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'We want US and British'say Mumbai gunmen

November 28, 2008 00:00:00


MUMBAI, Nov 27 (agencies): The young gunmen roaming the corridors of two luxury hotels in Mumbai were shooting wildly, but they knew exactly what sort of guests they intended to take hostage.
"They told everybody to stop and put their hands up and asked if there were any British or Americans," Alex Chamberlain, a British guest at the Oberoi Trident hotel, said after fleeing his captors via a fire escape.
"My friend said to me, 'don't be a hero, don't say you are British.'"
On Thursday morning at least two gunmen were believed to be holding around half-a-dozen hostages inside the Oberoi, while more hostages were also being held in the city's Taj Mahal hotel.
Chamberlain told Indian television that he and other guests had been herded together by the gunmen and taken up to the upper floors of the hotel.
Rakesh Patel, a guest at the Taj, said that "they were after foreigners, because they were asking for British or American passports."
"They came from the restaurant and took us up the stairs," Patel, a British citizen based in Hong Kong, told the NDTV news channel, his face blackened by smoke.
"They were very young, like boys really, wearing jeans and T-shirts," he said, adding that he and another hostage managed to escape on the 18th floor.
One woman staying at the Taj hotel told how she lay on the floor of one room with 25 other petrified guests as gunmen fought special commandos.
"That was, without doubt, the worst experience of my entire life," she told reporters. "It was a very, very painful six hours.
"We could hear the army coming through the hotel. We heard the firing and the blasts. In the end the firemen broke the windows of the room and we climbed down the ladder."
Military units stormed the Taj hotel in the early hours of Thursday morning to confront a handful of gunmen armed with assault rifles and grenades.
In the encounter a huge fire broke out at the top of the hotel, trapping some guests.
One woman contacted during the night by a television channel said she and around 35 other guests were boarded up inside.
"We were shot at and we have one man who has a bullet wound in his stomach," she whispered down her phone. "He's bleeding badly and he needs to go to hospital."
Australian television actress Brooke Satchwell hid inside a small cupboard when the violence erupted at the Taj.
"As I stepped inside the lobby gunshots started to go off," she said. "It was really terrifying. There was people getting shot in the corridor. There was someone dead outside the bathroom."
The head of the Madrid government and a British member of the European Parliament were inside the Taj when the gunmen attacked but escaped unhurt.
"I saw was one man on foot carrying a machine gun-type of weapon -- which I then saw him firing from and I saw people hitting the floor, people right next to me," MEP Sajjad Karim was quoted as saying by the BBC.
An Australian student said his girlfriend was shot and wounded when other gunmen stormed the Cafe Leopold restaurant in Mumbai and opened fire.
David Coker, 23, and his partner Katie Anstee, 24, had just arrived for a holiday to celebrate their graduation from university.
"We had literally just ordered and then it seemed like firecrackers -- people were screaming," he told The Courier-Mail newspaper.
Anstee was shot in the leg, with the bullet breaking her femur and exiting through the front of her thigh, while Coker was grazed by a bullet.
"I turned around and she was crawling out the door because she couldn't walk," he said
Meanwhile: President-elect Barack Obama led global condemnation of grenade and gun assaults in India's financial hub of Mumbai, the third major terrorist attack targeting foreigners in South Asian nations this year.
House National Security Council convened after the attacks with officials from counterterrorism and intelligence agencies as well as the State and Defense Departments, it said.
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said the ``outrageous'' attacks in India would be met with a ``vigorous response,'' while United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called for the attackers to be ``brought to justice swiftly.''
The attacks ``remind us yet again of the threat we face from violent extremists,'' U.K. Foreign Secretary David Miliband said in a statement issued in London. ``We condemn this attack unreservedly.'' The Foreign Office said it couldn't confirm that any Britons had been killed or were being held hostage.
``China strongly condemns the attacks in Mumbai,'' Qin Gang, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman, said at a press briefing today. ``We offer our condolences to those who died.''
Australia ``unreservedly condemns these atrocious attacks,'' Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said. Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso said the attacks ``are utterly unforgivable, vicious and heinous.''
Zardari and Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani ``strongly'' condemned the attacks and noted both India and Pakistan have suffered from global terrorism.
Another report adds: The sophistication of Wednesday's assault in Mumbai and the targeting of US and British citizens are the hallmarks of groups affiliated with Al Qaeda, but an array of other organisations have launched attacks in India and may also have played a role, officials and counter-terrorism experts said.

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