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‘Don’t travel to Mumbai’
Foreign nations issuing advisories
Tribune News Service

New Delhi, November 27
Foreign nations today started issuing travel advisories to their citizens to avoid travelling to Mumbai in the wake of the audacious terror attacks on the metropolis as the United States offered its full assistance to the Indian authorities to deal with the crisis.

Government officials said it would be too premature to speculate, who masterminded the simultaneous attacks at different places in India’s commercial capital but hastened to add that the needle of suspicion pointed towards the involvement of Pakistani militant groups.

US secretary of state Condoleezza Rice telephoned external affairs minister Pranab Mukherjee and expressed outrage over the attacks.

United Nations secretary general Ban Ki-moon strongly condemned the shootings and blasts in Mumbai and expressed his conviction that no cause or grievance could justify indiscriminate attacks against civilians.

Incidentally, the attacks in Mumbai last night strated just minutes after visiting Pakistan foreign minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi had finished his joint press conference with Mukherjee after their talks here, particularly on the issue of terrorism.

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Australian actress hid inside cupboard

Melbourne, November 27
An Australian TV actress, who was trapped inside Mumbai’s Taj Hotel when terrorists went on a shooting spree, hid herself in a two-by-three metre cupboard for an hour to escape death.

Brooke Satchwell, former star of soap opera ‘Neighbours’, told a radio portal that she was inside the ground-floor toilets when the attack happened and “everyone just froze”.

“As I stepped into the bathroom you could hear machine-gun fire start up in the lobby,” she told the radio portal.

“People started locking themselves into the toilet cubicles, which clearly wasn’t a very good idea. But we were trying to find somewhere to hide,” she said.

Satchwell, along with her boyfriend and about eight other foreigners, has now been moved to another hotel in south Mumbai, whose location was not disclosed for security reasons. “I can’t even get my leg dressed, we can’t go to the airport, that’s been bombed, we can’t go to the police centres, they’ve been bombed,” Satchwell’s boyfriend told the Herald from the hotel.

Recalling her ordeal at the Taj Hotel, the actress told the portal that hotel staff directed the group into the service cupboard, where she waited for up to an hour, hearing bursts of gunfire. “Some of the hotel security came and ushered us very quickly down the corridor and across the lobby, clearly no one had a very good idea of what happened ... or where we were meant to be heading at that stage,” she said. — PTI

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