Coordinated terrorist attacks struck the heart of Mumbai, India’s commercial capital, on Wednesday night, killing dozens in machine-gun and grenade assaults on at least two five-star hotels, the city’s largest train station, a movie theater and a hospital.
Even by the standards of
terrorism in India, which has suffered a rising number of terrorist attacks this year, the assaults were particularly brazen and drastically different in scale and execution. The attackers used boats to reach the urban peninsula where they hit, and their targets were sites popular with tourists.
The Mumbai police said the attacks killed at least 80 people and wounded 240, according to preliminary reports. Guests who had escaped the hotels told television stations that the attackers were taking hostages, singling out Americans and Britons. A previously unknown group claimed responsibility, though that claim could not be confirmed. It remained unclear whether there was any link to outside terrorist groups.
Gunfire and explosions rang out well into the night. Hours after the assaults began, the landmark
Taj Mahal Palace & Tower Hotel, next to the famed
Gateway of India, was in flames. Guests banged on the windows of the upper floors as firefighters worked to rescue them. Fire also raged inside the luxurious
Oberoi Hotel, according to the police.
Some guests, including two members of the
European Parliament who were visiting on a trade delegation, remained in hiding in the hotels, making desperate cellphone calls, some of them to television stations, describing their ordeal.
Alex Chamberlain, a British citizen who was dining at the Oberoi, told
Sky News television that a gunman had ushered 30 or 40 people from the restaurant into a stairway and, speaking in Hindi or Urdu, ordered them to put up their hands.
“They were talking about British and Americans specifically,” he recounted. “There was an Italian guy, who, you know, they said, ‘Where are you from?’ and he said he’s from Italy, and they said, ‘Fine,’ and they left him alone.”
Sajjad Karim, 38, a British member of the European Parliament, told Sky News: “A gunman just stood there spraying bullets around, right next to me.”
Before his phone went dead, Mr. Karim added: “I managed to turn away and I ran into the hotel kitchen and then we were shunted into a restaurant in the basement. We are now in the dark in this room, and we have barricaded all the doors. It’s really bad.”
Attackers had also entered Cama and Albless Hospital, according to Indian television reports.
Several high-ranking law enforcement officials, including the chief of the antiterrorism squad and a commissioner of police, were reported killed. The military was quickly called in to assist the police.
Hospitals in Mumbai, formerly Bombay, have appealed for blood donations. As a sense of crisis gripped much of the city, schools and colleges announced they would be closed Thursday.
Vilasrao Deshmukh, the chief minister for
Maharashtra State, where Mumbai is, told the
CNN-IBN station that the attacks hit five to seven targets, concentrated in the southern tip of the city, known as Colaba and Nariman Point. But even hours after the attacks began, the full scope of the assaults was unclear.
Unlike previous attacks in India this year, which consisted of anonymously planted bombs, the assailants on Wednesday night were spectacularly well-armed and very confrontational.
In some cases, said the state’s highest-ranking police official, A.N. Roy, the attackers opened fire and disappeared.
Indian officials said the police had killed four of the suspected attackers and captured nine, The Associated Press reported.
Around midnight, more than two hours after the series of attacks began, television images from near the historic Metro Cinema showed journalists and bystanders ducking for cover as gunshots rang out.
Television showed the charred shell of a car in front of
Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus, formerly Victoria Terminus, the mammoth railway station. A nearby gas station was blown up.
The landmark
Leopold Café, a favorite tourist haunt, was also hit.
Reached by phone, three guests trapped inside the Taj said about 1 a.m. that they had heard a fresh explosion and gunfire in the old wing of the hotel.
A 31-year-old man who was inside the Taj attending a friend’s wedding reception said he was getting a drink around 9:45 p.m. when he heard something like firecrackers — “loud bursts” interspersed with what then sounded like machine-gun fire.
A window of the banquet hall shattered, and guests scattered under tables and were quickly escorted to another room in the hotel, he said. No one was allowed to leave.
Just before 1 a.m., another loud explosion rang out, and then another about a half-hour later, the man said.
At 6 a.m., he said that when the guests tried to leave the room early Thursday, gunmen opened fire. One person was shot.
The man’s friend, the groom, was two floors above him, in the old wing of the hotel, trapped in a room with his bride.
One of the explosions, the man said, took the door off its hinges. He blocked it with a table.
Then came another, and gunfire rang out throughout the evening. The man did not want to be identified for fear of being tracked down.
Rakesh Patel, a British businessman who escaped the Taj, told a local television station that two young men armed with a rifle and a machine gun took 15 people hostage, forcing them to the hotel roof.
The gunmen, dressed in jeans and T-shirts, “were saying they wanted anyone with British or American passports,” Mr. Patel said.
He and four others managed to slip away in the confusion and smoke of the upper floors, he said. He said he did not know the fate of the remaining hostages.
Clarence Rich Diffenderffer, of Wilmington, Del., said that after dinner at the hotel he headed up to the business center on the fifth floor.
“A man in a hood with an AK-47 came running down the hall,” shooting and throwing four grenades, Mr. Diffenderffer said. “I, needless to say, beat it back to my room and locked it, and double-locked it, and put the bureau up against the door.”
Mr. Diffenderffer said he was rescued hours later, at 6:30 a.m., by a cherrypicker. “That was pretty hairy,” he said. “I don’t like heights.”
A similar situation unfolded at the Oberoi.
Among those apparently trapped were top executives and board members of Hindustan Unilever, part of the multinational corporate giant, the newspaper The Times of India reported.
Indian military forces arrived outside the Oberoi at 2 a.m., and some 100 officers from the central government’s Rapid Action Force, an elite police unit, entered later. CNN-IBN reported the sounds of gunfire from the hotel just after the police contingent went in.
In Washington, the State Department immediately condemned the attacks, as did President-elect
Barack Obama’s
transition team. There were no immediate reports of American casualties.
A group calling itself the Deccan Mujahedeen said it had carried out the attacks. It was not known who the group is or whether the claim was real.
India has been hit by a succession of terrorist attacks in the past several months. Many of them were initially attributed to Islamist militants, although in recent weeks, the police have pointed to a Hindu terrorist network as well, making several arrests.
Mumbai has suffered several major terrorist attacks in recent years.
organized-crime networkIn 2003, 52 people were killed in
another set of bombings for which Muslim militants were blamed.
In July 2006, a
series of bombs planted inside commuter trains killed 187 people.