Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
India

26/11 Mumbai Attacks: David Headley Pardoned, Accepted As Approver

Darpan News Desk IANS, 10 Dec, 2015 11:53 AM
    A court here accepted on Thursday the request of Pakistani-American Lashkar-e-Taiba terrorist David Coleman Headley, currently imprisoned in the US, to turn approver and depose in the 26/11 case in return for a pardon.
     
    Headley, who appeared before a court through a video-conferencing from an unidentified location in the US, during the hearing expressed his willingness to turn approver and depose in the case in return for a pardon to Sessions Judge G.A. Sanap.
     
    Special Public Prosecutor Ujjwal Nikam, who conducted the 26/11 trial earlier, sought time to consult the investigating officers for which the court was adjourned for half an hour. After discussions, he informed Judge Sanap that the prosecution was agreeable to Headley's offer, subject to certain conditions.
     
    Accordingly, Judge Sanap pardoned Headley and made him an approver late on Thursday.
     
    Headley alias Daood Sayeed Gilani will depose as a prosecution witness before the court on February 8, 2016.
     
    Judge Sanap also asked him to disclose all information pertaining to the 26/11 case which he had earlier shared with the US courts.
     
    This is expected to shed light on the 26/11 conspiracy and the role of various terror groups, and other crucial details of the terror strike.
     
    Headley confirmed that he had received the charge sheet filed against him in the Mumbai court, charging him with the same conduct for which he was also charged in the US.
     
     
    "I had pleaded guilty to the charges in the US and I admitted I was a participant in these charges," he told the Mumbai court.
     
    He added he had accepted the responsibility for his role in the offences in the US and also to make himself as witness in the Mumbai court.
     
    "I am here ready to answer questions - if I receive a pardon from this court," pleaded Headley who is currently serving a 35-year sentence in a US jail for his role in the 26/11 Mumbai terror strikes which left 166 dead and hundreds injured.
     
    His deposition before the Mumbai court follows an order by Judge Sanap on November 18 asking Headley to be presented via video-conference on December 10.
     
    Police had sought the court's permission to write to the US Deparment of Justice as Headley had been convicted in the US, but never faced the Indian courts.
     
    On several trips to India, Headley had carried out recces of some of locations, including Hotel Taj Mahal Palace and Hotel Trident, targeted by the Pakistani terrorists who sneaked into Mumbai from sea.
     
    In 2009, he again travelled to India and recced more locations in other cities, including New Delhi. On one trip, he became close friends with Rahul Bhatt, son of eminent film maker Mahesh Bhatt.
     
     
    Headley, now 54, has also been suspected or charged with involvement in several terrorist cases around the world and had made video-recordings of some of the sites targeted in the 26/11 attack.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Two schemes for overseas Indians to be merged

    Two schemes for overseas Indians to be merged
    India is working on a new scheme that will merge the People of Indian Origin (PIO) and Overseas Citizenship of India (OCI) schemes, an official statement said Tuesday....

    Two schemes for overseas Indians to be merged

    India among five nations to build world's biggest telescope

    India among five nations to build world's biggest telescope
     India, along with four other countries, will Tuesday start work to build the world's biggest telescope in Hawaii Island, the media here reported Monday...

    India among five nations to build world's biggest telescope

    Five killed in Pakistan firing in Jammu

    Five killed in Pakistan firing in Jammu
    Pakistan Rangers Monday resorted to indiscriminate firing along the international border in Jammu district, killing five civilians and injuring...

    Five killed in Pakistan firing in Jammu

    Will Modi's broom sweep away legal cobwebs?

    Will Modi's broom sweep away legal cobwebs?
    The Narendra Modi government is determined to clean up the country in more ways than one. In an ambitious move, the government intends to junk...

    Will Modi's broom sweep away legal cobwebs?

    Patna stampede: Probe team records statements of officials, injured

    Patna stampede: Probe team records statements of officials, injured
    The panel probing the Dussehra day stampede at the Gandhi Maidan here recorded the statements of top officials and the injured Sunday and may...

    Patna stampede: Probe team records statements of officials, injured

    Pakistan violates ceasefire in Kashmir

    Pakistan violates ceasefire in Kashmir
    The Pakistan Army fired at Indian positions along the Line of Control (LoC) in Jammu and Kashmir Sunday, violating a 2003 ceasefire, the defence ministry said....

    Pakistan violates ceasefire in Kashmir