Pakistan Takes Heat Over Mumbai Massacre
India Demands "Strong Action" Against Those Behind Deadly Attacks; Details Emerge About Gunmen's Training
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Women attend a memorial service at a synagogue in Mumbai, India, Monday, Dec. 1, 2008. (AP Photo)
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This image taken from a grainy cell phone video allegedly shows the only suspect in the Mumbai terror attacks to be captured alive being beaten by bystanders and police before his arrest, Dec. 27, 2008. (CBS)
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In this Nov. 26, 2008 file photo, a gunman identified by police as Ajmal Qasab walks through the Chatrapathi Sivaji Terminal railway station in Mumbai, India. (Mumbai Mirror, Sebastian D'souza)
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Fire engulfs part of the Taj Hotel in Mumbai, India, Nov. 27, 2008. (AP Photo/Gautam Singh)
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People place petals and touch the photographs of slain policemen at a prayer meeting to pay tribute to Mumbai's policemen who lost their lives in the recent terrorist attacks, Sunday, Nov. 30, 2008. (AP Photo/Gautam Singh)
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Play CBS Video Video Exclusive: Mumbai Arrest "CBS News EXCLUSIVE:" Grainy cell-phone video obtained exclusively by CBS News allegedly shows police beating the only suspect to be caught alive in the Mumbai, India terror attacks.
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Video Mumbai Suspect Caught Alive The Indian government captured one of the suspected terrorists in the Mumbai terror attacks. The suspect admitted he belonged to a Pakistani militant group. Celia Hatton reports.
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Video Looking For Answers Following the massacre in Mumbai, officials lowered the death toll to 174 and the only surviving attacker claims to belong to a Pakistani militant group. Celia Hatton has more.
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Timeline Mumbai Terror A timeline of the terrorist attacks in Mumbai that left more than 170 people dead.
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Photo Essay Mumbai Mourns Residents hold candlelight vigils, leave flowers in memory of those killed in terror attacks.
The only known surviving attacker told police that his group trained for months in camps operated by a banned Pakistani militant group, learning close-combat techniques, explosives training and other tactics for their three-day siege.
A grainy cell-phone video obtained by CBS News shows the moments before police in Mumbai arrested the suspect.
Teams from the FBI and Britain's Scotland Yard met with top Indian police as they prepared to help collect evidence, a police official said.
Soldiers removed the remaining bodies from the shattered Taj Mahal hotel, where the standoff finally ended Saturday morning, with at least 172 people dead and 239 wounded. The army had already cleared other siege sites, including the five-star Oberoi hotel and the Mumbai headquarters of an ultra-Orthodox Jewish group.
McKinney and Jan Taylor of Virginia were trapped for nearly two days in the Taj Mahal hotel as gunshots and explosions echoed outside their room. One of the gunmen's bullets actually pierced their hotel room door.
"Every time there was an explosion out in the hall, I'd open the door just a little bit," Mr. Taylor told CBS Evening News anchor Katie Couric. "And about the fourth time I opened it, I start startled some person out in the hall, slammed the door real fast and locked it and about that time he fired at the door and it missed me by about six inches."
When newspaper photographer Sebastien D'Souza heard explosions at Mumbai's main train station, he grabbed his camera and tracked the militants for 45 minutes, reports CBS News' Celia Hatton.
"They know what they're doing. I think they wanted maximum damage because they killed randomly, anybody," D'Souza told Hatton.
India's financial hub returned to normal Monday to some degree, with parents dropping their children off at school and shopkeepers opening for the first time since the attacks, which Indian authorities blamed on the banned Pakistani militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba.
"I think this is the first Monday I am glad to be coming to work," said Donica Trivedi, 23, an employee of a public relations agency.
Jewelry stores, clothing shops and food kiosks in a winding side street near the Jewish center were back in business. But the normally bustling street was half-empty, and business owners said customers were slow in returning to an area so close to the violence.
The 60-hour attack, apparently carried out by 10 gunmen, exposed glaring weakness in India's security forces and police. In the past two days, the country's top law enforcement official has resigned and two top state officials have offered to quit amid growing criticism that the attackers appeared better trained, better coordinated and better armed than police.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh promised to strengthen maritime and air security and look into creating a new federal investigative agency.
While the cross-border rhetoric between Pakistan and India has increased since the attacks, both countries - by their often-antagonistic standards - carefully refrained from making statements that could quickly lead to a buildup of troops along their heavily militarized frontier.
In India, Pakistan's high commissioner to the country met with Foreign Ministry officials and was told that "elements from Pakistan" had carried out the attacks, said ministry spokesman Vishnu Prakash. His phrasing, though, carefully avoided blaming the Pakistani government.
The commissioner was told that India "expects that strong action would be taken against those elements," Prakash said.
India's demands were reinforced by the United States as Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who will visit India later this week, said the perpetrators of attacks "must be brought to justice."
Pakistan must "follow the evidence wherever it leads," she said during a visit in London. "This is a time for complete, absolute, total transparency and cooperation, and that's what we expect."
Pakistan has repeatedly insisted it was not behind the attacks. Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari said Monday the gunmen were "non-state actors," and warned against letting their actions lead to greater regional enmity.
"Such a tragic incident must bring opportunity rather than the defeat of a nation," Zardari told Arj television. "We don't think the world's great nations and countries can be held hostage by non-state actors."
Pakistan said its foreign secretary "condemned the barbaric attacks" and again pledged his country's cooperation during a meeting Monday with India's high commissioner in Islamabad.
The sole surviving attacker, Ajmal Qasab, told police that his group trained over about six months in camps operated by Lashkar in Pakistan, learning close-combat techniques, hostage-taking, handling of explosives, satellite navigation, and high-seas survival skills, according to two Indian security officials familiar with the investigation. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about the details.
Lashkar has murky ties to a group called Deccan Mujahadeen, which said it planned the siege, reports Hatton. Deccan Mujahadeen has just sent out a new email warning Mumbai's airport and its highways are its next targets.
Lashkar was banned in Pakistan under pressure from the U.S. in 2002, a year after Washington and Britain listed it a terrorist group. It is since believed to have emerged under another name, Jamaat-ud-Dawa, although that group has denied links to the Mumbai attack.
Qasab told investigators the militants hijacked an Indian vessel and killed three crew members, keeping the captain alive long enough to guide them into Mumbai, the two security officials said.
The men, ages 18-28, then came ashore in a dinghy at two different Mumbai areas before slipping into the city in two teams, officials said. The gunmen struck at several sites, including a train station, where they mowed down police and passersby; the Jewish center; and the two luxury hotels, representing the city's wealth and tourism, reportedly seeking out Westerners.
A Muslim cemetery rejected the corpses of the nine dead gunmen and its officials said "Islam does not permit this sort of barbaric crime."
"People who committed this heinous crime cannot be called Muslim," said Hanif Nalkhande, a trustee of the influential Jama Masjid Trust, which runs the 7½-acre Badakabrastan graveyard in downtown Mumbai.
While some Muslim scholars disagreed with the decision - saying Islam requires a proper burial for every Muslim - the city's other Muslim graveyards are likely to do the same.
The 19 foreigners killed were Americans, Germans, Canadians, Israelis and nationals from Britain, Italy, Mexico, Japan, China, Thailand, Australia, Singapore and Mexico.
At the Jewish center, Israeli emergency workers sorted through the shattered glass and splintered furniture to gather the victims' remains. At one point, one of the men opened a prayer book amid the rubble and stopped to pray.
Indian officials said their country would persevere.
"This is a threat to the very idea of India, the very soul of India," said Home Minister Palaniappan Chidambaram, the country's top law enforcement official. "Ultimately the idea of India - that is a secular, plural, tolerant and open society - will triumph."
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





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Posted by MikeTotten1 at 12:31 AM
Like you do?
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Posted by brianwwb at 12:32 AM
It doesn''t matter what Clinton said. The reality was otherwise. And yes, hate radio cites Clintons and whomever else they can find tripped over their own words.
From now on, each and every time you post the same post over and over, I am going to report it as spamming. You either start posting original thoughts, or you will quickly get banned from this area. Yes, your last post was reported as spam.
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Posted by brianwwb at 12:16 AM
Sorry, but inspectors on the ground had already clarified that this was no longer the case. The inspectors were doing their job. Pointing to old references that side step reality has been the trademark of hate radio, which I find is losing ground rather quickly.
Why are you using someone else''''''''s name?
Posted by rudy6543
I seemed to be the rage at the time I chose to - like singingrick etc.
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Posted by brianwwb at 12:05 AM
Doing so discredits you. You have some valid points, but I know Brian would never pull out such worthless stats for the purpose of justifying a totally unnecessary war.
Why are you using someone else''s name?
******
In all honesty, there are many who do. However, it would be nice to see them come out at the level they do when some kid names a teddy bear Muhammed.
Posted by runningralph at 09:28 PM : Dec 01, 2008
They are not moral equivalents, you''re trying to tie the murder in Italy to a satanic cult is a zero.
Muslim terrorists reside in terror friendly countries who turn a blind eye to what they are doing and even aid these terrorist.
Nice try on your part though
Posted by donevis at 07:11 PM : Dec 01, 2008
The Arabs Muslim that flew the planes in the Twin Towers were drinking for weeks in t!tty bars in FLorida. All is forgiven when you die a martyr for the Muslim cause, even if you blow up a bus load of school kids in Iraq. With the added bonus that you get PsOS like you and the phony mike totten1 to be your appologists.
The Israelis have been training the Indian security forces for some time now.
The Israelis are sending %u201Cinvestigators%u201D to the scene, giving them an opportunity to reach whatever conclusions they would like to about who is responsible for the attacks.
Posted by MikeTotten1 at 07:56 PM : Dec 01, 2008
Behold the the looney conspiracy man is at it again posting his lies and fiction which have nothing factual to do with the realty of the murders in India.
Impersonating a genuine news blogger like Mike Tooten too, you are indeed a desparate needy man.
- by donevis-2009 December 1, 2008 10:11 PM EST
- Reports coming out from India%u2019s local news sources point to fair skin men. These reports
- Reply to this comment
See all 18 Commentspoint out that the room the gunmen had stayed in had four empty bottle%u2019s of assorted liquor laying about. Eyewitness reports stated they''re attack and slaughter started from a bar after slamming a beer. It%u2019s a known fact that Islamic Muslims to not drink alcohol. Not even the extremist. So before we all start pointing fingers where the media says we should, lets wait for the investigations to bring the facts to a more transparent level.