Bangkok Post

India honours attack victims

US offers bounty on 10-year anniversar­y

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MUMBAI: India marked the tenth anniversar­y of the Mumbai terror attacks yesterday with ceremonies at sites across the city that became battlegrou­nds in the wave of violence that killed scores and dealt a critical blow to relations with neighbouri­ng Pakistan.

Armed with AK-47 assault rifles and hand grenades, ten Islamic militants killed 166 people and injured hundreds more in a three-day rampage through India’s financial capital which started on Wednesday, Nov 26, 2008.

Ten years on, the United States offered a new US$5 million (165.1 million baht) reward for the capture of the remaining attackers and called on Islamabad to cooperate with the hunt for the planners of the assault.

The attackers belonged to Pakistanba­sed militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT).

While Mumbai staged its own solemn ceremonies, Prime Minister Narendra Modi called the attacks “gruesome” and said: “A grateful nation bows to our brave police and security forces who valiantly fought the terrorists during the Mumbai attacks.”

Played out on TV news channels around the world, the bloody events — widely known as 26/11 — have been compared in India to New York’s suffering on Sept 11, 2001.

The co-ordinated attacks on the city of nearly 20 million people hit luxury hotels, the main railway station, a restaurant popular with tourists and a Jewish centre.

Mumbai’s police remembered more than a dozen officers killed in the operation against the militants while relatives of the victims laid wreaths at a police memorial honouring the dead.

Residents also paid their respects at Chhatrapat­i Shivaji Terminus railway station where Mohammed Kasab, the only gunman caught alive, and another attacker killed almost 60 people and wounded at least 100 others.

The Taj Mahal Palace and Tower Hotel also held a private service to remember the 31 people who died there.

Over 60 hours, four attackers shot dead guests and hotel staff, detonated explosives and set ablaze parts of the building — including its famous dome.

Dramatic scenes of Indian commandos battling the heavily armed gunmen, and guests tried to escape from windows down bedsheet ropes were beamed around the world on live television.

Indian security forces only retook control of the hotel on the morning of Nov 29.

More than 30 people also died at the Oberoi and Trident hotels in a 42-hour siege involving shootings, explosions and hostage-taking.

Six hostages — including a rabbi and his pregnant wife — were killed at Nariman House, a Jewish cultural and religious centre.

The current rabbi is to unveil a new memorial at the centre to all those who died in the 26/11 attacks.

Mohammad Ajmal Amir Kasab, the gunman caught at the railway station, was executed by India in 2012 after being found guilty of charges including murder and waging war against India.

The LeT called Kasab “a hero” in a comment that highlighte­d the deep-rooted rivalry between India and Pakistan since their division in 1947.

Indian politician­s and officials routinely condemn Pakistan for not taking action against LeT leader Hafez Saeed who remains free even though he is designated a terrorist by the United Nations. Pakistan says that evidence provided by India against Mr Saeed is too vague.

Six Americans were among the Mumbai victims and the US State Department announced a $5 million prize for the capture of the remaining planners of the attacks.

The United States already has a $10 million bounty offered for Mr Saeed and $2 million for Hafiz Abdul Rahman Makki, another senior group leader.

“It is an affront to the families of the victims that, after 10 years, those who planned the Mumbai attack have still not been convicted for their involvemen­t,” US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said in a statement.

“We call upon all countries, particular­ly Pakistan, to uphold their UN Security Council obligation­s to implement sanctions against the terrorists responsibl­e for this atrocity.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? Policemen pay their respects at a memorial to mark the tenth anniversar­y of the Nov 26, 2008 attacks at a railway station in Mumbai, India yesterday.
REUTERS Policemen pay their respects at a memorial to mark the tenth anniversar­y of the Nov 26, 2008 attacks at a railway station in Mumbai, India yesterday.

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