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Feeling good, but this can't heal our wounds: 26/11 victims on Kasab's death penalty ruling
Rediff ^ | 6 May 2010 | Rediff

Posted on 05/06/2010 5:56:02 AM PDT by James C. Bennett

Their wounds may never heal but survivors and relatives of victims of the November 2008 terror attacks in Mumbai on Thursday voiced satisfaction that Pakistani gunman Ajmal Amir Kasab has been handed down the maximum punishment under law.

"I am feeling good (after the verdict). But this cannot heal the wounds.... The decision has reinforced the faith in the judicial process of the country... the pain will always be there," said Ragini Sharma, widow of a chief ticket collector at the C. Shivaji Terminus who was killed on the fateful night by Pakistani terrorists, after Kasab was sentenced to death by a special court.

K Unnikrishnana, father of slain National Security Guards commander Sandeep, who sacrificed his life during the 26/11 terror strike, termed the sentencing as 'symbolic.'

"The sentencing is a symbolic one and I regret that our system cannot give much more harsher punishment that this. So I have to be satisfied with this. What we could have finished with the single bullet in a second, we have taken 17 months," Unnikrishnan said.

On being asked about the quantum of punishment, he said, "This is the maximum he has committed and we are giving him the maximum."

Sriram Vernekar, photographer of a news daily who clicked a number of photographs of Kasab while he was firing at innocent people on November 26, 2008, hailed the verdict.

"He (Judge M L Tahiliyani) told in the court that my photo is the main evidence in the case. I followed him (on 26/11) though he was firing... I followed him from CST to Cama bridge... the same picture the judge used as the main evidence. It is a great certificate for my work," he said.

Recounting the nights of the attacks, Chitkala Zutshi, a survivor of terror strike at Hotel Taj, said, "This is a very good decision. I welcome it."

"God is great as we were saved. It was luck and really fast thinking and action on part of the Taj officials, who were looking after us there. Also the Mumbai Police and the commandos, who had entered there. We did get out. It was a combination of luck and a very quick and efficient action by all these people."

Additional commissioner of police, Deven Bharti said, "Our goal has been achieved. We really worked hard on the case."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: islam; kasab; muslim; pakistan
Related:

26/11 victim prefers jail to death for Kasab [Mumbai Attacks] 
| 6 May 2010 |
CNN IBN 

CHICAGO: As Ajmal Kasab awaits punishment after being held guilty in the Mumbai attacks, the widow of an American killed in the terror strikes says she does not favour death penalty for the Pakistani gunman and prefers him to be jailed for life.

Kia Scherr, whose 13-year-old daughter was also killed in the 26/11 strikes, further said she is planning to visit India later this year and would especially like to meet "the families of those who lost their lives in the attack" in November 2008.

"I have never favoured the death penalty. More killing does not solve anything. Kasab should remain in the Indian prison system for life. In the meantime, I favour rehabilitation and education," Scherr told PTI in an e-mail statement.

Kasab will be sentenced tomorrow by a special court in Mumbai with the prosecution demanding death penalty, branding him a killing machine manufactured in Pakistan. Scherr's husband, Virginia resident Alan Scherr, and their daughter Naomi were at Mumbai's Oberoi Hotel when Kasab along with nine other Pakistani terrorists held the city hostage for three days killing 166 people, including six Americans.

Terming the court's guilty verdict as "appropriate", Scherr said "I do think this verdict of guilty for Ajmal Kasab will bring some closure to the families of the victims".

Planning to visit India later this year, Scherr said she would like to meet the people of Mumbai. "Mr Oberoi, the owner of the Oberoi Hotel, where my husband and daughter were killed, is in support of our message and has agreed to be an honorary member of our Board of Advisors. He invited us to be his guests when we come to Mumbai," she said.

Scherr said if Kasab could be moved to tell the truth, he could "perhaps prevent more young men from joining the terrorist groups. I am open to this possibility and would be willing to have this conversation with him".

Kasab’s actions amount to ‘waging war against nation’

http://www.dnaindia.com/mumbai/report_kasab-s-actions-amount-to-waging-war-against-nation_1378734

Mumbai: Holding that a war-like situation was created by the 10 Pakistani gunmen, including Mohammed Ajmal Amir Kasab, who attacked the city on November 26, 2008, the special court held Kasab guilty for waging war against the State.

The judge came to this conclusion after going through Kasab’s confession, in which he has spoken about his training; the reason he came to Mumbai; the planning and acquisition of arms, ammunition, explosives; hijacking the trawler MV Kuber; purchase of telephones and GPS devices; and the student identity cards forged to conceal their identities.

“I have given a finding that this planning cannot be made by normal criminals. This was a preparation made for a war,” said special judge ML Tahaliyani.

The court also took into consideration the fact that extra government forces like the National Security Gaurds (NSG), Marcos commandos had to be called to fight the terrorists.

“The resistance put up by the accused is indicative of the determination to fight the war,” the judge opined. The court considered the talk between a Pakistani gunman, Fahadullah, after his accomplice, Abdul Rehman Bada, was killed by the NSG commandos at Oberoi Hotel.

“He was cornered form all sides but he received instructions to fight till death,” said judge Tahaliyani.

Fahadullah handlers had tried to motivate him by saying: “Mere veer, sabar karna hai. Himmat karni hain, aur muqabla karna hain datke (My brother, you have to be patient. Have courage and carry on fighting.”

The court also found Kasab guilty under Section 122 of the Indian Penal Code that deals with collecting arms, ammunition with the intention of waging war against the nation.

“It appears from his confession that such people are regularly recruited in Pakistan,” the judge said, adding that a foreigner can be held guilty under the offence.

 


 

 

Kasab breaks down after death sentence

IANS, May 6, 2010, 03.10pm IST

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/India/Kasab-breaks-down-after-death-sentence-/articleshow/5898038.cms

MUMBAI: Pakistani terrorist Ajmal Amir Kasab broke down Thursday in the court room after he was sentenced to death for the Mumbai terror attack. But the public prosecutor called it “crocodile tears”.

The 23-year-old from Pakistan’s Punjab province was seen crying as he was led back to the court room after stepping out briefly with the judge’s consent to drink water.

Walking slowly, he wiped his tears before returning to the dock where he sat down, his head bowed.

Kasab, the only one of 10 Pakistani terrorists taken alive after the November 2008 slaughter in Mumbai, looked downcast during his stay in the court at the Arthur Road prison.

At times, he sat with his right hand covering his mouth.

At one point, special judge M.L. Tahaliyani asked the defence lawyer if Kasab wanted to say something. When the question was posed to him, Kasab just shook his head. He looked irritated and again sat down.

The judge then spoke directly to the prisoner in Hindi: “Do you want to say something?”

Kasab looked at the judge blankly, shook his head and sat down.

Speaking later, Special Public Prosecutor Ujjwal Nikam said: “Those were crocodile tears.” Nikam went on to recite a Sanskrit verse to mean that no matter how much milk is given to a snake, it will always spew venom.

 

 

1 posted on 05/06/2010 5:56:03 AM PDT by James C. Bennett
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To: James C. Bennett
Ajmal Kasab sentenced to death for Mumbai attacks
Observers say the death penalty is likely to trigger a lengthy, possibly open-ended, appeal through the Indian courts.

MUMBAI: An Indian judge on Thursday condemned to death the sole surviving gunman involved in the 2008 Mumbai siege after a year-long trial over the bloody attacks that traumatised the nation.

Judge M.L. Tahaliyani imposed the death penalty against Pakistani national Mohammed Ajmal Amir Kasab on four counts of murder, waging war against India and conspiracy and terrorism offences.

“He should be hanged by the neck until he is dead,” he said. “I don't find any case for a lesser punishment than death in the case of waging war against India, murder and terrorist acts.”

Kasab, 22, dressed in a traditional white tunic, sat with his head in his hands staring at the floor of the dock as the judge issued the sentence, three days after the Pakistani's conviction on Monday.

Tahaliyani said the evidence showed “previous, meticulous and systematic planning” of the atrocity, which left 166 people dead and hundreds injured and led India to halt peace talks with its arch-rival Pakistan.

“Brutality was writ large,” he added, and the offences were “of exceptional depravity.”

Branded a “killing machine” and “cruelty incarnate” by the prosecution, Kasab was the only gunman caught alive in the 60-hour assault by 10 militants on hotels, a railway station, a restaurant and Jewish centre.

Observers say the death penalty is likely to trigger a lengthy, possibly open-ended, appeal through the Indian courts.

The government officially supports capital punishment for what the Supreme Court in New Delhi has called the “rarest of rare” cases but no execution has been carried out since 2004 and only two since 1998.

Many pleas for clemency to the president are still pending, including ones from the killers of former prime minister Rajiv Gandhi, who was assassinated in 1991, and a Kashmiri separatist who attacked India's parliament in 2001.

Outside the court, crowds chanted “Victory to Hindustan” while public prosecutor Ujjwal Nikam brandished a poster showing Kasab behind a noose and flashing victory signs to the media.

“Today's sentencing sends the message that keeping Kasab alive would be a crime in itself,” Nikam said. “Terrorism and terrorists like Kasab cannot be tolerated. The death penalty is the only option.”

Families of some of the victims have long called for Kasab's execution, and the clamour for him to be sent to the gallows grew louder after Monday's widely expected guilty verdict by the court in India's most populous city.

“I am happy, a chapter has closed for me,” said a tearful Sevanti Parekh, who lost his son and daughter-in-law in the attacks in India's commercial capital. “But I fear for our generation and the next generation.”

Defence lawyer K.P. Pawar had argued against capital punishment, suggesting his client was brainwashed into committing the offences while under the influence of Pakistan-based extremists.

New Delhi, which suspended peace talks with Islamabad after the attacks, wants Pakistan to convict the alleged masterminds, namely the founder of the Lashkar-i-Taiba (LT) militant group, Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, and key operative Zarar Shah.
Hafiz Saeed, head of the Jamaatud Dawa charity, which is seen as a front for the LT, is the third figure blamed by India.

Since the beginning of Kasab's trial, new evidence has come to light about the planning of the atrocity after the arrest of Pakistani-American David Headley in Chicago last year.

The 49-year-old, who changed his name from Daood Gilani, admitted to spending two years eluding security forces as he cased out Mumbai for the LT.

Commentators doubt that Kasab's case will have any effect on either curbing extremism or improving relations between India and Pakistan, which have fought three wars since independence from Britain in 1947.

“If he's convicted and hanged, it's still going to be years given our legal system,” the executive director of the Institute of Conflict Management in New Delhi, Ajai Sahni, told AFP.

“The fundamentals of the conflict between India and Pakistan and the trajectory of terrorism are not going to be radically affected by this (case).”


2 posted on 05/06/2010 6:06:07 AM PDT by James C. Bennett
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