FACTBOX - Details of charge sheet in the Mumbai attacks
(Reuters) - Police charged the man they say is the lone surviving gunman in last year's Mumbai attacks with "waging war" against India and included two Pakistani soldiers among 37 others charged on Wednesday, government officials said.
Those charged include Indians and Pakistanis accused of planning and abetting the attacks that killed 179 people and sparked renewed tensions between the nuclear-armed neighbours.
None of the accused have entered pleas. Following are a few details from the charge sheet and evidence made available by Indian police:
THE MAIN ACCUSED
Indian police named 38 people in the 11,000-page charge sheet filed in a Mumbai court. Only three of those named are in the custody of Indian police. Those charged include two Pakistan army soldiers and Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, founder of the militant Islamist Lashkar-e-Taiba group India says was behind the attacks, and other senior Lashkar members Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi, Zarar Shah and Abu Hamza.
Those in custody are:
* Mohammed Ajmal Kasab: Identified by police as the lone surviving gunman in the attacks. He was captured by security forces police on November 26. Police say that during interrogation he confessed that he was a Pakistani national sent by Lashkar to attack Mumbai.
* Fahim Ansari and Sabahuddin: The two Indian members of Lashkar who were charged with abetting the attacks. According to police, the pair had scouted Mumbai landmarks before the attack and provided Kasab and his associates with logistical support.
THE CHARGES
The attackers and the planners have been charged under various Indian laws, including waging war against the nation, murder, illegal entry into India, damaging public property and offences under the arms and explosives act. A stringent anti-terrorism act has also been applied.
A government lawyer said a supplementary charge sheet would be filed later when new evidence emerges from continuing investigations.
THE EVIDENCE
This includes what police say is Kasab's confession, satellite telephone intercepts and GPS data, excerpts of telephone conversations, statements of more than 2,200 witnesses, and the SIM cards from mobile phones and a satellite phone.
The evidence also includes a list and photographs of guns and grenades used by the Mumbai attackers police say bears markings linked to Pakistan's Nedi Frontier Arms company and the Pakistan Ordnance Factory. The police also say they have a list of items made in Pakistan, including detergent powder, dental cream, a packet of wheat flour, toilet paper and clothes stitched in Pakistan.
(Compiled by Bappa Majumdar; Editing by Krittivas Mukherjee and Paul Tait)
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