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Thursday, August 30, 2012

The appellant, Mohammed Ajmal Mohammad Amir Kasab @ Abu Mujahid (hereinafter referred to as ‘the appellant’ or as ‘Kasab’), who is a Pakistani national, has earned for himself five death penalties and an equal number of life terms in prison for committing multiple crimes of a horrendous kind in this country. Some of the major charges against him were: conspiracy to wage war against the Government of India; collecting arms with the intention of waging war against the Government of India; waging and abetting the waging of war against the Government of India; commission of terrorist acts; criminal conspiracy to commit murder; criminal conspiracy, common intention and abetment to commit murder; committing murder of a number of persons; attempt to murder with common intention; criminal conspiracy and abetment; abduction for murder; robbery/dacoity with an attempt to cause death or grievous hurt; and causing explosions punishable under the Explosive Substance Act, 1908. He was found guilty of all these charges besides many others and was awarded the death sentence on five counts, life-sentence on five other counts, as well as a number of relatively lighter sentences of imprisonment for the other offences.


                                                                  REPORTABLE



                        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

                       CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION


                    CRIMINAL APPEAL NOS.1899-1900 OF 2011

MOHAMMED AJMAL MOHAMMAD
AMIR KASAB @ ABU MUJAHID                     … APPELLANT

                                   VERSUS

STATE OF MAHARASHTRA                         … RESPONDENT

                                    WITH

                       CRIMINAL APPEAL NO.1961 OF 2011

STATE OF MAHARASHTRA                         … APPELLANT

                                   VERSUS

FAHIM HARSHAD MOHAMMAD YUSUF
ANSARI & ANOTHER                             … RESPONDENTS

                                     AND

                 TRANSFER PETITION (CRIMINAL) NO.30 OF 2012

RADHAKANT YADAV                              … PETITIONER

                                   VERSUS

UNION OF INDIA & OTHERS                      … RESPONDENTS





                               J U D G M E N T



Aftab Alam, J.

1.    The appellant, Mohammed  Ajmal  Mohammad  Amir  Kasab  @  Abu  Mujahid
(hereinafter referred to as  ‘the  appellant’  or  as  ‘Kasab’),  who  is  a
Pakistani national, has earned for  himself  five  death  penalties  and  an
equal number of life terms in prison for committing  multiple  crimes  of  a
horrendous kind in this country. Some  of  the  major  charges  against  him
were: conspiracy to wage war against the  Government  of  India;  collecting
arms with the intention of waging  war  against  the  Government  of  India;
waging and abetting the waging of  war  against  the  Government  of  India;
commission  of  terrorist  acts;  criminal  conspiracy  to  commit   murder;
criminal  conspiracy,  common  intention  and  abetment  to  commit  murder;
committing murder of a number of persons;  attempt  to  murder  with  common
intention;  criminal  conspiracy  and  abetment;   abduction   for   murder;
robbery/dacoity with an  attempt  to  cause  death  or  grievous  hurt;  and
causing explosions punishable under the Explosive Substance  Act,  1908.  He
was found guilty of all these charges besides many others  and  was  awarded
the death sentence on five counts, life-sentence on five  other  counts,  as
well as a number of relatively lighter sentences  of  imprisonment  for  the
other offences.

2.    Apart from the appellant, two other accused, namely Fahim  Ansari  and
Sabauddin Ahamed, both Indian nationals,  were  also  arraigned  before  the
trial court and indicted on the same charges as the appellant.

3.    At the end of the trial, however,  the  appellant  was  convicted  and
sentenced to death as noted above (vide judgment and order  dated  May  3/6,
2010 passed by the Addl. Sessions Judge, Greater  Mumbai  in  Sessions  Case
No. 175 of 2009). The other two accused were acquitted of all  charges.  The
trial court gave them the benefit of the doubt as  regards  the  charges  of
conspiracy and abetment of other offences by conspiracy,  and  further  held
that the prosecution completely failed  to  establish  those  other  charges
that were made directly against them.

4.    The judgment by the trial court  gave  rise  to  a  reference  to  the
Bombay High Court under Section  366  of  the  Code  of  Criminal  Procedure
(CrPC), registered as Confirmation Case No. 2 of 2010. In  addition  to  the
reference, two appeals also came to the High Court  from  the  judgment  and
order  passed  by  the  trial  court,  one  by  the  appellant  against  his
conviction and sentences (Criminal Appeal No. 738 of 2010) and the other  by
the State of Maharashtra against the acquittal  of  the  other  two  accused
(Criminal Appeal No. 606 of 2010). The  High  Court,  by  its  judgment  and
order dated February 21, 2011, confirmed the death sentences  given  to  the
appellant by the trial court and dismissed both the appeals. The High  Court
upheld the judgment and order passed by the  trial  court  in  all  material
aspects:  it  sustained  the  appellant’s  conviction  and   confirmed   the
punishments given him by the trial court, but at the same time  it  did  not
interfere with the acquittal of the other two accused.

5.    From the judgment of the High Court two  appeals  have  come  to  this
Court: one is a jail appeal by Kasab and  the  other  is  by  the  State  of
Maharashtra. The State’s appeal seeks to  challenge  the  acquittal  of  the
other two accused by the trial court and affirmed by  the  High  Court.  The
other two accused are impleaded in the State’s appeal as Respondents  No.  1
and 2. Kasab was unrepresented in the appeal preferred by him from jail  and
this Court, therefore, appointed Mr.  Raju  Ramachandran,  senior  advocate,
assisted by Mr. Gaurav Agrawal, to represent him. He was thus  able  to  get
legal assistance of a standard and  quality  that  is  not  available  to  a
majority  of  Indian  nationals  approaching  this   Court   against   their
conviction and sentence.

6.    We may also state here that since it is a case of death  sentence,  we
intend to examine the materials on record first  hand,  in  accordance  with
the time-honoured practice of this Court, and come to  our  own  conclusions
on all issues of facts and law, unbound by the findings of the  trial  court
and the High Court.

7.    According to the prosecution, a sinister  conspiracy  was  hatched  in
Pakistan  and  in  furtherance  of  that  conspiracy  a  savage  attack  was
unleashed on Mumbai by a  team  of  ten  terrorists,  including  Kasab,  who
landed on the city’s shores  via  the  Arabian  Sea.  The  attack  began  on
November 26, 2008 at about 9.15 PM  and  it  ended  when  the  last  of  the
attackers, who was holed up in Hotel Taj Mahal Palace, was killed by  Indian
security forces at about 9.00 AM on November 29.  The  brutal  assault  left
Mumbai  scarred  and  traumatized  and  the  entire  country  shocked.   The
terrorists killed one hundred and sixty-six (166) people and injured,  often
grievously, two hundred  and  thirty-eight  (238)  people.[1]  The  loss  to
property resulting from the terrorist attack was  assessed  at  over  Rupees
one hundred and fifty crores (Rs. 150 Cr.). The dead included eighteen  (18)
policemen  and  other  security  personnel  and  twenty-six   (26)   foreign
nationals. The  injured  included  thirty-seven  (37)  policemen  and  other
security personnel and twenty-one (21) foreign nationals.   Of  those  dead,
at least seven (7) were killed  by  the  appellant  personally,  seventy-two
(72) were killed by him in furtherance of the  common  intention  he  shared
with one Abu Ismail (deceased accused no.1) and the  rest  were  victims  of
the conspiracy to which he was a party along with the nine (9) dead  accused
and thirty-five (35) other accused who remain to be apprehended and  brought
to court.[2]

8.    The case of the prosecution is based, of course, on investigations  by
the police, but  a  good  deal  of  it  also  comes  from  the  confessional
statement of the appellant recorded under  Section  164  of  the  CrPC.  The
confession of the appellant may be  broadly  divided  into  two  parts,  one
relating to the conspiracy, planning and preparation  for  the  attack,  and
the other relating to the actual attack  on  Mumbai,  in  execution  of  the
conspiracy  of  which  the  appellant  along  with  his   “buddia”[3],   the
accomplice Abu Ismail, was a part.  So  far  as  the  attack  on  Mumbai  is
concerned, every statement made by the appellant is  corroborated  over  and
over again by objective findings and evidences gathered by the  prosecution.
But the conspiracy  and  the  preparation  for  the  attack  took  place  in
Pakistan and, therefore, it was impossible for any agency  of  this  country
to make investigations in regard to that part  of  the  case.  Nevertheless,
the  investigators  have  been  able  to  gather   extensive   material   to
corroborate even that part of the appellant’s confession.

9.    It would thus be convenient to present the case of the prosecution  by
beginning with the appellant’s confessional statement.

THE RECORDING OF THE CONFESSIONAL STATEMENT:

10.   The appellant was brought before the  Chief  Metropolitan  Magistrate,
Mumbai, on February 17, 2009, to make his confessional statement. The  Chief
Metropolitan Magistrate referred him  to  Mrs.  Sawant-Wagule,  Addl.  Chief
Metropolitan Magistrate, 3rd Court, Esplanade, Mumbai, before  whom  he  was
presented for recording his confessional  statement  in  CR  No.  198/08  of
Detection of Crime Branch, Mumbai (one of the twelve (12)  cases  registered
in  connection  with  the  offences  committed  by  the  invading  group  of
terrorists) at 10.45 AM on the same day.

11.   Mrs. Sawant Wagule proceeded to take his  statement  very  slowly  and
with great circumspection. First of all, she had  the  appellant  completely
insulated from the police. She explained to him that from that point he  was
in her custody and not in the custody of the police. She asked  him  whether
he was ill-treated or abused by the police in any manner and why  he  wanted
to make the confessional statement. To  her  first  question  the  appellant
replied in the negative, and as for the reasons for him making a  confession
he said he would explain everything  when  his  statement  was  recorded  in
detail. The magistrate further satisfied  herself  that  the  appellant  was
willing to make the confessional statement voluntarily  and  not  under  any
pressure, coercion or allurement by the police or anyone else.  Nonetheless,
she did not take his statement on that day but told him that she wanted  him
to reflect further on the matter, for which purpose she was  giving  him  24
hours’ time. She then remanded him to judicial  custody  where  he  was  not
accessible to the police or any other agency.

12.   When the appellant was brought back to her on February 18  at  11  AM,
she had another long exchange with him. In the preliminary exchanges on  the
previous day  she  had  found  that  the  appellant  had  no  difficulty  in
following  or  speaking  in  Hindi;  thus,  the  interaction   between   the
magistrate and the appellant took place, in question  and  answer  form,  in
simple, everyday spoken Hindi.  The  magistrate,  having  satisfied  herself
that the police had no contact with the appellant  in  the  past  24  hours,
began by telling the appellant that she had no  concern  with  the  offences
for which he was arrested  or  any  connection  with  the  police  that  had
arrested him. She explained to him that he was under no compulsion  to  make
the  confessional  statement  and  further,  that  whether   he   made   the
confessional statement or not, he would not be handed back  to  the  police.
She confirmed once again that the appellant wished to make the statement  of
his own volition and not under any influence.

13.   The appellant told her his name and gave his address  of  a  place  in
Pakistan. She asked him about his education and where, when and how  he  was
arrested by the police. She asked him why was  he  brought  to  her  and  in
reply he said that he wanted to make a  confessional  statement.  She  asked
for which offence he wanted to make confession. He replied that on  November
26, 2008, he and his accomplices made a Fidayeen attack on Mumbai  city  and
he wanted to make a confession about the attack and  the  conspiracy  behind
it. She asked when he felt like making a confession. He told  her  that  the
thought of making the confession came to him when he  was  arrested  by  the
police. He added that he had absolutely no regret for whatever he had  done.
He wanted to make the confession to set an  example  for  others  to  become
Fidayeen like him and follow him in his deeds. The magistrate cautioned  him
by saying that he should make the statement only if he wished to do so.  She
further cautioned him by saying that any confessional statement made by  him
would be taken down in writing and it would be used as evidence against  him
and that might lead to his conviction. The appellant said he  was  aware  of
the consequences. The magistrate again asked  him  whether  the  police  had
given any inducement to him to make the confessional statement, such  as  by
offering to make him an approver. He  replied  in  the  negative.  She  then
asked if he needed an advocate while making the confession. Once  again,  he
answered in the negative.

14.    Even  after  this  lengthy  and  detailed  interaction,  the  learned
magistrate did not take his confession on that day but gave him a period  of
48 hours for further reflection, telling him  that  during  that  period  he
would not be in police custody but would be kept in  jail  in  her  custody.
She advised him to reconsider the matter with  a  composed  mind.  She  then
remanded him to judicial custody with the  direction  that  he  be  produced
before her on February 20, 2009, at 11 AM.

15.   The appellant was produced  before  the  magistrate  as  directed,  on
February 20 at 10.40  AM.  The  magistrate  repeated  the  entire  gamut  of
explanations and cautions at the end of which the  appellant  said  that  he
still wanted to make his confession.  It  was  only  then  did  the  learned
magistrate proceed to record the  statement  made  by  the  appellant  under
Section 164 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. The statement  could  not  be
fully recorded on February 20 and it was resumed on  February  21  at  10.40
AM. On that date, the recording of the statement was completed. The  learned
magistrate has maintained a meticulous record of the proceedings before  her
on all those dates, duly  signed  by  the  appellant.  After  recording  his
statement, she also gave such certificates as required under  sub-section  4
of Section 164 CrPC.

16.   Coming now to the main body of the confessional statement,  it  is  in
the  form  of  a  statement  made  by  the  appellant  with   only   minimal
interjections  by  the  learned  magistrate.  She  occasionally  asked   the
appellant to clarify the meaning of some uncommon words or code  words  used
in the conspiracy. The appellant’s statement,  made  before  the  magistrate
over two days, is long and  rambling,  at  points  repetitive  and  full  of
seemingly superfluous details that would appear quite unnecessary if one  is
to take a limited view  of  the  case  and  judge  the  culpability  of  the
appellant only on the basis of the events in Mumbai. To that end,  it  would
be quite simple and convenient to give a brief summary  of  the  appellant’s
confessional statement. But such an approach will  not  do  justice  to  the
case and we intend to take a look at the full  statement  of  the  appellant
with all its repetitions and details. We do  so  to  be  fair  to  both  the
prosecution and the appellant. The details given by  the  appellant  have  a
bearing on the prosecution case, according to which  conspiracy,  conspiracy
to wage war against India and waging war against India are some of the  main
crimes in the case, and the details given by the  appellant  throw  a  great
deal of light on the commission of those crimes.  Further,  the  details  in
the  appellant’s  statement  are  relevant  to  the  submission   that   the
confessional statement is not truly voluntary but  that  the  appellant  was
manipulated into making that statement. It is submitted  on  behalf  of  the
appellant that no accused making an admission of his guilt  would  refer  to
those unnecessary details and that the  great  detail  of  the  confessional
statement only shows that it was not the appellant but the prosecution  that
was speaking through his mouth. We, therefore, scan  the  confession  as  it
is, in full, unabridged and unadorned.





THE KASAB NARRATIVE:

Family background:

17.   The appellant started by giving his name as  Mohammed  Ajmal  Mohammad
Amir Kasab. He was born on September 13, 1987. He lived  in  Pakistan  where
his address was village Faridkot, tehsil-Dipalpur,  district  Okara,  Punjab
province, Pakistan. He attended the Urdu-medium Faridkot Government  Primary
School up to class 4. He lived in the village with his  Abbu  Mohammad  Amir
Shaban Kasab, his Ammi  Noor-e-Elahi,  younger  brother  Munir  and  younger
sister Surraiya. He gave his father’s mobile phone number. He had  an  elder
sister and an elder brother, both of whom were  married.  The  sister  lived
with her husband at a village in Pathankot, district Okara, and the  brother
lived in Lahore with his wife. He gave the  names  of  the  spouses  of  the
elder sister and the elder brother and their respective addresses.

18.   After the immediate family he gave the names  of  his  three  paternal
uncles, elder to his father, and their sons, who lived in  village  Mohammad
Yar Chishti, Pathankot, district Okara, Pakistan. He  also  named  a  fourth
paternal uncle, younger to  his  father,  who  lived  with  the  appellant’s
father.

19.   He then gave the names of his Mamoon (mother’s brother) and his  three
sons and a daughter and their address; and the name of his Khaloo  (mother’s
sister’s husband), his address and mobile phone number.

20.   He gave the name of another  sister  of  his  mother  whom  he  called
‘Mamo’ and her address.

21.   He had two paternal aunts who were married. He gave  their  names  and
their addresses. He said that his Mamoon and  Mousi  (mother’s  brother  and
sister) had grown-up children.

22.   Kasab added that his house at Faridkot had been taken  by  his  father
who earned his livelihood by plying carts. Kasab was  fond  of  watching  TV
and Hindi movies; he named a number of popular  Indian  films  that  he  had
seen many times. He was in  the  habit  of  chewing  tobacco.  He  was  good
friends with the village doctor, Mazhar, who had a dispensary near  Faridkot
bus stop.

23.   After dropping out of school in the year 2000, Kasab  and  his  friend
Dittu started working as labourers in Faridkot. In 2001,  he  and  his  Abbu
went to Lahore in search of employment. In Lahore he lived with  his  father
and uncle, Ghulam Rasool, in a house they rented from Haji  Qamar.  He  gave
the detailed address of the  house.  On  his  father’s  instructions,  Kasab
started working as a labourer at “Mazdooron Ka Adda”. He  worked  there  for
about five years. In the year 2005, his father and uncle returned  to  their
village.  Kasab  continued  to  stay  in  Lahore  alone,  living  in  rented
accommodation. During this period he used to visit his village home. On  one
such visit, he quarreled with his Abbu over the money earned by  him.  After
the quarrel he left the home and started living at  Ali  Hajveri  Dargah  in
Lahore. Kasab’s friend Shafique got him a job in Welcome  Tent  Service.  He
gave the full address of the establishment, the name of its  owner  and  the
mobile phone numbers of the owner and his son. He added that  the  owner  of
the establishment used to call him “Balka”. It was here that Kasab  met  and
befriended Muzaffar Lal Khan, who also worked there.

Induction into Lashkar-E-Toiba, Indoctrination and Training for “Jihad”:

24.   In November 2007, Kasab and Muzaffar Lal Khan went  to  Rawalpindi  in
search of  better  employment  and  took  rented  accommodation  in  Bangash
Colony. It was here, around the month of December, that they saw members  of
Lashkar-e-Toiba going from door to door under the  name  of  Jamaat-ul-Dava,
collecting hides of  goats  sacrificed  on  Eid-uz-Zoha.  They  were  asking
people to donate the goat hides to help achieve  independence  for  Kashmir.
Kasab and his friend developed great respect for those people. They  thought
that those people were fighting for the  liberation  of  Kashmir  and  they,
too, should do something for their people. When they were working  at  Sarai
Alamgir members of Jamat-ul-Dava were organising camps at  different  places
where they would go to listen to their speeches.  He  explained  that  after
Lashkar-e-Toiba was banned in 2002, it started its activities  in  the  name
of Jamat-ul-Dava. At this time, Kasab and Muzaffar Lal  Khan  first  thought
of undergoing training for Jihad.

25.   In December 2007, they took the address of the  office  of  Lashkar-e-
Toiba from a moulvi and reached its office at  Raja  Bazar,  Rawalpindi.  He
added that the office was near Bangash Colony. There  were  two  persons  in
the office who asked them the purpose of  their  visit.  They  replied  that
they wanted to undertake Jihad. The office  people  took  their  address  in
full and asked them to come the following day, with their clothes and  other
belongings. They returned the following day. On that day, a  person  in  the
office gave them  a  slip  of  paper  with  “Daura-E-Suffa,  Markaz-e-Toiba,
Muridke” written on it. He gave them directions for Muridke  and  told  them
to go there. They left for Muridke and,  after  traveling  by  bus  for  six
hours, they reached Muridke bus stand. From there, they walked for  about  a
kilometer and a half to reach the camp  site.  To  the  person  there,  they
showed the letter and said that  they  had  come  for  Daura-e-Suffa.  After
subjecting them to a search, he took them  inside  the  office.  There  they
showed the letter to a person called Fahadullah (wanted accused No.  8).  He
wrote down their names and addresses and admitted them for the training.

26.   Daura-e-Suffa training lasted twenty one (21) days. There were  thirty
(30) other boys, apart from  Kasab  and  his  friend,  doing  the  training.
During this, they were first converted from Sunni (sect of Islam) to  Ahl-e-
Hadis and were given lessons in the Hadis (a study of  the  things  said  by
the  Prophet  Muhammad  and  descriptions  of  his  daily  life).  An  Ustad
conducted physical exercises. Besides, they were given lectures and  lessons
on Jihad. In those sessions Fahadullah and Mufti Sayeed (wanted accused  No.
13) were the Ustad. The  training  took  place  between  December  2007  and
January 2008. In the course of the training, Ustad Abu Kafa (wanted  accused
No. 5) introduced  them  to  Hafiz  Sayeed,  the  Ameer  of  Lashkar-e-Toiba
(wanted accused No. 1), Operational Commander Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi  (wanted
accused No. 2), Area Commander Abu Al-Kama (wanted accused No. 4),  Muzzamil
alias Yusuf (wanted accused  No.  6),  Training-in-charge  Abu  Umar  Sayeed
(wanted accused No. 18) and Abu Hamza (wanted accused No.  3).  Kasab  added
that Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi was known as ‘Chacha’ and Lakhvi.  At  that  time
Kafa told them that Abu Umar Sayeed arranged the training camps of  Lashkar-
e-Toiba.

 [At this point the learned magistrate interrupted him to  ask  the  meaning
of the word Ameer. He said it meant leader].

27.   Kasab said that Ameer Hafiz Sayeed exhorted them by  saying  that  all
Mujahedeens must fight  for  the  independence  of  Kashmir;  Zaki-ur-Rehman
announced that the time had come for Jihad, adding that  their  orgainsation
had been fighting in Kashmir  for  the  last  fifteen  (15)  years  but  the
Hindustani Government was not allowing Kashmir to be  independent.  It  had,
therefore, become necessary to fight a  war  against  Hindustan  to  capture
Kashmir. Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi asked them if they were  ready  to  wage  the
war. They all said they were ready for the war. At that  time,  Abu  Al-Kama
told them that they had to attack the major cities of Hindustan;  that  they
would wage war against Hindustan from within, so that it  is  weakened  from
the inside. He added that anyone who would die  in  this  war  would  go  to
paradise. In response, Kasab and all his  associates  said  that  they  were
ready to launch an attack on Hindustan.

28.   In February 2008, they were selected for Daura-e-Amma training.  Ustad
Fahadullah gave them a letter saying “Bhai Vasool  Daura-e-Amma”,  and  sent
them to Mansera Markaz Aksa. They traveled for twelve (12) hours by  bus  to
reach Mansera bus-stand from where they had to walk into the  hilly  region.
There, at the entrance to the camp they were subjected  to  a  search.  They
showed Fahadullah’s note to the person at the gate  and  were  allowed  into
the office. The  person  in  the  office  wrote  down  detailed  information
concerning them in a register. After staying there for the  day,  they  were
taken to Buttel village in a van. From there the driver of the van led  them
to the top of the hill on foot – a walk of about thirty (30) minutes.

29.   In this second training of twenty-one  (21)  days  they  did  physical
exercises and practiced running and climbing over mountains. They were  also
given training in dismantling and assembling ‘Kalashan’, rifles and  pistols
and taught how to fire these weapons.

[Here  the  magistrate  asked  him  the  meaning  of  ‘Kalashan’.  He   said
‘Kalashan’ meant AK 47 rifle].

The Saving of Muzaffar:

30.   During this training, Muzzafar’s elder brother came and took him  from
there.

Further Training:

31.   Kasab told the magistrate  that  after  the  Daura-e-Amma  training  a
Mujahid could go home if he so wished; alternatively, he  could  remain  for
three months of ‘Khidmat’.

[The magistrate asked him what ‘Khidmat’ meant, to which he replied that  it
meant keeping watch on the new Mujahids who  came  for  training,  preparing
food for them in the kitchen and generally looking after them].

32.   He said that he remained to  do  ‘Khidmat’  of  the  Mujahedeens.  The
‘Ustad’ for the trainees who came there during Kasab’s  ‘Khidmat’  were  Abu
Abdul Rehman (wanted accused No. 9), Yusuf  (wanted  accused  No.  15),  Abu
Anas (wanted accused No. 10) and Abu Bashir (wanted accused No.  11).  Kasab
did ‘Khidmat’ during March, April and May, 2008.

33.   Kasab’s ‘Ustad’, Abu Abdul Rehman, then asked him  to  go  along  with
the other ‘Mujahedeens’ to the office  of  Lashkar-e-Toiba  at  Model  Town,
District Okara for ‘Daura-e-Khassa’. As instructed,  they  went  to  Mansera
bus-stand in the ‘Lashkar-e-Toiba’ van. After traveling from  there  by  bus
for twelve (12) hours they  reached  Lahore  Lorry  Adda  (bus-stand).  From
there they went to Okara bus-stand by bus and, after walking for  about  one
kilometer, they reached the office of ‘Lashkar-e-Toiba’  near  a  Masjid  at
the corner of a lane in Model Town. They told the  people  there  that  they
had come to obtain the note for ‘Daura-e-Khassa’. After making inquiries  of
them and after making verifications on the  telephone,  the  person  present
there wrote a letter saying “Bhai Vasool”. He stamped this with the flag  of
the ‘Lashkar-e-Toiba’ and gave it to them. He also gave them the address  of
the ‘Lashkar-e-Toiba’ training camp at Muzzafarabad.

34.   All of them travelled 16/17 hours in  a  bus  to  Muzzafarabad.  Kasab
added that Muzzaffarabad is in POK. From there  they  walked  for  about  an
hour  and,  passing  through  a  ‘Lashkar-e-Toiba’  hospital  called  Neelam
Dariya, they reached Sevai Nala. At that place there were 10/12  houses  and
a  masjid  of  Lashkar-e-Toiba  and  the  settlement  was   called   ‘Baitul
Mujahedeen’. They gave the Rukka  (chit)  to  a  person  called  Sayeed  and
entered the training camp, which was also called  ‘Maskar  Aksa’.  The  camp
was situated on Chehalbandi Hills of Muzzaffarabad. There was high  security
in this training camp and restrictions on moving  in  or  out  of  the  camp
without the permission of the ‘Ustad’. Abu Muavia (wanted  accused  No.  28)
was the ‘Ustad’ of this training, which was conducted in the months of  May,
June and July, 2008.

35.   Kasab told the magistrate that this training was of  two  and  a  half
months in course of which they were turned into solid ‘Jihadis’.  They  were
given lessons in Hadis, Namaz and Quran. In addition, they  were  taught  to
dismantle and assemble Kalashans and many kinds of rifles and  pistols,  and
to fire from those weapons, to operate rocket launchers and the use of  hand
grenades. They were also given training in the use of satellite phones,  GPS
systems and map-reading. The physical  exercise  comprised  staying  without
food for 60 hours while climbing mountains with heavy loads on the back.  He
added that the  training  was  very  arduous,  so  much  so  that  ten  (10)
Mujahedeens fled the training camp.  Abu  Muavia  and  Abu  Hanzala  (wanted
accused No. 31) were the ‘Ustad’ for this Daura.

36.   During that training, a person unknown to Kasab visited the  camp.  At
that time, Ameer Hafiz Sayeed, Zaki-Ur-Rehman Lakhvi and Kafa  were  present
there. Ameer Hafiz Sayeed and Zaki-Ur-Rehman Lakhvi  embraced  the  visitor,
and ‘Ustad’ Abu Muavia and Abu Hanzala saluted him in  soldier  style.  Kafa
introduced him to the trainees as Major General  Saab  (wanted  accused  No.
20) adding that the persons who were giving  them  training  were  his  men.
Major  General  Saab  asked  them  their  names  and  inquired  about  their
training. He asked whether they had any complaints. They all  answered  that
they had none. Major General Saab left after talking to them  for  about  an
hour.

[At this point, the magistrate asked Kasab for the  name  of  Major  General
Saab. He said they were not told his name]

37.   Kasab said that after completion of the training  his  ‘Ustad’  Muavia
gave him Rupees one thousand and three hundred (Rs.1,300/-)  and  asked  him
to go home and then to Ameer Hafiz Sayeed’s office at Baitul Mujahedeen.

Preparation for attack on India:

38.   Kasab stayed at his village for one week and then, towards the end  of
July, 2008, he reached  the  office  of  Hafiz  Mohammad  Sayeed  at  Baitul
Mujahedeen. From there ‘Ustad’ Muavia took him to Selection Point  at  Sevai
Nala, where 20/22 Mujahedeens like him were already  present.  Also  present
were Ameer Hafiz Mohammad Sayeed, Muzammil, Abu Hamza, ‘Ustad’ Muavia,  Kafa
and  Abu  Al-Kama.  The  Mujahedeens  were  shown  a  CD   on   the   laptop
demonstrating how  Salauddin  had  made  a  ‘Fidayeen’  attack  in  Kashmir.
Thereafter, Abu Al-Kama explained to them in detail how  ‘Fidayeen’  attacks
were made in Kashmir.

39.   Ameer Hafiz Sayeed selected them and gave them  new  names.  He  named
Kasab ‘Abu Mujahid’ and Imran  Babar  from  Multan  of  Punjab  region  ‘Abu
Aqsa’; Nasir of Faisalabad  was  named  ‘Abu  Umar’  and  Nazir  Ahmed  ‘Abu
Omair’; Hafiz Arshad of Multan Road, Punjab, was called Abdul Rehman  ‘Bada’
alias Hayaji; Abdul Rehman (Chhota) of Multan  Road,  Arabwala,  was  called
‘Saqib’; Soheb from Narowala, Shakkar Garh, Punjab, was given the name  ‘Abu
Soheb’. Some other colleagues of Kasab, who came from  different  places  in
Pakistan and whose names he did not  recall  but  whom  he  identified  with
reference  to  the  places  from  which  they  came,  were  similarly  given
pseudonyms by Hafiz Sayeed.

40.   On the same day in the evening  they  were  taken  to  the  office  of
Baitul Mujahedeen.

41.   The fifteen  (15)  selected  persons  then  left  for  Markaz-e-Toiba,
Muridke, for the Daura-e-Ribat training. In this session, which  lasted  one
month, they were given intelligence training, such  as  gathering  knowledge
about the target, keeping  watch  on  him,  following  him  and  dodging  if
someone were to follow them. Kasab described one  of  these  tricks  to  the
magistrate, telling  her  that  if  they  suspected  that  they  were  being
followed, they would switch on the indicator light on  the  right  and  then
suddenly take a left turn. That is how they would  find  out  if  they  were
being followed. They learnt how to use fake identities while on  a  mission.
Training in-charge Abu Sayeed gave special attention to  this  training.  He
would frequently come to them and make queries about the training.

42.   During the training two of Kasab’s colleagues, Nasad and  Abu  Muavia,
left the camp and went away.

43.   Abu Kafa and Imran (wanted accused No. 12)  were  the  Ustad  of  this
Dauara. During this training,  Major  General  Saab  came  there  twice.  He
watched them train and encouraged them. The Daura was completed in  the  end
of August, 2008. At that time Muzammil alias Yusuf and Abu Al-Kama had  also
come there. Major Saab  asked  them  if  they  could  swim,  to  which  they
answered in the affirmative. Then Major Saab asked Kafa to give them  marine
training. Kafa said he would do so.

44.   A few days later, in September, 2008, Kafa took  them  to  Karachi  by
train. There they were lodged in a house in Azizabad mohalla. It  was  there
in the month of September, 2008, that Ramzan  started.  Kafa  took  all  the
thirteen (13) Mujahedeens to the creek from where they  all  sailed  to  the
sea at Karachi on two small boats. Here, they were put on  a  boat  with  an
engine attached to it. On that boat  a  person  called  Hakim  Saab  (wanted
accused No. 14) gave them three days’ marine  training.  During  the  marine
training they were taught to read and use maps, to fathom the depths of  the
sea, to use GPS for marine-ways, to cast fishing nets and to sail.

[At this point the magistrate asked Kasab  why  they  were  taught  to  cast
fishing nets. He replied that in order to deceive the naval officers of  the
enemy they would say they were fishermen].

45.   After the marine training, Kafa took them back to  Baitul  Mujahedeen.
There, Ameer Hafiz Sayeed and Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi  asked  them  about  the
marine training.

46.   Three days later, Ameer Hafiz Sayeed and  Zaki-ur-Rehman  Lakhvi  sent
six (6) Mujahedeens from among them (whose names Kasab told the  magistrate)
for a ‘Fidayeen’  attack  in  Kashmir.  On  the  following  day,  Abu  Hamza
introduced three men to their group: Ismail  Khan  from  Dera  Ismail  Khan,
Punjab, Fahadulla, and Javed from Okara, Punjab.  Hafiz  Sayeed  named  them
Abu Ismail, Abu Fahadullah and Abu Ali. Abu Hamza told the group that  these
three were ‘Fidayeens’ like them; they had also  taken  training  like  them
and they were also going with them to carry out the attack on Hindustan.

47.   On the thirteenth (13th) Roza  Hafiz  Sayeed,  Zaki-ur-Rehman  Lakhvi,
Muzammil alias Yusuf, Al Kama, Abu Hasan,  Abu  Kafa  and  Abu  Umar  Sayeed
called them into the office of Baitul Mujahid. Ameer Hafiz Sayeed  addressed
them there. He said that the time for ‘Jihad’ had come  and  they  were  now
required to consider how best to launch the attack on Hindustan.  After  him
Zaki-ur-Rehman  Lakhvi  spoke  and  said  that  the  economic  strength   of
Hindustan lay in Bombay and it was therefore necessary to direct the  attack
on Bombay. He added that they had taken good marine training and hence  they
would attack Bombay from the sea route. Major  General  Saab  also  came  to
this meeting. He embraced Ameer Hafiz and  Zaki-ur-Rehman  Lakhvi  and  they
talked to each other at some distance from the rest of the  group.  After  a
while they came to the group  and  Zaki-ur-Rehman  Lakhvi  said  that  Major
General Saab wanted to see their preparedness.  Immediately,  each  of  them
was given a ‘Kalashan’ and a  loaded  magazine.  Major  General  Saab  asked
Ameer Hafiz to have the targets fixed at which Ameer Hafiz directed Kafa  to
fix ten (10) targets. Major General Saab said that when  he  shouted  “fire”
they should fire a single shot and when he shouted “fire”  twice  they  were
to make ‘rapid firing’.

48.   All of them took position. Major  General  Saab  watched  them  taking
position and then he shouted “fire”. Each  of  them  fired  a  single  shot.
Except Imran Babar, everyone shot the target.  Ameer  Hafiz  Sayeed  rebuked
Imran Babar severely. Major General Saab, too, told Imran Babar to  practice
shooting  properly.  Major  General  Saab  then  asked  everybody  to   take
position. They all resumed position and Major General  Saab  shouted  “fire”
twice. All of them emptied their magazines. Major General Saab  then  walked
upto the targets and inspected them closely.  He  asked  who  had  fired  at
(target) No.4. Kasab said it was he. Major  General  Saab  complemented  him
saying that he had destroyed the target entirely. He told  the  others  that
they had to destroy  the  target  fully  using  minimum  bullets  and  then,
pointing at Kasab, he told the others that this is the way firing should  be
done. He then left and went away.

49.   Then Kafa introduced them  to  a  person  called  Zarar  Shah  (wanted
accused No. 7). Kasab and Ismail asked him about Zarar  Shah,  at  which  he
told them that Zarar Shah and Ibrahim were the Ameer of the  media  wing  of
their organization. Zarar Shah was a computer expert. He could use  computer
technology to make a call from Pakistan appear, deceptively, as  if  it  was
being made from some other country. Zarar Shah and  Ibrahim  had  set  up  a
high technology media room. In this room they had collected  maps,  CDs  and
other information concerning the major cities of every country in the  world
on the basis of which they selected the targets and  advised  Zaki-ur-Rehman
Lakhvi.

50.   Ameer Hafiz Sayeed and Zaki-ur-Rehman  Lakhvi  then  divided  the  ten
(10) ‘Mujahedeens’ into five (5) ‘buddiyas’.

[The magistrate asked what a ‘Buddiya’ was. Kasab  said  ‘Buddiya’  meant  a
pair].

51.   The Buddiyas were: 1. Kasab & Ismail Khan; 2. Imran Babar & Nasir;  3.
Soheb & Nazir Ahmed; 4. Hafiz Arshad alias Hayaji  &  Javed;  and  5.  Abdul
Rehman (Chhota) & Fahadullah.

52.   Then, Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi  told  them  that  on  the  twenty-seventh
(27th) Roza they were to go and make the “Fidayeen” attack on Bombay.  Ameer
Hafiz Sayeed said  to  them  that  for  going  from  Karachi  to  Bombay,  a
Hindustani boat would have to be hijacked and they would  go  to  Bombay  by
that Hindustani boat. He added that  the  “maali  halat”  of  Hindustan  was
based on “videshi sailaniyon”. Therefore, in  order  to  weaken  the  “maali
halat” of Hindustan it was necessary to attack, among  other  places,  those
places frequented by “videshi sailaniyon”.

[At this point the magistrate interrupted to  ask  the  meanings  of  “maali
halat” and “videshi  sailani”.  Kasab  translated  the  two  expressions  as
“money power” and “foreign tourists”].

53.   Ameer Hafiz Sayeed told them that  they  would  fire  from  “Kalashan”
while also throwing hand  grenades  at  VTS,  Malabar  Hill,  Taj  Hotel  at
Colaba, Leopold  Hotel,  Oberoi  Hotel  and  Nariman  House  Building  where
Israelis stayed in Bombay. He added that while firing they should  specially
target the Americans, the British and the Israelis because those people  had
greatly oppressed the Muslims. At VTS there would be a very large crowd  and
while firing there they should not  think  of  whether  their  targets  were
Muslims or Hindus. They should just open ‘brush fire’  without  any  thought
as to who they targeted. However, while firing at  the  hotels  they  should
take care that no Muslim was killed in their  attack.  Then,  Zaki-ur-Rehman
Lakhvi asked the two “buddies” who were  assigned  the  attack  on  the  Taj
Hotel and the Oberoi Hotel to set the  two  hotels  on  fire  and  to  cause
damage to them on a large scale.  Zaki-ur-Rehman  Lakhvi  said  that  before
launching the attack they must fix the RDX bombs around their  targets.  The
bomb blasts would cause traffic jams and  slow  down  the  movement  of  the
police coming to the rescue, and would thus make it easier for them to  kill
the policemen, besides many other people.

54.   Ameer Hafiz Sayeed fixed the time for the attacks  at  7.30  PM.  When
Kasab asked why the attack should take place at that particular time,  Hafiz
Sayeed explained that this was the time when the targeted  places  would  be
most crowded, and insisted that the attack must take place at 7.30 PM.  Kafa
told them that the ten (10) “Mujahedeens”, would  be  given  ID  cards  with
fake Hindu names and that they would go to  Hindustan  with  those  fake  ID
cards. On the way, they would also tie sacred threads  around  their  wrists
like Hindus do. When Ismail asked about the need for ID cards  and  threads,
Kafa replied that with those ID cards nobody could stop them and they  would
be easily successful in their mission.  And  the  threads  on  their  wrists
would deceive the police.

55.   Continuing his story, Kasab told the magistrate that at  that  meeting
they decided that he and Ismail would begin firing at VTS to make  piles  of
dead bodies. From VTS they would go to Malabar Hill and start firing  there.
Hafiz Arshad and Javed would do the firing at  Hotel  Taj;  Fahadullaah  and
Abdul Rehman (Chhota) at Hotel Oberoi; Imran  Babar  and  Nasir  at  Nariman
House; while Soheb and Nazir would begin firing at Hotel  Leopold  and  then
join Hafiz Arshad and Javed at the Taj Hotel. Further, while  going  to  VTS
he would plant an RDX bomb under the driver’s seat in the taxi; Nazir  Ahmed
and Javed would similarly place the bombs in the taxis they  would  hire  to
Leopold Hotel and Taj Hotel respectively. The taxis used by them would  thus
explode at some other place and no one would have  any  clue  regarding  how
they came and where they came from. The Buddiyas at  Nariman  House,  Oberoi
Hotel and Taj Mahal Hotel would talk to the  media  and  falsely  tell  them
that they had taken some people hostage and (on  that  strength)  would  ask
the Hindustan Government to allow Kashmir to be  free.  They  would  deceive
the media into believing that they were Hindustani Muslims in large  numbers
and would thus generate fear.

56.   Ameer Hafiz said Abu Hamza would teach them how  to  plant  RDX  bombs
and how to cause blasts.

57.   Ameer Hafiz Sayeed, Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi, Muzammil alias  Yusuf,  Abu
Al-Kama, Abu Umar Sayeed, Kafa, Abu Hamza and Zarar Shah then took  the  ten
(10) “Mujahedeens” to a big hall. In that hall there were two or three  TVs.
Zarar Shah told them that this was the  control  room  of  the  media  wing.
Zarar Shah showed them the different roads of  Bombay  and  their  different
targets on a big TV screen. He showed VTS and  Malabar  Hill  to  Kasab  and
Ismail Khan on a CD. He also gave them detailed information about the  roads
leading to VTS and Malabar Hill. Kafa used Google Earth on a laptop to  show
them how to go from Badhwar Park in Mumbai to VTS and from  VTS  to  Malabar
Hill. Kafa also showed them some maps that were drawn by hand and told  them
that Fahim Ansari and Sabauddin  Ahmed  in  Hindustan  (Accused  2  &3)  had
prepared those maps and sent them from there. He said that with the help  of
those maps they would easily reach the places targeted by them. Having  told
them how the maps were obtained, Kafa explained  the  maps  to  them.  Kasab
asked where Sabauddin and Fahim were. Kafa said both of them  were  arrested
in Hindustan. Kasab asked why they were  arrested,  to  which  Kafa  replied
that they were arrested in connection with an attack made on a  police  camp
at Rampur in India. Then, on the basis of one of the maps, he explained  how
long it would take them to go from Badhwar Park to VTS  and  from  there  to
Malabar Hill. Kafa told them that Cooperage Ground and Azad Maidan  fall  on
the way to VTS and told them to mention those places  to  the  taxi  driver.
Kafa gave similar information to the other “Buddiyas” on the  basis  of  the
CD, Google Earth and the maps sent by Sabauddin and Fahim.

58.   On the day of the fifteenth (15th) Roza, Abu Hamza and Kafa  took  the
ten (10) Mujahedeens to the hills of Muzaffarabad. There they practiced  how
to take position and fire with Kalashans. They were also taught how to  make
the tiffin bomb from RDX, how to fix a blast timer into it and  how  to  set
off the bomb. At that time, on the instructions of Ameer Hafiz  Sayeed,  Abu
Hamza and Kafa gave more firing practice to Imran Babar.

59.   The same night they returned to Baitul Mujahedeen.

60.   On the day of the sixteenth (16th) Roza, Kafa asked them to shave  and
cut their hair. They were given new clothes,  shoes  and  socks.  On  Kafa’s
instruction they cut off the labels of the new clothes. Kafa also gave  them
watches set to Indian time. On the same  day,  Kafa  had  their  photographs
taken.

61.   On the day of the seventeenth (17th) Roza, Kafa took them  to  Karachi
city by train and there they went to a house in Azizabad mohalla.  Lying  in
the house was an Urdu magazine called “Taibat” that featured  the  names  of
the six (6) “Mujahedeens” who had gone  on  the  Kashmir  Mission  and  been
martyred  there.  Kasab  asked  Kafa  about  them.  Kafa  said  that   their
colleagues had become martyrs in the encounter with the Hindustani army  and
that Allah would rest their souls in heaven.

62.   On the day of the  eighteenth  (18th)  Roza,  Kafa  brought  ten  (10)
timers and explained to them how to fix a battery in the timer  and  how  to
set the time. On Kafa’s instructions they affixed their names on  one  timer
each, after which Kafa took  the  timers  back  from  them.  At  that  time,
according to the plan, Kafa also gave all of them ID cards with their  Hindu
names. Kasab’s ID  card  showed  him  as  Sameer  Choudhary  son  of  Dinesh
Choudhary  of  Arunodaya  Degree  College,  Bangalore.  Ismail’s   ID   card
described him as Naresh  Verma  son  of  Vilas  Verma  of  Arunodaya  Degree
College, Hyderabad. All the  ID  cards  were  of  Arunodaya  College.  Kasab
listed the different fake Hindu names given to the rest of his colleagues.

63.   Kafa took them back to the Karachi harbour and they stayed on the  sea
for one day. On that expedition, Hakim Saab taught them  how  to  dismantle,
assemble and run a small inflatable boat. He showed them  how  to  take  out
the sea valve and sink  a  boat.  He  explained  to  them  about  “tul”  and
“chourai”.

[Here the magistrate asked him to explain “tul” and “chourai”. He  explained
that “tuls” were the vertical and “chourais” were the horizontal lines on  a
map]

64.   On the twentieth (20th) day of Roza, Lakhvi came there and  said  that
the work had been stopped for some time. At this Kasab said to  Lakhvi  that
there was no need for them to wait. He could make their mission  successful,
according to the plan, and there  was  no  need  for  him  to  worry.  Kasab
further said that he had longed for it for so many years  and  asked  Lakhvi
not to create any  obstructions.  At  this,  Zaki-ur-Rehman  Lakhvi  started
laughing and said that he knew  from  the  beginning  that  he  was  a  firm
“Jihadi”, but he asked him to wait for some  time.  The  next  day  Zaki-ur-
Rehman Lakhvi  left,  though  the  Mujahedeens  continued  to  stay  in  the
Azizabad house. During those days Imran Babar would  make  them  repeat  the
names on their ID cards. Of them, Imran Babar alone  was  properly  educated
and he could, therefore, read and write English.

65.   They celebrated ‘Ramzan  Eid’  in  the  Azizabad  house.  During  this
period Abu Hamza taught them how to plant a bomb under the seat in a  moving
car and gave training to Kasab, Javed and Nazir Ahmed  on  how  to  plant  a
bomb under the (driver’s) seat while sitting in the back seat  of  the  car.
They were in the Azizabad house for almost a month and a half.  On  November
18, Kafa left, taking Nasir and Nazir Ahmed with him.





Arming for the Invasion:

66.   On November 21 they were driven from Azizabad in  a  car  to  a  house
near a creek. Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi, Zarar Shah, Abu Hamza, Kafa, Nasir  and
Nazir Ahmed were already  present  there.  Zaki-ur-Rehman  Lakhvi  had  made
Ismail Khan the ‘Ameer’ of the mission. In the house near  the  creek  there
were a number of boxes containing the ‘goods’. Those boxes  were  opened  in
their presence and all the ‘goods’ were handed over to Ismail.  The  ‘goods’
were Aslaha, barood (explosives) and eatables.

[The magistrate asked what “Aslaha” is. Kasab replied: weapons].

67.   Abu Hamza had explained to Ismail how the “Aslaha” and  “Barood”  were
to be distributed. Ismail noted down all the instructions in his  diary  and
took all the articles in his possession. Thereafter  Abu  Hamza  gave  Kasab
and Ismail Rupees ten thousand and eight  hundred  (Rs.10800=00)  in  Indian
currency. They divided it between themselves. All the other  ‘buddies’  were
also given Indian money. Then Zarar Shah gave each of them a  mobile  phone.
Ismail asked which place the numbers belonged to. Zarar  Shah  replied  that
those numbers were of Hindustan. He added that they  had  obtained  the  SIM
cards from Hindustan by tricking some people there. He added  that  the  SIM
cards would get activated on reaching Bombay.  He  asked  them  to  use  the
phones on reaching Bombay. Kasab asked  about  the  numbers  on  which  they
could talk to them. Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi said  that  Zarar  had  fed  their
numbers in the mobiles and that on  punching  the  green  button  twice  the
phone would be connected to them and they would be able to  report  to  them
about the work.

68.   He then gave some (telephone) numbers to Ismail and asked him to  note
down those numbers in his diary. Ismail noted down the numbers in the  diary
which he always kept with him. Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi also gave the names  of
some areas of Bombay, like Colaba, WTC etc., which names, too, Ismail  noted
down in his diary. During the training, Abu Hamza had given them some  codes
so that no one would suspect while they communicated on  the  phone.  Ismail
had those codes and the details of “tul” and “chourai”  also  noted  in  his
diary. Thereafter, Zaki-ur-Rehman gave  a  satellite  phone  to  Ismail  and
left.

69.   Ismail then distributed the weapons and  the  explosives.  He  gave  a
large sack to all the “Mujahedeens”. He also  gave  each  of  them  one  (1)
‘Kalashan’, eight (8) magazines, two hundred and forty (240)  rounds,  eight
(8) hand grenades, one bayonet (Kasab called it “Sangeen”), one  (1)  pistol
with three (3) magazines, twenty-one (21) rounds, one (1) water bottle,  one
(1) Kg raisins, one (1) headphone and three  (3)  nine  (9)  volt  batteries
along with a charger. He also gave each of them an RDX bomb of eight (8)  Kg
that was kept in a tiffin box in a small sack. He also gave each  ‘buddy’  a
GPS system  and  a  small  pouch  to  everyone  to  tie  around  the  waist.


70.   All of them took their goods and cleaned and serviced  the  “Kalashan”
and the pistol; put thirty (30) rounds in each magazine of their  “Kalashan”
and seven (7) in those of the  pistol.  As  trained,  they  joined  two  (2)
magazines together with tape so as to  easily  replace  the  magazine  being
emptied while firing from “Kalashan”. They then  packed  all  the  “aslaha”,
the other goods and their new clothes in the large  sack.  Everyone’s  sack,
containing the bombs and the goods, was kept for the night in the Lashkar-e-
Toiba’s car.  Ismail  asked  all  of  them  to  keep  their  ID  cards  with
Hindustani names in their pockets, and they did as instructed.

71.   At night, Abu Hamza and Kafa told Ismail to note down  the  “tul”  and
“chourai” while on their way to Bombay so that they could reach Bombay  with
the help of GPS without difficulty. Ismail made the notes in his  diary,  as
instructed by them, in Kasab’s presence.

The Journey to Mumbai by Sea:

72.   On November 22, they woke at  six  (6)  in  the  morning  and  offered
Namaz. Then they left for Karachi, along with Kafa and Abu  Hamza,  to  make
the “Fidayeen” attack  on  Bombay.  After  walking  for  about  thirty  (30)
minutes they reached a creek. Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi was  present  there.  He
told them that the “Aaqa” (master) Hafiz Sayeed and all of them  had  worked
very hard for that mission. Their efforts must bear  fruit.  They  had  been
trained fully in every skill. They must not be  let  down.  That  was  their
responsibility. Zaki-ur-Rehman further told them to  switch  on  the  mobile
phones on reaching Bombay. He said that  the  “buddiyas”  targeting  Nariman
House, Taj Hotel and Oberoi Hotel would communicate  with  the  media.  They
(Zaki-ur-Rehman and the other conspirators) would tell them afterwards  what
to say to them. They (Zaki-ur-Rehman and the other conspirators) would  also
send e-mail to the media and challenge the Hindustani  government.  Zaki-ur-
Rehman then handed over to each ‘buddy’  the  maps  sent  by  Sabauddin  and
Fahim. Ismail kept the map that showed the way  to  reach  VTS  and  Malabar
Hill. Zaki-ur-Rehman instructed them to tear  up  the  maps  after  reaching
their destinations. Thereafter, Zaki-ur-Rehman prayed for them  saying  that
he put them under the protection of Allah and Allah would protect  them.  He
further prayed that Allah might let them complete the  desired  work  fully.
He then gave instruction to Ismail to take out the sea valve before  leaving
the Hindustani boat so that it would sink into the sea. Zaki-ur-Rehman  then
took Ismail aside and talked to him privately.

73.   At around seven (7:00 AM) in the morning a small wooden  boat  arrived
to take them. After sailing in that boat for an hour and a half,  they  were
transferred to a bigger boat and the small boat went back.  Hakim  Saab  and
his three colleagues were also there in the big boat. At about 9:00 PM  they
boarded an even bigger vessel, Al-Hussaini, while Hakim Saab and  his  three
colleagues returned in the second boat. There were seven (7) persons on  the
Al-Hussaini from before, of whom three were called Murshad  (wanted  accused
No. 16), Aaquib (wanted accused No. 17) and Usman (wanted accused  No.  19).
They were all members  of  Lashkar-e-Toiba.  Murshad  gave  them  the  sacks
containing the bombs, and the “Kalashan” that were  packed  in  the  Karachi
house. Murshad also gave Ismail a rubber speed boat, a pump to fill  air  in
the rubber boat, life jackets, blankets,  rice,  flour,  oil,  pickle,  milk
powder, match boxes, detergent powder, tissue papers,  bottles  of  Mountain
Dew cold drink, dental cream,  spray  paint,  towels,  shaving  kits,  tooth
brushes, etc.

They spent that night on Al-Hussaini.

74.   [At this point the court time  was  over  but  Kasab’s  statement  was
incomplete. The magistrate, therefore, sent him back  to  judicial  custody.
He was again produced before her on the following day,  February  21,  2009,
at 10.40 AM. The magistrate once again satisfied herself that  he  had  been
insulated  from  any  external  influence  and  would  make  the   statement
completely voluntarily. She then resumed taking down his statement].

75.   Continuing the narrative where he stopped on the previous  day,  Kasab
said that on November 23, at  about  12.00  PM  they  had  traveled  by  Al-
Hussaini for about half an hour (sic) when they saw a  boat  coming  towards
them. Usman waved a broken engine belt, indicating to  the  people  on  that
boat that they were in need of help and, on the  pretext  of  seeking  their
help in changing the broken belt, they approached  that  boat  and  captured
it. The name of the Hindustani boat was “Kuber”. Four persons on  that  boat
were taken hostage by Hakim Saab and Usman and were brought aboard  the  Al-
Hussaini. They also brought from the Kuber TV set and  VCR  and  some  other
articles lying on it to the  Al-Hussaini.  Then  all  ten  (10)  “Fidayeens”
along with all their belongings boarded the Kuber. The “Nakhva”  (navigator)
of  “Kuber”  was  also  put  in  their  custody.  Then,  on   Hakim   Saab’s
instructions, Ismail checked the amount of diesel  on  Kuber.  The  “Nakhva”
told him that there were seven hundred (700) liters of diesel  in  its  tank
and another four (4) drums filled with diesel on  board.  Ismail  asked  him
whether that would be sufficient to take them to Bombay to which he  replied
that that may not be sufficient to carry them to  Bombay.  Hakim  Saab  told
Ismail that there might arise the need for more diesel, and asked his  three
colleagues to transfer the iron drums and plastic cans  filled  with  diesel
from Al-Hussaini to Kuber.

76.   Thereafter, according to plan, they sailed for Bombay, with  the  help
of GPS and the “tul” and “chourai” that were given to  them,  and  with  the
assistance of Amarchand Solanki, the Nakhva of Kuber.

77.   On Kuber, Imran Babar was assigned the work of cooking and  the  other
nine (9) men were divided by Ismail in groups of three each for guard  duty.
Kasab was in the group with Ismail Khan and  Nasir.  Each  group  was  given
guard duty for two hours on rotation basis. Ismail also noted  down  in  his
diary the hours assigned to each  group,  mentioning  the  members  of  each
group by the names given to them by Hafiz Sayeed.

78.   After sailing for some  distance,  they  tied  the  “Nakhva’s”  hands,
blindfolded him and made him sit near the engine. The three  groups  guarded
the Kuber against any unfriendly intrusion round the  clock  and  they  also
kept a watch on Amarchand, the “Nakhva”. Ismail and Javed were  sailing  the
boat with the help of the “Nakhva”. During the voyage they were  talking  to
Abu Hamza on the satellite phone. And Ismail was verifying with the  aid  of
GPS that they were sailing in the right direction. They  were  also  feeding
the “Nakhva”. They filled diesel in the engine of the Kuber  thrice  on  the
journey to Bombay, with help from the “Nakhva”.

79.   On November 26, at 11.00 AM, according to plan, they  tied  red-yellow
coloured threads around their wrists.  Around  4.00  PM  on  that  day  they
neared Bombay and its tall buildings came within into sight.

Kasab shames the Butcher:

80.   According to plan, Kasab called Abu Hamza on the satellite  phone.  He
told him that they had reached Bombay and asked what was  to  be  done  with
the “Nakhva”. Abu Hamza laughed and said he should do  whatever  he  wanted.
Kasab then told Ismail that it would be better to kill the “Nakhva”.  Ismail
agreed with him. Kasab then asked Soheb and Nasir to hold  the  “Nakhva”  by
the legs in the engine room. He himself yanked him by the hair  and  pulling
his head down cut his neck. He then hid his body in the engine room.

81.   Meanwhile, Ismail, Fahadullah, Javed and Nazir Ahmed  began  inflating
the rubber speed-boat with the pump. After half an hour, when the  boat  was
filled with air, it was lowered into the sea.  They  wore  the  new  clothes
purchased from the market in Karachi. Kasab put on a red T-shirt  and,  over
it, a blue T-shirt with a cap attached to it and  green  cargo  pants.  Like
him, the others also put on the new clothes purchased  from  the  market  in
Karachi. They all put on red life jackets and  yellow  waterproof  trousers.
They left behind the clothes they had travelled in on the Kuber. Kasab  left
a white shalwar and a white shirt that he had been wearing earlier.  All  of
them offered namaz and then, according to plan,  they  all  took  out  their
mobile phones from the bags and switched them on. But there was  no  network
on the sea. They unloaded all the articles for the attack on to  the  speed-
boat. While they were engaged in moving from the Kuber  to  the  speed-boat,
they saw a boat approaching. They thought it was  a  ‘navy’  boat.  Alarmed,
they quickly got into the speed-boat and set  sail.  In  his  haste,  Ismail
forgot to take out the sea valve of the Kuber. He also forgot his  satellite
phone on the Kuber.

82.   They left the Kuber at a distance of about  four  (4)  nautical  miles
from Bombay and sailed for Bombay on the speed-boat. Ismail was sailing  the
speed-boat. The speed-boat had the engine of Yamaha  Company.  Nazir  Ahmed,
with the aid of GPS, was showing the way to Bombay. On the way, Ismail  said
that first he and Kasab would leave for VTS by taxi, then  Soheb  and  Nazir
Ahmad would go to Leopold Hotel by taxi, and then  Javed  and  Hafiz  Arshad
would go to the Taj Hotel by taxi. Imran  Babar  and  Nasir  would  walk  to
Nariman House. Last of all, Fahadullah and Abdul Rehman  (Chhota)  would  go
to Oberoi Hotel in the speed-boat. Ismail asked Kasab, Soheb  and  Javed  to
place RDX bombs, according to plan, under  their  taxi  drivers’  seats.  He
told the others to place their bombs near the targets.

83.   After sailing for about an hour and a half or two hours  they  reached
the Bombay shore. According to plan, Abu Ali jumped  out  and  anchored  the
boat to the shore. First, Ismail and Kasab  alighted  from  the  speed-boat.
They took their bags. Both Ismail and Kasab removed their life  jackets  and
waterproof trousers and threw them into  the  sea.  After  getting  off  the
boat, Kasab put on his shoes. Following Kasab and Ismail,  the  others  also
got off the speed boat. At that time it was about 9.00 PM and  according  to
the plan they were late by about an hour and a half.

84.   On getting down from the boat  they  came  across  two  persons.  They
asked them who they were and from where had they come. Kasab told them  that
they were students. Ismail had an altercation with them.

The Attack:

85.   Ismail and Kasab took their bags and walked up to the road. They  took
a taxi. Ismail sat in the front and Kasab  sat  in  the  back  seat.  Ismail
asked the driver to take them to VTS. He  started  talking  to  the  driver.
Meanwhile Kasab fixed two nine (9) volt batteries to the wire of  the  timer
in the bomb in the bag. He placed this bag, containing the bomb,  under  the
driver’s seat. He had set the time  of  explosion  for  after  an  hour  and
fifteen minutes.

86.   They reached VTS within fifteen to twenty minutes and were annoyed  to
find the crowd at the station far less than what they had seen  on  the  CD.
Ismail tried to communicate with Abu Hamza on his mobile but the mobile  did
not show any network. Ismail then  tried  to  make  the  call  from  Kasab’s
mobile but his mobile, too, did not work. Ismail kept  Kasab’s  mobile  with
him and both of them entered and came  inside  the  passage.  They  saw  the
stairs going upwards. The people there had come with  large  bags  and  from
that they gathered that this platform was for  long-distance  trains.  There
was a toilet nearby. Kasab gave his bag to Ismail and went  to  the  toilet.
When he came back,  Ismail  went  to  the  toilet  carrying  the  small  bag
containing the bomb with him.  Inside,  according  to  plan,  he  fixed  the
batteries in the bomb and came out with the bag containing the bomb.  Ismail
put the bag containing the bomb among the  passengers’  luggage.  They  then
signaled to each other  and  decided  to  open  fire.  Kasab  took  out  the
‘Kalashan’ from his bag and Ismail took out a hand grenade from his bag.  He
removed its clip and threw it at the people. At the  same  time  both  Kasab
and Ismail started firing on  the  people  present  there.  After  a  while,
Ismail threw another grenade at  the  people.  They  continued  firing  from
their ‘Kalashans’. As a result of the firing, many  people  were  killed  on
the station. The people at the station were frightened and  started  running
in all directions. Within a  short  time,  the  entire  station  was  empty.
Meanwhile the police had started firing on them. Both of them fired back  at
the police, giving cover to each other.

87.   The police continued to fire at them and tried to  stop  them.  Ismail
and Kasab shot the policemen dead and came out of  VT  station  through  the
stairs. (He refers to the foot-overbridge on the side of  platform  No.1  of
the local lines). Kasab said that he  fired  almost  six  magazines  at  the
station.

88.   After coming down from the overbridge they looked for a  taxi  in  the
lane (Badruddin Tayabji Marg). But they found none. They tried to  open  the
cars parked in the lane but were unable to open any car.  They  moved  ahead
in the lane. They both fired in that lane. At that time heavy police  firing
started and they decided to enter the opposite building (which  happened  to
be Cama Hospital), climb to its terrace and kill  the  policemen  by  firing
and throwing grenades at them from this higher position.

89.   They jumped over a closed gate, entered the building  and  climbed  up
its floors. The police followed them into the building. They  fired  at  the
police and the people and also threw hand grenades at  them.  At  that  time
the police was also firing at them. They shot the policemen dead.  Then,  as
the firing stopped, they came down. They were in that  building  for  almost
an hour. Then they came to know that the  building  was  a  hospital.   They
could hear the screams of women and cries of children coming from the  rooms
of the building. They decided to enter every room of  the  building  and  to
kill the women and children there. They tried  to  open  the  doors  of  the
rooms but all the doors were closed from inside  and  the  iron-grill  doors
outside were also closed. They were unable to open any of  the  doors.  They
decided to get out from that building and go  to  their  last  target.  They
came down from the building and moved ahead, taking cover of a  wall.  After
moving ahead, they jumped over the wall and came out on the road.

90.   They moved ahead on the road, keeping on the right side, taking  cover
of the wall. They saw a policeman coming. Kasab pointed  his  ‘Kalashan’  at
him and fired, killing the policeman on the spot. At  that  time  they  were
fired at from the opposite direction. They fired in retaliation and  entered
a lane. They saw a white car with a red beacon  light  in  the  lane  moving
backwards. Kasab fired at the car. The car moved for a little  distance  and
stopped. Ismail threw a hand grenade at the car and Kasab again fired at  it
with a view to make the car move away from  there.  But  when  they  reached
near the car and tried to open its door they found all  the  window  glasses
raised and the doors locked and the driver lying dead inside the  car.  They
tried to open the door of the car but were unable to open it.

91.   Then they saw a car with a yellow light coming towards them  from  the
opposite direction. Seeing that car, both of them hid in the bushes,  taking
the cover of the wall behind them. As soon as that car came near them,  they
fired at it; at the same time shots were fired from the car,  hitting  Kasab
on both his hands. When the firing from the car stopped they looked  at  the
car and found that the persons inside the car  were  policemen  and  all  of
them were dead. They tried to open the car’s rear door but it did not  open.
Kasab was injured and he stood leaning on the vehicle,  shaking  his  hands,
while Ismail fired a round of ‘brush fire’  on  the  road  behind  the  car.
Ismail then went near the car and pulled out the dead bodies of  the  driver
and the policeman sitting behind the driver. Kasab pulled out the dead  body
of the policeman sitting next to the driver and  threw  it  on  the  ground.
There were no rounds left in Ismail’s ‘Kalashan’ and, therefore,  he  picked
up the policeman’s ‘Kalashan’ from the car. He started the car and drove  at
full speed. He told Kasab that bullets had hit him on the legs  and  in  the
armpits.

92.   After some time they  reached  the  chowk  and  found  a  large  crowd
comprising both policemen and the public. Ismail fired at the policemen  and
the public while continuing to drive the car. After some  time  it  appeared
that  the  back  right  tyre  of  their  car  was  punctured.  Ismail   was,
nevertheless, driving the car at a very high speed. Then, on seeing a  white
car approaching from the  opposite  direction,  Ismail  stopped  their  car.
Kasab fired from his ‘Kalashan’ in the air and both of them got out  of  the
car. He went towards the white car  and,  pointing  the  ‘Kalashan’  at  the
driver, asked him to stop the car. The driver immediately stopped  the  car.
Ismail pulled him out. At the same time  the  person  sitting  next  to  the
driver and the woman sitting on the back seat also got out. All this  while,
Kasab was giving cover to Ismail. Having thus snatched the car,  Ismail  sat
on the driver’s seat and Kasab quickly sat next to him  and  they  left.  At
this point Kasab asked Ismail where they had to go. Ismail said they had  to
go to Malabar Hill. Kasab further  asked  where  exactly  in  Malabar  Hill.
Ismail said he would tell him on reaching Malabar Hill.

93.   After going for some distance, Kasab saw that they were  traveling  on
a road going along the sea and then he realized that this road was shown  in
the map by Sabauddin and Fahim as going towards  Malabar  Hill.  While  they
were driving at full speed, going in the direction  of  Malabar  Hill,  they
saw the barricade on the road and policemen standing around  the  barricade.
The policemen had seen their car moving at great speed from a long  distance
and were asking them to stop  by  raising  their  hands  and  blowing  their
whistles. Realizing that  it  was  impossible  to  cross  the  barricade  by
smashing against it, Kasab asked Ismail to stop the  car  at  some  distance
from the barricade and to keep the  headlights  on  so  that  the  policemen
would not be able to see either them or the  number  of  their  car.  Ismail
stopped the car at some distance from the barricade and kept the  headlights
on. The policemen were shouting at them and were asking them to  switch  off
the headlights.

94.   Looking around, Kasab saw that the road divider on his right was  very
low and thought they could cross it by driving the car at very  high  speed.
He advised Ismail accordingly. Ismail  immediately  switched  on  the  water
spray on the wind screen and started the wiper. He took  the  car  a  little
ahead and turned it to the right in the direction of the  road  divider.  He
drove at full speed but the car did not go  over  the  divider  and  stopped
there. At the same time the policemen  charged  at  them  from  both  sides.
Realizing the gravity of the situation they both  raised  their  hands.  But
the policemen kept coming at them. Seeing this Ismail tried to pick  up  the
‘Kalashan’ but it was kept below and  he  couldn’t  take  it  out.  He  then
picked up his pistol,  which  was  kept  on  the  seat,  and  fired  at  the
policemen. At the same time, Kasab saw a policeman coming  towards  him;  he
opened the door of the car and got hold of his ‘Kalashan’.  The  police  had
started firing. A policeman tried to snatch the ‘Kalashan’ from him. In  the
struggle, Kasab fell down but he had  his  finger  on  the  trigger  and  he
pressed it. The bullets hit a policeman holding a rifle and he collapsed  on
the ground. The other policemen  beat  him  with  lathis  and  snatched  the
‘Kalashan’ from his hands. Ismail was injured in the police  firing  and  he
too was overpowered.

95.   Kasab said that he and Ismail were then brought to the hospital in  an
ambulance. In the hospital he learnt that Ismail died by police bullets.  He
gave his and Ismail’s names to the police and  the  doctors  and  also  told
them that they were Pakistanis.

96.   He concluded his statement before the magistrate by  saying  that  the
doctors in the  hospital  cleaned  and  bandaged  his  wounds  and  got  him
admitted in the hospital. There the  doctors  took  away  his  blood-smeared
clothes and gave him hospital clothes to wear. When  the  police  asked  him
about his colleagues and how they reached Bombay he told them everything.

97.   This is the appellant’s account, as told by him to the magistrate.  We
now propose to take a brief look at the  violent  crimes  committed  by  the
appellant and his group of terrorists in Mumbai  through  Indian  eyes.  And
for that we shall follow the bloody trails of the  appellant  and  those  of
the other members of the terrorist group.

THE LANDING:

98.   The inflatable rubber dinghy on which the terrorists  came  to  Mumbai
landed at a  place  called  Badhwar  Park.  The  dinghy’s  arrival  at  that
particular place could not possibly be by accident  or  by  chance.  Badhwar
Park was evidently selected as the landing  site  for  the  terrorists  with
great care and with consideration of its  immense  strategic  potential  for
the attack on their chosen targets. It is also clear that the  selection  of
Badhwar  Park  as  their  landing  place  was  not  made  by  the  attackers
themselves but by someone else among the conspirators. The selection of  the
landing  place  for  the  dinghy  was  clearly  based  on  a  good  deal  of
reconnaissance and survey work; and whoever selected the  spot  for  landing
had undoubtedly made himself fully familiar not only with the  Mumbai  shore
line but also the city.

99.   Badhwar Park is a settlement of fishermen and at that  place  the  sea
comes more deeply into the land mass, forming a kind of  a  vesicle.  Hence,
the water is calm and, this being a fishermen’s colony,  a  group  of  young
people arriving from the sea is not likely to arouse any suspicion  or  even
attract much attention. Further, the place  abutts  a  main  road.  A  sandy
slope from the water, not more than ten (10) metres in length, takes one  to
the road where taxis are readily available. The CST railway  station  is  at
distance of 3.5 kms from Badhwar Park and by a  taxi  it  takes  fifteen  to
twenty (15-20) minutes to reach there. The Taj Hotel is at distance of 1  km
and Leopold Café nine hundred (900) metres. Nariman House, to which the  two
(2) terrorist went walking, is at a  distance  of  0.5  km.  Nariman  Point,
where the last pair took the  dinghy  by  sea  after  the  other  eight  had
alighted at Badhwar Park, is 0.55 nautical miles  (1  km)  from  there;  and
from the point where the last pair got off  the  dinghy,  Oberoi  Hotel  and
Trident Hotel are at a distance of three  hundred  (300)  metres.  The  last
pair walked to these hotels.

100.  Kasab had said to the magistrate that on getting down  from  the  boat
they had come across two persons. They had  enquired  about  them  and  even
while Abu Ismail tried to  rebuff  them  Kasab  told  them  that  they  were
students. One of these two men that Kasab met was  Bharat  Dattatray  Tamore
(PW-28). He lived in the Fisherman Colony, Cuffe Parade. He was a  permanent
employee of Hotel Taj Mahal, Colaba, where he worked as Mukhadam.  He  lived
in Chawl no.2 which was situated very  close  to  the  sea  shore  at  about
fifteen (15) minutes walking distance from the Taj Hotel. He deposed  before
the court that since his Chawl was  very  close  to  the  shore,  for  going
anywhere he had to go along the shore quite close to the water. On  November
26, 2008, he left his house at about  9.15  PM  for  the  hotel,  where  his
duties commenced at 10.00 PM and ended the following morning at 7.00 AM.  On
the way to the hotel he saw an inflatable boat on the  shore.  In  the  boat
there were ten (10) people who were in the age group  of  twenty  to  twenty
five (20-25) years. He saw eight out of them alighting from the  boat.  Each
of them was carrying a sack and a hand-bag. Two of  them  proceeded  towards
the main road ahead of the others. They appeared strangers to the place  and
he asked them where they came from. One of  them  said  they  were  students
while the other responded by roughly asking  in  reply  as  to  how  he  was
concerned about them. He added that the two persons  who  had  not  alighted
took the boat towards Nariman Point. He returned to his  home  next  morning
at about seven (7:00 AM). On way he came across four (4) policemen near  the
Badhwar Park Railway Officers’ Colony who were talking about the  inflatable
boat. He then told them what he  had  witnessed  the  previous  evening.  He
later identified the appellant in the test  identification  parade  held  on
December 28, 2008. He also identified the dead body of the other  person  at
the mortuary of J.J.  Hospital.  He  also  identified  the  appellant  while
deposing in court, as one of the persons who had alighted from the boat.

101.  There is another person called  Prashant  Hemnath  Dhanu  (PW-29)  who
lived in the fishermen’s colony. He was twenty-four (24)  years  old  and  a
fisherman by profession. He stated before the court that he  had  a  fishing
boat and on November 26, 2008, at  about  9.15  PM  he,  along  with  a  few
relatives, had gone out to sea on his  boat  to  fish.  On  nearing  Nariman
Point around 9.45 PM they saw a seemingly abandoned rubber boat. There  were
some life jackets in the boat and  it  was  fitted  with  a  Yamaha  engine.
Buffeted by the sea waves, it was bouncing against the  tetrapod.  Lest  the
owner of the boat might suffer its loss  they  towed  it  to  their  fishing
trawler and brought it to the jetty near the fishermen’s colony  at  Badhwar
Park (that is, to the point where it had first  landed!).  He  informed  the
coast guard about the abandoned boat found by him. He further said that  the
police had  arrived  there  and  they  took  charge  of  the  boat  under  a
Panchnama. We shall deal with the seizure of the boat by the police and  the
articles found in it in due course. Suffice here to  note  that  the  rubber
boat (Article 156) was shown to the witness in court and he duly  identified
it as the one that he had found abandoned at Nariman  Point  and  had  towed
back to the Fishermen’s Colony, Badhwar Park. He also indicated  the  yellow
strip of paint on the black body of the boat, on the basis of which  he  was
able to identify it.

102.  From Badhwar Park  the  appellant,  Kasab,  and  his  accomplice,  Abu
Ismail, took a taxi and proceeded to CST. Kasab told the magistrate that  he
occupied the back seat of the taxi and, on the way to CST, had put  the  RDX
bomb under the driver’s seat, setting the time of blast for  after  an  hour
and fifteen minutes. We shall see the fate of the taxi, its driver  and  the
passenger, who occupied it after Kasab and Abu Ismail, presently  under  the
marginal  heading  “The  Vile  Parle  Blast”.  But,  for  the  present,  the
appellant and his ‘buddy’ are on a spree of mass killings at CST.

Slaughter at CST: Fifty two  (52)  dead  and  One  hundred  and  nine  (109)
injured:

103.  In regard to the CST episode, like all other parts of  the  case,  the
prosecution has gathered a very large amount of evidence:  ocular,  forensic
and  of  other  kinds,  e.g.,  CCTV  recordings.[4]  They  have   documented
practically every action and movement of the  two  killers  from  the  point
when Abu Ismail threw the first hand grenade[5] at  the  passengers  on  the
platform till they went out of CST through the foot-overbridge on  the  side
of platform no.1 of the local lines (and thereafter….). On the basis of  the
ocular evidence alone (not taking into account  for  the  moment  the  other
evidences) the prosecution has  presented  before  the  court  a  vivid  and
photographic (figuratively and actually) account of the CST events. Here  we
propose  to  examine  in  slightly  greater  detail  four  witnesses   whose
evidence, in one way or another, has some  special  features,  and  then  to
take an overview of some more witnesses to construct a broad picture of  the
massacre at CST.

104.  Before proceeding to examine the witnesses it may  be  appropriate  to
say a word about the way most of the  witnesses  identified  the  appellant.
The appellant, Kasab, and his accomplice, Abu Ismail, seemed to make an  odd
pair in that Abu Ismail was quite tall, about six (6) feet  in  height,  and
Kasab is barely over five (5) feet. The difference in their  height  appears
to have struck almost anyone  who  saw  them  together.  Although  different
witnesses described them by their complexion (both Abu Ismail and Kasab  are
described as fair), age (Abu Ismail is said to be between 22  and  25  years
and Kasab between 22 and 24 years), built of  body  (Abu  Ismail  as  medium
built, Kasab as strongly built),  their  apparel  and  the  bags  they  were
carrying, almost everyone referred to their heights, calling Abu  Ismail  as
“the taller” and Kasab as “the shorter”  one.  Many  witnesses  called  them
“lamboo” (tall) and “butka” or “tingu” (short).

105.  Now the witnesses:

      Bharat Ramchandra Bhosale (PW-49) is the Informant in connection  with
the offences committed at CST. At the time of the assault on CST he  was  an
Assistant Inspector of Police attached to the CST  Railway  Police  Station.
The police station is situated within the premises of  CST  in  the  passage
between the main hall of local lines and the main hall  of  main  lines.  On
the night of November 26 and 27, he was on duty at the  police  station  and
he reported for duty at 20.30 hours. At about  21.50  hours,  while  he  was
coming out of the PS, he heard the sound of firing from  the  main  hall  of
the main line railway station. The main hall  is  at  a  distance  of  about
fifty to sixty (50 – 60) feet from the PS. He proceeded  to  the  main  hall
from the side of the taxi stand (north). Police  Inspector  Shashank  Shinde
(one of the policemen killed in the attack), who was also on  duty  at  that
time, proceeded to the hall from the side of the SBI ATM (south). On  coming
to the main hall he saw the two terrorists indiscriminately firing from  AK-
47 rifles at the passengers sitting in  the  main  hall.  Many  people  were
lying injured in pools of blood; many of them were crying.  Those  who  were
still on their legs were trying to flee the main hall. Bhosale said that  he
first saw the two terrorists when they were firing  from  a  spot  near  the
public toilet. He described the location of the public toilet  and  went  on
to say that when he first saw the two terrorists they were in the main  hall
at a distance of about forty (40) feet. There was sufficient  light  in  the
main hall for him to see them.

106.  Bhosale then proceeded to give a description of  the  two  terrorists.
He said that one of them was short, aged  about  twenty-two  to  twenty-four
(22–24) years with long hair that came down to  his  neck;  he  had  a  fair
complexion and was strongly built. He was wearing a  blue  T-shirt  and  was
carrying a rexine bag. He was holding an AK-47 rifle.  The  other  terrorist
was taller than the first one. He was also fair and of medium built. He  was
aged about twenty-two to twenty-five (22–25) years. He was wearing  a  black
T-shirt and he too was carrying a rexine bag. He was also carrying an  AK-47
rifle.

107.  At this point, the witness paused in his  narration  to  identify  the
appellant as one of the two terrorists who was described by  him  as  short,
strong built and who was wearing a blue T-shirt.

108.  The witness was then  shown  the  identity  card  recovered  from  Abu
Ismail (Article 61)[6]. He identified the photograph as that  of  the  other
terrorist, the accomplice of the appellant.

109.  The witness proceeded with his narration and said that he rushed  back
to the police station to ask for additional  force.  As  he  came  near  the
entrance door of the police station he was fired at by the  terrorists.  One
of the bullets pierced through his right upper arm and struck the wall  near
the table of the police station’s House Officer. He  intimated  the  railway
police  helpline  about  the  assault  by  the  terrorists  and  asked   for
additional  force.[7]  He  also  intimated  the  Commissioner   of   Police,
Railways, on his walkie-talkie.

110.  He then came back to the main hall  accompanied  by  Police  Constable
Nalawade who had a carbine with him. He saw Police  Inspector  Shinde  lying
injured near the SBI, ATM. Also lying injured in the main  hall  were  about
one hundred to one hundred and twenty-five (100-125) passengers.

111.  By the time he came back to the main hall of the main lines,  the  two
terrorists had moved in the direction of the main hall of the local  railway
station. Constable  Nalawade  fired  three  rounds  towards  them  from  his
carbine. Constable Nardele (PW-58) also fired eight rounds at them from  the
main hall of the main lines while the terrorists were in the  main  hall  of
the local lines. The appellant and his associate were, however, not hit  and
they continued to proceed towards platform No. 1  of  the  local  lines.  By
then, the additional police force had come and the public had also  come  to
their help. The injured persons were being taken to hospitals.  The  witness
himself was admitted to St. George’s Hospital for treatment of  the  firearm
injury in his right upper arm.

112.  He later came to learn that Police Inspector Shinde and  MN  Chaudhary
of the RPF were also among those who were killed as a result of  the  firing
by the two terrorists. He also learnt that the appellant and  his  associate
had also used hand-grenades at the railway station.

113.  His statement was recorded at the hospital and on that basis a  formal
FIR was drawn up in regard to the CST episode. He identified  his  statement
(Ext. no. 219) and the formal FIR (Ext. no. 220).

114.  He  further  told  the  court  that  he  had  earlier  identified  the
appellant in the test identification parade held at Arthur  Road  Prison  on
December 28, 2008.

115.  In reply to  a  court  question,  Bhosale  said  that  though  he  was
carrying a 9mm pistol, loaded with nine rounds,  he  did  not  fire  at  the
terrorists because there was a strong risk of the passengers getting  killed
or injured by his firing.

116.  Vishnu Dattaram Zende (PW-65) is the railway announcer. His job is  to
make announcements of the arrival  and  departure  of  trains  on  a  public
address system. For that purpose he sits with his colleagues in a  cabin  on
the mezzanine floor, almost at the centre of the  main  hall  of  the  local
lines, facing the full expanse  of  the  main  hall  and  beyond  it  up  to
platforms 1 to 7 of the local lines. Perched  in  his  office  Zende  had  a
completely unobstructed view through the glass screen of his  cabin  and  he
was able to see all that happening down below  in  the  main  hall  and  the
local lines’ platforms on the fateful evening of November 26, 2008. Here  it
must also be noted that  showing  great  devotion  to  duty  and  remarkable
presence of mind Zende saved  countless  people  from  death  or  injury  by
constantly announcing on the public address system that the railway  station
was under terrorist assault and by advising passengers alighting from  local
trains that continued  to  arrive  at  the  station  while  the  attack  was
underway to not go towards the main hall but to exit through the  rear  side
of the local lines’ platforms.

117.  Deposing before the court, he began with  a  succinct  description  of
CST from inside. He then proceeded to tell the court that  on  November  26,
2008, he was on duty from 3.00 PM to 11.00 PM. At about 9.55 PM he  heard  a
big explosion. He guessed that it was a bomb and looked outside  the  window
of his cabin. He saw passengers from the main line hall running towards  the
local lines. Among them some were  bleeding.  Some  were  trying  to  rescue
others who were unable to flee or move on account of injuries.

118.  He further stated before the court that he saw two  terrorists  coming
from the direction of platform no.7.  He  could  see  one  of  them  from  a
distance of 15 to 20 feet as he came near the entry gate of platform no.  4.
The other was following him. Both were firing. At that  point  he  suspended
his announcements because the terrorists,  from  where  they  were  at  that
time, could see him and fire at him. He then saw  the  shorter  of  the  two
terrorists sit down on the floor of the main  hall,  load  his  gun  with  a
magazine, throw his bag in the hall and resume firing.

119.  Zende added that, to avoid being shot at by  the  terrorists,  he  and
his colleagues sat down on the floor  of  their  cabin.  Nonetheless,  shots
were fired in the direction of their cabin and one of  the  bullets  smashed
the glass pane and went right through, piercing  the  plywood  partition  at
the back of the cabin.  They continued sitting on the  floor  for  about  an
hour and a half.  All the while they were in contact with their officers  on
the telephone.

120.  He then gave a description of the two terrorists and identified  Kasab
as the person who loaded his rifle sitting down on the  floor  of  the  main
hall and who threw away his bag.  He  was  then  shown  the  identity  card,
Article 61. He identified the photograph as that  of  the  taller  terrorist
who was accompanying the appellant. He was shown a black haversack,  Article
219. He identified it as the bag that the appellant had thrown away  in  the
main hall of the local lines.

121.  While dealing with the CST episode we must  take  note  of  two  other
witnesses. Their evidence  is  extraordinary  in  that  they  did  not  only
witness the incidents but also made a visual record of the events by  taking
pictures of the two killers  in  action  and  also  of  their  victims.  The
pictures  taken  by  these  two  witnesses,  without  anything   else,   are
sufficient to conclude the issue of identification of Kasab and  Abu  Ismail
(deceased accused no.1) as the  killers  of  CST.  Both  the  witnesses  are
professional photographers working with the Times of India  group.  Both  of
them,  caring  little  for  their  own  safety  and   displaying   exemplary
professionalism, followed the killers  practically  at  their  heels.  Their
ocular testimony together with the photographs  taken  by  them  provides  a
graphic picture of the carnage at CST.

122.  Sabastian Barnal D’Souza  (PW-61)  is  one  of  the  two  photographer
witnesses. He stated before the court that on the evening  of  November  26,
2008, he was in his office on  the  fourth  floor  of  the  Times  of  India
Building, which stands opposite the CST railway station. The  main  gate  of
the Times of India  Building  faces  platform  no.1  of  the  local  railway
station and one gate of CST railway station opens in front of the  Times  of
India Building. At about 9.50 PM he came to know from one of his  colleagues
that a gunman had entered Taj Hotel and was firing there randomly.  On  this
information, two photographers  immediately  proceeded  to  the  Taj  Hotel.
D’Souza and his colleague also came out of the office. As they came  out  of
the main gate of the building,  they  heard  the  sound  of  firing  at  CST
railway station. D’Souza jumped over the road divider and  entered  platform
no.1 of the local railway station, carrying  a  Nikon  digital  camera.  The
railway station was deserted and there were no passengers on the  platforms.
A local train was standing on platform no.1.  He crossed through  the  train
and reached platform no.2. There were no trains on platforms no.  2  and  3.
He proceeded to the main hall of the local railway station and walked up  to
the exit of platform no.6 in the main hall.  There he  found  one  policeman
in uniform and another person accompanying him in plain clothes.  They  were
looking towards the passage between the main line and  the  local  line.  It
was at this point that he saw, at a distance  of  about  one  hundred  (100)
feet, in the passage between  the  main  lines  and  the  local  lines,  two
persons who were firing from guns held by them. They were near  the  booking
window of local railway line  in  front  of  CST  police  station  while  he
himself was at the exit of  platform  no.6  of  the  local  line.   At  this
juncture, one of the policemen[8] fired at the two gunmen.

123.  At a nearby book-stall, the owner started to  pull  down  the  shutter
and, as he was doing so, he was hit by a bullet and fell down. D’Souza  took
a picture of the fallen book-stall owner.

124.  D’Souza then described the two gunmen and the way they  were  dressed.
He identified the appellant in the dock as the shorter of  the  two  gunmen.
He added that both were carrying guns.

125.  He further said to the court that he wanted  to  take  photographs  of
the gunmen and, therefore, he entered one of the compartments of  the  train
standing on platform no.6. The policeman in uniform  and  the  other  person
accompanying him in plain clothes were still there. He thought  the  man  in
plain clothes was also a policeman. He  saw  the  plainclothesman[9]  taking
the gun from the policeman in uniform and taking position  to  fire  at  the
appellant and his companion. He took pictures of the  policeman  in  uniform
and the plainclothesman. He asked the  two  policemen  to  enter  the  train
compartment because he thought they had taken  a  position  that  was  quite
dangerous.

126.  He further said that since the gunmen were coming  towards  the  local
lines, he went to platform no.4. He told the court that  during  the  course
of the incident he took over one hundred (100) photographs but most of  them
were blurred. He was not using the flash-gun and the light was not good  for
taking  photographs.  In  course  of  the  deposition  he  was   shown   the
photographs taken by him and he identified those photographs.

127.  The photograph showing the book-stall owner felled  by  a  bullet  was
marked Ext. no. 238. A set of three photographs  showing  the  policeman  in
uniform and the  plainclothesman  taking  aim  with  the  rifle  was  marked
collectively as Ext. no. 239. A set of three photographs  of  the  appellant
taken by D’Souza from behind a  pillar  was  collectively  marked  Ext.  no.
240[10]. A set of four photographs in which Kasab is shown  with  the  other
gunman Abu Ismail (deceased accused no.1) was marked  collectively  as  Ext.
no. 241. A photograph showing two persons lying dead or injured  was  marked
Ext. no. 242[11]. A set of 10 photographs taken by him after the gunmen  had
gone over to platform no.1 of the  local  lines,  showing  dead  or  wounded
passengers lying in the main  hall  of  the  main  lines,  was  collectively
marked as Ext. no. 243.

128.  He told the court that pictures taken by him were saved in the  memory
card of his camera. He had prepared a CD of the photographs from the  memory
card, to produce in court.  The  print-outs  were  taken  from  the  CD.  He
produced the memory card before the court (which the  court,  after  it  was
marked as Article 216, directed to be  returned  to  the  witness  for  safe
custody until further orders).

129.  He said that the CD was produced by him before the police  on  January
7, 2009, in presence of panch witnesses and then it was sealed. The  CD  was
taken out of a sealed packet (bearing no. 204) and was marked by  the  court
as Article 217.

130.  Significantly, he also  said  before  the  court  that  while  at  the
station he heard the announcement  on  the  public  address  system  warning
passengers of incoming local trains not to alight from  the  train  and,  in
case they had to go out, not to come to the main hall but  to  exit  through
the rear gate.

131.  Sriram Ramakant Vernekar (PW-102),  the  other  photographer  witness,
works as a press photographer with the Times of India. He stated before  the
court that on November 26, 2008, he was in the office at the Times of  India
Building, opposite CST railway station. At about 10.00 PM,  on  hearing  the
sound of firing, he picked up his camera and rushed towards CST station.  He
approached the station from the subway gate. He saw two  persons  firing  in
the directions of the railway office and booking office.  He  took  pictures
of the two gunmen from near the entrance to the main hall  from  the  subway
porch. As they were moving in his direction, he got out of the station  and,
crossing the road divider, came on the side of the Times of India Building.

132.  He told the court that  he  had  seen  the  two  gunmen  in  front  of
platform no.6 when he took their first photograph. He  produced  before  the
court four enlarged print-outs of the photographs taken by  him  which  were
collectively marked, for the purpose of identification  only,  as  Ext.  no.
410.

133.  He also produced the original memory card of  his  Nikon  D200  camera
containing more than ten (10) pictures taken by him with that  camera.   The
memory card was marked, for the purpose of identification, as Ext. no.  411.
The witness explained that the three photographs  bearing  Ext.  no.  410-A,
Ext. no. 410-B and Ext. no. 410-C[12] were the first photographs of the  two
gunmen taken by him.

He further stated before the court that one of them lobbed  a  hand  grenade
while they were proceeding from the main hall to  platform  no.1.  The  hand
grenade was thrown on DN Road in front of MCGM building. He went on  to  say
that he saw the two gunmen going from platform no.1 to the  foot-overbridge.
Both of them were carrying bags on their shoulders. He was in front  of  the
Times of India Building at that time. Both of them were firing  towards  the
Times of India Building from the foot-overbridge.  They  were  lobbing  hand
grenades also. He wanted to take their photographs and, therefore,  he  went
to the second floor of the Times of India Building from where the  foot-over
bridge is clearly visible. He took about three  to  four  (3-4)  photographs
from there. Since the quality of photographs was not satisfactory,  he  took
another photograph by using flash. As a result, the  shorter  man,  who  was
moving in front, got alerted and he fired three to four (3-4) rounds at  the
Times of India Building. The witness identified the fourth photograph  (Ext.
no. 410-D[13]) as the photograph taken by him by  using  flash.  He  further
said that the photograph was taken when the shorter fellow was getting  down
from the overbridge towards Badruddin Tayabji Road.

134.  Vernekar then identified the appellant as  “the  shorter  fellow”.  He
also identified the appellant’s partner from the photograph in the  Identity
Card Article 61.

135.  Among the rest of the CST witnesses we shall take a brief  look  first
at some of the policemen and then at some of the passenger witnesses.

136.  Jilu Baddu Yadav (PW-54), Mammath  Motiral  Nardele  (PW-58),  Harshad
Punju  Patil  (PW-59),  Geetanjali  Krishnarao  Gurav  (PW-60),  Sudama  Aba
Pandarkar  (PW-62),  Pandurang  Subrao  Patil  (PW-63)  and  Sandeep  Tanaji
Khiratkar (PW-66) are policemen or members of the Railway Protection  Force.
At the time of occurrence, they were on duty  at  different  places  in  the
vast premises of CST. On hearing the explosion and  the  gun  shots  and  on
seeing the  passengers  fleeing  for  their  lives,  they  realized  that  a
terrorist attack was underway at the  railway  station  and  proceeded  from
their respective stations towards the spot where the assault  was  launched.
On the way, some of them came across each other. A few were lucky to  escape
unharmed and some survived even after receiving grave injuries to  tell  the
story before the court; some others laid down their lives  while  trying  to
tackle the assailants  either  completely  unarmed  or  carrying  antiquated
weapons that failed them at the most crucial moment.

137.  Harshad Punju Patil (PW-59) was a police constable and  on  that  date
he was on patrolling duty in the ladies’ compartment in  the  local  trains.
He was carrying a .303 rifle and  ten  (10)  rounds.  When  the  terrorists’
attack took place, he was waiting for the train on  which  he  was  on  duty
near the Police Help Center in the main hall of the local  lines,  in  front
of platform no.3. Soon after the firing started, Police  Inspector  Shashank
Shinde of the CST Railway Police Station came there and told them  that  two
terrorists were firing  in  the  main  hall  of  the  main  station.  Police
constables Nardele and Gavit were also there. Both  of  them  were  carrying
carbines.  Shashank  Shinde  proceeded  towards  the   main   line   station
accompanied by Nardele and Gavit. Patil started loading the ten (10)  rounds
in his rifle. He then saw  the  two  terrorists  coming  towards  the  local
railway station from the main lines’ side. Taking cover of the  Police  Help
Centre he fired one round  at  them.  But  the  shot  misfired  because  the
cartridge was defective; the bolt was jammed and he was unable to  open  it.
By that time, the terrorists had come in  front  of  platform  no.3  of  the
local lines. At that point, Jillu Baddu Yadav (PW-54), a head  constable  of
the RPF, also arrived there, proceeding  from  his  place  of  duty  at  the
General Manager Gate of the CST Railway Station. He himself was unarmed  but
he saw Patil carrying a rifle  with  him.  He  saw  one  of  the  assailants
sitting down on the floor of the main hall of the local station and  loading
his rifle with a magazine. Yadav asked Patil to fire at  the  terrorist.  He
did not know that Patil’s rifle bolt had  jammed  and  it  would  not  open.
Thinking that Patil was trying to avoid firing at the terrorist, Yadav  took
the rifle from him and tried to fire at the terrorist who was  sitting  down
on the station floor, loading the magazine into the  rifle,  but  the  rifle
did not fire as it had locked. Meanwhile, the other terrorist  also  arrived
at the spot and they fired in the direction  of  Yadav  and  Patil.  He  and
Patil then took cover behind a pillar from where he threw one plastic  chair
towards the two terrorists. In retaliation they  again  fired  back  towards
them while proceeding in  the  direction  of  platform  no.1  of  the  local
railway station.

138.  Patil identified the appellant as the one whom  he  had  described  as
the shorter of the  two  terrorists.  He  identified  Abu  Ismail  (deceased
accused no. 1) from his photograph on the fake identity  card,  Article  61.
He said before the court that he had earlier  identified  the  appellant  in
the test identification parade held on January  14,  2009,  at  Arthur  Road
Prison. Yadav identified the appellant as the person who was firing  at  him
from his AK-47 rifle and at whom he had  thrown  the  plastic  chair.  Yadav
also identified Abu Ismail from Article 61.

139.  Mammath Motiral Nardele (PW-58) was a police  constable  and  on  that
date he was on anti-sabotage duty on the foot-overbridge at  platform  no.1,
opposite the Times of India building.  He was carrying a  carbine  with  ten
(10) rounds. At about 9.45 PM, leaving his two other colleagues on duty,  he
came to take his meal at  the  Police  Help  Centre  situated  in  front  of
platform no.3 of the local railway station. No sooner had he  reached  there
that he heard the  noise  of  a  bomb  explosion  and  gun  shots  from  the
direction of the main hall of the main  lines  and  saw  passengers  running
away from there. Shashank Shinde came there  and  alerted  him  saying  that
terrorists were firing in the main hall  of  the  main  line.  Shinde  asked
Nardele to accompany him. Nardele started loading the  ten  (10)  rounds  in
his carbine but Shinde proceeded towards the main line without  waiting  for
him. Nardele saw Shinde proceeding in the direction of the main hall of  the
main line accompanied by ASI Pandarkar[14], a  police  constable[15]  and  a
photographer[16]. He went after them  and  heard  the  sound  of  firing  on
platform no.7. He entered a compartment of a local train  on  platform  no.6
and from there he saw two terrorists, each carrying an  AK-47  rifle  and  a
hand-bag on their shoulders, proceeding towards the local  railway  station.
He fired eight (8) rounds from his  carbine  (but  the  shots  did  not  hit
them). They retaliated but he was  safe  inside  the  rail  compartment.  He
again tried to fire, but in the meanwhile his carbine was locked.  He  could
not fire from it any longer. He then went to the  armory,  got  his  carbine
unlocked and loaded it with more rounds. But by the time  he  came  back  to
the main hall of the local lines, the terrorists had already left the  local
railway station.

140.  Nardele identified the appellant in court as the shorter  of  the  two
terrorists. He also identified the clothes worn by the  two  assailants.  He
also identified Abu Ismail (deceased  accused  no.1)  from  Article  61.  He
further told the court that he had earlier identified the appellant  in  the
test identification parade  held  on  December  28,  2008,  at  Arthur  Road
Prison, Mumbai. He had  also  identified  the  dead  body  of  the  deceased
accused no.1 at the mortuary of JJ Hospital on January 6, 2009.

141.  Sudama Aba Pandarkar (PW-62) was an Assistant Sub-Inspector of  police
and on November 26, 2008, he was on patrolling duty on the local trains.  He
was carrying a .303 rifle and ten (10) rounds. The train on which he was  on
duty arrived at CST on platforms no. 4 or 5 at  9.45  PM.  He  went  to  the
Police Help Center and  made  the  entry  concerning  his  patrolling  duty.
Within a few minutes the explosion took place followed  by  firing,  and  he
saw many passengers running wildly. In the meantime,  Shashank  Shinde  came
to the Police Help Center. He told them that the railway station  was  under
attack by terrorists.  Shinde  asked  Pandarkar  to  load  his  .303  rifle.
Pandarkar accompanied Shinde towards the main line. He saw a  terrorist  who
was about 6 feet in height coming from  the  side  of  the  taxi  stand  and
firing towards the railway police station. At that time he was  standing  in
front of the railway police station. He fired two rounds  at  him  from  his
.303 rifle but the shots did not hit him. At this  point,  Police  Constable
Ambadas Pawar, who  was  also  accompanying  Shinde,  took  the  rifle  from
Pandarkar and fired one round at the terrorist. At the same  time  Pandarkar
saw the other terrorist (the appellant) coming towards them  from  the  side
of platform no.8 (main line).  He was  shorter  in  height  than  the  other
terrorist. He was firing from his AK-47 rifle. Pandarkar, Constable  Ambadas
Pawar and PI Shinde went towards platform no.7  through  platform  no.6  and
came near the ATM of Indian Bank. Both  the  terrorists  started  firing  at
them from AK-47 rifles. One of the bullets pierced through Pandarkar’s  left
chest and exited from the back. He fell down  as  a  result  of  the  bullet
injury. Shashank Shinde and Ambadas Pawar too were hit  by  the  terrorists’
shots and unfortunately they were not as lucky as Pandarkar. They  succumbed
to their injuries.

142.  In the course of his deposition Pandarkar  was  shown  the  three  (3)
photographs collectively marked Ext. no. 239. He identified himself and  the
slain Constable Ambadas Pawar in those photographs. In the  photograph  Ext.
no. 242, he identified Shashank Shinde and Ambadas Pawar lying  prone  after
being shot by the terrorists. In one of the photographs from  Ext.  no.  243
(collectively) he identified himself and Lau Kharat (PW-57), who  worked  at
the railway station, who is holding him by the arm after  he  was  shot  and
helping  him  to  be  taken  to  St.  George’s  Hospital.  This   particular
photograph from Ext. no. 243 (collectively) was separately marked  Ext.  no.
245.

143.   Pandarkar  identified  the  appellant  as  the  shorter  of  the  two
terrorists. He identified Abu Ismail from his photograph on Article  61.  He
had earlier identified the appellant in the test identification parade  held
on January 14, 2009.

144.  Sandeep Tanaji Khiratkar (PW-66)  was  an  Inspector  in  the  Railway
Protection Force. At the time of the occurrence he was at his residence  and
was informed about the attack by Jadhav (PW-54) by telephone. He  rushed  to
the police station on his motor-cycle and arrived there in five to seven (5-
7) minutes. He went to the RPF armory on the ground  floor  of  the  General
Manager Office building and took out a .303 rifle  and  twenty  (20)  rounds
from the armory. He came out of the station from the GM  Porch  abutting  DN
Road. SI Bhosale (PW-68) and Inspector Kshirsagar were with him.  They  took
position in the GM Porch. At  that  time  they  saw  two  terrorists  coming
towards the porch situated near the subway. Both  the  terrorists  fired  at
them. They also retaliated and fired back at the terrorists. The  firing  by
Khiratkar and his men forced the terrorists to re-enter the railway  station
and move in the opposite direction towards platform no. 1  from  where  they
went out of the railway station through the foot-overbridge. When  Khiratkar
and his men reached near the gate of the foot-overbridge they were  informed
that the terrorists had already left the  railway  station.  Khiratkar  then
went to the control room of the CCTV cameras in the  RPF  office.  There  he
found that on that date the CCTV cameras of the main lines  were  shut  down
for maintenance but the movements of Kasab and Abu Ismail were  recorded  by
the CCTV cameras in the main hall and platform no.1 of the local  lines.  At
about 11.30 PM on the same day, he was informed  by  Constable  Jadhav  that
the movements of the  terrorists  had  been  recorded  on  the  Data  Visual
Recorder. Immediately thereafter he prepared  from  the  DVR  a  CD  of  the
visuals captured by CCTV cameras of the main hall and other places  wherever
the movements of the terrorists had been seen. The  CD  was  sealed  by  him
immediately and it was later handed over to an officer of DCB  CID,  Mumbai.
He further stated before the court that the recording on the DVR  is  stored
for a period of seven days. At the end of the seventh day  the  first  day’s
recording would get deleted to make space for the recording  of  the  eighth
day.

145.   Khiratkar  identified  the  appellant  as  the  shorter  of  the  two
terrorists. He identified  Abu  Ismail  (deceased  accused  no.1)  from  his
photograph on Article 61. He had earlier identified  the  appellant  in  the
test identification parade  held  on  December  28,  2008,  at  Arthur  Road
prison, Mumbai.

146.  Pandurang Subrao Patil  (PW-63)  was  an  Assistant  Sub-Inspector  of
Police on duty carrying a lathi. He told the court that he was fired  at  by
the shorter terrorist (i.e., the appellant). The bullet hit his  left  thigh
and, passing through it,  pierced  his  right  thigh  and  exited  from  the
exterior portion of his right thigh. He simply collapsed on  to  the  floor.
He further said that he had seen the  two  terrorists  from  a  distance  of
twenty-two to twenty-five (22 to 25) feet.

147.  Patil identified the appellant as the shorter of the  two  terrorists.
He also identified Abu Ismail, (deceased accused no.1) from  his  photograph
on Article 61.

148.  Geetanjali Krishnarao Gurav (PW-60) was  on  duty  at  the  CST  local
railway station near main gate no. 3. On hearing the explosion and  the  gun
shots she along with Shinde (killed), API Bhosale (PW-49), PSI Khandale  and
other policemen went towards the main hall of the main lines.  She  saw  two
terrorists in the main hall and she saw the taller of  the  two  throwing  a
hand grenade at  a  crowd  of  passengers.  The  grenade  exploded,  causing
injuries to a large number of passengers. Both terrorists were  continuously
firing from AK-47 rifles. She and Bhosale, therefore, proceeded towards  the
railway police station to call for additional force. While  on  way  to  the
police station, Bhosale was hit by a bullet in his left  upper  arm  and  he
fell down. She tied a handkerchief to his wound and helped  him  in  getting
back on his feet. At that time, she saw both the  terrorists  proceeding  in
the direction  of  the  local  railway  station.  More  than  hundred  (100)
passengers lay badly injured in the main hall of the main lines.

149.  Geetanjali Gurav identified the appellant as the shorter  of  the  two
terrorists. She also identified Abu Ismail (deceased accused no.1) from  his
photograph on Article 61.

150.  Now, some of the passengers:

      Natwarlal Gigaji Rotawan (PW-50) and  his  daughter  Devika  Natwarlal
Rotawan,  aged  about  ten  (10)  years,  (PW-51)[17];  Farooqi   Nasiruddin
Khaliluddin  (PW-52);  Nafisa  Shadab  Qureshi  (PW-53);  Sangeeta  Niranjan
Sardar (PW-86) and her husband Niranjan Sadashiv Sardar (PW-87);  and  Ansar
Alabaksha  Mohd.  Hanif  Saudagar  (PW-88),  are  some  of   the   passenger
witnesses. They were in the main hall of the main lines  waiting  for  their
respective trains. They were jolted out of whatever they might be  doing  or
thinking at that moment by the explosion of the first grenade thrown by  Abu
Ismail (deceased accused no.1) and from that moment they watched, in  abject
horror, the appellant and  his  companion  firing  indiscriminately  at  the
group of passengers in  the  main  hall;  Abu  Ismail  throwing  the  second
grenade and then the  two  moving  around  on  the  platforms  in  different
directions until the spray of bullets and the shrapnel  from  the  exploding
grenades hit them or one of their group.

151.   Natwarlal  Rotawan  (PW-50)  was  lucky  to  escape  unhurt  but  his
daughter, Devika Rotawan (PW-51), was hit by a bullet on her right leg.  She
was treated as an indoor patient in the hospital for about  a  month  and  a
half and thereafter remained bedridden for four to six  (4-6)  months.  When
she came to depose in court after about 6 months of the occurrence, she  was
still unable to walk properly.

152.  Natwarlal identified the appellant as the “shorter one” and said  that
his companion was not present in court. Devika identified the  appellant  as
the person who was firing at the VT railway station.

153.  Farooqi Nasiruddin Khaliluddin (PW-52) was at  the  station  with  his
son. Both of them were injured, the son far more badly than the  father,  by
the splinters from  the  second  grenade  thrown  by  Abu  Ismail  (deceased
accused  no.  1).  Khaliluddin  told  the  court  that  the  firing  by  the
terrorists continued  for  about  fifteen  to  twenty  (15-20)  minutes.  He
further said that the taller man had paused in the firing as he took  out  a
bomb from his bag and threw it in their direction but  that  the  other  man
(that is, the appellant) continued with the firing and he appeared to be  in
a “joyous mood” on seeing the lethal effect of his firing.  Identifying  the
appellant in court, he once again said that he was the same person  whom  he
had seen in “joyous mood”.

154.  Nafisa Qureshi (PW-53), who worked as a  maid-servant,  lost  her  six
(6) year old daughter Afrin to the terrorists’ bullets. She  was  hit  by  a
bullet on the back and died at the spot.  Nafisa herself sustained a  bullet
injury on her left leg.

155.  She identified the appellant as  one  of  the  two  persons  who  were
firing at CST in all directions. The appellant was the person whom she  had,
earlier in her deposition, referred to as the “shorter one”.

156.  Sangeeta Sardar (PW-86) and her husband Niranjan Sadashiv Sardar  (PW-
87) also sustained injuries as a  result  of  the  firing  and  throwing  of
grenades. Sangeeta was hit by steel  balls  (from  the  hand  grenade)  that
pierced her body, and some of which were still lodged  inside  her  body  as
she deposed. Her husband, Niranjan, sustained two (2) bullet  injuries,  one
on the right side of the head and the other below the  right  ear.  Both  of
them remained indoor patients in the hospital for weeks.

157.  Sangeeta identified the appellant as the “butka”  who  was  firing  at
the CST railway  station.  She  identified  the  “lamboo  fellow”  from  his
photograph on the identity card Article 61.

158.  Ansar Alabaksha Mohd. Hanif Saudagar (PW-88) was hit by  a  bullet  on
his right leg, below the  knee  joint.  In  court,  Saudagar  was  asked  to
identify the appellant from among the three (3)  accused  in  the  dock.  He
identified the appellant as the “butka” firing at the passengers at the  CST
railway station. He also identified the  person  who  was  accompanying  the
appellant from the photograph on Article 61.

Cama In[18]: Seven (7) dead and ten (10) injured[19]

159.  Kasab and Abu Ismail were seen exiting  CST  via  the  foot-overbridge
and coming down the bridge in the evidence of Vernekar (PW-102) and  in  the
photograph of Kasab (Ext. no. 410-D) taken by him. On  descending  from  the
foot-overbridge, they came to Badruddin  Tayabji  Marg,  which  is  a  long,
meandering road, a part of which runs along the premises of  Cama  Hospital.
Cama Hospital has large premises, on which there are a number  of  buildings
including a six-storey structure  called  the  New  Hospital  Building.  The
entry to Cama Hospital is from Mahapalika Road  on  its  western  side,  and
Badruddin  Tayabji  Marg  runs  along  the  back  of   its   premises.   The
prosecution,  with  the  aid  of  eleven  (11)  eye-witnesses,  has   traced
practically every step taken by Kasab and Abu Ismail from  the  moment  they
came out of CST, entered Cama hospital and  eventually  left  the  hospital.
We, however, propose to examine only some of these steps,  to  get  a  broad
idea  of  how  the  two  were  moving  around  killing  people,   completely
mindlessly.

160.  Bharat Budhabhai Waghela  (PW-103)  worked  as  a  Safai  Kamgar  with
Voltas. He lived in a hut off Badruddin Tayabji Marg. At about  9.30  PM  on
November 26, 2008, he was sitting near the back gate  of  Cama  Hospital  on
Badruddin Tayabji Marg engaged  in  small  talk  with  his  friends  Sandeep
Waghela (PW-105), who lived on the premises of  Cama  Hospital,  and  Bhagan
Shinde, who lived in the same hutments as  Waghela.  Gupta  bhel-vendor  was
also near the gate selling snacks of bhel-puri. At about 10.30 PM  they  saw
two persons coming on to Badruddin Tayabji Road from the  direction  of  the
Times of India Building. One of them was ‘lamboo’ (tall) and the  other  was
‘butka’ (short). Both were carrying bags on their shoulders. Suddenly,  they
started firing. The butka man fired straight at  them,  and  he  shot  Gupta
bhelwala in full view of Waghela. Waghela was  frightened  and  ran  towards
his hut. His friends also ran away from the spot. Back in his  hut,  Waghela
told his mother about the incident. He shut the doors of his hut and  peeped
out from the little gap between the frame of the door  and  the  panels.  He
saw  the  butka  fellow  standing  near  his  brother’s  shanty,   adjoining
Waghela’s own hut, and firing at it. He heard his brother cry  out.  He  saw
the lamboo fellow firing in the lane. After some time, he saw both  of  them
going towards the gate of Cama Hospital.

161.  After a while, Waghela went to his brother, Thakur  Waghela’s  shanty.
He found his brother lying in a pool of blood. His five  (5)  year  old  son
was also there but his wife was not present. Waghela  took  his  brother  to
the GT Hospital where he was declared dead  by  the  doctors.  Five  minutes
later, Bhagan Shinde was brought to  the  hospital.  He  was  also  declared
dead.

162.  Waghela identified the appellant as the  gunman  who  had  shot  Gupta
bhelwala and fired at his brother’s shanty. He said before  the  court  that
he had identified the accused in the test identification parade on  December
27, 2008. He had also identified the dead body of the “lamboo” when  it  was
placed among six (6) other dead bodies at the mortuary of  JJ  Hospital.  He
then identified him from the photograph on the identity card, Article 61.

163.  Anjali Vijay  Kulathe  (PW-101)  worked  as  a  staff  nurse  at  Cama
Hospital. On November 26, 2008, she arrived for duty at 8.00 PM. She was  on
duty on the first floor of the New Building. At about  10.30  PM  she  heard
the sound of firing from the back of the hospital. She looked out  from  the
back window of the ante-natal care unit and saw two  persons  climbing  over
the steel gate at the back of the hospital. One of them was ‘lamboo’  (tall)
and the other was ‘butka’ (short). She could see them clearly in  the  light
from the street lights. She further said that the gate was at  the  distance
of ten to fifteen (10-15) feet from  the  window  from  where  she  saw  the
intruders.

164.  The two men jumped inside the Cama Hospital  premises.  The  tall  man
fired towards the window from where she was looking  at  them.  One  of  the
bullets hit the right wrist of a hospital  servant,  Hira  Jadhav.  She  was
immediately removed to  the  casualty  ward  on  the  ground  floor  of  the
hospital. Kulathe further said that  she  informed  the  CMO  on  duty,  Dr.
Archana, that two terrorists had entered the  hospital  building.  She  then
rushed back to her ward and closed all  the  doors  from  inside.  She  also
locked the ward’s collapsible (iron grill) gate. Moreover,  since  the  ward
had windows on all sides, all twenty (20) patients who were in the ANC  ward
at that time were moved to the pantry for their safety.

165.  She further stated before the court  that  the  noise  of  firing  and
explosions went on for about two  hours.  She  and  all  the  patients  were
frightened due to the continuous noise of explosions  and  firing.  She  and
the patients stayed inside the pantry till 4.00 AM  the  following  morning,
when senior officers came and took them out.

166.  She then identified the appellant as the butka  man  who,  along  with
his tall partner, had entered the Cama Hospital  premises  by  jumping  over
its back gate. She identified the tall partner of  the  appellant  from  the
photograph on the identity card, Article 61.  She  further  told  the  court
that she had identified the appellant in the test identification  parade  on
December 27, 2008, held by “judge” (sic) Sharad Vichare.  She  further  said
that, on being identified by her, the appellant had  said  that  he  was  in
fact Ajmal Kasab and she had correctly identified him.

167.  Raosaheb Changdev Funde (PW-107) is an ex-serviceman and he worked  as
an unarmed security guard at Cama Hospital. On November 26, 2008, his  shift
ended at 10.00 PM but he learnt that some incidents had taken place  at  CST
and, therefore, decided not to go home but to stay back  for  the  night  at
the hospital. He stated before the court that, on  learning  about  the  CST
incidents, he returned to  Cama  Hospital’s  main  (front)  gate,  near  the
collapsible gate. Another security guard, Baban Ugade, was  also  there.  As
Funde was standing  with  Ugade  near  the  collapsible  gate,  he  saw  the
appellant and one other person coming towards them. The  appellant  fired  a
shot at Ugade from his rifle. The shot hit Ugade in the abdomen and he  fell
down. Funde was scared and ran up the stairs to the fifth  floor,  where  he
took shelter in a ward, hiding behind a  stand  which  is  used  for  drying
clothes. The appellant, however, followed him there and, putting the  barrel
of his rifle on his head, ordered him, “Utho” (get-up). The  appellant  then
asked Funde to proceed towards the bathroom. Funde saw one person  lying  in
a pool of blood in front of the bathroom with a tall man standing near  him.
The appellant made him enter the  bathroom  where  three  (3)  persons  were
already confined[20]. The bathroom was then bolted from outside.  After  two
to three (2 or 3) hours, the police arrived there and opened  the  bathroom.
Funde narrated the incident to the police.

168.  Funde then identified the appellant’s partner from the  photograph  on
the identity card, Article  61.  He  further  told  the  court  the  he  had
identified the appellant at the test identification parade on  December  27,
2008. He had also identified the dead body of  the  appellant’s  partner  on
January 7, 2009, at JJ Hospital.

169.  Harishchandra Sonu Shrivardhankar (PW-106) was the person  whom  Funde
had seen lying in a pool of  blood  near  the  door  of  the  bathroom.  His
encounter with the two terrorists  has  something  uncanny  about  it.  Fate
seemed to force his every step towards meeting the terrorists  and  when  he
actually stood face-to-face with them, quite certain of death,  he  did  not
go down without fighting. Tough, two  and  a  half  times  the  age  of  his
opponents, completely unarmed and untrained in any kind of fighting, he  put
up a  fight  nonetheless.  Unfortunately,  his  attempt  could  not  succeed
against an armed and trained killer.  He  was  stabbed  and  shot  and  left
behind by the terrorist in the belief that he was dead or  would  soon  die.
Shrivardhankar, however, survived to tell the  story  and  to  identify  his
assailant.

170.  Shrivardhankar worked as a Senior  Clerk  at  the  Mantralaya  at  the
time. Apparently a devotee of Hazrat Sayyed  Shah  Baba  (a  Muslim  saint),
after leaving his office at 6.00 PM on  November  26,  2008,  Shrivardhankar
went to the Urs at  the  saint’s  Durgah  (shrine),  situated  behind  Metro
Cinema. He left the Durgah at 10.30 PM and proceeded to CST  via  the  Metro
subway and St. Xavier’s College to catch a train home.  On  approaching  the
gate of Cama Hospital at Mahapalika Road,  Shrivardhankar  saw  many  people
running in panic and learnt about the incident of firings at CST.  To  avoid
getting caught in  the  firing,  he  sought  refuge  in  Cama  Hospital.  On
entering the gate of the hospital he saw a dead body (Ugade) lying in  front
of the entrance to the main building. On seeing the dead body he was  scared
and, suspecting that some incident must have taken place on the premises  of
the hospital, he entered the main building  through  the  collapsible  gate.
There was complete silence in the  building  and  he  found  all  the  doors
closed. He went up to the fourth  floor;  all  the  floors  appeared  to  be
deserted and the doors of all the wards were closed.

171.  As soon as he reached the fifth floor, the luckless man found  himself
standing in front of a man holding a gun and a knife, and carrying a bag  on
his shoulder. He was about five feet six inches (5’ 6”) tall and  had  short
hair. He was wearing a jacket. He put his knife  on  Shrivardhankar’s  neck.
Shrivardhankar realised that the  man  would  kill  him  in  any  case  and,
therefore, decided to fight. He tried to hit the man in the groin  with  his
knee and also attempted to hit him with his bag. The bag,  however,  slipped
out of Shrivardhankar’s hand and the killer struck him two (2) times on  the
neck  with  his  knife,  causing  bleeding.  The  killer  caught   hold   of
Shrivardhankar’s collar and pushed him down.  He  inflicted  a  third  knife
blow on his back and  also  shot  a  bullet  in  his  back.  By  that  time,
Shrivardhankar had lost any strength to  resist  and  fell  unconscious.  He
regained consciousness after three to four (3-4) days  at  JJ  Hospital  and
was treated as an indoor patient for about three (3) months.[21]

172.  Shrivardhankar  vividly  recounted  his  encounter  with  one  of  the
terrorists. He also told the court that in the fight  with  the  killer  his
spectacles had fallen down. At that  time  he  was  wearing  brown  slippers
(footwear). Shrivardhankar told the court that his footwear  and  spectacles
were lost and he  did  not  find  them  on  regaining  consciousness  at  JJ
Hospital.

173.  He then identified his assailant at Cama Hospital from the  photograph
on the identity card, Article 61. He also identified the  assailant  in  the
photographs Ext.  no.  410-A  &  Ext.  no.  410-B  (part  of  Ext.  no.  410
collectively).

174.  He also identified his spectacles, Article 310 (recovered  and  seized
from Cama Hospital and produced in court as one of the  case  articles)  but
said that the slippers shown to him as Article 309 did not belong to him.

175.  Chandrakant Dnyandev Tikhe (PW-109) was  the  lift  operator  at  Cama
Hospital. On November 26, 2008, he was on duty as  Generator  Operator  from
10.00 PM in the evening till 7:00 AM the following  morning.  The  generator
room is situated on the terrace of the building. At about 10:00 PM, when  he
was on the terrace, Tikhe heard the sound of firing from the  ground  floor.
On hearing the gunshots he immediately went inside the enclosure  where  the
solar system is installed and locked its  collapsible  gate.  He  was  still
inside the enclosure when, around 11:00 PM, the two  terrorists  arrived  on
the terrace. He saw them clearly in the light of the electric  bulb  of  200
watts that was lit on the terrace. One of them was taller and the other  was
shorter. The “butka” (short) fellow pointed  his  rifle  towards  Tikhe  and
asked him to come out or else he would blow him to  bits  (“Aage  aao  warna
uda  dunga”).  Therefore,  Tikhe  opened  the  gate  and  came  out  of  the
enclosure. The tall man was also holding a gun. Tikhe  then  identified  the
appellant as the short man who had pointed his gun at him.

176.  When Tikhe came out of the enclosure, the appellant asked him the  way
out from the hospital. Tikhe told them that there  was  only  one  staircase
that alone could be used to exit the hospital.  The  tall  fellow,  who  was
keeping a watch, suddenly shouted “Police!” and started firing  towards  the
stairs. The appellant held his gun  against  Tikhe’s  back  and  pushed  him
towards the stairs. The appellant and his tall partner brought Tikhe to  the
landing between the sixth floor and  the  terrace.  From  there,  Tikhe  saw
three to four (3-4) policemen in front of  the  lift  on  the  sixth  floor.
Tikhe raised his hands apprehending that he might be killed  by  the  police
if they suspected  him  of  being  a  terrorist.  A  staff  member  of  Cama
Hospital, namely Kailash (PW-111),  was  also  with  the  policemen  and  he
identified Tikhe to the police as one of  the  hospital  staff.  The  police
fired at the appellant and his tall partner forcing them to retreat  to  the
terrace. In that time, Tikhe escaped  and  came  down  to  the  sixth  floor
landing. He told the police that there were two terrorists.

177.  The appellant then started firing at them from above. He also threw  a
hand grenade on to the sixth floor. The splinters from the hand grenade  hit
Tikhe on his neck and he sustained a bleeding injury.  Some  policemen  were
also injured from the explosion of the hand grenade. The appellant  and  his
tall partner kept firing at the policemen. Tikhe saw a  police  officer  and
another policeman getting shot and falling down in front of the lift.  After
some time, the  terrorists  again  threw  down  a  hand  grenade  and  fired
indiscriminately in the direction of the lift. The other policemen  and  the
officers were also injured by the second explosion and the firing.

178.   At  this  point,  Tikhe  came  down  to  the  second  floor.  He  was
accompanied by two policemen and by Kailash. One  of  these  policemen  went
further down but the other stayed with them. After  being  given  first  aid
they were shifted to GT  Hospital.  From  there,  Tikhe  was  taken  to  KEM
Hospital for treatment as hand grenade splinters were lodged  in  his  neck.
He was treated as an indoor patient for seven (7) days.

179.  He also told the court that he had identified  the  appellant  in  the
test identification parade on December 27, 2008.

180.  Sadanand Vasant Date (PW-118) is an IPS Officer and, at  the  material
time, he was posted as Additional Commissioner of  Police,  Central  Region,
Mumbai. On November 26, 2008, at about 10.00 PM, he  was  at  his  residence
when  the  assault  at  CST  took  place.  CST  did  not  come  within   his
jurisdiction but, on the request of  his  colleague  Dr.  Vankatesham  whose
jurisdiction included CST, Date came out like any  dutiful  police  officer.
He first went to the Malabar Hill Police Station, which  was  close  to  his
residence, and collected one carbine and twenty (20) rounds. On the  way  to
CST he got information about the movements of the terrorists and,  in  light
of this information, he and his team reached Cama Hospital  a  little  after
11.00 PM. Date came to learn that the terrorists had gone up to the  terrace
of Cama Hospital building and, therefore, he took  the  lift  to  the  sixth
floor landing, from where stairs led up to the terrace[22].  There,  he  had
an encounter with the two terrorists who were at that time  on  the  terrace
of the building, holding Tikhe there.

181.  On reaching the sixth floor, instead of rushing to the  terrace,  Date
picked up an iron object lying there and threw it towards the  door  of  the
terrace, to check the position of the terrorists. In response,  a  burst  of
firing from  an  automatic  weapon  came  from  the  terrace  door.  Shortly
thereafter, Date saw a bulky person (Tikhe) coming down to  the  landing  on
the stairs between the terrace and the 6th floor. Date challenged the  bulky
person but Kailash (PW-111) identified him  as  a  member  of  the  hospital
staff. The bulky person indicated that there was somebody behind  him.  Date
asked him to bend down and then fired over his  head  towards  the  terrace.
That forced the terrorists to go back to the terrace.  Taking  advantage  of
the situation, Tikhe came down to the sixth floor landing. In the  meantime,
a grenade was thrown from the terrace. It exploded on  the  sixth  floor  in
front of the lift causing injuries to some police officers, including  Date,
and also to Tikhe.

182.  Date’s team comprised seven (7) police officers and policemen. All  of
them were armed with firearms. Date’s operator Tilekar and police  constable
Khandelkar had one carbine each. Date himself  was  wearing  a  bullet-proof
jacket and he had a carbine with twenty (20) rounds. But all  this  did  not
prove sufficient to take out Kasab and Abu Ismail or even to stop them.  The
two terrorists were able to overcome the  police  and  to  escape  from  the
tight spot in which they had landed – the terrace  that  had  only  one  (1)
exit by the stairs. This was because, besides having  superior  fire  power,
they had the great advantage of hand grenades.  Grenades  exploding  in  the
very small landing area badly injured the policemen  who  had  no  cover  or
shelter there.

183.  Date stated before the  court  that,  after  the  first  hand  grenade
exploded, his officers continued to fire towards the  terrace.  But  shortly
afterwards, another hand  grenade  was  thrown,  which  caused  injuries  to
almost all officers who were present  there,  including  Date.  The  injured
police officers, policemen and staff members of Cama Hospital were asked  to
go down. More (killed) could not go down because he was  badly  injured  and
unconscious. Police constable Khandekar (killed) also could not go  down  as
he, too, was badly injured. Date said before the court that he continued  to
fire towards the terrace in  retaliation  of  the  firing  from  there.  The
exchange of fire went on for about forty (40) minutes during  which  he  had
taken cover behind a wall situated in front of the right  side  lift.  After
some time he sensed some movement and, as he came out from behind  the  wall
which he was using for cover, he found that two  persons  had  already  gone
down towards the fifth floor. He fired two shots  towards  the  two  persons
going away but was unable to say whether  or  not  they  were  hit.  He  was
unable to pursue them because of his leg injury.

184.  He said it would be 11.50 PM at that time.

185.  Accordingly, Date informed his superiors that  two  persons  had  gone
down from the sixth floor of  the  building  and  that  they  had  automatic
weapons and hand grenades.

186.  Date further said that the help came at about  00.45  AM  and  he  was
shifted to KEM Hospital, where he was admitted for  three  (3)  days.  Apart
from several minor injuries he had sustained  injuries  from  splinters  and
fragments of the hand grenade in his right eye  and  on  the  left  side  of
chest just below armpit, and in his throat, right knee and left ankle.

Cama Out[23]: Nine (9) dead, seven (7) injured[24]

187.  Date on the sixth floor landing was  unable  to  stop  Kasab  and  Abu
Ismail and, while he took shelter against the hail of bullets  and  shrapnel
from the grenades behind a wall, the two managed to sneak down  the  stairs.


188.  Suresh Shantaram Kadam (PW-138) and Yashwant  Shankar  Thorawade  (PW-
128)[25] next saw Kasab and Abu Ismail coming out of Cama Hospital from  its
front side  on  Mahapalika  Road  and  immediately  gunning  down  a  police
officer.

189.  Thorawade was a Police Inspector and, on the evening of  November  26,
2008, in the absence of the senior police inspector, he was  holding  charge
of Azad Maidan police station. Kadam was a constable attached  to  the  same
Police Station. As Azad Maidan  police  station  received  information  that
terrorists had entered CST and were firing there,  the  policemen  proceeded
to the railway station in two police vehicles. On the way, they learnt  that
the terrorists had left the railway station  and  were  seen  going  in  the
direction of Metro Cinema. Accordingly, they came to  Metro  junction  where
they came across Additional Police Commissioner Date  (PW-118).  Date  asked
them to go back and collect bullet-proof jackets  and  arms  and  ammunition
from Azad Maidan police station as information had arrived by then that  the
terrorists had reached the  terrace  of  Cama  Hospital  building  and  were
firing from there. As directed by Date,  Kadam,  Shelke  (PW-141)  and  some
others went back to Azad Maidan police  station  where  they  collected  two
bullet-proof jackets and some fire-arms and ammunition.

190.  Returning to the scene of firing, they decided  to  go  to  the  front
gate of Cama Hospital (instead of going to the  back  side),  expecting  the
terrorists to exit the hospital from its main gate.  Kadam  stated  that  he
was accompanied by PI Thorawade (PW-128), PSI Shelke  (PW-141),  and  police
constables Utekar and Rathore.  Constable  Gawade  was  driving  the  Bolero
vehicle (called Peter-I[26] Azad Maidan)  in  which  they  came  there.  The
vehicle was parked on the left side of the road facing  Metro  junction  and
they took position by the side of the vehicle.

191.  At about 11:45 PM, the policemen saw two persons coming  out  of  Cama
Hospital.  Kadam first saw  them  on  the  footpath  of  Cama  Hospital  and
Thorawade when they were near the gate of  St.  Xavier’s  College  adjoining
the hospital. Kadam said that one of them was ‘lamboo’ (tall) and the  other
was ‘butka’ (short). In the meantime, they  saw  a  motor-cycle  driving  on
Mahapalika Road from Metro junction towards CST. It was driven by  a  police
constable and a police officer was on its  pillion.  The  officer  got  down
near the gate of St. Xavier’s College and, according to  Kadam,  the  motor-
cycle went ahead. (According to Thorwade, the constable made  a  u-turn  and
went back towards Metro). The officer who  got  down  from  the  motor-cycle
started directing people coming from the direction  of  CST  to  return.  He
seemed to have asked the lamboo and the butka also not  to  proceed  further
but to go back. But they continued moving towards him and fired at him  from
a distance of about fifteen to twenty (15-20) feet.  The  officer  collapsed
to the ground. This confirmed to Thorawade and Kadam that  the  two  persons
who had come out from Cama Hospital were the terrorists whom they  had  been
watching for. Thorawade started firing at  them  from  his  service  pistol.
Kadam also fired one round from his  pistol  and  then  he  stopped  because
Thorawade was firing  at  the  terrorists.  The  terrorists  fired  back  in
retaliation.

192.  Thorawade told the court that  he  tried  sending  messages  to  South
Control from the wireless installed in his Bolero police  vehicle  but,  due
to heavy traffic on  the  network,  he  was  unable  to  send  the  message.
Therefore, Thorawade went to the Metro junction where  two  to  three  (2-3)
police vehicles were available. The message was sent from the  wireless  set
of one of those vehicles.

193.  There were many people at the metro junction.  After  a  short  while,
one police vehicle (Qualis) appeared from Badruddin Tayabji  Road  and  took
right turn on Mahapalika Road towards Metro junction. Thorawade saw the  two
terrorists in that vehicle. The person who was sitting  on  the  right  side
was firing at the large crowd assembled at  Metro  junction.  One  policeman
and another person were injured due to firing from that vehicle.[27]

194.  In the meanwhile, Kadam had remained in front  of  Cama  Hospital.  He
went on to state before the court that he saw a white car with a red  beacon
approaching Mahapalika Road from Badruddin  Tayabji  Road  but,  immediately
thereafter, he saw the car going backwards on Badruddin  Tayabji  Road.  The
lamboo and the butka fired at that car. One  of  them  also  threw  a  hand-
grenade towards the white car. Thereafter, both of  them  proceeded  towards
Rang Bhavan Lane on (BT Road). The officer who was shot  near  the  gate  of
St. Xavier’s College was  later  identified  from  the  name  plate  on  his
uniform as Durgude. Kadam then identified Kasab in the  dock  as  the  butka
who had fired at Durgude and who was accompanying the lamboo. Kadam  further
stated that he had earlier identified the appellant  in  the  identification
parade on December 27, 2008, and had also identified the dead  body  of  the
lamboo on January 6, 2009, at the JJ Hospital mortuary.

195.  Maruti Madhavrao Phad (PW-139) was the driver of the “white  car  with
red beacon” which Kadam had seen coming from Badruddin Tayabji Road  towards
Mahapalika Road and then going in the reverse direction.  It was actually  a
white Honda City car, a government vehicle allotted to one Bhushan  Gagrani,
IAS, Secretary Medical Education and Drugs  Department  (PW-140).  Phad  was
the driver on duty for the vehicle. On November 26, 2008,  at  6.30  PM  the
car was, as usual, parked in the premises of “High Rise  Building”  situated
on Badruddin Tayabji Road. Between 11:30 and 11:45 PM, Phad received a  call
on his mobile from Gagrani, asking him to bring the car to his residence  to
take him to Mantralaya to attend an emergency meeting  that  seems  to  have
been called as news broke of the terrorists’ attack on Mumbai. As  directed,
Phad took the car from its parking  place  on  Badruddin  Tayabji  Road  and
proceeded towards Mahapalika Road on his way to Gagrani’s residence.  As  he
approached Mahapalika Road, Phad saw two persons, one  tall  and  the  other
short, firing on the road. He, therefore,  stopped  the  car  and  began  to
reverse. At this, those two persons fired at his vehicle. Phad’s right  hand
was on the steering wheel. Two bullets pierced the car’s windscreen and  hit
him on his right hand. He continued to reverse the vehicle, ducking down  to
save himself from the volley of bullets, but a third bullet hit him  on  the
left side of his waist. He also realized that the left front  wheel  of  the
car was punctured. He, therefore, locked all four doors of the car by  means
of the central locking switch and, pretending to be dead, lay  down  on  the
driver’s seat. At this time, he heard an explosion near the  car.  A  little
while later, the two terrorists came near his car  and  tried  to  open  its
doors but they were unable to do so as the doors  were  locked.  After  some
time, he saw them from the rear windscreen of the car near  the  SBI  office
behind him. His car was standing on the road  in  a  slanting  position  but
there was enough space on both sides  for  vehicles  to  pass.  As  the  two
terrorists approached “High Rise Building”, they took  cover  behind  bushes
abutting that building.  At  the  same  time,  Phad  saw  a  police  vehicle
approaching his vehicle from behind, i.e., from the side of the  SBI  office
on Badruddin Tayabji Road. As soon as the police vehicle came close  to  the
two persons hiding in the bushes, they started  firing  indiscriminately  at
the police vehicle. At the same time, the  shorter  fellow  seemed  to  have
sustained a  bullet  injury,  probably  from  the  firing  from  the  police
vehicle. His gun fell down. The  butka,  however,  picked  up  the  gun  and
resumed firing at the police vehicle.

196.  Firing from the police vehicle stopped, and the  taller  man  went  to
the vehicle and opened its right front door, pulling the driver  on  to  the
road. He also pulled down another person from  the  vehicle’s  middle  seat.
The butka fellow went to the left side of the vehicle and  pulled  down  the
person sitting on the left  front  seat.  The  lamboo  fellow  occupied  the
driver’s seat and the butka took the front left seat.

197.  Phad stated before the court that he had witnessed the above  incident
from a distance of about one  hundred  and  fifty  (150)  feet.  The  police
vehicle thus taken over by the two terrorists proceeded  towards  Mahapalika
Road. Apprehending danger from those two persons, Phad pretended to be  dead
and continued lying in his vehicle. That vehicle crossed Phad’s vehicle  and
went towards Mahapalika Road. It was a Qualis vehicle.

198.  Phad stated before  the  court  that  as  a  result  of  the  injuries
sustained by him he lost the ring finger on his right  hand  and  two  other
fingers were not functioning properly. He was no longer able to  drive  auto
vehicles.

199.  Phad gave a description to the court of the two persons  whom  he  had
seen firing on Badruddin Tayabji Road.  The  lamboo  was  six  (6)  feet  in
height, of fair complexion, and was aged  about  twenty-two  to  twenty-five
(22-25) years. The butka was five  feet  three  inches  (5’  3”)  inches  in
height, of fair complexion and strongly built. Phad said he  could  identify
both of them and added that one of them was present  in  court,  identifying
the appellant as the butka. He further  said  that  he  had  identified  the
appellant in  the  identification  parade  on  December  27,  2008.  He  had
identified the appellant from amongst seven (7) persons  put  in  line  with
him. SEO, Vichare was conducting the test  identification  parade.  He  then
identified the lamboo from his  photograph  (Article  61)  and  stated  that
earlier he had identified his dead body at the JJ mortuary from amongst  ten
(10) dead bodies.

200.  In cross-examination Phad said that as he approached  Mahapalika  Road
he had seen a police vehicle parked near the  bus-stop  on  Mahapalika  Road
and had also seen the two terrorists firing on the police officers  standing
near the vehicle.

201.  Bhushan Ashok Gagrani, who was examined as PW-140, stated  before  the
court that he called Phad between 11.30 and 11.45 PM, to bring  the  car  to
his residence at Yashodhan Building and take him  to  Mantralaya.  When  the
car did not come, he again called Phad but he did not  turn  up.  Therefore,
Gagrani went to Mantralaya in his personal vehicle. At  about  12.15  AM  he
tried to contact Phad once again. This time, he  got  a  response  from  the
driver who told him that he had been fired at in the car; that the  car  was
stranded in the vicinity of Rang Bhavan;  and  that  he  was  lying  injured
inside it. Gagrani then tried to contact the police control room  but  could
not get through as the number was continuously engaged.  He  then  contacted
the Superintendent of GT Hospital and  requested  him  to  provide  help  to
Phad. After an hour he was informed that  Phad  had  been  admitted  to  the
hospital with bullet injuries.

202.  All the phone calls made by Gagrani  from  his  mobile  phone  to  the
mobile phone of Phad and to  the  hospital  were  independently  established
from the mobile phones records.

203.  Arun Dada Jadhav (PW-136) is a very special witness.  He  was  in  the
extraordinary position of actually traveling with the two terrorists,  lying
badly injured in the back side of the Qualis  vehicle  that  the  terrorists
had hijacked after killing three (3) senior police officers  and  three  (3)
policemen on Badruddin Tayabji Road.

204.  In the time that Additional Commissioner of Police Date  (PW-118)  was
engaged in the encounter with the terrorists on the sixth floor  landing  of
the New Cama Hospital Building, a number of senior  officers  and  policemen
had gathered at  the  back  of  the  hospital.  At  that  time,  an  injured
policeman emerged from the back of  the  hospital.  He  told  the  assembled
officers that Date and some other police officers were lying injured on  the
higher floors of the hospital. Thereupon,  Kamate,  Additional  Commissioner
of Police (East Region), Karkare, Joint Commissioner  of  Police  (ATS)  and
Salaskar, Senior Police Inspector, decided to go to the front gate  of  Cama
Hospital, anticipating that the terrorists would  go  out  from  that  side.
They took a Qualis police jeep of Pydhonie Division[28]  that  was  standing
there. Salaskar took the driver’s seat, Kamate occupied the front left  seat
and Karkare sat on the middle seat of the vehicle. Jadhav, who was  attached
to the Anti-Extortion Cell of which Salaskar  was  the  chief,  sat  in  the
extreme rear of the vehicle. The driver of the  vehicle,  Bhosale  (killed),
sat alongside Jadhav. Two  constables,  namely  Yogesh  Patil  (killed)  and
Jaywant  Patil  (killed),  occupied  the  rear  seat,  opposite  Jadhav  and
Bhosale. Yogesh Patil was the wireless operator on  duty  for  that  vehicle
and Jaywant Patil was the wireless operator of Kamte’s vehicle.

205.  As they proceeded on Badruddin Tayabji Road towards the SBI office,  a
message was received on wireless that the  two  terrorists  were  hiding  on
Rang Bhavan Lane near a red vehicle. Rang Bhavan Lane begins  from  the  SBI
office. Kamate directed Salaskar  to  slow  down  the  vehicle  and  proceed
cautiously. Jadhav told the court that there were bushes on the  right  side
of the road, about five to five and a half (5-5.5) feet in  height.  As  the
Qualis came near the bushes, it was greeted by a burst of  gun-fire.  Jadhav
looked out from the vehicle’s window  and  saw  one  lamboo  and  one  butka
firing at their vehicle with  AK-47  rifles.  Jadhav,  Karkare,  Kamate  and
Salaskar also fired at the lamboo and the butka  from  the  windows  of  the
vehicle. Jadhav sustained bullet  injuries  on  his  right  elbow  and  left
shoulder. Because of the injuries, the carbine fell from his  hands  on  the
vehicle’s floor. The terrorists continued to fire at them. By now,  all  the
policemen had suffered gunshots and were injured. Jadhav was unable to  pick
up his carbine.

206.  After some time, the firing stopped and the lamboo tried to  open  the
vehicle’s rear side door. However, the door did not open.  Jadhav  tried  to
pick up his weapon once again but could not. The  driver  Bhosale  was  also
badly injured and he had fallen down on Jadhav.  Yogesh  Patil  and  Jaywant
Patil were also unable to move. Realising that it was not possible  for  him
to retaliate, Jadhav pretended to be dead. At this time he heard a  door  of
their vehicle opening and also heard the noise of the vehicle  starting.  He
realised that the vehicle was  being  driven,  and  he  then  saw  that  the
driver’s seat was occupied by the lamboo. Karkare, Salaskar and Kamate  were
no longer in the vehicle.

207.  At the metro junction,  Jadhav  heard  the  sound  of  firing  but  he
continued pretending to be dead. He  realised  that  one  of  the  vehicle’s
wheels was punctured. After some time, he also realised that even  the  tube
and tyre had come off the punctured wheel.  He could sense this  as  he  was
himself an experienced driver.

208.  The vehicle stopped on the road behind the Vidhan  Bhavan.  There  was
more firing and then he saw the two terrorists leaving the Qualis and  going
to a car that had stopped. They left in the other car, which looked  like  a
Honda City. He could see them clearly in the street light.

209.  After the terrorists had left,  Jadhav  informed  the  Police  Control
Room on the vehicle’s wireless that the two terrorists had  run  away  in  a
car and that he was lying  injured  in  the  vehicle  of  Pydhonie  division
(Able) in front of the State Bank of Mysore. He was rescued  by  a  team  of
policemen including Amrute, Senior Police Inspector (PW-137).

210.  Jadhav went on to describe  the  two  terrorists.  He  said  that  the
lamboo was six (6) feet tall, of strong built and fair complexion, and  aged
twenty-two to twenty-five (22-25) years.  The  butka  was  about  five  feet
three inches (5’ 3”) tall, of medium built and  fair  complexion,  and  aged
twenty to twenty-two (20-22) years. He identified the appellant in court  as
the  butka.  He  added  that  he  had  identified  the  appellant   in   the
identification parade held on December 27, 2008, at Arthur Road  Prison.  On
January 6, 2009, he had identified the dead body of the lamboo from  amongst
seven (7) dead bodies.

211.   He  also  identified  the  carbine  and  the  magazine  (Article  444
collectively) which he had in his possession at the time of the  occurrence.


212.  In cross-examination on behalf of the appellant,  Jadhav  stated  that
while proceeding on Badruddin Tayabji Road he had seen one white car with  a
red beacon. The exchange  of  fire  between  the  occupants  of  the  police
vehicle and the terrorists had taken place in front of the  ATM  centre.  He
further stated that, at the time of the exchange of fire,  his  carbine  was
on single fire mode and he had no opportunity to put it on burst fire  mode.
 Jadhav, Salaskar, Karkare  and  Kamate  had  fired  at  the  terrorists  in
retaliation. The AK-47 held by the appellant had fallen down  from  Jadhav’s
firing. The appellant, however, picked up the  gun  and  resumed  firing  at
them. Jadhav also said that  while  the  Qualis  was  being  driven  by  the
terrorists, Yogesh Patil was lying on his knee. At that time Patil’s  mobile
rang. The appellant, who was sitting on the front left seat,  shot  a  burst
of bullets with the barrel  of  his  gun  pointing  backwards.  The  bullets
pierced the middle seat and riddled the body of Yogesh Patil and he died  as
a result. Jadhav was not injured  in  that  firing.  Jadhav  said  that  the
appellant must have fired ten to fifteen (10-15) shots  in  that  burst.  He
also stated that the lamboo  had  pulled  Salaskar  and  the  appellant  had
pulled Kamate out of the vehicle. Karkare  was  pulled  out  by  the  lamboo
assisted by the appellant. While pulling  him  down  from  the  vehicle  the
appellant had cursed him, using foul language, saying that he was wearing  a
bullet-proof (jacket). He further said that the  whole  incident,  from  the
beginning of firing by the terrorists until they  took  the  vehicle  lasted
three to four (3-4) minutes.





THE SKODA ROBBERY[29]:

213.  Sharan Arasa (PW-144), Samit Vijay Ajgaonkar  (PW-147)  and  his  wife
Megha were the three occupants of the white Skoda car  that  Kasab  and  Abu
Ismail snatched at gun-point, and which Arun Dada Jadhav (PW-136), lying  in
the back seat of the police Qualis, had thought to be  a  white  Honda  City
car.

214.  Arasa and Ajgaonkar had a common friend Siddharth Umashankar  (PW-238)
who worked as Sales Manager  in  Oberoi  Hotel.  When  the  two  terrorists,
namely Abdul Rehman  (Chhota)  and  Fahadullah,  entered  Oberoi  Hotel  and
started shooting there,  Umashankar,  along  with  other  guests  and  staff
members, escaped through the exit door in the lobby area. They went to  Inox
multiplex, which is a few minutes’ walking distance from  the  Oberoi.  When
Ajgaonkar called him on the telephone, Umashankar asked him to come to  Inox
and take him away from there. Ajgaonkar contacted Arasa  and  asked  him  to
come with his car so that they could go to Inox to fetch  Umashankar.  Thus,
Arasa took the Skoda Car (of which his father was the registered owner)  and
came to Ajgaonkar’s house at Mahim. From Mahim they proceeded to  Inox  with
Arasa driving, Ajgaonkar occupying the front left seat and  his  wife  Megha
sitting in  the  back.  They  were  going  to  rescue  Umashankar  but  they
themselves had a brush with death when they came across the  two  terrorists
face-to-face.

215.  They reached Rajani Patel Road, Nariman Point, at  about  00.15  hours
on November 27, 2008. They saw a  Qualis  police  vehicle  approaching  them
from the opposite direction. When the  Qualis  was  about  sixty  (60)  feet
away,  someone  from  the  police  vehicle  shouted   at   them   to   stop.
Simultaneously, a shot was fired in the air from that  vehicle.  The  Qualis
stopped and two persons got down from  it  and  approached  their  car.  The
person who had got out from the left side of  the  police  vehicle  came  in
front of their car. He asked Arasa to get out  of  the  vehicle.  The  other
person, who had been driving the Qualis, pulled Arasa out of the Skoda  car,
holding him by his collar. In the meantime,  Samit  and  Megha  had  already
left the car and were sitting on the footpath. As Arasa got out of the  car,
he realised that he was carrying the key. He, therefore,  immediately  threw
the key away.

216.  The person who had come out of the  Qualis  from  the  left  side  was
shorter than the other person. Arasa identified the appellant  in  court  as
the same short person who had come to him and asked for the car’s key.  When
Arasa had thrown away the key, it had  landed  near  the  car’s  rear  right
wheel. Arasa picked up the key and gave it to the  appellant.  The  two  men
drove away in the car: the appellant sat in the  front  left  seat  and  his
partner drove the car.

217.  Let us now see the description of  the  occurrence  by  Ajgaonkar.  He
stated in his deposition before the court that,  when  the  Qualis  stopped,
two persons got down from it and approached  their  car.  One  of  them  was
taller and the other  was  shorter.  He  identified  the  appellant  as  the
shorter person who approached their car along with  his  associate  who  was
taller than him. The taller man approached Arasa while the  appellant  stood
in front of the car.  The appellant ordered them  to  get  out  of  the  car
(“Gadi se bahar aao”). The taller fellow pulled Arasa out by his collar.  In
the meantime, Ajgaonkar and his wife got down from the car and went  to  the
footpath on the left side  of  the  car.  The  taller  fellow  occupied  the
driver’s seat and the appellant sat on  the  front  left  seat.  The  taller
fellow, however, could not find the car keys and, hence, the  appellant  got
down from the car and demanded the key from Arasa.  Arasa picked up the  key
which he had thrown near the car and gave it to the  appellant.  Thereafter,
both of them drove away in the Skoda car. The terrorists  proceeded  towards
Inox theatre.

218.  Arasa further told the court that, at about 3:00 PM  on  November  27,
2008, he received a phone call from  PSI  Zende  (PW-148)  of  Marine  Drive
police station, asking him to come to the police  station.  Accordingly,  he
went and reached there at about 3:45 PM. He  was  taken  to  the  spot  from
where the car was taken from him. A Panchnama was drawn up by the police.

219.  He was finally  shown  his  vehicle  on  December  25,  2008,  in  the
premises of the office of DCB CID. There was a  bullet  hole  on  the  right
front door. The car was badly damaged on the right side. He told  the  court
that the car was in proper condition when it  was  snatched  away  from  his
custody.

220.  As seen above, both Arasa and Ajgaonkar identified  the  appellant  in
court.  Both  said  that  they  had  earlier  identified  him  in  the  test
identification  parade.  Arasa  was  one  of  the  witnesses  in  the   test
identification parade held on December 28, 2008, and  Ajgaonkar  on  January
14, 2009. Both had identified him  in  a  group  of  seven  (7)  persons  of
similar height and built. The identification was made  in  the  presence  of
the SEO and two panchas.

VINOLI CHOWPATY[30]: ONE DEAD, ONE INJURED

221.  Kasab and Abu Ismail along with eight (8) others  (the  dead  accused)
were seen landing on the shore of Mumbai on November 26, 2008, between  9.15
and 9.30 PM. Kasab and Abu Ismail snatched the Skoda car near  Vidhan  Sabha
around 12.15 AM on November 27. They came to  Mumbai  armed  to  the  teeth;
they had the great advantage of complete surprise and were also aided  by  a
lot of luck. They were thus able to have a  free  run  for  over  three  (3)
hours, killing innocent people and policemen at  will.  However,  their  run
would soon come to end as a team of policemen were  waiting,  determined  to
stop them, caring little for their own  lives.  Abu  Ismail  was  killed  in
their last encounter with a police  team,  but  Kasab  was  taken  alive  in
custody.

222.  We propose to examine here three (3) witnesses  who  were  members  of
the police team that stopped Kasab and Abu Ismail travelling in  the  stolen
Skoda car and took them in custody.

223.  Bhaskar Dattatray Kadam (PW-1) was a Sub-Inspector of Police  attached
to DB Marg Police Station. On November  26,  2008,  at  about  22.00  hours,
Senior Police Inspector Nagappa Mali told him that terrorists  had  attacked
some parts of South Mumbai and  directed  him  to  go  to  Girgaon  (Vinoli)
Chowpaty along with members of the  Crime  Detection  Branch  and  to  do  a
nakabandi there by  putting  up  barricades.  As  directed  by  Mali,  Kadam
proceeded  to  Vinoli  Chowpaty  accompanied  by  six  (6)  members  of  the
Detection Branch. On reaching there, he found API Hemant Bavthankar  (PW-3),
Peter Mobile Operator Sanjay Patil, Peter Mobile Driver Chandrakant  Kamble,
Girgaon Chowpaty Beat In-charge  ASI  Pawar,  ASI  Kochale,  Head  Constable
Chavan,  PN  Naik  and  some  other  policemen  already  present  there  and
barricades already put up. Kadam and the members  of  the  Detection  Branch
joined the police team already present there. After some time, API  Govilkar
(PW-2; injured) and ASI Tukaram  Ombale  (killed),  along  with  some  other
policemen, also arrived at the nakabandi.

224.  The police team was receiving messages regularly through  wireless  on
the Peter Mobile Van. They received  a  message  that  two  terrorists  were
proceeding towards Chowpaty from Vidhan Bhawan via Marine Drive in  a  Skoda
car. At about 00.30 hours they spotted a Skoda car on  Marine  Drive  coming
from South Bombay towards Chowpaty. Having been alerted  in  regard  to  the
Skoda, all the policemen, including Kadam, signalled to the driver  to  stop
the car. The car stopped at a distance of about fifty  (50)  feet  from  the
barricades. The police team shouted to tell the  driver  that  there  was  a
nakabandi and they would check the car. They asked the  driver  to  put  off
the head lights and to put on the inside  lights  of  the  car.  Instead  of
following these directions, the driver of the car  did  just  the  opposite.
Not only were the head lights kept on but the wipers and the water spray  on
the windscreen were also switched on. Therefore, it became difficult to  see
anything inside the car. Then, in a bid to escape, the driver tried to  take
a u-turn just before the barricades. However, the car could not  climb  over
the road divider; it dashed against it and stopped. Kadam and six (6)  other
policemen rushed towards the car and  surrounded  it.  The  driver  and  the
other person who was sitting on the  front  left  seat  raised  their  hands
pretending surrender but, when  Kadam  approached  the  driver,  he  started
firing at him through the lowered window. Kadam fired back from his  service
revolver. At that time Kadam was about ten to twelve (10-12) feet  from  the
driver of the car. Kadam told the court that  he  shot  the  driver  of  the
Skoda car and injured him.

225.  The other occupant of the Skoda car, who  was  sitting  on  the  front
left seat, opened the door on his  side  and  got  out  of  the  car.  While
getting out, he deliberately fell on the road. ASI Tukaram  Ombale  and  API
Sanjay Govilkar were proceeding towards  the  car’s  front  left  door.  The
person who had got out of the car from the front left  door  started  firing
at Tukaram Ombale with an AK-47 rifle.  Even  as  he  was  being  fired  at,
Tukaram Ombale threw himself bodily upon his assailant. Tukaram  Ombale  and
Govilkar were injured by shots  from  the  AK-47  rifle.  Other  members  of
Ombale’s and Govilkar’s team started  hitting  the  assailant  with  lathis.
They succeeded in disarming him. His AK-47 rifle was snatched away from  him
by policemen and he was taken into custody.

226.  Within ten (10) minutes of this occurrence, Senior PI Mali, PI  Sawant
(PW-31), PI Surulkar, API Yadav, API Gawade (PW-4), PSI Gaikwad (PW-24)  and
PSI Warang (PW-27) reached the spot. Two (2) ambulances also  reached  there
within the same time.

227.  Ombale  and  Govilkar,  who  had  sustained  injuries,  were  sent  to
hospital in the Peter Mobile Van. PI Surulkar and API  Gawade  took  one  of
the two terrorists (Abu Ismail) to hospital in one  of  the  ambulances  and
the other terrorist (Kasab) was taken to hospital by PSI Warang (PW-27)  and
some other policemen.

228.  Kadam further told the court that, on  reaching  the  DB  Marg  Police
Station, he received a  call  from  Gawade,  speaking  from  Nair  Hospital,
informing him that one of the terrorists  (Abu  Ismail)  had  been  declared
brought dead by the hospital and that the other terrorist (Kasab)  had  been
admitted for treatment. Gawade also informed Kadam that  the  terrorist  who
was alive had disclosed his name as Ajmal Amir Kasab, gave  his  age  as  21
years and address as Faridkot,  Taluka  Jipalpura,  District  Ukhad,  Punjab
State, Pakistan.  He  also  gave  the  name  and  address  of  the  deceased
terrorist as Abu Ismail, aged  25  years,  resident  of  Dera  Ismail  Khan,
Punjab State, Pakistan. Station diary entries (Ext. no. 150A) were  made  on
the basis of the information received from  Gawade.  After  some  time,  API
Yadav called from Harkisandas Hospital to inform that ASI  Ombale  had  died
as a result of injuries sustained by him. Station diary entry was also  made
in regard to this information.

229.  The FIR of Kadam was recorded by PI Sawant at 2.10 hours, giving  rise
to CR no. 305/2008 (later converted into DCB CID CR no. 182/2008).  The  FIR
was shown to him in the course of his deposition. He identified it and  also
identified his signatures on all the pages. The FIR  was  then  marked  Ext.
no. 57.

230.  Kadam then identified the appellant in court as the terrorist who  was
sitting on the Skoda’s front left seat. He also described the terrorist  who
was driving the car. He said that he was strongly built and  about  six  (6)
feet in height; he had shallow complexion  and  was  clean  shaven.  He  had
black hair. He was wearing an ash-coloured T-shirt and blue cargo trousers.

231.  He identified a pair of blue cargo trousers (Article 3)  and  an  ash-
coloured T-shirt (Article 5)  in  court  as  the  same  as  those  that  the
deceased driver of the Skoda car was wearing at the time of the occurrence.

232.  He then identified the appellant as the terrorist  who  had  fired  at
the deceased Ombale. He further said that the appellant  was  wearing  green
cargo pants and a blue half T-shirt. On these  articles  being  produced  in
court, he identified the green cargo trousers (Article  7)  and  a  blue  T-
shirt (Article 9) as those that the appellant was wearing  at  the  time  of
the occurrence.

233.  Kadam further said that in all four firearms  (two  AK-47  rifles  and
two pistols) were seized from the place of the occurrence. Both the  pistols
were found on the road, one was lying on the  right  side  of  the  driver’s
seat on the road and the other was lying on the left side of  the  car  near
the front left door. One of the AK-47 rifles was  found  in  the  leg  space
below the driver’s seat and the other was found lying on  the  road  on  the
left side of the car. He claimed that he  could  identify  the  AK-47  rifle
with which the appellant had fired at the deceased Tukaram Ombale.

234.  Kadam identified the AK-47 rifle (Article 10) in court  as  being  the
same AK-47 rifle with which the appellant had fired at the deceased  Tukaram
Ombale. He also identified the other AK-47 rifle (Article 12)  as  the  same
AK-47 rifle that was found in the leg space below the driver’s seat  of  the
Skoda car. He added that Article 10 was found loaded with one  magazine  and
that another magazine was attached to the first one with cellophane tape.

235.  Kadam further claimed that he could identify the pistols  seized  from
the spot. He identified the 9 mm  pistol  (Article  14)  and  another  9  mm
pistol that bore the name of its maker ‘Diamond Nedi Frontiar Arms  Company’
Peshawar  (Article 16) as the same two pistols  seized  from  the  place  of
occurrence by PI Sawant (PW-31) under a Panchnama.

236.  Kadam proceeded to identify another 9 mm  pistol  (Article  18)  along
with one (1) empty magazine (Article 20), five (5) live cartridges  (Article
21 collectively), two (2) empty cartridge cases (Article  22  collectively),
and two (2) bullets (Article 23 collectively) as the  service  pistol  Kadam
was carrying and from which he had fired three rounds at  the  time  of  the
occurrence.

237.  He also said  that  he  had  identified  the  appellant  in  the  test
identification parade held on December 27, 2008, at Arthur Road  Prison.  He
had also identified the dead body  of  the  deceased  terrorist  at  the  JJ
Hospital mortuary on January 6, 2009. He had identified  the  dead  body  of
the deceased driver from amongst seven (7) dead bodies shown to him.

238.  He also said that the operation lasted for about four (4) minutes  and
it was over by 00:30 hours or 00:35 hours.

239.  The appellant and the deceased  driver  (Abu  Ismail)  were  taken  to
hospitals in two different ambulances.

240.  Sanjay Yashwant Govilkar (PW-2) was another member of the police  team
at Vinoli Chowpaty that took Kasab in custody. On the  direction  of  Senior
PI Mali, he arrived at Chowpaty in front of Ideal Café for nakabandi  around
00.05 hours on November 27, 2008.  His deposition was  similar  to  that  of
Kadam (PW-1): the arrival of the Skoda car at the barricades at about  00:30
hours, the attempt by the occupants of the car to confuse  the  police  team
by keeping the headlights on and switching  on  the  windscreen  wipers  and
water spray, and the unsuccessful bid to escape by taking  a  u-turn  before
the barricades. Govilkar told the court that  when  the  car  stopped  after
dashing  against  the  road  divider,  he,  ASI  Tukaram  Ombale  and  other
policemen proceeded towards the left side of the  car.  Simultaneously,  API
Bavthankar (PW-3),  PSI  Bhaskar  Kadam  (PW-1)  and  other  policemen  went
towards the driver’s side.

241.  Though Govilkar was a  Police  Inspector,  he  was  not  carrying  any
weapon at the time of the occurrence. He had come to DB Marg Police  Station
only a few days  ago  and  had  earlier  been  working  in  the  immigration
department where officers are not provided with any  official  firearms.  He
was yet to get a weapon when the occurrence took place. Tukaram  Ombale  was
also unarmed. In short,  these  unarmed  policemen  proceeded  to  tackle  a
desperate terrorist armed with an AK-47 rifle and a pistol.

242.  When Govilkar and Tukaram Ombale reached near  the  car’s  front  left
door, the terrorist sitting on that  side  opened  the  door  and  came  out
holding an AK-47 rifle in his hand. Govilkar and  Tukaram  Ombale  attempted
to catch hold of the weapon.  The  terrorist  fell  down  on  the  road  and
started firing at them while lying down  on  the  road.  Both  Govilkar  and
Tukaram Ombale sustained  injuries  from  the  firing.  Tukaram  Ombale  was
seriously injured. Govilkar sustained only one injury on the right  side  of
his waist.  Both  policemen  were  bleeding  from  their  injuries.  In  the
meanwhile, the other policemen hit the fallen terrorist with lathis  and  it
was only then that he was brought under control and could be  disarmed.  The
AK-47 rifle was snatched away by  Govilkar  and  other  policemen.  Govilkar
could see the terrorist clearly in the street  light.  He  claimed  that  he
could identify  the  terrorist  and  he  identified  the  appellant  as  the
terrorist who was holding the AK-47 rifle and who had fired at him  and  ASI
Tukaram Ombale. Govilkar was then shown AK-47 rifles (Articles 10  and  12).
He identified Article 10 as the AK-47 rifle that the appellant  was  holding
and from which he had fired at them.

243.  Govilkar further stated  before  the  court  that  the  appellant  was
wearing a blue T-shirt and green cargo trousers. He was  also  wearing  grey
sports shoes. When these were produced in  court,  Govilkar  identified  the
pair of shoes (Article 25 collectively) as the same that were  worn  by  the
appellant at the time of the occurrence.

244.  Govilkar and Tukaram Ombale were  taken  to  Harkisandas  Hospital  in
Peter Mobile van. Tukaram Ombale died there. Govilkar remained  admitted  in
the hospital till November 29, 2008.

245.  Govilkar told the court that he had identified the  appellant  in  the
test identification parade  held  on  December  27,  2008,  at  Arthur  Road
Prison. Special Executive Officer Vichare conducted the parade.

246.  In cross-examination on behalf of the appellant,  Govilkar  said  that
while getting out of the car, the appellant had  fallen  down  deliberately.
Govilkar added that he continued  to  hold  the  appellant’s  rifle  despite
sustaining injuries, and that Tukaram Ombale had thrown himself bodily  over
the appellant even after being shot.  Replying to a question in  the  cross-
examination, Govilkar said that he identified the AK-47 rifle  (Article  10)
as belonging to the appellant because it had no sling while the other  AK-47
rifle (Article 12) had a sling.

247.  Hemant Anant Bavthankar (PW-3) was another Assistant Police  Inspector
present at the nakabandi at Vinoli  Chowpaty  on  the  direction  of  Senior
Police Inspector Mali. He had arrived at the nakabandi at about 21:55  hours
on November 26, 2008. His narration of  events  during  the  occurrence  was
similar to that of Kadam and Govilkar: the arrival of the Skoda car  at  the
nakabandi at about 00:30 hours on November 27, 2008;  the  driver’s  attempt
to flee the barricades by trying to make  a  u-turn;  and  the  car  getting
stuck on the road divider. Bavthankar added that  he  was  standing  on  the
road divider when the car hit against the divider.  The  divider  was  about
two and a half (2.5) feet high and made of RCC. He was on the right side  of
the car at the divider. Kadam (PW-1) was about fifteen (15) feet  away  from
him on the eastern side of the road meant for south-bound traffic.

248.  Shouting at the terrorist, they tried to approach the car. The  driver
of the car fired from his pistol at Bavthankar, Kadam  and  other  policemen
who were trying to approach him. The bullets missed Bavthankar  and  he  did
not sustain any injury. At that time he was on the  road  meant  for  north-
bound traffic. He went behind the Skoda car and fired three rounds from  his
service pistol at the car’s rear windscreen.  Kadam  (PW-1)  also  fired  at
the driver at the same time. The driver was injured due to their firing.  He
was taken into custody by the police officers/policemen who were present  on
the spot. In the meantime, Bavthankar moved to the front left  door  of  the
car. The person sitting on the front left seat  had  fired  at  ASI  Tukaram
Ombale, API Sanjay Govilkar and other policemen.  Ombale  and  Govilkar  had
both been shot and injured by this person. The  other  policemen,  who  were
with Govilkar and Ombale, disarmed and apprehended him. Bavthankar told  the
court that he could identify the person sitting on the left  front  seat  of
the car. He said he was present in court and he identified the appellant  as
the same person who had fired at Ombale and Govilkar. He further  said  that
he saw the whole incident in the street lights.

249.  Bavthankar further stated before the court  that,  in  the  course  of
inspecting the car, the Bomb Detection and Disposal Squad (BDDS)  found  one
(1) hand grenade and two (2) magazines of AK-47 rifle in a jacket  lying  on
the rear seat of the car. One  AK-47  rifle  was  found  in  the  leg  space
beneath the driver’s seat. PSI Ghodse (PW-9) of the BDDS  removed  the  hand
grenade and proceeded towards Girgaon Chowpaty. Bavthankar  told  the  court
that he could identify the AK-47 rifle found in the leg space  of  the  car.
Articles 10 and 12 were shown to the witness. He identified  Article  12  as
the AK-47 that was found in the leg  space  below  the  driver’s  seat,  and
Article 10 as the AK-47 rifle which was held by the appellant.

250.  He then proceeded to give a description of the driver.  He  said  that
the driver had wheatish complexion, was strongly built and was aged  twenty-
four to twenty-six (24-26) years. He was about six (6)  feet  tall  and  was
wearing an ash-coloured half T-shirt and  blue  cargo  trousers.  Bavthankar
further said that he had identified the dead  body  of  the  driver  at  the
mortuary of JJ Hospital on January 6, 2009. He had identified the dead  body
from amongst seven (7) dead bodies placed for identification. He added  that
he had identified  the  appellant  in  the  identification  parade  held  on
December 27, 2008, at Arthur Road Prison.

251.  On these articles being produced in court, Bavthankar  identified  one
(1) pistol (Article 29), one  (1)  magazine  (Article  30),  five  (5)  live
cartridges  (Article  31  collectively),  two  (2)   empties   (Article   32
collectively), and two (2) bullets (Article 33 collectively), and said  this
was the same pistol that he had used at  the  time  of  the  occurrence  and
which he had handed over, along with the rounds, to PI Sawant (PW-31)

252.  In cross examination, Bavthankar said that bullets fired  by  him  had
hit the driver. He further said that he  could  not  say  how  many  bullets
might have hit him. The driver also sustained injuries from  firing  by  PSI
Kadam (PW-1)[31]. The driver was removed from  the  seat  by  them.  He  was
unconscious at that time as he was injured by the bullets.

It needs to be clarified here that Article 12, the  AK-47  rifle  which  was
identified by Kadam (PW-1), Govilkar (PW-2) and Bavthankar (PW-3) as  having
been recovered from the leg space below the driver’s seat of the  Skoda  car
actually belonged to  the  slain  police  officer  Ashok  Kamte,  Additional
Police Commissioner. Abu Ismail evidently picked it up while switching  from
the Qualis to the Skoda, leaving his own AK-47 rifle in the damaged Qualis.

253.  Arun Balkrishna  Jande  (PW-7)  who  was  working  at  Naigaon  Police
Armoury at the relevant time deposed before the court that Article  12,  the
AK-47 rifle  and  the  magazine  were  issued  to  Ashok  Kamte,  Additional
Commissioner of Police on August 4, 2008. He identified Article 12, the  AK-
47 rifle from the number on its butt (94)  and  the  body  (LY8860)  on  the
basis of the entry (Ext. no. 76) made in  the  register  maintained  in  the
armoury. The empty magazine with it also bore the same number.

254.  On the other hand the AK-47 rifle  along  with  a  magazine  (labelled
Articles 427 and 428 respectively)  that  was  recovered  from  the  damaged
Qualis police vehicle under seizure Panchnama (Ext.  no.  529)  belonged  to
Abu Ismail and he had carried it with him from Pakistan. This becomes  clear
from the ballistic analysis of the bullets recovered from dead bodies  which
shows that one Ashrafali, who was killed at CST and  Ashok  Kamte,  who  was
killed in the Qualis police vehicle were hit by bullets fired from  the  AK-
47 rifle, Article 427.This is also in conformity  with  what  the  appellant
stated in his confession before the magistrate that as they left the  Qualis
police vehicle, Abu Ismail left behind his AK-47,  the  magazines  of  which
had emptied by then and picked up the AK-47 of one  of  the  officers  lying
dead in the vehicle.

VILE PARLE BLAST: TWO DEAD, THREE INJURED

255.  Before concluding the narration of crimes directly committed by  Kasab
in the company of Abu Ismail, we must take note of  another  event.  A  taxi
bearing registration number MH-01-G-7792 was blown up by  a  bomb  blast  on
western express highway, Vile Parle (East), near Swan City Club at  slightly
after 10:45 PM on November 26, 2008. The  explosion  destroyed  the  vehicle
and instantly killed its two occupants (the driver and a passenger).

256.  The explosion was witnessed by Shyamsunder  Rambharat  Choudhary  (PW-
171), Balkrushna Ramchandra Bare (PW-490) and Sheldon Alman (PW-491).  As  a
result of the explosion, Choudhary suffered a bleeding injury on  his  right
shoulder, Bare sustained injuries on his face below the eyelid, and  on  the
forehead, nose and ear, and Alman on his left hand. Choudhary and Bare  were
admitted as indoor patients and treated at Cooper  Hospital,  and  Alman  at
Holy Spirit Hospital.

257.  The two occupants of the taxi, i.e., the  driver  and  the  passenger,
who lost their lives in the explosion, were  Umar  Shaikh  and  Laxminarayan
Goyal[32] respectively.

258.  In the narration of this painful  and  gory  tale,  one  comes  across
brutal and mindless killings at every step  but  there  are  some  killings,
like the present one, that stand out as especially sorrowful. Shaikh  was  a
taxi driver eking out a livelihood by plying a taxi  of  which  he  was  not
even the owner, and Goyal was a  lawyer  from  Hyderabad  who  had  come  to
Mumbai in connection with some professional work.  The  only  fault  of  the
taxi driver was that he was hired by the two messengers of  death  to  carry
them from Badhwar Park to CST and of the  passenger  that  on  that  chaotic
night in Mumbai, when death seemed to be lurking  around  every  corner,  he
had thought that a taxi would be a safer mode of transport  than  the  local
trains.

259.  As noted above, Goyal had come  to  Mumbai  in  connection  with  some
professional work and he was due to go back to Hyderabad by a train  leaving
CST in the evening of November 26, 2008.  He  reached  CST  but  missed  the
train. His sister-in-law Usha Sharad Chaudhary (PW-168) lived in  Mumbai  at
Charkop, Kandivali (W). Goyal called her from his mobile[33] phone  to  tell
her that there was some incident of firings at CST and  he  had  missed  his
train and he was coming back to her place. On  account  of  the  city  being
under terrorist attack, she asked him not to travel by any local  train  but
to take a taxi. After five (5) minutes, he called  her  again  to  tell  her
that he had boarded a taxi and left CST.

260.  Usha Sharad Chaudhary was quite anxious  and  called  Goyal  from  her
mobile phone again at about 10:30 PM.  He  told  her  that  he  had  reached
Dadar. At about 11:45 PM, Usha Sharad Chaudhary received a phone  call  from
Goyal’s daughter Diksha, who stayed at Walkeshwar, Mumbai, saying  that  she
had last spoken to her father at about 10:45 PM and thereafter her  father’s
phone was not reachable. That was the last anyone spoke  to  or  heard  from
Goyal. His mutilated body was later found at Cooper Hospital.

261.  Umar Sheikh, too, while carrying Goyal in his taxi, was called by  his
friend Irshad Ahmed Shaikh (PW-169) on his  mobile  at  about  10:00  PM  on
November 26, 2008. Irshad had given his driving licence for renewal to  Umar
(the deceased) and he was enquiring whether it had been renewed.  Umar  told
him that the friend to whom he had given the licence  for  renewal  had  not
brought it back and added that in view of all the disturbances in  the  city
it was good that he (Irshad Ahmed Shaikh)  would  not  be  driving  on  that
night. At this Irshad, asked him why, in that case,  was  he  proceeding  to
Kandivali with a passenger in his taxi? Umar  told  him  that  it  was  only
because the passenger seemed to be  in  trouble  and  he  had  made  a  very
earnest request to take him to Kandivali by any means.  In  the  morning  of
November 27, 2008, Irshad Shaikh learnt from TV news that there had  been  a
bomb blast in a taxi at Vile Parle. He and some friends went  in  search  of
Umar Shaikh and found his dead body at Coroner’s Court at Cooper Hospital.

BEYOND VINOLI:

262.  The above is a broad account of the havoc wrought  by  Kasab  and  Abu
Ismail over a period of slightly more than three (3) hours,  beginning  with
their arrival at Badhwar Park and ending with  their  being  apprehended  at
Vinoli Chowpaty. It must, however, be made clear that the above  account  is
based only on part of the ocular evidence led by the prosecution before  the
trial court. Besides the depositions referred to above, the prosecution  has
an enormous volume of other evidence such as: articles recovered and  seized
from places through which the two terrorists passed, and  the  places  where
they stopped; the  vehicles  they  used  until  they  were  finally  caught;
medical and forensic reports, CCTV recordings, phone call  records,  Station
Diary entries, police logs, etc. We see no reason, however, to refer to  all
that evidence since, on the basis of the  ocular  evidence  discussed  above
alone, we have no doubt that the appellant, personally and jointly with  Abu
Ismail, is directly  responsible  for  killing  at  least  seventy-two  (72)
people[34] and causing injuries of various kinds to one hundred  and  thirty
(130) people[35].

263.  All the witnesses discussed above (except those relating to  the  Vile
Parle and Mazgaon Taxi blasts) had a  life  and  death  encounter  with  the
appellant and his associate, Abu Ismail (deceased accused  no.1),  at  close
quarters. The physical appearance of the two terrorists was etched on  their
minds. All the witnesses gave a detailed description of the  two  terrorists
to the court. They described them by their complexion, age,  body-built  and
height, stating that one of them was tall and the other was short.   All  of
them  identified  the  appellant  in  court  as  the  shorter  of  the   two
assailants. They also identified Abu Ismail from the photograph on the  fake
identity card Article 61. They also stated before the court  that  they  had
identified the appellant in the test identification parades held. We  accept
their testimony without any hesitation.

264.  From the forensic evidence it further appears that of the  seventy-two
(72)  dead,  at  least  six  (6)  persons  fell  to  shots  fired   by   the
appellant.[36] We, therefore, see no difficulty whatsoever  in  holding  him
guilty of multiple  murder,  murder  with  common  intention  and  abetment,
attempt to murder with common intention and abetment, abducting in order  to
murder, robbery with attempt to cause death or grievous  hurt,  and  several
other allied offences under the Penal Code (IPC), committing  terrorist  act
punishable under Section 16 of Unlawful Activities (Prevention)  Act,  1967,
as well as offences under the Explosives  Act,  1884,  Explosive  Substances
Act, 1908, and Arms Act, 1959.

265.  Nothing will please Mr. Raju Ramachandran,  senior  counsel  appearing
for the appellant, more than stopping at this stage. As a  matter  of  fact,
he made a fervent plea to segregate the  case  of  the  appellant  from  the
other eight (8) dead accused.  He  urged  that,  for  the  purpose  of  this
appeal, the court need not go into the offences committed by the  eight  (8)
other dead terrorists who, though, arrived together with the  appellant  and
Abu Ismail at Badhwar park, but went their separate  ways  from  there.  The
learned  Counsel  submitted  that  the  appellant’s  culpability  should  be
judged, and the commensurate punishment for him should  be  determined  only
on the basis of the offences directly attributable to him. In  other  words,
he would like to confine the case only to acts committed  by  the  appellant
along with the dead Abu Ismail from the time the two landed at Badhwar  Park
until they were caught at Vinoli Chowpaty.

266.  Mr. Gopal Subramanium,  learned  senior  advocate  appearing  for  the
State of Maharashtra, was quite  shocked  by  the  suggestion  made  by  Mr.
Ramachandran. Mr. Subramanium submitted that stopping at this stage  of  the
case would amount to shutting out the prosecution unheard.  Learned  Counsel
submitted that the offences committed by the appellant  in  the  company  of
the dead Abu Ismail can never be  properly  appreciated  in  isolation.  The
appellant and his companion, the dead Abu Ismail, were part of a  close-knit
team of ten (10) terrorists who arrived together on the soil of Mumbai in  a
highly organised way and attacked their various targets in furtherance of  a
common conspiracy. The learned Counsel submitted that the full magnitude  of
the case would only  be  clear  as  the  prosecution  unfolds  the  evidence
relating to conspiracy. He submitted that, as the evidence relating  to  the
other aspects of the case and the five (5) other venues of violence  is  set
out before the court, it would become clear that a much larger  and  ominous
conspiracy was hatched in Pakistan, the aim of which was to destabilize  the
country and to wage war against the Government of India. It  would  also  be
clear that all ten (10) terrorists, including  Kasab  and  Abu  Ismail,  who
spread out from Badhwar Park  in  pairs,  were  acting  in  concert  and  in
execution of the larger conspiracy. Seen thus, the  appellant  would  appear
equally culpable for the carnage and other offences committed by  the  other
terrorists of the team at different places, though  admittedly  he  was  not
physically present at the venues of those crimes. Mr. Subramanium  submitted
that the course suggested by Mr. Ramachandran would do  grave  injustice  to
the prosecution, nay  to  the  people  of  the  country  who  came  under  a
completely unprovoked attack and suffered a war waged against them that  was
encouraged, monitored, and guided from minute to minute from a command  post
based in a foreign land.

267.  We are of  the  view  that  Mr.  Subramanium  is  clearly  right.  The
suggestion made by Mr. Ramachandran that the appellant should only  be  held
liable for acts committed by him in the company of Abu Ismail  is  based  on
the premise that the appellant and Abu Ismail were acting independently  and
separately from the other terrorists who, on arriving  at  Mumbai,  went  to
four different targets. It is contended that though all ten (10)  terrorists
arrived in Mumbai together, on the same inflatable rubber  dinghy,  each  of
the five pairs into which they divided themselves must be  held  liable  for
the actions of the pair alone and not for what the other  four  pairs  might
have done, because each pair went in a different direction from the  landing
site. The underlying assumption is that the five pairs  were  not  connected
to each other by a common conspiracy  and  that  they  were  not  acting  in
furtherance of a conspiracy that was keeping them bound together even  after
they had separated physically in  order  to  execute  their  assigned  roles
under the conspiracy. We find no basis  for  such  an  assumption,  even  in
light of the prosecution evidence discussed so far.  Further,  it  would  be
wrong to proceed on such an assumption even without taking into account  the
evidence of conspiracy that the prosecution has to  present  with  reference
to the other aspects of the case and  the  other  venues  of  the  terrorist
attack.

268.  We, therefore, deem it necessary to proceed with  the  matter  further
and to examine the other venues of carnage. But  we  propose  to  scrutinise
the other aspects of the case and visit the other four places  of  terrorist
violence primarily with the view to see what the prosecution  has  to  offer
by way of evidence of  conspiracy  and  in  support  of  the  various  other
charges against the appellant. We do not propose  to  discuss  the  evidence
relating to the offences committed by the other eight  (8)  dead  terrorists
at those places in any great detail for the simple reason that, being  dead,
they were not on trial.

269.  After landing at Badhwar Park,  the  appellant  and  Abu  Ismail,  the
leader of the group (deceased accused no.1), went to CST by a taxi.  At  the
railway station they killed as many people as they could and then  left  via
the foot-overbridge to Badruddin Tayabji Marg. They overcame any efforts  by
the police to stop them on the sixth floor of the  Cama  Hospital  building,
at the main front gate of the hospital and on Badruddin  Tayabji  Marg  near
Rang Bhavan Lane. In the process, they killed, among many others, three  (3)
senior police officers and grabbed the Qualis vehicle  in  which  they  were
trying to intercept the two terrorists. They were unable to go very  far  in
the Qualis as one of its wheels was destroyed in the  gun  fire.  They  then
commandeered another vehicle, a Skoda,  from  its  occupants  at  gun-point.
They were driving the Skoda on Marine Drive when they  were  finally  caught
at Vinoli Chowpaty.

270.  The road on which they were travelling goes to Malabar Hill and  their
car was headed in that direction. In his statement  before  the  magistrate,
the appellant had said that as they sat in the Skoda after seizing  it  from
its occupants he had asked Abu Ismail where they had to go. Abu Ismail  said
they had to go to Malabar Hill. The appellant further  asked  where  exactly
in Malabar Hill, but Abu Ismail said that he  would  tell  him  on  reaching
Malabar Hill.  There  is  no  other  evidence  that  their  destination  was
actually Malabar Hill. It is  also  not  clear  as  to  where  exactly  they
intended to go  once  they  reached  Malabar  Hill  or  who  was/were  their
target(s) there. But it is worth  remembering  that  the  Governor  and  the
Chief Minister of Maharashtra as well as the Chief Justice  of  Bombay  High
Court all reside on  Malabar  Hill.  It  is  quite  possible  that  the  two
desperados had anyone among them as their next target.

271.  Following the appellant and  Abu  Ismail,  Nazir  Ahmad  @  Abu  Omair
(deceased accused no.4) and Shoaib @ Abu  Soheb  (deceased  accused  no.  9)
took a taxi from Badhwar Park for Leopold Café. They were followed by  Abdul
Rahman ‘Bada’  @  Hajazi  (deceased  accused  no.5)  and  Javed  @  Abu  Ali
(deceased accused no.8) who went to Hotel Taj by  taxi.  After  them,  Imran
Babar @ Abu Aqsa (deceased accused no.2) and  Nasir  @  Abu  Umar  (deceased
accused no.3) went to Nariman House on foot. After these eight (8)  men  had
left, the remaining two, namely,  Fahadullah  (deceased  accused  no.7)  and
Abdul Rahman ‘Chhota’ @ Saqib (deceased  accused  no.6)  sailed  the  rubber
boat to Nariman Point from where they just walked into Hotel Oberoi.

272.  Here it needs to be made clear that the nine (9)  dead  accused  could
only be known by their respective names after the appellant identified  them
through photographs of their dead bodies[37]. Later he also named  them  and
referred to their respective roles in his confessional statement before  the
magistrate. Further, the fact that the four terrorists  at  Hotel  Taj  were
called Abu Soheb, Omair, Rahman and Abu Ali also comes in  the  evidence  of
Sunil Rajaram Jadhav (PW-224) and Nivruti Tukaram Kadam (PW-242). Also,  the
names of the terrorists who went to Hotel  Oberoi  and  Nariman  House  come
through in the transcripts of their intercepted phone calls, in  which  they
are talking with their collaborators and to which we  shall  advert  in  due
course.

Leopold Café: eleven  (11)  dead  and  twenty-eight  (28)  injured  and  the
Mazgaon blast: three (3) dead and nineteen (19) injured

273.  Nazir (deceased accused  no.4)  and  Shoaib  (deceased  accused  no.9)
launched an attack on Leopold Café with  grenades  and  gunfire  from  AK-47
rifles and left it within minutes, leaving behind eleven (11) dead (of  whom
two (2) were foreign nationals) and twenty-eight (28) injured (of whom  nine
(9) were foreign nationals). They  walked  to  Hotel  Taj,  which  is  at  a
distance of about hundred (100) metres  to  join  Abdul  Rahman  ‘Bada’  and
Javed who had gone directly to the Hotel by taxi from Badhwar Park.

274.  Nazir and Shoaib were carrying two RDX bombs, one of  which  they  had
planted in the taxi they took from Badhwar Park  to  Leopold  Café.[38]  The
bomb in the taxi exploded at about 10:30 PM while it was going  through  the
Wadi Bunder Road in the Mazgaon  Area  of  the  city,  killing  its  driver,
Fulchandra Ramchandra  Bind,  and  its  two  passengers,  Zarina  Shamsuddin
Shaikh and her daughter Reema Mohammad Rabiul Shaikh (the mother-in-law  and
wife, respectively, of Mohammad Shaikh (PW-176))  and  causing  injuries  to
nineteen (19) people on the road.

275.  The other RDX bomb they planted while on  way  from  Leopold  Café  to
Hotel Taj, in Gokul Wine Shop Lane behind Hotel Taj, near  Gokul  Restaurant
in front of the State Bank of Hyderabad. The bomb, however, did not  explode
and it was finally recovered and seized under the Panchnama Ext. no. 736.

Hotel Taj: thirty-six (36) dead and thirty (30) injured

276.  Abdul Rahman  ‘Bada’  (deceased  accused  no.5)  and  Javed  (deceased
accused no.8), on reaching Hotel Taj, first put their RDX bomb near  a  tree
at a distance of about fifty (50) metres from  the  porch  of  the  New  Taj
Hotel. This bomb, too, did not explode and was recovered  and  seized  along
with the bomb planted by the Leopold-team under the Panchnama Ext. no.  736.
They then entered the lobby of the hotel and started firing with  their  AK-
47 rifles on burst mode. Leaving the commotion  behind,  they  went  to  the
upper floors of the hotel using its wide winding stairs.[39]  On  the  fifth
floor of the hotel they planted the second RDX bomb, placing  it  under  the
central dome so as to cause maximum  damage  to  the  building.  Next,  they
proceeded  to  the  sixth  floor  where  they   took   Kuttalam   Rajgopalan
Ramamoorthy (PW-184)  into  captivity.  Ramamoorthy  was  the  non-Executive
Chairman of ING Vysya Bank[40] and he had gone to Mumbai in connection  with
a board meeting of one of the companies. He was staying at Hotel Taj  Palace
in Room no.632 on the sixth floor.

277.  Abdul Rahman ‘Bada’ and Javed also took four employees  of  the  hotel
as hostages, namely, Adil Rohinton Irani[41]  (PW-188),  Sunil  Jadhav  (PW-
224), Rajendra Bagade and Swapnil. In room no.632, Abdul Rahman  ‘Bada’  and
Javed were joined by Nazir and Shoaib, coming from Leopold  Café.  At  about
2.15 AM (on November 27, 2008) all four terrorists came down  to  the  fifth
floor, bringing with them all five hostages, with their  hands  tied  behind
their backs, and went into room no.520. While they  were  in  that  room,  a
call came from Adil’s wife on his mobile phone. Adil was then  held  captive
by the terrorists who had also taken away his mobile phone.  The  terrorists
talked to his wife menacingly and asked her to stop security  forces  acting
against them otherwise they would not only kill Adil but  wreak  havoc.  All
the  while,  they  were  engaged  in  a   long   conversation   with   their
collaborators  and  handlers  on  a  mobile  phone;  these   handlers   were
constantly urging them to throw grenades  and  to  set  fire  to  the  hotel
building. While  they  were  trying  to  build  a  fire  by  setting  ablaze
inflammable articles in the room like sofa(s),  foam  mattresses,  curtains,
bed  sheets,  etc.,  there  was  a  major  blast  somewhere  in  the   hotel
building[42] and heavy smoke started  to  fill  the  room.  When  it  became
difficult to breathe inside the room, the four terrorists came  out  of  the
room and in that confusion the four hotel staff were able to escape  through
room’s window by tying up bed sheets and curtains into a rope  for  climbing
down. Ramamoorthy was unable to climb down by this ‘rope’  but  he  too  was
able to escape and to reach a window from where he was  finally  rescued  by
the fire brigade personnel. Having lost their hostages, the four  terrorists
settled down in the hotel, taking position  for  a  long-drawn  battle  with
security forces and continued their attempts to set fire to  the  hotel  and
to destroy it by whatever means they could. They gave a tough fight  to  the
security forces till they were finally killed on  the  morning  of  November
29, 2008. The last of  the  four  terrorists  at  Hotel  Taj  (Abdul  Rahman
‘Bada’) was shot by security forces at 9:00 AM  on  November  29,  2008.  By
that time, the four men had killed thirty-six (36) people (of whom nine  (9)
were foreign nationals) and caused injuries of various kinds to thirty  (30)
others (of whom five (5) were foreign nationals).

Nariman House: nine (9) killed and seven (7) injured

278.  Imran Babar @ Abu Aqsa (deceased accused no.2) and Nasir  @  Abu  Umar
(deceased accused no.3) had gone to  Nariman  House  from  Badhwar  Park  on
foot. On reaching near Nariman House they first planted an RDX bomb  at  the
Express Petrol Pump on SBS  Road,  Colaba.  From  there  they  proceeded  to
Nariman House, where they planted the second RDX bomb near the staircase  on
the ground (parking level area).[43]

279.   They  then  entered  the  upper  floors  of  Nariman  House   without
difficulty. Nariman House is a six (6) storied (ground plus five)  building.
It is a residential-cum-prayer house used by Israeli  people  for  temporary
accommodation. An Israeli  priest  called  Gabriel  Holtzberge  lived  there
permanently with his wife Rivka and their two (2) year old son  Moshe.  They
had two (2)  employees.  One  was  Kazi  Zakir  Hussain  (PW-239),  who  was
provided accommodation on the ground  floor,  and  the  other  was  a  woman
called Sandra. Besides these two, they had a  watchman  called  Kesari  who,
however, was not present at the time  of  the  occurrence  on  November  26,
2008.
280.  On the date of the occurrence there were four guests,  two  males  and
two females, staying with the Holtzberge couple at Nariman House.

281.  Dinner, on November 26, 2008, was over by 8.00  PM.  And  by  9.45  PM
Hussain was going  down  to  his  accommodation  after  he  and  Sandra  had
finished their day’s work. On the stairs he saw a person armed  with  a  gun
standing on the landing area  between  the  first  and  second  floors.  The
gunman fired a shot at Hussain but  he  was  not  hit.  Hussain  immediately
returned to the first floor where Sandra was still in the hall. On  entering
the first floor hall, Hussain shut the door from inside. Gabriel, Rivka  and
their four guests were at that time on the second floor. Hussain and  Sandra
hid themselves in the store room, bolting the door from inside  and  putting
off the lights. They came out of the store room at 11.00 AM on November  27,
2008. All through the night and in the morning  there  had  been  sounds  of
gunshots being fired from inside the building. While  they  were  trying  to
get out of the building, they heard the child Moshe  crying  on  the  second
floor. They went up and found Moshe on the second floor hall. Sandra  picked
up the boy and brought him out with them. On coming  out  of  Nariman  House
they were immediately taken to Colaba Police Station.[44]

282.  It  was  their  exemplary  courage,  humanity  and  loyalty  to  their
employers that saved the child Moshe from certain death at the hands of  the
two terrorists.

283.  The Nariman House episode indeed presents a shining  example  of  good
and proper human conduct in the face of grave  personal  danger,  but  there
were also many tragic killings of innocent people at Nariman House. The  two
terrorists took Gabriel, Rivka and their  guests  as  hostages.  They  first
tried to use them as bargaining chips to  start  some  sort  of  negotiation
with the Indian  authorities  but,  when  they  were  unable  to  start  any
negotiation and as  they  came  under  the  heat  of  the  security  forces’
operation, they  simply  killed  all  their  hostages  as  being  expendable
baggage and encumbrances in their fight against the security forces.

284.  Apart from the inmates of Nariman House, two other people  lost  their
lives in the most tragic circumstances.

285.  Mohammad Salim Harharwala (PW-206) lived  along  with  his  family  at
73/4 Faridun Court Building, SBS  Road,  Colaba,  which  is  very  close  to
Nariman House. Apprehending danger and feeling  insecure  at  Faridun  Court
because of the incident of firings in Nariman House,  he  shifted  with  his
family to a flat on the fourth floor of Colaba Court, which is  situated  in
front of Nariman House. This,  unfortunately,  turned  out  to  be  a  fatal
decision. In the Colaba flat, he  and  his  parents  were  standing  near  a
window facing Nariman House when, at about 10:30 PM, his  parents  were  hit
by bullets fired  directly  from  Nariman  House.  They  were  taken  to  ST
George’s hospital where they were declared dead.

286.   From  Nariman  House  the  terrorists  made  random  firings  in  all
directions and threw hand grenades at adjoining buildings, roads  and  lanes
that resulted in many injuries.

287.  There is another aspect of the  Nariman  House  episode  to  which  we
shall advert in greater detail in the latter  part  of  the  judgment.  From
Nariman House the  two  terrorists,  Imran  Babar  in  particular,  were  in
regular contact on the mobile phone with their  handlers  and  corroborators
across the border. At one stage, the controllers even tried to  use  one  of
their hostages,  Norma  Shvarzblat  Robinovich  (a  Mexican  citizen,  later
killed),  as  an  intermediary  in  an  attempt  to  start  some   sort   of
‘negotiation’ with the Indian authorities. The collaborators tried to  tutor
her as to what she should speak to the Indian authorities on the  telephone.
She was told not to disclose  her  own  position  or  the  position  of  her
captors inside the house and further not to disclose the number of  hostages
taken by them but to persuade the Indian authorities to stop  the  operation
by the security forces and to negotiate with her captors in  order  to  save
the lives of the hostages.

288.  Apart from the collaborators and handlers, Imran  Babar  also  engaged
in dialogues with India TV, a popular news channel in the country, and  with
one Levi from the US who apparently intervened as a self-styled mediator  to
try and save the lives of the Jewish hostages.

289.  The two terrorists holed up in Nariman House, Imran Babar @  Abu  Aqsa
and Nasir @ Abu Umar, were finally killed by security forces  in  the  night
of November 28, 2008. But, by then, they had been  able  to  kill  nine  (9)
people (of whom five (5)  were  foreign  nationals)  and  injure  seven  (7)
people.

Hotel Oberoi: thirty-five (35) dead twenty-four (24) injured.

290.  Fahadullah (deceased accused no.7) and Abdul Rahman ‘Chhota’  @  Saqib
(deceased accused no.6)  entered  Hotel  Oberoi  at  about  21:55  hours  on
November 26, 2008 and started burst firing in the hotel lobby. In  the  CCTV
recording one can clearly see a hotel-staff opening a door, coming  out  and
going around the reception desk. He gets hit  by  shots  fired  by  the  two
terrorists  and  slumps  down  to  the  floor.  They  next  went  to  Tiffin
Restaurant,  situated  in  the  main  lobby  of   the   Hotel,   and   fired
indiscriminately from  their  AK-47  rifles.  The  hotel  staff  in  Kandhar
Restaurant, situated on the mezzanine floor, heard and saw  them  firing  in
Tiffin Restaurant. At that time there were fifty to sixty (50–60) guests  in
Kandhar Restaurant. The staff members closed the door of Kandhar  Restaurant
and bolted it from inside and started taking out the guests  from  the  rear
(service) door. From Tiffin Restaurant the two terrorists proceeded  towards
Kandhar Restaurant but they found  the  restaurant’s  entrance  door  locked
from inside. They fired at the  closed  doors.  One  of  the  shots  pierced
through the glass pane and hit Dinaj Sharma, one of the hotel staff, on  her
right forearm. They eventually succeeded  in  breaking  open  the  door  and
entering Kandhar Restaurant but by that time, fortunately,  all  the  guests
in the restaurant had been evacuated and the two terrorists found  only  two
hotel employees, namely Jorden and Pradeep Rammurthy  Bengalorkar  (PW-212).
They threatened them that they would kill them if they tried  to  run  away.
Then they asked Bengalorkar to pour liquor on the tables and other items  of
furniture from the bottles in the  bar  counter  and  handed  a  lighter  to
Jorden, telling him to set fire to the furniture  soaked  with  liquor.  The
lighter  did  not  work  and  they  asked  Jorden  to  make  the  fire  with
matchsticks. Jorden took out a matchbox from his pocket  and  tried  to  set
fire to the table cloth. The poor fellow was so nervous that he  was  unable
to start the fire but, in the process, he burnt his own  hands.  As  he  was
wringing his hands and crying that his hands were  burnt,  one  of  the  two
terrorists, evidently annoyed at his lack  of  efficiency  as  an  arsonist,
fired a burst  of  bullets,  killing  him  on  the  spot.  They  then  asked
Bengalorkar to set the furniture on fire. He somehow  succeeded  in  setting
fire to a table. The terrorists then asked him to take  them  to  the  floor
where the hotel’s VIP guests were staying. Bengalorkar entered the lift,  as
bidden by the terrorists, but as their attention  was  momentarily  diverted
in throwing hand grenades he quickly pressed the down button  of  the  lift.
The lift door thus closed and  the  lift  started  descending  even  as  the
terrorists fired at its closed door. Bengalorkar thus gave the slip  to  the
terrorists and saved himself by his presence of mind.

291.  Fahadullah and Abdul Rahman ‘Chhota’ then went to the upper floors  of
the hotel in search of any VIP guests staying there.  They  were  unable  to
find any but they got holed up there and fought  the  security  forces  till
they were finally killed at about 7.00 AM on November 28, 2008.  A  complete
and ocular account of the final encounter of the  two  terrorists  with  the
National Security Guard (NSG) Commando  may  be  seen  in  the  evidence  of
Rajesh Ganpat Kadam (PW-215) who was the Assistant Chief  Security  Officer,
Hotel Oberoi, and who was accompanying the NSG Commandos headed  by  Colonel
Rathi and Lt. Colonel Sharma in the final  encounter  with  the  terrorists.
Before Fahadullah and Abdul Rahman  ‘Chhota’  were  killed,  they  had  left
behind thirty-five (35) people as  dead  (of  whom  ten  (10)  were  foreign
nationals) and twenty-four 24  injured  (of  whom  seven  (7)  were  foreign
nationals).

THE FIREPOWER, THE TENACITY:

292.  Just to have an idea of the fire power the terrorists  were  carrying,
we propose to take a look at the seizure Panchnamas from Hotel  Taj  and  we
note below only some of the firearms  and  ammunitions  seized  under  those
Panchnamas:

293.  Exhibit No. 744

 1. Seven (7) magazines of black colour. Of them, six  (6)  contained  live
    rounds and one (1) was empty
 2. One (1) cotton bag containing one hundred  and  thirty-two  (132)  live
    cartridges
 3. Five (5) hand grenades
 4. One (1) bullet bayonet

294.  Exhibit No. 746
 1) One hundred and fifty (150) pistol empties
 2) Six (6) big empties
 3) Twenty-eight (28) bullets
 4) Ten (10) small empties
 5) Twelve (12) big empties
 6) Five (5) bullets
 7) One (1) grenade pin
 8) One (1) small empty

295.  Exhibit No. 751
 1.  Three (3) empties

296.  Exhibit No. 752
 1. One (1) pistol with magazine
 2. One (1) pistol with empty magazine

297.  Exhibit No. 757
 1.  One (1) tin box of size two by four (2x4) inches of explosives
 2. Seven (7) empties

298.  Exhibit No. 760
 1. Four (4) AK-47 (damaged) rifles – one (1) rifle was with magazine
 2. Eight (8) magazines of AK 47
 3. Two (2) pistols of Star make with one (1) magazine each
 4. One (1) separate pistol magazine
 5. Eight (8) 9 mm loose cartridges
 6. Six (6) 7.62 mm cartridges
 7. One (1) 7.62 mm empty

299.  Exhibit No. 763
 1.  One (1) bayonet
 2. Two (2) magazines were found in a bag lying in the debris. One  of  the
    magazines contained five (5) live rounds and another magazine contained
    two (2) live rounds.

300.  Exhibit No. 910
 1.  Twenty-one (21) empty cartridges
 2. Three (3) live cartridges
 3. Six (6) metal pieces

301.  Exhibit No. 1125
 1. One (1) pistol  manufactured  by  Khyber  Arms  Manufacturing  Company,
    Peshawar
 2. Five (5) magazines of AK-47 rifle, two (2) of them  tied  with  plastic
    adhesive tape and the other three (3) loose and in rusted condition
 3. Twelve (12) live cartridges
 4. Two (2) bayonets

302.  The seizure Panchnamas from the other venues of violence are  no  less
full.

303.  It may also be noted here that once the terrorists had taken  position
at their respective targets of attack it did not prove  easy  to  neutralise
them or to take them out. The Maharashtra police was quite  unequal  to  the
task and, consequently, MARCOS (Naval) Commandos were  called  in  at  Hotel
Taj. Finally, the whole operation at all the three places, Hotel Taj,  Hotel
Oberoi and Nariman House, was handed over to the  National  Security  Guards
who were able to clear the sites but not before the terrorists gave  them  a
stiff resistance. The second of the  two  terrorists  at  Hotel  Oberoi  was
killed at about 7.00 A.M. on November 28, 2008. Nariman  House  was  cleared
in the night of November 28 and Hotel Taj, thereafter, at about 9:00  AM  on
November 29.

304.  The prosecution has documented the episodes  at  Leopold  Café,  Hotel
Taj, Hotel Oberoi, and Nariman House, as well as the Mazgaon Taxi  Blast  as
exhaustively as it has documented the incidents at  CST,  “Cama  in”,  “Cama
out”, Skoda robbery and “Vinoli Chowpaty” relating to the appellant and  his
dead companion Abu Ismail.

305.   In  regard  to  Leopold  Café,  the  prosecution  examined  ten  (10)
witnesses besides producing  other  kinds  of  evidence.  Of  the  ten  (10)
witnesses, three (3) are eye-witnesses of whom Nilesh Mahendra  Gandhi  (PW-
478) and Prakash Bharvani (PW-479) are  injured  witnesses.  Sudhakar  Dattu
Deshmukh (PW-179) is a Police Sub-Inspector of  Colaba  Police  Station  who
arrived at the spot shortly after the terrorists  had  left  the  place  and
gone towards Hotel Taj.

306.  In regard to the incidents at  Hotel  Taj,  the  prosecution  examined
twenty-seven (27) witnesses besides two (2) witnesses summoned by the  trial
court. Three of them,  namely,  Kuttalam  Rajgopalan  Ramamoorthy  (PW-184),
Sunil  Rajaram  Jadhav  (PW-224)  and  Adil  Rohintan  Irani  (PW-188),  are
witnesses who were taken hostage by the terrorists  and  who  also  suffered
injuries at their hands. Annie Irani (PW-255) is the wife of  Adil  Rohintan
Irani who had called Adil on his mobile while he was  held  captive  and  to
whom the terrorists had talked threateningly. Prakash Sampatrao Bhoite  (PW-
182) is a Police Inspector who discovered the two unexploded  bombs  planted
near Hotel Taj. Another substantive witness is Captain  Anil  Jhakar  (CW-3)
who is an NSG Commando. The rest are formal witnesses and panch witnesses.

307.  Regarding Nariman House, the prosecution examined nine  (9)  witnesses
of  whom  Kazi  Zakir  Hussain  (PW-239),  Kamal  Liladhar  Singh  (PW-201),
Rambuval Chandrapati Yadav (PW-202) and Hanmant Vishnu  Bhandalkar  (PW-200)
are substantive eye-witnesses. Another substantive witness  is  Mohd.  Salim
Harharwala (PW-206), whose parents, as we  have  seen  above,  succumbed  to
shots fired by the terrorists.

308.   Regarding  Hotel  Oberoi,  the  prosecution  examined  fourteen  (14)
witnesses of whom Pradeep Bengalorkar (PW-212), Rajesh  Kadam  (PW-215)  and
Lisa Ringner (PW-250) are substantive witnesses who had personal  encounters
with the terrorists. The Police Inspector Bhagwat  Kachru  Bansode  (PW-208)
is another substantive witness. The rest  are  formal  witnesses  and  panch
witnesses.

309.  Having thus examined the other venues of the terrorists’ violence,  we
fail to see how it can even be suggested that the  appellant  and  his  dead
accomplice, Abu Ismail, were acting separately and that their  actions  were
not connected in any manner with the offences committed at the other  places
by the other eight (8) terrorists  with  whom  they  jointly  made  the  sea
journey to Mumbai’s shore. To us it is obvious that all five (5) teams  were
bound  together  and  each  team  was  acting  in  execution  of  a   common
conspiracy.

310.  Earlier it was observed that the landing site for  the  terrorists  at
Badhwar Park was selected with great care. Here it must be  added  that  the
selection of the targets for attack was made with even greater care. CST  is
a  place  where  people  would  be  present  in  large  numbers,  completely
defenseless and helpless, within a relatively small and confined space.  The
appellant and Abu Ismail went to CST for numbers  and,  according  to  plan,
they were able to kill fifty-two (52) and wound one hundred and  nine  (109)
people. The intention was plainly to shock and create terror.

311.  From CST, the appellant and Abu Ismail were headed for  Malabar  Hill,
presumably with the intent  to  take  captive  some  very  important  person
there, which would put enormous pressure on the  Government  of  Maharashtra
and the Central Government.

312.  Of the other two teams, one went to Leopold Café and then to  the  Taj
Hotel, and the other to the Oberoi Hotel. Leopold Café is a  highly  popular
eating and drinking establishment, frequented not  only  by  Mumbaikars  but
also by domestic and international tourists in large numbers.  The  Café  is
open to the pavement, and it is known as  a  place  where  one  can  sit  at
leisure over a cup of coffee or a glass of beer, and watch  bustling  Mumbai
pass by on the pavement and road just outside. The attack on  Leopold’s  was
meant to kill in large numbers, including foreign tourists.

313.  Hotel Taj is an iconic hotel,  part  of  the  history  of  Mumbai[45].
Hotel Oberoi is a modern, super-luxury hotel. These  are  places  where  the
upper crust of the country rubs shoulders  with  its  colleagues  and  peers
from across the globe. The attack at those two hotels and  at  Leopold  Café
had a dual purpose. First, the killing of wealthy and powerful  Indians  and
foreigners would not only send shock waves across  this  country  but  would
also attract international  attention,  which  is  the  greatest  prize  and
inducement for any terrorist group. Secondly the terrorists  hoped  to  take
some ‘very  important  people’  as  hostages[46]  there;  this  would,  they
believed, enable them to negotiate with  the  Indian  authorities  regarding
some highly vague and fantastic demands.

314.  The attack at Nariman House was intended to somehow involve Israel  in
the matter and to further internationalize the issue by killing  the  Jewish
and Israeli citizens living there. For a short  while,  the  terrorists  who
had taken possession of Nariman House  seemed  to  be  succeeding  in  their
objective as they were able to establish contact with  someone  called  Levi
in the US, who appears to have rushed  in  as  a  self-styled  intermediary,
negotiating  to  save  the  lives  of  the  people  taken  hostage  by   the
terrorists.

315.  Thus seen, the attacks at all five targets  appear  to  be  integrally
connected with each other and the appellant and Abu Ismail are as much  part
of the offences committed at the other places as they  are  responsible  for
the offences committed by them directly. It may even be said  that  even  if
the appellant was apprehended without  firing  a  single  shot  and  without
personally committing any offence on the soil of India, he would still  have
been connected through conspiracy to the offences  committed  by  the  other
four teams of terrorists in whose company he came to Mumbai. But  the  above
discussion is meant only to reject the contention  made  on  behalf  of  the
appellant that, for the purpose of this appeal,  there  is  no  need  to  go
beyond the acts directly attributed to  him  and  his  dead  associate,  Abu
Ismail. The real and far more tangible evidence  of  conspiracy  is  yet  to
unfold in the following part of the judgment.

KUBER:

316.  To look for evidence of conspiracy, let us go back to  the  beginning,
i.e., the MV Kuber.

317.  It is seen above that the identity of the appellant and his  companion
who was killed in the encounter with the police  at  Vinoli  Chowpaty  first
came to light when he made a statement at Nair Hospital at  01:30  hours  on
November 27, 2008, disclosing his name, age and address  and  those  of  his
accomplice, the dead Abu Ismail.

318.  In the morning of November  27,  2008,  at  11:00  hours,  Chandrakant
Jabardast  Jadhav  (PW-  42)  came  to  Nair  Hospital  to  interrogate  the
appellant, as directed by PI Vinod Pandurang Sawant  (PW-31)  who  was  till
then the Investigating Officer of the case relating  to  the  occurrence  at
Vinoli Chowpaty. At that time, PI Prashant Kashinath Marde  of  CB-CID  (PW-
48) was also present at the hospital having gone there on the  direction  of
his superiors. Jadhav obtained the  necessary  permission  from  the  doctor
treating  the  appellant  and,  at  13:00  hours,  recorded  his  disclosure
statement in the presence of Marde and two panch witnesses,  namely,  Pravin
Ashok Hargude and Bhavesh Mahadeo Takalkar (PW-25). The  statement  made  by
the appellant that first led to the recovery of the Indian boat on  the  sea
and then to the recovery of the dead  body  of  its  navigator,  Amar  Singh
Solanki, and of the satellite phone, the GPS and the notebook is as under:
      “My nine Pakistani  associates  and  I,  with  an  intention  to  make
      Fidayeen attack in India started from Karachi Creek in one small  boat
      on the twenty-second of this month. We got Al-Husaini boat in the sea.
      There were  seven  persons  in  Al-Husaini  boat.  Next  day,  in  the
      afternoon, we caught Indian boat. We dumped  four  persons  of  Indian
      boat into Al-Husaini boat. My nine associates and I reached  close  to
      Mumbai about four nautical miles away in Indian boat with the ‘Nakhva’
      (Navigator) of Indian boat, on the date twenty-sixth in the afternoon.
      There my associates Abu Soheb and Ismail and I took ‘Nakhva’ to engine
      room and tied his hands and legs and covered his eyes with black strip
      and I slit the neck of ‘Nakhva’ by a knife  and  killed  him.  I  have
      hidden ‘Nakhva’s dead-body there only.  We  have  kept  our  Satellite
      phone, G.P.S. and Note-Book in the very Indian boat and have left  the
      said Indian boat in the sea. My nine associates and I with the rifles,
      bombs and grenades bags boarded the rubber boat and reached the shores
      of Mumbai. I will show the Indian boat in which dead-body of ‘Nakhva’,
      Satellite phone, G.P.S. and note-book are there and  the  place  where
      ‘Nakhva’s dead-body is hidden  and  will  take  out  Satellite  phone,
      G.P.S. and note-book.”


      (Emphasis added to indicate admissibility  under  Section  27  of  the
      Evidence Act)

319.  The disclosure statement recorded by Jadhav was signed by him and  the
two panchas. The memo does not bear  the  signature  of  the  appellant  but
there is a certificate by Dr. Vikaskumar Kashinath  Kesari  (PW-13)  stating
that the appellant was unable to hold the pen due to injuries in  his  right
hand (the writing hand) and he was not, therefore, in a position to put  his
signature on paper.

320.  On the basis of the information received from the appellant  a  search
was mounted for “the abandoned Indian boat” and it was found and brought  to
Sassoon Dock  in  Mumbai  with  the  assistance  of  the  Coast  Guard.  The
abandoned boat was first sighted at 16:40 hours at a  distance  of  six  (6)
nautical miles (south-west) from the Mumbai  shore  by  Commandant  Malhotra
(PW-26) of the Coast Guard, who made a reconnaissance by helicopter  at  the
request of the Additional Commissioner of  Police  Jagannathan  (PW-37).  He
kept a watch over the abandoned boat till the Coast Guard ship  “Sankalp-46”
arrived there and brought the boat to Sassoon Docks in Mumbai.[47]

321.  “The abandoned boat” was undeniably an Indian fishing boat called  ‘MV
Kuber’. It was registered with the port authorities at  Porbandar,  Gujarat,
and bore  the  registration  no.  PBR2342.  Its  registered  owner  was  one
Heeralal Masani of Porbandar.[48]

322.  Deepakkumar Vishwanath Dave (PW-46), who  was  the  Superintendent  of
Customs,  Porbandar,  testified  before  the  court  that  Creek  Pass   No.
CH/PBR/174 was issued to the fishing vessel Kuber on August  16,  2008,  for
the period August 16 to December 31, 2008. He produced the  office  copy  of
the Creek Pass bearing his signature (Exhibit 201). He further  stated  that
the owner of the vessel was one Hiralal Masani and its Tandel was  Amarsingh
Solanki.

323.  Vinod Babulal Masani (PW-43) stated that his was a fishing family  and
owned six (6) boats, including MV Kuber. He added that he looked  after  the
family business. Masani further stated that the Kuber  and  another  fishing
boat of the family called Maa had gone out to the sea on November 14,  2008.
Both boats were scheduled to return to Porbandar within ten (10)  to  twelve
(12) days. The boat Maa returned to Porbandar on November 25 but  there  was
no information about the Kuber. The Tandel of Maa only  said  that  the  two
boats had separated as a result of a storm in the sea.  Masani  first  heard
of the Kuber’s fate at 5:00 PM on November 27,  2008,  on  getting  a  phone
call from a Coast Guard officer in Mumbai who made a detailed  enquiry  from
him about the boat and asked him to come over to Mumbai. He went  to  Mumbai
on December 2, 2008, and found the boat anchored at  Melat  Bandar,  Sewree,
Mumbai, and came to learn that the Nakhva of the boat, Amar  Singh  Solanki,
had been killed by the terrorists who had captured his boat on the sea.

324.  While the Kuber was being searched and brought to Sassoon  Docks,  the
investigation of the case was assigned to the Crime  Branch  and,  at  21:25
hours on November 27, 2008, when the  appellant  was  discharged  from  Nair
Hospital, Marde took him in his custody. Marde brought the appellant to  the
office of the  DCB-CID,  Unit  3,  Lower  Parel,  where  the  appellant  was
formally arrested by him between 22:30 and 22:45  hours  in  CR  No.182/2008
(vide Arrest Memo Ext. no. 215). At 22:45 hours, Marde received a call  from
Jadhav requesting him to bring the  appellant  to  DB  Marg  Police  Station
where information was received in the meanwhile that the  vessel  Kuber  had
been brought to Sassoon Docks. Marde reached DB Marg  Police  Station  along
with the appellant at 23:10 hours and, at 23:30  hours,  Marde  and  Jadhav,
along with the appellant and the two witnesses of the  disclosure  statement
Panchnama, namely, Pravin Ashok Hargude and Bhavesh  Mahadeo  Takalkar  (PW-
25), left for Sassoon Docks and reached there at 00:00 hours.

325.  On reaching Sassoon Dock, they went near a wooden  boat  brought  from
the sea that was anchored near the jetty, alongside a launch of  the  Yellow
Gate Police Station called  ‘Amboli’.  On  seeing  the  two,  the  appellant
identified the wooden boat as “the Indian boat” in which he, along with  his
nine associates, had approached the Mumbai shore and on which he had  killed
the ‘Nakhva’ of the boat, whose body he had kept in  the  engine  room.  The
appellant then led the police team and the panchas to the  engine  room  and
showed them the dead body of a male that was kept in  the  corner  near  the
ladder. The body’s hands were tied at his back and the body was  kept  in  a
supine position. The appellant  then  proceeded  to  take  out  a  satellite
phone, a GPS and a notebook that were kept concealed under  a  wooden  plank
in the engine room on the left side of the dead  body.  He  took  out  these
three articles and handed them to the police team. The  articles  that  were
taken out and produced by the appellant from the engine room  of  the  Kuber
and were seized under the panchnama (Ext.  no.  138)  may  be  described  as
follows:
           1) One satellite phone in  black  cover,  make:  HUGHES,  THURAYA
              7101;  IMEI  no.352884-00-054152-6;  assembled  in  EU;   MCN:
              8008211-0006; SIM CARD-THURAYA 89882  05980  80530  6377;  the
              battery had the words ‘Assembled in France’ inscribed on it.
           2) One black colour GPS,  make:  GARMIN;  model-GPS  12  MAP  S/N
              98205626; made in Taiwan.
           3) One notebook with cover  in  faded  green  with  writings  and
              jottings in Urdu on various pages.

326.  Another seizure Panchnama, Exhibit no. 182,  in  respect  of  all  the
other articles found on the boat, was drawn up in the presence  of  panchas.
Chandrakant Jabardast Jhadhav (PW-42) deposed that nearly 145 articles  were
seized and enumerated under the Panchnama Ext. no. 182. He also gave a  list
to the court of those  articles  recovered  from  the  Kuber  that  are  not
normally found on a fishing boat. This list of articles given by Jhadhav  to
the court is as under:
           1) Six (6) pieces of foam of pink colour
           2) Fourteen (14) blankets
           3) Two (2) shawls
           4) One (1) mattress
           5) One (1) empty bottle of cold drink*
           6) One (1) scarf used at the time of Namaj
           7) Four (4) caps
           8) Six (6) T-shirts
           9) Six (6) pants (one of the pants was branded with the name  of
              a Pakistani manufacturing company, i.e., “South Pole”)
          10) One (1) shirt[49]
          11) Fifteen (15) jackets
          12) Seven (7) tooth brushes
          13) Shaving razors
          14) One (1) tube of shaving cream*
          15) One (1) tube of tooth paste *
          16) One (1) empty sugar bag*
          17) One (1) empty paper bag of wheat flour*
          18) Two (2) air pumps
          19) Four (4) packets of detergent powder (Brand name ‘PAK’)*
          20) Empty containers of Nestle milk powder*[50]
          21) Eight (8) cans of oil having a capacity  of  fifty-five  (55)
              litres each    (One of the cans had markings  of  ‘Gulf’  and
              ‘Karachi’)
          22) Five (5) barrels of diesel (One of them was empty)
          23) Five (5) containers of colour spray
          24) One (1) dagger
          25) One (1) knife
          26) One (1) pair of scissors
          27) Three (3) boat covers made of tarpaulin
          28) Floor cleaning brush (made in Pakistan)*

327.  Of course, the panchnama Ext. no. 182 contains a much longer  list  of
articles that were recovered from the Kuber and seized under the  Panchnama.
The following articles listed in the Panchnama may  be  added  to  the  list
given by Jadhav (PW-42), of articles that are not expected to be found on  a
fishing boat of Indian origin:
           1) Six (6) inch steel spanner with writings thereon in Urdu,  and
              spanners having pictures of a gun, as well as a big knife with
              a four (4) inch wooden hilt
           2) Empty packets of fifty (50) bullets for 30 bore  pistol,  made
              in China
           3) Nylon rope meant for unloading goods from the big ship to  the
              small one, having a round knot on one side
           4) Pieces of silver foil used to consume drugs
           5) One match-box with the  mark  ‘Hockey’  of  Fazal  Sons  match
              industries, Pakistan
           6) One (1) white plastic container with a red lid inscribed  with
              the words ‘National Food’, and with  its  contents  listed  in
              both English and Urdu
           7) One (1) khaki-coloured paper cover with writing in Urdu

328.  It may be added here that Vinod Babulal Masni (PW-43), on being  shown
the satellite phone, the GPS and the other  articles  recovered  from  Kuber
and seized under the two Panchnamas (Ext. nos. 138 and 182), told the  court
that those articles did not belong to him nor were those articles  on  board
when the boat had sailed out to sea from Porbandar on November 14, 2008.

329.  One of the three articles that were produced by the  appellant  before
the police after taking them out from their hiding place on the  Kuber,  and
that were then seized under the Panchnama Ext. no. 138, is a thin  notebook,
loosely stitched with a faded green cover (Ext. no. 174).

330.  The first page of the notebook contains the guard  duty  roster  under
the heading ‘24 Hours – Entire Journey’. The guard roster  is  made  in  the
following manner:
      Fahadulla + Saqib + Sohaib –            morning 6 to 8
      Ali + Hejazi + Umer –             morning 8 to 10
      Ismail + Mujahid + Umar –         morning 10 to 12

331.  At 12:00 PM, the first team would again take over  for  the  next  two
(2) hours followed by the second and third teams for two-hour  shifts  each,
and the roster would thus go on till the next morning.

332.  On the second page on the right side there is a list of the  following
articles:
      1) Biscuit (Candy + Bakery)
      2) Sewayyan[51] fine
      3) Flour red
      4) Drum (for luggage with lock)

333.  On the left side there is another list of the following:
      1) Phone number of this place
      2) Satellite number of this place
      3) Photocopies of maps
      4) SIMs for mobile sets
      5) T-T Pistol 2 in number
      6) Mineral water Aquafina
      7) Dates good (quality) 10 kilo
      8) Current store charger
      9) GPS or navigator
      10) Satellite + Phone card

334.  The third page contains a list of code words:
      1) Halat theek hain (All is well)      Macchli lag rahi hai (Fish  are
                                                   coming)
      2) Civil Boat                     Bhai log (Brothers)
      3) Navy Boat                      Yaar log (Friends)
      4) Navy Ship                      Yaar logon ka group (Group of
                                       friends)
      5) Engine                         Machine
      6) Madad (help)                   Maal (Goods)
      7) Safar (journey)                      Barf (Ice)

335.  Below the above codes it is written that the one who  gives  GR  would
add three and the taker would himself deduct three.

336.  And below that there is a reminder that the satellite is  to  be  kept
open (10:00 AM to 10:00 PM).

337.  On the next page there is another list of the following articles:
     1) Gun – 1 in number
     2) Magazine – 8 in number
     3) Grenade – 8 in number
     4) GPS – Group – 1
     5) Dagger – 1 in number
     6) Additional rounds
     7) Mobile + Batteries

338.  On the next two pages  there  are  some  figures  indicating  degrees,
minutes and seconds.

339.  On the next page, there is the number 23270972879217  written  on  the
top and below it the names of the following places in Mumbai:
       Qulaba      Cuff  Parade             Macchlimaar  Nagar      Rajabhai
Tower   Regal   Chowk        Nathalal   Marg      Nariman    Point       WTC
Regal Cinema.

340.  On the  last  page  there  are  once  again  some  figures  indicating
degrees, minutes and seconds.

341.  The Thuraya satellite phone and  the  GARMIN  GPS  recovered  from  MV
Kuber, along with four other GPS devices recovered from the other  sites  of
terrorist violence, were sent for forensic examination to the United  States
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)[52] where the data stored in  the  GPS
devices were analyzed by Daniel Jackson (PW-152) who was working in the  FBI
as Electronic Engineer/Forensic Examiner. He  had  vast  experience  in  his
field of specialty, particularly mobile phones, GPS devices,  I-pods,  etc.,
and he stated before the court that before examining  the  devices  sent  by
the Mumbai Police he had examined over a thousand electronic devices in  the
Bureau’s laboratory. He had marked the satellite phone and the five (5)  GPS
devices sent for data retrieval and analysis  as  Q119,  Q120,  Q121,  Q122,
Q123 and Q124. Q119 and Q120 were marks given by him to the satellite  phone
and the GARMIN GPS device recovered from MV Kuber. Q123 and  Q124  were  the
other GARMIN GPS devices that were recovered from Taj Hotel.  Q121  was,  in
all probability, recovered from Nariman House and Q122  from  Oberoi  Hotel.
Q121 and Q122 were Magellan GPS devices and the data in those  devices  were
irretrievable as the internal batteries of the two devices had discharged.

342.  Jackson stated before the court that his examination of the  satellite
phone and the five GPS received by him  from  the  Mumbai  Police  commenced
from February  11,  2009,  and  was  completed  on  February  18,  2009.  He
explained to the court that to retrieve the data  from  a  GPS  device,  the
device must be connected to a computer and the data is then  copied  on  the
computer. Software is then used to examine the data copied on the  computer.
He stated that he had made his report after examining all  the  devices.  He
had copied the data from the GPS devices  on  the  computer  and,  from  the
computer, recorded the data on a CD. He identified the CD, Article  517,  in
court. He also identified the physical copy (“Derivative 2”) that  bore  his
signature and was marked Ext. no. 601 collectively. He further explained  to
the court that the waypoints  on  the  GPS  were  locations  that  might  be
latitude and longitude and those waypoints could be saved  on  the  GPS.  He
further stated that he had prepared the maps with the  help  of  the  GARMIN
software on the basis of the waypoints retrieved from the GPS Q120.

343.  Jackson said that “JALA 1” and “JALA 2” were the  names  used  by  the
user of GPS Q120. The waypoints list  of  Q120  showed  that  the  waypoints
between Karachi and Mumbai were saved on the  device.  The  route  shown  on
page No.36 of the annexure to his report showed the  intermediate  waypoints
stored by the user and those waypoints were between Karachi and Mumbai.  The
first waypoint was in the  ocean  of  the  Gulf  of  Karachi  and  the  last
waypoint was in Mumbai. He added that page No.38  of  the  annexure  to  his
report showed the track back route from Mumbai to the Gulf of Karachi.  Page
No.38 showed the waypoints of the  journey  of  the  user  from  ‘OCEN1’  to
‘OCENA’. He explained that ‘OCEN1’ was the coast  of  Pakistan  and  ‘OCENA’
was the coast of Mumbai.

344.  The maps prepared by Jackson  (PW-152)  were  based  on  printouts  of
computer generated  images.  To  make  the  maps  even  more  explicit,  the
prosecution examined Sandeep  Siddhlilngappa  Shivangi  (PW-161).  Shivangi,
who had completed the course of Master Marine in the year 1998, was  working
at the relevant time as Professor (Nautical Officer) in Lal Bahadur  Shastri
College for Advance Maritime Studies and  Research.  He  stated  before  the
court that, on February 24, 2009, he was called to the  office  of  DCB  CID
where Inspector Chavan had shown  him  the  printouts  taken  from  two  GPS
devices. The printouts showed the waypoints. He was required to  plot  those
waypoints on maps. He had brought two maps from his college and one  printed
map was purchased from the market. On being shown pages No.3 &  54  of  Ext.
no. 601 collectively, he stated before the court that on page  No.3  of  the
Exhibit, the waypoints were described as JALA 1, JALA 2, JALA 3 and JALA  4.
He was required to plot those waypoints on a printed  map.  He  had  plotted
those waypoints by means of a  parallel  ruler.  The  maps  on  which  those
points were plotted by him were shown to him in  court.  He  said  that  the
points were in his handwriting and the map bore his signature. The  map  was
marked as Ext. no. 651. To have a closer view of the waypoints, he had  also
plotted waypoints no. JALA 3 and JALA 4 on  another  map  (marked  Ext.  no.
652). The waypoints described as OCENS1,  OCENS2,  OCENS3  and  OCENSA  were
also plotted on the  map  Ext.  no.  651.  He  explained  that  the  ‘OCENS’
waypoints showed the route from south of Pakistan to south Mumbai. The  JALA
waypoints showed the route from Gujarat to South Mumbai.

THE DNA CONNECT:

345.  It is seen above that among the articles recovered from Kuber  were  a
number of blankets, shawls and many other items of clothing. The  stains  of
sweat, saliva and other bodily secretions on those articles  were  subjected
to DNA profiling and, excepting Imran Babar (deceased accused  no.2),  Abdul
Rahman Bada (deceased accused no.5), Fahadullah (deceased accused no.7)  and
Shoaib (deceased accused no.9), the rest of the six accused  were  connected
with various articles found and recovered from the  Kuber.  The  appellant’s
DNA matched the DNA profile from a  sweat  stain  detected  on  one  of  the
jackets (see report Ext. no. 205-F). A chart showing  the  matching  of  the
DNA of the different accused with DNA  profiles  from  stains  on  different
articles found and recovered from the Kuber is annexed at  the  end  of  the
judgment as Schedule No. III.

THE INFLATABLE RUBBER BOAT:

346.  From Kuber, in order of sequence, we come  to  the  inflatable  rubber
dinghy on which the appellant and the other  nine  dead  accused  landed  on
Mumbai’s shore. It is seen above that Prashant  Hemnath  Dhanu  (PW-29)  had
found the rubber dinghy abandoned at Nariman Point and had towed it back  to
Badhwar Park between 9:45 PM  and  10:00  PM,  on  November  26,  2008,  and
informed the Coast Guard regarding the dinghy. At 23:00 hours  on  the  same
day, the dinghy and the articles found in it were  seized  by  Sub-Inspector
of Police Anil Kamble in  the  presence  of  two  panch  witnesses,  namely,
Parshuram Kashinath Meher (PW-34) and Prakash Krishna Naik  under  Panchnama
Ext. no. 162. From the seizure  Panchnama  it  appears  that  fourteen  (14)
articles were seized along with the rubber dinghy. Of  these,  we  may  take
note of the following:
              1. A Yamaha Enduro outboard motor of 40 horsepower, fitted  to
                 the dinghy.
              2. Eight (8) life jackets of saffron (red) colour on which was
                 written “Made in China, MYC 86-5  model,  make  year  2006”
                 bearing serial numbers 0404663, 0404725, 0404731,  0404766,
                 04404847, 0404974, 0404869 and 0404996.
              3. One (1) red fuel box on which was written “GASOLINE”.
              4. One (1) glue tube in one (1)  plastic  bag,  on  which  was
                 written “Samad Rubber Pvt.  Ltd.,  Ferozpur  Road,  Lahore,
                 Pakistan”.
              5. One (1) blue oil can with “Shell, Advance Sport HT 20 W  50
                 Motorcycle oil” written on it, of 0.7  litre  and  one  (1)
                 plastic bag containing tools for repairing a boat.

The Yamaha outboard machine that was fitted  to  the  rubber  dinghy  is  of
special significance for the case.

347.  Gatala (PW-30), who was a Marine  Engineer  and  who  was  working  as
Service Supervisor in George Maijo Industries (P) Ltd.,  stated  before  the
court that his company  was  the  authorized  importer  of  Yamaha  outboard
machines (OBMs) in India. The head office of the company  maintained  record
of all the OBMs imported and sold in India. He  further  stated  before  the
court that he was called to the Crime Branch Office  of  the  Mumbai  Police
and there he had inspected one  Yamaha  OBM.  He  was  shown  an  inflatable
rubber speed boat and the OBM of Yamaha make by Inspector Kale  (PW-47).  He
had inspected the OBM and on examination he had  found  certain  numbers  on
different parts of the engine. He had noted down the numbers  in  his  diary
and he had brought the diary to the court and he could  tell  those  numbers
from his diary (Ext. no. 147). He stated before the court  that  the  Engine
Bracket Number of the OBM shown to him was 67602E-3; the CDI number was 6F6-
01F 8 T 411727 Y 09; and the sticker on the unit  showed  engine  number  as
1020015. The size of propeller was  11x15-G.  He  further  stated  that  his
company was the sole authorized  importer  and  dealer  of  Yamaha  OBMs  in
India. The verification of those numbers  from  the  company’s  head  office
confirmed that the engine examined by him  was  not  imported  and  sold  by
their company. He  identified  in  court  the  OBM,  Article  157  that  was
examined by him.

348.  The other witness in this connection was Pat Williams (PW-154),  whose
evidence was recorded through audio-video linkage while he  was  sitting  in
the office of the FBI at Los Angeles, USA. One Geoffrey Maron  (PW-153)  who
was working as a Special Agent of FBI identified Paul Orphanides as  an  FBI
Agent of Los Angeles  Office.  Paul  Orphanides,  in  turn,  identified  Pat
Williams to the court. Pat Williams stated to the court that he was  working
as Senior Product Specialist in Yamaha Motor Corporation.  The  head  office
of his company was  situated  at  Cypress  California,  US,  and  they  were
manufacturers of outboard machines, motor cycles,  scooters,  etc.  Some  of
those items were manufactured at the  US  manufacturing  unit  but  outboard
machines were manufactured in Japan, not the US. He further stated that  the
outboard machine could be identified on the basis of the serial  numbers  on
the motor bracket and the engine, and that the last seven (7) digits of  the
number identified the motor boat. There would never be  more  than  one  OBM
having the same last seven (7) digits of serial number for the same size  of
machine. He further stated that Yamaha outboard machine  Enduro  40  bearing
serial number #1020015 was dispatched to ‘Business  and  Engineering  Trend’
from Japan to Karachi Sea Port in Pakistan on January 20, 2008.

349.  A letter dated February 17,  2009,  written  on  the  letter  head  of
Yamaha Customer Support Group under the signature of  one  Michelle  Tejeras
(Assistant Manager – Service Support) and addressed to the US Department  of
Justice, Federal Bureau of Investigation, was shown to  Williams.  On  being
shown the letter Williams stated to the court  that  he  knew  Ms.  Michelle
Tejeras  who  was  the  Assistant  Manager   (Service)   of   Yamaha   Motor
Corporation, US, and with whom he had been  working  for  at  least  six  to
seven (6-7) years. He could identify  her  signature  and  he  proceeded  to
identify the  signature  of  Ms.  Tejeras  on  the  aforesaid  letter  dated
February 17, 2009, whereupon it was marked Ext. no. 604. The  letter  of  Ms
Tejeras Ext. no. 604 was as under:
    “February 17, 2009

    U.S. Department of Justice
    Federal Bureau of Investigation
    11000 Wilshire Blvd., 17th Floor
    Los Angeles, CA 90403
    Attention: Special Agent Geoffrey Maron

    Re:    File No. LA-252196

    Dear Mr. Maron,

    This letter is to confirm the conversation on February 13, 2009 between
    our Yamaha representative and representatives from your location.

    We have contacted Yamaha Motor  Co.,  Ltd.  regarding  Yamaha  Outboard
    Enduro 40, model E40JMHL serial # 1020015 to confirm the following:

    Country of production:  Japan
    Destination for export: Islamic Republic of Pakistan
    Distributor:            Business and Engineering Trend (BET)

    Within the scope of my employment with Yamaha Motor Corporation,  I  am
    authorized to provide this information.

    Sincerely,

    Michelle Tejeras
    Asst. Manager-Service Support
    Cc: SR# 1-9130852.”

THE PINK-COLOURED FOAM, THE TERRORISTS’ SIGNATURE:

350.  From the rubber dinghy that touched Mumbai’s shore  at  Badhwar  Park,
we return to CST. We have earlier seen the absolute mayhem  created  by  the
appellant and his associate, the dead Abu Ismail, at  CST  railway  station.
We now re-visit the place looking for any evidence of conspiracy that  might
bind them with the other eight terrorists who were on  a  similar  murderous
spree at other venues in the  city.  What  we  find  at  CST  appears  quite
innocent, something as ordinary as a piece of foam, pink coloured foam.  But
that piece of foam inseparably connects the appellant  to  the  other  eight
terrorists. As we proceed further, we will find the pink foam  running  like
a thread through all the episodes and connecting them as integral pieces  of
one single, horrible drama.

351.  We may recall here that the pink foam first appeared  among  the  many
articles found and seized from MV  Kuber.  In  Ext.  no.  182,  the  seizure
Panchnama regarding the articles found and seized  from  the  Kuber,  it  is
listed at serial no. 10 as “Six (6) pieces of pink colour foam of  different
sizes”. Serial no.13 of the Panchnama mentions a  “six  (6)  inch  stainless
steel pair of scissors”.

352.  The pink foam is also present at CST. While dealing  with  the  attack
on CST in the earlier pages of  the  judgment,  it  was  noted  that  before
opening fire from his AK-47 rifle, Abu Ismail, the  dead  companion  of  the
appellant Kasab, had put a bag carrying the RDX bomb among  the  passengers’
luggage in the waiting hall. Luckily, however, the  bomb  did  not  explode.
After the carnage  was  over,  the  authorities  collected  the  passengers’
unclaimed belongings, lying scattered all over CST Railway Station, and  put
them all at one place. It appears that the bag containing the bomb was  also
picked up and was kept along with this collected baggage. In the process  of
returning the luggage pieces to their respective owners who came forward  to
claim their belongings by-and-by, a suspicious  red-and-black  sack-bag  was
discovered lying in the baggage.  When  the  bag  was  inspected  by  police
officials, it was found  that  it  contained  explosives  which  were  later
diffused by personnel of the Bomb Detection and Disposal  Squad.  A  seizure
Panchnama, Ext. no. 269, was drawn up on December 3, 2008,  at  19:00  hours
in the presence of two panchas, namely, David  Raj  Thomas  and  Sham  Ratan
Dhake. From the Panchnama it appears that  inside  the  red-and-black  nylon
sack bag, there was a  locked  square  tin  box  containing  the  indigenous
explosive device (IED). The tin box was covered on all sides by a  piece  of
pink colour foam!

353.  From CST, the appellant  and  his  dead  associate  had  gone  to  the
terrace of the Cama Hospital building  where  they  had  an  encounter  with
Sadanand Vasant Date (PW-118) and his team. After the episode  was  over,  a
search was made and a large number of articles  were  collected  and  seized
from the premises of the hospital and from different parts of  the  hospital
building, particularly its terrace, from where the appellant  and  his  dead
accomplice had battled Date and his team. The seizure of the articles  found
on the building’s terrace was made under the Panchnama  dated  November  27,
2008, Ext. no. 486. One of the articles seized from the terrace of the  Cama
Hospital building was a blue, purple and  black  coloured  rexine  bag  that
could be carried on the back by fastening the belts around the shoulder  and
the waist. The bag had the words “CHANGING THE TIDE” printed on  it.  Inside
the bag, there were several articles including a pink foam piece “51 c.m.  x
193 c.m. x 1 c.m. in size”.[53]

354.  It may further be noted  that  two  (2)  other  bombs  placed  by  the
terrorists near and  around  Taj  Hotel  had  failed  to  explode.  One  bag
containing the explosive was picked up from near a tree  near  Quni  Tourism
Chowki at a distance of fifty (50) metres from the porch of New  Taj  Hotel;
and the other was found near Gokul Restaurant in Gokul  Wine  Shop  Lane  in
front of the State Bank of Hyderabad. Both the  bags  containing  explosives
were seized under the Panchnama dated November 27, 2008, Ext.  no.  736,  in
the presence  of  panchas  Hiteshchandra  Vijaykumar  Awasthi  and  Amarnath
Ramvilas Yadav. In the Panchnama the description of the first  explosive  is
given as follows:
      “One black colour carrying bag containing rectangular metal  container
      approximately measuring 10” -10” 0-2, 5” with a metal cover on the top
      and latch on the side, covered by pink colour foam from all sides. The
      firing mechanism electronic timing device, one white paper written  in
      Urdu and English stuck upon the electronic  timer,  two  9-V  durasale
      (sic.) batteries, 2 electrical detonators…….”

355.  The description of the second explosive is as follows:

      “One rectangular metal container  approximately  measuring  10”-10”-0-
      2.5” with a metal coveres (sic.) on the top and  latch  on  the  side.
      Covered by pink colour foam  from  all  sides.  The  firing  mechanism
      electronic timing device, one white paper written in Urdu and  English
      stuck upon the electronic timer, two 9-V durasale (sic.) batteries, 23
      electrical detonators……”

356.  The pink foam reappears in one of  the  bags  of  blue  and  dark-blue
colour that was found in Wasabi Harbour Bar 1933 of  the  Taj  Mahal  Hotel.
This bag is one of the articles seized under the  Panchnama  dated  November
29, 2008, Ext. no. 749, in  the  presence  of  the  panchas  Ishwar  Mahadeo
Kolekar and Vaibhav Vilas Patil. In the Panchnama the bag  is  described  as
follows:
      “One blue and dark blue colour bag, of the height of  about,  two  and
      quarter feet and 1  foot  in  width  having  two  belts  (strips)  for
      carrying on the back and a blue (strip) of 5 inch in width  for  tying
      around the waist bearing the words in English as “CHANGING  THE  TIDE”
      in black colour and a picture in saffron, parrot green and blue colour
      on the bag and light pink colour foam of the size of about 2  feet  in
      length and 1½ feet in width in the bag.”

357.  It is obvious that the foam was used to provide  padding  and  cushion
to the IEDs and the hand grenades kept in the bags so  as  to  prevent  them
exploding accidentally while the terrorists  were  carrying  them  on  their
person.

358.  The foam pieces recovered from the Kuber and found in  the  bags  that
were picked up from CST, the terrace of the Cama Hospital building  and  the
two bags containing unexploded IEDs found near Hotel Taj  and  seized  under
the Panchnama, Ext. no. 736, were  sent  for  chemical  examination  at  the
Forensic Science Laboratory.

359.  Rajendra Ramchandra Mavle (PW-247) is the forensic expert who  deposed
before the court that all  the  foam  pieces  tallied  with  each  other  in
respect of hue (appearance) and physico-thermal characteristics. He  further
stated to the court  that  the  foam  pieces  were  examined  by  him  under
‘Differential Thermal Analyser’ and that they were found to  be  similar  in
thermal characteristics. Mavle concluded that the source  of  all  the  foam
pieces was the same. He identified his report before the  court,  marked  as
Ext. no. 1013.[54]

INTERCEPTED PHONE CALLS RECORDS:

360.  The most  clinching  evidence  regarding  conspiracy  comes  from  the
recordings of intercepted telephone calls between the terrorists  and  their
co-conspirators and collaborators sitting in a foreign land that,  in  light
of the over all facts and circumstances of the case, can only  be  Pakistan.
Unlike the appellant and his dead companion, Abu  Ismail  (deceased  accused
no.1), who were constantly on the move, the other  terrorists  had  gone  to
Hotel Taj, Hotel Oberoi and Nariman House and  were  holed  up  there,  even
taking hostages for some time. From their respective positions they were  in
regular contact with  their  collaborators  and  were  constantly  receiving
moral support, tactical advice and guidance from them  by  means  of  mobile
phones.

361.  The phone calls made by the terrorists from Hotel Taj,  Nariman  House
and Hotel Oberoi came to be noticed  and  were  intercepted  by  a  watchful
member of the Anti Terrorist Squad.

362.  Nivruti Tukaram Kadam (PW-242) was an Inspector of Police attached  to
the Anti Terrorist Squad (ATS), Mumbai. He was looking after  the  technical
wing of the ATS, which was assigned the tasks  of  collecting  intelligence,
phone interceptions and data analysis.  On  the  night  of  November  26  to
November 27, 2008, he was on duty in  his  office  at  Nagpada,  Mumbai.  At
midnight of November 26, 2008, he received information that terrorists  were
making regular calls from mobile phone no.9910719424.

363.  In normal circumstances, a telephone interception  can  only  be  done
after  getting  sanction  from  the  Government   but   in   an   emergency,
interception is permissible with the  approval  of  the  immediate  superior
who, in this case, was the officer in-charge of the ATS.

364.  Hemant Karkare, Special IG, was the chief of  the  ATS  and,  as  seen
above, he was killed by the appellant and  Abu  Ismail  around  midnight  of
November 26, 2008, when the two terrorists  had  snatched  a  Qualis  police
vehicle after killing him and two other  officers  and  policemen  who  were
travelling in that vehicle. Following the  killing  of  Karkare,  Param  Bir
Singh (PW-241), Additional Commissioner of Police and Karkare’s deputy,  had
assumed charge in his  place.  Hence,  Kadam  (PW-242)  obtained  Param  Bir
Singh’s  written  permission  for  intercepting  calls  from  mobile   phone
No.9910719424. The permission granted by Param Bir Singh was later  accorded
post-facto sanction by Chitkala Zutshi (PW-253), who was at  that  time  the
Additional Chief Secretary, Home Department, Government of Maharashtra.

365.  On the basis of the permission granted  for  interception,  directions
were given to the service provider of the  aforesaid  phone  number  (Bharti
Airtel) and to  all  other  service  providers,  since  the  number  was  in
‘roaming’, to transfer all calls from  or  to  that  number  to  the  police
landline number 02223053162. The calls made from or to the aforesaid  mobile
number thus  diverted  to  the  police  landline  could  then  be  heard  on
headphones or the  speaker  of  a  computer  with  the  aid  of  appropriate
software. The ATS office had  software  called  ‘Shogie’  installed  in  the
office computer for that purpose.

366.  Kadam stated before the court that the first conversation recorded  by
him from that mobile number commenced at 01:04 hours on November  27,  2008,
and the last call from that mobile number  was  recorded  by  him  at  10:27
hours of November 27, 2008. He further stated  before  the  court  that  the
conversation was being heard by him personally and  being  recorded  on  the
hard disk of the computer simultaneously. The recordings from the hard  disc
of the computer were copied on to CDs and the conversations recorded on  the
CDs were later transcribed on paper.

367.  He further told the court  that,  from  the  conversations  made  from
mobile phone number 9910719424, he could make  out  that  the  callers  from
that phone were speaking from Hotel Taj  and  that  their  names  were  Ali,
Umar, Abdul Rehman and Shoeb. The two persons on the other end  were  called
Vashibhai and Kafabhai.

368.  In course of the night, Kadam  came  across  two  other  mobile  phone
numbers, 9820704561 and 9819464530. The first of these two  was  being  used
by the terrorists at Hotel Oberoi and the second by those at Nariman  House.
After obtaining the necessary permissions  in  regard  to  those  two  phone
numbers following the same procedure, Kadam  intercepted  and  recorded  the
conversations made from those two phone numbers also.  He  stated  that  the
interception of these calls by him commenced at 01:04 hours on November  27,
2008, and the last call from one of these numbers concluded at  08:52  hours
on November 28, 2008. The total recordings of intercepted phone  calls  were
spread over twelve (12) hours and thirty-three (33) minutes.

369.  The CDs recording the intercepted phone conversations were  played  in
court on a laptop and, on comparing the recorded  voices  with  the  written
transcripts, Kadam told the court that, except for a very few minor  errors,
the transcripts were  accurate.  He  then  proceeded  to  identify  all  the
different CDs  recording  conversations  from  the  three  different  mobile
numbers and the transcripts of conversations made from those CDs.

370.  Significantly, Kadam told the court that all the calls from the  above
three mobile phones were made to a single number, 012012531824, which  later
investigation revealed to be the number of private Corporation based in  New
Jersey, USA, with the domain name Callphonex.



THE CALLPHONEX:

371.  Kadam (PW-42) told the court that the collaborators of the  terrorists
appeared  to  be  speaking  from  telephone  number  012012531824.  As   the
international  code  would  indicate,  the  number  was  based  in  the  US.
Clarification about the number comes from the evidence of Nizar  Al  Sharif,
who was examined by the prosecution as PW-156.

372.   The  evidence  of  this  witness  was  recorded  through  audio-video
linkage. The witness was sitting in room  no.222  of  Hotel  Fairfield  Inn,
Sudbury, Ontario, Canada, where video  conference  facility  was  available.
Geoffrey Maron, the Special Agent of FBI who was  earlier  examined  as  PW-
153, first identified one David Shea on the screen as the FBI Agent  in  Los
Angeles. Shea in turn identified  Nizar  Al  Sharif  to  the  court  on  the
screen.

373.   Al  Sharif  stated  before  the  court  that  he  was  the  owner  of
International Connection Services (ICS)  which  was  a  Private  Corporation
incorporated in the year 1993 and registered in the State of  Delaware.  The
office of the Corporation was situated in New  Jersey.  The  brand  name  as
well as the domain name of the Corporation was  Callphonex.  The  Callphonex
telephone number, in the month of November, 2008,  until  January  6,  2009,
was (201)253-1824. Al Sharif further stated before the court that they  were
providing Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) Services in wholesale as  well
as in retail. Any person, who wanted to avail of their services, in case  he
was not in the US, could contact them through their  website.  The  customer
had to register through email. After getting the email  from  the  customer,
they would set up services in accordance with  the  customer’s  requirement.
Pre-payment was necessary in all cases. He further stated  that  ordinarily,
in case a customer availing their services made a call  to  any  phone  that
displayed caller ID, the screen would display the Callphonex number  (which,
as noted above, was (201)253-1824 in November, 2008). He explained that  the
carrier could suppress the number but the user had  no  control  over  their
number  [(201)253-1824].  He  further  said  that  they  had  numbers   from
different countries. Some of them were US-based and  their  customers  could
make calls to mobile numbers through VoIP.

374.  He further said before the  court  that  one  person  calling  himself
Kharak Singh (wanted accused No. 21) had contacted them  through  email  and
had told them that he was a reseller of  VoIP  services.  Kharak  Singh  had
contacted them on October 20, 2008,  by  email.  After  correspondence  with
Kharak Singh on email they had provided him fifteen (15) PC2Phone  accounts,
ten (10) Common Client accounts and five (5)  DID  Austrian  phone  numbers.
The email  ID  of  Kharak  Singh  was  Kharak-telco@yahoo.com.  No  specific
address was provided by Kharak Singh. He had only  said  that  he  was  from
India. The mails received from Kharak Singh were  replied  to  by  Nizar  Al
Sharif personally. The first payment made by Kharak  Singh  was  of  250  US
dollars and it was received through Moneygram  from  Pakistan.  The  payment
was made by some Mohammed Isfaq. On being shown a copy  of  the  receipt  of
the Moneygram, Al Sharif identified it and it was then taken in evidence  as
Article 530. The second payment of  229  US  dollars  was  received  through
Western Union. He identified the receipt of this payment as well, which  was
marked Article 531.

375.  More importantly, Al Sharif stated to  the  court  that  the  services
provided by him to Kharak Singh were used most heavily from November  24  to
27, 2008. The initial use was only for  testing.  He  further  informed  the
court that he had supplied the following details to the FBI along  with  his
letter of February 13, 2009 (Ext. No. 614).
      “1)   Call Detail Records for sub-account 310000xx  and  400000xx  for
           client Mr. Kharak Singh;

      2)    Callphonex Call Detail Records for calls to 5 DID numbers;

      3)    Voxbone Call Detail Records to DID numbers (that Callphonex  has
           access to and obtained on its own);

      4)    Three (3) chat logs between a representative of  Callphonex  and
           Mr. Kharak Singh;

      5)    Copy of MoneyGram receipt dt. 27th October, 2008,  and  copy  of
           Western Union receipt dt. 25th November, 2008.

      6)    E-mails between Mr. Kharak Singh and Callphonex.”

376.  He further deposed before the court that the  last  mail  received  by
him from Kharak Singh was on November 25, 2008, at 12:08 PM  and  thereafter
there was no contact between him and Kharak Singh.  The  account  of  Kharak
Singh was closed after December 25, 2008.

377.  It does not require much  imagination  to  see  that  “Kharak  Singh”,
claiming to be from India, was a fake identity created for the sole  purpose
of obtaining the VoIP services from  Callphonex.  But  this  was  made  very
clear by  the  investigation  made  by  the  FBI  as  would  appear  from  a
communication dated February 18, 2009, from the Special Agent of the  Bureau
(PW-153) in response to the letter-o-gatory  issued  by  the  Court  of  the
Additional   Chief   Metropolitan   Magistrate,   Esplanade,   Mumbai,    on
Miscellaneous Application No.1/2009. The communication from  the  FBI  dated
February 18, 2009, is Ext. no.  617-A  and  it  states  the  following  with
regard to the two payments made to Callphonex from Kharak Singh’s account:
      “Two payments were made to Callphonex for Singh’s accounts. On October
      27, 2008, the initial payment of $250.00 was wired to  Callphonex  via
      MoneyGram, receipt number 80700471903880005473. The  sender  for  this
      payment was Muhammad Ishfaq. The sender used MoneyGram  agent  Paracha
      International Exchange located at Road Anarkali Fayazuddin in  Lahore,
      Pakistan. According to MoneyGram records, Ishfaq provided  an  address
      of Postoffice Mall Awn Teh Gujar K, Peshawer, Pakistan  and  telephone
      number 03455698566. Copies of the MoneyGram receipts are attached.

      On November 25, 2008, the second  payment  of  $229.00  was  wired  to
      Callphonex via Western Union, receipt number 8364307716-0. The  sender
      of this payment was Javaid Iqbal. The sender used Western Union  agent
      Madina Trading, located in Bescia,  Italy,  to  make  the  payment  to
      Callphonex. For identification, Iqbal  provided  Madina  Trading  with
      Pakistani passport number KC092481.


      The owner of Callphonex noticed that neither  of  the  wire  transfers
      were sent from India. On November 25, 2008, he emailed Singh and asked
      why the transfers were not coming from India, however, he received  no
      response.”

378.  As to Kharak Singh being an Indian  in  the  aforesaid  communication,
the FBI Agent made the following observations:-
      “The  FBI  determined  that  the  kharak_telco@yahoo.com  account  was
      created on October  20,  2008,  via  Internet  Protocol  (IP)  address
      66.90.73.125. Between October 20, 2008, and November 28, 2008, a  user
      with access to this account logged in from the following IP addresses,
      which,  according  to  open-source   information,   resolve   to   the
      corresponding geographic locations:
      IP Addresses                 Location

      58.27.167.153               (Pakistan)
      66.90.73.125                (U.S. – apparent proxy)
      67.159.44.63                (U.S. – apparent proxy)
      80.78.132.155               (Kuwait)
      82.114.138.18               (Russia – apparent proxy)
      82.114.141.99               (Russia – apparent proxy)
      118.107.140.138             (Pakistan)
      203.81.224.201              (Pakistan)
      203.81.224.202              (Pakistan)
      203.81.224.203              (Pakistan)

      Singh’s Callphonex account has been inactive since November 28,  2008.
      Callphonex closed Singh’s account because there has been  no  payment,
      no activity and no communication from him since November 28, 2008.”

379.  It is noted above that among  the  documents  furnished  by  Nizar  Al
Sharif to the FBI there were three chat logs  between  a  representative  of
Callphonex and Kharak  Singh  and  the  e-mails  between  Kharak  Singh  and
Callphonex.

380.  Mr. Gopal Subramanium, in his meticulous and painstaking way, took  us
through the three chat logs and the e-mails exchanged between  Kharak  Singh
and Callphonex. We have no doubt that even in the three chat logs it is  not
the same person who is chatting under the fictitious name of  Kharak  Singh.
That the persons chatting as Kharak Singh are different persons  is  evident
from the different styles of language and their use of slang.

381.  Perhaps Nizar Al Sharif’s commercial interest got the  better  of  his
sense of discretion, or perhaps he was too naïve to see  through  the  clear
deception. His services were thus used by a  bunch  of  terrorists  for  the
mass killing of innocent people. According to him, he realized that a  false
account was opened with him for unlawful purposes only  after  the  massacre
in Mumbai.

MOBILE NUMBERS 9910719424, 9820704561 AND 9819464530 AND THE  MOBILE  PHONES
USING THOSE NUMBERS:

382.  We have seen how the collaborators of the terrorists killing  innocent
people in India hid behind the phone  number  of  Callphonex  and  tried  to
conceal the locations from which they were making calls. We shall  now  take
a brief look at the three numbers from which the terrorists holed up  in  at
Hotel Taj, Hotel Oberoi and Nariman House were calling  or  receiving  calls
from their collaborators.

383.  A great many mobile phones were collected and seized from the  various
places through which the terrorists had passed as  also  from  the  vehicles
used by the appellant  and  his  dead  companion,  Abu  Ismail,  for  moving
through the city. But of interest to us are only  five  (5)  mobile  phones,
two (2) of which were recovered from Hotel Taj, two (2) from  Nariman  House
and one (1) from Hotel Oberoi. The  two  phones  that  were  recovered  from
Hotel Taj are mentioned in Exhibit nos. 749 and 760. Both  were  Nokia  1200
and silver-and-black in colour. One of them had the IMEI  No.353526024049451
and an Airtel’s Sim No.8991310000200898887842. This phone was never used  by
the  terrorists.  The  other   Nokia   1200   phone   had   the   IMEI   No.
353526025840890. It had a Sim card purchased from Delhi in the name  of  one
Suresh Prasad and, on calls being made from this phone, the number that  was
displayed on the receiving phone would be 9910719424, the first number  that
had come to the notice of Kadam (PW-242). The investigation  later  revealed
that the Sim card for this phone was purchased from Gurvinder  Singh  Bakshi
(PW-259), a retailer in Delhi, by producing fake identity documents.  Suresh
Prasad was a fictitious person.

384.  Two Nokia 1200 phones were also recovered from Nariman House and  they
found  mention  in  Exhibit  no.  771.  One  of  the  phones  had  the  IMEI
No.353526025828739. The phone was without a Sim card and it was never  used.
The other Nokia 1200 phone had the IMEI No.353526025842235.  It  had  a  Sim
card belonging to Gabriel Holtzberg, who was first  taken  hostage  and  was
later killed by the terrorists. It appears that  the  terrorists  had  taken
away the mobile phone of Gabriel Holtzberg, took out the Sim card  from  his
mobile and put it in their own mobile phone. A call  made  through  the  Sim
card of Gabriel Holtzberg would display this number on the receiving  phone:
9819464530. This was one of the two numbers that later came  to  the  notice
of Kadam (PW-242).

385.  The fifth Nokia 1200 of silver-and-black  colour  was  recovered  from
Hotel Oberoi vide Ext. no. 790. Its IMEI number  was  353526025933620.  This
mobile phone had a Sim card issued in the name of one Rita Agarwal. She  was
among those killed by the terrorists at Hotel Oberoi. It  appears  that,  as
with Gabriel Holtzberg, Rita Agarwal’s mobile phone was also taken  away  by
the terrorists at Hotel Oberoi, who took out the Sim card  from  her  mobile
and used it to make calls from their own mobile. Any call made  through  the
Sim card of  Rita  Agarwal  would  display  the  number  9820704561  on  the
receiving phone. This was the third number that had come to  the  notice  of
Kadam (PW-242).

386.  It is thus clear that the terrorists at Hotel Taj  were  using  a  Sim
card that was obtained in India under a fictitious name Suresh Praad on  the
basis of fake identity documents. The terrorists at Nariman House and  Hotel
Oberoi used Sim cards snatched from their  respective  victims,  which  they
used to make calls from their own mobile phones.

387.  From the materials brought on record,  it  is  evident  that  all  the
aforementioned five Nokia 1200 mobile phones were manufactured in  DongGuan,
China, and were shipped to Pakistan. Exhibit  no.  606  is  a  communication
dated February 12, 2009,  from  Mary  Lozano,  ACP,  Enforcement  Manager  /
Americas Nokia Inc. (PW-155) addressed to SA Geoffrey Maron of  the  Federal
Bureau of Investigation (PW-153).  In  the  aforesaid  communication  it  is
stated as follows:-
“February 12, 2009.

SA Geoffrey Maron
Federal Bureau of Investigation
11000 Wilshire Blvd
Los Angeles, CA 90024

      In response to the FBI’s request via United  States  legal  authority,
Nokia  provides  information  from  our  records  concerning  the  following
specific Nokia devices:

1.  Nokia  1200,  IMEI  #  353526024049451     2.   Nokia   1200,   IMEI   #
353526025828739
Manufactured: DongGuan, China           Manufactured: DongGuan, China
Date shipped: June 28, 2008             Date shipped: June 26, 2008
Country shipped to: Pakistan            Country shipped to: Pakistan
Vendor product sold to: United Mobile         Vendor  product  sold  to:  I2
Pakistan (Pvt.) Ltd.


3.  Nokia  1200,  IMEI  #  353526025842235     4.   Nokia   1200,   IMEI   #
353526025840890
Manufactured: DongGuan, China           Manufactured: DongGuan, China
Date shipped: June 26, 2008             Date shipped: June 26, 2008
Country shipped to: Pakistan            Country shipped to: Pakistan
Vendor product sold to: I2 Pakistan (Pvt.) Ltd.    Vendor product  sold  to:
I2 Pakistan (Pvt.) Ltd.


5. Nokia 1200, IMEI # 353526025933620
Manufactured: DongGuan, China
Date shipped: June 28, 2008
Country shipped to: Pakistan
Vendor product sold to: United Mobile

Further, our records reflect that at  the  time  of  shipment,  I2  Pakistan
(Pvt.) Limited’s address was:

      I2 Pakistan (Pvt.) Limited
      2nd Typical Floor, Executive Tower
      Dolmen City, Block 4, Clifton
      Karachi Pakistan

      Within the scope of my employment with Nokia, and in  compliance  with
United States law, I am authorized to provide the above  listed  information
derived from Nokia’s records.

Sincerely,

Mary Lozano, ACP
Enforcement Manager/ Americas
Nokia Inc.
6021 Connection Drive, MS 2-5-520
Irving, Texas”

388.  We have seen the mobile phones and the SIM cards  by  means  of  which
the terrorists holed up in the places targeted by them  were  calling  their
collaborators across the border and also the medium through which the  exact
location of the collaborators was hidden. Now we come to  the  substance  of
the conversations between the terrorists and their collaborators.





THE TALKS:

389.  The attack on Mumbai killing and wounding scores  of  innocent  people
was a wicked act, and the conversations between  the  terrorists  and  their
collaborators while the attack was underway appear to  be  its  ugliest  and
most hateful  part.  Those  conversations  unveil  warped  minds  conceiving
perverted objectives and trying to realize those objectives through  vicious
and dastardly means.

390.  In an early talk[55] that took  place  between  01:15:01  to  01:16:42
hrs. on November 27, 2008, between one of the terrorists from Hotel Taj  and
the collaborators, the latter appear quite anxious that the  hotel  building
should be set on fire. They constantly urge the terrorist to start the  fire
but this man seems to be a little nervous as he finds himself alone  holding
a  hostage  (Ramamoorthy)  while  his  other  partners,  who  had  gone   on
reconnaissance and in search of more hostages,  are  delayed  in  returning.
Every time the collaborators ask him to start the fire  and  throw  grenades
he complains that his partners have not come back even though  he  had  told
them to come back quickly. The collaborators ask him  many  questions  about
the sea journey and get answers that would not have made them very happy  as
everything did not go as per instructions. The terrorist in Hotel  Taj  told
them that the Indian boat was not sunk in the sea but was left afloat.  What
is more, Abu Ismail’s satellite phone and a GPS too were left in  the  boat.
The only information that seems to have pleased the collaborators  was  that
the navigator of the Indian boat was killed by cutting  his  neck.  [But  on
that score also the happiness was not complete  because  his  body  was  not
thrown into the sea but left on the boat itself.] In the  midst  of  getting
all this information the collaborators keep pressing the terrorist to  start
the fire but this man appears unequal to the task.

391.  In another conversation between the terrorists at  Nariman  House  and
the collaborators, one of the  hostages,  a  Mexican  citizen  called  Norma
Shvarzblat Robinovich, is brought to the phone  and  is  threatened  by  the
collaborators that if she wanted to remain alive she must do  their  bidding
and talk to the Indian authorities as  dictated  by  them.  The  poor  woman
agreed to do all that they demanded and  yet  she  was  killed  at  the  end
without  the  slightest  qulams.  As  noted  above,  the  recording  of  the
intercepted conversation extend over twelve and a  half  (12.5)  hours.  The
transcripts of the recorded conversations are accordingly long.  We  propose
to take a look at a few excerpts as samples under the following heads.

     1. Exhortation to fight in the name of Islam against heresy,  and  the
        allurement of martyrdom.
     2. Deception that the terrorists were Indians  and  were  venting  the
        grievance of the Indian Muslims; also an attempt to involve Israel.


     3. Rejoicing over the killing of the high police officers.
     4. Advising the terrorists  on  tactics  to  deal  with  the  security
        forces, who were called in to neutralize them.
     5. Killing of the hostages

Exhortation  to  fight  in  the  name  of  Islam  against  heresy,  and  the
allurement of martyrdom

392.  (1)             TRANSCRIPTS FROM HOTEL TAJ
                   Talk No. 3 (Ext. no. 970 Collectively)
(The collaborator talking from across the border is marked as ‘UK’  and  the
terrorists holed up in Hotel Taj are marked as ‘T’)

UK 2:       Allah yaar aapka kaam kabool kare. Bahot saare  logon  ke  zakhm
           par marham rakha gaya hai. Jo  dua  aapko  batayee  thee  na  wo
           bhoolni nahi hai. Jahan bhi baitho teen baar dua  zaroor  padhni
           hai.

           [My friend, may Allah accept your deed. Balm has been put on the
           wounds of many people. Do not forget the prayer that we made you
           learn; wherever you sit recite the prayer three times.]

UK 2:       Baaki bhaiyon ko salaam kehna. Mazboot rehna apni  baaton  mein,
           apni baaton mein mazbooti paida karo.  Aapne  duniya  ko  chhoda
           hai. Jannat Insha-allah iss se  bahut  behtar  hai.  Apne  vaade
           zaroor poore karna jo sachhe vaade hain.  Hamare  liye  bhi  dua
           karna.

           [Tell my ‘Salaam’ to the rest of the brothers. Be strong in your
           actions; in your actions instill strength. You  have  left  this
           world. Paradise is far better than this world. You  must  fulfil
           your promises, which are true promises. Pray for us too.]

                        TRANSCRIPTS FROM HOTEL OBEROI
                          Talk No. 4 (Ext. no. 979)
(The collaborator talking from across the border has  been  marked  as  ‘UK’
and the terrorists holed up in the Hotel Oberoi are marked as ‘T’)

UK:         Insha-allah, pata matlab yeh hai ki iss waqt Islam aur  Kufr  ka
           mamla hai. Hum woh bande hain jisko Allah ne apne deen ke jahaan
           ke liye bheja hai. Matlab shahadat ki maut toh badi  hai.  Lekin
           hai shahadat ka andaaz hai ki dushmanon ke dil mein khauf  bitha
           dein. Aur sahi andaaz hai matlab shahadat. Matlab, na  darne  ki
           baat hai, shaheed ka paigaam aage rakhna hai.

           [God willing, you know, what I mean is at this time the issue is
           between Islam and heresy. We are the slaves of God whom  he  has
           sent for expansion of the true faith. I mean, death as a  martyr
           is a big thing. But the style of martyrdom should be such as  to
           put fright in the heart of the enemies and that is the style  of
           martyrdom. What I mean is there is nothing to fear, the  message
           of the martyr must be put forward.]

UK:         Dua karo, dua ka waqt hai. Sahi Allah ke saath kiye vaade  poore
           karein. Theek hai.

           [Pray. It is time for prayer and keep your promise to Allah. All
      right!]

UK:         Aisa ladna hai ki unhein maloom  pade  ki  Allah  ka  sher  mere
           peechey pada hai.

           [Fight in such a way, they should  feel  that  Allah’s  lion  is
           after them.]

T-II:       Insha-allah.

           [God willing.]

UK:         Insha-allah. Matlab Shaheed.

           [God willing. What I mean is martyr.]

T-II:       Insha-allah. Dua karo.

           [God willing. Pray for me.]

UK-II:      Unko bada maan hai Hindu bhai ko,  unka  maan  khaak  mein  mila
dein.

           [They have great pride those Hindu bhais.  Let  their  pride  be
           trampled in mud.]

T:          Insha-allah.

           [God willing.]

UK-II:      Sahi hai. Zikr karo Insha-allah kaamyaabi  har  taraf  se  aapki
           hai. Aapki yeh kaamyaabi Allah kabool  karle,  theek  hai.  Sahi
           Insha-allah, Allah-tala ne Jannat bilkul  clear  kar  di.  Aapke
           liye shareer mahi hai. Insha-allah sabne jaana  wahin  par  hai.
           Jis raste se aap chal rahe ho woh himmatwala rasta  hai.  Insha-
           allah, himmatwala kaam karna hai.

           [Remember Him and God willing success will be of yours. May  God
           accept your success. That is right. Right,  God  willing.  Allah
           has completely cleared paradise for  you.  Everyone  has  to  go
           there. The path on which you are treading that is  the  path  of
           strength. God willing. You have to do the courageous deed.]

T:          Insha-allah.

           [God willing.]

                         Talk No. 11 (Ext. no. 981)
(This is towards the conclusion perhaps the last minutes of Fahadullah).

T:          Assalaam-Valeykum.

           [Assalaam-Valeykum.]

UK:         Valeykum Salaam, kya haal hai Fahadullah,  mere  yaar  khairiyat
hai?

           [Valeykum Salaam. How are you Fahadullah, my friend are you  all
           right?]

T:          Abdul Rahman Bhaiyya Allah ko pyaare ho gaye.

           [Abdul Rahman Bhaiyya has been taken away by God.]

UK:         Achha, aapke paas hi hain?

           [Well, is he near you?]

T:          Haan jee; paas hi hain.

           [Yes. He is near me.]

UK:         Allah kabool kare. Mere veer sabr karna hai,  himmat  karni  hai
           aur muquabla karna hai datt ke.

           [May Allah accept him. My brother have  forbearance.  Be  brave,
           you have to fight unrelentingly.]

T:          Insha-allah.

           [God willing.]

UK:         Haan. Allah madad karega.

           [Yes. Allah will help you.]

UK:         Theek hai mere yaar, himmat karo. Muquabla karo, josh  se  lado.
           Theek hai. Dua karo, iss waqt karo, iss waqt ki dua badi  kabool
           hoti hai.

           [All right my friend.  Be  brave.  Fight,  fight  with  passion.
           Alright. Pray,  pray.  Prayer  at  this  time  is  very  readily
           accepted.]

                         Talk No. 12 (Ext. no. 982)

UK:         Giraftaari waali shakl nahin hone deni.  Yeh  baat  yaad  rakhni
hai.

           (There cannot be the eventuality of arrest. You have to remember
           this.)

T:          Nahin. Insha-allah, Insha-allah.

           (No. God willing, god willing.)

UK:         Himmat karni hai mere veer, ghabraana  nahin  hai,  Insha-allah;
           goli lage toh kaamyaabi hai. Allah intezaar kar raha hai.

           (My brother you have  to  be  strong.  Do  not  be  afraid.  God
           willing. If you are hit by a bullet, in that  is  your  success.
           God is waiting for you.)

T:          Haan jee. Insha-allah.

           (All right. God willing.)

Deception that the terrorists were Indians and were killing people  to  vent
the grievance of the Indian Muslims; also the attempt to involve Israel

393.  (2)        TRANSCRIPTS FROM NARIMAN HOUSE
                          Talk No. 7 (Ext. no. 984)
(The collaborator talking from across the border has  been  marked  as  ‘UK’
and the terrorists holed up in the Nariman House are marked as ‘T’)

UK-III:     Aap woh poochhenge aap  kahan  ke  hain.  Kehna  mein  Hyderabad
           Deccan ka hoon.

           [Now they will ask where do  you  belong  to?  Say,  I  am  from
           Hyderabad Deccan.]

T:          Jee.

           [Yes.]

UK-III:     Hyderabad city ka theek hai.

            [City of Hyderabad, understand.]

T:          Hyderabad Deccan.

UK-III:     Hyderabad city ka Hyderabad city ka  hoon  aur  chowki  ka  mera
           area hai.

           [Hyderabad city, I am from Hyderabad city, from the Chowki area]

T:          Chowki

UK-III:     Tolee Chowki. Tolee Chowki.

T:          Tolee Chowki theek hai.

           [Tolee Chowki, all right.]

UK-III:     Aur phir poochhey toh kehna Mujahedeen Hyderabad Deccan se  mera
           talluk hai. Theek hai.

           [And if they ask further,  say  that  you  are  associated  with
           Mujahedeen Hyderabad Deccan.]

T:          Theek hai.

           [All right]

UK-III:     Mujahedeen Hyderabad Deccan ise hasi sangeen  (sic  tanzeem)  se
           mera taluk hai. Aur agar weh kehte hain ye action kyon  ki  hai.
           Hum hukumat ki doshi policy  hukumat  ki  dohri  policy  hukumat
           peeth thapthapati hai. Aur prashasan sar pe tole marti hai.

           [Mujahedden Hyderabad Deccan is  the  organization  to  which  I
           belong. And if they say  why  did  you  do  this  action.  (say)
           against the wrong policy of the Government, the dual  policy  of
           the  Government.  The  Government  pats   the   back   and   the
           administration knocks on the head.]

T:          Hukumat ki doshi policy. Hukumat peeth thapthapati hai.

           [The wrong policy of the Government.  The  Government  pats  the
           back.]

UK-III:     Hukumat peeth thapthapati hai.

           [The Government pats the back.]

T:          Peeth thapthapati hai.

           [Pats the back.]

UK-III:     Aur prashasan jo hai sar par tole maarta hai.

           [And the administration, such as it is, knocks on the head.]

T:          Aur prashasan.

           [And administration.]

UK-III:     Sar par tole maarta hai. Uski taaza misaal Sachhar Committee  ki
           shifarishein, uski taaza misaal.

           [Knocks on the head. Its recent example (is) the recommendations
           of the Sachhar Committee.]

T:          Uski taaza misaal.

           [Its recent example.]

UK-III:     Sachhar Committee shifarish. Jis  taraf  hukumat  jo  ye  ailaan
           karti hai aur darasal vajah prashasan  Muslim  yuvkon  ko  pakad
           pakad kar giraftaar karti hai.

           [Sachhar  Committee  recommendations.  On  the  one   hand   the
           Government makes this announcement and in reality  in  order  to
           harass  them,  the  administration  pursues  Muslim  youths  and
           arrests them.]

T:          Hukumat koi aur insaan karti hai.

           [The Government makes another announcement.]

UK-III:     Prashasan uska amal Muslim yuvkon ko giraftaar karke  deta  hai.
           Saabit karta hai.

           [(And) the administration implements it by arresting the  Muslim
           youth. This just shows.]

T:          Muslim.

UK-III:     Muslim yuvkon ko, Muslim jawaanon ko.

           [The Muslim youth, the young Muslim.]

T:          Nau jawaanon ko.

           [The youngsters.]

UK-III:     Giraftaar karke sabit karta hai.

           [Makes it clear by arresting them.]

T:          Haan.

           [Yes.]

UK-III:     Unka future barbaad karti hai. Unko ye ultimatum de denge  hamra
           abhi toh trailor hai abhi asal film to  baaki  hai.  Hukumat  ye
           jaan le yeh trailor hai, asal film to baaki hai.

           [Destroys their future. Give them the  ultimatum  that  this  is
           only the  trailor  and  the  main  film  is  yet  to  come.  The
           Government should know that this is only  the  trailor  and  the
           main film still remains.]

T:          Hukumat ye jaan le sarkaar ye jaan le yeh trailor hai asal  film
           to baaki hai.

           [The Government should know, the  Government  should  know  that
           this is the trailor and the real film is still remaining.]

UK-III:     Yeh to abhi trailor hai.

           [This is only the trialor.]

T:          Yeh to abhi trailor hai.

           [This is only the trialor.]

UK-III:     Yeh to chhotta sa udaharan hai  mein.  Chhota  sa  example  hai.
           Trailor hai.

           [This is only a small example, is a small example, is  only  the
      trailor.]

T:          Yeh trailor hai.

           [This is only the trialor.]

UK-III:     Yeh chhotta sa humne aapko dikhaya hai.

           [We have shown you only this little thing.]

T:          Film to abhi saara pada hai.

           [The whole film is still there.]

UK-III:     Unko kaho ye chhota sa namoona hai. Abhi hukumat ko dekhna  hai.
           Aage aur kya kya hota hai.

           [Tell them this is only a small sample. The Government is yet to
           see what happens in the time to come.]

T:          Abhi hukumat dekhegi kya hota hai.

           [The Government will see what happens now.]

UK-III:     Theek hai.

           [Alright.]

T:          Theek hai. Theek hai.

           [Alright. Alright.]

UK-III:     Woh kahenge na aapka demand kaya hai. Hello.

           [They will say what is your demand. Hello.]

T:          Haan jee, haan jee.

           [Yes jee, yes jee.]

UK-III:     Jitne bhi jailon mein musalman qaid hain unko riha  kiya  jaaye.
           Ek number.

           [All the Musalmans  who  are  languishing  in  jails  should  be
           released. Number one.]

T:          Saare musalman riha.

           [All the Musalmans released.]

UK-III:     Jitne bhi jailon mein band musalman hain unko riha kiya jaaye.

           [All the  Musalmans  who  are  locked  up  in  jails  should  be
      released.]

T:          Theek hai.

           [Alright.]

UK-III:     Theek hai. Number do.

           [Alright. Number two.]

T:          Jee.

           [Yes.]

UK-III:     Muslim state, Muslmanon ke hawaale kiya jaaye.

           [Muslim state should be handed over to the Musalmans.]

T:          State Musalmanon ke hawaale kiya jaaye.

           [State should be handed over to the Musalmans.]

UK-III:     Number teen. Kashmir se fauj bulayee jaaye. Unko unka  haq  diya
           jaaye. Kashmiriyon ko unke haq diya haaye (jaaye).

           [Number three. The Army should be withdrawn from  Kashmir.  They
           should be given their rights. Kashmiris should  be  given  their
           rights.]

T:          Theek hai.

           [Alright.]

UK-III:     Babri Masjid ki jagah par  fauran  masjid  ka  kaam  shuru  kiya
           jaaye. Uss Jagah ko musalmanon ke hawaale kiya jaaye.

           [At the site of Babri Masjid, work should  immediately  commence
           for construction of the mosque. That spot should be handed  over
           to the Musalmans.]

T:          Theek hai. Theek hai.

           [Alright. Alright.]

UK-III:     Uss jagah ko musalmanon ke hawaale kiya jaaye. Israel  ke  saath
           gathbandhan na kiya jaaye.

           [That spot should be handed over to the Musalmans. There  should
           be no collaboration with Israel.]

T:          Israel ke saath gathbandhan na kiya jaaye.

           [There should be no collaboration with Israel.]

UK-III:     Israel ke saath gathbandhan na kiya jaaye.

           [There should be no collaboration with Israel.]

T:          Jee

           [Jee.]

UK-III:     Hello

           [Hello.]

T:          Haan jee.

           [Yes jee.]

UK-III:     Israel ko ye ultimatum diya jaaye ya bawar [beware]  kiya  jaaye
           ki woh musalmanon par zulm na kare. Philippines udhar zulm jaati
           bandh kare.

           [An ultimatum should be given to Israel; it should  be  made  to
           realize not to oppress the Musalmans and Philippines too  should
           stop oppressing and harassing.]

T:          Israel ko.

           [To Israel.]

UK-III:     Philippines ki musalmanon ke upar jaatati [jyadati]  bandh  kiya
jaaye.

           [The harassment of the Musalmans of Philippines should stop.]

T:          Israel musalman ke khoon se khelna chhod dein.

           [Israel should stop playing with the blood of Musalmans.]

UK-III:     Ha. (Whispers: Oberoi mein dhamakon ki awwaz) Theek hai.

           [Ha. (Whispers to the colleagues with him: Sound of explosion in
           Oberoi. Alright.]

T:          Jee, Jee.

            [Jee, Jee.]

UK-III:     Agar Israel uss tarah nahin karegaa  toh  poore…  Yahi  hai  bus
theek                  hai.

            [If Israel does not do like this then all this… That is  it  and
alright.]

T:          Jee, Jee.

            [Jee, Jee.]

UK-III:     Yahi kehna hai. Bus yahi kehna hai.

            [This is to be said. Only this is to be said.]

T:          Jee, Jee.

            [Jee, Jee.]

UK-III:     Israel jo yeh bharat ke musalmanon ke beech mein dakhal  andaazi
                 nahin karein.

            [Israel should not interfere with the Musalmans of Bharat.]

T:          Theek hai.

            [Alright.]

UK-III:     Theek.

            [Right.]

T:          Salaam-Valeykum.

UK-II:      Valeykum-assalaam.

394.  And it was exactly on these lines that  the  terrorists  from  Nariman
House talked to India TV  as  the  transcripts  of  those  interviews  would
indicate.

395.  The deception, the falsehood that the terrorists were  Indian  Muslims
coming from Hyderabad and were connected with some  fictitious  organization
called Mujaheddin,  Hyderabad  Deccan,  is  one  of  the  most  ominous  and
distressing parts of the conspiracy. If the appellant had  not  been  caught
alive and the investigating agencies  had  not  been  able  to  unravel  the
conspiracy fully and in all its devious  ways,  the  terrorists  might  have
passed as Indian Muslims and that would have led to  devastating  short-term
and equally debilitating long-term consequences.  It  would  have  caused  a
cleavage of distrust and suspicion between  communities  and  disturbed  the
communal peace and harmony  of  the  country.  It  is  not  impossible  that
conflagrations would have erupted in different parts of  the  country  which
the governments would have found difficult to contain.

396.  In this regard, the selection  of  CST  as  one  of  the  targets  for
carnage assumes great  importance.  Trains  leave  for  many  parts  of  the
country from CST. Thus, as news of the carnage  spread  across  the  country
through the media, travelers would start arriving in different parts of  the
country, some having lost their near and dear  ones  at  CST,  some  with  a
wounded companion and others shell-shocked by the experience of a  terrorist
attack on the railway station. Their  first-hand,  eye-witness  accounts  of
the carnage added  to  reports  in  the  print  media  and  visuals  in  the
electronic  media  could  be  highly  inflammable  and  could  easily  evoke
communal violence that would be difficult to contain.

397.  The deception was ominous because it  aimed  at  destabilising  Indian
society and its governments. But it was equally  distressing  for  being  so
deeply untruthful. Indian  Muslims  may  have  a  long  list  of  grievances
against the establishment. Some of the grievances may be fanciful, some  may
be of their own making and some may be substantive. Nevertheless, no  Indian
Muslim would even think of venting his grievance like  an  animal,  killing,
maiming and wounding innocent people; his own countrymen.  This  is  because
he is not only loyal to his  faith  and  community  but  equally  loves  his
country and fellow countrymen.

Rejoicing over the killing of high police officials

398.  (3)             TRANSCRIPTS FROM HOTEL TAJ
                          Talk No. 3 (Ext. no. 970)
(The collaborator talking from across the border has been marked as ‘UK’
and the terrorists holed up in the Hotel Taj are marked as ‘T’)

UK:         Koi masla nahin mere yaar, pareshaan nahin hona mere  yaar.  Aap
           kaam karo, Allah ki dua se saari Bombay mein  tabahi  mach  gayi
           hai. 260 bandhe zakhmi hain aur kayee officer mare  gayee  hain,
           pachaas fidayeen ghusey hain. Har terah choudah jagah firing  ho
           rahi hai. Sahi Allah ke dua  se  mahaul  bana  raha  hai.  Koyee
           pareshaani ki baat nahin.

           [There is no problem my friend, don’t get worried my friend. You
           do your work. By the blessing of God there  is  destruction  all
           around in the whole of  Bombay.  Two  hundred  and  sixty  (260)
           people are wounded and many  officers  are  killed.  Fifty  (50)
           fidayeens have entered. Firing is going on at  thirteen-fourteen
           (13-14) places. By the blessing of God the right  atmosphere  is
           developing. There is nothing to worry.]

T:          Pareshaani wah bass  hai.  Do  bhai  gaye  hain.  Who  jaldi  aa
           jaayein. Unko mein baar baar kehta hoon. Jaldi aa jaao, jaldi aa
           jaana.

           [The only worry is two brothers  have  gone.  They  should  come
           quickly. I told them repeatedly:Come quickly, come quickly.]

UK:         Aapke yahan shayad koyee helicopter aayega. Kyonki  aapke  yahan
           koyi wazeer fansey hain hotel mein? Hotel mein  bhi  media  bata
           rahe hain ki wazeer fansey hain.

           [A helicopter may come to your  place.  Because  there  is  some
           Minister trapped in the hotel? The media too informs  that  some
           Minister is caught in the hotel.]

T:          Achha.

           [Very well.]

UK:         Ab wazeer alam ye kaha hai. Helicopter bhejkar woh wazeer  logon
           nikalo. To aap aag laga do darwaza nahin khol rahe  hain.  Parde
           nikalkar aag lagao. Kamron ko aag lagao to wazeer jale. Aur unki
           jaan jaayen.

           [Now the Prime Minister has asked for sending  a  helicopter  to
           get that Minister (those Ministers?) out. Then you set fire (if)
           they are not opening the doors. Take the curtains and  set  them
           on fire. Set the rooms on fire so that the Minister should burn.
           And get killed.]

T:          Chalo koshish karte hain. Woh aa jaaye  na  yaar  to  yeh  masla
           hai. Hum donon rumaaliyon ke paas bethe hain, woh aa jaate  hain
           to hum ikattha koshish karte hain.

           [Very well, we’ll try. The problem is that they’re not coming. I
           am sitting with the two hostages. When they come back, we  shall
           try (to start the fire) together.]

UK:         Aur ek Commissioner maara gaya hai Allah ki dua se.  Aapko  kaha
           hai ek hathoda opener dhoondo.

           [And one commissioner is killed by the blessing of God.  I  told
           you to find a hammer or an opener.]

T:          Nahin, nahin mila.

           [It is not found.]

UK:         Mere bhai  jahan  bhi  deewaron  par  cylinder  aag  bujhane  ko
           lagaayein hain, udhar hathoda latkaay  rehtey  hain.  Har  hotel
           mein rehta hai. Har manzil pe rehta hai, har gali mein hota hai.



           [My brother at all the points  where  cylinders  are  fixed  for
           extinguishing fire a hammer would also be hanging. It  is  there
           in every hotel. It is there  on  each  floor,  it  is  in  every
           corridor.]

T:          Woh kis liye hota hai.

            (Whisper) Sabse zyada zulm karnewala Commissioner maara gaya.

           [What is its purpose.]

           [(Whisper) The Commissioner who oppressed most is killed.]

UK:         Achha mere veer mere  bhai  jaldi  se  aag  lagao  jaise  maahol
           banega. Aur log ghabra jaayengein, aag ke sholey bahar nazar  aa
           jaayengein.

           [Alright my veer, my brother, please  start  the  fire  quickly.
           That would set the scene and people will panic, the flames would
           be visible from outside.]

UK:         Haa, Maine kaha yahan ka Bombay ka police. …

           [Yes I said of this place, of Bombay police.]

T:          Haa haa Pathan hai.

           [Yes yes, he is pathan.]

UK:         Yeh Bombay ka Chief maara gaya.

           [The Bambay Chief is killed.]

T:          Whisper (to the handler): Maharashtrya hai. (to the hostage)  Tu
           kidhar ka hai. Kis ilake ka hai tu kidhar ka hai.

           [Whisper (to the handler): He is Maharashtrian. (To the hostage)
           Where do you belong? From which region, which place?]

UK:         Chief maara gaya hai. ATS chief maara gaya hai.

           [The chief is killed. The ATS chief is killed.]

                       TRANSCRIPTS FROM NARIMAN HOUSE
                         Talk No. 18 (Ext. no. 988)
(The collaborator talking from across the border has  been  marked  as  ‘UK’
and the terrorists holed up in the Nariman House are marked as ‘T’)

T:          Woh toh keh raha tha do bhai surrender ho gaye.

           [He was saying two brothers have surrendered.]

UK:         Nahi bakwaas kar rahe hain.

           [No they are talking nonsense.]

T:          Jee

           [Jee]

UK:         Surrender ho gaya. Bakwaas kar raha hai. Kal se  lekar  aaj  tak
           unse koyi bhi jagah clear nahin hui hai.

           [Surrendered! He is talking rubbish. From yesterday  till  today
           no place has been cleared by them.]

T:          Aur kya naam lete hain. Uska. Baaki bhai kahan tak pahunch  gaye
           hain.

           [And what other names do they take. His. Till where the rest  of
           the brothers have reached.]

UK:         Sab jahaan jahaan apni apni jagah par gaye they na.

           [They all went where they were meant to go.]

T:          Haan jee.

           [Yes jee.]

UK:         Udhar hain. Allam Dulla woh toh sahi behtreen  ladh  rahe  hain.
           Kaam jaari hai. Insey ab tak koyi bhi jagah clear nahin hui. Yeh
           koyi na kahe rahe humne yeh jagah chudwa lee hai.

           [They are there. Allah be praised they are fighting excellently.
           The work is in progress. They have not been able  to  clear  any
           place. No one is saying that they have got this place freed.]

  T:          Achha Achha dua karein, shahadat kee maut kubool karein. Dua

           [Well well pray for me, the martyr’s death may be accepted.
      Pray…]

Advising the terrorists on the tactics to deal with the security forces  who
were called in to neutralize them

399.  (4)             TRANSCRIPTS FROM HOTEL TAJ
                          Talk No. 3 (Ext. no. 970)
(The collaborator talking from across the border has  been  marked  as  ‘UK’
and the terrorists holed up in the Hotel Taj are marked as ‘T’)

UK2:        Baat suno.

           [Listen.]

T3:         Haan jee.

           [Yes jee.]

UK2:        Jahan se aap mudhkar aaye ho, aapka munh samudr ke baaju hua.

           [The spot from where you have returned, you should be facing the
           sea.]

T3:         Haan haan.

           [Yes yes.]

UK2:        Hello.

           [Hello.]

T3:         Haan jee. Mein sun raha hoon.

           [Yes jee. I am listening.]

UK2:        Jis taraf aap mude ho aapka munh samudr ke paas hua.  Wahan  mod
           ke road ke upar ek building hai civil logon ki.  Woh  asal  mein
           Navy ki hai. Woh civil ko di hai. Uskey taraf  do  jagah  police
           waale khade hain. Woh position lekar  aapke  upar  shisht  lekar
           firing kar rahe hain. Jis tarah aap gaye hain. Uske  peechey  se
           aakar aapko fire karna padhega. Theek hai.

           [The way you have turned, you should be facing the  sea.  There,
           at the corner of the road,  there  is  a  building  of  civilian
           people. In reality that belongs to the Navy. It is given to  the
           civilians. Over there, policemen are  standing  at  two  places.
           They have taken position and, taking aim at you, they are firing
           at you. The way you have gone you would have to come from behind
           and fire at them. You understand?]

T3:         Theek hai.

           [All right.]

                          Talk No. 8 (Ext. no. 972)

UK:         Kyaa haal mere yaar? Shift ho gaye neechey.

           [How are you, my friend? Have you shifted below?]

T:          Haan ji shift ho gaye hein aur doosare kamron  mein  chale  hain
           clear karne ke liye.

           [Yes jee, we have shifted and are  moving  to  clear  the  other
      rooms.]

UK:         Upar aag laga di hai?

           [Have you set fire upstairs?]

T:          Grenade fenka hai. Grenade.

           [We have thrown a grenade. Grenade.]

UK:         Grenade ki awaaz aa gayi hai. Grenade  unhone  dikha  diya  hai.
           Dhamaka hua hai. Aadmi zakhmi hue hain.

           [The sound of the grenade has come. They have shown the grenade.
           The explosion has taken place. People are wounded.]

T:          Toh aag lagane lagey hain.

           [So, (you) have started to lit the fire.]

UK:         Jis kamre se nikal kar aaye ho upar waali manzil hai na?

           [The room from where you’ve come (is) on the upper floor?]

T:          Haan jee, haan jee.

           [Yes jee, yes jee.]

UK:         Usko mere yaar jaakar aag lagao.

           [My friend, go and set fire to it]

T:          Haan jee bhai.

           [Yes jee, bhai.]

UK:         Kamron ke beech pardey hain gadde hain unko  ikathha  karke  aag
           laga do.

           [In the rooms there are curtains and cushions, Put them together
           and set them on fire.]

T:          Asal aag lagane  mein  bhi  utni  der  lagati  hai  aur  rumaali
           dhondhne ko utni der lagati hai. Bataao ki hum kya karein.  Aage
           ki toh mauj laga denge masha-allah.

           [Actually it takes some time to start a fire, and  it  takes  as
           long to find hostages. Tell us what to  do.  We’ll  create  real
           fun, presently.]

UK:         Aag laga do, aag laga do mere yaar, kamra koyi naya clear  karne
           lage ho.

           [Set fire, set fire my friend; are you clearing any new rooms?]

T:          Haan jee.

           [Yes jee]

UK:         Pehle chalo aag lagao mere yaar upar ek banda bas ho  gaya.  Aag
           lagake neechey aa jaao. Ek banda hai na.

           [First go and set a fire, my  friend.  One  fellow  (is  caught)
           upstairs, that is enough. Set fire and come down. You  have  one
           fellow, don’t you?]

T:          Nahin do bandey hain.

           [No there are two men.]

UK:         Nahin do bandey toh upar, party poori bhej do  unke  paas  phone
           hai na doosra.

           [No, two men are upstairs. Send the whole  party  to  them.  You
           have the other phone?]

T:          Haan jee.

           [Yes jee.]

UK:         Dono ikkatha karke aag lagake aao.

           [Put them together and set the fire and come.]

T:           Asal  mein  hum  seediyon  ke  paas  ek  kamra  liya  hai  bada
           jabardast, ek banda seediyon ke paas ek banda andar mein  baitha
           hai roomali ke saath aur do bande baahar khyal rakhenge.

           [Actually, we have taken a room near the stairs that  is  great.
           One man is near the stairs, one man is sitting inside  with  the
           hostage, and two men are keeping watch outside.]

                                 ----------

UK2:        Fire hua hai.

           [There has been a fire]

T2:         Haan fire hua. Abhi apna darwaaza band rakhein?

           [Yes, there has been a fire. Should we keep our door closed?]

UK:         Nahin aap chaaron ek kamre mein nahin ikkatha hongein. Woh  yaad
           rakhein aapke kareeb koyi pahunchega toh aapke hain na jo  aapke
           paas baithey hue.



           [No, all four of you should not be together in one room. Keep in
           mind, if anyone comes close to you then those (hostages) who are
           sitting with you…]

T2:         Haan.

           [Yes]

UK:         Jab aapko lage koyi hamarey kareeb pahunch gaye hain aur  hamare
           liye mushkil ho rahi hai. Tab unko aapne khadka dena hai.

           [When you feel someone has reached close to you and its  getting
           difficult for you, then you have to kill them (the hostages).]

T2:         Haan haan. Insha-allah. Khadka denge.  Insha-allah  chaaron  hum
           ek hi kamre mein hain hum log.

           [Yes yes. God-willing, we shall kill them. God-willing all  four
           of us are in the same room.]

UK:         Haan yeh baat suno. Chaaron ek kamrey na  hon.  Do  kamron  mein
           aapne intezaam karna hai.

           [Yes, listen to this. All four of you, don’t  be  in  one  room.
           Make arrangements in two rooms.]

                                 ----------

UK2:        Yeh aap kis manzil par hain aap.

           [On which floor are you?]

T2:         Hum sabse upar waali chhodkar neecheywale pe.

           [On the topmost but one.]

UK2:        Sabse ooperwali chhodkar  neechey  wale  pe.  Bande  kitne  hain
           aapke paas.

           [On the topmost but one. How many hostages are with you?]

T2:         Ek minute jee. Sohaib ko fire maara hai unhon ne toh pehle  band
           karte hain phir aapse raafta (baat kartey hain) kartey hain.

           [One minute jee. Sohaib has been fired at by  them  so  we  stop
           this talk and get connected with you later on.]

UK2:        Line mat kato hum sun rahe hain.

           [Don’t cut the line, we are listening.]

T2:         Ek minute.

           [One minute.]

UK2:        Position badlo. Position badlo.

           [Change your position. Change your position.]

T2:         Achha achha. Sohaib ne maara hai un bandon ko fire.

           [All right, all right. Sohaib has shot at those men.]

UK2:        Allam Dulla jagah badlo, position badlo,  ikkattha  mat  baitho.
           Jahan se aa rahe hain wahan  grenade  fenko.  Teesri  manzil  pe
           baithe hain.

           [Allah be praised, changed your  place,  change  your  position,
           don’t sit together. Throw a  grenade  at  (the  direction  from)
           where they are coming. They are on the third floor.]

                        TRANSCRIPTS FROM HOTEL OBEROI
                          Talk No. 4 (Ext. no. 979)
(The collaborator talking from across the border has  been  marked  as  ‘UK’
and the terrorists holed up in the Hotel Oberoi are marked as ‘T’)

UK:         Aapki building ke upar fauji apni  position  bahut  mazboot  kar
           rahi hain. Number ek.

           [On the top of your  building  the  soldiers  are  making  their
           position very strong. Number one (1).]

T:          Jee, Jee.

           [Jee, Jee.]

UK:         Agar aapko manzil pe aawaaz aa rahi ho toh chhupo andar.

           [If noises are coming on your floor then hide inside.]

T:          Haan jee.

           [Yes jee.]

UK:         Aapko aawaaz nahin aa rahi ho  to  aap  nikal  kar  jahah  aapko
           movement nazar aati hai wahan par fire karo.

           [If there are no noises coming to you then come out and fire  at
           the spot where you see any movements.]

T:          Aawaaz to khair aa rahi hai bahut jyaada balki dhamaka bhi  kiya
hai.

           [Definitely, there is a lot of noise, and there has also been an
           explosion.]

UK:         Pehli manzil par aa rahi hai aawaaz. Dhamaka, dhamaka,  kaun  sa
           hua hai?

           [The noise is coming on the first floor?  Explosion,  explosion,
           what explosion happened?]

T:          Pata nahin kaun sa hai.

           [I don’t know what (explosion) is this.]

UK:         Army ne kiya na?

           [Is it by the Army?]

T:          Haan jee.

           [Yes jee.]

UK:         Saamne aapke manzil par se aa rahi hain kya aawaazein?

           [Are noises coming from the front side of your floor?]

T:          Haan jee, aa rahin hain.

           [Yes jee, (noises) are coming.]

UK:         Haa, phir aap mazboot hokar dono iss  tarah  se  position  lekar
           agar do – teen bande andar ikkathha aate hain  toh…  aapke  paas
           magazine kitni hai?

           [Ha, then be strong and the two of you should take positions  in
           a manner that in case two or  three  men  come  inside  together
           then… how many magazines do you have?]

T:          Char – paanch hain.

           [Four-five (4-5) are there.]

UK:         Aapki magazine ko burst pe kar lo. Char char hain naa?

           [Put your magazine on ‘burst’ mode. Each of you have  four  (4),
           right?]

T:          Haan jee.

           [Yes jee.]

UK:         Aap magazine ko load kar, aap apni gun ko burst par kar lo.  Jab
           bhi fire karna hai.

           [You load the magazine and put your gun on burst when  you  have
           to fire.]

T:          Sahi.

           [Right.]

UK:         Phir control karke chhota karna hai kyonki jab  entry  hogi  toh
           ek ke  baad  doosra,  doosre  ke  baad  teesra,  aisa  aana  hai
           unhonein. Tab burst fire karna hai. Zarase bhi  nazdeek  aayenge
           to grenade fenko aur jaise grenade fenkoge tab aapne bahar nikal
           kar saamne daayein baayein firing karni hai toh phir Fadullah.

           [Then you have to control and make it smaller because when  they
           enter, the second would come after first and the third after the
           second. They would come like this. Then you  have  to  fire  the
           ‘burst’. If they come any closer, then throw the grenade and  as
           soon as you throw the grenade come out and fire in the front and
           to the right and left and then… Fadullah!]

                                 ----------

UK:         Theek hai naa, hausle dena.  Mere  dost  gun  burst  par  karlo.
           Matlab bilkul position set karke baitho. Aap kissi aad se baithe
           ho ya khule baithe ho?

           [Is it all right,  give  courage.  My  friend  put  the  gun  on
           ‘burst’. I mean sit in perfect position. Are you sitting  behind
           some cover or are you exposed?]

T:          Side par baithe hain.

           [We are sitting at one side.]

UK:         Aise baithen ke andar aate hain, aapke upar  nazar  nahin  pade.
           Aap kissi sofe ke peechhey bairal gun ki nikaal kar baitho.  Yeh
           ek andaaza hai. Khada  banda  nazar  aa  jaata  hai.  Aaap  aise
           position leke baitho, unko andar aate hi  unhein  nazar  ghumani
           pade, unko clear karna pade, woh  kamre  clear  kar  rahe  hain.
           Sabse pehle unhone clear karna hai. Aapke  kamre  mein  bed  aur
           saamaan kitna hai?

           [Sit in a manner that you may not be within the sight of someone
           coming inside. Sit behind some sofa with the barrel of  the  gun
           sticking out. This is only  a  suggestion.  A  standing  man  is
           easily sighted. Sit at a position that on coming inside they may
           have to look around, they may  have  to  make  clear.  They  are
           clearing the rooms. First of all they have to  clear.  How  many
           beds and other articles are there in your room?]

T:          Haan jee hai.

           [Yes jee it is there.]

UK:         Aapke kamre mein bed saamaan hai na unki  aad  leke  baitho  toh
           aap uske peechhey dekhkar baithna. Bahar jab aap grenade  fenkna
           hai toh aap ek bandene  peechhey  ho  jaana  hai.  Achha,  jaise
           grenade khatam hoti hai bahar nikal ke dono taraf se fire  shuru
           karna. Jitna dushman marna ya bhaagna,  poora  floor  kaabu  kar
           lena, Insha-allah. Uske baad ladhai chaalu hogi.

           [In your room there is bed and other articles.  Make  sure  that
           you sit behind them. When you are throwing grenade outside, then
           one of you should stand behind the other. And as  the  grenade’s
           explosion dies down, go out and start firing on both sides. Kill
           as many of the enemy as possible or make them flee, control  the
           entire floor, God-willing and then the battle will begin.]

T:          Insha-Allah, theek hai.

           [God-willing alright.]

UK:         Matlab position safe rakho, agar aapke  aage  bed  hai  na  foam
           wagaira kaa, lakkad ka foam ka sofa  hai.  Aisi  cheez  se  aadh
           milegi agar aapko grenade fenkna padta hai to fenko. Matlab aisa
           darwaza kholkar fenko apne pairon mein nahin  fenk  lena.  Lekin
           yeh option hai. Magazine laga ke  sab  tarah  se  taiyar  rakho.
           Insha-allah jo ek banda milta hai Insha-allah chhodna nahin hai.

           [I mean keep your position safe. If you have a bed in  front  of
           you of foam etc. or a sofa of foam or  wood.  Such  things  will
           provide you cover, if you have to throw the grenade then  throw.
           I mean open the door and throw it and don’t throw it on your own
           feet. But there is an option. Fix the magazine and be  ready  in
           all ways. God-willing, if you get hold of a  person  God-willing
           he is not to be spared.]

                         Talk No. 12 (Ext. no. 982)

UK:         Salaam vaaleykum. Fahadullah mere veer; ladayee ki koyi  shikast
           banti nahin ki aap bahar aakar ladain. Grenade fenk kar wahan se
           nikalne ki koshish karein, kahin aur jaa sakein.

           [Salaam vaaleykum Fahadullah my brother. You should come out and
           fight. Throw the grenade and try to come out  so  that  you  may
           change your position.]

T:          Grenade fenk diye hain donon.

           [I have thrown both the grenades.]

UK:         Grenade fenk diye hain?

           [Have you thrown the grenades.]

T:          Haan jee.

           [Yes jee.]

UK:         Ab kalashan magazine kitni hain tumhare paas?

           [How many kalashan magazines do you have?]

T:          Mere paas do hi hain.

           [I have only two.]

UK:         Giraftaari waali shakl nahin hone deni.  Yeh  baat  yaad  rakhni
hai.

           [There should be no  situation  of  arrest.  You  must  remember
      that.]

T:          Nahin. Insha-alla, Insha-allah.

           [No. God-willing, God-willing]

UK:         Aur ladhna padhega toh hi maamla seedha hoga, aisa na ho ki  woh
           dhooein ka bomb fenk kar aap behosh kar  dein  aur  jaayein  aur
           aapko uthalein.

           [And  it  is  only  by  fighting  that  the  situation  will  be
           straightened out. There should not be a situation that they make
           you unconscious by throwing a smoke  bomb  and  later  take  you
           (alive).]

T:          Nahin.

           [No.]

UK:         Woh badha nuksaan hai. Aap aagey badhkar ladhein,  aapko  kaheen
           se bhi nazar aa jaate hain. Khidkiyon se aap nahin  dekh  sakte,
           nazar aate hi aap fire karo. Fire karo, burst maaro. Uske  saath
           halchal mach jayeegi toh aap nikalne ki koshish karo.

           [That would be a great loss. You come forward and fight  if  you
           see (them) from anywhere. Cannot you see from the  window?  Fire
           as soon as you see (them). Fire, shoot a burst. That would cause
           a commotion and then you can try to get out.]

T:          Chalo, try karte hain, Insha-allah.

           [Very well, I will try, God-willing.]

UK:         Haan mere veer; gun ki barrel  nikalein,  burst  nikalein,  ussi
           burst ke saath dono side nikale aur aap nikal kar jagah  badalne
           ki koshish karo.

           [Yes my brother, put the barrel of the gun outside  and  fire  a
           burst and with the firing of the burst come out and fire on both
           sides and try to change your place.]

T:          Theek hai jee.

           [All right jee.]

UK:         Jahaan baithe hain aapko pata hai ki fire aata  hai  udhar  dono
           taraf se? Pandrah-bees goli nikal jaaye, poori  magazine  khaali
           ho jaaye aur doosari magazine aapke haath mein hai woh  laga  do
           aur aap wahan se nikal jaao.

           [From where you are sitting do you know that  shots  are  coming
           (at you) from both sides? Fire 15-20 bullets, empty  your  whole
           magazine, load the other magazine that is in your hand, and  get
           away from that spot.]

T:          Theek hai, Insha-allah.

           [All right, God-willing]

UK:         Himmat karni hai mere veer, ghabraana  nahin  hai,  Insha-allah;
           goli lagey toh kaamyaabi hai Allah intezaar kar raha hai.

           [Be brave, my bother, don’t worry. God-willing, getting shot  by
           a bullet is to be successful. Allah is waiting for you.]

Killing of hostages

400.  (5)        TRANSCRIPTS FROM NARIMAN HOUSE
                         Talk No. 26 (Ext. no. 990)
(The collaborator talking from across the border has been marked as ‘UK’
and the terrorists holed up in the Nariman House are marked as ‘T’)

UK.II :     Achha, aap yeh khyaal rakhna; jo bandhi hain naa, yeh jab tak
      aapke
           paas hain tab tak yeh aapke upar fire nahin karenge. Samjha meri
           baat?

           [Well keep this in mind, that as long as these hostages are with
           you, they will not fire at you. You understand me?]

T:          Jee jee.

           [Yes, yes]

UK.II:      Inka faayda tabtak hai jabtak aapke upar fire aane se rok raha
hai.

           [They are useful only until they are stopping any firing at
      you.]

T:          Fire jab open ho jaayga.

           [When the firing starts.]

UK.II:      Fire jab open ho jaayga toh aap unko khatm kar do.

           [When the firing starts, finish them.]

T:          Jee Jee

           [Yes, yes]

UK.II:      Baat samajh aayi aapko? Fire jab open ho jaayga to aap unko
           khatm kar do. Theek hai.

           [Do you understand? When the firing starts, then finish them.
           All right.]

T:          Insha-allah.

           [God-willing]

UK.II :     Jab aapne dekha ke aapke upar dabaav aa raha hai sabse pehle
inhein
           khatm karo.

           [When you feel that you are coming under pressure, then first of
           all finish them]

T:          Insha-allah.

           [God-willing]

UK.II:      Kisi army ka yeh daava hota hai ki koyi bhi bande ko taqleef na
           hote hue kaam karna hota hai.

           [Every army has this commitment to do their job without causing
           any harm to anyone.]

T:          Insha-allah. Insha-allah.

           [God-willing, God-willing]

UK.II:      Abhi baat yeh hai ki inn logon ko bachane ke liye approach aa
           rahi hai. Agar yeh log maare jaate hain toh unke desh ke saath
           taalukaat kharab ho sakte hain. Shor bhi mach jaayga.

           [Now the fact is that approaches are being made to save those
           people (hostages). If they are killed the relationship with
           their countries is likely to get strained. There may be a lot of
           noise too.]

T.          Insha-allah. Insha-allah.

           [God-willing, God-willing.]

401.  In view of the enormous evidence of all possible  kinds  it  is  clear
that the terrorist attack on Mumbai was in pursuance of a larger  conspiracy
of which the appellant was as much part as the nine  dead  accused  and  the
other wanted accused. It will be futile even to suggest that  the  appellant
while he was shooting at CST and at the other places along with  Abu  Ismail
had no connection with the attacks taking place at the other targets by  the
other eight (8) members of the terrorist group. From the evidence on  record
it is further clear that the conspiracy did not stop with the  group  of  10
terrorists leaving the Pakistani shore. It continued developing and  growing
even  while  the  larger  conspiracy  was  under  execution.  In  course  of
execution of the larger conspiracy by the ten  terrorists  in  Mumbai,  they
were being advised and guided to meet the  contingencies  arising  at  those
three different places.  In  other  words,  newer  conspiracies  were  being
hatched even in course  of  execution  of  the  larger  conspiracy  and  the
conspiracies came to an end only when all  the  remaining  eight  terrorists
were killed at the three places where they were holding up.

AN OBITER:

Role of the media:

402.  Before parting with the transcripts, we feel compelled to  say  a  few
words about the way the terrorist attacks on Taj  Hotel,  Hotel  Oberoi  and
Nariman House were covered by the mainstream,  electronic  media  and  shown
live on the TV screen.  From the  transcripts,  especially  those  from  Taj
Hotel and Nariman  House,  it  is  evident  that  the  terrorists  who  were
entrenched at those places and more than them,  their  collaborators  across
the border were watching the full show on TV.  In the transcripts there  are
many references to the media reports and the visuals being shown on  the  TV
screen.  The collaborators sitting in their hideouts across the border  came
to know about the appellant being caught alive from Indian TV: they came  to
know about the killing of high ranking police officers also from Indian  TV.
At one place in the transcript, the collaborators and the terrorists  appear
to be making fun of the speculative report in  the  media  that  the  person
whose dead body was found in Kuber was the leader  of  the  terrorist  group
whom his colleagues had killed for some reason before leaving the  boat[56].
At another place in the transcript the collaborators tell the terrorists  in
Taj Hotel that the dome at the top (of the building) had  caught  fire.  The
terrorists holed up in some room were not aware of this.  The  collaborators
further advise the terrorists that the  stronger  they  make  the  fire  the
better it would be for them[57]. At yet  another  place  the  terrorists  at
Hotel Taj tell the  collaborators  that  they  had  thrown  a  grenade.  The
Collaborators reply, “the sound of the grenade has  come,  they  have  shown
the grenade, the explosion has taken place, people are wounded”[58]. At  yet
another place the collaborators tell the terrorists  at  Hotel  Oberoi  that
the troops were making their  position  very  strong  on  the  roof  of  the
building[59]. At yet another place the collaborators tell the terrorists  at
Taj Hotel the exact position taken by the policemen  (close  to  a  building
that belonged to the navy but was given to the  civilians)  and  from  where
they were taking aim and firing at them (the terrorists)  and  advised  them
the best position for them to hit back at  those  policemen.[60]  There  are
countless such instances  to  show  that  the  collaborators  were  watching
practically every movement of  the  security  forces  that  were  trying  to
tackle the terrorists under relentless gun fire  and  throwing  of  grenades
from their end.

403.  Apart from the transcripts, we can take judicial notice  of  the  fact
that the terrorists attacks at all the places, in the goriest details,  were
shown live on the Indian TV from beginning to end almost non-stop.  All  the
channels were competing with each other in showing the  latest  developments
on a minute to minute basis, including the positions and  the  movements  of
the security forces engaged in flushing out  the  terrorists.  The  reckless
coverage of the terrorist attack  by  the  channels  thus  gave  rise  to  a
situation where on the one hand the terrorists were completely  hidden  from
the security forces and they had no means to know their  exact  position  or
even the kind of firearms and explosives they possessed  and  on  the  other
hand the positions of the security  forces,  their  weapons  and  all  their
operational movements were being watched by  the  collaborators  across  the
border on TV screens and being communicated to the terrorists.

404.  In these appeals, it is not possible to find out whether the  security
forces actually suffered any casualty or injuries  on  account  of  the  way
their operations were being displayed on the TV screen.  But  it  is  beyond
doubt that the way their operations were freely shown made the task  of  the
security forces not  only  exceedingly  difficult  but  also  dangerous  and
risky.

405.  Any attempt to justify the conduct of the TV channels  by  citing  the
right to freedom of  speech  and  expression  would  be  totally  wrong  and
unacceptable in such a situation. The freedom of expression, like all  other
freedoms under Article 19, is subject to reasonable restrictions. An  action
tending to violate another person’s right to life guaranteed  under  Article
21 or putting the national security in jeopardy can never  be  justified  by
taking the plea of freedom of speech and expression.

406.  The shots and visuals that were shown live by the  TV  channels  could
have also been shown after all  the  terrorists  were  neutralized  and  the
security operations were over.  But, in that case the  TV  programmes  would
not have had the same shrill, scintillating and chilling  effect  and  would
not have shot up the TRP ratings of the channels.  It  must,  therefore,  be
held that by covering live the terrorists attack on Mumbai  in  the  way  it
was done, the Indian TV channels were not serving any national  interest  or
social cause. On the contrary they  were  acting  in  their  own  commercial
interests putting the national security in jeopardy.

407.  It is in such extreme cases that the credibility of an institution  is
tested.  The  coverage  of  the  Mumbai  terror  attack  by  the  mainstream
electronic media has done much harm to  the  argument  that  any  regulatory
mechanism for the media must only come from within.

ARGUMENTS

   I. Denial of Due Process

Mr. Raju Ramachandran:

408.   In  the  face  of  the  evidence  stacked  against   the   appellant,
overwhelming both in volume and in weight, Mr. Ramachandran  took  a  course
that  would  neatly  side-step  everything.  He  struck  at  the  root.  Mr.
Ramachandran submitted that the appellant did  not  get  a  fair  trial  and
added  that  the  denial  of  fair  trial,  for  any  reason,  wittingly  or
unwittingly, would have the  same  result:  it  would  render  the  trial  a
nullity and no conviction or sentence based on such a trial would  be  legal
or  enforceable.  Mr.  Ramachandran  prefaced  his  submissions  by   gently
reminding the court that, having taken the path of the rule of law, we  must
walk the full mile; we cannot stop halfway and fall short of  the  standards
we have set for ourselves.

409.  The learned Counsel submitted that the  right  to  fair  trial  is  an
integral part of the right to life and  personal  liberty  guaranteed  under
Article 21 of the Constitution of India,  and  that  the  fundamental  right
under Article 21 was inalienable and there can be no question of any  waiver
of the right by any person. In support of the first limb of his  submission,
he referred to the decisions in Zahira Habibullah Sheikh  (5)  v.  State  of
Gujarat[61], T. Nagappa  v.  Y.R.  Muralidhar[62],  Noor  Aga  v.  State  of
Punjab[63], NHRC v. State of Gujarat[64] , Jayendra Vishnu Thakur  v.  State
of Maharashtra[65] and G. Someshwar Rao v. Samineni Nageshwar  Rao[66];  and
in support of the second  limb  he  relied  upon  the  decisions  in  Behram
Khursheed v. State  of  Bombay[67]  and  Olga  Tellis  v.  Bombay  Municipal
Corp.[68].

410.  Proceeding from the premise that fair trial is  an  inalienable  right
of every person, Mr. Ramachandran submitted that in case  of  the  appellant
the Constitutional guarantee remained unsatisfied because of denial  to  him
of two valuable  Constitutional  rights/protections:  first,  the  right  to
counsel  at  the  earliest,  as  provided  under  Article  22  (1)  of   the
Constitution;  and  secondly,  the  right  to   protection   against   self-
incrimination as stipulated by Article 20(3) of the Constitution.

411.  Elaborating the first submission regarding the  right  to  counsel  at
the earliest, Mr. Ramachandran said that the appellant was  not  made  aware
of  his  Constitutional  right  to  counsel  under  Article  22(1)  of   the
Constitution at the time of his arrest and production  before  the  Judicial
Magistrate in remand proceedings. Mr. Ramachandran  submitted  that  a  mere
offer of legal aid is not the same as being made  aware  that  one  has  the
Constitutional  right  to  consult,  and  to  be  defended   by,   a   legal
practitioner, and that simply the offer of legal aid does  not  satisfy  the
Constitutional requirement. He stated that until the appellant was  produced
before the Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate on  February  17,  2009,
for recording his confession, he was not informed of  such  a  right.[69]The
learned magistrate also did not tell him that under the Constitution he  had
the fundamental and inalienable right to consult and  be  represented  by  a
lawyer, but simply asked him whether he wanted a lawyer. This, according  to
Mr. Ramachandran, resulted in the  confession  being  recorded  without  the
appellant being  made  aware  of  his  Constitutional  right  against  self-
incrimination under Article 20(3). Mr. Ramachandran further  submitted  that
the repeated cautioning  administered  by  the  learned  magistrate  to  the
appellant  and  her  admonitions  to  him  about   making   the   confession
undoubtedly satisfied the requirements under Section  164  of  the  Code  of
Criminal Procedure,  but  they  fell  far  short  of  higher  Constitutional
standards. The learned Counsel maintained that telling  the  appellant  that
he was not bound to make the confession and that it could  be  used  against
him  did  not  amount  to  Constitutional  compliance.  The  magistrate  was
required to inform him of his rights under Article 22(1) and  20(3)  of  the
Constitution.  It is only if an accused is so informed that he can  be  said
to have made a Constitutionally acceptable choice either to have or  not  to
have a lawyer or to make or not to make a confession.

412.  The learned Counsel sought to buttress his submission by referring  to
the decision in Nandini Satpathy v.  P.  L.  Dani[70]  and  through  Nandini
Satpathy to the decision of the US Supreme Court in Miranda v.  Arizona[71].
He referred to paragraphs  42  to  44  of  the  judgment  that  contain  the
discussion regarding the stage at which the right under Article 20(3)  comes
into operation; paragraphs 62 to 65 that deal with the stage  at  which  the
accused gets the  right  to  have  the  assistance  of  a  lawyer;  and  put
particular stress on paragraphs 21 to 34 of the judgment,  where  the  right
under Article 20(3) of  the  Constitution  and  the  provisions  of  Section
161(2) of the Code of Criminal  Procedure  (said  to  be  the  parliamentary
gloss on the constitutional clause!) are seen through the Miranda prism.

413.   Apart  from  Nandini  Satpathy,  Mr.  Ramachandran  relied  upon  the
decision of this Court in Khatri (II) v. State of Bihar[72] relating to  the
infamous case of blinding of prisoners  in  Bihar.  In  Khatri,  this  Court
reiterated that the right to free legal aid is an  essential  ingredient  of
due process that  is  implicit  in  the  guarantee  of  Article  21  of  the
Constitution.

414.  Mr. Ramachandran also relied upon the decision of this Court in  State
(NCT of Delhi) v. Navjot Sandhu[73]. He referred to paragraphs  159  to  164
of the judgment where the Court discussed the decision in  Nandini  Satpathy
and  the  US  decision  in  Miranda  and  found  that  the  safeguards   and
protections provided to  the  accused  under  Sections  32  and  52  of  the
Prevention of Terrorism Act, 2002 (POTA), apart from stemming directly  from
the guarantees enshrined in Articles 21 and 22 (1) of the  Constitution  and
embodying the guidelines spelt out in the earlier decisions  of  this  Court
in Kartar Singh v. State of  Punjab[74]  and  D.K.  Basu  v  State  of  West
Bengal[75], were in complete harmony with the observations of this Court  in
Nandini Satpathy as well as the Miranda rule enunciated by the U.S.  Supreme
Court. Mr. Ramachandran also referred to paragraphs 181, 182 and 185 of  the
judgment, where  the  Court  eschewed  the  confessional  statement  of  the
accused from consideration on the grounds that they  were  not  apprised  of
the right to consult a legal practitioner either when  they  were  initially
arrested or after POTA was introduced  in  the  case.  The  learned  Counsel
contended that the reasons for which the Court held that  strict  compliance
with the Constitutional safeguards was  necessary  in  Navjot  Sandhu  would
hold equally good in the present case as well. As  observed  in  that  case,
the protections under Sections 32 and 52 of the POTA  ultimately  flow  from
Articles 20(3), 21 and 22(1) of the Constitution. It  would,  therefore,  be
incorrect to contend  that  the  magistrate  recording  a  confession  under
Section 164 of CrPC had no obligation to comply with  the  Miranda  rule  or
the requirements of Sections 32 and 52 of the POTA only because Miranda  and
Navjot Sandhu are  cases  in  which  confessions  to  police  officers  were
admissible while, under the normal law of the  land,  confession  to  police
officers are not admissible in evidence. It is precisely because the  police
cannot be expected to inform the accused of his Constitutional  rights  that
the magistrate must be required to do so when the  accused  is  brought  for
recording his/her confession. Mr.  Ramachandran  submitted  that  in  Navjot
Sandhu  the  Court  actually  implanted  the  right  to  information  within
articles 20(3), 21 and 22(1)  and  submitted  that  in  order  to  give  any
meaningful content to those three articles it was  necessary  to  read  them
along with Article 19(1) (a) of the Constitution. He submitted  that  unless
a person is informed, in clear terms, that it  is  his  basic  right  to  be
defended by a lawyer he would not be in a position  to  exercise  the  right
under Article 22(1) in any informed and effective manner. He contended  that
it should be obligatory for every authority responsible for  deprivation  of
liberty of a person to inform him of his rights. It, thus, followed  that  a
magistrate, at the stage of recording a confession under Section  164  CrPC,
should mandatorily make the accused  aware  of  his  rights  under  Articles
20(3) and 22(1). Mr. Ramachandran submitted that in this  case,  though  the
magistrate (PW-218) asked the appellant whether he required  a  lawyer,  she
was also bound to find out whether  he  was  made  this  offer  earlier.  He
further submitted that even strict compliance with Section  164  CrPC  would
not  fulfil  the  Constitutional  requirements   in   the   absence   of   a
‘Constitutional’ choice by the accused  to  avail  or  not  to  avail  of  a
defence lawyer. He pointed out  that  Section  304  of  the  CrPC  makes  it
mandatory  to  provide  a  defence  lawyer  at  the  trial  stage  and  this
requirement of law cannot be waived by the accused.  In  the  same  way,  he
argued, the administration of justice mandates the provision  of  a  defence
lawyer at the earliest because a lawyer provided at the  trial  stage  would
be disabled from offering any effective defence if he is  presented  with  a
fait accompli in the form of a confession  in  which  the  accused  condemns
himself.  It is, therefore, imperative that  a  Constitutionally  acceptable
choice is made by the accused before a point of no return  is  reached.   He
further submitted that a statutory caution  administered  by  a  magistrate,
howsoever carefully done in letter and spirit, cannot be a substitute for  a
lawyer’s advice. By the very nature of their differing professions, a  judge
and a lawyer perform different roles in this context. A  judge  is  required
to be detached and can therefore only administer  cautions.  The  nature  of
legal advice is entirely different.

415.  Mr. Ramachandran further submitted  that  the  omission  to  make  the
appellant aware of his Constitutional right to consult, and be defended  by,
a legal practitioner resulted in the  denial  of  protection  against  self-
incrimination  guaranteed  under  Article  20(3)  of  the  Constitution.  In
support of the submission, he relied upon a recent decision  of  this  Court
in Selvi and others v. State of Karnataka[76].  He  referred  to  paragraphs
92 to 101 under the marginal  heading  “Historical  origins  of  ‘the  right
against self-incrimination’”; paragraphs  102  to  112  under  the  marginal
heading “Underlying rationale  of  the  right  against  self-incrimination”;
paragraphs 113 to 119 under the marginal heading “Applicability  of  Article
20(3) to the stage of investigation”; and paragraphs 120 to  144  under  the
marginal heading “Who can invoke the protection under Article 20(3)?”.

Mr. Gopal Subramanium:

416.  In reply to the submissions made  on  behalf  of  the  appellant,  Mr.
Subramanium submitted that  all  Constitutional  rights  of  the  appellant,
including the right to be defended by a lawyer and protection against  self-
incrimination, were fully secured and up-held and it  is  incorrect  to  say
that  the  trial  of  the  appellant  was  vitiated   by   denial   of   any
Constitutional right or privilege to him. Mr. Subramanium  agreed  that  the
Constitution of India indeed accorded a primary status to the  rights  of  a
person accused of committing any offences. Article 21  of  the  Constitution
guaranteed the right to life and personal liberty in the  widest  amplitude,
and  other  related  provisions  in  the  Constitution  provided   for   the
safeguards essential  to  preserve  the  presumption  of  innocence  of  the
accused, as well as for the trial of the accused in an  adversarial  system.
He further pointed out that the rights, privileges and protections  accorded
by the Constitution to a person accused of  committing  a  criminal  offence
were  comprehensively  translated  into  the  statutory  scheme  framed   by
Parliament; and that the  relevant  provisions  of  the  Criminal  Procedure
Code, 1973, and the Indian Evidence Act, 1872, were crafted in  such  a  way
as to translate the Constitutional promises to the accused into reality  and
to ensure that the rights, privileges and protections given to  the  accused
are, in fact, available to him in actual practice.

417.   The  Constitutional  rights  and  protection  referred  to   by   Mr.
Ramachandran are to be found in Articles 20(3), 21 and 22(1)  which  are  as
follows:
    “20. Protection in respect of conviction for offences.
    ... ...

    (3) No person accused of any offence shall be compelled to be a witness
    against himself.

    21 – Protection of life and personal liberty.  —  No  person  shall  be
    deprived of his life or personal liberty except according to  procedure
    established by law.

    22. Protection against arrest and detention in  certain  cases.—(1)  No
    person who is arrested shall  be  detained  in  custody  without  being
    informed, as soon as may be, of the grounds for such arrest  nor  shall
    he be denied the right to consult, and  to  be  defended  by,  a  legal
    practitioner of his choice.”

418.  Mr. Subramanium submitted that the Constitution prescribed values  and
norms and  set  out  standards  of  socio-political  life,  but  for  actual
enforcement those norms and standards were manifested in the  provisions  of
the CrPC. He submitted that in order  to  understand  the  true  import  and
contents  of  the  provisions  of  the  CrPC,  one   must   look   for   the
Constitutional norms and standards incorporated in  those  provisions.  Thus
viewed, the provisions of the CrPC would appear  to  be  the  Constitutional
guarantees at work.

419.  He referred to Section 161 of CrPC that provides as follows:
    161. Examination of witnesses by police.— (1) Any police officer making
    an investigation under this Chapter, or any police  officer  not  below
    such rank as the State Government may, by  general  or  special  order,
    prescribe in this behalf, acting on the requisition  of  such  officer,
    may examine orally any person supposed to be acquainted with the  facts
    and circumstances of the case.

    (2) Such person shall be bound to answer truly all  questions  relating
    to such case put to him by  such  officer,  other  than  questions  the
    answers to which would have a tendency to  expose  him  to  a  criminal
    charge or to a penalty or forfeiture.

    (3) The police officer may reduce into writing any  statement  made  to
    him in the course of an examination under this section; and if he  does
    so, he shall make a separate and true record of the statement  of  each
    such person whose statement he records:

    Provided that  statement  made  under  this  sub-section  may  also  be
    recorded by audio-video electronic means.

                                                         (Emphasis supplied)

420.  He pointed out that the provisions of sub-section (2) of  Section  161
that disallow incriminating answers to police  interrogations,  are  clearly
an extension and application of the principle enshrined in Article 20(3).

421.  A similar position obtains from the provisions of Section  162,  which
reads as follows:
    “162. Statements to police not to  be  signed:  Use  of  statements  in
    evidence.— (1) No statement made by any person to a police  officer  in
    the course of an investigation under this Chapter, shall, if reduced to
    writing, be signed  by  the  person  making  it;  nor  shall  any  such
    statement  or  any  record  thereof,  whether  in  a  police  diary  or
    otherwise, or any part of such statement or record,  be  used  for  any
    purpose, save as hereinafter provided,  at  any  inquiry  or  trial  in
    respect of any offence  under  investigation  at  the  time  when  such
    statement was made:

    Provided that when any witness is called for the  prosecution  in  such
    inquiry or trial whose statement  has  been  reduced  into  writing  as
    aforesaid, any part of his statement, if duly proved, may  be  used  by
    the accused, and with the permission of the Court, by the  prosecution,
    to contradict such witness in the manner provided by Section 145 of the
    Indian Evidence Act, 1872 (1 of  1872);  and  when  any  part  of  such
    statement is so used, any part thereof may also  be  used  in  the  re-
    examination of such witness, but for the purpose only of explaining any
    matter referred to in his cross-examination.

    (2) Nothing in this section shall be deemed to apply to  any  statement
    falling within the provisions of clause (1) of Section 32 of the Indian
    Evidence Act, 1872 (1 of 1872), or to affect the provisions of  Section
    27 of that Act.

    Explanation.—An omission  to  state  a  fact  or  circumstance  in  the
    statement referred to in sub-section (1) may amount to contradiction if
    the same appears to be significant and otherwise relevant having regard
    to the context in which such omission occurs and whether  any  omission
    amounts to a  contradiction  in  the  particular  context  shall  be  a
    question of fact.”

                                                         (Emphasis supplied)

422.  Mr. Subramanium stated that sub-section (1) of  Section  162,  insofar
as  it  makes  any  statement,  in  any  form,  made  to   police   officers
inadmissible,  is  a  mirror  reflection  of   the   right   against   self-
incrimination contained in Article 20(3). He pointed  out  that  sub-section
(2) of Section 162 carves out only limited exceptions  to  sub-section  (1),
to the extent of statements falling under the provisions of  Sections  32(1)
and 27 of the Evidence Act, 1872.

423.  Section 163 of CrPC is also significant in its import:
    “163. No inducement to be offered.— (1)  No  police  officer  or  other
    person in authority shall offer or make, or  cause  to  be  offered  or
    made, any such inducement, threat or promise as is mentioned in Section
    24 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872 (1 of 1872).

    (2) But no police officer or other person shall prevent, by any caution
    or otherwise, any person from making in the course of any investigation
    under this Chapter any statement which he may be disposed  to  make  of
    his own free will:

    Provided that nothing in this sub-section shall affect  the  provisions
    of sub-section (4) of Section 164”

                                                         (Emphasis supplied)

424.   Mr.  Subramanium  submitted  that  sub-section  (1)  of  Section  163
contains the universally accepted principle,  enjoining  against  inducement
or coercion etc.; but it is sub-section (2) that rounds  off  and  completes
the provision by introducing the distinction between  a  statement  obtained
by inducement, coercion etc., and another made freely  and  voluntarily  and
separating the one from the other; sub-section (2)  upholds  the  individual
volition of an accused person to confess to an offence, as an  attribute  of
his free will.

425.  Mr. Subramanium further submitted that the scheme of Sections  161  to
163 needs to be understood in the context of the  investigation  process  in
India. He stated that the inadmissibility of statements by  the  accused  to
the police and the resultant distancing of the police from the  accused  are
meant to adequately protect  and  uphold  the  rights  and  liberty  of  the
accused. Though primarily providing a procedural framework,  the  Code  also
contained provisions meant to  be  substantive  safeguards  for  an  accused
person. Under Indian law, there is no concept  of  incriminatory  statements
whilst in the course of police investigation (except as  contemplated  under
Section 162(2)). The law contemplates only judicial confession, recorded  in
accordance with Section 164 CrPC, to be admissible as evidence.

426.   Section  164  CrPC  is  another  statutory   incorporation   of   the
Constitutional  privilege  against  self-incrimination  and  it   reads   as
follows:
    “164. Recording of confessions and statements.—  (1)  Any  Metropolitan
    Magistrate  or  Judicial  Magistrate  may,  whether  or  not   he   has
    jurisdiction in the case, record any confession or  statement  made  to
    him in the course of an investigation under this Chapter or  under  any
    other law for the time being in force, or at any time afterwards before
    the commencement of the inquiry or trial:

    1[Provided that any confession or statement made under this sub-section
    may also be recorded by audio-video electronic means in the presence of
    the advocate of the person accused of an offence:

    Provided further that no confession  shall  be  recorded  by  a  police
    officer on whom any power of a Magistrate has been conferred under  any
    law for the time being in force.]

    (2) The Magistrate shall, before recording any such confession, explain
    to the person making it that he is not bound to make a  confession  and
    that, if he does so, it may be used as evidence against  him;  and  the
    Magistrate  shall  not  record  any  such   confession   unless,   upon
    questioning the person making it, he has reason to believe that  it  is
    being made voluntarily.

    (3) If at any time  before  the  confession  is  recorded,  the  person
    appearing before the Magistrate states that he is not willing  to  make
    the confession, the Magistrate shall not  authorise  the  detention  of
    such person in police custody.

    (4) Any such confession shall be recorded in  the  manner  provided  in
    Section 281 for recording the examination  of  an  accused  person  and
    shall be signed by the person making the confession; and the Magistrate
    shall make a memorandum at the foot of such  record  to  the  following
    effect:—

    “I have explained to (name) that he is not bound to make  a  confession
    and that, if he does so, any confession he may  make  may  be  used  as
    evidence against him and I believe that this confession was voluntarily
    made. It was taken in my presence and hearing, and was read over to the
    person making it and admitted by him to be correct, and it  contains  a
    full and true account of the statement made by him.

                                                               (Signed) A.B.

                                                                Magistrate.”

    (5) Any statement (other than a confession) made under sub-section  (1)
    shall be recorded in such manner hereinafter provided for the recording
    of evidence as is, in the opinion of the Magistrate, best fitted to the
    circumstances of the case; and  the  Magistrate  shall  have  power  to
    administer oath to the person whose statement is so recorded.

    (6) The Magistrate recording  a  confession  or  statement  under  this
    section shall forward it to the Magistrate by whom the case  is  to  be
    inquired into or tried.”

                                                         (Emphasis supplied)

427.  Mr. Subramanium pointed  out  that  sub-section  (1)  of  Section  164
provides for  the  recording  of  a  confession  during  the  course  of  an
investigation under Chapter XII of CrPC;  sub-section  (2)  of  Section  164
mandates the magistrate to administer  the  pre-confession  caution  to  the
accused and also requires the magistrate to  be  satisfied,  as  a  judicial
authority, about  the  confession  being  made  voluntarily.  Further,  sub-
section (2) has to be read with sub-section  (3),  wherein  it  is  provided
that if,  at  any  time  before  the  confession  is  recorded,  the  person
appearing before the magistrate states that he is not willing  to  make  the
confession, the magistrate shall not authorise the detention of such  person
in police custody. The post-confession safeguard is incorporated under  sub-
section (4), wherein the magistrate is required to make a memorandum at  the
foot of the confession regarding the caution  administered  to  the  accused
person and a certificate to the effect that the confession as recorded is  a
full and true account of the statement made.

428.   The  protection  of  the  privilege  of  the  accused  against  self-
incrimination is thus cast as  a  mandatory  duty  upon  the  magistrate,  a
judicial authority, under sub-sections (2), (3) and (4) of Section 164.

429.  Mr. Subramanian further submitted that the confession of  the  accused
under Section  164  CrPC  is  not  a  statement  recorded  under  oath  and,
therefore, the proceedings retain their adversarial  character  and  do  not
take any inquisitorial colour. He contrasted the recording of  a  confession
under Section 164 with the examination  of  the  accused  as  a  witness  in
support of his own case (under Section 315 CrPC),  wherein  the  accused  is
examined on oath, and pointed  out  that  the  voluntary  character  of  the
judicial confession is, thus, ascertained at three stages:

 i) Under Section 164(2), by the magistrate prior to the recording  of  the
    confession;

ii) Under Section 164(4), by the magistrate subsequent to the recording  of
    the confession; and

iii) Upon the examination of the magistrate, who  recorded  the  confession,
    on oath in course of the trial.

430.   Mr.  Subramanium  argued  that  Indian  law,   in   regard   to   the
investigation of crimes, recognised and put into application  the  extremely
important  distinction  between  an  involuntary   statement   obtained   by
inducement or coercion and a voluntary statement. The former  was  condemned
and completely excluded from consideration as a piece of  evidence  but  the
latter was accepted as a sign of respect for the expression  of  free  will.
Thus, on the one hand, a confession or a statement  cannot  be  obtained  by
means of inducement, threat or promise, as prohibited by sub-section (1)  of
Section 163, but, on the other hand, a confession  made  voluntarily  as  an
expression of free will and volition cannot be  disallowed  as  provided  in
sub-section (2) of Section 163 and Section 164.

431.  Here  Mr. Subramanium referred to the decision of this Court in  State
of Bombay v. Kathi Kalu Oghad[77], in which an eleven-Judge  Bench  of  this
Court examined the true import of Article 20(3) and held  that  “an  accused
person cannot be said to  have  been  compelled  to  be  a  witness  against
himself simply because he made a statement while in police  custody  without
anything more”; and that “the mere questioning of an  accused  person  by  a
police officer, resulting in a voluntary  statement,  which  may  ultimately
turn out to be incriminatory, is not ‘compulsion’”.

432.  In light  of  the  decision  in  Kathi  Kalu  Oghad,  Mr.  Subramanium
submitted that voluntary statements are not proscribed by Article 20(3)  and
do not amount to violation of the privilege against self-incrimination.

433.  Having thus established the connections between the provisions of  the
CrPC  and  the  relevant  Articles  of  the  Constitution,  Mr.  Subramanium
contended that the provisions of Section 161, 162,  163  and  164  CrPC  are
mirror images of  the  Constitutional  safeguards  provided  under  Articles
20(3) and 21, and  that  compliance  with  the  statutory  provisions  would
amount to effective compliance  with  the  Constitutional  provisions.   The
provisions  of  the  CrPC  could   naturally   be   tested   against   these
Constitutional safeguards, and the manner in which the CrPC  provisions  are
to be interpreted would be informed  by  the  Constitutional  safeguards  in
Articles 20 to 22, but once the CrPC provisions stand complied  with,  there
is  no  scope  for  a  separate  and  distinct  species  of   Constitutional
compliance. Thus, the provisions of the CrPC would be amenable to be  tested
on the grounds of ‘due process’, but having passed such a  test,  compliance
with the CrPC  would  entail  compliance  with  the  various  Constitutional
safeguards. The purpose of placing such safeguards in  the  Constitution  is
not to  create  a  separate  level  of  compliance,  but  to  emphasize  the
importance  and  enduring  nature  of  these  protections  by  giving   them
Constitutional status.

434.  Dealing with the right to legal assistance, Mr. Subramanium  submitted
that the right to legal aid and the stage when the right comes  into  effect
are to be found in Article 22(1) of the Constitution, which states that  “no
person who is arrested … … shall be denied the right to consult, and  to  be
defended by,  a  legal  practitioner  of  his  choice”.   According  to  Mr.
Subramanium, Article 22(1) has thus two significant facets:

     i) The enablement of an arrested person to consult a legal practitioner
        of his choice;

    ii) The right of an  arrested  person  to  be  represented  by  a  legal
        practitioner of his choice.

435.  He submitted that the phrase “to be defended” made it clear  that  the
character of the right guaranteed under Article  22(1)  transforms  from  an
enablement to a positive right only  when  an  arrested  person  is  put  on
trial.

436.  In this regard, he made a reference to the provisions of  Section  304
CrPC. He called  the  provisions  of  Section  304  CrPC  as  the  statutory
enablement of the right to legal  aid  and  pointed  out  that  the  Section
provides that, in a trial before the Court of  Session,  a  pleader  may  be
assigned to the accused for his defence if the accused  is  not  represented
by a pleader and it appears to the court that he  may  not  have  sufficient
means to engage a pleader. The effectiveness of the right to  legal  aid  at
the stage of trial is also buttressed  by  the  provisions  of  Section  169
CrPC, wherein an accused may  be  discharged  upon  the  completion  of  the
process of investigation if there is insufficient evidence or no  reasonable
ground  of  suspicion  to  justify  the  forwarding  of  the  accused  to  a
magistrate.

437.  He added that the rationale behind  the  provision  of  the  right  to
legal aid must be  understood  in  the  context  of  the  Indian  system  of
investigation. Unlike certain foreign jurisdictions, Indian  procedural  and
evidence laws do not permit statements made to the police to be  admissible,
and only judicial confessions made to a magistrate in  compliance  with  the
provisions of Section 164 are admissible. The same position does not  obtain
in certain other jurisdictions, for example, the United  States  of  America
and the United Kingdom, where statements made to police officers  are  fully
admissible and used as evidence against the accused. There  are,  therefore,
consequences attached to statements made whilst in custody of the police  in
such jurisdictions; however, the same consequences do not attach  under  the
Indian scheme of investigation of crimes.

438.  Dealing with the Miranda decision, Mr. Subramanium submitted that  the
US decision was rendered in the context of  a  system  in  which  statements
made  to  police  officers  are  admissible  and  it  has,   therefore,   no
application insofar as the  Indian  criminal  process  is  concerned.  Under
Indian law, vide chapter XII of the CrPC, read with Sections 24  and  25  of
the Evidence Act, 1872,  statements  made  before  the  police  are  per  se
inadmissible and a confession is considered as admissible only if made to  a
magistrate, in accordance with the provisions of Section 164  of  the  CrPC.
Indian law, therefore, completely excludes  the  possibility  of  an  extra-
judicial confession extracted by the police in the course  of  incommunicado
interrogation in which the accused is subjected  to  threat,  inducement  or
coercion.

439.  The learned Counsel  further  submitted  that  the  Miranda  rule  was
substantially diluted even in the US and the Miranda decision has  not  been
consistently and uniformly followed in the United States itself. In  support
of this submission, he referred to the judgment of the US Supreme  Court  in
Davis v. United States[78], in which it was held  by  that  Court  that  the
suspect must unambiguously request for counsel and that the police were  not
prohibited from  continuing  with  the  interrogation  if  the  request  for
counsel by the  suspect  did  not  meet  the  requisite  level  of  clarity.
Significantly, it was observed by the US Supreme Court that “a  suspect  who
knowingly and voluntarily waives his right  to  counsel  after  having  that
right explained to him has  indicated  his  willingness  to  deal  with  the
police unassisted.”

440.  Mr. Subramanium further submitted that the principle of waiver of  the
privilege against self-incrimination and the right to  counsel  was  further
elaborated upon by the US Supreme  Court  in  its  recent  judgment  in  the
matter of Berghuis, Warden v. Thompkins[79]. In the said  judgment,  the  US
Supreme Court reiterated the requirement of  an  unambiguous  invocation  of
the Miranda rights by an accused person in order to  avoid  difficulties  of
proof and to provide guidance to officers.[80]  The  US  Supreme  Court  has
therefore developed a parallel jurisprudence with respect to the  assessment
of the waiver by the accused  of  his  Miranda  rights  and  has  stated  in
Berghuis that a waiver must be voluntary, i.e. the product  of  a  free  and
deliberate choice rather than of intimidation, coercion  or  deception,  and
made with full awareness of both the nature of  the  right  being  abandoned
and the consequences of the decision to abandon it.

441.  Mr. Subramanium also submitted that the Miranda principles  that  gave
the accused the right to silence and an absolute right  to  counsel  at  the
stage of police interrogation have not been uniformly  followed  in  several
other jurisdictions. He pointed out that  the  Miranda  principle  has  been
held to be inapplicable in Australia in a judgment  of  the  High  Court  of
Australia in Dietrich v. R.[81].  In this regard, he also  referred  to  the
judgment of the Supreme Court of Canada in  R.  v.  Sinclair[82].   He  also
referred to a decision of the European Court in Salduz  v.  Turkey[83],  and
two decisions of the UK Supreme  Court  in  Ambrose  v.  Harris  (Procurator
Fiscal, Oban) (Scotland)[84] and McGowan, (Procurator Fiscal, Edinburgh)  v.
B (Scotland)[85].

442.  Mr. Subramanium also referred to a number  of  academic  articles  and
papers to contend that, in the United States itself, the Miranda  principles
have been considerably eroded by later case laws.

443.  Next, dealing with the issue of the right to counsel,  as  claimed  on
behalf of the appellant in light of the decision in  Nandini  Satpathy,  Mr.
Subramanium pointed out that at least in two  cases,  namely,  Poolpandi  v.
Superintendent, Central Excise[86] and Directorate of  Revenue  Intelligence
v. Jugal Kishore Samra[87], this Court  had  expressly  declined  to  follow
Nandini Satpathy.

444.  Miranda and Nandini Satpathy, which draws  heavily  upon  the  former,
are, of course, referred with approval in D.K. Basu and  in  Navjot  Sandhu,
but those decisions were in completely different contexts.   In  D.K.  Basu,
the Court was dealing with the use of compulsion  during  investigation  and
the need to insulate the accused from any coercive measures. It was in  that
connection that this Court issued guidelines incorporating the  requirements
that  “the  arrestee  may  be  permitted   to   meet   his   lawyer   during
interrogation, though not throughout the  interrogation”.   Mr.  Subramanium
submitted that the decision in D.K. Basu has construed Article 22(1)  as  an
enablement and not as a mandatory right.

445.  Navjot Sandhu was the case of a terrorist attack on the Parliament  of
India and, in that case, this Court considered the import of  the  right  to
counsel in the context of the provisions  of  the  Prevention  of  Terrorism
Act, 2002.  Mr. Subramanium submitted that a comparison  of  the  provisions
of the POTA with the Miranda principle was quite apt, in that the  statutory
scheme of the POTA, like US law, allowed confessions made to  police  to  be
admissible.  With respect to the right  to  counsel,  this  Court  made  the
following observation in paragraph 160 of the judgment, after analyzing  the
judgments in Miranda and Nandini Satpathy:
    “Based on the observations in Nandini Satpathy case it is  possible  to
    agree that  the  constitutional  guarantee  under  Article  22(1)  only
    implies that the suspect in the police custody shall not be denied  the
    right  to  meet  and  consult  his  lawyer  even  at   the   stage   of
    interrogation.  In other words, if he wishes to have  the  presence  of
    the lawyer, he shall not be denied that opportunity.  Perhaps,  Nandini
    Satpathy does not go so far as Miranda  in  establishing  access  to  a
    lawyer at the interrogation stage.”

446.   Mr.  Subramanium  submitted  that  the  Miranda  principle   has   no
application  to  normal  criminal  procedure  in   India   because   similar
safeguards and precautions with respect to the rights  of  the  accused  are
expressly recognized in India under the law. He emphasized that  the  rights
of the accused (including  the  right  against  self-incrimination  and  the
right to legal representation) have been placed on a  much  higher  pedestal
in Indian law, even prior  to  such  judicial  developments  in  the  United
States.  The learned Counsel submitted that  the  Constitutional  provisions
of Article 20(3) and Article 22(1),  read  with  the  statutory  protections
under Sections 161, 162, 163 and 164 CrPC as well as Sections 24 and  25  of
the Evidence Act, 1872, make the rights of an accused sacrosanct.

447.  He also referred to the decision in Selvi, relied upon  on  behalf  of
the appellant, and submitted that in Selvi this  Court  made  the  following
observations:-
    “In Indian law, there is no automatic presumption  that  the  custodial
    statements have been extracted through compulsion. In short,  there  is
    no requirement of additional diligence akin to  the  administration  of
    Miranda warnings.”

448.  Summing up his submissions, Mr. Subramanium formulated them  into  the
following points:-

       i) The right to  legal  assistance  under  Article  22(1)  is  not  a
          mandatory right upon arrest, but an enablement to be exercised  by
          the person arrested.

      ii) The right against self-incrimination under Article 20(3) does  not
          proscribe voluntary statements made in exercise of free  will  and
          volition.

     iii) The right against self-incrimination under Article 20(3) has  been
          statutorily incorporated in the provisions of CrPC (i.e.  Sections
          161,  162,  163  and  164)  and  the  Evidence   Act,   1872,   as
          manifestations of enforceable due  process,  and  thus  compliance
          with statutory provisions is also compliance  with  Constitutional
          requirements.

      iv) The right to counsel as contemplated in the  judgment  of  Miranda
          has not been followed in either the  United  States  or  in  other
          jurisdictions,  particularly   due   to   the   qualification   of
          intelligent and voluntary waiver.



THE COURT:

449.  Let us first put  aside  the  Miranda  decision  that  seems  to  have
entered into the discussions of this case as  a  red  herring.  The  Miranda
decision was rendered under a system of law in which an utterance made by  a
suspect before the  police  could  lead  to  his  conviction  and  even  the
imposition of the death penalty. From the judgment in the  Miranda  case  it
further appears that the police would subject the suspect  to  incommunicado
interrogation in a terribly oppressive atmosphere.  The  interrogator  would
employ all  the  intimidation  tactics  and  interrogations  skills  at  his
command, not to find out the truth but to  somehow  crack  the  suspect  and
make him ‘confess’ to his guilt. It was in such  a  situation  that  the  US
Supreme Court evolved the Miranda  rules,  in  order  to  provide  necessary
protection  to  the  accused  against  self-accusation  and  to  ensure  the
voluntary nature of any statement made before the police, and came  to  hold
and direct as under:
    “To summarize, we hold that when an individual is taken into custody or
    otherwise deprived of his freedom by the authorities in any significant
    way and is  subjected  to  questioning,  the  privilege  against  self-
    incrimination is jeopardized. Procedural safeguards must be employed to
    protect the privilege, and  unless  other  fully  effective  means  are
    adopted to notify the person of his right of silence and to assure that
    the exercise of the right will be scrupulously honored,  the  following
    measures are required.  He must be warned prior to any questioning that
    he has the right to remain silent; that anything he says  can  be  used
    against him in a court of law, that he has the right to the presence of
    an attorney, and that if he cannot  afford  an  attorney  one  will  be
    appointed  for  him  prior  to  any  questioning  if  he  so   desires.
    Opportunity to exercise these rights must be afforded to him throughout
    the interrogation.  After such  warnings  have  been  given,  and  such
    opportunity  afforded   him,   the   individual   may   knowingly   and
    intelligently waive these rights and agree to answer questions or  make
    a statement.  But  unless  and  until  such  warnings  and  waiver  are
    demonstrated by the prosecution at trial, no  evidence  obtained  as  a
    result of interrogation can be used against him.”

                                                            (Emphasis Added)

450.  We have not the slightest doubt that the  right  to  silence  and  the
right to the presence of an attorney granted by the Miranda decision  to  an
accused as a  measure  of  protection  against  self-incrimination  have  no
application under the Indian system of law. Interestingly, an indication  to
this effect is to be found in the Miranda judgment itself. Having  set  down
the principle, extracted above, that Court proceeded in the next part  (Part
IV) of the judgment to repel the arguments advanced against its view and  to
find support for its view in other jurisdictions.  Part IV of  the  judgment
begins as under:
    “A recurrent argument made in these cases is that  society’s  need  for
    interrogation outweighs the privilege.  This argument is not unfamiliar
    to this Court ……”

451.   Rejecting  the  argument,  the  Court  pointed  out  that  very  firm
protections against self-incrimination were  available  to  the  accused  in
several other jurisdictions, in which connection it also  made  a  reference
to Indian laws.  The Court observed:
    “The experience in some other countries also suggests that  the  danger
    to law enforcement in curbs on interrogation is overplayed.  …    …   …
    ….. In India, confessions made to police  not  in  the  presence  of  a
    magistrate have been excluded by rule of evidence since 1872, at a time
    when it operated under British law.”

452.  The Court then noticed Sections 25 and 26 of the Indian  Evidence  Act
and then referred to the decision of the  Indian  Supreme  Court  in  Sarwan
Singh v. State of Punjab[88]  in the following words:
    “To avoid any continuing effect of police pressure or  inducement,  the
    Indian Supreme Court has invalidated a confession  made  shortly  after
    police brought a suspect before a magistrate, suggesting: “[I]t  would,
    we think, be reasonable to insist upon  giving  an  accused  person  at
    least 24 hours to decide whether or not he should make a confession.”

453.  The US Supreme Court, thus, clearly acknowledged and pointed out  that
the measures to protect the accused against  self-incrimination  evolved  by
it under the Miranda  rules  were  already  part  of  the  Indian  statutory
scheme.

454.  Moreover, a bare reference to the provisions of the  CrPC  would  show
that those provisions are designed to  afford  complete  protection  to  the
accused against self-incrimination. Section 161(2)  of  the  CrPC  disallows
incriminating answers to police interrogations.  Section  162(1)  makes  any
statements, in any form, made  to  police  officers  inadmissible  excepting
those that may lead to discovery  of  any  fact  (vide  Section  27  of  the
Evidence Act) and that may constitute a dying declaration (vide  Section  32
of the Evidence Act). Coupled with these provisions of the CrPC  is  Section
25 of the Evidence Act that makes any confession by an  accused  made  to  a
police officer completely inadmissible.  Section 163 of the  CrPC  prohibits
the use of any inducement, threat or promise by a police officer.  And  then
comes Section 164 CrPC,  dealing  with  the  recording  of  confessions  and
statements  made  before  a  magistrate.  Sub-section  (1)  of  Section  164
provides for recording any confession or  statement  in  the  course  of  an
investigation, or at any time before the  commencement  of  the  inquiry  or
trial; sub-section (2)  mandates  the  magistrate  to  administer  the  pre-
confession caution to the accused and also requires him to be satisfied,  as
a judicial authority, about the  confession  being  made  voluntarily;  sub-
section (3) provides one of the most important protections  to  the  accused
by stipulating that in case  the  accused  produced  before  the  magistrate
declines to make the confession, the  magistrate  shall  not  authorize  his
detention  in  police  custody;  sub-section  (4)  incorporates  the   post-
confession safeguard and requires the magistrate to  make  a  memorandum  at
the foot of  the  confession  regarding  the  caution  administered  to  the
accused and a certificate to the effect that the confession as  recorded  is
a full and true account of the statement made. Section 164 of  the  CrPC  is
to be read along with Section 26 of the Evidence Act,  which  provides  that
no confession made by any person whilst he is in the  custody  of  a  police
officer, unless it be made in the immediate presence of a magistrate,  shall
be proved as against such person.

455.  It is thus clear to us that the protection to the accused against  any
self-incrimination guaranteed by the Constitution  is  very  strongly  built
into the Indian statutory framework and we see absolutely no reason to  draw
any help from the Miranda principles for providing protection against  self-
incrimination to the accused.

456.  Here it will be instructive to see how the Miranda decision  has  been
viewed by this Court; in what ways it has been referred to in  this  Court’s
decisions and where this Court has declined to follow the Miranda rules.

457.  Significant notice of the Miranda decision was first taken by a three-
Judge bench of this Court in Nandini Satpathy. The appellant in  that  case,
a former Chief Minister of Orissa, was summoned to  the  police  station  in
connection with a case registered against her under Section  5(1)  and  (2),
Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947, and Sections 161/165, 120-B and  109  of
the Penal Code, and was interrogated with reference  to  a  long  string  of
questions given to her in writing. On her refusal  to  answer,  a  complaint
was filed  against  her  under  Section  179  of  the  Penal  Code  and  the
magistrate took cognizance of the offence. She challenged  the  validity  of
the proceedings  before  the  High  Court.  The  High  Court  dismissed  the
petition following which the Chief Minister came to  this  Court  in  appeal
against the order passed by the High Court. It  was  in  that  context  that
this Court made a glowing reference to the  Miranda  decision;  however,  in
the end, this Court refrained from entirely transplanting the Miranda  rules
into the Indian criminal process and, with regard to the  Indian  realities,
“suggested” certain guidelines that may be enumerated as under:
    “(a)   Under Article 22(1), the right to consult  an  advocate  of  his
    choice shall not be denied to any person  who  is  arrested.   Articles
    20(3) and 22(1) may be telescoped by making it prudent for  the  police
    to permit the advocate of the accused to be present at the time  he  is
    examined. Over-reaching  Article  20(3)  and  Section  161(2)  will  be
    obviated by this requirement.  But it is not  as  if  the  police  must
    secure the services of a lawyer, for, that will lead to ‘police station-
    lawyer’ system with all its attendant vices.   If  however  an  accused
    expresses the wish to have his lawyer  by  his  side  at  the  time  of
    examination, this facility shall not be denied, because, by denying the
    facility, the police will be exposed to the serious reproof  that  they
    are trying to secure in secrecy and by coercing the will an involuntary
    self-incrimination.  It is not as if a lawyer’s presence is  a  panacea
    for all problems  of  self-incrimination,  because,  he  cannot  supply
    answers or whisper hints or otherwise  interfere  with  the  course  of
    questioning except to intercept where intimidatory  tactics  are  tried
    and to caution his client  where  incrimination  is  attempted  and  to
    insist on questions and answers being noted where  objections  are  not
    otherwise fully appreciated.  The lawyer cannot  harangue  the  police,
    but may help his client and complain on his behalf.   The  police  also
    need not wait for more  than  a  reasonable  time  for  the  advocate’s
    arrival.

    (b)    Where a lawyer  of  his  choice  is  not  available,  after  the
    examination of the accused, the police  officer  must  take  him  to  a
    magistrate, a doctor or  other  willing  and  responsible  non-partisan
    official or non-official and allow a secluded  audience  where  he  may
    unburden himself beyond the view of the police and tell whether he  has
    suffered duress, in which case he should be transferred to judicial  or
    other custody where  the  police  cannot  reach  him.   The  collocutor
    communicate the relevant conversation to the nearest magistrate.”

458.  In later decisions, Nandini Satpathy guidelines and the  Miranda  rule
are referred to, approved and followed in an ancillary way when  this  Court
moved to protect or expand the rights of the accused  against  investigation
by lawless means, but we are not aware of any decision in  which  the  Court
might have followed the core of  the  Nandini  Satpathy  guidelines  or  the
Miranda rule.

459.  In Poolpandi, the appellants before this Court, who  were  called  for
interrogation in  course  of  investigation  under  the  provisions  of  the
Customs Act, 1963, and the Foreign Exchange Regulation  Act,  1973,  claimed
the  right  of  presence  of  their  lawyer  during  interrogation,  relying
strongly on Nandini  Satpathy.  The  question  before  the  Court  was  thus
directly whether a person summoned for  interrogation  is  entitled  to  the
presence of his lawyer during questioning. But a three-judge bench  of  this
Court rejected the appeal, tersely observing in paragraph 4 of the  judgment
as under:
    “Both Mr. Salve and Mr. Lalit strongly relied on  the  observations  in
    Nandini Satpathy v. P.L. Dani.  We are afraid, in view of two judgments
    of the Constitution Bench of this Court  in  Ramesh  Chandra  Mehta  v.
    State of W.B. and Illias v. Collector of Customs, Madras, the stand  of
    the appellants cannot be accepted.   The  learned  counsel  urged  that
    since Nandini Satpathy case was decided later, the observations therein
    must be given effect to by this Court now.  There is no force  in  this
    argument.”

460.  More recently in Directorate of Revenue Intelligence,  (to  which  one
of us, Aftab Alam J., is a party) the question before the  Court  was,  once
again, whether a person summoned for interrogation by the  officers  of  the
Directorate of Revenue Intelligence in a case under the Narcotic  Drugs  and
Psychotropic Substances Act, 1985, had the right  of  the  presence  of  his
lawyer at the  time  of  interrogation.  The  Court,  after  discussing  the
decision in Nandini Satpathy and relying upon  the  decision  in  Poolpandi,
rejected the claim; but, in light of the decision  in  D.K.  Basu  and  with
regard to the special facts and circumstances of  the  case,  directed  that
the interrogation of  the  respondent  may  be  held  within  sight  of  his
advocate or any person duly authorized by him, with the condition  that  the
advocate or person authorized by the respondent might watch the  proceedings
from a distance or from beyond a glass partition but he would not be  within
hearing  distance,  and  the  respondent  would  not  be  allowed  to   have
consultations with him in the course of the interrogation.

461.  But, as has been said earlier, Nandini Satpathy and Miranda  may  also
be found referred quite  positively,  though  in  a  more  general  way,  in
several decisions of this Court. In D.K. Basu,  this  Court,  while  dealing
with the menace of custodial violence, including torture and  death  in  the
police lock-up, condemned the use of violence and  third-degree  methods  of
interrogation of the accused, and described custodial death as  one  of  the
worst crimes against the society. In  paragraph  22  of  its  judgment,  the
Court observed:
    “…..Any form of torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment  would
    fall within the inhibition of Article 21 of the  Constitution,  whether
    it  occurs  during  investigation,  interrogation   or   otherwise……The
    precious right guaranteed by Article 21 of the  Constitution  of  India
    cannot be denied to convicts, under-trials, detenus and other prisoners
    in custody, except according to the procedure  established  by  law  by
    placing such reasonable restrictions as are permitted by law.”

462.  In that connection, the Court examined international  conventions  and
declarations  on  the  subject  and  visited  other  jurisdictions,  besides
relying upon earlier decisions of  this  Court,  and  laid  down  a  set  of
guidelines to be strictly followed in all cases of arrest  or  detention  as
preventive measures. While dealing with the question of striking  a  balance
between the fundamental rights of the suspect-accused and the  necessity  of
a thorough investigation in serious cases that may threaten the very  fabric
of society, such as acts of terrorism and communal riots  etc.  this  Court,
in paragraph 32 of the judgment, referred to the opening lines  of  Part  IV
of the judgment in Miranda.
    “A recurrent argument, made in these cases is that society’s  need  for
    interrogation outweighs the privilege. This argument is not  unfamiliar
    to this Court. [See e.g., Chambers v. Florida[89], US at pp. 240-41:  L
    Ed at p. 724: 60 S Ct 472 (1940)].  The whole thrust of  our  foregoing
    discussion demonstrates that the Constitution has prescribed the rights
    of the individual when confronted with the power of Government when  it
    provided in the Fifth Amendment that an individual cannot be  compelled
    to be a witness against himself.  That right cannot be abridged.”

                                                         (Emphasis Original)

463.  Navjot Sandhu is a case under the Prevention of  Terrorism  Act,  2002
(in short “POTA”).  The law of the  POTA  is  a  major  departure  from  the
ordinary mainstream criminal law of the country. Under  Section  32  of  the
Prevention of Terrorism Act, 2002, contrary to the provisions  of  the  CrPC
and the Evidence Act, as noted above in detail,  a  confession  made  by  an
accused before a police officer, not lower in rank than a Superintendent  of
Police, is  admissible  in  evidence  though  subject,  of  course,  to  the
safeguards stipulated in sub-sections (2) to (5) of Section 32  and  Section
52 that lay down the requirements to be complied with at  the  time  of  the
arrest  of  a  person.   Insisting  on  a  strict  compliance   with   those
safeguards, the Court in Navjot Sandhu pointed  out  that  those  safeguards
and protections provided to the accused were directly relatable to  Articles
21 and 22(1) of the Constitution and  incorporated  the  guidelines  spelled
out by this Court in Kartar Singh and D.K. Basu. In that regard,  the  Court
also referred in paragraph 55 of the judgment to  the  decision  in  Nandini
Satpathy, and  in  paragraph  63  to  the  Miranda  decision,  observing  as
follows:-
    “In the United States, according to the decisions of the Supreme  Court
    viz., Miranda v. Arizona[90]; Escobedo v. Illinois[91] the  prosecution
    cannot make use of the statements stemming from custodial interrogation
    unless it demonstrates the use of procedural safeguards to  secure  the
    right against self-incrimination and these safeguards include  a  right
    to  counsel   during   such   interrogation   and   warnings   to   the
    suspect/accused of his right to  counsel  and  to  remain  silent.   In
    Miranda case (decided in 1966), it was held  that  the  right  to  have
    counsel  present  at  the  interrogation  was  indispensable   to   the
    protection of the Vth Amendment  privilege  against  self-incrimination
    and to ensure that the right  to  choose  between  silence  and  speech
    remains unfettered throughout the interrogation process.  However, this
    rule is subject to the conscious waiver of right after  the  individual
    was warned of his right.”

464.   As  we  see  Navjot  Sandhu,  it  is   difficult   to   sustain   Mr.
Ramachandran’s submission made on that basis. To  say  that  the  safeguards
built into Section 32 of the POTA have their source in  Articles  20(3),  21
and 22(1) is one thing, but to say that the right to  be  represented  by  a
lawyer and the right against self-incrimination would remain incomplete  and
unsatisfied unless those rights are read out to the accused and  further  to
contend that the omission to read out those  rights  to  the  accused  would
result in vitiating the trial and the conviction  of  the  accused  in  that
trial is something entirely different .  As  we  shall  see  presently,  the
obligation to provide legal aid to the accused as  soon  as  he  is  brought
before the magistrate is very much part of our criminal law  procedure,  but
for reasons very different from the Miranda rule, aimed  at  protecting  the
accused against self-incrimination. And to say that any failure  to  provide
legal aid to the accused at the  beginning,  or  before  his  confession  is
recorded under Section 164 CrPC, would inevitably render the  trial  illegal
is stretching the point to unacceptable extremes.

465.  What seems to be overlooked in Mr. Ramachandran’s submission  is  that
the law of the POTA is a  major  departure  from  the  common  criminal  law
process in this country. One can almost call the POTA and a few  other  Acts
of its ilk as exceptions to the general rule. Now, in the  severe  framework
of the POTA, certain constitutional safeguards are built  into  Section  32,
and to some extent in Section 52, of the Act. But  the  mainstream  criminal
law procedure in India, which  is  governed  by  the  CrPC  and  the  Indian
Evidence Act, has a fundamentally different and far more liberal  framework,
in which the rights of the individual are protected, in a  better  and  more
effective manner, in different ways. It is, therefore, wrong to  argue  that
what is said in context of the POTA should  also  apply  to  the  mainstream
criminal law procedure.

466.  We are also  not  impressed  by  Mr.  Ramachandran’s  submission  that
providing a lawyer at the stage  of  trial  would  provide  only  incomplete
protection to the accused because, in case the accused had  already  made  a
confession under Section 164 CrPC, the lawyer would be  faced  with  a  fait
accompli and would be defending the accused with his hands tied.

467.  The object of the criminal law process is to find out  the  truth  and
not to shield the  accused  from  the  consequences  of  his  wrongdoing.  A
defense lawyer has to conduct the  trial  on  the  basis  of  the  materials
lawfully collected in the course of investigation. The  test  to  judge  the
Constitutional and  legal  acceptability  of  a  confession  recorded  under
Section 164 CrPC is not whether the accused would have  made  the  statement
had he been sufficiently scared by the lawyer regarding the consequences  of
the  confession.  The  true  test  is  whether  or  not  the  confession  is
voluntary. If  a  doubt  is  created  regarding  the  voluntariness  of  the
confession, notwithstanding the safeguards stipulated in Section 164 it  has
to be trashed; but if a confession is established as voluntary  it  must  be
taken into account, not only constitutionally and legally but also morally.

468.  In light of the  above  discussion,  we  are  in  agreement  with  the
submissions of Mr. Subramanium as formulated in paragraphs  II  and  III  of
his summing up. We accept that the right  against  self-incrimination  under
Article 20(3) does not exclude any voluntary statements made in exercise  of
free will and  volition.  We  also  accept  that  the  right  against  self-
incrimination under Article 20(3) is fully incorporated  in  the  provisions
of the CrPC (Sections 161, 162, 163 and 164) and the Evidence Act, 1872,  as
manifestations of enforceable due process, and thus  compliance  with  these
statutory provisions  is  also  equal  compliance  with  the  Constitutional
guarantees.

469.  But on the issue of the right of the suspect  or  the  accused  to  be
represented by a lawyer,  we  find  Mr.  Subramanium’s  submissions  equally
unacceptable. Mr. Subramanium contends that Article 22(1) merely  allows  an
arrested person to consult a legal practitioner of his choice and the  right
to be defended by a legal practitioner crystallizes only  at  the  stage  of
commencement of the trial in terms of Section 304  of  the  CrPC.   We  feel
that such a view is quite  incorrect  and  insupportable  for  two  reasons.
First, such a view is based on an unreasonably  restricted  construction  of
the Constitutional and statutory provisions; and second,  it  overlooks  the
socio-economic realities of the country.

470.  Article 22(1) was part of the Constitution as it came  into  force  on
January 26, 1950. The Criminal Procedure Code, 1973 (Act 2  of  1974),  that
substituted the earlier Code of 1898, came into  force  on  April  1,  1974.
The CrPC, as correctly explained by  Mr.  Subramanium  in  his  submissions,
incorporated the Constitutional provisions regarding the protection  of  the
accused against self-accusation. The CrPC also had a  provision  in  Section
304 regarding access to a  lawyer,  to  which  Mr.  Subramanium  alluded  in
support of his  submission  that  the  right  to  be  defended  by  a  legal
practitioner would crystallize only on the commencement of the trial.

471.  But the Constitution and the body of laws  are  not  frozen  in  time.
They comprise an organic structure developing  and  growing  like  a  living
organism.  We cannot put it better than in  the  vibrant  words  of  Justice
Vivian Bose, who, dealing with the incipient Constitution in State  of  West
Bengal v. Anwar Ali Sarkar[92] made the following observations:-
    “I find it impossible  to  read  these  portions  of  the  Constitution
    without regard to the background out of which they arose. I cannot blot
    out their history and omit from consideration the  brooding  spirit  of
    our times. They are not just dull, lifeless words static and hide-bound
    as in some mummified manuscript, but, living flames  intended  to  give
    life to a great nation and order its being, tongues  of  dynamic  fire,
    potent  to  mould  the  future  as  well  as  guide  the  present.  The
    Constitution must, in my judgment, be left elastic enough to meet  from
    time to time the altering conditions  of  a  changing  world  with  its
    shifting emphasis and differing needs. I feel therefore  that  in  each
    case Judges must look straight into the heart of things and regard  the
    facts of each case concretely much as a jury would  do;  and  yet,  not
    quite as a jury, for we are considering here a matter of  law  and  not
    just one of fact: Do these ‘laws’ which have been  called  in  question
    offend a still greater law before which even they must bow?”

472.  In the more than four decades that have  passed  since,  true  to  the
exhortation of Justice Bose, the law, in order to serve the  evolving  needs
of the Indian people,  has  made  massive  progress  through  Constitutional
amendments, legislative action and, not least,  through  the  pronouncements
by this Court. Article 39-A came to be inserted in the Constitution  by  the
Constitution (42nd Amendment Act, 1976) with effect from  3.1.1977  as  part
of the ‘Directive Principles of the State  Policy’.  The  Article  reads  as
under:-
    “Article 39-A.     Equal justice and free legal aid:  The  State  shall
    secure that the operation of the legal system promotes  justice,  on  a
    basis of equal opportunity, and  shall,  in  particular,  provide  free
    legal aid, by suitable legislation or schemes or in any other  way,  to
    ensure that opportunities for securing justice are not  denied  to  any
    citizen by reason of economic or other disabilities.”

473.  In furtherance to the ideal of Article 39-A,  Parliament  enacted  the
Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987, that came into force  from  9.11.1995.
The Statement of Objects and Reasons of the Act,  insofar  as  relevant  for
the present, reads as under:-
    “Article 39A of the Constitution provides that the State  shall  secure
    that the operation of the legal system promotes justice on a  basis  of
    equal opportunity, and shall, in particular, provide free legal aid, by
    suitable legislation or schemes or in any other  way,  to  ensure  that
    opportunities for securing justice are not denied  to  any  citizen  by
    reason of economic or other disabilities.

                                                            (Emphasis Added)

474.  Sections 12 and 13 in Chapter IV of the Act deal with  entitlement  to
legal services, and provide for legal services  under  the  Act  to  a  very
large class of people, including members of Scheduled Castes  and  Scheduled
Tribes, women and children and persons in  receipt  of  annual  income  less
than Rupees nine thousand (Rs 9,000/-) if the case is before a  court  other
than the Supreme Court, and less than Rupees twelve thousand (Rs 12,000)  if
the case is before the Supreme Court. As regards income, an  affidavit  made
by the concerned  person  would  be  regarded  as  sufficient  to  make  him
eligible for entitlement to legal services  under  the  Act.   In  the  past
seventeen (17) years since the Act came into force, the programme  of  legal
aid had assumed the proportions of a national movement.

475.  All this development clearly indicates the direction in which the  law
relating to access to lawyers/legal  aid  has  developed  and  continues  to
develop. It is now rather late in the day to contend that Article  22(1)  is
merely an enabling provision and that the right to be defended  by  a  legal
practitioner comes into force only on the commencement of trial as  provided
under Section 304 of the CrPC.

476.  And this  leads  us  to  the  second  ground  for  not  accepting  Mr.
Subramanium’s submission on this issue. Mr. Subramanium is quite  right  and
we are one with him in holding that the  provisions  of  the  CrPC  and  the
Evidence Act fully incorporate the Constitutional guarantees, and  that  the
statutory framework for the criminal process in India  affords  the  fullest
protection to personal liberty and dignity of an  individual.   We  find  no
flaws in the provisions in the statutes books, but the devil  lurks  in  the
faithful application and enforcement  of  those  provisions.  It  is  common
knowledge, of which we take judicial notice, that there is  a  great  hiatus
between what the law stipulates and the  realities  on  the  ground  in  the
enforcement of the law. The  abuses  of  the  provisions  of  the  CrPC  are
perhaps the most subversive of the right to life and personal  liberty,  the
most precious right under the Constitution,  and  the  human  rights  of  an
individual.  Access  to  a  lawyer  is,  therefore,  imperative  to   ensure
compliance with  statutory  provisions,  which  are  of  high  standards  in
themselves and which, if duly complied with, will  leave  no  room  for  any
violation of Constitutional provisions or human rights abuses.

477.  In any case, we find that the issue stands settled long ago and is  no
longer open to a debate. More than three decades ago, in Hussainara  Khatoon
(IV) v. Home Secretary, State of Bihar[93], this Court referring to  Article
39-A,  then  newly  added  to  the  Constitution,  said  that  the   article
emphasised that free legal aid was an unalienable element of a  “reasonable,
fair and just” procedure, for without it a person  suffering  from  economic
or other disabilities would be deprived from securing justice. In  paragraph
7 of the judgment the Court observed and directed as under:
    “7……..The right to  free  legal  services  is,  therefore,  clearly  an
    essential ingredient of “reasonable, fair and just”,  procedure  for  a
    person accused of an offence and  it  must  be  held  implicit  in  the
    guarantee of Article 21.  This  is  a  constitutional  right  of  every
    accused person who is unable  to  engage  a  lawyer  and  secure  legal
    services  on  account  of  reasons  such  as  poverty,   indigence   or
    incommunicado situation and the State is under a mandate to  provide  a
    lawyer to an accused person if the circumstances of the  case  and  the
    needs of justice so require, provided of course the accused person does
    not object to the provision of such lawyer. We would, therefore, direct
    that on the next remand dates, when the under-trial prisoners,  charged
    with bailable offences, are produced before the Magistrates, the  State
    Government should provide them a lawyer at its own cost for the purpose
    of making an application for bail, provided that no objection is raised
    to such lawyer on behalf of  such  under-trial  prisoners  and  if  any
    application for bail is made, the Magistrates  should  dispose  of  the
    same in accordance with the  broad  outlines  set  out  by  us  in  our
    judgment dated February 12, 1979.  The State Government will report  to
    the High Court of Patna its compliance with  this  direction  within  a
    period of six weeks from today.”

478.  Two years later, in Khatri (II)  relating  to  the  infamous  case  of
blinding of prisoners in Bihar, this Court  reiterated  that  the  right  to
free legal aid is an essential ingredient of due process, which is  implicit
in the guarantee of Article 21 of the Constitution. In paragraph  5  of  the
judgment, the Court said:
    “This Court has pointed out in Hussainara Khatoon (IV)  case[94]  which
    was decided as far back as March 9, 1979 that the right to  free  legal
    services is clearly an essential ingredient  of  reasonable,  fair  and
    just procedure for a person accused of an offence and it must  be  held
    implicit in the guarantee of Article  21  and  the  State  is  under  a
    constitutional mandate to provide a lawyer to an accused person if  the
    circumstances of the case and the needs of justice so require, provided
    of course the accused person does not object to the provision  of  such
    lawyer.”

479.  Then, brushing aside the plea of  financial  constraint  in  providing
legal aid to an indigent, the Court went on to say:
    “Moreover,  this  constitutional  obligation  to  provide  free   legal
    services to an indigent accused does not  arise  only  when  the  trial
    commences but also attaches when the accused  is  for  the  first  time
    produced before the magistrate.  It is elementary that the jeopardy  to
    his personal liberty arises  as  soon  as  a  person  is  arrested  and
    produced before a magistrate, for it is at that stage that he gets  the
    first opportunity to apply for bail and obtain his release as  also  to
    resist remand to police or jail custody. That is the stage at which  an
    accused person needs competent legal advice and representation  and  no
    procedure can be said to be reasonable,  fair  and  just  which  denies
    legal advice and  representation  to  him  at  this  stage.   We  must,
    therefore, hold that the State is under a constitutional obligation  to
    provide free legal services to an indigent  accused  not  only  at  the
    stage of trial but also at the stage when he is first  produced  before
    the magistrate as also when he is remanded from time to time.”

480.  In paragraph 6 of the judgment, this Court further said:
    “But even this right to free legal services would be  illusory  for  an
    indigent accused unless the Magistrate or  the  Sessions  Judge  before
    whom he is produced informs him of  such  right.  ….    …..    …….  …….
    ..... The Magistrate or the Sessions  Judge  before  whom  the  accused
    appears must be held to be under an obligation to  inform  the  accused
    that if he is unable to engage the services of a lawyer on  account  of
    poverty or indigence, he is entitled to obtain free legal  services  at
    the cost of the State…….  We would, therefore, direct  the  Magistrates
    and Sessions Judges in the country to inform every accused who  appears
    before them and who is not represented by a lawyer on  account  of  his
    poverty or indigence that he is entitled to free legal services at  the
    cost of the State.  Unless he is not willing to take advantage  of  the
    free legal services provided by the State, he must  be  provided  legal
    representation at the cost of the State…….”

                                                            (Emphasis Added)

481.  The resounding words of the Court in Khatri (II) are equally,  if  not
more, relevant today than when they were first pronounced.  In  Khatri  (II)
the Court also alluded to the reasons for the urgent need of the accused  to
access a lawyer, these being  the  indigence  and  illiteracy  of  the  vast
majority of Indians accused of crimes.

482.  As noted in Khatri (II) as far back as  in  1981,  a  person  arrested
needs a lawyer at the stage of his first production before  the  magistrate,
to resist remand to police or jail custody and to apply for bail.  He  would
need a lawyer when the chargesheet is submitted and the  magistrate  applies
his mind to the chargesheet with a view to determine the  future  course  of
proceedings. He would need a lawyer at  the  stage  of  framing  of  charges
against him and he would, of course, need a lawyer to defend him in trial.

483.  To deal with one terrorist, we cannot take away  the  right  given  to
the indigent and under-privileged people  of  this  country  by  this  Court
thirty one (31) years ago.

484.  We, therefore, have no hesitation in holding that the right to  access
to legal aid, to consult and to be defended by a legal practitioner,  arises
when a person arrested in connection with  a  cognizable  offence  is  first
produced before a magistrate. We, accordingly, hold that it is the duty  and
obligation of the magistrate before whom a person accused  of  committing  a
cognizable offence is first produced to make him fully aware that it is  his
right to consult and be defended by a legal practitioner  and,  in  case  he
has no means to engage a lawyer of his choice, that one  would  be  provided
to him from legal aid at the expense of the  State.  The  right  flows  from
Articles 21  and  22(1)  of  the  Constitution  and  needs  to  be  strictly
enforced. We, accordingly, direct all the  magistrates  in  the  country  to
faithfully discharge the aforesaid duty and obligation and further  make  it
clear that  any  failure  to  fully  discharge  the  duty  would  amount  to
dereliction in duty and  would  make  the  concerned  magistrate  liable  to
departmental proceedings.

485.  It needs to be clarified  here  that  the  right  to  consult  and  be
defended by a legal practitioner is not to be construed  as  sanctioning  or
permitting the presence of a lawyer during police  interrogation.  According
to our system of law, the role of  a  lawyer  is  mainly  focused  on  court
proceedings. The accused would need a lawyer to resist remand to  police  or
judicial custody and for granting of bail; to clearly  explain  to  him  the
legal consequences in case he intended to make a confessional  statement  in
terms of Section 164 CrPC; to represent him  when  the  court  examines  the
chargesheet submitted by the police and decides upon the  future  course  of
proceedings and at the stage of the framing of charges; and beyond that,  of
course, for the trial. It is thus to be seen that the right to access  to  a
lawyer  in  this  country  is  not  based  on  the  Miranda  principles,  as
protection  against  self-incrimination,  for  which  there  are  more  than
adequate safeguards in Indian laws. The right to access to a lawyer  is  for
very Indian reasons; it flows from the provisions of  the  Constitution  and
the statutes, and is only intended  to  ensure  that  those  provisions  are
faithfully adhered to in practice.

486.   At  this  stage  the  question  arises,  what  would  be  the   legal
consequence of failure to provide legal aid to an indigent who is not  in  a
position, on account of indigence or any other similar reasons, to engage  a
lawyer of his own choice?

487.  Every accused unrepresented by a lawyer has to be  provided  a  lawyer
at the commencement of the  trial,  engaged  to  represent  him  during  the
entire course of the trial.  Even if the accused does not ask for  a  lawyer
or he remains silent, it is the Constitutional duty of the court to  provide
him  with  a  lawyer  before  commencing  the  trial.  Unless  the   accused
voluntarily makes an informed decision and tells the  court,  in  clear  and
unambiguous words, that he does not want the assistance of  any  lawyer  and
would rather defend himself personally, the obligation to provide  him  with
a lawyer at the commencement of the trial is absolute, and failure to do  so
would vitiate the trial and the resultant conviction and sentence,  if  any,
given to the accused (see Suk Das v. UT of Arunachal Pradesh[95]).

488.  But the failure to provide a lawyer to the accused  at  the  pre-trial
stage may not have the same consequence of vitiating the trial. It may  have
other  consequences  like  making  the  delinquent  magistrate   liable   to
disciplinary  proceedings,  or  giving  the  accused  a   right   to   claim
compensation against the State for failing to provide him legal aid. But  it
would not vitiate the trial unless it  is  shown  that  failure  to  provide
legal assistance at the  pre-trial  stage  had  resulted  in  some  material
prejudice to the accused in the course of the trial. That would have  to  be
judged on the facts of each case.

489.  Having thus enunciated the legal position, we may  examine  the  facts
of the appellant’s case.  As noted in  the  earlier  part  of  the  judgment
(under the marginal heading “Kuber”), the appellant was  arrested  by  Marde
(PW-48) at DCB-CID, Unit III, on November 27, 2008, at 10.45PM. At the  time
of his arrest the appellant stated that he was a Pakistani national  and  he
did not have any friend or relative in India.  Marde,  accordingly,  made  a
note  in  “the  Record  of  Formalities  to  be  Followed  at  the  time  of
Arrest”[96] that intimation of his arrest could not be given  to  anyone  in
India but information about his relatives  was  being  procured  for  giving
intimation to them (in  Pakistan).  He  added  that  information  about  his
arrest was duly given  to  the  Crime  Branch,  the  Control  Room  and  the
superior officers. He also noted in the Arrest Panchnama that the  appellant
belonged to an economically weaker section, with an annual income  of  under
Rupees twenty thousand           (Rs.20,000/-) per annum. What is  important
for the present, however, is the note in “the  Record  of  Formalities  …..”
that the appellant refused the offer of legal aid made to him.

490.  We were also shown an undated letter written by the appellant  to  the
Pakistani Consulate/High Commission (“Pakistani Wakalat”),  New  Delhi.  The
letter is in broken Urdu and is written in  half-literate  handwriting.  The
appellant handed over the letter  to  Marde  on  December  10,  2008.  Marde
passed the letter to his superiors, and the ACP (Crime),  Mumbai,  forwarded
it  to  the  Joint  Secretary  (Foreigners),  Ministry  of   Home   Affairs,
Government of India, on  December  11,  2008,  with  a  request  to  arrange
Consular access for the appellant. In this  letter,  the  appellant  asserts
his Pakistani  identity  and  nationality,  and  states  that  after  having
received armed  training  at  different  places  in  Pakistan,  he  and  his
associates made an attack on India. In  the  exchange  of  firing  with  the
police, Ismail was killed and he received gun-shot  injuries.  He  requested
legal aid and asked that the Pakistani authorities should make  arrangements
to take the dead body of Ismail to his home. He signed the letter as  “Yours
Patriotic” (“Aapka Watan Parast”) Mohammad Ajmal.

491.   Further,  on  December  26,  2008,  on  being  produced  before   the
Additional Chief  Metropolitan  Magistrate,  he  handed  a  similar  letter,
written by him in Urdu, to the magistrate. In this  letter,  he  once  again
asserted his Pakistani identity and nationality, and requested  a  Pakistani
lawyer. In this letter, he clearly said that he  did  not  want  any  Indian
lawyer for his defence. He also said that he had already  written  a  letter
to the Pakistani Consulate/High Commission,  requesting  a  lawyer,  but  he
failed to get any reply from there. He requested the magistrate  to  make  a
request on  his  behalf  to  the  Pakistani  Consulate/High  Commission  for
providing  him  legal  aid.  On  that  date,  the  court  remanded  him   to
magisterial custody for the purposes of an identification parade,  recording
in the order sheet that the appellant had requested a Pakistani  lawyer.  On
December 29, 2008, the Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate 37th  Court,
Esplanade, Mumbai, took the rather unusual step of directly  forwarding  the
appellant’s letter to the “Hon’ble Ambassador, Pakistan”,  with  a  covering
letter under his seal and signature. Unfortunately for  the  appellant,  the
country of his nationality was in a mode of complete denial at  that  stage,
and there does not seem  to  be  even  an  acknowledgement  of  his  letters
requesting a Pakistani lawyer. On  February  17,  2009,  the  appellant  was
produced before the Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate  for  recording
his confession under Section 164 of the CrPC, and we have  already  seen  in
great detail the proceedings of the next four dates till February 21,  2009.
On February 25, 2009, a chargesheet was submitted in the case, and on  March
23, 2009, the appellant was  produced  before  the  Sessions  Court  through
electronic video linkage for the first time. He then made a  request  to  be
given a lawyer at the expense of the State. On March  30,  2009,  the  court
appointed Ms. Anjali Waghmare to represent the appellant from the  panel  of
lawyers maintained by the court.  Moreover, since the appellant was  charged
with offences carrying the death  penalty,  under  legal-aid  rules  he  was
entitled to be defended by a senior lawyer assisted by a junior. The  court,
therefore, appointed Mr. Pawar  as  the  junior  counsel  to  represent  the
appellant on April 1, 2009. At this stage, one Kaikhushru Lam, who had  been
clamouring for some time to be allowed to represent Kasab, filed a  petition
against the appointment  of  Ms.  Anjali  Waghmare,  stating  that  she  was
representing a victim of the terrorist attack and  a  potential  witness  in
the trial for compensation for the victim, in a separate  civil  proceeding.
When this fact came to light, the trial judge  revoked  the  appointment  of
Ms. Anjali Waghmare by a reasoned order passed on April 15, 2009,  observing
that there was a possibility of conflict of interests. Then,  after  careful
consideration and consultations with  a  number  of  senior  advocates,  the
court finally chose Mr. Abbas Kazmi, advocate, to represent  the  appellant.
The court selected Mr. Kazmi in consultation with the President of the  Bar,
and taking into account the magnitude of the case  and  the  competence  and
experience of Mr. Kazmi. Mr.Kazmi was then provided a chamber on  the  first
floor of the court building and was given all the facilities to conduct  the
case properly and without any difficulty  (including  round-the-clock  armed
security!).

492.  On April 17, 2009, the confession of the  appellant  recorded  by  the
Judicial Magistrate was opened before the court and  copies  were  given  to
the Special Public Prosecutor and Mr. Kazmi. On that  very  day,  Mr.  Kazmi
submitted an application (Exhibit 18) stating that the  appellant  retracted
from the confession recorded before the magistrate. On  the  same  day,  the
prosecution opened its case. It is another matter that, towards the  end  of
the trial, Mr. Kazmi picked repeated  quarrels  with  the  court.  From  the
orders passed by the court in that regard, it is clear that  Mr.  Kazmi  was
bent  upon  delaying  the  trial  proceedings  and  was  raising  groundless
objections at every step, trying to make it  impossible  for  the  court  to
proceed with the trial. As a result, the  court  was  eventually  forced  to
remove Mr. Kazmi from the trial. Mr.  Kazmi  challenged  the  court’s  order
removing him from the trial before  the  High  Court,  but  the  High  Court
affirmed the order of the trial court. It may be noted here  that  even  Mr.
Ramachandran did not find any fault  with  the  decision  of  the  court  to
remove Mr. Kazmi from the court proceedings. From that stage, the  appellant
was represented by Mr. Pawar, who seems to have handled the case as well  as
anyone could have done in face of the evidence against the appellant.

493.  On the basis of the appellant’s two letters in  which  he  sought  the
help of the Pakistani  Consulate/High  Commission  to  provide  him  with  a
Pakistani lawyer, Mr. Ramachandran submitted  that  it  is  clear  that  the
appellant wanted a lawyer but he wanted a lawyer who  should  be  Pakistani.
He contended that it was, therefore, the duty of the court  either  to  make
arrangements for him to be represented by a Pakistani lawyer or to tell  him
clearly that his request could  not  be  acceded  to,  but  that  under  the
Constitution of India he had the right to be defended by a  lawyer  and,  in
case he so wished, he would  be  given  adequate  legal  representation.  He
argued that apart from the Constitutional and legal  principles,  the  rules
of natural justice demanded that the appellant be so informed.

494.  We feel that Mr. Ramachandran is taking  the  matter  to  unacceptable
extremes. It is seen above that the appellant was offered a  lawyer  at  the
time of his arrest by the police officer making the arrest. He declined  the
offer. He then wrote a letter to the Pakistani High Commission asking to  be
provided with a lawyer.  He made a similar request in a second  letter  that
was handed over to the Additional  Chief  Metropolitan  Magistrate.  In  the
second letter, there is an assertion that he did not want to be  represented
by an Indian lawyer. It is thus clear that, in his mind, the  appellant  was
still at war with India, and he had no use  for  a  lawyer  from  the  enemy
country. Moreover, the negative assertion that he did  not  want  an  Indian
lawyer itself implies that he had received  offers  of  legal  counsel.  But
those offers were not acceptable to him.

495.  The appellant’s refusal to accept the services  of  an  Indian  lawyer
and his demand for a lawyer from his country cannot be anything but his  own
independent  decision.  The  demand  for  a  Pakistani   lawyer   in   those
circumstances, and especially when Pakistan was denying that  the  appellant
was even a Pakistani citizen, might have  been  impractical,  even  foolish,
but the man certainly did not need  any  advice  from  an  Indian  court  or
authority as to his rights under the  Indian  Constitution.  He  was  acting
quite independently and, in his mind, he was a “patriotic” Pakistani at  war
with this country.

496.  On  March  23,  2009,  the  appellant  finally  asked  for  a  lawyer,
apparently convinced by then that  no  help  would  come  from  Pakistan  or
anywhere else. He was then immediately provided with a set of two lawyers.

497.  In the aforesaid facts we are firmly of the  view  that  there  is  no
question of any violation of any of the rights of the  appellant  under  the
Indian Constitution. He was offered the services of a lawyer at the time  of
his arrest and at all relevant stages in the proceedings. We are also  clear
in our view that the absence of a lawyer at  the  pre-trial  stage  was  not
only as per the wishes of the appellant himself, but that this absence  also
did not cause him any prejudice in the trial.

Too little time allowed to the lawyer for preparation:

498.  Mr. Ramachandran submitted that after Mr. Kazmi was appointed  by  the
court to represent the appellant, he  filed  an  application  on  April  21,
2009, requesting for grant of four weeks’ time to prepare  a  reply  to  the
submissions made by the Special PP under Section 226 CrPC.  His  application
was only partly allowed and he was given only eight days’ time, till May  2,
2009, to prepare a reply to the address of the Special PP.   On  that  date,
Mr. Kazmi submitted an application raising the issue of  the  juvenility  of
the appellant, which was rejected by the court  after  it  held  an  enquiry
into the matter.  Mr. Ramachandran submitted that the  time  of  eight  days
given by the trial court to  the  court-appointed  lawyer  was  unreasonably
short, considering that Mr. Kazmi had made a  reasonable  request  for  four
weeks’ time.  The learned Counsel submitted that justice is not only  to  be
done but also to be seen to be done, and  the  short  time  granted  to  the
defence counsel fell foul of this principle and thus  affected  fair  trial.
He pointed out that while appointing Mr. Kazmi the court  itself  recognized
that he was a lawyer of some standard and would be required  to  adjust  his
other commitments. Mr. Ramachandran, therefore,  submitted  that  the  trial
procedure was also vitiated and that it cannot be said to be just, fair  and
reasonable because of the denial of sufficient time to  the  defence  lawyer
to prepare his case.

499.  In  support  of  the  submission,  Mr.  Ramachandran  relied  upon  an
unreported decision of this Court in Owais Alam v.  State  of  U.P.[97],  in
which this Court observed that an Amicus may feel hesitation in  asking  for
time but the court itself must allow adequate time to him for preparing  the
case.  He also relied upon the decision of this Court in  Bashira  v.  State
of U.P.[98].   In that case, the court had proceeded with the trial  on  the
same day on which it appointed the Amicus to represent  the  accused.   This
Court held that the defence was not given sufficient time and,  accordingly,
set aside the judgments of the courts below and remanded the  case  for  re-
trial.  Mr. Ramachandran relied upon yet another decision of this  Court  in
Ranchod Mathur Wasawa v. State of Gujarat[99].  In this  case,  though  this
Court held that sufficient time was given to the  counsel  representing  the
accused, it observed that the courts should adopt a  sensitive  approach  to
see that the accused felt confident that the counsel chosen for him  by  the
court has had adequate time and material to defend him properly.

500.  Mr. Kazmi was appointed to represent the appellant on April 16,  2009,
and he made an application for time on April 21,  2009.  The  court  allowed
him eight (8) days’ time, which cannot be said to  be  unreasonable.  It  is
true that during those eight (8) days some very brief hearings were held  on
2-3 days on the issue of the juvenility of the appellant. But that does  not
mean that the counsel for the appellant was not  given  sufficient  time  to
prepare for the case.

501.  Mr. Subramanium gave us  a  chart  showing  not  only  the  day-to-day
developments in the trial but also giving   details  of  the  hours  of  the
court proceedings on each day, and from this chart  we  are  satisfied  that
Mr. Kazmi was allowed ample time for preparation.

502.  It would be pertinent to  note  here  that  Mr.  Kazmi  himself  never
complained about not being given sufficient time. We may further note  that,
from the record of proceedings of  the  trial  court,  Mr.  Kazmi  does  not
appear to be the non-complaining type, one  who  would  suffer  silently  or
take things lying down. In the later stages of the trial, Mr.  Kazmi  raised
all kinds of objections and left no opportunity to noisily  protest  against
the procedural decisions of the trial court, yet he  never  complained  that
he was given insufficient time for preparation.

503.  We further find that, in the course  of  the  trial,  when  Mr.  Kazmi
requested  for  adjournment  for   cross-examination   of   some   important
witnesses, the court accommodated him on most occasions. We are,  therefore,
unable to agree with Mr. Ramachandran  that  the  defence  was  not  allowed
sufficient time for preparation of the case and that  denial  of  sufficient
time vitiated the trial.

II.   The charges not established

504.  Mr. Ramachandran feebly submitted that the  evidence  adduced  by  the
prosecution did not fully establish all the charges against  the  appellant.
But finding us not inclined to even listen to this he moved on to his  other
submissions trying to chip away at the prosecution case in different ways.










III.  Confession Not Voluntary and Liable to be Eschewed from  Consideration



505.  Mr. Raju Ramachandran submitted that the confession by  the  appellant
was not  voluntary  but  that  it  was  a  tutored  statement  to  suit  the
prosecution’s case. The very language, tone  and  tenor  of  the  confession
showed that it was not voluntary in nature. There were  many  indicators  in
the confession itself showing that it  was  made  at  the  instance  of  the
investigating agency. Mr. Ramachandran submitted  that  the  confession  was
inordinately  long  and  it  was  full  of  unnecessary  details  that  were
completely out of place, as those had no  connection  or  relevance  to  the
offences in regard to which the  confession  was  being  made.  The  learned
Counsel pointed out that the confession started by  giving  the  address  of
the village where the appellant was born and where he spent  his  childhood.
The appellant then gave the names  of  his  parents  and  the  mobile  phone
number of his father; the names of his younger siblings who lived  with  his
parents and those of his elder brother  and  sister  who  were  married  and
lived at different places, along with their addresses. After  the  names  of
the immediate family, he went on to give the  names  and  addresses  of  his
uncles and aunts and cousins, both  on  the  paternal  and  maternal  sides.
Those were people whom the  appellant  had  left  long  before  joining  the
Lashkar-e-Toiba and taking on the  mantel  of  a  Jihadi.  Mr.  Ramachandran
submitted that there was no reason to mention all of them  in  a  confession
regarding the terrorist attack on Mumbai.  He further pointed out  that  the
appellant  seems  to  exhibit  a  phenomenal  memory  in  the   confessional
statement, naming a large number of persons with  their  aliases  and  their
home towns, with street names as well as the names  given  to  them  by  the
Jihadi group, along with the Hindu names assigned to them  for  the  purpose
of the attack on Mumbai. In regard to his visits to  the  different  offices
of the Lashkar-e-Toiba at different places, the appellant would mention  not
only the mode of transport but also the time taken in  travelling  from  one
place to another. He would give the name of the person whom he  met  at  the
gate of the office and then of the person whom he met inside the office.  He
would say what was written on the slips of paper given by one  office  while
sending him  to  the  other  office  or  training  camp.  According  to  Mr.
Ramachandran, all those details were quite unnecessary in a  confession  and
a person making  a  confession  with  regard  to  the  Mumbai  attack  would
normally not go into all those particulars on his  own  unless  prompted  by
some external agency.

506.   He  further  submitted  that  the  confession  as  recorded  by   the
magistrate  was  too  tightly  organized,   well-structured   and   properly
sequenced to be the true and honest narrative  of  the  appellant,  who  was
merely a semi-literate rustic.  The confession started  with  the  childhood
days of the appellant at his village  Faridkot,  tehsil  Dipalpur,  district
Okara, Punjab Province, Pakistan,  and  ended  with  his  arrest  at  Vinoli
Chowpaty in Mumbai, and all the intervening circumstances were detailed  one
after the other in a highly structured and  properly  sequenced  manner.  He
submitted that a person of the appellant’s education, when  making  an  oral
confessional statement, was bound to slightly ramble and many parts  in  the
narrative would be out of sequence, but that was not so in  the  appellant’s
confessional statement as produced before the court.

507.  Mr. Ramachandran next  pointed  out  that  there  were  certain  words
occurring in the confessional statement which could not possibly  have  been
used by the appellant and which show that  the  confessional  statement  was
not in  his  own  words.   For  instance,  he  referred  to  the  record  of
proceedings dated February 18, 2009, before  the  learned  magistrate,  Mrs.
Sawant-Wagule  (PW-218),  who  recorded  his  confessional  statement.   The
magistrate asked (vide question number 14) him the offence  about  which  he
wanted to make a confessional statement.  In reply, the appellant  is  shown
to  have  said  that  he  wanted  to  make  the  confessional  statement  in
connection with the  Fidayeen  attack  on  Bombay  by  him  along  with  his
associates on November 26,  2008,  as  well  as  the  “Sahzish”  behind  the
attack. Mr. Ramachandran said that “Sahzish” is an Urdu word which would  be
roughly translated into English as “conspiracy” but  that  it  has  negative
connotations. To  the  appellant,  the  preparation  and  the  training  for
launching the attack on India were a patriotic duty and  not  “Sahzish”.  He
also referred to the passage in the confession about the  training  camp  at
Muzzaffarabad.  In the confessional statement  the  appellant  is  shown  to
have described Muzaffarabad as being situated  in  “POK”.  Mr.  Ramachandran
submitted that for the appellant, unlike for an Indian, this region was  not
“POK” (Pakistan Occupied Kashmir) but rather  it  was  “Azad  Kashmir”,  and
contended that the appellant could not have  used  the  words  “Sahzish”  or
“POK” and several  other  similar  words  that  occur  in  his  confessional
statement.

508.  Mr. Ramachandran further submitted that  operations  of  the  kind  in
which the appellant was involved work strictly on a “need  to  know  basis”,
such that individual operatives are given information  limited  to  what  is
essential for execution of the role assigned to them.   This  is  for  their
own safety and for the safety of the larger group, as also for  the  success
of the conspiracy. But in this case it would appear that, in the  course  of
his training, the appellant was being freely introduced to  all  and  sundry
in the organization and was also told about their  respective  positions  in
the hierarchy of the organization and their special skills. As an  instance,
Mr. Ramachandran referred to  the  passage  in  the  confessional  statement
where the appellant is taken to the media room of the organization and  Kafa
tells him about Zarar  Shah  being  the  head  of  the  media  wing  of  the
organization.

509.  Mr. Ramachandran pointed out that the appellant describes a number  of
events in the course of his training in Pakistan in the minutest detail.  He
not only recalls what someone said at  that  time  but  actually  reproduces
long statements made by someone else in direct speech, which is recorded  by
the magistrate within inverted commas. The learned  Counsel  submitted  that
this  feature  of  the  confessional  statement  was  itself  sufficient  to
discredit it.

510.  He further pointed out that, at several  places,  in  course  of  some
discussion in a group, the appellant asks a question  to  elicit  an  answer
that would  fit  exactly  into  the  prosecution’s  case.  Mr.  Ramachandran
submitted that, if viewed objectively, those parts of the  confession  would
appear quite out of place and contrived. He  also  referred  to  some  other
passages in the confessional statement, like the one where  the  members  of
the terrorist squad are told that the SIM  cards  for  their  mobile  phones
were procured from India by fooling some  people  there,  and  characterised
these passages as quite contrived and out of place.

511.  Mr. Ramachandran further submitted that the introduction of Fahim  and
Sabauddin (accused 2 and 3) with the maps allegedly  prepared  by  them,  in
the confessional statement, was clearly fabricated. He said that  the  other
two accused were mentioned in the confession at three  places  and  at  each
place the reference appeared to be more incongruous than at the other.

512.  Mr. Ramachandran submitted that, beginning from the Kuber right up  to
his being taken into custody at Vinoli Chowpaty, the appellant seems  to  be
narrating events so as to confirm all the  findings  of  the  investigation.
Mr. Ramachandran referred to the passage where Abu Ismail and the  appellant
proceed in the Skoda car, having snatched the vehicle from its owner at gun-
point. At this point, the appellant asks Abu Ismail  where  they  are  going
and Abu Ismail vaguely replies that they are going to Malabar Hill  and,  on
being asked again, tells the appellant that he  would  tell  him  the  exact
destination only after  reaching  Malabar  Hill.  And  then,  as  they  pass
through the road by the sea, the appellant recalls that this  was  the  same
road as was shown in the maps prepared by the other two  accused,  as  going
towards Malabar Hill.  Mr.  Ramachandran  said  that  if  Malabar  Hill  was
actually the area they were headed for, it is impossible to believe that  he
would not know their exact target there, or that Abu Ismail  would  hold  it
back from him till they reached there. The learned  Counsel  contended  that
the whole passage was clearly an untrue insertion for filling up the  blanks
in the prosecution case.

513.   Mr.  Ramachandran  also  referred  to  two  other  passages  in   the
confession, one relating to the terrorists’ encounter with  two  persons  as
they came ashore at Badhwar Park, and the other  regarding  the  appellant’s
planting of an RDX bomb in the taxi by which the appellant  and  Abu  Ismail
came to CST. Mr. Ramachandran submitted that the first passage was  intended
to prop up the evidence of Bharat Dattatrya Tamore (PW-28), who was  just  a
chance witness and whose credibility was otherwise wholly  unsupported;  and
the other passage was to foist the killings in the taxi blast at Vile  Parle
on the appellant, for which also there was otherwise no evidence.

514.  Mr. Ramachandran further submitted that the appellant  had  wanted  to
make a confession as soon as he was apprehended (see his answer to  question
no. 9 by the magistrate in the record  of  proceedings  dated  February  18,
2009, before Mrs. Sawant-Wagule, PW-218). Even Ramesh Padmanabh Mahale,  the
Chief Investigating Officer (PW-607), said in his deposition in  court  that
he realised in the first week  of  December  2008  that  the  appellant  was
willing to give a confession before a magistrate (vide Paragraph 25  of  his
deposition before the court). And yet, he was brought before the  magistrate
for making the confession as late as February 17, 2009. That  the  appellant
was  produced  before  the  magistrate  only  after  the  investigation  was
complete is evident from the fact that the recording of the  confession  was
completed on February 21, 2009, and the chargesheet was  filed  on  February
25, 2009. Mr. Ramachandran submitted that after the investigation was  over,
the police wanted the appellant to confirm all the findings made  in  course
of the  investigation  and  that  the  appellant  was  produced  before  the
magistrate with that objective.

515.  Mr. Ramachandran submitted that for the reasons pointed  out  by  him,
this Court should keep the  appellant’s  confessional  statement  completely
out of consideration. And if the confessional statement is  put  aside  then
his conviction, at least for the murder  committed  on  the  Kuber  and  the
killings in the Vile Parle taxi blast, cannot be sustained.

516.  We have read the appellant’s confession a number of times in light  of
its denunciation by Mr. Ramachandran as not  being  a  voluntary  statement.
But we find it impossible to hold that the confession is not  voluntary  and
is liable to be thrown out for that reason.  Indeed, some of the  criticisms
by Mr. Ramachandran appear, at first sight, quite convincing, but  a  little
reflection would show  that  there  is  not  much  force  in  any  of  those
criticisms. Before proceeding  further,  however,  we  may  state  that  his
censure regarding the mentions of the other two accused in the  confessional
statement is quite justified, and we too find the references  to  accused  2
and  3  at  three  (3)  places  in   the   confessional   statement   highly
unsatisfactory. We are  also  of  the  view  that  the  reference  to  their
destination being Malabar Hills when  Abu  Ismail  and  the  appellant  were
caught at Vinoli Chowpaty  is  equally  vague,  and  that  also  is  perhaps
mentioned to establish a  connection  with  the  alleged  maps  prepared  by
accused 2 and 3. But so far as the rest of the very detailed  confession  is
concerned, there  is  absolutely  no  reason  to  doubt  that  it  was  made
voluntarily and without any influence or duress from any external agency.

517.   Taking  Mr.  Ramachandran’s  criticisms  one  by  one,  the  detailed
references by the appellant to his  parents  and  a  larger  number  of  his
relatives, their addresses and the mobile phone numbers of   some  of  them,
and his references to the different places in Pakistan, appears to us to  be
directed  against  the  Pakistani  authorities.   It  is   the   appellant’s
assertion, made consciously or subconsciously,  of  his  Pakistani  identity
and nationality.  It is noted above that, shortly after his arrest,  he  had
sent two letters (one  undated,  handed  over  to  Marde;  the  other  dated
December 26, 2008, and handed over  to  the  Additional  Chief  Metropolitan
Magistrate; both addressed to the Pakistani High  Commission  asking  for  a
Pakistani lawyer).  Those two letters were not even  acknowledged  and,  for
all intents and purposes, he  was  disowned  by  the  country  to  which  he
belongs.  Thus, in the statement that  he  made  before  the  magistrate  on
February 20, 2009,  the  appellant  was  making  it  clear  that  he  was  a
Pakistani by birth and by citizenship, and was  making  assertions  that  no
one could deny.

518.  Proceeding to the structure of the statement the  sequence  of  events
narrated therein and the use of some words that prima facie  seem  unnatural
in his mouth. It needs to be kept in mind that the appellant was making  the
statement after being in police custody for several months. The  police,  in
the course of countless sessions of interrogations, would  have  turned  him
inside out, and he would have earlier made the very same statements  in  the
same sequence before the  police  many  a  times.  Under  relentless  police
interrogations, he would have recalled the  smallest  details  of  his  past
life, specially relating to the preparation and training for the  attack  on
Mumbai.  (The  statements  made  before  the  police  were   not,   however,
admissible in evidence as being barred by  the  various  provisions  of  the
CrPC and the Evidence Act, as discussed  in  detail  above.)  But  when  the
appellant went to the magistrate to make his  confession,  everything  would
be completely fresh in his mind.  He would also  have  unconsciously  picked
up those words pointed out by Mr. Ramachandran from his  interrogators,  and
these would have become part of his own  vocabulary.   We,  therefore,  find
nothing surprising in his uttering words like “Sahzish” or “POK”.

519.  As to his knowing the names of many people in  Lashkar-e-Toiba,  their
respective positions in the hierarchy and their roles in  the  organization,
again there is nothing unusual about  it.   It  is  to  be  noted  that  the
appellant was not a mercenary hired for  the  operation.  He  was  a  highly
committed and devoted member of the organization and,  therefore,  there  is
nothing strange  or  wrong  in  his  coming  to  know  many  people  in  the
organization during the course of his training.  Further, it is to  be  kept
in mind that his being caught  alive  was  not  part  of  the  plan  of  the
handlers. According to the plan, he, like the other nine terrorists  in  the
team, was supposed to die in the course of the attack, and  with  his  death
everything would have remained unknown.[100]  It  was  only  thanks  to  the
fact of his being caught alive (which, as the  phone  transcripts  indicate,
made his handlers quite anxious) that the Indian authorities  were  able  to
learn the names of the other people  in  the  organization,  their  specific
roles and their positions in the  organization.   As  to  the  recording  of
certain statements within quotes by the learned magistrate, that is  only  a
manner of how the appellant spoke.  The appellant would say a long  sentence
and then add that this was what so-and-so said.  The magistrate  would  then
record the statement within inverted commas even though the sentences  would
be made  by  the  appellant  himself,  paraphrasing  the  words  of  others.
Further, to say that the confessional statement was intended to confirm  the
findings of the police investigation is actually to blame the police for  an
excellent  investigation.  If  the  confessional  statement   confirms   the
findings  of  the  investigation  that  should  go  to  the  credit  of  the
investigation, and it cannot be said that  the  confessional  statement  was
recorded to confirm the police investigation.

520.  Finally, the production  of  the  accused  before  the  magistrate  on
February 17, 2009, even though he had expressed his willingness to make  the
confessional statement in early December, 2008, is  equally  legitimate  and
understandable.  The  police  could  not  afford  to  lose  custody  of  the
appellant at that stage, as  it  was  essential  in  connection  with  their
investigation, which was still incomplete to a very  large  extent  at  that
time. Once the appellant was produced for recording of the confession  under
Section 164 of the CrPC, the law ordained the  magistrate  to  send  him  to
judicial custody and not back on police  remand.   In  those  circumstances,
the police was fully justified in producing  the  appellant  for  confession
only after completing its own investigation, when it no  longer  needed  the
appellant in its custody.

521.   Leaving  aside  Mr.  Ramachandran’s  criticisms,  the  proof  of  the
voluntariness and the  truthfulness  of  the  confessional  statement  comes
directly from the appellant’s own statements. It is  noted  in  the  earlier
part of the judgment that, on February 18,  2009,  when  the  appellant  was
brought before the magistrate, she asked him when he first felt like  making
a confession, to which he  had  replied  that  the  thought  of  making  the
confession came to him when he was arrested by the  police;  he  then  added
that he had absolutely no regret for whatever he had done. At another  stage
in the proceedings, the magistrate once again asked why he  wished  to  make
the confessional statement, to which he replied that he  wanted  to  set  an
example for others to follow and to become Fidayeen like him.   It  is  thus
clear that he was not making a confessional statement from any  position  of
weakness or resignation, or out of remorse.  He was a hero in his own  eyes,
and in those circumstances it is not possible to hold  that  the  confession
was not voluntary.  It may further be noted that,  though  Mr.  Ramachandran
questioned the voluntariness of the confession, he  did  not  say  that  the
statements made therein were untrue in any manner.

522.  It needs to be noted here that, in the  course  of  the  trial,  after
fifty-eight (58) prosecution  witnesses  had  been  examined  and  the  next
witness, Police Sub-Inspector Chavan was about to enter the witness  box  on
July 20, 2009, the appellant in the dock expressed a desire to have  a  word
with his Counsel.  After a brief consultation that lasted for about  half  a
minute, Mr. Kazmi informed the  court  that  the  appellant  wanted  to  say
something to the court directly.  On being asked to speak by the court,  the
appellant  said  that  he  was  accepting  his  guilt.  The  Special  Public
Prosecutor objected to entertaining any plea of guilty  at  that  stage,  on
the grounds that the stage of  Section  229  CrPC  was  already  over.   The
court, however, rightly overruling the objection, allowed the  appellant  to
make a statement, which was recorded after giving him due caution.

523.  This is once  again  a  long  statement  but  it  does  not  have  the
organized structure that Mr. Ramachandran pointed  out  in  respect  of  the
confessional statement recorded by the magistrate. In his  statement  before
the court the appellant began the story from CST station, where both he  and
Abu Ismail fired from AK-47 rifles and Abu Ismail threw hand grenades  at  a
crowd of passengers. Starting from CST he went up to Vinoli Chowpaty,  where
he and Abu Ismail were finally caught.   From there, he  went  back  to  the
point when they had started their  sea  journey  from  Karachi  for  Mumbai,
recounting their journey first  on  the  small  boat,  then  on  the  larger
vessels Al-Hussaini and Kuber, until he came to the landing at Badhwar  Park
on the inflatable rubber boat.  He then  went  back  again  to  the  various
kinds of trainings that he had received at  different  places  in  Pakistan.
However,  what  is  of  importance  is   that,   though   structurally   and
sequentially the statement made in the court is  completely  different  from
the confessional statement made before the magistrate, it  has  broadly  the
same contents. It is true that in the  confessional  statement  he  presents
himself as the central figure in  almost  all  the  episodes  while  in  the
statement before the court he appears to be perceptibly  retreating  to  the
background. The lead role in and the overt acts  are  attributed  to  others
rather than to himself. In all the offences  that  he  committed  in  Mumbai
along with Abu Ismail, it is now the latter  who  is  in  the  lead  and  he
himself is simply following behind him. The killing of Amarchand Solanki  on
the boat Kuber that he owned up to almost with pride before  the  magistrate
is now assigned to Abu Soheb with Kasab  not  even  present  in  the  engine
room. Significantly, however, as regards  his  joining  of  Lashkar-e-Toiba,
the formation of the  conspiracy,  the  preparation  and  training  for  the
attack on Mumbai, as well as the identities of the men in the  organisation,
there is hardly any omission  in  the  appellant’s  statement  made  in  the
court.

524.  Further, in the statement to the court, though  there  is  mention  of
the hand-prepared maps, there is no mention of their  source.  There  is  no
reference to Fahim and Sabauddin (accused nos. 2 and 3)  as  the  maker  and
the deliverer (respectively) of those maps.

525.  In the appellant’s statement before the court there  is  no  reference
at all to his family but the reason  for  this  is  not  far  to  seek.   In
paragraph 40 of the statement recorded by the court the  appellant  said  as
follows:
    “I wanted to confess the offence. Since Pakistan had been disowning,  I
    was not confessing. I have now learnt that Pakistan has accepted that I
    am Pakistani  National  and  that  they  are  ready  to  prosecute  the
    offenders.  Therefore, I  am  voluntarily  confessing  to  the  charges
    framed against me.  I have made the statement voluntarily without being
    influenced by any extraneous source or reason.”

526.  His Pakistani identity and nationality having  been  acknowledged[101]
there was no need for the appellant to remind  the  Pakistani  establishment
of his nationality by giving details of his family and their addresses.

527.  The court, of course, did not accept the statement that was sought  to
be made as the plea of guilty because it was  a  very  diluted  and  partial
admission of only some of the charges. It, accordingly, proceeded  with  the
trial.

528.  While dealing with the statements made by the appellant, it  may  also
be noted that, finally, in the statement recorded under Section 313  of  the
CrPC, he denied the entire prosecution  case  and  also  retracted  his  two
previous statements.  It is evident that by the  time  the  statement  under
Section 313 was recorded towards the end of December 2009, the Jihadi  sheen
had worn off and the desire to live was  again  exerting  its  pull  on  the
appellant.

529.  In light of the discussions made above, we are unable  to  accept  Mr.
Ramachandran’s submission to eschew the appellant’s  confessional  statement
made before the magistrate completely from consideration.   We  are  clearly
of the view that the confessional statement recorded by  the  magistrate  is
voluntary and truthful, except insofar  as  it  relates  to  the  other  two
accused, namely, Fahim and Sabauddin.

IV.   Conspiracy

530.  Mr. Ramachandran submitted that the charge  of  conspiracy  cannot  be
said to have been fully established against the appellant.  He  pointed  out
that the appellant was charged with a larger conspiracy and he  was  alleged
to have:-

 1) Attempted  to  destabilize  the  Government  of  India  by  engineering
    violence in different parts in India;

 2) Attempted to create instability in India by  the  aforesaid  subversive
    activities;

 3) Terrorized the people in different  parts  of  India  by  indulging  in
    wanton killings and destruction of properties through bomb attacks  and
    use of fire-arms and lethal weapons;

 4) Conspired to weaken India’s economic might;

 5) Conspired to kill foreign nationals with a view to cause serious damage
    to tourism business of India;

 6) Conspired to adversely affect harmony between various  communities  and
    religions in India.

531.  The learned Counsel submitted that if the  appellant’s  confession  is
excluded from consideration there is not  enough  evidence  brought  by  the
prosecution  to  prove  the  aforesaid  allegations  beyond  all  reasonable
doubts.  He  further  submitted  that  the  transcripts  of  the  telephonic
conversation which have  been  pressed  by  the  prosecution  to  prove  the
charges relating to conspiracy cannot be used against the appellant.

532.  We find no force in the submission.  Earlier  it  is  found  that  the
confession by the appellant was quite voluntary and there was  no  violation
of any Constitutional or legal right of the appellant in  the  recording  of
the confession. Hence, there is no reason  for  not  taking  the  confession
into consideration to judge the charges against the appellant. Moreover,  in
the earlier  pages  of  this  judgment  we  had  examined  the  evidence  of
conspiracy in considerable detail, which may  be  broadly  classified  under
three heads: (i) the confessional  statement  by  the  appellant;  (ii)  the
objective findings in the vessel Kuber, the inflatable  rubber  dinghy,  the
different places of attack  by  the  other  groups  of  terrorists  and  the
locations of bomb explosion in the two taxis; and (iii) the  transcripts  of
the phone conversations between the terrorists and their  collaborators  and
handlers from across the border.  In our view, evidence under any  of  these
three heads is sufficient to bring home the charges relating  to  conspiracy
against the appellant.

533.  At this stage, however,  we  must  address  Mr.  Ramachandran’s  point
regarding the admissibility of  the  transcripts  in  evidence  against  the
appellant. Mr. Ramachandran submitted that the transcripts begin from  01.04
AM on November 27, 2008, whereas the appellant was  taken  into  custody  at
00:30 hours on that date.  In other words, the transcripts begin  after  the
appellant was in police custody.  He contended that with the arrest  of  the
appellant his link with the other alleged conspirators was snapped,  and  it
could no longer be said that he continued to be a part  of  the  conspiracy.
In that  situation,  the  conversation  among  the  alleged  co-conspirators
cannot be used against the appellant.  In  support  of  the  submission,  he
placed  reliance  on  a  three-Judge  Bench  of  this  Court  in  State   v.
Nalini[102].  We find no force or  substance  in  the  submission,  and  the
reliance placed on  the  decision  in  Nalini  is  quite  misconceived.   In
Nalini, the Court was examining the question whether a  confession  made  by
an accused and recorded under Section  32  of  TADA,  though  a  substantive
evidence against the maker thereof,  could  be  used  with  the  same  force
against a co-accused being tried in the same case.    The  Court  considered
the question first in light of the amendment of TADA by Act 43 of 1993,  and
came to hold and find  that  while  a  confession  is  substantive  evidence
against its maker,  it  cannot  be  used  as  substantive  evidence  against
another person, even if the latter is a co-accused, and can only be used  as
a piece of corroborative material to  support  other  substantive  evidence.
The State then fell back on Section 10 of the  Evidence  Act,  arguing  that
the width of the provision is so large as to render any statement made by  a
conspirator as substantive evidence if it satisfies the other conditions  of
the Section. Rejecting the State’s submission, the Court pointed out that  a
confession can normally be made when an accused  is  under  arrest  and  his
contact with the other conspirators has snapped, and it was in that  context
that the Court held and observed in paragraph 111 of the judgment as under:-

    “Whether a particular accused had ceased to be a conspirator or not, at
    any point of time, is a matter which can be decided  on  the  facts  of
    that particular case.  Normally a  conspirator’s  connection  with  the
    conspiracy would get snapped after he is nabbed by the police and  kept
    in their custody because he would thereby cease to be the agent of  the
    other conspirators.  Of course we are not unmindful of  rare  cases  in
    which a conspirator  would  continue  to  confabulate  with  the  other
    conspirators and persist with the conspiracy  even  after  his  arrest.
    That is precisely the reason why we said that it may not be possible to
    lay down a proposition of law that one  conspirator’s  connection  with
    the conspiracy would necessarily be cut off with his arrest.”

534.  In the case in hand the situation is entirely different. The phase  of
planning the attack and  training  for  it,  which  form  the  core  of  the
conspiracy, took place  in  Pakistan,  and  the  terrorists,  including  the
appellant,  came  to  Mumbai  in  execution  of  the  main  objects  of  the
conspiracy. The appellant was apprehended while he was on  a  killing  spree
in execution of the objects of the conspiracy and  the  transcripts  of  the
phone conversation of the other terrorists, associates of the appellant  and
their foreign collaborators, relate to a time when  the  speakers  were  not
only free but were actively involved in trying to fulfil the objects of  the
conspiracy.  The transcripts are by no  means  any  confessional  statements
made under arrest and they are fully covered by the  provisions  of  Section
10 of the Indian Evidence Act.  There is no reason not  to  take  them  into
consideration in support of the charge of conspiracy against the  appellant.






V.    Waging War Against the Government of India

534.  The appellant has been convicted on the charge of waging  war  against
the Government of India and is awarded the death penalty under  Section  121
of the Penal Code. In addition, he is separately  convicted,  under  Section
121A, for conspiracy to commit offences punishable by  Section  121  of  the
Code and Section 122 for  collecting  arms  with  intention  of  waging  war
against the Government of India, and given life sentences  under  these  two
Sections.  Mr. Ramachandran stated that the conviction  under  Section  121A
pertains to the incidents at venues where the  appellant  was  not  present,
and in that regard he has already made his submissions  while  dealing  with
the question of conspiracy. In regard to the conviction under  Section  121,
therefore, he  would  confine  his  submissions  to  the  offences  directly
attributable to the appellant.

535.  Mr. Ramachandran was anxious to somehow rescue the appellant from  the
grave charge of waging war against the Government of India. His  anxiety  in
regard to this particular charge stems from the  fact  that  the  conviction
for the offence of “waging war” has been viewed by the  High  Court  as  the
most aggravating factor for awarding the death sentence  to  the  appellant.
Mr. Ramachandran evidently  hoped  that  if  he  succeeded  in  getting  the
appellant acquitted of the charge of “waging war” he would be  in  a  better
position to plead before the Court for  mitigation  of  the  punishment  and
commutation of his sentence to life imprisonment.

536.  Mr. Ramachandran argued that killing of people, even though  in  large
numbers, within the precincts of CST, or the  other  offences  committed  by
the appellant, earlier described under the  heads  “Cama  in”,  “Cama  out”,
“Skoda robbery” and “Vinoli Chowpaty”, by no means amount  to  “waging  war”
within the meaning of Section 121 of the  Penal  Code.   To  constitute  the
offence of “waging  war”,  there  must  be  a  challenge  to  the  sovereign
authority of the Government of India, which  is  completely  absent  in  the
present case.  The learned Counsel submitted that  the  acts  said  to  have
been committed by the appellant may constitute a terrorist  act  within  the
meaning of Section 15 of the Unlawful  Activities  (Prevention)  Act,  1967,
but not “waging war”. He further submitted that if the views  of  the  trial
court and the High Court were to be upheld,  it  would  amount  to  equating
every terrorist act with waging war.

537.   Mr.  Ramachandran  submitted  that  even  assuming  that  the   words
“Government of India” in Section 121 of the Penal Code are  to  be  read  as
synonymous with the Indian State, that would not  make  the  attack  on  CST
Station “waging war” within the meaning of that Section. The attack  on  CST
was not an attack directly targeting any important symbol of  the  State  or
any vital establishment of the State or any important functionaries  of  the
State. The intent to weaken or terrorize the State may render such an act  a
‘terrorist act’ but it would still not satisfy the  ingredients  of  Section
121 of the Penal Code. The learned Counsel went on to contend that,  in  any
event, after the enactment of the very comprehensive provisions  in  Chapter
IV of the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act,  1967,   the  provisions  of
Section 121 of the Penal Code would cease to apply to  terrorist  attack  on
the Indian State on principles analogous  to  those  governing  the  implied
repeal of statute.

538.  Mr. Ramachandran  further  submitted  that,  similarly,  the  mindless
killing of persons in a public place would not  constitute  the  offence  of
“waging war” against the Indian State.  Any argument that  an  attack  on  a
place which is no more than  the  hub  of  a  public  transportation  system
amounts to an attack on the State is, according to Mr.  Ramachandran,  quite
fallacious in the  context  of  a  criminal  statute.  The  learned  Counsel
submitted that to say that an attack on a very important  and  busy  railway
station or an attack on India’s financial capital or  economic  might  would
be an attack on the  State  would  amount  to  giving  a  greatly  extended,
expansive  and  liberal  meaning  to  a  criminal  statute,  which  is   not
permissible.

539.  Mr. Ramachandran further submitted that on  the  question  of  “waging
war” the present case was not comparable to the cases of Navjot  Sandhu  and
Mohd. Arif v. State of Delhi[103]. In Navjot  Sandhu  and  Mohd.  Arif,  the
targets of attack were the Parliament building and the Red Fort, which  this
Court held were clearly symbols of the Indian  State  and  its  sovereignty.
According to Mr. Ramachandran, the same could not be said of CST,  which  is
only a public building.

540.  The offences concerning “waging war” are in Chapter VI  of  the  Penal
Code under the heading “of offences against the  State”.  Section  121  uses
the phrase ‘Government of India’ and it provides as follows:-
    “121.  Waging, or attempting to wage war, or abetting  waging  of  war,
    against the Government of India.  –  Whoever,  wages  war  against  the
    Government of India, or attempts to wage such war, or abets the  waging
    of such war, shall be punished with death, or imprisonment for life and
    shall also be liable to fine.”

541.  Section 121A makes a  conspiracy  to  commit  offences  punishable  by
Section 121 per se an offence punishable with imprisonment for life  or  for
a period that may extend to ten (10) years. The explanation to  the  Section
makes it clear that the offence is complete even without any act or  illegal
omission occurring in pursuance of the conspiracy.  This  Section  uses  the
expression ‘the Central Government or any State  Government’.   The  Section
reads as under:-
    “121A. Conspiracy to commit  offences  punishable  by  Section  121.  –
    Whoever within or without India conspires to commit any of the offences
    punishable by Section  121,  or  conspires  to  overawe,  by  means  of
    criminal force or the show of criminal force, the Central Government or
    any State Government, shall be punished with imprisonment for life,  or
    with imprisonment of either description which may extend to ten  years,
    and shall also be liable to fine.

    Explanation.- To constitute a conspiracy under this section, it is  not
    necessary that  any  act  or  illegal  omission  shall  take  place  in
    pursuance thereof.”

542.  Section 122 similarly makes  collection  of  arms  with  intention  of
“waging war” per se an offence, regardless of whether or not the  arms  were
put to actual use.  This Section again uses the  expression  “Government  of
India” and it reads as under:-
    “122.  Collecting arms, etc., with intention of waging war against  the
    Government of India. – Whoever collects  men,  arms  or  ammunition  or
    otherwise prepares to wage war with the intention of either  waging  or
    being prepared to wage war against the Government of  India,  shall  be
    punished  with  imprisonment  for  life  or  imprisonment   of   either
    description for a term not exceeding  ten  years,  and  shall  also  be
    liable to fine.”

543.  Section 123 deals with ‘Concealing with intent  to  facilitate  design
to wage war against the  Government  of  India’.   Section  125  deals  with
‘Waging war against any Asiatic Power in alliance  with  the  Government  of
India’, and Section 126 deals with ‘Committing  depredation  on  territories
of Power at peace with the Government of India’.

544.  Here it may also be noted that Section 39 CrPC read with  Section  176
of the Penal Code makes it an offence for any person who  is  aware  of  the
commission of, or of the intention of  any  person  to  commit,  an  offence
under Sections 121 to 126, both inclusive (that  is,  offences  against  the
State specified in Chapter VI of the Code), to omit  giving  any  notice  or
furnishing any information to any public servant.  Moreover, Section 123  of
the Penal Code makes it an offence to conceal, whether by act  or  omission,
the existence of a design to “wage war” against  the  Government  of  India,
when intending by such concealment  to  facilitate,  or  knowing  it  to  be
likely that such concealing will facilitate, the waging of such war.

545.  The question that arises for consideration, therefore, is what is  the
true import of the expression “Government of India”? In its narrower  sense,
Government of India is only the executive limb of the State. It comprises  a
group of people, the administrative bureaucracy that controls the  executive
functions and powers of the State at a given  time.  Different  governments,
in continuous succession, serve the State  and  provide  the  means  through
which  the  executive  power  of  the  State  is  employed.  The  expression
“Government of India” is surely not  used  in  this  narrow  and  restricted
sense in Section 121. In our considered view, the expression “Government  of
India” is used in Section 121  to  imply  the  Indian  State,  the  juristic
embodiment of the sovereignty of the country  that  derives  its  legitimacy
from the collective will and consent of its people. The use  of  the  phrase
“Government of India” to signify the notion  of  sovereignty  is  consistent
with the principles of Public International Law, wherein  sovereignty  of  a
territorial unit is deemed to vest  in  the  people  of  the  territory  and
exercised by a representative government.

546.  It is important to note here that earlier the  word  used  in  Section
121 (as well as all the other  Sections  referred  to  above)  was  ”Queen”.
After  the  formation  of  the  republic  under  the  Constitution  it   was
substituted by the expression “Government of India” by the Adaption of  Laws
Order of 1950. In a  republic,  sovereignty  vests  in  the  people  of  the
country and the lawfully elected government  is  simply  the  representative
and a manifestation of the  sovereign,  that  is,  the  people.   Thus,  the
expression “Government of India”, as appearing in Section 121, must be  held
to mean the State or interchangeably  the  people  of  the  country  as  the
repository of the sovereignty of India which  is  manifested  and  expressed
through the elected Government.

547.  An illuminating discussion on the issue of  “Waging  war  against  the
Government of India” is to be found  in  this  Court’s  decision  in  Navjot
Sandhu. In paragraph 272 of the judgment P. Venkatarama Reddi, J.,  speaking
for the Court, referred to the report of  the  Indian  Law  Commission  that
examined the draft Penal Code in 1847 and quoted the following passage  from
the report:
    “We conceive the term ‘ wages war against the Government’ naturally  to
    import a person arraying himself in defiance of the Government in  like
    manner and by like means as a foreign enemy would do, and it  seems  to
    us, we presume it did to the authors of the Code that any definition of
    the term so unambiguous would be superfluous.”

548.  To us, the expression, “in like manner and by like means as a  foreign
enemy” (highlighted by us in the above quotation), is  very  significant  to
understand the nature of the violent acts that would amount to  waging  war.
In “waging war”, the intent of the foreign enemy  is  not  only  to  disturb
public peace or law and order or  to  kill  many  people.  A  foreign  enemy
strikes at the sovereignty of the State, and his conspiracy and actions  are
motivated by that animus.

549.  In Navjot Sandhu, the issue of “waging war” against the Government  of
India has also been considered in relation to terrorist  acts  and  in  that
regard the Court observed and held as follows:
     “275. War, terrorism and  violent  acts  to  overawe  the  established
    Government have  many  things  in  common.   It  is  not  too  easy  to
    distinguish them……

    276.   It has been aptly said by Sir J.F. Stephen:

      “Unlawful assemblies, riots, insurrections,  rebellions,  levying  of
    war are offences which run into each other and  not  capable  of  being
    marked off by perfectly definite  boundaries.   All  of  them  have  in
    common one feature, namely, that the normal tranquility of a  civilized
    society is, in each of the cases mentioned, disturbed either by  actual
    force or at least by the show and threat of it.”

    277.   To this list has to be  added  “terrorist  acts”  which  are  so
    conspicuous now-a-days.  Though every terrorist act does not amount  to
    waging war, certain terrorist acts can also constitute the  offence  of
    waging war and there is no dichotomy between the two.   Terrorist  acts
    can manifest themselves into acts of war.   According  to  the  learned
    Senior Counsel for the State, terrorist acts prompted by  an  intention
    to  strike  at  the  sovereign  authority  of   the   State/Government,
    tantamount to waging war irrespective of the  number  involved  or  the
    force employed.

    278.   It is seen that the first limb of Section 3(1) of POTA-

         “with  intent  to  threaten  the  unity,  integrity,  security   or
         sovereignty of India or to strike  terror  in  the  people  or  any
         section of the people  does  any  act  or  thing  by  using  bombs,
         dynamite or other explosive substances or inflammable substances or
         firearms or other lethal weapons or poisons  or  noxious  gases  or
         other chemicals or by any other substances (whether  biological  or
         otherwise) of a hazardous nature or by any other means whatsoever”.



    and the acts of waging war have  overlapping  features.   However,  the
    degree of animus or intent and  the  magnitude  of  the  acts  done  or
    attempted to be done would assume some relevance in order  to  consider
    whether the terrorist acts give rise to  a  state  of  war.   Yet,  the
    demarcating line is by no means clear, much less  transparent.   It  is
    often a difference in  degree.   The  distinction  gets  thinner  if  a
    comparison is made of terrorist acts with the acts aimed  at  overawing
    the Government by means of criminal force.  Conspiracy  to  commit  the
    latter offence is covered by Section 121-A.”

550.  This answers Mr. Ramachandran’s submissions to the effect that  if  an
offence comes within the definition of “terrorist act” under Section  15  of
the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, it would  automatically  fall  out
of Section 121 of the Penal Code, as  also  his  rather  extreme  submission
that  the  incorporation  of  Chapter  IV   of   the   Unlawful   Activities
(Prevention) Act, 1967, should be viewed as deemed repeal of Section 121  of
the Penal Code. As explained in Navjot Sandhu, a “terrorist act” and an  act
of “waging war against the Government of India” may  have  some  overlapping
features, but a terrorist act may  not  always  be  an  act  of  waging  war
against the Government of India, and vice-versa. The provisions  of  Chapter
IV of the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act and those of  Chapter  VI  of
the Penal Code, including Section 121, basically cover different areas.

551.  Coming back to the facts of  the  case  in  hand,  we  find  that  the
primary and the first offence that the  appellant  and  his  co-conspirators
committed was the offence of waging war against the Government of India.  It
does not matter that the target assigned to the  appellant  and  Abu  Ismail
was CST Station (according to  Mr.  Ramachandran,  no  more  than  a  public
building) where they killed a large number of people  or  that  they  killed
many others on Badruddin Tayabji Marg and in Cama Hospital. What matters  is
that the  attack  was  aimed  at  India  and  Indians.  It  was  by  foreign
nationals. People were killed for no other reason than  they  were  Indians;
in case of foreigners, they were killed  because  their  killing  on  Indian
soil would embarrass India. The conspiracy,  in  furtherance  of  which  the
attack was made, was, inter alia, to hit at India; to hit at  its  financial
centre; to try to give rise to communal tensions and create internal  strife
and insurgency; to demand that India should withdraw from  Kashmir;  and  to
dictate its relations with other countries. It was in furtherance  of  those
objectives that the attack was made, causing the loss of a large  number  of
people and injury to an even greater number of people.  Nothing  could  have
been more “in like manner and by like means as a foreign enemy would do”.

552.   In  this  connection  Mr.  Gopal  Subramanium  has  referred  to  the
transcripts  of  the  conversations  between  the   terrorists   and   their
collaborators across the border.  The  learned  Counsel  referred  from  the
appellant’s  confessional  statement  made  before  the  magistrate  to  the
passages where instructions are given by Amir Hafiz Sayeed  (wanted  accused
no. 1),  Zaki-ur-Rehman  Lakhvi  (wanted  accused  no.  2),  and  others  in
connection with the main purpose of the  attack.   He  also  referred  to  a
number of  passages  from  the  transcripts  of  conversations  between  the
terrorists and their collaborators across the border (which we have  already
referred to in the earlier part of the judgment), to show  that  the  attack
was clearly an enemy action. We are of the view that the submission  of  Mr.
Subramanium is well-founded and fit to be accepted.

553.  On a careful consideration of the submissions of  the  two  sides  and
the materials on record we have no hesitation in holding that the  appellant
has been rightly held guilty of waging war against the Government  of  India
and rightly convicted under Sections 121, 121A and 122 of the Penal Code.



VI.   The Question of Sentence

554.  The trial court has awarded five (5) death sentences to the  appellant
for the offences punishable under:

     i) Section 120B IPC read with Section 302 IPC for conspiracy to  commit
        murder;

    ii) Section 121 IPC for waging war against the Government of India;

   iii) Section 16 of the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967;

    iv) Section 302 IPC for committing murder of 7 persons;

     v) Section 302 IPC read with Section 34 and Section 302 IPC  read  with
        Sections 109 and 120-B IPC.

555.  The High Court confirmed the death sentences given  to  the  appellant
by the trial court.

556.  Mr. Ramachandran, however,  submitted  that  in  no  case  should  the
appellant be given the death penalty. The learned Counsel submitted that  no
person  can  be  deprived  of  his  life  except  according   to   procedure
established by law. It is now well-established that the “procedure” must  be
fair, just and reasonable, in other words  following  the  “due  process  of
law”. Hence, the Court must refrain from awarding  the  extreme  penalty  of
death, irrevocable and irreversible in nature, in a case where there is  the
slightest doubt regarding the complete fairness of the  trial.  The  learned
Counsel submitted that the appellant’s trial was compromised on due  process
and, therefore, he should not be given the death sentence.

557.  Mr. Ramachandran’s contention that the  trial  of  the  appellant  was
less than completely fair is based on  the  same  grounds  that  he  earlier
advanced to suggest that the trial was vitiated and nullified. He  submitted
that the  appellant’s  confession  was  recorded  without  adhering  to  the
constitutional safeguards and that the lawyer  nominated  to  represent  him
was not given a reasonable time to prepare the  case.  The  learned  Counsel
submitted that an unhappy compromise  was  struck  between  the  demands  of
speedy trial and the requirements of a fair trial in this case, and in  that
situation, prudence would demand that this  Court  should  not  confirm  the
death penalty given to the appellant but change it to life sentence.

558.  In the earlier parts of the judgment we  have  already  considered  in
detail both the submissions and found them  not  worthy  of  acceptance.  We
have held that there was  no  lowering  of  the  standard  of  fairness  and
reasonableness in the appellant’s trial and it, therefore, follows  that  no
mitigation in punishment can be asked for on that score.

559.  Mr. Ramachandran next submitted that the High Court  has  committed  a
serious error in balancing the aggravating and the mitigating  circumstances
against the appellant. The High Court has viewed the appellant’s  conviction
for “waging war” as the most aggravating circumstance for awarding  him  the
death penalty after wrongly holding him guilty of  the  charge  relating  to
waging war against the Government of India. Further, the High Court  wrongly
held the appellant “individually responsible” for the murder  of  seven  (7)
persons, including Amarchand Solanki.  The  High  Court  erroneously  relied
upon the testimony of a single witness (PW-52) who said  that  while  firing
at the crowd of passengers at CST the appellant was in a “joyous mood”  (  a
fact which the witness did not mention in his statement before the police)

560.  As to the charge of waging war against the  Government  of  India  and
the appellant being personally responsible for  the  killing  of  seven  (7)
people, including Amarchand Solanki, those are fully in accord with our  own
findings, arrived at independently, and hence,  the  High  Court  was  quite
justified in taking those facts into account for determining the  punishment
for the appellant. As regards the statement of PW-52 that the appellant  was
in “joyous mood”, nothing depends on that and we asked Mr.  Ramachandran  to
address us on  the  issue  of  sentence  keeping  that  statement  by  PW-52
completely aside.

561.  Mr. Ramachandran submitted that the strongest reason  for  not  giving
the death penalty to the appellant was his  young  age;  the  appellant  was
barely twenty-one (21) years old at  the  time  of  the  commission  of  the
offences. And now he would be twenty-five (25) years of age.  It  is  indeed
correct that the appellant is quite young, but having said  that  one  would
think that nothing was left to be said for him. Mr.  Ramachandran,  however,
thinks otherwise and he has many more  things  to  say  in  the  appellant’s
favour. Mr. Ramachandran submitted that the Court cannot ignore  the  family
and educational background and the economic circumstances of the  appellant,
and in determining the just punishment to him the  Court  must  take  those,
too, into account. The learned Counsel submitted that here is a boy who,  as
a child, loved to watch Indian movies. But he hardly had  a  childhood  like
other children. He dropped out of school after class IV and  was  forced  to
start earning by hard manual labour. Soon thereafter, he had a quarrel  with
his father over his earnings and that led to his leaving his home.  At  that
immature age, living away from home and family and  earning  his  livelihood
by manual labour, he was allured by a group of fanatic  murderers  seemingly
engaged in social work. He thought that he  too  should  contribute  towards
helping the Kashmiris, who he was led  to  believe  were  oppressed  by  the
Indian Government. Mr. Ramachandran submitted that, seen from his  point  of
view, the appellant may appear completely and dangerously  wayward  but  his
motivation was good and patriotic. Mr. Ramachandran further  submitted  that
once trapped by Lashkar-e-Toiba he was completely brain-washed and became  a
tool in their hand. While executing the attack on Mumbai,  along  with  nine
(9) other terrorists, the appellant was hardly in control of his  own  mind.
He was almost like  an  automaton  working  under  remote  control,  a  mere
extension of the deadly weapon in his hands.

562.  Mr. Ramachandran submitted that, viewed thus, it would  appear  wholly
unjust to give the death penalty to the appellant. The death penalty  should
be kept reserved for his handlers, who,  unfortunately,  are  not  before  a
court till now. If the submission of Mr.  Ramachandran  is  taken  one  step
further it would almost appear as if it was a  conspiracy  by  destiny  that
pushed the appellant to commit all his terrible deeds,  and  all  those  who
were killed or injured in Mumbai were  predestined  to  be  visited  by  his
violence. We have no  absolute  belief  in  the  philosophical  doctrine  of
predetermination and, therefore, we are  completely  unable  to  accept  Mr.
Ramachandran’s submission. In this proceeding  before  this  Court  we  must
judge the actions of the appellant and the  offences  committed  by  him  as
expressions of his free will, for which he alone  is  responsible  and  must
face the punishment.

563.  We are unable to accept the submission that the appellant was  a  mere
tool in the hands of the  Lashkar-e-Toiba.  He  joined  the  Lashkar-e-Toiba
around December 2007 and continued as its member till  the  end,  despite  a
number of opportunities to leave it. This shows his clear  and  unmistakable
intention to be a part of the organization and participate in  its  designs.
Even after his arrest he regarded himself as a “watan parast”,  a  patriotic
Pakistani at war with this country. Where  is  the  question  of  his  being
brain-washed or acting under remote control?  We  completely  disagree  that
the appellant was acting like an automaton. During the past months while  we
lived through this case we have been able to make a fair assessment  of  the
appellant’s personality. It is true that he is not  educated  but  he  is  a
very good and quick learner, has a tough mind and strong  determination.  He
is  also  quite  clever  and  shrewd.[104]  Unfortunately,  he   is   wholly
remorseless and any feeling of pity is unknown to him. He kills without  the
slightest twinge of conscience. Leaving aside all the massacre, we may  here
refer only to the casualness with which the appellant and his associate  Abu
Ismail shot down Gupta Bhelwala and the shanty dwellers Thakur  Waghela  and
Bhagan Shinde at Badruddin Tayabji Marg;  the  attempt  to  break  into  the
wards of Cama Hospital to kill the women and children who  were  crying  and
wailing inside; and the nonchalance with which  he  and  Abu  Ismail  gunned
down the police officer Durgude on coming out of Cama Hospital.

564.  The saddest and the most disturbing part  of  the  case  is  that  the
appellant never showed any remorse for the terrible things he did.  As  seen
earlier, in the initial weeks  after  his  arrest  he  continued  to  regard
himself as a “watan parast”, a patriotic Pakistani  who  considered  himself
to be at war with this country, who had no use  for  an  Indian  lawyer  but
needed a Pakistani  lawyer  to  defend  him  in  the  court.   He  made  the
confessional statement before the magistrate on February 17, 2009,  not  out
of any sense of guilt or sorrow or grief but to present himself as  a  hero.
He told the magistrate that he had absolutely no regret for whatever he  had
done and he wanted to make the confession to set an example  for  others  to
become Fidayeen like him and follow him in his deeds. Even in the course  of
the trial he was never repentant and did not show any  sign  of  contrition.
The judge trying him had occasion to watch him closely  and  has  repeatedly
observed about the lack of any remorse on the part  of  the  appellant.  The
High Court, too, has noticed that the appellant  never  showed  any  remorse
for the large-scale murder committed by him. This, to our  mind,  forecloses
the possibility of any  reform  or  rehabilitation  of  the  appellant.  The
alternative option of life sentence is thus unquestionably excluded  in  the
case of the appellant and death remains the  only  punishment  that  can  be
given to him.

565.  Coming back to the legalese of the matter:

    The Constitutional validity of death penalty was tested in Bachan Singh
v. State of Punjab[105] and in  that  case  a  Constitution  Bench  of  this
Court, while  upholding  the  Constitutional  validity  of  death  sentence,
observed that the death penalty may be invoked only in the  rarest  of  rare
cases. This Court stated that:
    “209. ….For persons convicted of murder life imprisonment is  the  rule
    and death sentence an exception. A real and  abiding  concern  for  the
    dignity of human life postulates resistance to taking  a  life  through
    law’s instrumentality. That ought not to be done save in the rarest  of
    rare cases when the alternative option is unquestionably foreclosed.”

                                                         (Emphasis Supplied)

566.  The Bachan Singh principle of the ‘rarest of rare cases’ came  up  for
consideration and elaboration in Machhi Singh v. State of  Punjab[106].   It
was a case of extraordinary brutality (from  normal  standards  but  nothing
compared to this case!).  On account of a  family  feud  Machhi  Singh,  the
main accused in the case along with eleven (11) accomplices, in  the  course
of a  single  night,  conducted  raids  on  a  number  of  villages  killing
seventeen (17) people, men, women and children, for  no  reason  other  than
they were related to one Amar Singh and his sister Piyaro  Bai.   The  death
sentence awarded to Machhi Singh and two other accused by  the  trial  court
and affirmed by the High Court was also confirmed by this Court.

567.  In Machhi Singh  this  Court  observed  that  though  the  “community”
revered  and  protected  life  because  “the  very  humanistic  edifice   is
constructed on the foundation of reverence for life principle”  it  may  yet
withdraw the protection and demand death  penalty.  The  kind  of  cases  in
which protection to life may be withdrawn and there may be  the  demand  for
death penalty were then enumerated in the following paragraphs:
    “32.   … It may do so “in rarest of rare  cases”  when  its  collective
    conscience is so shocked  that  it  will  expect  the  holders  of  the
    judicial power centre to inflict death penalty  irrespective  of  their
    personal opinion as regards  desirability  or  otherwise  of  retaining
    death penalty.  The community may entertain such a sentiment  when  the
    crime is viewed from the platform of the motive for, or the  manner  of
    commission of the crime, or the anti-social or abhorrent nature of  the
    crime, such as for instance:

     1. Manner of commission of murder

    33.          When the murder  is  committed  in  an  extremely  brutal,
    grotesque, diabolical, revolting or dastardly manner so  as  to  arouse
    intense and extreme indignation of the community.  For instance,

      (i)  when the house of the victim is set aflame with the end in  view
    to roast him alive in the house.

      (ii) when the victim is subjected  to  inhuman  acts  of  torture  or
    cruelty in order to bring about his or her death.

      (iii)      when the body of the victim is cut into pieces or his body
    is dismembered in a fiendish manner.

    II. Motive for commission of murder

      34.  When the murder is committed for a motive  which  evinces  total
    depravity and meanness. For instance when (a) a hired assassin  commits
    murder for the sake of money or reward (b)  a  cold-blooded  murder  is
    committed with a deliberate design in order to inherit property  or  to
    gain control over property of a ward or a person under the  control  of
    the murderer or vis-à-vis whom the murderer is in a dominating position
    or in a position of trust, or (c) a murder is committed in  the  course
    for betrayal of the motherland.

   III. Anti-social or socially abhorrent nature of the crime

    35.    (a)   When murder of a member of a Scheduled Caste  or  minority
    community,  etc.,  is  committed  not  for  personal  reasons  but   in
    circumstances which arouse social wrath.   For  instance  when  such  a
    crime is committed in order to terrorise such persons and frighten them
    into fleeing from a place or in order to deprive them of, or make  them
    surrender, lands or benefits conferred on them with a view  to  reverse
    past injustices and in order to restore the social balance.

           (b)   In cases of “bride burning” and what are known  as  “dowry
    deaths” or when murder is committed in order to remarry for the sake of
    extracting dowry once again or to marry another  woman  on  account  of
    infatuation.

    IV. Magnitude of crime

      36.  When the crime is enormous in  proportion.   For  instance  when
    multiple murders say of all or almost all the members of a family or  a
    large number of persons of a particular caste, community, or  locality,
    are committed.

     V. Personality of victim of murder

    37.    When the victim of murder is (a) an innocent child who could not
    have or has not provided even an excuse, much less a  provocation,  for
    murder (b) a helpless woman or a person rendered helpless by old age or
    infirmity (c) when the victim is a person vis-à-vis whom  the  murderer
    is in a position of domination or trust (d) when the victim is a public
    figure generally loved and respected by the community for the  services
    rendered by him and the murder is committed for  political  or  similar
    reasons other than personal reasons.”

568.  The above principles are generally  regarded  by  this  Court  as  the
broad guidelines for imposition of death sentence and have been followed  by
the Court in many subsequent decisions.

569.  If we examine the present case in light of the Machhi Singh  decision,
it would not only satisfy all the conditions laid down in that decision  for
imposition of death sentence but also present several  other  features  that
could not have been conceived of by the Court in Machhi Singh. We  can  even
say that every single  reason  that  this  Court  might  have  assigned  for
confirming a death sentence in the past is to be found in  this  case  in  a
more magnified way.

570.  This case has  the  element  of  conspiracy  as  no  other  case.  The
appellant was part of a conspiracy hatched across the  border  to  wage  war
against the  Government  of  India  and  lethal  arms  and  explosives  were
collected with the intention of waging war against the Government of  India.
The conspiracy was to launch a murderous attack on Mumbai  regarding  it  as
the financial centre of the country; to kill as  many  Indians  and  foreign
nationals as possible; to take Indians and  foreign  nationals  as  hostages
for using them as bargaining chips in regard  to  the  terrorists’  demands;
and to try to incite communal strife and insurgency; all with the intent  to
weaken the country from within.

571.  The case presents the element of previous planning and preparation  as
no other case. For execution of the conspiracy, the appellant and  the  nine
(9) other dead accused, his accomplices, were given rigorous  and  extensive
training as combatants.  The planning for  the  attack  was  meticulous  and
greatly detailed. The route from Karachi to  Mumbai,  the  landing  site  at
Mumbai, the different targets at Mumbai were all predetermined.  The  nature
of the attack by the different teams of terrorists was planned and  everyone
was given clear instructions as to what they were supposed to  do  at  their
respective targets. All the terrorists, including  the  appellant,  actually
acted according  to  the  previous  planning.  A  channel  of  communication
between the attacking terrorists and their handlers and  collaborators  from
across the border,  based  on  advanced  computer  technology  and  procured
through deception, was already arranged and put in place before  the  attack
was launched.

572.  This case has the element of waging  war  against  the  Government  of
India and the magnitude of the war is of a degree as in no other  case.  And
the appellant is convicted on  the  charge,  among  others,  of  waging  war
against the Government of India.

573.  This case has shocked the collective conscience of the  Indian  people
as few other cases have.

574.  The number of persons killed and  injured  is  not  only  staggeringly
high but also as in no other or  in  extremely  few  cases.  The  terrorists
killed  one  hundred  and  sixty-six  (166)  people   and   injured,   often
grievously, two hundred and thirty-eight (238)  people.  The  dead  included
eighteen (18) policemen and other security  personnel  and  twenty-six  (26)
foreign nationals. The injured  included  thirty-seven  (37)  policemen  and
other security personnel and twenty-one (21) foreign  nationals.   Of  those
dead, at least seven (7) were killed  by  the  appellant  personally,  about
seventy-two (72) were killed by him in furtherance of the  common  intention
he shared with one Abu Ismail (deceased accused no. 1), and  the  rest  were
victims of the conspiracy to which he was a party along with  the  nine  (9)
dead  accused  and  thirty-five  (35)  other  accused  who  remain   to   be
apprehended and brought to court.

575.  The number of policemen and members  of  security  forces  killed  and
injured in course of their duty by the  appellant  and  his  accomplice  Abu
Ismail and the eight (8) other co-conspirators would hardly find a match  in
any other cases. Tukaram Ombale was killed by the  appellant  personally  at
Vinoli Chowpaty. Durgude, Hemant Karkare, Ashok Kamte,  Vijay  Salaskar  and
the other policemen in the Qualis van were killed jointly by  the  appellant
and Abu Ismail. The policemen at Cama  Hospital  were  injured,  several  of
them grievously, jointly by the appellant and Abu Ismail. The  rest  of  the
policemen and law enforcement officers, including  the  NSG  Commando  Major
Sandeep Unnikrihsnan, were killed as part of the larger conspiracy to  which
the appellant was a party.

576.  The loss of property caused by the attack  is  colossal,  over  Rupees
one hundred and fifty crores (Rs. 150Cr.), again of a scale as in  no  other
case.

577.  The offences committed by the appellant  show  a  degree  of  cruelty,
brutality and depravity as in very few other cases.

578.  The appellant,  as  also  the  other  nine  (9)  terrorists,  his  co-
conspirators, used  highly  lethal  weapons  such  as  AK-47  rifles,  9  mm
pistols, and grenades and RDX bombs.

579.  As to the personality of the victims, all the  persons  killed/injured
at CST, Badruddin Tayabji Marg and Cama Hospital were harmless,  defenceless
people. What is  more,  they  did  not  even  know  the  appellant  and  the
appellant too had no personal animus against them.  He  killed/injured  them
simply because they happened to be Indians.

580.  It  is  already  seen  above  that  the  appellant  never  showed  any
repentance or remorse, which is the first sign of any possibility of  reform
and rehabilitation.

581.  In short, this is a case of terrorist attack from across  the  border.
It has a magnitude of unprecedented enormity on all scales.  The  conspiracy
behind the attack was as deep and large as it was vicious.  The  preparation
and training for  the  execution  was  as  thorough  as  the  execution  was
ruthless. In terms of loss of life and property,  and  more  importantly  in
its traumatizing effect, this case stands alone, or it is at least the  very
rarest of rare to come before this Court since the birth  of  the  Republic.
Therefore, it should also attract the rarest of rare punishment.

582.  Against all this, the only mitigating factor is the appellant’s  young
age, but that is completely offset by the absence  of  any  remorse  on  his
part, and the resultant finding that in his case there is no possibility  of
any reformation or rehabilitation.

583.  In the effort to have the appellant spared of the  death  penalty  Mr.
Ramachandran also relied upon several observations and remarks made by  this
Court in a number of judgments. He cited before the Court: (i) Mohd.  Mannan
V  State  of  Bihar[107];  (ii)  Swamy  Shraddananda   (2)   v.   State   of
Karnataka[108]; (iii)  Santosh  Kumar  Satishbhushan  Bariyar  v.  State  of
Maharashtra[109];   (iv)   Mohd.   Farooq   Abdul   Gafur   v.   State    of
Maharashtra[110];   (v)   Rameshbhai   Chandubhai   Rathod   v.   State   of
Gujarat[111];  (vi)  Rameshbhai  Chandubhai   Rathod   (2)   v.   State   of
Gujarat[112]; (vii) Mulla  and  another  v.  State  of  Uttar  Pradesh[113];
(viii) Dilip Premnarayan Tiwari v.  State  of  Maharashtra[114];  (ix)  R  S
Budhwar v UOI[115];  and  (x)  State  of  Maharashtra  v.  Bharat  Chaganlal
Raghani[116].

584.  The observations relied upon by Mr.  Ramachandran  were  made  in  the
facts of those cases. As a matter of fact, in some of the cases relied  upon
by Mr. Ramachandran, the Court actually confirmed the  death  penalty  given
to the accused. Moreover, the facts of those cases are totally  incomparable
to the facts of the case in hand, and those decisions are of no help to  the
appellant.

585.  Putting the matter once again quite simply, in this country  death  as
a penalty has been held to be Constitutionally valid, though  it  is  indeed
to be awarded in the “rarest of rare cases when the alternative  option  (of
life sentence) is unquestionably foreclosed”. Now,  as  long  as  the  death
penalty remains on the statute book  as  punishment  for  certain  offences,
including “waging war” and murder, it logically follows that there  must  be
some cases, howsoever rare  or  one  in  a  million,  that  would  call  for
inflicting that penalty. That being the position we fail to  see  what  case
would attract the death penalty, if not the case of the appellant.  To  hold
back the death penalty in this case would  amount  to  obdurately  declaring
that this Court rejects death as lawful penalty even though  it  is  on  the
statute book and held valid by Constitutional benches of this Court.

586.  We are thus left with no option but to hold that in the facts  of  the
case the death penalty is the  only  sentence  that  can  be  given  to  the
appellant. We hold accordingly and affirm the convictions and  sentences  of
the appellant passed by the trial court and affirmed by the High Court.

587.  The appeals are accordingly dismissed.

CRIMINAL APPEAL NO.1961 OF 2011

588.  This appeal is filed at the  instance  of  the  State  of  Maharashtra
against the acquittal of Fahim Ansari and Sabauddin Ahamed (accused  Nos.  2
and 3 respectively) recorded by the trial court and  affirmed  by  the  High
Court.  As noted, in the judgment in Criminal Appeal Nos.1899-1900 of  2011,
these two accused faced the trial along with and  on  the  same  charges  as
Kasab.

589.  Their connection with the other accused in the case, according to  the
prosecution, was through conspiracy. Fahim Ansari is said to have  prepared,
by hand, maps of various places of Mumbai to facilitate the  attack  by  the
terrorists who landed in the city.  One such  map  was  recovered  from  the
trouser pocket of Abu Ismail (deceased accused no.1) during inquest and  was
seized under the seizure panchnama (Ext. no. 99).

590.  According to the prosecution case, Fahim Ansari handed over  the  maps
prepared by him to Sabauddin Ahamed in Kathmandu, Nepal and the latter  sent
or delivered those maps to the perpetrators of the crime in Pakistan.

591.  This part of the  prosecution  case  is  based  on  the  testimony  of
Naruddin Shaikh (PW-160).

592.  It is further alleged that in order to  provide  ancillary  logistical
support  to  the  terrorists  landing  in  Mumbai,  Fahim  Ansari  had  made
arrangements for his stay in Colaba area of South Mumbai.  In order to  stay
in close proximity  to  Badhwar  Park  he  was  searching  for  a  place  of
residence in fishermen’s colony there  and  he  had  taken  admission  in  a
Computer Institute viz., “Softpro  Computer  Education”  situated  at  Fort,
Mumbai, as an excuse for staying in that area.

593.  However, when the attack took place  on  November  26,  2008,  neither
Fahim Ansari nor Sabauddin Ahamed were present in Mumbai.  They were in  the
custody of U.P. Police, having been arrested earlier in  connection  with  a
terrorist attack on the RPF Camp at Rampur.

594.  In support of the  second  part  of  its  case,  the  prosecution  has
examined a number of witnesses, namely, Police Inspector Prashant Marde (PW-
48),  Jivan  Gulabkar  (PW-35),  Rajendra  Bhosale  (PW-38),  Ms.  Shantabai
Bhosale (PW-40), Police Inspector Shripad Kale (PW-47), Jayant Bhosale  (PW-
146), Sharad Vichare (PW-265), Shivaji Shivekar (PW-14), API Subhash  Warang
(PW-27), Ashok Kumar Raghav (PW-213), Manpreet Vohra  (PW-254),  Krantikumar
Varma (PW-61) and Dr. Shailesh Mohite (PW-23).

595.  We have gone through the evidence of Naruddin  Shaikh  and  the  other
witnesses very carefully.  We are of the view that the evidence of  Naruddin
Shaikh is completely unacceptable.  The evidences  of  the  other  witnesses
also do not inspire confidence insofar as these two accused are concerned.

596.  The trial court and the  High  Court  have  considered  the  evidences
relating to these two accused in far greater detail. Both  the  courts  have
analysed the prosecution evidence in regard to  the  two  accused  at  great
length and have given very good reasons to  hold  the  prosecution  evidence
unworthy of reliance to hold such grave charges against the two accused.  We
are in full agreement with the reasons assigned by the trial court  and  the
High Court for acquitting the two accused  of  all  the  charges.  The  view
taken by the trial court and the High Court is not only correct but  on  the
facts of the case, that is the only possible view.

597.  We find no merit in the appeal and it is, accordingly, dismissed.

TRANSFER PETITION (CRIMINAL) NO.30 OF 2012

598.  In view of the judgment in Criminal Appeal  Nos.  1899-1900  of  2011,
the Transfer Petition does not survive and it  is,  accordingly,  dismissed.


THE POSTSCRIPT

599.  The decision in the appeal is over.  But there are still a few  things
for us to say before we finally close this matter.

600.  At the beginning of the hearing of the appeal, Mr.  Gopal  Subramanium
avowed that, though appearing for the prosecution, he would  like  the  best
for the appellant. He wished that the case of  the  appellant  be  presented
before the Court at the highest level and that it should  receive  the  most
careful  scrutiny  by  the  Court.  The  solemnity  and  sincerity  of   his
declaration  set  the  tone  for  the  proceedings  before  the  Court.  The
discourses were luminous, warm and  stimulating  but  completely  free  from
heat, rancour or anger,  leave  alone  any  vengefulness.  Mr.  Subramanium,
erudite and sensitive,  was  full  of  restraint;  always  down-playing  the
prosecution case a notch or two and never making a statement of fact  unless
absolutely certain of its correctness. Mr. Ramachandran, cool and  clinical,
gently tried to persuade the Court to his point of view. In  the  course  of
the hearing of the case, which was spread over 13 weeks, not once  were  the
voices raised, not once was the Counsel of the other  side  interrupted  and
contradicted on a statement of fact. In my twenty years on the bench I  have
not heard a serious case debated in such a congenial atmosphere  as  created
by Mr. Subramanium and Mr. Ramachandran in this case.

601.  Mr. Ramachandran, appearing for the appellant,  was  assisted  by  Mr.
Gaurav Agrawal and a small team of juniors.  Mr.  Subramanium,  representing
the State of Maharashtra, was assisted by Mr. Ujjawal Nikkam,  the  Spl.  PP
who conducted the trial and a team  of  juniors.  The  juniors’  teams  also
showed remarkable preparation and resourcefulness. Any query  on  facts  was
answered in no time with reference to volume number  and  page  number  from
the records that appeared like a small mountain.  We  are  indebted  to  Mr.
Subramanium and Mr. Ramachandran and their respective teams and we  put  our
gratitude on record.

602.  In this case  we  came  across  heroes  like  Tukaram  Ombale,  Hemant
Karkare, Ashok Kamte, Vijay Salaskar  and  Sandeep  Unnikrishnan,  who  lost
their lives in the fight  against  terrorism.  We  salute  every  policeman,
every member of the security forces and others who  laid  down  their  lives
saving others and helping to catch or  neutralise  the  ten  terrorists.  We
have great admiration for the  courage  and  sense  of  duty  shown  by  the
policemen and the members of the security forces who  received  injuries  in
discharge of their duties and we extend our deepest sympathies to  them  for
their injuries. We compliment all those who showed great  presence  of  mind
and  professionalism  and,  caring  little  for  their  own  safety,   saved
countless lives or photographed the terrorists on their killing  spree  thus
providing unimpeachable evidence for the court. We mourn the  death  of  148
civilians, both Indians and foreign nationals, who fell victim to  the  orgy
of terror unleashed on the city, and extend our  heart-felt  condolences  to
their families. We also extend our deepest sympathies to all the 238  people
who suffered injuries at the  hands  of  the  terrorists.  We  also  greatly
complement the resilient spirit of Mumbai that, to all outward  appearances,
recovered from the blow very quickly and was back to business  as  usual  in
no time.

603.  In the course of hearing of the appeal we also came to know the  trial
Judge Shri Tahiliani. From the records of  the  case  he  appears  to  be  a
stern, no-nonsense person. But he is a true flag bearer of the rule  of  law
in this country.  The manner in which he  conducted  the  trial  proceedings
and maintained the record is exemplary.  We  seriously  recommend  that  the
trial court records of this case  be  included  in  the  curriculum  of  the
National Judicial Authority and the Judicial Authorities  of  the  different
States as a model for criminal trial proceedings.

604.  We direct the Maharashtra Government to pay a  sum  of  Rupees  eleven
lakh (Rs.11 Lakhs) to Mr. Raju Ramachandran  and  Rupees  three  lakh  fifty
thousand to Mr. Gaurav Agrawal (Rs 3.5  Lakhs)  as  token  remuneration  for
their very valuable assistance to the Court. The  payments  should  be  made
within two months from today.

605.  With this we come to the close of the matter and we end here.





                                                           …………………………………… J.
                                          (Aftab Alam)




                                                           …………………………………… J.
                                          (Chandramauli Kr. Prasad)

New Delhi,
August 29, 2012
                                 SCHEDULE I

                           LIST OF PERSONS KILLED




|Sr. No. |NAME                      |POLICE/          |NATIONALITY       |
|        |                          |SECURITY FORCE/  |                  |
|        |                          |CIVILIAN         |                  |
|KUBER                                                                   |
|1       |Amarchand Naran Solanki   |Civilian         |Indian            |
|CST                                                                     |
|2       |Shashank Chandrasen Shinde|Police           |Indian            |
|        |                          |(Inspector)      |                  |
|3       |Hamina Begum Hamid Shaikh |Civilian         |Indian            |
|4       |Ashraf Ali Allahrakha     |Civilian         |Indian            |
|        |Shaikh                    |                 |                  |
|5       |Ajij Nabilal Rampure      |Civilian         |Indian            |
|6       |Aakash Akhilesh Yadav     |Civilian         |Indian            |
|7       |Mukesh Bhikaji Jadhav     |Home Guard       |Indian            |
|8       |Sitaram Mallapa Sakhare   |Civilian         |Indian            |
|9       |Rahamtulla Ibrahim        |Civilian         |Indian            |
|10      |Mishrilal Mourya Shri     |Civilian         |Indian            |
|        |Garib Mourya              |                 |                  |
|11      |Vinod Madanlal Gupta      |Civilian         |Indian            |
|12      |Sunil Ashok Thackare      |Civilian         |Indian            |
|13      |Haji Ejaj Bhai Imamsaheb  |Civilian         |Indian            |
|        |Dalal                     |                 |                  |
|14      |Mira Narayan Chattarji    |Civilian         |Indian            |
|15      |Shirish Sawla Chari       |Civilian         |Indian            |
|16      |Sushilkumar Vishwambhar   |Civilian         |Indian            |
|        |Sharma                    |                 |                  |
|17      |Murlidhar Laxman Choudhary|Railway          |Indian            |
|        |                          |Protection Force |                  |
|        |                          |(Constable)      |                  |
|18      |Ambadas Ramchandra Pawar  |Police           |Indian            |
|        |                          |(Constable)      |                  |
|19      |Jaikumar Durairaj Nadar   |Civilian         |Indian            |
|20      |Deepali Janardhan Chitekar|Civilian         |Indian            |
|21      |Raju Janardhan Chitekar   |Civilian         |Indian            |
|22      |Aditya Ashok Yadav        |Civilian         |Indian            |
|23      |Isibul Raheman Faizuddin  |Civilian         |Indian            |
|        |Raheman Shaikh            |                 |                  |
|24      |Prakash Janath Mandal     |Civilian         |Indian            |
|25      |Harakha Lalji Solanki     |Civilian         |Indian            |
|26      |Mohamed Amanat Mohamad Ali|Civilian         |Indian            |
|27      |Sarafraz Sallauddin Ansari|Civilian         |Indian            |
|28      |Ayub Yakub Qureshi        |Civilian         |Indian            |
|29      |Afarin Shahadab Qureshi   |Civilian         |Indian            |
|30      |Avadesh Sudama Pandit     |Civilian         |Indian            |
|31      |Chandulal Kashinath Tandel|Civilian         |Indian            |
|32      |Manohar Sohani            |Civilian         |Indian            |
|33      |Mohamad Hussain Mohamad   |Civilian         |Indian            |
|        |Alamgir Shaikh            |                 |                  |
|34      |Murtaza Ansari Sallauddin |Civilian         |Indian            |
|        |Ansari                    |                 |                  |
|35      |Mohamad Arif Mohamed Islam|Civilian         |Indian            |
|        |Ansari                    |                 |                  |
|36      |Mohamad Mukhtar Malik     |Civilian         |Indian            |
|37      |Abbas Rajjab Ansari       |Civilian         |Indian            |
|38      |Unknown Male person       |Civilian         |Indian            |
|39      |Mrs.Gangabai Baburao      |Civilian         |Indian            |
|        |Kharatmol                 |                 |                  |
|40      |Narul Islam Ajahar Mulla  |Civilian         |Indian            |
|41      |Murgan Palaniya Pillai    |Civilian         |Indian            |
|42      |Rakhila Abbas Ansari      |Civilian         |Indian            |
|43      |Nitesh Vijaykumar Sharma  |Civilian         |Indian            |
|44      |Fatmabi Rehaman Shaikh    |Civilian         |Indian            |
|45      |Meenu Arjun Ansari        |Civilian         |Indian            |
|46      |Mohamad Itihas Ansari     |Civilian         |Indian            |
|47      |Mastan Munir Qureshi      |Civilian         |Indian            |
|48      |M.V. Anish                |Civilian         |Indian            |
|49      |Upendra Birju Yadav       |Civilian         |Indian            |
|50      |Unknown Male person       |Civilian         |Indian            |
|51      |Poonam Bharat Navadia     |Civilian         |Indian            |
|52      |Baichan Ramprasad Gupta   |Civilian         |Indian            |
|53      |Nathuni Parshuram Yadav   |Civilian         |Indian            |
|CAMA-IN                                                                 |
|54      |Prakash Pandurang More    |Police           |Indian            |
|        |                          |(Sub-Inspector)  |                  |
|55      |Vijay Madhukar Khandekar  |Police           |Indian            |
|        |                          |(Constable)      |                  |
|56      |Baban Balu Ughade         |Civilian         |Indian            |
|57      |Bhanu Devu Narkar         |Civilian         |Indian            |
|58      |Thakur Budha Waghela      |Civilian         |Indian            |
|59      |Bhagan Gangaram Shinde    |Civilian         |Indian            |
|60      |Shivashankar Nirant Gupta |Civilian         |Indian            |
|CAMA-OUT                                                                |
|61      |Hemant Kamlakar Karkare   |Police           |Indian            |
|        |                          |(Joint           |                  |
|        |                          |Commissioner,    |                  |
|        |                          |ATS)             |                  |
|62      |Ashok Marutirao Kamate    |Police           |Indian            |
|        |                          |(Additional      |                  |
|        |                          |Commissioner –   |                  |
|        |                          |East Region)     |                  |
|63      |Vijay Sahadev Salaskar    |Police           |Indian            |
|        |                          |(Inspector)      |                  |
|64      |Bapurao Sahebrao Durgude  |Police           |Indian            |
|        |                          |(Sub-Inspector)  |                  |
|65      |Balasaheb @ Nana          |Police           |Indian            |
|        |Chandrakant Bhosale       |(Assistant       |                  |
|        |                          |Sub-Inspector)   |                  |
|66      |Arun Raghunath Chite      |Police           |Indian            |
|        |                          |(Constable)      |                  |
|67      |Jayawant Hanumant Patil   |Police           |Indian            |
|        |                          |(Constable)      |                  |
|68      |Yogesh Shivaji Patil      |Police           |Indian            |
|        |                          |(Constable)      |                  |
|69      |Surendrakumar Bindu Rama  |Civilian         |Indian            |
|VINOLI CHOWPATY                                                         |
|70      |Tukaram Gopal Ombale      |Police           |Indian            |
|        |                          |(Assistant       |                  |
|        |                          |Sub-Inspector)   |                  |
|VILE PARLE BLAST                                                        |
|71      |Mohabbat Umer Abdul Khalid|Civilian         |Indian            |
|72      |Laxminarayan Goyal        |Civilian         |Indian            |
|LEOPOLD CAFÉ                                                            |
|73      |Subhash Vanmali Vaghela   |Civilian         |Indian            |
|74      |Pirpashi Mehboobali Shaikh|Civilian         |Indian            |
|75      |Shahabuddin Sirajuddin    |Civilian         |Indian            |
|        |Khan                      |                 |                  |
|76      |Harishbhai Durlabbhai     |Civilian         |Indian            |
|        |Gohil                     |                 |                  |
|77      |Hidayatullah Anwarali Kazi|Civilian         |Indian            |
|78      |Malyesh Manvendra Banarjee|Civilian         |Indian            |
|79      |Gourav Balchand Jain      |Civilian         |Indian            |
|80      |P.K. Gopalkrishnan        |Civilian         |Indian            |
|81      |Kamal Nanakram Motwani    |Civilian         |Indian            |
|82      |Jurgen Hienrich Rudolf    |Civilian         |German            |
|83      |Daphne Hilary Schmidt     |Civilian         |German            |
|MAZGAON BLAST                                                           |
|84      |Mrs. Jarina Samsuddin     |Civilian         |Indian            |
|        |Shaikh                    |                 |                  |
|85      |Fulchandra Ramchandra Bind|Civilian         |Indian            |
|86      |Mrs. Reema Mohamad Rabiul |Civilian         |Indian            |
|HOTEL TAJ                                                               |
|87      |Major Sandip Unnikrishnan |Security Force   |Indian            |
|88      |Rahul Subhash Shinde      |Police           |Indian            |
|        |                          |(Constable)      |                  |
|89      |Zaheen Sayyed Nisar Ali   |Civilian         |Indian            |
|        |Jafary Mateen             |                 |                  |
|90      |Andres Don Livera         |Civilian         |British           |
|91      |Gunjan Vishandas Narang   |Civilian         |Indian            |
|92      |Vishandas Giridharidas    |Civilian         |Indian            |
|        |Narang                    |                 |                  |
|93      |Vijayrao Anandrao Banja   |Civilian         |Indian            |
|94      |Sadanand Ratan Patil      |Civilian         |Indian            |
|95      |Thomas Verghese           |Civilian         |Indian            |
|96      |Ravi Jagan Kunwar         |Civilian         |Indian            |
|97      |Boris Mario Do Rego       |Civilian         |Indian            |
|98      |Satpakkam Rahmatulla      |Civilian         |Indian            |
|        |Shaukatali                |                 |                  |
|99      |Faustine Basil Martis     |Civilian         |Indian            |
|100     |Kaizad Naushir Kamdin     |Civilian         |Indian            |
|101     |Neelam Vishandas Narang   |Civilian         |Indian            |
|102     |Rupinder Devenersing      |Civilian         |Indian            |
|        |Randhava                  |                 |                  |
|103     |Eklak Ahmed Mustak Ahmed  |Civilian         |Indian            |
|104     |Maksud Tabarakali Shaikh  |Civilian         |Indian            |
|105     |Feroz Jamil Ahmed Khan    |Civilian         |Indian            |
|106     |Teitelbaum Aryeh Levish   |Civilian         |Israeli           |
|107     |Duglas Justin Markell     |Civilian         |Australian        |
|108     |Chaitilal Gunish          |Civilian         |Mauritius         |
|109     |Willem Jan Berbaers       |Civilian         |Belgium           |
|110     |Nitisingh Karamveer Kang  |Civilian         |Indian            |
|111     |Samarveer Singh Karamveer |Civilian         |Indian            |
|        |Singh Kang                |                 |                  |
|112     |Udaysingh Karamveer Singh |Civilian         |Indian            |
|        |Kang                      |                 |                  |
|113     |Sabina Saigal Saikia      |Civilian         |Indian            |
|114     |Hemlata Kashi Pillai      |Civilian         |Malaysian         |
|115     |Rajiv Omprakash Sarswat   |Civilian         |Indian            |
|116     |Gutam Devsingh Gosai      |Civilian         |Indian            |
|117     |Rajan Eshwar Kamble       |Civilian         |Indian            |
|118     |Burki Ralph Rainer Jachim |Civilian         |German            |
|119     |Hemant Pravin Talim       |Civilian         |Indian            |
|120     |Shoeb Ahmed Shaikh        |Civilian         |Indian            |
|121     |Michael Stuart Moss       |Civilian         |British           |
|122     |Elizabeth Russell         |Civilian         |Canadian          |
|NARIMAN HOUSE                                                           |
|123     |Salim Hussain Harharwala  |Civilian         |Indian            |
|124     |Mehzabin @ Maria Salim    |Civilian         |Indian            |
|        |Harharwala                |                 |                  |
|125     |Rivka Gavriel Holtzberg   |Civilian         |Israeli           |
|126     |Rabbi Gavriel Noach       |Civilian         |Israeli           |
|        |Holtzberg                 |                 |                  |
|127     |Gajendra Singh            |Security Force   |Indian            |
|128     |Ben Zion Chroman          |Civilian         |Israeli           |
|129     |Norma Shvarzblat          |Civilian         |Mexican           |
|        |Robinovich                |                 |                  |
|130     |Rajendrakumar Baburam     |Civilian         |Indian            |
|        |Sharma                    |                 |                  |
|131     |Yokevet Mosho Orpaz       |Civilian         |Israeli           |
|HOTEL OBEROI                                                            |
|132     |T. Suda Hisashi           |Civilian         |Japanese          |
|133     |Murad Amarsi              |Civilian         |French            |
|134     |Loumiya Hiridaji Amarsi   |Civilian         |French            |
|135     |Scherr Alan Michael       |Civilian         |American          |
|136     |Neomi Leiya Sher          |Civilian         |American          |
|137     |Sandeep Kisan Jeswani     |Civilian         |American          |
|138     |Lo Hawei Yen              |Civilian         |Singapore         |
|139     |Jhirachant Kanmani @ Jina |Civilian         |Thailand          |
|140     |Altino D' Lorenjo         |Civilian         |Italian           |
|141     |Brett Gilbert Tailor      |Civilian         |Australian        |
|142     |Farukh Dinshaw            |Civilian         |Indian            |
|143     |Reshama Sunil Parikh      |Civilian         |Indian            |
|144     |Sunil Shevantilal Parekh  |Civilian         |Indian            |
|145     |Ajit Shrichand Chabriya   |Civilian         |Indian            |
|146     |Sanjay Vijay Agarwal      |Civilian         |Indian            |
|147     |Rita Sanjay Agarwal       |Civilian         |Indian            |
|148     |Mohit Kanhaiyalal Harjani |Civilian         |Indian            |
|149     |Monika Ajit Chabriya      |Civilian         |Indian            |
|150     |Harsha Mohit Harjani      |Civilian         |Indian            |
|151     |Ravi Dara                 |Civilian         |Indian            |
|152     |Uma Vinod Gark            |Civilian         |Indian            |
|153     |Pankaj Somchand Shah      |Civilian         |Indian            |
|154     |Ashok Kapoor              |Civilian         |Indian            |
|155     |Anand Suryadatta Bhatt    |Civilian         |Indian            |
|156     |Rohington Bajji Mallu     |Civilian         |Indian            |
|157     |Kannubhai Zaverbhai Patel |Civilian         |Indian            |
|158     |Ami Bipinichandra Thaker  |Civilian         |Indian            |
|159     |Jordan Geigy Fernandise   |Civilian         |Indian            |
|160     |Neeta Prakash Gaikwad     |Civilian         |Indian            |
|161     |Shaunak Jayawant          |Civilian         |Indian            |
|        |Chemburkar                |                 |                  |
|162     |Wilson Baburao Mandalik   |Civilian         |Indian            |
|163     |Sarjerao Sadashiv Bhosale |Civilian         |Indian            |
|164     |JasminMahendrasingh Burji |Civilian         |Indian            |
|165     |Sanjy Sambhajirao Surve   |Civilian         |Indian            |
|166     |Bimolchand Maibam         |Civilian         |Indian            |


                           LIST OF INJURED PEOPLE


|Sr. No.|NAME                     |POLICE/            |NATIONALITY      |
|       |                         |SECURITY FORCE/    |                 |
|       |                         |CIVILIAN           |                 |
|CST                                                                     |
|1      |Mukesh Bhagwatprakash    |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Agarwal                  |                   |                 |
|2      |Nisha Anilkumar Yadav    |Civilian           |Indian           |
|3      |JangamVithalrao Bokade   |Civilian           |Indian           |
|4      |Parasnath Ramsoman Giri  |Railway Protection |Indian           |
|       |                         |Force              |                 |
|       |                         |(Head Constable)   |                 |
|5      |Firoz Khan Khushnur Khan |Railway Protection |Indian           |
|       |Ghouri                   |Force              |                 |
|       |                         |(Constable)        |                 |
|6      |Raziyabegum Noor Qureshi |Civilian           |Indian           |
|7      |Sarita Shantaram         |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Harkulkar                |                   |                 |
|8      |Neeta Gajanan Kurhade    |Civilian           |Indian           |
|9      |Ajamat Ali Narhu Sha     |Civilian           |Indian           |
|10     |Maltidevi Madan Gupta    |Civilian           |Indian           |
|11     |Sulochana Chandrakant    |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Lokhande                 |                   |                 |
|12     |Vijay Ramchandra Khote   |Civilian           |Indian           |
|13     |Mumtaz Mohd. Yusuf Khan  |Civilian           |Indian           |
|14     |Pappu Laldev Jawahar     |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Laldev                   |                   |                 |
|15     |Shabir Abdul Salam Dalal |Civilian           |Indian           |
|16     |Laxman Shivaji Hundkeri  |Civilian           |Indian           |
|17     |Akshay Tanaji Supekar    |Civilian           |Indian           |
|18     |Nimba Shampuri Gosavi    |Civilian           |Indian           |
|19     |Mahadev Datta Petkar     |Civilian           |Indian           |
|20     |Santoshkumar Faujdarsing |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Yadav                    |                   |                 |
|21     |Miraj Alam Ali Mulla     |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Ansari                   |                   |                 |
|22     |Abdul Rashid Abdul Aziz  |Civilian           |Indian           |
|23     |Abdul Salam Shaikh S.    |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Qureshi                  |                   |                 |
|24     |Akhilesh Dyanu Yadav     |Civilian           |Indian           |
|25     |Ramzan Sahrif Kadar      |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Sharif                   |                   |                 |
|26     |Mohd. Siddiqu Mohd. Sagir|Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Alam                     |                   |                 |
|27     |Sachinkumar Singh        |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Santoshkumar Singh       |                   |                 |
|28     |Tejas Arjungi            |Civilian           |Indian           |
|29     |Shamshad Dalal           |Civilian           |Indian           |
|30     |Baby Ashok Yadav         |Civilian           |Indian           |
|31     |Shital Upendra Yadav     |Civilian           |Indian           |
|32     |Asha Shridhar Borde      |Civilian           |Indian           |
|33     |Vatsala Sahadev Kurhade  |Civilian           |Indian           |
|34     |Chandrakant Ganpatirao   |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Lokhande                 |                   |                 |
|35     |Abdul Razak Farukh       |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Nasiruddin               |                   |                 |
|36     |Afroz Abbas Ansari       |Civilian           |Indian           |
|37     |Dadarao Rambhoji Jadhav  |Civilian           |Indian           |
|38     |Suryabhan Sampat Gupta   |Civilian           |Indian           |
|39     |Jagendrakumar            |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Kailashkumar Mishra      |                   |                 |
|40     |Gopal Julena Prajapati   |Civilian           |Indian           |
|41     |P. Nirmala               |Civilian           |Indian           |
|42     |P. Ponuraj               |Civilian           |Indian           |
|43     |Mohan Bharti             |Civilian           |Indian           |
|44     |Sushant Nityanand Panda  |Civilian           |Indian           |
|45     |Annasaheb Ambu Waghmode  |Civilian           |Indian           |
|46     |T. Thavasi Parnal        |Civilian           |Indian           |
|47     |Anand Bhimrao Arjun      |Civilian           |Indian           |
|48     |Kanhayya Kedarnath Sahani|Civilian           |Indian           |
|49     |Vibha Ashokkumar Singh   |Civilian           |Indian           |
|50     |Beti Alfonso             |Civilian           |Indian           |
|51     |Indraraj Luise           |Civilian           |Indian           |
|52     |Jayram Harilal Chawan    |Civilian           |Indian           |
|53     |Sunita Upendra Yadav     |Civilian           |Indian           |
|54     |Sushama Akhilesh Yadav   |Civilian           |Indian           |
|55     |Raviranjan Shriram       |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Virendra                 |                   |                 |
|56     |Priyanka Chitaranjan Giri|Civilian           |Indian           |
|57     |Imran Shakur Bhagwan     |Civilian           |Indian           |
|58     |Rekha Shyam Rathod       |Civilian           |Indian           |
|59     |Barjrang Jaykaran        |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Prajapati                |                   |                 |
|60     |Satyanand Karunakaro     |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Behra                    |                   |                 |
|61     |Manoj Prafulchandra      |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Kanojia                  |                   |                 |
|62     |Balaji Baburao Kharatmol |Civilian           |Indian           |
|63     |Mehboob Abbas Ansari     |Civilian           |Indian           |
|64     |Asif Abdul Rafik Shaikh  |Civilian           |Indian           |
|65     |Raghvendra Banvasi Singh |Civilian           |Indian           |
|66     |Ashok Keshwanand Singh   |Civilian           |Indian           |
|67     |Radhadevi Bodhiram Sahani|Civilian           |Indian           |
|68     |Tapasi Taramniggam Nadar |Civilian           |Indian           |
|69     |Sayyed Shahnavaz Sayyed  |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Salim Mujawar            |                   |                 |
|70     |Arvind Gopinath Bhalekar |Civilian           |Indian           |
|71     |Shivram Vijay Sawant     |Civilian           |Indian           |
|72     |Ashok Shivram Patil      |Civilian           |Indian           |
|73     |Bharat Ramchandra Bhosale|Government Railway |Indian           |
|       |                         |Police             |                 |
|       |                         |(Assistant         |                 |
|       |                         |Inspector)         |                 |
|74     |Devika Natvarlal Rotawan |Civilian           |Indian           |
|75     |Farukh Nasiruddin        |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Khaliluddin              |                   |                 |
|76     |Nafisa Sadaf Qureshi     |Civilian           |Indian           |
|77     |Kishor Vinayak Kale      |Civilian           |Indian           |
|78     |Sudama Aba Pandarkar     |Government Railway |Indian           |
|       |                         |Police             |                 |
|       |                         |(Assistant         |                 |
|       |                         |Sub-Inspector)     |                 |
|79     |Pandurang Subrao Patil   |Government Railway |Indian           |
|       |                         |Police             |                 |
|       |                         |(Assistant         |                 |
|       |                         |Sub-Inspector)     |                 |
|80     |Punamsingh Santosh Singh |Civilian           |Indian           |
|81     |Vishal Prakash Kardak    |Civilian           |Indian           |
|82     |Sangita Niranjan Sardar  |Civilian           |Indian           |
|83     |Niranjan Sadashiv Sardar |Civilian           |Indian           |
|84     |Ansarallh Saudaarallh    |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Baksh Mohd. Hanif        |                   |                 |
|85     |Harshada Suhas Salaskar  |Civilian           |Indian           |
|86     |Pappusing Mannusingh     |Civilian           |Indian           |
|87     |Habibul Mohd. Sukurddin  |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Khan                     |                   |                 |
|88     |Anilkumar Rajendra Yadav |Civilian           |Indian           |
|89     |Laji Jagganath Pandye    |Civilian           |Indian           |
|90     |Sanjay Nemchandra Yadav  |Civilian           |Indian           |
|91     |Ratankumarji             |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Kanhayaprasad Yadav      |                   |                 |
|92     |Shambunath Munai Yadav   |Civilian           |Indian           |
|93     |Ganesh Sitaram Sakhare   |Civilian           |Indian           |
|94     |Ashok Bhimappa Renetala  |Civilian           |Indian           |
|95     |Alok Harilal Gupta       |Civilian           |Indian           |
|96     |Ganpat Gangaram Shigwan  |Civilian           |Indian           |
|97     |Fakir Mohd. Abdul Gafoor |Civilian           |Indian           |
|98     |Murlidhar Chintu Jhole   |Police             |Indian           |
|       |                         |(Head Constable)   |                 |
|99     |Balu Bandu More          |Police             |Indian           |
|       |                         |(Constable)        |                 |
|100    |Prakash Sohanlal Phalore |Civilian           |Indian           |
|101    |Ramji Yabad Napit        |Railway Protection |Indian           |
|       |                         |Force              |                 |
|       |                         |(Assistant         |                 |
|       |                         |Sub-Inspector)     |                 |
|102    |Vishveshwar Shishupal    |Home Guard         |Indian           |
|       |Pacharane                |                   |                 |
|103    |Adhikrao Gyanu Kale      |Government Railway |Indian           |
|       |                         |Police             |                 |
|       |                         |(Head Constable)   |                 |
|104    |Uttam Vishnu Sasulkar    |Home Guard         |Indian           |
|105    |Vijaya Ramkomal Kushwah  |Civilian           |Indian           |
|106    |Bharat Shyam Nawadia     |Civilian           |Indian           |
|107    |Anilkumar Dyanoji        |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Harkulkar                |                   |                 |
|108    |Sadahiv Chandrakant Kolke|Civilian           |Indian           |
|109    |Prashant Purnachandra Das|Civilian           |Indian           |
|                                                                        |
|CAMA-IN                                                                 |
|110    |Harischandra Sonu        |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Shrivardhankar           |                   |                 |
|111    |Chandrakant Gyandev Tikhe|Civilian           |Indian           |
|112    |Kailash Chandrabhan      |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Ghegadmal                |                   |                 |
|113    |Vijay Abaji Shinde       |Police             |Indian           |
|       |                         |(Assistant         |                 |
|       |                         |Inspector)         |                 |
|114    |Sadanand Vasant Date     |Police             |Indian           |
|       |                         |(Additional        |                 |
|       |                         |Commissioner)      |                 |
|115    |Vijay Tukaram Powar      |Police             |Indian           |
|       |                         |(Assistant         |                 |
|       |                         |Inspector)         |                 |
|116    |Sachin Dadasaheb Tilekar |Police             |Indian           |
|       |                         |(Constable)        |                 |
|117    |Mohan Gyanoba Shinde     |Police             |Indian           |
|       |                         |(Head Constable)   |                 |
|118    |Hirabai Vilas Jadhav     |Civilian           |Indian           |
|119    |Vinayak Chintaman        |Police             |Indian           |
|       |Dandgawhal               |(Constable)        |                 |
|CAMA-OUT                                                                |
|120    |Arun Dada Jadhav         |Police             |Indian           |
|       |                         |(Naik)             |                 |
|121    |Maruti Mahdevrao Phad    |Civilian           |Indian           |
|122    |Anil Mahadev Nirmal      |Civilian           |Indian           |
|123    |Shankar Bhausaheb Vhande |Police             |Indian           |
|       |                         |(Constable)        |                 |
|124    |Prashant Sadashiv Koshti |Civilian           |Indian           |
|125    |Mohd. Asif Abdul Gani    |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Memon                    |                   |                 |
|126    |Kalpanth Jitai Singh     |Civilian           |Indian           |
|VINOLI CHOWPATY                                                         |
|127    |Sanjay Yeshwant Govilkar |Police             |Indian           |
|       |                         |(Assistant         |                 |
|       |                         |Inspector)         |                 |
|VILE PARLE BLAST                                                        |
|128    |Roldan Glandson Ayman    |Civilian           |Indian           |
|129    |Shyam Sunder Choudhary   |Civilian           |Indian           |
|130    |Balkrishna Ramchandra    |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Bore                     |                   |                 |
|LEOPOLD CAFÉ                                                            |
|131    |Munira-ul Rayesi         |Civilian           |Oman             |
|132    |Faizal Miran Sabil-ul    |Civilian           |Oman             |
|       |Gidgali                  |                   |                 |
|133    |Asma-un Rayesi           |Civilian           |Oman             |
|134    |David John Kokar         |Civilian           |Australian       |
|135    |Harnish Patel            |Civilian           |British          |
|136    |Micheal Charles Murphy   |Civilian           |British          |
|137    |Riyan Michael Murphy     |Civilian           |British          |
|138    |Anamika Bholanath Gupta  |Civilian           |Indian           |
|139    |Minakshi Raghubhai       |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Dattaji                  |                   |                 |
|140    |Bhaskar Paddu Dewadiga   |Civilian           |Indian           |
|141    |Benjamin Jerold Methis   |Civilian           |German           |
|142    |Pravin Pandurang Sawant  |Police             |Indian           |
|       |                         |(Naik)             |                 |
|143    |Kunal Prakash Jaiswani   |Civilian           |Indian           |
|144    |Ransale Gilbert          |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Santhumayor              |                   |                 |
|145    |Ijas Abdul Karupadan     |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Kuddi                    |                   |                 |
|146    |Nilesh Mahendra Gandhi   |Civilian           |Indian           |
|147    |Prakash Satan Bharwani   |Civilian           |Indian           |
|148    |Ramchandra Selumadhav    |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Nair                     |                   |                 |
|149    |Bharat Sasuprasad Gujar  |Civilian           |Indian           |
|150    |Rasika Krushna Sawant    |Civilian           |Indian           |
|151    |Mohd. Parvez Aslam Ansari|Civilian           |Indian           |
|152    |Mohd. Ayub Mohd. Abdul   |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Ansari                   |                   |                 |
|153    |Manoj Bahadur Thakur     |Civilian           |Indian           |
|154    |Fanishang Misha Bhishum  |Civilian           |Indian           |
|155    |Naresh Mulchand Jumani   |Civilian           |Indian           |
|156    |Prashant Vasant Tambe    |Civilian           |Indian           |
|157    |Nivrutti Baburao Gavhane |Police             |Indian           |
|       |                         |(Naik)             |                 |
|158    |Katherin Austin          |Civilian           |Australian       |
|MAZGAON BLAST                                                           |
|159    |Rajendraprasad Ramchandra|Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Maurya                   |                   |                 |
|160    |Abdul Salim Shaikh       |Civilian           |Indian           |
|161    |Shahbaz Juber Khan       |Civilian           |Indian           |
|162    |Sabira Majid Khan        |Civilian           |Indian           |
|163    |Sohel Abdul Shaikh       |Civilian           |Indian           |
|164    |Kabir Bablu Shaikh       |Civilian           |Indian           |
|165    |Kulsum Babu Shaikh       |Civilian           |Indian           |
|166    |Jasmin Babu Shaikh       |Civilian           |Indian           |
|167    |Imran Mohd. Shafi Pathari|Civilian           |Indian           |
|168    |Manoharabegum Ali Ahmed  |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Shaikh                   |                   |                 |
|169    |Hawa Abdul Salim Shaikh  |Civilian           |Indian           |
|170    |Sanju Kurshna Ghorpade   |Civilian           |Indian           |
|171    |Manorabagum Ali Akbar    |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Shaikh                   |                   |                 |
|172    |Saiddiqui Firoz Shaikh   |Civilian           |Indian           |
|173    |Shamin Rauf Shaikh       |Civilian           |Indian           |
|174    |Rahaman Ali Akbar Shaikh |Civilian           |Indian           |
|175    |Heena China Shaikh       |Civilian           |Indian           |
|176    |Mukhtar Shriniwas Shaikh |Civilian           |Indian           |
|177    |Kanhaikumar Harikishor   |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Paswan                   |                   |                 |
|HOTEL TAJ                                                               |
|178    |Deepak Narsu Dhole       |Police             |Indian           |
|       |                         |(Inspector)        |                 |
|179    |Samadhan Shankar More    |State Reserve      |Indian           |
|       |                         |Police Force       |                 |
|180    |Sanjay Uttam Gomase      |State Reserve      |Indian           |
|       |                         |Police Force       |                 |
|181    |Rafal Godas              |Civilian           |Spanish          |
|182    |Maria Roza Romero        |Civilian           |Spanish          |
|183    |Simond Helis             |Civilian           |British          |
|184    |Eyujin Tan Jhonsi        |Civilian           |Philippines      |
|185    |Hanifa Bilakiya          |Civilian           |Indian           |
|186    |Anjum Gaful Bilakiya     |Civilian           |Indian           |
|187    |U.T Bernad               |Civilian           |German           |
|188    |Vinay Keshavaji Kuntawala|Civilian           |Indian           |
|189    |Deepak Pramod Gupta      |Civilian           |Indian           |
|190    |Pragati Deepak Gupta     |Civilian           |Indian           |
|191    |Mohanlal Pratap Taware   |Civilian           |Indian           |
|192    |Sunil Kumar Jodha        |Security Force     |Indian           |
|193    |Vishvanath Maruti Gaikwad|State Reserve      |Indian           |
|       |                         |Police Force       |                 |
|194    |K.R. Rammurthi           |Civilian           |Indian           |
|195    |Adil Rohengtan Irani     |Civilian           |Indian           |
|196    |Ashish Ankush Patil      |Civilian           |Indian           |
|197    |Nitin Digamber Kakade    |Police             |Indian           |
|       |                         |(Sub-Inspector)    |                 |
|198    |Naushir Firoz Sanjana    |Civilian           |Indian           |
|199    |Jagdish Waman Gujran     |Civilian           |Indian           |
|200    |Nitin Satishkumar Minocha|Civilian           |Indian           |
|201    |Sajesh Narayan Nair      |Civilian           |Indian           |
|202    |Rakesh Harischandra      |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Chawan                   |                   |                 |
|203    |Amit Raghnuath Khetle    |Police             |Indian           |
|       |                         |(Constable)        |                 |
|204    |Ashok Laxman Pawar       |Police             |Indian           |
|       |                         |(Naik)             |                 |
|205    |Arun Sarjerao Mane       |Police             |Indian           |
|       |                         |(Naik)             |                 |
|206    |Saudagar Nivrutti Shinde |Police             |Indian           |
|       |                         |(Constable)        |                 |
|207    |Shankar Shamrao Pawar    |Police             |Indian           |
|       |                         |(Constable)        |                 |
|NARIMAN HOUSE                                                           |
|208    |Prakash Rawji Surve      |Civilian           |Indian           |
|209    |Bablu Rajsing Yallam     |Civilian           |Indian           |
|210    |Sanjay Laxman Katar      |Civilian           |Indian           |
|211    |Vijay Ankush Falke       |Civilian           |Indian           |
|212    |Ashok Babu Sunnap        |Civilian           |Indian           |
|213    |Pradosh Prakash Perekar  |Civilian           |Indian           |
|214    |Anil Sakharam Varal      |Civilian           |Indian           |
|HOTEL OBEROI & HOTEL TRIDENT                                            |
|215    |Shabbir Tahirna Naruddin |Civilian           |Indian           |
|216    |Amardeep Harkisan Sethi  |Civilian           |Indian           |
|217    |Sidharth Rajkumar Tyagi  |Civilian           |Indian           |
|218    |Drrissuz Sobizutski      |Civilian           |Poland           |
|219    |Linda Oricistala Rangsdel|Civilian           |American         |
|220    |Alisa Micheal            |Civilian           |Canadian         |
|221    |Andolina Waokta          |Civilian           |American         |
|222    |Helan Connolly           |Civilian           |Canadian         |
|223    |Jahid Jibad Mebyar       |Civilian           |Jordanian        |
|224    |Shi Fung Chen            |Civilian           |Japanese         |
|225    |Reshma Sanjay Khiyani    |Civilian           |Indian           |
|226    |C.M. Puri                |Civilian           |Indian           |
|227    |Capt. A.K. Singh         |Security Force     |Indian           |
|228    |Camando Manish           |Security Force     |Indian           |
|229    |Apurva Natwarlal Parekh  |Civilian           |Indian           |
|230    |Dinaj Puranchand Sharma  |Civilian           |Indian           |
|231    |Chandresh Harjiwandas    |Civilian           |Indian           |
|       |Vyas                     |                   |                 |
|232    |Imran Jan Mohd. Merchant |Civilian           |Indian           |
|233    |Appasaheb Maruti Patil   |Civilian           |Indian           |
|234    |Anil Bhaskar Kolhe       |State Reserve      |Indian           |
|       |                         |Police Force       |                 |
|235    |Gangaram Suryabhan Borde |Civilian           |Indian           |
|236    |Ranjit Jagganath Jadhav  |State Reserve      |Indian           |
|       |                         |Police Force       |                 |
|237    |Joseph Joy Pultara       |Civilian           |Indian           |
|238    |Virendra Pitamber Semwal |Civilian           |Indian           |


                                 SCHEDULE II

                           LIST OF ACCUSED PERSONS


|SR. No.  |NAME                                                          |
|ACCUSED ON TRIAL                                                        |
|1        |Mohammad Ajmal Mohammad Amir Kasab @ Abu Mujahid              |
|2        |Fahim Arshad Mohammad Yusuf Ansari @ Abu Jarar @ Sakib @ Sahil|
|         |Pawaskar @ Sameer Shaikh@ Ahmed Hasan                         |
|3        |Sabauddin Ahmed Shabbir Ahmed Shaikh @ Saba @ Farhan @        |
|         |Mubbashir @ Babar @ Sameer Singh @ Sanjiv @ Abu-Al-Kasim @    |
|         |Iftikhar @ Murshad @ Mohammad Shafik@Ajmal Ali                |
|ACCUSED WHO DIED IN COMMISSION OF OFFENCE                               |
|1        |Ismail Khan @Abu Ismail                                       |
|2        |Imran Babar @ Abu Aqsa                                        |
|3        |Nasir @ Abu Umar                                              |
|4        |Nazir @ Abu Omair                                             |
|5        |Hafiz Arshad @ Abdul Rehaman Bada @ Hayaji                    |
|6        |Abadul Reheman Chhota @ Saqib                                 |
|7        |Fahad Ullah                                                   |
|8        |Javed @ Abu Ali                                               |
|9        |Shoaib @ Abu Soheb                                            |
|WANTED ACCUSED                                                          |
|1        |Hafeez Mohammad Saeed @ Hafiz @ Hafiz Saab                    |
|2        |Zaki-Ur-Rehaman Lakhvi                                        |
|3        |Abu Hamza                                                     |
|4        |Abu Al Kama @ Amjid                                           |
|5        |Abu Kaahfa                                                    |
|6        |Mujjamil @ Yusuf                                              |
|7        |Zarar Shah                                                    |
|8        |Abu Fahad Ullah                                               |
|9        |Abu Abdul Rehman                                              |
|10       |Abu Anas                                                      |
|11       |Abu Bashir                                                    |
|12       |Abu Imran                                                     |
|13       |Abu Mufti Saeed                                               |
|14       |Hakim Saab                                                    |
|15       |Yusuf                                                         |
|16       |Mursheed                                                      |
|17       |Aakib                                                         |
|18       |Abu Umar Saeed                                                |
|19       |Usman                                                         |
|20       |Major General Sahab – Name not known                          |
|21       |Kharak Singh                                                  |
|22       |Mohammad Ishfak                                               |
|23       |Javid Iqbal                                                   |
|24       |Sajid Iftikhar                                                |
|25       |Col. R. Saadat Ullah                                          |
|26       |Khurram Shahdad                                               |
|27       |Abu Abdur Rehaman                                             |
|28       |Abu Muavia                                                    |
|29       |Abu Anis                                                      |
|30       |Abu Bashir                                                    |
|31       |Abu Hanjla Pathan                                             |
|32       |Abu Saria                                                     |
|33       |Abu Saif Ur Rehman                                            |
|34       |Abu Imran                                                     |
|35       |Hakim Saheb                                                   |



                                SCHEDULE III

                                DNA EVIDENCE


|SR. NO.  |NAME OF THE       |FORWARDING LETTER |ARTICLES SEIZED DURING  |OPINION                              |
|         |TERRORIST         |TO FSL FOR DNA    |INVESTIGATION IN M.V.   |                                     |
|         |                  |PROFILING         |KUBER                   |                                     |
|1.       |Kasab             |Exhibit No. 658   |Jacket (Art. 186 Colly.)|The DNA profile from the control     |
|         |                  |                  |                        |sample matched with the DNA profile  |
|         |                  |                  |                        |from sweat detected in jacket –      |
|         |                  |                  |                        |report is Exhibit No. 205-F          |
|2.       |Abu Ismail        |Exhibit No. 216   |Blanket (Art. 184       |The DNA profile from the control     |
|         |                  |                  |Colly.)                 |sample matched with the DNA profile  |
|         |                  |                  |                        |from sweat detected on blanket –     |
|         |                  |                  |                        |report is Exhibit No. 205-B          |
|3.       |Imran Babar       |Exhibit No. 683   |–                       |–                                    |
|4.       |Abu Umar          |Exhibit No. 683   |Monkey Cap (Art. 187    |The DNA profile from the control     |
|         |                  |                  |Colly.)                 |sample matched with the DNA profile  |
|         |                  |                  |                        |from sweat detected on Monkey cap –  |
|         |                  |                  |                        |report is Exhibit No. 205-E          |
|5.       |Abu Omair         |Exhibit No. 671   |Jacket (Art. 186 Colly.)|The DNA profile from the control     |
|         |                  |Colly             |                        |sample matched with the DNA profile  |
|         |                  |                  |                        |from sweat detected on jacket –      |
|         |                  |                  |                        |report is Exhibit No. 205-G          |
|6.       |Abdul Rehman Bada |–                 |–                       |–                                    |
|7.       |Abdul Rehman      |Exhibit No. 665   |Israeli Cap (Art. 187   |The DNA profile from the control     |
|         |Chhota            |                  |Colly.)                 |sample matched with the DNA profile  |
|         |                  |                  |                        |from sweat detected on Israeli cap – |
|         |                  |                  |                        |report is Exhibit No. 205-D          |
|8.       |Fahadullah        |Exhibit No. 666   |–                       |–                                    |
|9.       |Abu Ali           |Exhibit No. 671   |Handkerchief (Art. 206) |The DNA profile from the control     |
|         |                  |Colly.            |                        |sample matched with the DNA profile  |
|         |                  |                  |                        |from sweat detected on handkerchief –|
|         |                  |                  |                        |report is Exhibit No. 205-C          |
|10.      |Abu Soheb         |Exhibit No. 671   |–                       |–                                    |
|         |                  |Colly.            |                        |                                     |

                                                                  REPORTABLE

                        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

                       CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION

                    CRIMINAL APPEAL NOS.1899-1900 OF 2011



MOHAMMED AJMAL MOHAMMAD
AMIR KASAB @ ABU MUJAHID                .... APPELLANT

                                   VERSUS



STATE OF MAHARASHTRA                    ... RESPONDENT

                                    WITH



                      CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 1961 OF 2011



STATE OF MAHARASHTRA                    .... APPELLANT



                                   VERSUS



FAMHIM HARSHAD MOHAMMAD YUSUF
ANSARI & ANOTHER                        ... RESPONDENTS

                                    WITH



                 TRANSFER PETITION (CRIMINAL) NO. 30 OF 2012



RADHAKANT YADAV                         .... APPELLANT



                                   VERSUS



UNION OF INDIA & OTHERS                      ... RESPONDENTS







                                  JUDGMENT

CHANDRAMAULI KR. PRASAD,J.

      I agree.

      However, I wish to add few words of my own.

      In all human affairs absolute certainty is myth. Prof. Brett puts  it,
“ all exactness is fake”. Ordinarily, E.L.Dorado theory of “absolute  proof”
being unattainable,  the  law  accepts  for  it  probability  as  a  working
substitute.

      Hardly one come  across  a  case,  where  Court  does  not  resort  to
“certain probability” as working substitute for proof beyond all  reasonable
doubt.  However,  in  the  case  in  hand,  from  the  evidence,  oral   and
documentary, reference of which have copiously been made in the judgment  by
my noble and learned Brother Aftab Alam, J. make me believe  that  “absolute
certainty” may not necessarily be a myth or fake in all cases and can  be  a
reality.

      The present case is an exception.  Here, I am more than  certain  that
the planning and conspiracy to commit the crime were  hatched  in  Pakistan,
the perpetrators of crime were Pakistani trained  at  different  centres  in
that country, and the devastation which took place at various places in  the
city of Mumbai, were executed by the appellant in furtherance thereof.

                                 …………………………………………………………J.

                                (CHANDRAMAULI KR. PRASAD)



NEW DELHI,

AUGUST 29,2012.

-----------------------
[1]    A complete list of people killed  and  injured  is  appended  at  the
bottom of the judgment as Schedule No. I, forming part of the judgment.

[2]    A complete list of the accused in three  categories,  i.e.,  (i)  the
three who faced the trial, (ii) the nine who died in  course  of  commission
of the crimes and (iii) the thirty five (35) who remain  to  be  apprehended
is appended at the bottom of this judgment as Schedule No. II, forming  part
of the judgment.

[3]    A term used by the appellant; vernacular adaptation of buddy.

[4]    To reconstruct the events at the  CST  the  prosecution  has  examine
fifty-three (53) witnesses. Leaving aside the  forensic  experts  and  other
witnesses of a formal nature such  as  panch  witness,  the  number  of  eye
witnesses who gave ocular accounts of the events is not  less  than  twenty-
five (25). Out of these, ten (10)  are  policemen  and  members  of  Railway
Protection Force (RPF) and Home Guard; among  them  three  (3)  are  injured
witnesses. Of the remaining fifteen(15), nine (9) are  passengers,  of  whom
eight (8) are injured witnesses. Of the remaining  six  (6),  four  (4)  are
railway employees, of whom two (2) are injured. The remaining  two  (2)  are
photographers from the Times of India, one of the prime English  dailies  of
the country.

[5]    According  to  the  appellant’s  confessional  statement  before  the
magistrate, before lobbing the hand grand at the crowd  of  passengers,  Abu
Ismail had placed the bag containing the RDX bomb, with the  timer  set  for
blast, among the passengers’ luggage. Fortunately, however, the bomb  failed
to explode. The bomb along with the  bag  was  later  seized  after  it  was
diffused by the bomb disposal squad, but that forms  part  of  the  forensic
evidence to which we will advert in due course.

[6]    The fake identity card with Hindu name given to each  member  of  the
group of terrorists by Abu Kafa before leaving  for Mumbai

[7]    Independently established through mobile phone call records

[8]    As we shall see presently this  was  Assistant  Sub-Inspector  Sudama
Aba Pandarkar (PW-62)

[9]     As we shall see presently this was Police  Constable  Ambadas  Pawar
(one of the policemen falling down to the terrorists’ bullets)

[10]   All the three pictures clearly show Kasab, carrying  a  haversack  on
his back and an AK-47 in his hands. In the first picture he is shown  moving
forward, with the left hand raised and the  right  hand  holding  the  AK-47
with the barrel pointing downwards. In the second picture he is raising  the
gun with the right hand and the left hand is coming  down  towards  the  gun
for providing support. In the third picture  he  is  stepping  forward  with
both hands holding AK-47 at waist level in firing position.

[11]   As we shall see presently these two were  Police  Inspector  Shashank
Shinde and Police Constable Ambadas Pawar (who fell down to the  terrorists’
bullets).

[12]   Ext. nos. 410-A, 410-B and 410-C are pictures taken  when  Kasab  and
Abu Ismail were at CST. All the three pictures appear to be taken  from  the
front. In the pictures they appear behind what appears to be the  frames  of
a set of two metal detectors. In Ext. no. 410-A Kasab  and  Abu  Ismail  are
standing about three ft. apart peering ahead; in Ext. no. 410-B they  appear
standing close together in the frame of the metal  detector  looking  ahead.
In Ext. no. 410-C Abu Ismail is hidden behind a pillar but Kasab is  clearly
shown carrying a haversack on his back and an AK-47 in both hands.

[13]   Ext. no. 410-D clearly shows Kasab coming down  form  the  foot-over-
bridge. The picture was taken with a flash and, therefore,  it  shows  Kasab
both startled and angry with the haversack hanging  from  the  shoulder  and
the AK-47 held in both hands ready to fire.

[14]   PW-62, Injured: shown in photograph Ext. no. 245

[15]   Ambadas Pawar, killed; shown  lying  down  with  Shashank  Shinde  in
photograph Ext. no. 242

[16]   PW-61, D’souza

[17]    Though Devika was not examined by the police  earlier  and  she  was
only a child aged 10 years, on an application made by  the  prosecution  the
trial court by order dated June 10, 2009 allowed her to be examined  as  one
of the prosecution witnesses under oath after being satisfied that  she  was
capable of understanding the meaning of oath. We feel that the  trial  court
was quite justified in examining Devika as  one  of  the  witnesses  of  the
occurrence.

[18]   For this part of the case the prosecution  examined  thirty-two  (32)
witnesses. Leaving aside the doctors, forensic experts and  other  witnesses
of a formal nature, such as panch witnesses, the  number  of  eye  witnesses
who gave an ocular account of the events is not less than  eleven  (11).  Of
the eleven (11), two are policemen both of whom  received  injuries  at  the
hands of Kasab and Abu Ismail, five (5) are from the public of whom one  (1)
is injured, and four (4) are hospital staff of whom two (2) are injured.

[19]   The number relates to the persons killed and  injured  by  Kasab  and
Abu Ismail both in the lane before they entered  Cama  hospital  and  inside
the hospital.

[20]   They were 1.Timesh Narsing Chinnekar (PW-123) whose  wife  Gracy  was
admitted in the hospital on November  22,  2008,  for  delivery;  2.  Thomas
Sidhappa Uledhar (PW-108), brother-in-law of  Chinnekar;  and  3.  Soman,  a
friend of Uledhar

[21]   The only issue on which the two judges hearing the case  were  unable
to agree completely was what would be the witnesses’  feelings  towards  the
saint. The author of these lines felt that he would never again  go  to  the
shrine holding him responsible for getting nearly  killed  on  November  26.
The other judge, on the other hand, maintained  that  the  occurrence  would
have greatly enhanced his devotion for the saint,  whom  the  witness  would
see as his savior.

[22]   The New Hospital building of Cama Hospital had two lifts, apart  from
the stairs, for going to the upper floors. The lifts could take  one  up  to
the sixth floor but the stairs would go beyond, right up to the  terrace  of
the building.

[23]   For this part of the case  the  prosecution  examined  eighteen  (18)
witnesses. Leaving aside the doctor, forensic expert and other witnesses  of
a formal nature, such as panch witnesses, the number of  eye  witnesses  who
gave an ocular account of the events is not less than seven (7). Out of  the
seven (7), six (6) are policemen one (1) of whom received  injuries  at  the
hands of Kasab and Abu Ismail and one  (1)  is  the  driver  of  a  car  who
received gunshot injuries when his car was fired upon by the terrorists.

[24]   The number relates to the persons killed and  injured  by  Kasab  and
Abu Ismail from the point they came out of  Cama  hospital  and  until  they
snatched the Skoda car.

[25]   Thorawade (PW-128) was earlier examined  on  July  14,  2009,  before
Kadam (PW-138) who was examined on July 27, 2009.  But on July 14, 2009,  he
only stated before the court that, from November 28, 2008, he  was  handling
the investigation of Crime No.245-08 till it was taken over by DCB, CID,  on
December 2, 2008.  Later, Kadam, in his deposition before the court,  stated
that Thorawade was also among  the  policemen  stationed  in  front  of  the
entrance to Cama Hospital  when  Kasab  and  Abu  Ismail  came  out  of  the
Hospital, and he too had witnessed the whole incident. Thereupon, the  court
recalled Thorawade and he was re-examined  by  the  court  on  November  23,
2009.

[26]   Peter Mobile is the name given to a vehicle fitted  with  a  wireless
system. One such Peter Mobile is provided to each police station  under  the
direct control of the Sr. PI in charge of the police station.

[27]   Abu Ismail was firing at the crowd assembled at  the  Metro  junction
while driving the  Qualis  police  vehicle  which  the  two  terrorists  had
snatched after killing all but one of its occupants. Actually both  the  two
persons, namely, police constable driver  Chitte  and  a  civilian  Surendra
Bindu Ram, were killed, vide PW-654  (Ashok  Dattatraya  Khedkar,  Assistant
Police Inspector)

[28]   Pydhonie Division  Jeep  was  assigned  to  Shantilal  Arjun  Bhamre,
Assistant Commissioner of Police, Pydhonie  Division  (PW-133)  and  he  had
come there on that Jeep.

[29]    For  this  part  of  the  case  the  prosecution  examined  six  (6)
witnesses. Of these three (3) are policemen. One  of  them  is  formal,  the
other recorded the statement of the person from whom the car was taken  away
at gun-point and, since he was not the jurisdictional policeman,  he  handed
over the recorded statement to  the  jurisdictional  policeman  who  is  the
third police witness. Of the remaining three (3), two (2) are the  occupants
of the car and the third is the person whom they were going to rescue  after
he was evacuated from Oberoi Hotel.

[30]   For this part of the case  the  prosecution  has  examined  ten  (10)
witnesses. Leaving aside  two  (2)  panch  witnesses  and  a  formal  police
witness, there are seven (7) police witnesses of whom three (3) are  members
of the team that overpowered Kasab and Abu Ismail and took them  in  custody
(one of them  is  injured),  two  (2)  reached  the  spot  after  Kasab  was
apprehended  and  had  taken  him  and  Abu  Ismail  to  hospital,  one  (1)
maintained the  police  logs  and  the  last  secured  the  area  after  the
incident.

[31]   According to the Post-Mortem of Abu Ismai (Ext. no.  97)  there  were
six (6) bullet wounds on his person; among the other parts of the  body,  he
was hit on the right eye and on the rear side of head, the front portion  of
the arm of the right hand shoulder and also at a distance of  seven  (7)  cm
down from the right hand shoulder. It would thus appear that he was  hit  by
shots fired by both, Kadam and Bavthankar.

[32]   Their identity was established by DNA profiling  of  the  remains  of
the bodies found in the destroyed taxi.

[33]    All calls established through mobile call records.

[34]   One (1) the “Nakhva” on the Kuber; fifty-two (52) at CST; seven  (7),
“Cama in”; nine (9), “Cama out”; one (1) at Vinoli Chowpaty; and two (2)  in
the Vile Parle taxi blast.

[35]   One hundred and nine (109) at CST; ten (10), “Cama  in”;  seven  (7),
“Cama out”; one (1) at Vinoli Chowpaty; and three (3)  at  Vile  Parle  taxi
blast.

[36]   From the ballistic analysis of the AK-47 bullets recovered from  dead
bodies,  (only  such  that  were  not  fragmented  and   were   capable   of
identification), it came to be established that at least  six  (6)  persons,
namely, Sitaram Sakhare, Rahamtulla Ibrahim, Vinod Madanlal  Gupta,  Ambadas
Ramchandra Pawar, Abbas Rajab Ansari (at CST) and Tukaram Gopal  Ombale  (at
Vinoli Chaupaty) were hit by shots from the AK-47 rifle,  Article  10,  held
by the appellant. Ashok Kamte, according to the forensic evidence,  was  hit
by shots fired from Article 427, the AK-47 rifle used by Abu Ismail.

[37]   See letter  dated  January  5,  2009  from  the  Chief  Investigating
Officer to the Police Surgeon, Mumbai, Article 991

[38]   See Wasim Ahmed  Bashiruddin  Shaikh  (PW-225)  and  Mohammad  Rabiul
Mohammad Kiramal Shaikh (PW-176)

[39]    All this can be witnessed in the CCTV recordings of the Hotel.

[40]   After having taken Ramamoorthy captive, the terrorists  were  talking
with their handlers and collaborators from across the  border  on  a  mobile
phone. The collaborators asked them to find out  Ramamoorthy’s  identity  so
as to ascertain whether he was sufficiently important to  be  used  for  any
bargains or negotiations with  the  Indian  authorities.  Ramamoorthy  first
said that he was a teacher at which the terrorists mocked  him,  saying  how
could he stay at the Taj on a salary of  Rupees  twenty  thousand  a  month.
They sarcastically asked him whether he was a smuggler and  whether  he  was
teaching his pupils how to kill Muslims. Ramamoorthy finally  disclosed  his
true identity.

      Before he was able to escape, Ramamoorthy had a  most  harrowing  time
with his captors, and one may appreciate  his  plight  by  recalling  a  few
verses from a contemporary poem reflecting the feelings of  a  person  taken
as one of the hostages by the terrorists.

                       “I feel entrapped
                       Just like you do.
                       You by your acts
                       and I by you.


                       “You target me
                       yet you are blind
                       product of an
                       imprisoned mind.


                       Your freedom comes
                       with your last breath
                       for me, when I
                       escape from death.


                       No questions asked
                       when you will die
                       those mourning me
                       will question why.”
                             (from ‘Retaliate’ by Kapil Sibal, in  My  World
                 Within)

[41]   On being questioned by the terrorists, Adil Rohinton Irani  gave  his
name as Adil, and said that he was a Muslim, in the  hope  that  this  would
endear him to his captors. On the contrary, it only provoked the ire of  the
terrorists, who were particularly rough with him,  calling  him  a  “traitor
Musalman”.

[42]   This was in all probability the explosion of the RDX bomb  placed  by
the terrorists themselves on the fifth floor of the hotel.

[43]    Both  the  bombs  planted  by  the   terrorists   exploded   causing
considerable damage; see Rambuval Chandrapati Yadav (PW-202).

[44]   See the evidence of Kazi Zakir Hussain (PW-239).

[45]   It is reported that it was at the Taj Mahal Hotel ballroom  that,  on
February 20, 1918, at her eighteenth birthday party, Ruttie had accepted  Mr
Jinnah’s hand in marriage while the band was playing  the  Chopin  tune,  So
Deep is the Night. It is also reported that both Mr. Jinnah, the creator  of
Pakistan, and Mrs. Sarojini Naidu, the  President  of  the  Indian  National
Congress, often held court at Taj Mahal Hotel.

      Mr. Jinnah also had an intimate connection  with  Mazgaon,  where  the
bomb planted by two terrorists in a taxi exploded,  killing  three  (3)  and
wounding nineteen (19) people.  It  is  reported  that  Mr.  Jinnah  devoted
Thursday afternoons to visiting the grave of his wife Ruttie  at  the  Khoja
Shiite Isna’ashri Cemetry, situated at Mazgaon, Mumbai.

      One wonders what Quaied-e-Azam would have  thought  of  the  terrorist
attack on his favourite city in  the  subcontinent  and  especially  on  Taj
Mahal Hotel, with which he had a personal relationship of  a  very  intimate
kind.

[46]   In conversations (Talks no.3 and 4)  on  mobile  phones  between  the
terrorists at Hotel Taj and their collaborators from across the border,  the
latter gleefully tell the former that a  minister  was  trapped  inside  the
hotel and that, on the orders  of  the  Prime  Minister,  a  helicopter  was
likely to come to his rescue, and further that the  terrorists  should  find
and catch him and not allow him to flee.

[47]   See the evidence of Additional Commissioner of  Police  Saravanaswamy
Jagannathan (PW-37) and Commandant Prabhdeep  Singh  Malhotra  (PW-26),  and
Exhibits no. 172A and 140.

[48]   See Exhibit no. 160, the office copy  of  the  original  registration
certificate.

[49]   It may be stated here that the witness was giving  the  list  of  the
articles from his memory. At this stage, in answer to a court  question,  he
sought permission to refer to the Panchnama Ext. no. 182 and,  on  referring
to the Panchnama, he said that there were  fourteen  (14)  to  fifteen  (15)
shirts.

[50]  * A reference to the panchnama, Ext. no. 182 would show that  each  of
these articles had markings/writings that unmistakably  indicated  that  all
the articles originated in Pakistan.

[51]   Vermicelli

[52]   It may be noted here that among the one hundred and  sixty-six  (166)
persons  killed  in  the  terrorist  attack,  six  (6)  were  US   citizens.
Consequently, FBI case no.LA252196 was instituted  and  investigations  were
also made  in  America.  This  facilitated  some  coordination  between  the
investigating agencies in the two countries. The FBI rendered some  forensic
assistance  to  investigators  in  India  and   also   responded   to   some
letterogatories sent by  the  Indian  court  (See  PW-153,  Geoffrey  Maron,
Special Agent, FBI).

[53]   The full description of the pink foam piece is given at  Exhibit  no.
32, in the Panchnama dated November 27, 2008, Ext. no. 486.

[54]   See Ext. no. 182 and PW-41 Gorakh Nalawade (for seizure of  the  foam
pieces on Kuber), Ext. no. 269 and PW-74 Pandharinath Yeram (for seizure  of
the foam pieces from CST), Ext. no. 486 and PW-115  Nazimuddin  Sheikh  (for
seizure of the foam pieces from Cama Hospital) & Ext.  no.  736  and  PW-182
Prakash Bhoite (for seizure of the foam pieces from  Hotel  Taj):  The  foam
pieces were numbered in the forensic science laboratory as Ext.  no.  75  of
DNA-443B-08 in Ext. no. 1011 (on Kuber), Ext. no. 1  M.494-08  in  Ext.  no.
1012 (from CST), Ext. no. 53 of BL No. 990/C/08 in Ext. no. 1009 (from  Cama
Hospital) and Ext. no. 1 of M.516-08 & Ext. no. 3 of M.516-08  in  Ext.  no.
1010 (from Hotel Taj): And  finally  see  the  deposition  of  the  Forensic
Examiner Ramchandra Mavle (PW-247) and his report Ext. no. 1013

[55]   Described in the transcripts of intercepted  calls  from  Hotel  Taj:
Talk no.2

[56]   Nariman House, Talk No. 26 (Ext. no. 990)

[57]   Hotel Taj, Talk No. 4 (Ext. no. 971)

[58]   Hotel Taj, Talk No. 8 (Ext. No. 972)

[59]   Hotel Oberoi, Talk No. 4 (Ext. no. 979)

[60]   Hotel Taj, Talk No. 3 (Ext. No. 970)

[61]   (2006)  3  SCC  374  (paragraphs  33-39  with  special  reference  to
paragraph 38

[62]   (2008) 5 SCC 633 (paragraph 8, page 636)

[63]   (2008) 16 SCC 417 (paragraphs 71, 113, 114)

[64]   (2008) 16 SCC 497 (paragraph 5, page 499)

[65]   (2009) 7 SCC 104 (paragraph 53, page 127)

[66]   (2009) 14 SCC 677 (paragraph 10, page 680)

[67]   (1955) 1 SCR 613 (page 653, 2nd paragraph, 654)

[68]   (1985) 3 SCC 545 (paragraph 28 and 29, page 569, 570)

[69]   This statement  is  factually  inaccurate  but  in  fairness  to  Mr.
Ramachandran it must be stated that, as the facts unfolded and  the  correct
picture  emerged,  he  immediately  corrected  himself   and   adapted   his
submissions, as we shall see in due course, to the correct facts.

[70]   (1978) 2 SCC 424

[71]   384 US 436 (1966)

[72]   (1981) 1 SCC 627

[73]   (2005) 11 SCC 600

[74]   (1994) 3 SCC 569

[75]   (1997) 1 SCC 416

[76]   (2010) 7 SCC 263

[77]   [1962] 3 SCR 10

[78]   512 US 452 (1993)

[79]   130 S.Ct. 2250 (2010) [State Compilation 1, pg. 138]

[80]   130 S.Ct. 2250 at 2260 (2010) [State Compilation 1, pg. 151]

[81]   [1992] 177 CLR 292

[82]   [2010] 2 S.C.R. 310

[83]   (2009) 49 EHRR 19

[84]   [2011] UKSC 43

[85]   [2011] UKSC 54

[86]   (1992) 3 SCC 259

[87]   (2011) 12 SCC 362

[88]   AIR 1957 SC 637 (644)

[89]   309 US 227: 84 L Ed 716: 60 S Ct 472 (1940)

[90]   384 US 436: 16 L Ed 2d 694 (1966)

[91]   378 US 478: 12 L Ed 2d 977 (1964)

[92]   AIR 1952 SC 75

[93]   (1980) 1 SCC 98

[94]   Hussainara Khatoon (IV) v. Home Secretary, State of Bihar,  (1980)  1
SCC 98

[95]   (1986) 2 SCC 401

[96]   A detailed form prescribed after this Court’s decision in D.K.  Basu,
which every police officer in Maharashtra is required  to  fill  up  at  the
time of making arrest in compliance with the directions of this Court.

[97]   Criminal Appeal No.284 of 1968, decided on December 17, 1968

[98]   (1969) 1 SCR 32

[99]   (1974) 3 SCC 581 (para 1)

[100]  We may recall  here  the  injunction  by  the  collaborators  to  the
terrorists against being caught alive as appearing  in  the  transcripts  of
their phone calls.

[101]  On an enquiry made by the court as to how the appellant, being  under
judicial remand, came to learn that Pakistan had acknowledged him to be  his
national, it came to light that the appellant learnt  about  the  fact  from
the guards on duty.

      Actually, on February 12, 2009,  the  Interior  Minister  of  Pakistan
acknowledged that the  appellant  is  a  citizen  of  Pakistan  in  a  press
conference.  But the appellant came to know about it much later and used  it
as an excuse to make a statement before the court.

[102]  (1999) 5 SCC 253 (para 111)

[103]  2011 (8) SCALE 328

[104]  Recall here the “plea of guilty” statement made by him in  the  midst
of his trial. In this statement he artfully  and  very  subtly  changed  his
earlier statement, recorded under Section 164 CrPC, thus  cleverly  offering
himself for conviction but trying to escape the extreme penalty.

[105]  (1980) 2 SCC 684

[106]  (1983) 3 SCC 470

[107]  (2011) 5 SCC 317, paras 23-24

[108]  (2008) 13 SCC 767, para 43, 48-53

[109]  (2009) 6 SCC 498, para 64-66, 71-72, 80-89

[110]  (2009) 11 SCALE 327, para 11-23: (2010) 14 SCC 641

[111]  (2009) 5 SCC 740, para 83-84, 107-110

[112]  (2011) 2 SCC 764

[113]  (2010) 3 SCC 508, para 80

[114]  (2010) 1 SCC 775, para 66-67

[115]  (1996) 9 SCC 502, para 15

[116]  (2001) 9 SCC 1, para 1, 63