ISLAMABAD, (Reuters) – A Pakistani court freed on bail today a man accused of plotting a 2008 assault on India’s financial capital Mumbai that killed 166 people, his lawyer said.
The move provoked a sharp rebuke from India, which warned that relations between the two nuclear-armed neighbours were deteriorating. The United States said it was “gravely” concerned by the court move.
The decision to release Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi came months after India and Pakistan were engaged in their worst cross-border violence in more than a decade in the disputed Kashmir region.
“Lakhvi has been released and he is out of the jail now,” his lawyer, Malik Nasir Abbas, told Reuters today. “I don’t know where he will go now.”
A security official also confirmed his release.
India’s Ministry for External Affairs swiftly condemned the decision. “This has reinforced the perception that Pakistan has a dual policy on dealing with terrorists,” said a ministry spokesman.
“Those who have carried out attacks or are positing a threat to India are being dealt with differently and this is a most negative development in so far as bilateral ties are concerned.”
In Washington, the U.S. State Department said it was concerned and considering what steps to take next.
India blamed the Pakistan-based militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba for the Mumbai attack. Ten gunmen infiltrated the city by boat and spent three days spraying bullets and throwing grenades around city landmarks.
Indian investigators said Lakhvi was the Lashkar-e-Taiba military chief.
He was arrested in Pakistan in 2009 and later that year, he, and six other suspects, were charged in connection with the Mumbai attack. Local media said at the time they had pleaded not guilty and case is still pending.
Relations between India and Pakistan, which have fought three wars since independence in 1947, nosedived after the assault and have not fully recovered. A dispute over the Kashmir region periodically flares into violence.