MUMBAI PROBING STARTS
FEBRUARY 25 2009 12:56h
Text
The charges of `waging war` with India mean there is almost no chance Kasab would be handed over to Pakistan for trial.
Laying out the first formal charges in the case, special public prosecutor Ujjwal Nikam told reporters that those named included Indians and Pakistanis who are accused of planning and abetting last November's attacks that killed 179 people.
The attacks on India's financial hub sparked renewed tensions between nuclear-armed rivals India and Pakistan.
Rakesh Maria, the chief Indian investigator in the case, said two Pakistan army officials accused of training the gunmen were among those charged but he did not give their names or rank.
Those charged as key planners of the attacks included Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, founder of the militant Islamist Lashkar-e-Taiba group India says was behind the attacks, and other senior Lashkar members Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi and Zarar Shah.
Mohammed Ajmal Kasab, identified as the lone surviving gunman, did not appear in court because of security concerns. The next hearing of the case is on March 9.
If found guilty, Kasab and those charged with waging war with India could face death sentences.
None of the accused have so far entered pleas.
"The charge sheet has 35 wanted (accused) and three accused who are under arrest," Nikam said, waving a copy of the voluminous document with pictures of the attack on its covers.
He said he hoped the trial would be completed in 3-6 months.
"Considering the magnitude and gravity of the offence, the court gave us permission to carry out further investigations. We will file a supplementary charge sheet after that," he said.
Nikam said the accused included two arrested Indians -- Fahim Ansari and Sabauddin -- who are Lashkar members accused of scouting Mumbai landmarks before the attacks.
The charge sheet, which runs to some 11,000 pages, contains accounts of more than 2,200 witnesses as well as other evidence provided by the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), which helped Indian police with the probe.
PHONE CALL, VIDEO
It also includes the names of the nine gunmen who were killed by Indian security forces during the long siege on several Mumbai landmarks.
Police said the evidence included transcripts of phone calls between the attackers and their "handlers" in Pakistan, video footage from attack sites, and what police say is Kasab's confession.
The seriousness of the charges means there is almost no chance Kasab would be handed over to Pakistan for trial.
Kasab was captured during the attacks while nine other gunmen, who India says were Pakistani militants, were killed in a 60-hour rampage across two five-star hotels, a Jewish centre and a crowded train station in Mumbai.
India has said the Pakistani militants must have been supported by Pakistani security agencies.
Pakistan has acknowledged that the raid had been launched and partly planned from Pakistan. It is conducting its own investigation and has detained several Islamist leaders, including some whom India has named as planners of the attack.
India has handed Pakistan data from satellite phones used by the attackers and Kasab's confession.
India mounted a diplomatic offensive after the attacks, saying Pakistan was not doing enough to bring the perpetrators to justice or dismantle what it said were militant camps there.
Nuclear disaster zones to be designated
Refugees report rise in sectarian violence
Israel prepares for mass protests


French President Sarkozy campaigns..
Joey Kramer and Steve Tyler announce Aerosmith &qu
Liberal MP Justin Trudeau and Conservative Senator
"Space Brothers (Uchu kyodai)" Japan premiere
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan Visits
Kate Winslet attends the World Premiere of "T
Syria's President Bashar al-Assad Visited Homs
Atlantans crowd Capitol to rally for slain Florida
Michelle Obama welcomes school children to help pl
Matthew Morrison attends the "Empire Awards 2
SCIENCE
SCIENCE
WORLD REPORT