India-Pakistan |
Mumbai attack suspect remorseful, says report |
2009-03-15 |
![]() Pakistani national Mohammed Ajmal Amir Iman, also known as Kasab, said his father forced him to join a hard-line Islamist commando unit to earn money for the family, the Mumbai Mirror newspaper reported, quoting a police transcript. The newspaper, which gave no details about how it obtained the transcript, said it was a verbatim account of Iman's questioning for about an hour after his arrest. "My father told me we will get lots of money. We would be able to live like other rich people," Iman allegedly said in the transcript translated from Hindi and Urdu. Iman, 21, is in Indian police custody and faces trial for murder and "waging war against India". Mumbai police declined comment on the report, in which one policeman was quoted as telling Iman that, "Crying like this will not help. The people who lost their lives, they were poor and innocent, like you." Iman, accused of being part of a 10-man group that killed 165 people in a 60-hour killing spree in Mumbai, allegedly belonged to the banned Pakistan-based Islamist group, Lashkar-e-Taiba. |
Link |
India-Pakistan |
Another custody extension for Ajmal Kasab |
2009-01-20 |
![]() |
Link |
India-Pakistan |
Pakistani PM vows to punish anyone proved to blame for Mumbai attacks |
2009-01-06 |
Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani said Monday his government remained committed to punishing Pakistani nationals accused of taking part in the Mumbai attacks if "credible" evidence is given against them. Gilani made the comments during talks with Richard Boucher, the US assistant secretary of state for South and Central Asia, who arrived in Islamabad early Monday in a bid to defuse simmering tensions between Pakistan and India. Gilani spoke of "Pakistan's persistent efforts to defuse the current tensions with India, and his government's commitment to take action against any Pakistani national in case credible evidence is provided," his office said. Earlier Monday, Indian Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee said that New Delhi had handed over to Islamabad what it said was evidence linking the Islamic militants who carried out the late November attacks to "elements in Pakistan." Pakistan said it had received the dossier and was reviewing it. New Delhi has blamed the attacks - which left 172 people dead, including nine of the gunmen - on the banned Pakistan-based militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba, which is fighting Indian rule in divided Kashmir. Islamabad had repeatedly said that India had not provided any evidence linking the Mumbai attackers with Pakistan. Mukherjee said the Indian dossier included details of the interrogation of Mohammad Ajmal Amir Iman - also known as Mohammad Ajmal Kasab - who is the lone surviving gunman and whom India says is a Pakistani national. It also details the militants' communications with "elements" in Pakistan during the attack, recovered weapons and other equipment, retrieved global positioning system data and satellite phones. A number of US officials have visited both Pakistan and India, including US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and her deputy John Negroponte, following the attacks in a bid to defuse tensions between the nuclear-armed rivals. Boucher, who arrived in Pakistan early Monday, also met with Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi and President Asif Ali Zardari, who gave him an award for his "service to Pakistan." Zardari said Boucher had been "instrumental in promoting a stable, broad-based and long-term Pakistan-US relationship," the Associated Press of Pakistan news agency reported. |
Link |
India-Pakistan |
India hands over Mumbai evidence to Pakistan |
2009-01-06 |
India on Monday handed to Pakistan what it said was evidence linking the country to the militants who attacked Mumbai in November and it expected a prompt investigation India's foreign minister said. The government also said it was launching a major diplomatic offensive to maintain international pressure on Islamabad, which has so far rejected New Delhi's demands to hand over a list of terror suspects. "What happened in Mumbai was an unpardonable crime. As far as the Government of Pakistan is concerned, we ask only that it implement the bilateral commitments that it has made at the highest levels to India, and practices her international obligations. These are clear," Pranab Mukherjee said. "It is our expectation that the Government of Pakistan will promptly undertake further investigations in Pakistan and share the results with us so as to bring the perpetrators to justice." The material includes details of interrogation of Mohammed Ajmal Amir Iman -- also known as Mohammed Ajmal Kasab -- who was the lone surviving gunman and who India says is a Pakistani national. |
Link |
India-Pakistan | |
Ajmal shifted to Arthur Road prison | |
2008-12-28 | |
On Wednesday, Ajmal was remanded to police custody till January 6 by the Metropolitan Magistrate Court on charges of forcible possession of a car near the Mantralaya on November 26. Owing to security concerns, the magistrate and the public prosecutor came to the Mumbai police headquarters to seek extension of police custody for Ajmal. | |
Link |
India-Pakistan |
Pakistan claims Ajmal doesn't exist in official records |
2008-12-23 |
![]() An examination of the National Database and Registration Authority (NADRA), Pakistan's national database, had provided no records on any national named Ajmal Amir Iman alias Ajmal Kasab, Interior Ministry chief Rehman Malik told reporters. "As far as Ajmal Kasab is concerned, NADRA authorities do not have any records of his," he said after a meeting with visiting Interpol chief Ronald K Noble here. "Pakistan's High Commission (in New Delhi) has received a letter said to be written by Kasab and we will get it examined by our experts. We will give a detailed response today or tomorrow," Malik said. In the letter, a copy of which was sent to Malik yesterday by the Pakistan High Commission, Ajmal had detailed the circumstances of his arrest and sought legal assistance from the Pakistan government. Malik claimed that the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT), the banned terrorist group blamed for the Mumbai attacks, did not "exist now" and the government would decide on proscribing its front organisation Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD) if investigations proved it was involved in terrorist activities. The organization that doesn't "exist now" has a spokesman, a command structure, and offices in Pak Kashmir. Pakistan had cracked down on JuD in accordance with a UN Security Council resolution which designated it as a terrorist group and its leaders had been detained and its offices closed, Malik said. "Pakistan is a sovereign state. Whatever action we take, we will take in the interest of the country (and) we will not get dictation from anywhere," he said. |
Link |
India-Pakistan |
Kasab belongs to Pakistan, says Sharif |
2008-12-19 |
ISLAMABAD: Challenging Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari's assertion that there was no proof that the arrested Mumbai attacker hailed from Pakistan's Punjab province, former premier Nawaz Sharif has said that the suspect's village was cordoned off and his parents were not allowed to meet anyone. "I have checked myself. His (Ajmal Amir Iman alias Ajmal Kasab) house and village has been cordoned off by the security agencies. His parents are not allowed to meet anybody. I don't understand why it has been done," Sharif, who hails from Punjab, said in an interview to Geo News channel. "The people and media should be allowed to meet Iman's parents so that the truth could come out in the open," he said, adding that "We need some kind of introspection." Zardari, who earlier acknowledged that the perpetrators of the Mumbai carnage could be 'non-state' actors from Pakistan, has now said there is still no "real evidence" that the terrorists who attacked Mumbai came from Pakistan. "Have you seen any evidence to that effect? I have definitely not seen any real evidence to that effect," Zardari told BBC in an interview this week. Pakistani security agencies and local officials in Faridkot have launched a cover-up since India made it public that Kasab belonged to the village in Punjab province and his father acknowledged to a Pakistani newspaper, that the gunman captured in India was his son. Sharif also slammed Zardari's rule, saying the functioning of the current Pakistan People's Party-led government is making Pakistan look like a "failed state". ( Watch ) Pakistan presents the picture of a failed and ungovernable state due to the absence of the government's writ and the country urgently needs a new roadmap to pull it out of the problems it is currently facing, he said. The PML-N chief said the dictatorial rule of former President Pervez Musharraf had made the country ungovernable. "Since 1977, the army has ruled the country for more than 20 years... A state subjected to frequent military intervention in politics can only become ungovernable." He said India should have shared intelligence about the Mumbai attacks with Pakistan instead of approaching the UN Security Council. Sharif also criticised what he described as the government's "clarifications" regarding the purported violation of Pakistani airspace by Indian fighter jets. Noting that Pakistan was getting isolated in the international community, Sharif said there is a need to find the root causes of terrorism. He also condemned Zardari's reported statement that US drone attacks in Pakistan's tribal areas would continue. The government should make it clear to the US that such attacks went against the country's integrity and would not be tolerated, he said. Though the PPP-led government had been in power for ten months, there was little hope of any improvement in the affairs of the state, Sharif said, adding that it was up to the nation to decide whether to make Pakistan a failed state or a successful state. Sharif said the PML-N wanted an independent judiciary and the repeal of the 17th constitutional amendment, which gives the President sweeping powers, including the ability to dissolve parliament and to dismiss the Prime Minister. The PML-N will pressure the government to implement the Charter of Democracy, which according to him, was the "will" of slain PPP chairperson Benazir Bhutto. Sharif and Bhutto signed the Charter in 2006 when they launched a joint movement against Musharraf while they were both in exile. The Charter envisages wide-ranging reforms, including the scrapping of the President's powers, making the judiciary independent and clipping the powers of the military. |
Link |
India-Pakistan |
IHM wants judicial confession of Kasab |
2008-12-16 |
The Indian Home Ministry (IHM) on Monday asked the Maharashtra government to get an in-camera judicial confession of Ajmal Amir Iman aka Kasab, the lone surviving terrorist of the Mumbai attack. Once his confession is recorded, the government will consider foreign governments' demand to allow their agencies to independently interrogate him, sources said, referring to the demand made by British Prime Minister Gordon Brown on Sunday to let the Scotland Yard talk to Kasab.The sources said India was open to the questioning of Kasab by foreign agencies like the Scotland Yard and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), but not immediately as that might impinge upon the current investigations by the Mumbai Police. Access: First his confession will be recorded before a court and then the foreign agencies will be given access to him, the sources said. They said the government had a videotaped confession of Kasab, copies of which have been provided to the US and the UK and also presented before the United Nations Security Council to get its fiat issued to Pakistan. However, the tape has no legal value and hence the need to record the confession before a magistrate, the sources said. Though the government has not provided this evidence to Pakistan so far, the sources said it must have, however, already reached Islamabad through the international interlocutors and from its representative in the UN. They said the government would provide Pakistan the confession that Kasab would make before the court. The sources said the External Affairs Ministry would be forwarding a lengthy letter written by Kasab to the Pakistan High Commission and also urge upon it to take the custody of the bodies of the other nine terrorists lying in JJ Hospital's mortuary in Mumbai. They added that the US FBI and other Western investigating agencies have already taken DNA samples of all the nine terrorists killed in the attacks to ascertain if they had any Afghan or other terror links. The Western investigators have also carried out a detailed examination of the explosive devices used in the attacks and have found similarities with those used by terrorists in Afghanistan, the sources said. The FBI team accompanied by investigators from the UK's Scotland Yard was in Mumbai for a fortnight looking into clues including the Internet telephony signatures intercepted by the Indian intelligence agencies when the terrorists were receiving calls. The sources added that after registering the case the FBI team had been able to break into the code of Internet telephony. |
Link |
India-Pakistan |
Traces of Kasab's Pak link being wiped clean? |
2008-12-15 |
Pakistani authorities and residents of Ajmal Amir Iman's village have apparently launched efforts to cover up their links with the lone terrorist arrested for the Mumbai terror attacks, days after his father admitted that the young man as shown by the media was his son. Pakistani security and intelligence agencies have deployed a large number of personnel in plainclothes at Faridkot in Okara district of Punjab province, from where Ajmal hails, with journalists visiting the area having to face angry protests. Footage of the intelligence operatives has been aired by Geo News channel. The News daily reported that journalists who visited Faridkot on December 6 were surrounded by over 100 people, some of them armed with cane sticks, who pressurised the reporters not to interview anybody or do any filming in the area. Ghulam Mustafa Wattoo, the mayor of the local council who has been at the forefront of efforts to deny Iman's links to the village, warned the journalists that they would be responsible for the 'consequences' if they went against the wishes of the people. One person tried to snatch the camera and wallet of a foreign journalist and a team from a TV channel was assaulted by persons who snatched their mobile phones and digital video (DV) tapes and tried to smash their cameras. Asim Rana, who was in-charge of the team, said villagers could not take DV tapes from the camera 'with such expertise' because they would not know how to extract the tapes. "It clearly shows that some people from the (security) agencies are among the villagers, who are running the whole show," Rana said. An unnamed top Pakistani politician and a senior Punjab police official had also confirmed to a foreign journalist that Iman belonged to Faridkot, The News reported. On Sunday, hundreds of people from Faridkot blocked the Dipalpur-Kasur road for about two hours to protest what they described as a media campaign 'wrongly linking their village' to Iman. During the protest, Mayor Wattoo said Iman was not a resident of the village and was not related to anyone there. Iman's father Amir Kasab admitted to the influential Dawn newspaper that the terrorist shown in pictures of the attack on a train terminus in Mumbai was his son. After he spoke to the newspaper, AmirKasab and his wife Noor were moved from their home in Faridkot to an undisclosed location. Geo News channel too has aired what it described as secretly filmed footage of Faridkot residents acknowledging that Iman belonged to the village. The residents said Iman had last visited Faridkot five to six months ago, when he told his mother he was going away for jihad. The channel also reported that a man named Ghafoor is currently living in Amir Kasab's home in Faridkot. Ghafoor has been claiming before media persons that he has been living in the house for 'several years'. |
Link |
India-Pakistan | ||
No proof Mumbai gunman is one of us: Wormtongue | ||
2008-12-14 | ||
![]() They really do lack the gene for feeling stoopid, don't they? "We're not denying it, we're not accepting it," Shah Mohammed Qureshi told reporters during a trip to Paris. "If you (India) have any evidence, share this evidence with us." "His Mom and Dad don't count." Indian police said Saturday that the surviving gunman had written to the Pakistan High Commission in India seeking legal help. The gunman, Mohammed Ajmal Amir Iman, has also asked Pakistani officials to take custody of the body of another gunman who was killed in a gunfight. Iman faces a string of charges including "making war against the country, murder, attempted murder and other charges under the arms and explosives act." India says all 10 attackers came from Pakistan and has stepped up pressure on its neighbor to crack down on Islamic militants after the attacks last month that left 172 people dead, including nine gunmen. Suspect charity
Pakistan on Thursday placed the Jamaat-ud-Dawa leader Hafiz Saeed under house arrest and ordered its assets frozen after the United Nations listed it as a terror group the day before.
Jamaat-ud-Dawa is one of Pakistan's biggest charities and is known in Kashmir for its relief work after a devastating 2005 earthquake. Pakistan Defense Minister Ahmed Mukhtar said Friday that his government had no choice but to act on the U.N. ruling. "We can fight our enemies but not the whole world," he said. "We will not allow anybody to destabilize the country. Had we not implemented the resolution we would have been declared a terrorist state." | ||
Link |
India-Pakistan |
Kasab writes to Pakistani mission, seeks legal aid |
2008-12-13 |
Mohammad Ajmal Amir Iman also known as Kasab, the Pakistani terrorist who was captured alive on November 26 during the Mumbai terror attacks, has written to the Pakistan High Commission seeking legal. Kasab's letter has been forwarded by the Mumbai police to the External Affairs and the Union Home Ministries for necessary action, Joint Commissioner of Police Rakesh Maria said. He said that Kasab has also asked the Pakistan High Commission to take custody of the body of fellow terrorist Ismail Khan, who was killed in an encounter in south Mumbai the same night. Kasab was the only terrorist captured alive by police while nine other terrorists involved in the terror attacks in Taj, Oberoi-Trident Hotels and Nariman House, besides Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus and Cama Hospital were killed. Ajmal has been remanded to police custody till December 24. However, the Pakistan High Commission in Delhi denied having received any letter from Kasab. "We have not received any letter," a Pakistan High Commission spokesman said. |
Link |
India-Pakistan |
Captured terrorist Kasab my son, says father in Pakistan |
2008-12-12 |
Though Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jamaat-ud-Dawa may disown him, the father of the lone Pakistani gunman arrested for the Mumbai terror attacks has admitted that the young man whose picture was beamed by media across the world, is his son. Amir Kasab, the father of Ajmal Amir Iman alias Ajmal Kasab, broke down as he made the admission to the influential Dawn newspaper in the courtyard of his house in Faridkot, a village of about 2,500 people in Okara district of Punjab province. "I was in denial for the first couple of days, saying to myself it could not have been my son... Now I have accepted it. This is the truth. I have seen the picture in the newspaper. This is my son Ajmal," Amir said in his first interview to the media since his son's arrest. Britain's Observer newspaper and BBC had earlier reported that Iman belonged to Faridkot and had joined the Lashker-e-Taiba some time ago. The Observer's correspondent had located Iman's home and got hold of the voters' roll which had the names of his parents Amir Kasab and Noor as well as the numbers on their national identity cards. Reports had said that Iman left home as a frustrated teenager about four years ago and went to Lahore in search of a job. After a brush with crime in that city, he reportedly joined the LeT. Amir Kasab, a father of three sons and two daughters, said his son disappeared from home four years ago. "He had asked me for new clothes on Eid that I couldn't provide him. He got angry and left," he said. As Amir was talking to the Dawn's correspondents, Iman's two sisters and a younger brother stood by. Their mother, wrapped in a 'chador', lay on a nearby charpoy. "Her trance was broken as the small picture of Ajmal lying in a Mumbai hospital was shown around. They appeared to have identified their son. The mother shrunk back in her chador but the father said he had no problem in talking about the subject," the newspaper reported. Amir said he had settled in Faridkot after arriving from the nearby Haveli Lakha many years ago. He owned the house the family lived in and made a living by selling 'pakoras' in the streets of the village. He pointed to a hand-cart in one corner of the courtyard and said, "This is all I have. I shifted back to the village after doing the same job in Lahore. "My eldest son, Afzal, is also back after a stint in Lahore. He is out working in the fields." |
Link |