Indo-Pak foreign secretary talks not on the cards

New Delhi, Sep.4 (ANI): Talks between the Foreign Secretaries of India and Pakistan-Nirupama Rao and Salman Bashir-are not going to be held in the forseeable future in the wake of the latest statements emerging from Islamabad with regard to the 26/11 probe and its less than acceptable reactions to the six dossiers provided to it by the Indian Government.

According to sources, while the meeting between the Indian External Affairs Minister S.M.Krishna and his Pakistani counterpart Shah Mehmood Qureshi will take place on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly later this month, any hopes of a limited dialogue taking place at lesser levels is remote.

Incessant ceasefire violations at the Line of Control in Jammu and Kashmir and Pakistan’s consistent non-compliance to the six dossiers provided by India and the inaction against 26/11 mastermind Hafeez Saeed are proving to be a recipe for a new face off between the two neighbours.

Dismayed by Pakistan’s double speak and its refusal to accept the evidence provided by India in the sixth dossier, sources said “It is up to Pakistan to decide what relation they want with India”.

Hafeez Saeed and his organization are banned under UN resolution 1267 and he should be brought to books, the sources added.

Interpol has already issued Red corner notices against Hafeez Saeed and Lakhvi, the key suspects who masterminded the Mumbai terror attacks.

But Pakistan is still asking for concrete evidence from India.

The Union Home Minister P. Chidambaram has already indicated that India may not respond to further demands from the Pakistan Government for information on the 26/11 attacks on Mumbai.

The apparent bitterness between the two neighbours is evident from the fact that the meeting between the foreign secretaries of the two countries is not yet finalized.

Sources have told ANI that no dates are fixed for the meetings so far.

It was decided between Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Yusuf Raza Gilani at Sharm-al-Sheikh last month that foreign secretaries of both countries should meet more often and it was also decided that Indian Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao should meet her Pakistani counterpart Salman Bashir before the ministers of both countries meet in New York.

The Pakistan Foreign office has also reportedly invited the Indian Foreign Secretary for talks in Islamabad, but no decision has been taken regarding her visit as if now, sources have told ANI.

India is also alarmed by the recent US reports about Pakistan’s increasing nuclear capabilities. The Indian Army chief has also expressed apprehensions over the development and has said that Pakistan’s nuclear stockpile is going beyond nuclear deterrence. He has also cautioned Pakistan over the rising ceasefire violations. By Naveen Kapoor (ANI)

Chidambaram says there is enough evidence to nail Hafiz Saeed

New Delhi, Aug 26 (ANI): Union Home Minister P Chidambaram on Wednesday reiterated that enough evidence has been given to Pakistan to prosecute terrorists responsible for Mumbai terror attacks in November last year.

Talking to reporters in New Delhi on the sidelines of a function, Chidambaram described the Pakistani response, on the dossiers given by India as not encouraging.

He said that the information provided by India is more than enough to bring to justice the mastermind behind the attack Hafiz Saeed and others.

India provided fifth dossier to Islamabad last week giving more information on the involvement of Pak based terrorists in the attack.

The Union Home Minister renewed New Delhi’s stand that the attackers were Pakistanis and they planned the attack from their soil. (ANI)

India, Pak foreign secretaries burn midnight oil to find common ground

Sharm-el-Sheikh (Egypt), July 15 (ANI): Foreign Secretaries of India and Pakistan – Shiv Shankar Menon and Salman Basheer – burnt the midnight oil on Tuesday to try to work out some kind of framework to lay the ground for the resumption of talks between the two countries.

Mandated by their respective Prime Ministers’ – Dr. Manmohan Singh and Yousuf Raza Gilani-to work out the modalities before the two heads of government meet on Thursday (July 16). Menon and Basheer interacted with each other without the assistance of aides late into the night.

The 90-minute meeting took place soon after the Indian delegation landed here from Paris after attending the French National Day celebrations there.

According to senior officials, the discussions between the two were good and detailed, and both agreed to meet again on Wednesday on the sidelines of the XVth Non-Aligned Summit that opens in this Red Sea resort today.

There were suggestions of some movement being made by both sides on the issue of terrorism and the possibility of a joint media appearance by the Prime Ministers’ of the two countries after they hear from their respective foreign secretaries.

Menon and Basheer are believed to have discussed the progress made by Islamabad in its probe into the 26/11 strikes and the steps taken to dismantle the terrorism infrastructure on its soil.

Menon and Basheer’s discussions are also believed to have covered Pakistan’s flip-flop over the arrest and release of Sayeed and the withdrawal of petitions challenging his release from the Supreme Court.

Ahead of the meeting between the two foreign secretaries and the two Prime Ministers’, Indian External Affairs Minister S M Krishna has demanded a “visible response” and undertaking from Pakistan on bringing the perpetrators of Mumbai terror attacks to justice.

Prime Minister Gilani, who also arrived here on Tuesday, has said that he will approach his meeting with Dr. Singh with an “open heart and a positive mind.”

But he refused to comment on the Punjab provincial government’s decision to withdraw the petitions that challenged last month’s release from house arrest of Jamaat-ud Dawa chief Hafiz Mohammed Sayeed.

Tuesday night’s talks come four days after Pakistan handed over a fresh dossier on its probe into the Mumbai terror attacks to India.

The dossier, handed over to the Indian High Commission officials in Islamabad on Saturday, identifies 13 new suspects and gives an update on Pakistan’s investigations into the November 26 attacks, sources said.

After Prime Minister Singh’s disclosure on Saturday that ISI chief Lt. Gen. Ahmed Shuja Pasha had met some Indian High Commission officials in Islamabad, speculation are rife about the powerful spy agency’s influence on the talks process.

At present, the Indian side is unwilling to hazard a guess on whether the ISI will be a part of the talks.

There is, however, a hope on the Indian side about some kind of commitment being made by Pakistan to bring the Mumbai terror accused quickly to justice and to stop the use of Pakistani soil for terror acts against India.

The Pakistani side is of the view that the composite dialogue process should not be held hostage to one case. (ANI)

akistan blames India for delaying Mumbai attack probe

Islamabad, July 12 (ANI): Rejecting the notion that it is not sincere in conducting its investigations into the Mumbai attack, Pakistan has blamed India for the delay in the probe.

Addressing a press conference here, the Prime Minister’s Advisor on Interior Affairs, Rehman Malik, said the trial of the Mumbai attack suspects would commence from July 18.

Malik claimed that the delay into the investigations was on the part of India, and that Islamabad has completed the probe much faster than New Delhi.

“India took 90 days to complete the investigations and submit a challan, while Pakistan submitted it just in 76 days,” he said.

Malik said every possible step was taken to ensure a fair and extensive probe, and added that Pakistani agencies left no stone unturned in the probe.

“Pakistani intelligence agencies worked hard to dig out the case and collect evidences and now no one could say that Pakistan was not conducting the investigations seriously,”he Nation quoted Malik, as saying.

He added that further investigations would continue.

Malik said five accused have been arrested so far while 13 others have been declared proclaimed offenders.

The arrested accused included Zakiur Rehman, the mastermind of the attack, Hamid min, Mazhar Iqbal, facilitators, Abdul Wajid, facilitator and an expert of computer network, and Shahid Jamil Riaz.

Commenting on the Samjhauta Express blast, Malik said the probe into that incident is as important as the November 2008 Mumbai terror attack, as a large number of Pakistani civilians were killed in it.

India has reacted strongly to Pakistan’s accusations.

Junior Foreign Minister Preneet Kaur rejected Islamabad’s charge that New Delhi has delayed in providing information.

“This is totally untrue and we (Indian authorities) have produced whatever we had,” Preneet Kaur told reporters in New Delhi.

“In fact even on the Samjhauta Express, the people who masterminded it were from Karachi and we have told that to them. They are sending us a dossier this evening, once it arrives our government will look at it and examine it,” she added. (ANI)

Good relations with India essential for people’s welfare: Zardari

Islamabad, July 1 (ANI): Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari has said it is important for both India and Pakistan to share a cordial relationship so as to establish peace in the region and fight against extremism.

“Good neighbourly relations were essential for the welfare of the people of both countries and also for fighting militancy,” presidential spokesman Farhatullah Babar quoted Zardari, as saying.

Babar said Pakistan’s High Commissioner to India, Shahid Malik called on President Zardari to discuss several issues regarding India.

Both the leaders also discussed about resumption of foreign secretary level talks and Mumbai attacks, The Dawn reports.

The foreign secreraties of both the countries are expected to meet later this month in Egypt on the sidelines of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) conference.

According to the sources, Pakistan is planning to send another dossier to India seeking more informations on the Samjahuta Express blast and November 2008 Mumbai carnage, as it believes that the two incidents are inter-related.

Sources added that the interior minister has already informed the Indian High Commissioner regarding it. (ANI)

Peter Andre compiling ‘dossier of disgrace’ to gain kids’ full custody

London, June 26 (ANI): Singer Peter Andre is reportedly preparing a divorce dossier of Jordan’s wild antics in a bid to gain full custody of the kids.

The ‘Mysterious Girl’ singer is likely to cite unreasonable behaviour in the family courts against his glamour model wife following her week of wild living on the party island of Ibiza.

According to pals, he was appalled by his wife’s brazen behaviour in Ibiza – but is secretly pleased she’s making herself appear a poor role model to the kids.

His lawyers are compiling a ‘dossier of disgrace’ detailing all her alleged terrible behaviour.

“Pete’s seething that he had to give the children back. After everything he’s seen her get up to in the last week, he feels they should stay with him,” the Sun quoted a source as saying.

“It’s even harder for him not to be able to talk to Jordan and tell her what the kids have been doing, and what their needs are.

“But Jordan is too unreasonable to have a sensible chat with him,” the source added. (ANI)

Pakistan demands more info on Mumbai attacks from India

Islamabad, May 7 (ANI): Pakistan on Thursday sought additional information on the Mumbai attacks from the Government of India “as soon as possible” so that it could put up a “credible prosecution” of all persons arrested by it for their alleged involvement in the terrorist strikes.

Pakistan would not be able to “put up a credible prosecution” of the persons arrested for alleged involvement in the terror attacks if New Delhi did not provide the additional information sought by Islamabad, said Foreign Office spokesman Abdul Basit on Thursday.

Pakistan is “very serious” about bringing to justice the persons it has arrested and it is thus necessary for India to provide the additional information and evidence “as soon as possible,” Basit told a weekly news briefing.

Basit said it in reply to a question on reported comments by Indian politicians about Pakistan not being serious about taking action against the persons it has arrested.

India has provided a dossier on the Mumbai attacks and responded to Pakistan’s 30 questions seeking additional information. Pakistan handed over to India another request for additional information last month. (ANI)

Mugabe, Tsvangirai hold talks as unity government hangs in balance

Harare – Zimbabwe’s President Robert Mugabe and Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai held talks Thursday on critical issues that threaten to derail their unity government, including Mugabe’s snatch of the telecommunications portfolio from his rival’s party.

Zimbabwe’s deputy prime minister Arthur Mutambara, leader of a breakaway faction of Tsvangirai’s Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), who is the third signatory to September’s power-sharing agreement confirmed the meeting, which he is also attending.

The meeting would address “political hygiene matters”, Mutambara said Wednesday.

Since its inauguration in February, the new government has been accused of failing to break with the repressive policies of the past.

On Wednesday, MDC ministers threatened to boycott a weekly cabinet meeting chaired by Mugabe after he unilaterally stripped an MDC minister of key powers.

Mugabe last week took telecommunications off Nelson Chamisa and gave the dossier to Transport Minister Nicholas Goche from his Zanu- PF party. The move outraged the MDC, particularly given that telecommunications covers spying.

The ongoing invasion of white-owned farms by Zanu-PF loyalists and Mugabe’s refusal to review his unilateral appointments of the central bank governor and attorney general are other issues threatening to scupper the deal and putting the skids on foreign aid and investment.

Finance Minister Tendai Biti has appealed for 10 billion dollars to rebuild the tattered economy but Western donors are waiting for proof of real reforms before committing to anything more than emergency relief for the millions of Zimbabweans, who cannot feed themselves.

The secretary for finance of Zimbabwe’s neighbour Botswana, whose President Ian Khama is a vocal critic of Mugabe, said Thursday his country had pledged lines of credit to the steel, manufacturing and leather industries.

Taufila Nyamadzabo refused to put a figure on the credit.

South Africa also said last week it was looking at providing aid for health and education and opening credit lines but has yet to announce a figure.(dpa)

Subba is Assam’s richest poll candidate

Tezpur (Assam), April 6 (IANS) Moni Kumar Subba, controversial Congress party MP and nominee for the Tezpur parliamentary seat in Assam, is undoubtedly the richest candidate in the state with cash, assets and investments worth more than Rs.600 million (Rs.60 crore).

Subba, fighting to retain the Tezpur seat in northern Assam for the fourth straight term, is also insured for a whopping Rs.1 billion.

In his affidavit accompanying his nomination paper, Subba declared investments, including bank balance and cash in hand at about Rs.560 million, more than 95 percent of which are investments in the share market.

Subba and his two wives, Jyoti Limboo and Tilmaya Chong, together possess gold and diamond jewellery worth about Rs.18.5 million.

The 51-year-old Subba also possesses land and flats in various parts of India worth about Rs.35 million.

‘I am sure to win the polls as people of my constituency love me a lot for the work I did for the overall development of the area,’ Subba told IANS. ‘I am the last person to buy votes with money.’

Subba, however, is mired in a blazing controversy with the Central Bureau Investigation (CBI) currently probing a case relating to the lawmaker’s citizenship.

The CBI was investigating the case following a public interest litigation (PIL) filed by Birendra Nath Singh, a resident of Noida (Uttar Pradesh), who alleged Subba was a Nepalese citizen and was a murder convict in Nepal.

During the 12th Lok Sabha elections, Subba in his nomination papers recorded his place of birth as Tezpur, Assam, his date of birth being March 16, 1951.

But his dossier during the 14th Lok Sabha Subba shows his place of birth as Dabgram (Darjeeling) in West Bengal, and the date of birth as March 16, 1958.

The discrepancies in his date of birth and place of birth while filing his nominations are issues that have created doubts over Subba’s antecedents.

‘All these things are already corrected and there are no anomalies in my records. I am born at Dabgram in 1958 and have been staying in Assam since 1962 after my father shifted to the state,’ Subba said.

There are reports in the media that alleged Subba alias Mani Raj Limbo was a murder convict in Nepal and he was imprisoned from 1971 to 1973 before he escaped to India.

‘Mani Raj Limbo is still alive and in Nepal. The Supreme Court of Nepal in its verdict said Limbo was in jail in Nepal till 1982. So how can Limbo and Subba be the same person…these are all stories concocted by the media,’ Subba said.

‘If I am Limbo then the Nepal government would have easily arrested me by taking the help of the Indian government,’ he added.

The Congress leader said the controversy over his nationality always resurfaces before general elections.

‘I don’t want controversies but people inimical to me try and drag me into them although these things are indirectly helping me win election after election,’ Subba said.

‘If I am a Nepali citizen then why would have the people of Tezpur, who are culturally and intellectually rich, vote me to power for three consecutive terms already?’ he asked.

Resume dialogue process, Pakistan urges India

Islamabad, April 2 (IANS) Pakistan Thursday urged India to resume the sub-continental composite dialogue process that has been frozen in the wake of the 26/11 Mumbai carnage, a suggestion New Delhi has repeatedly and flatly rejected.

‘It will be better to resume the dialogue process as it will be better for the region and for the progress and prosperity of the people,’ Foreign Office spokesman Abdul Basit said during his weekly briefing here.

According to Basit, the blame game between the two countries could not resolve their differences and they should, therefore, resume their dialogue process.

Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh Tuesday nixed the suggestion, which Pakistan has often made since the Mumbai carnage, saying Islamabad must show ‘visible results’ on how it has dealt with the information New Delhi has shared on those responsible for the terror attacks – if the dialogue process was to resume.

‘Pakistan has to prove (it) is doing all that is possible,’ Manmohan Singh said, responding to a suggestion from President Asif Ali Zardari that the dialogue resume.

‘Pakistan should show visible results on the 26/11 probe,’ Manmohan Singh had said.

India has blamed elements from Pakistan for the Nov 26-29, 2008 Mumbai mayhem that claimed the lives of more than 170 people, including 26 foreigners.

Nine of the 10 terrorists who staged the assault were killed and one of them, Ajmal Amir Kasab, was captured alive.

Kasab, who is now in the custody of the Mumbai police, has admitted to being a Pakistani national.

India had in January submitted a detailed dossier on the involvement of Pakistani groups in the attacks.

Pakistan, which has admitted that part of the Mumbai conspiracy was planned on its territory had in February submitted a set of 30 questions on the Indian dossier, to which New Delhi responded in March.

Basit, at his briefing, said the Indian response was being studied and Pakistan would respond appropriately.

Pakistan’s Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) has registered cases against eight Pakistanis for their alleged role in the Mumbai carnage.

Six of them have been arrested, while one is at large. Kasab is the eighth suspect.

Advani targets government’s policy on terror

Bhubaneshwar, Apr 1 (ANI): Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) prime ministerial candidate Lal Krishna Advani on Wednesday targeted Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh for his statement about the need for India and Pakistan fighting militancy jointly.

Dr. Singh on Tuesday said that India and Pakistan should jointly face the scourge of terrorism.

Addressing a news conference here, Advani termed the Central Government’s policy on terrorism was “deeply flawed”.

“It’s obvious from the Prime Minister’s statement that the UPA Government’s policy of fighting terrorism has been deeply flawed. The fact that Pakistan has been the victim of home-grown terrorist incidents cannot be an argument in favour of an Indo-Pak joint mechanism to fight terrorism,” he said.

Advani, who is on a two-day election campaign tour to Orissa, questioned the logic of India joining hands with Pakistan in the fight against militancy in the backdrop of Islamabad refusing to fulfill its commitments.

“I personally question the rationale of India joining hands with a country whose government has refused to fulfill its 2004 commitment to dismantle the anti-India terror infrastructure on its territory,” Advani added.

The attacks on Mumbai sparked tensions between India and Pakistan.

New Delhi said state agencies in Pakistan were involved in the attacks and provided a dossier of what it said was evidence.

Islamabad denied this and asked for more evidence. (ANI)

Manmohan Singh asks Pakistan to take concrete steps to fight terrorism

New Delhi, Mar 24 (ANI): Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Tuesday urged Pakistan to take concrete steps to fight terrorism and bring perpetrators of the Mumbai terror attacks to justice.

“We expect Pakistan to bring all the culprits to justice. We have made important diplomatic efforts, which have succeeded so far. For the first time, Pakistan has admitted that its own citizens have been involved in these horrible acts. We expect Islamabad to take the next sequential steps and ensure that justice is done and the culprits are punished. I can’t say that I am fully satisfied with the way the process is moving, but we still believe that diplomacy should be given a chance. No purpose is served by promoting war hysteria,” Singh told reporters here.

Earlier in March, India replied to the 30 questions raised by Pakistan over last November’s Mumbai attacks. Pakistan raised the questions in response to a dossier of evidence provided by India. ndia said the dossier pointed to Pakistan-based militants being behind the attacks that killed 166 people in Mumbai. (ANI)

ISI exists primarily to fight India: Expert

London, Mar.24 (ANI): Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) appears primarily to exist to fight India and to maintain a constant link between its political and military wings.

It spends most of its time monitoring whom to recruit from within and outside Pakistan for intelligence-related activity.

According to Amir Rana of the Pakistan Institute of Peace Studies, “Many of them (radical people and groups) are supported by the intelligence agencies, so they are very much tolerated here. They are not seen as a threat to Pakistan and they view themselves as legitimate.”

Rana’s comments assume importance in the wake of Pakistan saying that more than 20 Britons have spent time with radical militant groups and then returned to the UK.

A Sky News report claimed that most British Pakistanis are believed to come from Kashmir

It said the tracked men are said to have trained with extremist outfits linked to al Qaeda and the Taliban and are thought to pose a potential threat to British security.

The dossier of names is expected to be handed over to British anti-terrorist teams soon and is being seen as a big leap forward in the sharing of intelligence between the two countries.

But British authorities may wonder why the names were not handed over before the suspects re-entered the UK.

The details have been compiled by Pakistan’s intelligence service he ISI – and follow the Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s declaration that three-quarters of all serious terror plots in Britain have their roots in Pakistan.

The suspects are aged between 17 and 23 and have apparently created “sufficient suspicion” with their activities for the ISI to believe they pose a “potential danger” to Britain.

At least four are thought to have been fighting in Afghanistan – which means they may well have been attacking British troops there.

Intelligence officials say they have also heard “English accents” while listening to satellite and mobile phone chatter between the UK and Pakistan’s tribal heartlands.

One anti-terror expert told Sky News: “The ISI have never been happy about sharing information. They are pretty much a law unto themselves, but we’d certainly like more intelligence sharing.”

“The intelligence services here (in Pakistan) have much bigger things to worry about and these guys haven’t committed any crime on Pakistani soil,” said a Pakistani source. (ANI)

Pakistan should follow its commitment with tangible action: Mukherjee

New Delhi, Mar 14 (ANI): A day after India hand over replies to Pakistan’s 30 questions on the Mumbai terror attacks, External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee on Saturday said India now expect Islamabad to follow up its commitment with tangible action.

“Words and commitments should be followed by tangible action,” said Pranab during a press meet.

Pranab asked Pakistan to dismantle terror infrastructure on its soil and asked it to now bring the perpetrators of the Mumbai terror strikes to justice in a credible and justified way not just to India but also to international community.

He also said the evidence of dismantling of terror facilities should be shared not only with India but also with the international community.

On Friday India had handed over a 400-page dossier containing the requested replies of Pakistan’s 30 questions asked by it on the Mumbai attacks to Islamabad.

The second dossier was handed over by Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon to Pakistan’s High Commissioner Shahid Malik here.

The dossier includes the description of the terrorists killed, telephonic conversation between the terrorists and their handlers and fingerprints of all terrorists. (ANI)

India gives 400-page dossier to Pakistan on Mumbai attacks

New Delhi, Mar 13 (ANI): India on Friday handed over a 400-page dossier containing the requested replies of Pakistan’s 30 questions asked by it on the Mumbai attacks to Islamabad.

The second dossier was handed over by Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon to Pakistan’s High Commissioner Shahid Malik here.

The dossier includes the description of the terrorists killed, telephonic conversation between the terrorists and their handlers and fingerprints of all terrorists.

India, meanwhile, has now asked Pakistan to proceed fast in prosecuting those behind the Mumbai attacks.

Earlier in the day, Home Minister P. Chidambaram submitted answers to the 30 questions forwarded by Pakistan on the Mumbai attack to External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee.

Chidambaram said that each and every question posed by Islamabad had been answered adequately.

“India’s reply to Pakistan’s 30 queries is comprehensive and now it is up to Pakistan to prove its intent by acting on the details,” the Home Minister said. (ANI)

India’s response to Pakistan dossier on Mumbai terror attack soon

New Delhi, Feb 27 (ANI): External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee has said India will respond to Pakistan’s questions on the investigation into the Mumbai terror attacks whenever the government will be in a position to do so.

“When we received these questions seeking clarification on the dossier, which we submitted to the Pakistan authorities to help them investigate further, at that point of time we made the commitment that the Government of India will respond. We will give the clarification whatever is possible. Whenever we’ll be in a position to share it with Pakistan, it will be done soon,” Mukherjee said on the sidelines of the launch of Pan-Africa e-network project.

Earlier, Home Minister P Chidambaram said that New Delhi would respond to Pakistan’s dossier after filing of the charge sheet in the case in a Mumbai court.

The charge sheet, running into more than 11,000 pages, was filed by police before a Mumbai court on Wednesday.

Thirty-eight people, including Mohammad Ajmal Amir Kasab, the lone surviving terrorist of the 26/ 11 terror strikes, and two Pakistani soldiers, were charged with “waging war” against India.

On February 12, Islamabad had acknowledged for the first time that the November attack in Mumbai was launched from and partly planned in Pakistan.

Pakistani investigators lodged a police complaint against eight suspects, including Kasab. (ANI)

Now, Pakistan sets 30 day deadline for India to reply on its Mumbai dossier

Islamabad, Feb.26 (ANI): Pakistan has now demanded that India reply to its 30 queries, within 30 days, regarding the Mumbai terror attacks which it tabled before New Delhi following acceptance of its involvement in the 26/11.

Pakistan’s Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani’s Advisor on Interior Affairs, Rehman Malik has asked India to respond by mid-March so that the accused taken into custody could be interrogated during the remand period.

“The court can give maximum 30 days remand of the accused to FIA, therefore it is very necessary that India must give the reply the earliest,” The Dawn quoted Malik, as saying.

Talking to media persons after holding a meeting with Interior Secretary Kamal Shah, the Federal Investigation Agency’s (FIA) Director General (DG) Tariq Khosa, and other top officials, Malik said Islamabad is investigating the incident sincerely and is fully committed to bringing the perpetrators to book.

He said India’s response was necessary for further proceedings.

FIA DG Tariq Khosa informed that the Anti-Terrorism Court has granted remand to the accused persons till March 12.

Pakistan has asked India for several documents including the mobile phone number which Ajmal Amir Kasab, the lone surviving Mumbai terrorist, was using during the three day cease, and logs of terrorists’ and perpetrators’ cell phone interceptions .

It also demanded DNA samples and ‘clear’ photographs of the ten terrorists killed during the operation. (ANI)

Chargesheet against Mumbai attackers filed

New Delhi, Feb 25 (ANI): Mumbai Police on Wednesday filed an approximately 5,000-page chargesheet on the 26/11 terror attacks.

The detailed chargesheet, presented to Metropolitan Magistrate M J Mirza, included reports and forensic examination conducted by the FBI, which had been working along with central security agencies.

Mohammad Ajmal Amir Iman Kasab, the lone terrorist caught alive during the attacks, was not produced in court.

Besides Kasab, nine Lashkar-e-Taiba terrorists and twenty most wanted accused were named in the chargesheet.

These twenty accused are believed to be hiding in Pakistan and include Yousuf Muzzamil and Zaki-ur Rehman Lakhvi, the mastermind of 26/11.

Kasab faces numerous charges under the Indian Penal Code, ranging from waging war against a foreign country to murder. He has also been charged under the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act.

The chargesheet also presents Kasab’s conversation with his Pakistani handlers, his interrogation report and eyewitness accounts.

The names of the most wanted accused figure in Column Two of the chargesheet (those who could not be brought for trial), which will enable the police to seek a non-bailable warrant against them and subsequently an Interpol Red Corner Notice.

Meanwhile, Home Minister P Chidambaram said India would respond to Pakistan queries on the 26/11 dossier after the filing of the chargesheet in the Mumbai attack case.

“After the chargesheet is filed, we will reply,” Chidambaram told reporters outside Parliament. (ANI)

India to reply Pak’s query on dossier after chargesheet: PC

New Delhi, Feb 25 (PTI) India will respond to Pakistan’s questions on dossier after filing of chargesheet in Mumbai attack case, Home Minister P Chidambaram said. “After the chargesheet is filed, we will reply,” Chidambaram told reporters outside Parliament on being asked when India would reply to the set of 30 questions posed by Pakistan on the Indian dossier.

Chidambaram was speaking when the chargesheet in Mumbai case was about to be filed in a court in the financial capital. Minister of State for Home Shakeel Ahmad said the government will seek to clarify whatever doubts Pakistan may have with regard to the attack.

He said the footage of four terrorists roaming in Taj Hotel in Mumbai on November 26 last year, which was aired by a TV channel, should provide further evidence to Pakistan in connection with the probe. “So far they have acknowledged the nationality of only Ajmal Amir Kasab but there has no acknowledgement by Pakistan of the nationality of his associates, who died during the attack.

The footage should help Pakistan in identifying them,” he said. At the same time, he said Pakistan should also hand over 40 fugitives of Indian law, which New Delhi has demanded.

“This is our target.” PTI.

India to respond to Pak action on Mumbai dossier: Pranab Mukherjee

New Delhi, Feb 24 (ANI): External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee on Tuesday said that New Delhi would respond to Pakistani action on Mumbai dossier.

Speaking to media persons on Tuesday after a high-level meeting with the officials, Mukherjee said, “So far the composite dialogue is concerned, it is paused. We expect Pakistan to do more in respect of dismantling the terror infrastructure and also to bring the perpetrators of terror attacks to justice.

The process is on. We have received their response. We are going to send our response today.”

India handed over the dossier to Pakistan in January that contained the confession of the gunman, satellite phone intercepts between the attackers and their handlers in Pakistan, and a list of Pakistani-made weapons used by the militants in Mumbai attacks.

Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani’s Interior Adviser Rehman Malik had told a news conference in Islamabad on February 12 that Pakistan was holding in custody the ringleader and five other suspects in the conspiracy behind the Mumbai attacks.

Malik had said that six suspects were in custody and two were known, but still at large. The findings were being shared with India’s High Commission in Islamabad. (ANI)