2006 Mumbai Train Blasts: 12 Convicted, Sentencing On Monday

MUMBAI, INDIA - SEPTEMBER 11: Mohmad Ali and Mohmad Faisal Shaikh (in green Shirt), arrested accused of 7/11 train serial bomb blasts, steps out of Arthur Road Jail in heavy police protection for their verdict at MCOCA court at the city civil and Sessions Court on September 11, 2015 in Mumbai, India. Today is final verdict after nine years of the serial bomb blast across suburban trains, a special court in Mumbai pronounced 12 accused guilty and one acquitted in the case. A special court on Friday convicted 12 of the 13 accused in the 2006 bombings in Mumbai's suburban trains that killed nearly 200 people. The court will announce the quantum of punishment for the convicts on September 14. Abdul Wahid Shaikh was the only accused to be acquitted by the special court under the Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act. On July 11, 2006, seven explosions rocked Bombay's commuter rail network during Tuesday evening rush hour, killing at least 100 people and injuring 300 people, officials and India media said. India's major cities were put on high alert after the blasts. The seven blasts in the suburban trains on July 11, 2006 killed 188 people and injured 829. (Photo by Kalpak Pathak/Hindustan Times via Getty Images)
MUMBAI, INDIA - SEPTEMBER 11: Mohmad Ali and Mohmad Faisal Shaikh (in green Shirt), arrested accused of 7/11 train serial bomb blasts, steps out of Arthur Road Jail in heavy police protection for their verdict at MCOCA court at the city civil and Sessions Court on September 11, 2015 in Mumbai, India. Today is final verdict after nine years of the serial bomb blast across suburban trains, a special court in Mumbai pronounced 12 accused guilty and one acquitted in the case. A special court on Friday convicted 12 of the 13 accused in the 2006 bombings in Mumbai's suburban trains that killed nearly 200 people. The court will announce the quantum of punishment for the convicts on September 14. Abdul Wahid Shaikh was the only accused to be acquitted by the special court under the Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act. On July 11, 2006, seven explosions rocked Bombay's commuter rail network during Tuesday evening rush hour, killing at least 100 people and injuring 300 people, officials and India media said. India's major cities were put on high alert after the blasts. The seven blasts in the suburban trains on July 11, 2006 killed 188 people and injured 829. (Photo by Kalpak Pathak/Hindustan Times via Getty Images)
2006 Mumbai Train Blasts: 12 Convicted, Sentencing On Monday
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