Hindustan Times (Delhi)

TERRORIST SHOT DEAD IN J&K GUNFIGHT

- Neeraj Chauhan and Rezaul H Laskar letters@hindustant­imes.com

SRINAGAR: A terrorist was killed on Saturday in an encounter with security forces in Kulgam district of J&K, police said. The security forces launched a cordon and search operation at Likhdipora in the south Kashmir district following specific informatio­n about the presence of terrorists in the area. As the forces were searching the area, the hiding terrorists fired upon them. The forces retaliated, killing a terrorist, an official said. He said the identity and group affiliatio­n of the deceased terrorist is being ascertaine­d. The operation was on till the last reports came in.

nNEWDELHI:TAHAWWUR Rana, a Pakistani-origin Canadian sent to a US jail for his role in planning the 2008 Mumbai attacks, has been arrested after being freed from prison in order to face extraditio­n to India.

Rana, 59, a close associate of David Coleman Headley, one of the main conspirato­rs behind the attacks on India’s financial hub that killed 166 people, was serving a 14-year sentence in a Los Angeles federal prison when he was granted early release last week because of poor health and being infected by the coronaviru­s.

However, he never left the prison as he was arrested to face extraditio­n to India, US prosecutor­s told The Associated Press. Indian officials said they learnt Rana was rearrested on June 10.

Officials familiar with developmen­ts said a US attorney informed the district judge in Los Angeles about India’s standing request for the extraditio­n of Rana, wanted in India for terror charges. A senior National Investigat­ion Agency (NIA) officer, who didn’t want to be named, said: “It’s a positive developmen­t after over 11 years. This means his extraditio­n hearings will now take place.”

Former home secretary GK Pillai, who played a key role in the investigat­ion of the Mumbai attacks and coordinate­d with the US, said there was a pending Indian extraditio­n request for Rana.

“There is a standing Indian extraditio­n request for Rana and that will still be applicable,” he told HT. A person in the government, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the US authoritie­s acted as there was a request for Rana’s preliminar­y arrest. The person noted that arrest signalled the start of the extraditio­n process.

An NIA team that visited the US in late 2018 was informed by the department of justice it was convinced by India’s charges against Rana. Earlier, the “double jeopardy” clause in US law, according to which a person can’t be punished twice for the same crime, was hindering efforts to extradite Rana, but NIA made a fresh request in 2016 .

India levelled the charges of forgery and criminal breach of trust as Rana used his firm for making documents for Headley during his surveillan­ce missions in Mumbai.

These charges were accepted by US prosecutor­s and the FBI, and they are inclined to honour India’s request. FBI arrested Rana on October 18, 2009 for providing material support for the conspiracy to commit terrorist acts outside the US.

The former Pakistan Army physician-turned-businessma­n, was convicted in 2011 for providing material support to the Lashkar-e-taiba for the Mumbai attacks, and for backing a planned attack on a Danish newspaper that printed caricature­s of Prophet Mohammed in 2005. Headley was convicted during the same trial.

At the time, US reports had said American prosecutor­s had failed to prove Rana supported the Mumbai attacks and he was cleared of this more serious charge by the jury at the trial. His legal team claimed he had been misled by Headley, who was a friend from school. Rana had been accused of allowing Headley to open a branch of his Chicagobas­ed immigratio­n law firm in Mumbai to act as a front for his surveillan­ce activities in Mumbai ahead of the attacks that also injured hundreds. He was accused of allowing Headley to pose as a representa­tive of the same firm when he went to Denmark for surveillan­ce ahead of the planned attack.

At the time, US prosecutor­s had said Rana knew Headley had trained with the LET and that Headley had shared informatio­n of his surveillan­ce activities in Mumbai and of the Taj Mahal Palace hotel, where LET members later killed dozens of people.

Headley was sentenced to 35 years in prison but can’t be extradited to India under a plea deal.

Pakistani authoritie­s had arrested seven men, including LET operations commander Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, for the Mumbai attacks though their trial in an anti-terrorism court never made headway.

Lakhvi was released on bail and his current whereabout­s aren’t known.

In Mumbai, Maharashtr­a home minister Anil Deshmukh said,“rana’s role had come to the fore during Headley’s testimony after the latter admitted that he was working as an agent for him. We are discussing the developmen­ts at top level and the government will take a decision about Rana’s extraditio­n. We will speak to the Centre in this respect,” Deshmukh said.

 ?? AP FILE ?? A soldier takes cover as a gun battle with terrorists rages at the Taj n
Mahal hotel, Mumbai, on November 29, 2008.
AP FILE A soldier takes cover as a gun battle with terrorists rages at the Taj n Mahal hotel, Mumbai, on November 29, 2008.

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