Kasab didn't take sea route: Pakistan navy

Pakistan further muddies the waters on 26/11, saying Ajmal Amir Kasab didn't take the sea route to India.
The Gateway of India, where the terrorists were said to have landed by boat. (File photo)
The Gateway of India, where the terrorists were said to have landed by boat. (File photo)
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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Friday sought to further muddy the waters on the Mumbai terror strikes, saying Ajmal Amir Kasab, the lone gunman captured during the mayhem, didn't take the sea route to the Indian port city.

"There is no proof that Kasab took the sea route," Pakistani Navy chief Admiral Noman Bashir said at a press conference here.

At the same time, he admitted that patrolling the waters on the Pakistani side of the international border off the Gujarat coast was "difficult" due to the dispute over the Sir Creek.

India says Kasab and nine other Pakistanis had set sail from Karachi, hijacked a trawler after entering Indian waters and finally used a rubber boat to sneak into Mumbai Nov 26, 2008 and embarked on a killing spree that lasted over 60 hours.

Kasab is now in the custody of the Mumbai police, which Wednesday filed a charge sheet naming him and 34 others, all of them operatives of the Lashkar-e-Taiba terror groups, for the Mumbai carnage that claimed the lives of more than 170 people.

Kasab is also one of the eight men named in a case registered by Pakistan's Federal Investigation Agency on the Mumbai attacks.

Bashir also sought to discount suggestions that Pakistan was engaged in an arms race with India.

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