India questions man accused of masterminding Mumbai attacks after extradition

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India released a photograph of Rana arriving in Delhi, taken from his back, dressed in a brown jumpsuit and guarded by NIA officers.

India released a photograph of Rana arriving in Delhi, taken from his back, dressed in a brown jumpsuit and guarded by NIA officers.

PHOTO: AFP

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- Indian investigative agencies on April 11 questioned a man they extradited from the US and charged with being a “mastermind” of the deadly 2008 Mumbai siege.

India accuses Tahawwur Hussain Rana, 66, of being a member of the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) group, designated by the UN as a terrorist organisation.

Rana, a Pakistan-born Canadian, has denied all charges – including waging war against India, conspiring to commit murder and acts of terrorism. He could face the death penalty if convicted.

New Delhi blamed the LeT group – as well as intelligence officials from New Delhi’s arch-enemy Pakistan – for the 2008 Mumbai attacks when 10 Islamist gunmen carried out a multi-day siege of the country’s financial capital.

Nine of the attackers died in the siege, while one captured alive was tried and hanged.

India’s National Investigation Agency (NIA), which accuses Rana of being the attacks’ “mastermind”, took him into custody under heavy guard after he arrived in a special flight to the capital New Delhi on the evening of April 10.

“Rana will remain in custody for 18 days, during which the agency will question him in detail in order to unravel the complete conspiracy behind the deadly 2008 attacks,” NIA said.

The man, who served in the Pakistani army’s medical corps, faces 10 criminal charges including conspiracy, murder, commission of a terrorist act and forgery.

Rana, who has denied the charges, is accused by India of helping his long-time friend David Coleman Headley, who was sentenced by a US court in 2013 to 35 years in prison after pleading guilty to aiding LeT militants, including by scouting target locations in Mumbai.

He is accused of playing a smaller role than Headley, but India maintains he is one of the key plotters.

He was

flown to India after the US Supreme Court in April rejected his bid

to remain in the US, where he was serving a 14-year sentence related to another LeT-linked attack.

India released a photograph of Rana arriving in Delhi, taken from his back, dressed in a brown jumpsuit and guarded by NIA officers.

It also accused Pakistan of direct involvement in the Mumbai attacks and Rana of having connections with its intelligence agencies, charges that Islamabad denies.

Pakistan’s foreign ministry spokesman Shafqat Ali said that Rana “did not apply to renew Pakistani documents over the past two decades”. AFP

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