Legal loopholes in Mumbai terror case led to Lakhvi's bail: Pakistan court

Legal loopholes in Mumbai terror case led to Lakhvi's bail: Pakistan court
Legal loopholes in Mumbai terror case led to Lakhvi's bail: Pakistan court
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The News Minute| December 27, 2014| 1.40 pm IST

Legal loopholes in the Mumbai terror attack case led to the granting of bail to its alleged mastermind Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, an Anti-Terrorism Court (ATC) stated here in a written order.

The order added that weak evidence, registration of the FIR invoking irrelevant sections against the suspect, the "never-ending" trial and hearsay evidence went in favour of the accused, the Dawn reported Saturday.

Lakhvi was arrested by Pakistan's Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) in February 2009 on the basis of the confessional statement of the lone surviving attacker Ajmal Kasab, who was executed in an Indian jail Nov 21, 2012.

After this, Lakhvi was detained in Rawalpindi's Adiala Jail. According to the charge sheet issued Nov 25, 2009, Lakhvi, a resident of Renala Khurd of Okara in Punjab province, was the alleged commander of the outlawed Lashkar-e-Tayyaba (LeT) as well as the mastermind of the Mumbai attack.

It alleged that Lakhvi received weapon training from different centres and then trained other militants of LeT. He was also facing the charges of imparting training and giving instructions to the 10 terrorists who carried out the attacks between Nov 26-28, 2008, leaving 166 people dead.

On December 18, Anti-Terrorist Court Judge Syed Kausar Abbas Zaidi granted bail to Lakhvi. He is, however, still detained in the jail under the Maintenance of Public Order ordinance.

The registration of the FIR and the insertion of different sections of the law also benefited Lakhvi. The FIR was registered about three months after the incident. The order issued for the release of Lakhvi stated: "As per the contents of the FIR, the occurrence was in November 2008 whereas the report was lodged Feb 2, 2009."

In the criminal proceedings, the delay in lodging an FIR of an offence always benefits the accused. The concluding paragraph of the order stated that these observations were "tentative in nature and shall not affect the trial or its fate in future."

IANS

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