15/11/2015
15/11/2015
Paris attacks evoke dark memories MUMBAI, Nov 14, (AFP): For residents of the bustling Indian city of Mumbai, the horrific attacks in Paris on Friday night carry sombre echoes of a bloody series of killings in their own city seven years ago. A total of 166 people were killed in November 2008 when Islamist gunmen stormed luxury hotels, the main railway station, a Jewish centre and other sites in the booming metropolis, the financial heart of India. “Anger is filling up inside me again as the pictures, the videos and the social media chats make me relive the horror of that night even more graphically,” said Sourav Mishra, who was injured in the Nov 26 attacks. Mishra was enjoying a beer with friends at Leopold Cafe, a popular tourist haunt in the historic district of Colaba, when two gunmen burst in. “One second I was drinking and chatting with my friends ... the next second we had bullets whizzing past killing fellow diners,” he said. The coordinated spate of attacks began at around 10:30 pm when gunmen armed with powerful assault rifles and grenades seized two five-star hotels, the Taj Mahal and the Oberoi Trident, taking hostages.
Stormed
A 20-minute killing spree at Mumbai’s main railway station, Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus, left some 80 people dead. “It had a psychological effect on each and every ‘Mumbaikar’. The entire city was under siege for three days,” said Manoj Singh, 39, who was working at a television station in Mumbai at the time. “This is French media, so they do not show all the images. But I could see the pictures they are not showing in my mind,” he told AFP. Nirmala Ponnudurai, who had to have a piece of bullet shrapnel removed from her head after being shot at the station, said the events in Paris “bring back all the memories”. “Even after the years have passed by it’s not an easy situation to deal with,” she told AFP.
Chintan Sakariya, who witnessed the attack on Nariman House, a Jewish Community Centre,” said reading about the Paris attacks on Saturday morning had given him “goosebumps”. “The memories are fresh and unforgettable. They are horrifying,” he told AFP. The Paris attacks have echoes of the Mumbai atrocity not just in their coordination but in their choosing of “soft targets”, according to terror analysts. “There are similarities because of the targeting of a restaurant, a crowded place and in terms of targeting a prominent city,” Sameer Patil, a terrorism and security expert in Mumbai told AFP.