Tue, Jan 31 2012 22:15 IST | 28 Views | Add your comment
SHARE:
The 2008 Mumbai terror attack convict and Pakistani terrorist Ajmal Kasab Tuesday told the Supreme Court that he was denied fair trial as he was not provided legal assistance during the initial stages as mandated under the Indian constitution.
Once an accused, including a foreigner, is tried for an offence in India the provisions related to arrest as mentioned in the constitution get applied in his case...Read Full Story
NEW DEHLI:? India’s Supreme Court adjourned an appeal hearing on Tuesday into the death sentence handed down to the lone surviving gunman from the 2008 Mumbai attacks.
Mohammed Kasab, one of 10 gunmen who laid siege to Mumbai in attacks which lasted nearly three days and killed 166 people, has appealed for his sentence to be overturned after he was convicted in May 2010.
The 24-year-old Pakistani was found guilty of a series of crimes, including waging war against India, murder and terror...Read Full Story
MUMBAI: A Pakistani commission investigating the 2008 terror attack in Mumbai will visit in early February, but will not be allowed to interrogate the lone surviving gunman, Indian officials said Monday.
The visit is the result of intricate negotiations between the nuclear-armed neighbours, but is unlikely to resolve tensions over whether Pakistan is sincerely working to prosecute the attack’s alleged perpetrators.
Disagreements over access to gunman Ajmal Kasab, who has been sentenced to...Read Full Story
Fri, Nov 25 2011 15:30 IST | 55 Views | Add your comment
SHARE:
Hanging 26/11 terrorist Ajmal Amir Kasab may be sooner said than done. While some from the Mumbai's lawyer fraternity said a fair process is vital, other feel that death sentence cases such as these should be speeded up.
"I feel a high profile terrorism case such as this should be fast-tracked, not only in the special court or the high court but also in the Supreme Court ," said Mahesh Vaswani, a Bombay High...Read Full Story
Mon, Oct 10 2011 22:27 IST | 14 Views | Add your comment
SHARE:
The Supreme Court Monday stayed the death sentence awarded to Ajmal Amir Kasab, the lone Pakistani terrorist captured alive during the Nov 26, 2008, Mumbai mayhem, till his appeal is disposed of. Kasab, contesting his conviction, claimed he was brainwashed by the co-accused to act like a robot and unleash the massacre.
The apex court bench of Justice Aftab Alam and Justice C.K. Prasad said "pending the disposal...Read Full Story
A lawyer read out a statement in court from Mohammed Ajmal Kasab, one of 10 gunmen who laid siege to Mumbai in the attacks that lasted nearly three days and killed 166 people. The 24-year-old man has appealed for his death penalty to be ...
The Supreme Court Wednesday debunked Mumbai terror attack convict and Pakistani terrorist Ajmal Kasab's contention that he was not a part of the overarching conspiracy of waging war against the Indian government but merely an agent in executing it.
Pakistan had wanted Mohammed Ajmal Amir Kasab, the lone surviving gunman from the Mumbai attacks, to testify. But Ahmad said Kasab, who has appealed a death sentence in India, was not included on the list of witnesses whom the panel wished to cross-examine.
The HinduI was denied legal help, Kasab tells apex courtIBNLive.comNew Delhi: The 2008 Mumbai terror attack convict and Pakistani terrorist Ajmal Kasab Tuesday told the Supreme Court that he was denied fair trial as he was not provided legal assistance during the initial stages as mandated under the Indian ...Kasab not given fair trial: Amicus curiae to SCTimes of IndiaKasab's death penalty appeal adjournedHindustan TimesMumbai gunman Qasab...
Pakistani terrorist Ajmal Kasab, given death sentence in the 26/11 Mumbai attack case, on Tuesday submitted before the Supreme Court that he was “denied free and fair trial” before the special court, which convicted him with capital punishment.
The Pakistani Commission will take the statements of Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate R V Sawant Waghule and Investigating Officer Ramesh Mahale, who had recorded the confessional statement of Ajmal Kasab, the lone surviving terrorist involved in ...
Indian researchers have presented disaster management plan for hospitals, which could help them meet the challenges when handling injuries sustained in major terrorist incidents. According to the research based on the 2008 Mumbai attack, meticulous forward ...
Mohammed Ajmal Kasab, 21, is the only surviving member of the terrorist group that attacked Mumbai in November 2008. Kasab is from the village of Okara in Pakistan's Punjab province.
Some 10 months before the Mumbai attacks, an Indian Muslim working for Lashkar-e-Taiba was examining some of the sites that would later be struck, according to Indian police. His story may provide clu
MUMBAI -- India has accused a senior leader of the Pakistani militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba of orchestrating last week's terror attacks that killed at least 172 people here, and demanded the Pakis
Those who live by the gun also die by its shadow. But there are a few who attain martyrdom and leave behind a legend to emulate and remember. Recently promoted as Assistant Sub-Inspector, 48-year-old