'Wound That Will Never Heal': Mumbai's 4 Days of Terror, How 26/11 Attacks Happened & What Transpired Later
News 1826/11 is now marked as a dark day in India’s history as a series of terrorist attacks, lasting four days, hit Mumbai in November 2008. International community must look for ways to counter terror: ‘Baby Moshe’ Moshe Holtzberg, the Israeli child who was just two years old when he lost his parents in the serial terror attacks, has called upon the international community to look for ways to counter terror so that “nobody has to go through what he has gone through”. ‘Baby Moshe’ is the youngest survivor of the Mumbai 26/11 attacks whose pictures with his Indian nanny Sandra holding him close to her chest in the besieged Nariman House caught worldwide attention. Sanction to block perpetrators of 26/11 blocked for ‘political reasons’: UN Ambassador India has said its efforts to sanction perpetrators and facilitators of 26/11 had been blocked in the past for “political reasons” that enabled them to organise further cross-border assaults against the country, an apparent reference to China’s repeated moves to block New Delhi’s efforts to blacklist Pakistan-based terrorists at the UN. “Lest we forget, in November 2008, 10 terrorists entered the city of Mumbai through sea route from Pakistan, ravaging the city for 4 days, killing 166 people, including 26 foreign nationals,” she said on Wednesday in her remarks to the UN Security Council Joint Briefing by the Chairs of the 1267/1373/1540 Committees to the Security Council.