An Indian court yesterday convicted two more men in connection with the 1993 Mumbai bombings, a series of attacks that killed 257 people in the country's financial and entertainment hub.
Eleven people have been convicted in the 11-year trial for their roles in the March 12, 1993, bombings, India's worst terror attack.
Judge Pramod Kode found Mohammed Shaikh, 33, guilty of conspiracy, arms training, transporting grenades and planting a bomb. He faces life imprisonment.
Another defendant, Nasim Barmare, 33, was found guilty of committing a terrorist act for throwing hand grenades into Mumbai's international airport. He could face the death penalty.
Judge Kode said Shaikh packed explosives into cars and scooters used in the blasts and rode the motorcycle from which Barmare lobbed grenades into the airport, injuring 54 people. Shaikh also parked a scooter filled with explosives that did not detonate in a crowded street in downtown Mumbai, he said.
The delay in the verdicts was blamed largely on procedural matters.
The bombings ripped through the country's financial heart, and targeted some of the city's most important facilities.
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