists India had asked the Pakistan government to hand over after the 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks. He is suspected to be involved in 40 bombings in the country and is the first in the list to be arrested.


According to Delhi Police, he is wanted for his role in 1993 Mumbai serial train blasts, Delhi bomb blasts of 1997-98 and serial bombings in the state of UP and also at Panipat, Sonepat, Ludhiana and Hyderabad.
SSridhar
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Re: Mumbai Terrorist Attack-News stories and timeline

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Pakistan Judicial Commission Likely to Visit India [on September 7 & 8] for 26/11 Probe - Meena Menon, The Hindu
The Pakistan Judicial Commission enquiring into the terror strike of November 26, 2008 is likely to visit Mumbai on September 7 and 8 and this time it will be permitted to cross examine four witnesses, including the investigating officer in the case and the magistrate who recorded Ajmal Kasab’s confession in Mumbai.

At the hearing of the case in the Anti Terrorism Court (ATC) here on Saturday, special public prosecutor Chaudhury Mohammed Azhar submitted the confirmation of the visit from India and the offer of dates on which the Commission could visit. Special judge Atiqur Rehman has asked the Commission to confirm the dates of travel to Mumbai by September 3.

Mr. Azhar told The Hindu that the Commission headed by him with seven other members would leave for India most probably on September 7. The Indian government suggested September 3 and 4 or September 7 and 8 for the visit. The Pakistan government earlier made a formal request to India to enable the visit of the Commission to meet four witnesses, including Ramesh Mahale, the investigating officer of the terror strike, Rama Vijay Sawant-Waghule, the magistrate who recorded the confession of Kasab and the two doctors who performed the autopsies on the nine suspected terrorists who were killed in the three-day operation by the National Security Guard.

The case is being heard in-camera, Mr. Azhar said and the media was not allowed in court. In March 2012, members of the Commission did visit Mumbai and recorded some statements of witnesses but they were not allowed to be cross examined, by a magistrate’s court order. Ujjwal Nikam, who was special public prosecutor in Mumbai for the November 26 terror attack case opposed the cross examination and contended that the Commission could only record statements. Later, the ATC judge rejected the report of the Pakistan Judicial Commission as a result.

However, this time the Indian government granted permission for the cross examination of the witnesses. Mr. Azhar said the last time they did meet some doctors but they were not the ones who had conducted the post-mortems of the nine slain men.

Mr. Nikam told The Hindu on the phone that the Commission would arrive in the first week of September and they would be allowed to cross examine witnesses. Mr. Nikam said he and three officials had visited Pakistan in connection with the case sometime ago.

The case has been dragging on for a while now and the former prosecutor, Chaudhry Zulfiqar Ali, was shot dead on his way to the Rawalpindi court in May this year.

Heavy security has now been provided to Mr. Azhar.

Mr. Ali was handling the Benazir Bhutto case apart from the November 26 terror strike and other high profile matters.
See here for a chronology of court drama in Pakistan
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Re: Mumbai Terrorist Attack-News stories and timeline

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Pak Judicial Panel Cancels September 7 Trip - ToI
In yet another setback for 26/11 investigations, Pakistan on Tuesday announced that its judicial commission is not going to visit India this week, as scheduled earlier. The judicial commission was to arrive in India on September 7, for the second time, to cross-examine witnesses in the case.

Pakistan had protested after the first visit earlier that the commission was not allowed to cross-examine witnesses and that this had hampered the ongoing trial against the seven accused in the attack, including Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) commander Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi.

The message from Pakistan came hours after Pakistani PM Nawaz Sharif's advisor on foreign affairs Sartaz Aziz told Indian high commissioner TCA Raghavan on Tuesday morning that Islamabad was looking forward to the "upcoming visit".

Sources here said Pakistan officially informed India on Tuesday evening that the judicial committee will not travel to India due to "procedural and technical" issues. "They had earlier conveyed readiness to send the judicial commission but have now informed India that they will propose fresh dates for the visit," said a source.

India was hoping that the visit this month would not just provide an impetus to the Mumbai trial in Pakistan but also clear the way for the proposed meeting between PM Manmohan Singh and his counterpart Nawaz Sharif in New York later this month. This development now has put the meeting under question. :lol:

In a meeting with Raghavan on Tuesday morning, Aziz said it was unfortunate that the Line of Control (LoC) incidents had derailed the dialogue process. He said there "had been great hope" within the Sharif government of picking up the threads from the Lahore Declaration of 1999 and embarking upon a new phase of Pakistan-India relations. Aziz, according to Pakistan, also blamed the Indian media for its "over-reaction to the LoC incident" adding that both sides had to show maturity and move forward in a positive manner.

In the meeting, Raghavan told Aziz that incidents such as those across LoC raise doubts in India about Pakistan's sincerity even though India wanted to engage with Pakistan. He described the LoC incidents as a setback for the dialogue process.

India had earlier agreed to a meeting between the two PMs on the sidelines of UNGA in September but the August 6 killing of five Indian soldiers at LoC, which saw government under fire from Opposition in Parliament, forced a rethink.

The postponement of the visit is certain to strengthen the perception that Islamabad has also started to harden its position on talks with India. Pakistani sources have repeatedly told TOI that despite the "goodwill gestures" by Islamabad, including the recent release of 337 Indian fishermen, India has not so much as acknowledged these moves, let alone reciprocate.

Pakistan said in a statement later in the evening that the upcoming visit of the commission will help in "forging a common policy on combating terrorism that would help in allaying many misperceptions that existed".

Pak's U-turn

Pakistan's message that its judicial commission was not coming foxed Indian officials not just because it would hurt Mumbai trial but also Islamabad seemed to have done a complete turnaround in a matter of few hours.

When Indian High Commissioner TCA Raghavan called on Sartaz Aziz Tuesday morning, he was told that Pakistan was actually looking at the "upcoming visit" to "work towards forging a common policy on combating terrorism that would help in allaying many misperceptions that existed". According to Pakistan's own press statement, Aziz said he believed the upcoming visit of the Joint Commission on the Mumbai trial to India would be helpful towards this end. What prompted the change of mind in the next few hours has perplexed all. Sources said this was a classic case of one wing of the government not knowing what the other was up to.
See here for a chronology of court drama in Pakistan
Lalmohan
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Re: Mumbai Terrorist Attack-News stories and timeline

Post by Lalmohan »

why do we even bother with this pak judicial panel, what exactly will they do?
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Re: Mumbai Terrorist Attack-News stories and timeline

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Kasab's Confession Tweaked, Pakistani Judicial Commission Members - New Indian Express
With counsel for Zaki-ur Rehman Lakhvi, the LeT commander who is said to have orchestrated the 26/11 attacks here, claiming that Lakhvi wasn’t involved in the attack, the Pakistani Judicial Commission’s visit to collect evidence appears set to become a farce. {We knew it all along. Only GoI did not know it}

Lakhvi’s lawyers accused Magistrate R V Sawant-Waghule of falsifying Pakistani terrorist Mohammad Ajmal Kasab’s confession by wrongly implicating Lakhvi in the attacks.

According to the defence counsel, Kasab hadn’t mentioned Lakhvi’s name during his interrogation at all.

Rejecting the charges, the magistrate said: “It isn’t true that I recorded a false statement of Kasab when he was produced before me.”

The Pakistani lawyers went on to say that it was actually the Indian government that was behind the terror attack, drawing attention to an affidavit filed by former Union Home Ministry official R V S Mani. Mani’s affidavit said IPS officer Satish Verma had told him that the 2008 Mumbai terror attacks and the 2001 Parliament attack were “engineered” by Indian intelligence agencies.

Earlier, the counsel questioned the presence of Special Public Prosecutor Ujjwal Nikam at the cross examination of witnesses and said that he had no locus standi.

Nikam countered them saying that he had the right to be present in the court as he had represented the government in the case.


Ramesh Mahale, the investigating officer in the case who was also cross-examined by the Pakistani commission, identified the rubber dinghy and its Yamaha motor, cell phones and the GPS system that were recovered from the Mumbai attackers.

He said the GPS coordinates revealed the markings of the Karachi-Mumbai route used by the terrorists to enter India.

The evidence of the two Indian witnesses is being recorded by Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate P Y Ladekar.

The witnesses are Magistrate R V Sawant-Waghule, who had recorded the confession of Pakistani terrorist Ajmal Kasab and Investigating officer Ramesh Mahale.

These witnesses are likely to be cross examined by the panel members on Wednesday, special public prosecutor Ujjwal Nikam, who represents the Indian Government, said.

This is the second and last day of the cross examination by the eight-member commission which is in India to collect evidence in order to carry forward the prosecution of seven Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) suspects, including Zaki-ur Rehman Lakhvi, held in Pakistan for their role in 26/11 Mumbai attacks.
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Re: Mumbai Terrorist Attack-News stories and timeline

Post by ramana »

Why is INd Express giving coverage to Paki trash?
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