CaptainJackSparrow
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WHAT WE DID!
NEW DELHI: India has agreed "in principle" to allow an investigating team from Pakistan to question Mumbai witnesses of the 2008 terror attack, Home minister P. Chidambaram said Tuesday.
But he added that Islamabad had been asked if Indian investigators could similarly question people accused of conspiring and helping execute the Mumbai carnage that killed 166 people including foreigners.
"We have agreed that they should come to India to record the evidence (about the Mumbai attack)," Chidambaram told reporters here at his monthly press conference.
"But we have also sent them a request asking them if they would agree to a team from India to question the people who are suspects," he said. New Delhi was awaiting a reply.
India allows Pakistani team access to 26/11 witnesses - Times Of India
WHAT THEY DID!
Pakistani authorities have declined an Indian request to send an inquiry commission to interrogate LeT commander Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi and six other suspects charged with involvement in the Mumbai attacks, a media report said on Sunday. "There is no law under which we could allow the Indian investig
ators to grill the seven accused, who are already in judicial custody," a senior unnamed interior ministry official was quoted as saying by the Dawn newspaper.
India had sent an official letter expressing its willingness to allow a Pakistani commission to visit India to interview key officials linked with the probe into the 2008 Mumbai attacks that killed 166 people. In the same letter, it had asked Pakistan to allow its team to visit Islamabad to interrogate the seven accused.
Home minister P Chidambaram told the media on March 2 this year that India had sent Pakistan "a request asking them if they would agree to a team from India to question the people who are suspects."
Wajid Zia, chief of the Federal Investigation Agency's joint investigating team that probed the Mumbai incident, sent a reply to the interior ministry's National Crisis Management Cell, which has forwarded it to the foreign ministry for delivery to Indian authorities.
Zia's letter states that Pakistan's request for sending a commission to India to interrogate persons, including the magistrate who recorded the lone surviving terrorist Ajmal Kasab's statement, is based on sections 503, 505 and 507 of the Code Criminal Procedure, sources told Dawn.
The letter also states that the seven Pakistani accused Lakhvi, Hammad Amin Sadiq, Mazhar Iqbal alias Abu Al-Qama, Abdul Wajid alias Zarar Shah, Mohammad Younas Anjum, Shahid Jameel Riaz and Jamil Ahmed -- have been remanded into judicial custody.
The letter questioned the legal basis of the Indian request to interrogate these suspects, sources said.
The seven Pakistani suspects are currently being held in Adiala Jail in Rawalpindi.
Pak turns down request on 26/11 inquiry: Report - Hindustan Times
India allows Pakistani team access to 26/11 witnesses
NEW DELHI: India has agreed "in principle" to allow an investigating team from Pakistan to question Mumbai witnesses of the 2008 terror attack, Home minister P. Chidambaram said Tuesday.
But he added that Islamabad had been asked if Indian investigators could similarly question people accused of conspiring and helping execute the Mumbai carnage that killed 166 people including foreigners.
"We have agreed that they should come to India to record the evidence (about the Mumbai attack)," Chidambaram told reporters here at his monthly press conference.
"But we have also sent them a request asking them if they would agree to a team from India to question the people who are suspects," he said. New Delhi was awaiting a reply.
India allows Pakistani team access to 26/11 witnesses - Times Of India
WHAT THEY DID!
Pak turns down request on 26/11 inquiry: Report
Pakistani authorities have declined an Indian request to send an inquiry commission to interrogate LeT commander Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi and six other suspects charged with involvement in the Mumbai attacks, a media report said on Sunday. "There is no law under which we could allow the Indian investig
ators to grill the seven accused, who are already in judicial custody," a senior unnamed interior ministry official was quoted as saying by the Dawn newspaper.
India had sent an official letter expressing its willingness to allow a Pakistani commission to visit India to interview key officials linked with the probe into the 2008 Mumbai attacks that killed 166 people. In the same letter, it had asked Pakistan to allow its team to visit Islamabad to interrogate the seven accused.
Home minister P Chidambaram told the media on March 2 this year that India had sent Pakistan "a request asking them if they would agree to a team from India to question the people who are suspects."
Wajid Zia, chief of the Federal Investigation Agency's joint investigating team that probed the Mumbai incident, sent a reply to the interior ministry's National Crisis Management Cell, which has forwarded it to the foreign ministry for delivery to Indian authorities.
Zia's letter states that Pakistan's request for sending a commission to India to interrogate persons, including the magistrate who recorded the lone surviving terrorist Ajmal Kasab's statement, is based on sections 503, 505 and 507 of the Code Criminal Procedure, sources told Dawn.
The letter also states that the seven Pakistani accused Lakhvi, Hammad Amin Sadiq, Mazhar Iqbal alias Abu Al-Qama, Abdul Wajid alias Zarar Shah, Mohammad Younas Anjum, Shahid Jameel Riaz and Jamil Ahmed -- have been remanded into judicial custody.
The letter questioned the legal basis of the Indian request to interrogate these suspects, sources said.
The seven Pakistani suspects are currently being held in Adiala Jail in Rawalpindi.
Pak turns down request on 26/11 inquiry: Report - Hindustan Times