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Ajmal Kasab sent to the gallows
May 06, 2010
Mumbai: The Indian judge on Thursday sentenced Ajmal Kasab to death, the man convicted of murder and waging war on India for his role in the deadly 2008 Mumbai attacks.
Judge M L Tahaliyani imposed the death penalty against Mohammed Ajmal Amir Kasab, 22, after he was found guilty at a special prison court on Monday after a year-long trial.
He should be hanged by the neck until he is dead, he said. Branded a killing machine and cruelty incarnate by the prosecution, Kasab was the only gunman caught alive during the assault in November 2008 that left 166 people dead.
Public prosecutor Ujjwal Nikam had called for the death penalty because of the premeditated nature of the attacks, which saw 10 Islamist gunmen attack hotels, a railway station, a restaurant and a Jewish centre during a 60-hour siege.
Observers say the death penalty was likely to trigger a lengthy, possibly open-ended, appeal through the Indian courts.
The government officially supports capital punishment for what the Supreme Court in New Delhi has called the rarest of rare cases but no execution has been carried out since 2004 and only two since 1998.
Many pleas for clemency to the president are still pending, including ones from the killers of former prime minister Rajiv Gandhi, who was assassinated in 1991, and a Kashmiri separatist who attacked Indias parliament in 2001.
The prosecution had a wealth of evidence against Kasab, including DNA and fingerprints, security camera footage, photographs and hundreds of witnesses. An image of him carrying a powerful AK-47 assault rifle and backpack at Mumbais main railway station, where he and an accomplice killed 52 people, has become a defining image of the atrocity.
Families of some of the victims have long called for Kasabs execution, and the clamour for him to be put to death grew louder after Mondays widely expected guilty verdict.
Defence lawyer K.P. Pawar has argued against capital punishment, suggesting that his client was brainwashed into committing the offences while under the influence of Pakistan-based extremists.
Even after Thursdays sentence, there will remain a feeling in India that closure on the devastating attacks will only come if the alleged masterminds of the attacks in Pakistan are convicted.
The Indian government said the verdict on Kasab sent a strong message to Pakistan not to export terror beyond its borders. New Delhi, which suspended peace talks with Islamabad after the attacks, now wants Pakistan to convict the founder of the Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) militant group, Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, and key operative Zarar Shah.
Hafiz Saeed, head of the Jamaat-ud-Dawa charity, which is seen as a front for the LeT, is the third mastermind blamed by India.
The Mumbai court ruled that all three were part of the conspiracy. Lakhvi and Shah are currently on trial in Pakistan. Kasab was a mere cog in the machine, wrote commentator Manoj Joshi in the Mail Today tabloid.
The real machine, Lashkar-e-Taiba, continues to flourish in Pakistan, brainwashing more young men, and arming and equipping them to wreak more mayhem.
Other commentators doubt that Kasabs case will have any effect on either curbing extremism or improving relations between the two neighbours, which have fought three wars since independence from Britain in 1947.
The executive director of the Institute of Conflict Management in New Delhi, Ajai Sahni, said the Kasab case was completely irrelevant to the wider context.
If hes convicted and hanged, its still going to be years given our legal system, the specialist on extremist groups told AFP. The fundamentals of the conflict between India and Pakistan and the trajectory of terrorism are not going to be radically affected by this (case).
Ajmal Kasab sent to the gallows – The Express Tribune
May 06, 2010
Mumbai: The Indian judge on Thursday sentenced Ajmal Kasab to death, the man convicted of murder and waging war on India for his role in the deadly 2008 Mumbai attacks.
Judge M L Tahaliyani imposed the death penalty against Mohammed Ajmal Amir Kasab, 22, after he was found guilty at a special prison court on Monday after a year-long trial.
He should be hanged by the neck until he is dead, he said. Branded a killing machine and cruelty incarnate by the prosecution, Kasab was the only gunman caught alive during the assault in November 2008 that left 166 people dead.
Public prosecutor Ujjwal Nikam had called for the death penalty because of the premeditated nature of the attacks, which saw 10 Islamist gunmen attack hotels, a railway station, a restaurant and a Jewish centre during a 60-hour siege.
Observers say the death penalty was likely to trigger a lengthy, possibly open-ended, appeal through the Indian courts.
The government officially supports capital punishment for what the Supreme Court in New Delhi has called the rarest of rare cases but no execution has been carried out since 2004 and only two since 1998.
Many pleas for clemency to the president are still pending, including ones from the killers of former prime minister Rajiv Gandhi, who was assassinated in 1991, and a Kashmiri separatist who attacked Indias parliament in 2001.
The prosecution had a wealth of evidence against Kasab, including DNA and fingerprints, security camera footage, photographs and hundreds of witnesses. An image of him carrying a powerful AK-47 assault rifle and backpack at Mumbais main railway station, where he and an accomplice killed 52 people, has become a defining image of the atrocity.
Families of some of the victims have long called for Kasabs execution, and the clamour for him to be put to death grew louder after Mondays widely expected guilty verdict.
Defence lawyer K.P. Pawar has argued against capital punishment, suggesting that his client was brainwashed into committing the offences while under the influence of Pakistan-based extremists.
Even after Thursdays sentence, there will remain a feeling in India that closure on the devastating attacks will only come if the alleged masterminds of the attacks in Pakistan are convicted.
The Indian government said the verdict on Kasab sent a strong message to Pakistan not to export terror beyond its borders. New Delhi, which suspended peace talks with Islamabad after the attacks, now wants Pakistan to convict the founder of the Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) militant group, Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, and key operative Zarar Shah.
Hafiz Saeed, head of the Jamaat-ud-Dawa charity, which is seen as a front for the LeT, is the third mastermind blamed by India.
The Mumbai court ruled that all three were part of the conspiracy. Lakhvi and Shah are currently on trial in Pakistan. Kasab was a mere cog in the machine, wrote commentator Manoj Joshi in the Mail Today tabloid.
The real machine, Lashkar-e-Taiba, continues to flourish in Pakistan, brainwashing more young men, and arming and equipping them to wreak more mayhem.
Other commentators doubt that Kasabs case will have any effect on either curbing extremism or improving relations between the two neighbours, which have fought three wars since independence from Britain in 1947.
The executive director of the Institute of Conflict Management in New Delhi, Ajai Sahni, said the Kasab case was completely irrelevant to the wider context.
If hes convicted and hanged, its still going to be years given our legal system, the specialist on extremist groups told AFP. The fundamentals of the conflict between India and Pakistan and the trajectory of terrorism are not going to be radically affected by this (case).
Ajmal Kasab sent to the gallows – The Express Tribune