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  • Mumbai slowly coming to terms

    Mumbai (PTI): This ever chirpy city is slowly coming to terms after it was brought to its knees by the most gruesome multiple terror attacks ever to take place in the country.

    Known as the city that never sleeps, the last three days saw a new side of Mumbai - closed shops, open roads, crowd-free local trains among many other such small but significant nuances.

    "It looked as if fear had gripped the entire city. Not many people ventured out of their house after it all began," Nasir Shah, a taxi driver said.

    But now that the guns have fallen silent, the city is slowly coming to terms with horrific terror that first raised its head on Wednesday evening.

    "I was at home watching news when I saw a news flash of shooting taking place outside Leopold cafe. My brother-in-law had come from Australia and had gone out for a dinner.

    "I was worried about him and slept only after I came to know that he had gone to his friend's place," said Anjana Dehani who lives on Meenu Desai road, a stone-throw distance from Hotel Taj Mahal.

    "In middle of the night I was woken up by loud blasts and thats when the fear crept in. My husband whose factory is getting renovated visit his office the next day, something which he has not done for many a years," she said.

    Breathing a sigh of relief is the cashier of Naval restaurant and stores. "For two days the shop was shut which resulted in loss," he said.

    Incidentally, the restaurant was the first to open (an hour after the operation by security forces got over) among the many shops in the vicinity of Taj Mahal Hotel including the 'Tendulkars', the restaurant owned by batting maestro Sachin Tendulkar.

    Even the Marine Drive area, near Oberoi hotel, which usually hustles and bustles with joggers and love-struck couples, had regained a little bit of its lost glory.

    "I had not come here for my morning walk for the last two days. I missed coming here but could not help it as it was risky," said Prakash Desai, a retired government official who was seen stretching himself facing the quite sea.

    Several curious onlookers thronged the Taj Mahal Hotel, the face of the deadly terror strikes which were telecast live for nearly 60 hours.

    Even as the city slowly returns to normalcy, the common talk among Mumbaiikars is the terror attack which has re-written the history of terrorism in the country.

  • End of Mumbai siege
  • Mumbai terror attacks in pictures
  • Mumbai terror attacks in pictures - 2
  • Mumbai terror attacks in pictures - 3
  • Ratan Tata’s press meet - Podcast

  • As siege ends, Mumbai mourns its dead
  • e-mail came from Pakistan
  • Zardari: if evidence points to any group in my country, I shall take the strictest action
  • Pointed intelligence warnings preceded attacks
  • Thousands bid tearful adieu to bravehearts
  • Calm returns to Oberoi/Trident
  • Mumbai Aftermath
  • How the Taj — the war zone — was reclaimed
  • Ratan Tata asserts his resolve
  • Taj denies staff involvement
  • Don’t come up, I will handle them, said the hero
  • Why the action took as long as it did
  • Labradors play key role in operation
  • For a community-led role in counter-terrorism - Analysis
  • Numbness to confidence — a forty-hour ordeal
  • Endgame in Mumbai, death toll could be 200
  • India’s strategic deafness & the massacre in Mumbai
  • An affront to the Indian state: Editorial
  • Three Lashkar fidayeen captured
  • Symbols of inhumanity will be pursued: Congress
  • “Full-scale war, let’s stay united”
  • Political India responds unitedly
  • We must rebuild what was destroyed: Ratan Tata

    Earlier terror strikes in Mumbai

  • Terror strikes Mumbai, over 147 killed
  • 46 killed as twin blasts rock Mumbai

    Major terror attacks in 2008

  • Terror strikes Assam, 62 killed
  • 17 killed in Imphal blast
  • 20 killed as 5 bomb explosions rock Delhi
  • 17 BLASTS ROCK AHMEDABAD
  • 60 killed, 150 injured as terror strikes Pink City






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