Pakistan's refusal to grant access to the masterminds in the 26/11 Mumbai attacks has come as a big blow for the National Investigating Agency.
The NIA, which has been on the trail of American terror operative David Coleman Headley, had been hoping to piece together the terror jig-saw by gaining independent access to Lashkar-e-Tayiba founder Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi and Jamaat-ud-Dawah chief Hafiz Saeed, who are alleged to have masterminded the Mumbai carnage.
While investigating the case of David Headley, the NIA has so far found material relating to the man himself and his operations in India. However, in order to join the missing links the most important of them being the local angle, they needed to get access to the top brass of the Lashkar-e-Tayiba.
Sources say that the Headley probe has come to kind of a standstill. There is a delay in the Tawahur Rana angle to the case, as there is still a cloud on whether he would make a confessional statement or not.
It was very crucial for the NIA to get hold of Rana, as he is said to be Headley's partner in crime during the 26/11 operation.
NIA sources say that during
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