The sole Bombay gunman captured alive has told police he was trained in Pakistan and ordered to "kill until the last breath", according to a leaked account of his interrogation. Azam Amir Kasab, 21, a Pakistani national, claimed the terror strikes, which left nearly 200 dead, were intended to kill as many as 5,000 people and that he and his fellow militants were ordered to target whites – especially Britons and Americans. The claims were made in what a police source said was a transcript of his questioning.Rico says hide and watch; this is going to get more complicated before it's over.
Kasab was captured after being shot in the hand by police in a standoff near Chowpatty beach, a popular evening destination for local families in south Bombay, also known as Mumbai, on Wednesday night. A policeman and one other terrorist were killed in the same encounter.
Earlier, Kasab and his accomplice had sprayed the concourse of Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus, Bombay's main train station, with gunfire, killing indiscriminately. While there, he was caught on camera wielding an automatic rifle. The photographs of the boyish gunman, wearing combat trousers, sneakers, a black t-shirt and a blue haversack stuffed with ammunition, promise to become a defining image of the assault on Mumbai, the deadliest terror strike unleashed in India in 15 years.
In a statement, Kasab said he had been trained by Lashkar-e-Tayiba, a well-known Pakistani-based militant group that has been linked to several operations carried on Indian soil. The group is thought to have been behind the 2001 attack on the Indian Parliament in Delhi, where terrorists stormed the building with guns and grenades, taking hostages as part of a suicidal mission. The statement said: "I was trained by militants of the Lashkar-e-Tayiba in Pakistan for three months and asked to cause maximum casualties in Mumbai." Police said that each terrorist was given six to seven magazines with 50 bullets, eight hand grenades, an AK-57 rifle, an automatic pistol, and a supply of dry fruits. Kasab was taken to hospital after his arrest. Reports said he pleaded with staff not to be allowed to die.
A British security source said it was too early to be sure of the statement's veracity, as India has long demonstrated a "knee-jerk response" to point the finger at Pakistan for terrorist outrages, he said, but that this did not mean that the response was incorrect. There will be apprehension, however, over the reputation of the Bombay police to place undue pressure on suspects in custody. It is thought that early questioning was carried out by officers from Bombay's Anti-Terrorism Squad and that experts in areas such as terrorist tactics and financing will be drawn in later.
Ajit Doval, a former head of India's Intelligence Bureau, told The Times it was unlikely that Kasab had yet being given "the third degree" – a term that can mean anything from arm twisting to a severe beating and torture, methods commonly employed by Indian police. "This is far too high profile a case for anything illegal or any undue pressure tactics to take place during questioning," he said. "It is not as if this guy can protest his innocence."
It is possible, however, that Kasab, who was being held in Bombay's Lamington Road police station, could be administered a "truth serum" - sodium pentothal - another method used widely in India but banned in most democracies.
A document filed by the Bombay police on the basis of the interrogation says that Kasab and his accomplices were trained for three months before a month's break. During further training, the group was taught how to hijack a vessel at sea. The statement added that the terrorists were indoctrinated by being shown images of "atrocities on Muslims in India".
Kasab is said to have admitted sailing from the port city of Karachi, in Pakistan. About midway through the journey to Mumbai, police believe the terrorists hijacked a second boat, a fourteen-metre fishing vessel, which was later found off the coast of Mumbai with one dead body aboard – that of a crew member whose throat was cut. Four or five other crew members had been killed and dumped overboard.
Finally, the terrorists used inflatable dinghies to make their way on shore. Local witnesses said that they saw a small inflatable boat carrying at least eight men, now believed to have been the terrorists, landing at the Badhwar Park area of Colaba just before the first attacks took place. When one local fisherman confronted the men they levelled their guns at him and said "Humko tension hai" (we are feeling very tense).
Pakistan has denied any involvement in the attacks on Mumbai, as has a spokesman for Lashkar-e-Tayiba, the Pakistan-based militant organisation.
30 November 2008
Until his last breath
The Times has a story by Rhys Blakeley:
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