Three bomb blasts go off within 11 minutes at Zaveri Bazar, Kabutarkhana, and Opera House
Three blasts between 6.54 p.m. and 7.05 p.m. on Wednesday rocked the crowded areas of Mumbai, killing 21 persons and injuring 141 others. The most powerful one, suspected to have been set off by an IED (improvised explosive device), occurred at Zaveri Bazaar in south Mumbai, a congested part of the city, the second at Kabutarkhana near the Dadar suburban railway station in central Mumbai and the third at Opera House, also in south Mumbai.
Maharashtra Chief Minister Prithviraj Chavan, confirming the death toll, said the blasts were a terror strike and the police would get to the bottom of it. He said the blasts occurred at 6.54 p.m., 6.55 p.m. and 7.05 p.m.
Appealing to Mumbaikars to remain calm, Mr. Chavan said he had spoken to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Union Home Minister P. Chidambaram and both of them assured the State all help.
In the blast near a bus stop at Kabutarkhana, according to eyewitness accounts, a car that was passing by was shattered and its driver injured. The damaged bus stop and broken glass of nearby shops bore testimony to the intensity of the bomb, which was placed near the Hanuman Mandir, according to Additional Chief Secretary (Home) Umeshkumar Sarangi.
Mr. Sarangi said the bomb at Zaveri Bazaar was placed in an umbrella, while the one at Opera House was in a manhole. While Mumbai Police Commissioner Arup Patnaik confirmed that it was an IED that was used at Zaveri Bazaar, investigations are still on to confirm the kind of explosive used at the other two places.
At Dadar, eyewitnesses said, the explosion was so loud many thought a building had collapsed. Rajendra Rathod, who has a shop just opposite the place where the bomb went off, told The Hindu that the intensity caused him to fall on the ground. A motorcyclist riding by also suffered the impact. The police cordoned off the entire area which was crammed with onlookers and the media.
There was a scuffle as workers of the Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) insisted the police were late in taking away the injured persons to hospital. People said they saw at least four persons lying injured and one dead.
Luckily, no schoolchild was injured, said Amruta Parab. For at this time of the day, usually lots of children and parents would be moving around the nearby school. Kabutarkhana is one of the most crowded areas outside the Dadar suburban station and usually there would be 150-200 people around. Rahul Gokhale heard the blast sound a little away at Portuguese Church where he lives in, and came to the site, where he witnessed chaos and confusion.
Pointing out that it was a difficult situation, Mr. Patnaik said Mumbai had witnessed blasts again and again. He promised the people that the guilty would be brought to book.
This is the third bomb blast at Zaveri Bazaar, the heart of the diamond trading area of the city. The earlier two happened in 1993 and in 2003.
On Wednesday, the bomb exploded in an area popularly called “Khau Galli” where people gather to have a snack in the evenings. It was littered with shattered glass and crowds surged to the site.
Jayesh Labdhi, a diamond merchant, was coming out of his office when he heard the loud explosion which he thought was caused by firing. Then he heard people running around and saying it was a blast. He said that he took 14-20 people to hospital. He saw almost 30 people lying around with injuries.
Some eyewitnesses said that they heard two blasts one after the other. Pravinbhai Tanna said the bomb exploded outside a shop called Super Tools. Its owner Syed Radhanpurwalla and some others inside the shop were seriously injured.
Mustafa Patakdawalla, who was helping the injured, saw a huge plume of smoke rising into the sky. Dheeraj Degliya was injured in the leg and hurt by metal particles. After the explosion there was complete darkness in the smoke-filled area. He said rains were a blessing because fewer people were out on the road.
In Opera House the bomb exploded outside the J K building in the Panchvati diamond chowk area. Pankaj Jain, a diamond trader, was in his ground floor office nearby when he heard the explosion which brought a sleet of shattered glass inside. He sustained head injuries and fled the scene to get admitted to the Saifee Hospital. There were scenes of chaos at both the Saifee and Harkisondas hospitals with relatives and the media thronging the place for information.
Jayant Sanghvi lost his hearing after the explosion. Speaking to The Hindu at the Saifee hospital, he said he had suffered head injuries too. The blast was heard a km away and even two streets down the road. On a normal day there would be 3,000 to 4,000 people in the area.
At the GT Hospital, Sadashiv Bhane was badly shaken as his son, who works in Kalbadevi as a clerk, was injured. Barun Samanta, a gold worker is frantically searching for his colleague, Kamal Dalai.
A hospital worker said nearly 30 injured persons were brought from Zaveri Bazaar and most of the serious cases were transferred to JJ and KEM.
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Showing posts with label Terrorist Ajmal Kasab. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Terrorist Ajmal Kasab. Show all posts
Wednesday, July 13, 2011
Kasab's date of birth wrongly stated as July 13
Soon after three serial bomb blasts struck Mumbai, a story started floating that July 13 is the birthday of Ajmal Kasab, the terrorist convicted for the 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks and hinted at the choice of date for the latest terror attack on India's financial capital.
Some other reports contradicted, pointing out that Ajmal Kasab was born on September 13, 1987. The confusion over Kasab's date of birth is also reflected in the multiple edits on the Wikipedia page on him. On July 13 alone, the Ajmal Kasab page on Wikipedia underwent at least 25 edits and now his date of birth there reflects both the dates.
The 13 July date of birth was attributed to a 2008 story by Praveen Swami in The Hindu that says Kasab "was born on July 13, 1987 at Faridkot village in Dipalpur tehsil of Okara district in Pakistan's Punjab province." But a September 2009 story in The Indian Express cites Arthur Road Jail records and puts Kasab's date of birth as September 13, 1987.
At IBNLive we were inundated with comments and emails from readers pointing out that the date of the Mumbai serial blasts wasn't a mere coincidence. While Kasab's interrogation report puts Kasab's date of birth as July 13, there are no other official documents publicly available to confirm Ajmal Kasab's actual date of birth. The confusion continues to prevail.
The Mumbai police had put together a picture of Ajmal Kasab's past:
Ajmal Kasab's family belongs to the Qasai (butcher) caste. Ajmal dropped out of school because of poverty. He is the third of the five children in the family. At the age of 13, Ajmal went to live with his elder brother in Lahore.
For several years, he shuttled between the homes of his brother and parents till he fought with his parents in 2005. He then fought with his parents and left home with the determination of never returning.
For a year he stayed at the shrine of the saint Syed Ali and in 2007 he began earning Rs 200 by working as a labourer. But, soon Ajmal started spending time with small-time criminals in Lahore. He then decided to make quick bucks by way of armed robbery.
Once when Ajmal and his friend went to a local market in Rawalpindi to purchase weapons, they saw activists of the LeT handing out pamphlets and posters about the organisation and activities. Ajmal then decided to join the Lashkar in the hope that the jihad training they would receive would further their future life in crime.
As a foot soldier of the LeT, Ajmal was shown films on India's purported atrocities in Kashmir, and fiery lectures of Lashkar chief Hafiz Mohammad Saeed. He then started seeing jihad as a purpose of his life and means to gain respectability in his society.
Ajmal was chosen for the Lashkar's basic combat course, the Daura-e-Aam. He performed well and was among a small group of 32 men selected to undergo advanced training at a camp near Manshera for the second level training called the Daura-e-Khaas.
Finally, he was handpicked along with nine others for specialised marine commando and navigation training given to the fidayeen unit selected to target Mumbai. Ajmal told investigators that commander Zaki-ur-Rahman Lakhvi promised that his family would be financially rewarded for his sacrifice.
While the other nine terrorists were killed during the operation in Mumbai, Ajmal lived to tell the story.
Some other reports contradicted, pointing out that Ajmal Kasab was born on September 13, 1987. The confusion over Kasab's date of birth is also reflected in the multiple edits on the Wikipedia page on him. On July 13 alone, the Ajmal Kasab page on Wikipedia underwent at least 25 edits and now his date of birth there reflects both the dates.
The 13 July date of birth was attributed to a 2008 story by Praveen Swami in The Hindu that says Kasab "was born on July 13, 1987 at Faridkot village in Dipalpur tehsil of Okara district in Pakistan's Punjab province." But a September 2009 story in The Indian Express cites Arthur Road Jail records and puts Kasab's date of birth as September 13, 1987.
At IBNLive we were inundated with comments and emails from readers pointing out that the date of the Mumbai serial blasts wasn't a mere coincidence. While Kasab's interrogation report puts Kasab's date of birth as July 13, there are no other official documents publicly available to confirm Ajmal Kasab's actual date of birth. The confusion continues to prevail.
The Mumbai police had put together a picture of Ajmal Kasab's past:
Ajmal Kasab's family belongs to the Qasai (butcher) caste. Ajmal dropped out of school because of poverty. He is the third of the five children in the family. At the age of 13, Ajmal went to live with his elder brother in Lahore.
For several years, he shuttled between the homes of his brother and parents till he fought with his parents in 2005. He then fought with his parents and left home with the determination of never returning.
For a year he stayed at the shrine of the saint Syed Ali and in 2007 he began earning Rs 200 by working as a labourer. But, soon Ajmal started spending time with small-time criminals in Lahore. He then decided to make quick bucks by way of armed robbery.
Once when Ajmal and his friend went to a local market in Rawalpindi to purchase weapons, they saw activists of the LeT handing out pamphlets and posters about the organisation and activities. Ajmal then decided to join the Lashkar in the hope that the jihad training they would receive would further their future life in crime.
As a foot soldier of the LeT, Ajmal was shown films on India's purported atrocities in Kashmir, and fiery lectures of Lashkar chief Hafiz Mohammad Saeed. He then started seeing jihad as a purpose of his life and means to gain respectability in his society.
Ajmal was chosen for the Lashkar's basic combat course, the Daura-e-Aam. He performed well and was among a small group of 32 men selected to undergo advanced training at a camp near Manshera for the second level training called the Daura-e-Khaas.
Finally, he was handpicked along with nine others for specialised marine commando and navigation training given to the fidayeen unit selected to target Mumbai. Ajmal told investigators that commander Zaki-ur-Rahman Lakhvi promised that his family would be financially rewarded for his sacrifice.
While the other nine terrorists were killed during the operation in Mumbai, Ajmal lived to tell the story.
Labels:
Ajmal Kasab,
Indian Mujahideen suspect in Mumbai Blast,
Kasab involve in Mumbai Blast,
Mumbai Blasts 2011,
Terrorist Ajmal Kasab
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