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3 held in Mumbai with suspected radioactive material

Mumbai: Mumbai Police have arrested three people with five kg of suspected radioactive material in Panvel, Navi Mumbai.

The seized material has been sent to Bhabha Atomic Research Centre for testing.

The arrests were made by Navi Mumbai Crime Branch.

3 held in Mumbai with suspected radioactive material
 
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if the story does turn out to be true that would make a pretty large dirty bomb.
 
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looks like the story has change a bit from 5kg of yellow cake uranium. To an unknown amount of depleted uranium. still up in the air if the story is true or not.
 
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if the story does turn out to be true that would make a pretty large dirty bomb.

But this is not the first time! many kilos have been reported stolem in past from various facilities.

You worry more of dirty bomb, where as we woryy more about the industrial practices of indians, which make indo-pak a risky place to live.... one likely accident and we are all exposed to radiation.
 
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As Mumbai carnage unfolded, Headley planned next strike



Praveen Swami

Temperamental Lashkar operative broke ranks with commanders to focus on attack in Europe

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He wanted to bomb offices of Danish newspaper that published cartoons of the Prophet


Headley’s arrest compelled Lashkar to drop its plan to attack National Defence College in Delhi
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NEW DELHI: Even as millions of people across the world watched the 2008 November carnage unfold in Mumbai, the Lashkar-e-Taiba secret agent who helped plan the massacre was preparing for another murderous attack.

Pakistani-American jihadist David Headley hoped to bomb the offices of Danish newspaper Jyllands Posten, whose publications of cartoons of Prophet Mohammad in 2005 offended many Muslims across the world.

Headley’s temperamental pursuit of what he called the “Mickey Mouse Project” led him to defy his Lashkar commanders, and undermined the jihadist group’s hopes of attacking the National Defence College here — forcing it to launch an alternative operation targeting the Indian High Commission in Dhaka that police in Bangladesh broke up last month.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation’s documents show Headley began planning the “Mickey Mouse Project” in October 2008 — just days before the 10-man Lashkar assault team used video footage he had gathered in five visits to Mumbai to stage an attack that claimed 163 lives.

That month, Headley initiated an e-mail correspondence on the “Mickey Mouse Project” with Abdul Rehman Hashim Syed, a former Pakistan Army officer, who had become a ranking Lashkar commander in charge of the terror group’s networks in Bangladesh.

During his first visit to Copenhagen in January 2009, Headley visited the offices of Jyllands Posten. He expressed an interest in purchasing advertising space, claiming to be a representative of the Chicago-based First World Immigration. First World’s owner, Tahawwur Rana, was an old school friend of Headley’s, and the firm provided him cover for his operations in Mumbai.

Later that year, Headley travelled to Pakistan at Syed’s invitation. Both are believed to have met with top Harkat ul-Jihad-e-Islami commander Illyas Kashmiri — an al-Qaeda linked jihadist, who is among Pakistan’s most-wanted men — at a training camp near Razmak, in Waziristan.

Headley reacted with ire to a May 4, 2009 post on a web group run by former students of his school in Pakistan, claiming that there was little support for al-Qaeda and the Taliban in the North West Frontier Province.

“The bazaar,” Headley wrote of his own visit, “is bustling with Chechens, Uzbeks, Tajiks, Russians, Bosnians, some from European Union countries and, of course, our Arab brothers. According to my [original emphasis] survey, the foreign population is a little less than a third of the total. Any Waziri or Mehsud I spoke to seemed grateful to God for the privilege of being able to host the Foreign Mujahideen.”


Early on, Headley believed the “Mickey Mouse Project” had the Lashkar’s support. Late this summer though, the Lashkar lost interest in the Danish plot. Lashkar commander Sajid Mir, who played a key role in organising the Mumbai attacks, e-mailed Headley on July 3, asking to meet with him to discuss “some new investment plans”: code, the FBI says, for an attack in India.

However, in correspondence that continued until late August, it became clear that Headley was focussed on the “Mickey Mouse Project.” Late in August, Headley promised Mir he would to travel to Pakistan to discuss the Indian operation — but pushed forward with his Danish project.

In July 2008, Headley flew to Copenhagen and carried out a second round of reconnaissance. He returned to the U.S. on August 5, and was interviewed at Atlanta airport by a customs official — a consequence, it is likely, of his past criminal record for smuggling narcotics. Headley told the authorities he was in Europe on business for Rana’s immigration firm. However, FBI documents record, a search of Headley’s luggage “revealed no papers, flyers or any documents for First World”.

Mir, worried at Headley’s silence during these weeks, sent an e-mail enquiring about his whereabouts on August 7. Syed was briefly detained by the Pakistani authorities during Headley’s European travels, and the Lashkar commander warned he might have betrayed Headley’s plans.

In an extended September 17, 2009 phone conversation with Syed, Headley railed against Lashkar leaders like Mir who, he asserted, had “rotten guts.” Instead of backing the “Mickey Mouse Project,” he complained, “their eyes are again in that direction [India]”. “I am just telling you,” he lectured Syed, “that the companies in your competition have started handling themselves in a far better way.”

FBI agents also heard a frustrated Headley tell a contact in Pakistan that “business must go on.” “I don’t care if I am working for Microsoft or for General Electric or Phillips,” Headley said, an elliptical reference to the fact that he was little concerned with allegiance to particular jihadist groups as long as they offered him a platform to carry out the attacks he wanted.

Headley’s arrest in September compelled the Lashkar to drop its plans to attack the National Defence College. Bangladesh-based Afghan jihad veteran Abdul Mutaliq was charged with organising an attack on the Indian High Commission in Dhaka, timed to coincide with the anniversary of the November 26 attacks. Police in Bangladesh held Mutaliq along with three Pakistani Lashkar operatives despatched by Syed last month, pre-empting the attacks.

The Hindu : Front Page : As Mumbai carnage unfolded, Headley planned next strike
 
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26/11 probe: US may ask for Pak major's extradition
Rajeev Deshpande, TNN 9 December 2009, 09:00am IST

ON BOARD AIR INDIA ONE: The FBI team that visited India in the wake of the arrest of Lashkar-e-Taiba terror duo David Coleman Headley and Tahawwur Hussain Rana has not only provided their links to the 26/11 attacks but also contacts with figures in Pakistan, including, possibly, serving officers of Pakistani army.

Speaking to journalists on the way back from Moscow, foreign secretary Nirupama Rao said India would be "naturally" keen to interrogate Rana and Headley. "I believe the FBI has given incriminating evidence and there are links to conspirators in Pakistan," said Rao.

Meanwhile in Delhi, sources in the government indicated that FBI has provided details of the involvement of serving officers of Pakistan army in the 26/11 plot. They also said that Mumbai police would file a supplementary chargesheet in the 26/11 case naming Headley. If the US indicts Rana in the 26/11 case, India will include his name as well in the chargesheet.

India's complaint that Pakistan is not doing enough to bring the perpetrators of 26/11 to book is shared by the Russians. This is reflected in the India-Russia joint statement as well with the two sides noting that nations must act on the "prosecute or extradite" principle in dealing with terrorists. There is also mention of respecting UN resolutions on specific outfits -- read LeT -- that have been declared as terrorist organizations.

Apart from Ajmal Kasab, Headley is another 26/11 accused in police custody in a country other than Pakistan. His role has emerged as more central to the attack on Mumbai than that of Fahim Ansari and Sabauddin, two other accused in Indian custody.

The US will certainly ask for the extradition of retired Pakistan army major Abdur Rehman Hashim Syed, who, according to the FBI chargesheet, was arrested in Pakistan earlier this year, but subsequently released.

The FBI team that was in New Delhi left for Pakistan on Monday.

Until now, the FBI had not been permitted access to the 7 Pakistanis charged for the 26/11 attack in Pakistan. So its difficult to guess whether Pakistan will give any access to Rehman. According to sources, Pakistan's stock response has been that since he's retired, they had no control over Rehman's movements.

It has to be remembered that Ilyas Kashmiri of HuJI, who allegedly worked closely with the LeT and Headley on the Mumbai attacks, was once a commander in Pakistan's elite Special Services Group.

According to sources familiar with the workings of the ISI, mid-level army officers are regularly "retired" and seconded off to the ISI, so the army can maintain plausible deniability if things go wrong.

26/11 probe: US may ask for Pak major's extradition - India - The Times of India
 
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Headley planned synchronised attacks on Jewish houses in India - Hindustan Times

Press Trust Of India
Mumbai, December 09, 2009
First Published: 16:51 IST(9/12/2009)
Last Updated: 17:01 IST(9/12/2009

The last visit of American terror suspect David Headley, before being arrested by the FBI, to India in March this year was to finalise synchronised terror strikes on Jewish houses located in five cities at the instance of terror outfit Lashker-e-Taiba.

Piecing together the travel trail of Headley during his visit to India in March this year, security agencies, who were briefed by FBI and US Department of Justice officials in New Delhi recently, are understood to have concluded that the US terror suspect was scouting only the Jewish targets including the El Al airlines office in Mumbai.

Headley, born to a Pakistani father and whose earlier name was Daood Gilani, has been charged by the FBI for conspiring in the audacious Mumbai attack of last year which left over 160 dead including six foreigners. On the Indian side, the National Investigating Agency (NIA), which was formed in the aftermath of 26/11, was probing the role of Headley and his Pakistani-Canadian accomplice Tahawwur Rana.

Sources privy to the investigations said that Headley had carried out reconnaissance of Israeli airlines -- El AI--office located at Cuffe Parade in March this year before moving to the national capital where he chose to stay in a small hotel at Pahargunj area.

Very quickly, the security agencies carried out the recce of the area and found a Chabad House, barely 300 metres from the hotel -- De Holiday Inn.

The Chabad House in Pahargunj, Delhi is located in narrow lanes and is frequented generally by backpackers from Israel while either going to Dharamshala in Himachal Pradesh or to western parts of the country.

The sources said Headley also visited the house and posed as Jew while carrying out his reconnaissance mission for terror group Lashker.

Statements of a few have been recorded by the NIA, the sources said.

From Delhi, Headley travelled to Pushkar in the outskirts of Ajmer in Rajasthan where he insisted on a room opposite a Jewish prayer centre claiming he was a Jew and wanted "holy sight".

The hotel staff, in their statements to the NIA, said that 48-year-old Headley had insisted on the room view which was right opposite to the prayer hall of the Jew centre in Pushkar.

After staying there for three days, Headley moved to Goa where he stayed at a guest house located in Anjuna village along the coast of Arabian sea before proceeding towards Pune where he recced the area around Koregaon Park.

Though initially it was believed that he wanted to target the foreigners coming to the Osho Ashram, it was found later that he had scouted the area for targeting the Jewish prayer centre in the area.

Headley later left for Mumbai where he again went to the Cuffe Prade area and apparently firmed up some loose ends in targeting the Israel Airways office before flying to Pakistan from the Chatrapati Shivaji airport.
 
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Not sure why the stupid Indian media keeps using the name David Headley. His actual name is Daood Sayed Gilani which he used for his entire life expect this mission. Its not like he met the PM of India with this name.

Apparently an "American" sounding name is more interesting for the indian media which creates more masala than the typical kind of names that pops up in the media every other day associated with terrorism. Its not even like they refer to an alias. Sad that media has really stooped to such low level these days.

Who the hell cares about only this jerk. He was just another link in the group with a scout mission as his duties. So what information India needs more now to go about on another round of dupatta with tears in front of the rest of the world? If Pakistan is retarded, India is impotent and not really sure what is more pathetic.
 
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So the Mumbai is situated in USA??? if not why would US ask for extradition of anyone.

And Zombie your media also failed to mention or may be having some memory laps to mention headly was CIA agent too.
 
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