The Japan Times - India readies for US extradition of Mumbai attacks suspect

EUR -
AED 4.195358
AFN 82.238118
ALL 99.52655
AMD 444.841503
ANG 2.058576
AOA 1041.686782
ARS 1345.276464
AUD 1.776353
AWG 2.058816
AZN 1.941912
BAM 1.968632
BBD 2.306836
BDT 138.813592
BGN 1.957514
BHD 0.43047
BIF 3350.072683
BMD 1.1422
BND 1.501158
BOB 7.911394
BRL 6.458801
BSD 1.142547
BTN 97.100213
BWP 15.661812
BYN 3.738905
BYR 22387.120553
BZD 2.294929
CAD 1.580062
CDF 3286.109721
CHF 0.935916
CLF 0.02798
CLP 1073.702521
CNY 8.324015
CNH 8.318471
COP 4814.441651
CRC 577.665308
CUC 1.1422
CUP 30.268301
CVE 110.987461
CZK 24.942333
DJF 202.992002
DKK 7.465156
DOP 67.328859
DZD 151.181579
EGP 58.061346
ERN 17.133
ETB 152.930073
FJD 2.572005
FKP 0.857894
GBP 0.850054
GEL 3.129786
GGP 0.857894
GHS 17.47166
GIP 0.857894
GMD 81.669899
GNF 9886.883416
GTQ 8.799355
GYD 239.021701
HKD 8.859761
HNL 29.619061
HRK 7.534295
HTG 149.494427
HUF 404.456585
IDR 19191.416204
ILS 4.132588
IMP 0.857894
INR 97.459646
IQD 1496.655421
IRR 48086.620861
ISK 146.121706
JEP 0.857894
JMD 180.988123
JOD 0.809937
JPY 162.242691
KES 147.629604
KGS 99.88596
KHR 4573.712022
KMF 493.997869
KPW 1027.980025
KRW 1641.170036
KWD 0.350176
KYD 0.95219
KZT 585.924009
LAK 24711.64142
LBP 102366.600035
LKR 342.180382
LRD 228.494359
LSL 21.331341
LTL 3.37262
LVL 0.690905
LYD 6.250688
MAD 10.593356
MDL 19.571225
MGA 5081.052321
MKD 61.534968
MMK 2398.482111
MNT 4078.679697
MOP 9.127656
MRU 45.21935
MUR 51.684289
MVR 17.601006
MWK 1980.675654
MXN 22.376235
MYR 4.983433
MZN 73.10112
NAD 21.331341
NGN 1834.35026
NIO 42.044049
NOK 11.803484
NPR 155.360623
NZD 1.911632
OMR 0.439751
PAB 1.142522
PEN 4.187293
PGK 4.730795
PHP 64.422345
PKR 321.068861
PLN 4.267587
PYG 9148.632133
QAR 4.164408
RON 4.978396
RSD 117.979005
RUB 94.378345
RWF 1611.662725
SAR 4.284469
SBD 9.542296
SCR 16.252633
SDG 685.892663
SEK 10.958746
SGD 1.497407
SHP 0.89759
SLE 25.918281
SLL 23951.344944
SOS 652.938802
SRD 42.090243
STD 23641.234491
SVC 9.997075
SYP 14850.800134
SZL 21.324812
THB 38.081225
TJS 12.053254
TMT 4.009122
TND 3.406613
TOP 2.675143
TRY 43.878981
TTD 7.754409
TWD 37.052616
TZS 3072.518174
UAH 47.629439
UGX 4190.313079
USD 1.1422
UYU 48.103122
UZS 14803.360885
VES 98.236838
VND 29697.200733
VUV 137.728961
WST 3.157022
XAF 660.24613
XAG 0.034452
XAU 0.000342
XCD 3.086853
XDR 0.819906
XOF 660.254858
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.895869
ZAR 21.159827
ZMK 10281.173801
ZMW 31.904258
ZWL 367.787943
  • RBGPF

    -2.5700

    60.88

    -4.22%

  • RYCEF

    0.0300

    10.18

    +0.29%

  • RELX

    -0.1900

    53.36

    -0.36%

  • VOD

    0.2200

    9.57

    +2.3%

  • GSK

    0.6300

    38.06

    +1.66%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    22.32

    -0.04%

  • NGG

    0.8100

    72.85

    +1.11%

  • SCS

    -0.0300

    9.86

    -0.3%

  • RIO

    0.3100

    60.87

    +0.51%

  • BTI

    0.3400

    42.39

    +0.8%

  • CMSD

    0.0200

    22.48

    +0.09%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    12.8

    +0.47%

  • AZN

    0.3600

    69.93

    +0.51%

  • BCC

    -0.1800

    95.33

    -0.19%

  • BCE

    0.1600

    21.81

    +0.73%

  • BP

    -0.0600

    29.13

    -0.21%

India readies for US extradition of Mumbai attacks suspect
India readies for US extradition of Mumbai attacks suspect / Photo: Pedro UGARTE - AFP

India readies for US extradition of Mumbai attacks suspect

Indian authorities are readying for the extradition from the United States of a man that New Delhi accuses of helping plan the 2008 Mumbai siege that killed 166 people.

Text size:

Tahawwur Hussain Rana, 64, a Canadian citizen born in Pakistan, is due to be extradited "shortly" to face trial, Indian media said, reporting that New Delhi had sent a multi-agency team of security officials to collect him.

India accuses him of being a member of the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) group, designated by the United Nations as a terrorist organisation, and of aiding planning the attacks.

US President Donald Trump announced in February that Washington would extradite Rana, whom he called "one of the very evil people in the world".

The US Supreme Court this month rejected his bid to remain in the United States, where he is serving a sentence for a planning role in another LeT-linked attack.

New Delhi blames the LeT group -- as well as intelligence officials from New Delhi's arch-enemy Pakistan -- for the Mumbai attacks in November 2008, when 10 Islamist gunmen carried out a multi-day slaughter in the country's financial capital.

India accuses Rana of helping his longterm friend, David Coleman Headley, who was sentenced by a US court in 2013 to 35 years in prison after pleading guilty to aiding LeT militants, including by scouting target locations in Mumbai.

- 'Long wait' -

Rana, a former military medic who served in Pakistan's army, emigrated to Canada in 1997, before moving to the United States and setting up businesses in Chicago, including a law firm and a slaughterhouse.

He was arrested by US police in 2009.

A US court in 2013 acquitted Rana of conspiracy to provide material support to the Mumbai attacks. But the same court convicted him of backing LeT to provide material support to a plot to commit murder in Denmark.

Rana was sentenced to 14 years for his involvement in a conspiracy to attack the offices of the Jyllands-Posten newspaper, which had published cartoons depicting the Prophet Mohammed that angered Muslims around the globe.

But India maintains Rana is one of the key plotters of the Mumbai attacks along with the convicted Headley -- and the authorities have welcomed his expected extradition.

In February, Devendra Fadnavis, chief minister of Maharashtra state which includes the megacity Mumbai, said that "finally, the long wait is over and justice will be done".

Devika Rotawan, a survivor of the Mumbai attacks, said she believed the extradition of Rana would be a "big win for India".

"I will never be able to forget the attack," she told broadcaster NDTV on Wednesday.

- 'Chilling effect' -

Counterterrorism experts however suggest Rana's involvement was peripheral compared to Headley, a US citizen, who India also wants extradited.

"They gave us a small fish but kept David Headley, so the essential outcome is going to be symbolic," said Ajay Sahni, head of the Institute for Conflict Management, a New Delhi-based think tank.

Rana knew Headley, 64, from their days together at boarding school in Pakistan.

Headley, who testified as a government witness at Rana's trial, said he had used his friend's Chicago-based immigration services firm as a cover to scout targets in India, by opening a branch in Mumbai.

Rana has said he visited Mumbai ahead of the attacks -- and stayed at the luxury Taj Mahal Palace Hotel that would become the epicentre of the bloody siege -- but denied involvement in the conspiracy.

Sahni said that more than 16 years after the attacks, Rana's extradition is of "historical importance" rather than a source of any "live intelligence".

But he added that handing him over has "a chilling effect" on others abroad who India seeks to put on trial.

K.Yoshida--JT