Holywood News

Tahawwur Rana plans to target other Indian cities, similar to the 26/11 Mumbai attack: NIA to court

The National Bureau of Investigation said the defendant Tahawwur Rana planned several other plots similar to the 26/11 Mumbai terrorist attack to target multiple Indian cities. “His long-term custody of Rana is considered necessary to promote broad trials designed to reveal a deeper level of the conspiracy. We suspect that the tactics used in the Mumbai attack are also intended to be enforced in other cities, prompting researchers to prompt researchers to examine similar patterns elsewhere,” whether Nia has been developed elsewhere,” whether Nia is willing to make the announcement for what the judge said, a judge, a judge, a judge, a judge, a judge.

Rana was taken to court, including a prison van, an armored SWAT car and an ambulance.

Before Rana was taken to Patiala House Court Complex, Delhi police evacuated Mediapersons and the public from their premises on security concerns.
“No one inside will be allowed,” police authorities said.

Sources said the Delhi court recently received trial records of the Mumbai attack before Rana extraditioned the United States.


The NIA said David Coleman Headley, accused of discussing the entire operation with Rana before visiting India as part of the criminal plot. The NIA told the court that Headley expected the potential challenge, sent an email to Rana detailing his property and assets, and Headley also informed Pakistani nationals Ilyas Kashmiri and Abdur Rehman, who were also charged in the case. The NIA submitted its comments Thursday night in Special Judge Chander Jit Singh, who remanded Rana to 18 days of NIA custody.

The judge followed the order instructed the NIA to conduct medical examinations on RANA every 24 hours and allowed him to meet with his lawyer every day.

The judge allowed Lana to use only the “soft tip pen” and meet with his attorney in the presence of NIA officials, who would not be at the auditory distance.

During the debate, the NIA said Rana’s custody was asked to piece together the entire scope of the entire plot and made a request that he was taken to various locations to trace the events that occurred 17 years ago.

The agency said it needed to investigate Lana’s connections with other terrorists and those accused.

“A detailed investigation is required. He has to face a lot of evidence. His statements will lead to other discoveries.”

Senior advocate Dayan Krishnan and Special Attorney Narender Mann represent the NIA.

To aggregate vital evidence and trace the incident 17 years ago, officials may have transported Lana to critical sites, allowing them to rebuild the crime scene and gain a deeper understanding of the larger terrorist networks that work, the source added.

Nia Digs, an IG and five DCP Delhi police officer attended the court venue during his production.

Rana will remain in NIA custody for 18 days, during which the agency plans to “ask him in detail to reveal the complete conspiracy behind the deadly attack in 2008”, which left 166 people killed and more than 238 injured.

The 64-year-old Pakistani-Origin Canadian businessman was produced before Special NIA Judge Chander Jit Singh.

Rana was a close assistant to the 26/11 Mumbai terrorist attack, with chief accomplices David Coleman Headley and U.S. citizen Daood Gilani, who were brought to India to the U.S. Supreme Court rejected his request for review of his extradition on April 4.

On November 26, 2008, a group of 10 Pakistani terrorists rushed into India’s financial capital using sea routes in the Arabian Sea, and coordinated attacks on the railway station, two luxury hotels and a Jewish center.

As many as 166 people were killed in nearly 60 hours of attack.

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button