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Mumbai remembers 26/11 victims

Mumbai, Nov 26 Sending the strongest possible signal that they would not be deterred by terror, Mumbaikars went to school, college and office as any other day on November 26 but also paused in their tracks to honour the memory of the 166 people killed in the devastating 60-hour terror strike last year.

Thousands of commuters rushing to their offices halted to pay respects to those who were killed in the attacks on the Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus (CST).

Railway Protection Force (RPF) personnel also laid wreaths inside the station to remember the commuters and their colleagues brutally gunned down by terrorists.

And while Chief Minister Ashok Chavan and his Cabinet colleagues visited the precincts of the Hotel Trident-Oberoi at Nariman Point to offer homage to the victims killed there, a group of people gathered outside the Leopold Cafe in Colaba -- where the first attack was launched on this day last year.

The Force One -- the new crack security force of the State government launched here last two days ago (Tuesday) -- made its first public appearance by staging a parade from Nariman Point to Chowpatty on November 26 morning.

The Mumbai Police had a separate parade later in the morning and displayed the latest arms and ammunitions it has acquired in the past one year after the attacks.

Later in the day, Chavan attended a memorial organised by the Indian Merchants Chamber where the corporate world paid homage to the 26/11 victims.

On the ve of November 26, the Citizens Initiative for Peace organised a candle-light march to Hotel Taj Mahal Palace & Tower.

On November 26 evening, the ravaged Chabad House, a Jewish community centre was reopened with a commemorative prayer meeting which will be webcast live.

Home Minister P. Chidambaram inaugurated a memorial to honour the martyrs erected by the Mumbai police and also attended a condolence meeting at the Sahyadri State Guest House.

The state also organised an all-religious prayer meeting at the Gateway of India in the evening that was attended by prominent members of the society and the masses.

There were many other moments of silence, remembering and mourning slated all over the day, but the morning rush hour showed the resilience of India's financial and entertainment capital, with commuter trains and buses packed and roads as choked with traffic as ever.

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Vayalar Ravi, who assumed office as Minister for Overseas Indian Affairs on January 30, 2006, was born in 1937 in Vayalar village of...
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