Pakistan sentences terrorist leader to 31 years for 2008 Mumbai attacks
A court on Friday sentenced a militant leader linked to the Mumbai terrorist attacks to 31 years in prison on charges of financing, his lawyer said.
The sentence is the latest for , who was arrested in 2019. He was sentenced the following year to 15 years in a separate case, also on charges of terror financing.
Mumbai attacks mastermind Hafiz Saeed sentenced to 31 years in prison by an anti-terror court in two terror cases. The court ordered that all his assets be seized. Last year he was sentenced to 11 years in prison in two other terror financing cases.
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Saeed, designated a terrorist by the U.S. Justice Department and with a $10 million bounty on his head, has never been charged in connection with the 2008 Mumbai attacks that killed 166 people.
He has been serving the 15-year term at home under a government order. His lawyer, Naseeruddin Nayyar, said Saeed can appeal the latest sentence.
Saeed is the founder of the outlawed Lashkar-e-Taiba group, which was blamed for the Mumbai attacks. The group was active for years in the Himalayan region of Kashmir, which is split between Pakistan and India but claimed by both.
Following his arrest, the Pakistani government seized Saeed’s extensive network of mosques, schools, seminaries and charities and other assets in the country. Under Pakistani law and unless a sentence is thrown out or reduced on appeal, Saeed will have to serve them consecutively.
Relations between Pakistan and India were strained after the attack on India’s financial hub in 2008. The rival South Asian powers have fought three wars since gaining independence from Britain in 1947, two of them over Kashmir.