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India says
LeT behind Mumbai train bombings
MUMBAI—Indian police have blamed July's deadly train bombings in Mumbai
on Pakistan's intelligence agency and the outlawed militant group
Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT).
"We have solved the 7/11 bomb blast case," Mumbai police commissioner
A.N. Roy said, referring to the July 11 attacks that killed 186 people
and injured more than 800. "This whole business was planned by the ISI
(Inter-Services Intelligence) in Pakistan and the LeT, and local
operatives here helped them," he told a news conference on Saturday. LeT
has been blamed for previous attacks in India. Pakistan and LeT have
repeatedly denied involvement.
In July, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had said that the
attackers had support "from across the border," a charge that stalled
the peace process with Pakistan, with which India has fought three wars.
Seven blasts went off in the space of 15 minutes along Mumbai's western
railway line, tearing open first-class train carriages that were packed
with people travelling home from work. Analysts believe the bombers
hoped to fuel Hindu-Muslim tensions and may have targeted first-class
carriages to maximise casualties among wealthy Hindus in Mumbai, India's
financial capital.
Roy, who gave no explanation to back his allegations that the ISI
planned the bombings, said police had arrested 15 people so far, of
which three may be released. "The role of 12 people has been directly
established," he said. "Many went to Pakistan at different times for
training."
He said 15 to 20 kilograms (33 to 44 pounds) of the explosive RDX "was
brought (into India) by a Pakistani man." The bombs were "kept in bags
and then camouflaged by newspapers and umbrellas" in the trains, he
said. Roy said that Indian police had found no evidence that Al-Qaeda
was invovled in the explosions.—Agencies |