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Mumbai bombs trial - 100 guilty Mumbai bombs trial - 100 guilty
(20 minutes later)
A judge in the Indian city of Mumbai (Bombay) has finished delivering verdicts in the trial of those charged over the country's deadliest bombings.A judge in the Indian city of Mumbai (Bombay) has finished delivering verdicts in the trial of those charged over the country's deadliest bombings.
He found six more defendants guilty of links to the 1993 bombings, taking to 100 the number of people convicted.He found six more defendants guilty of links to the 1993 bombings, taking to 100 the number of people convicted.
Twenty-three people were acquitted. Sentencing is expected early next year.Twenty-three people were acquitted. Sentencing is expected early next year.
The 12 blasts in Mumbai killed 257 people. The attacks were allegedly ordered by the Muslim-dominated underworld after Hindu-Muslim riots.The 12 blasts in Mumbai killed 257 people. The attacks were allegedly ordered by the Muslim-dominated underworld after Hindu-Muslim riots.
More than 700 people were injured in the bombings.More than 700 people were injured in the bombings.
Marathon trial
Public prosecutor Ujjwal Nikam told the BBC sentencing would not take place before January.
1993 MUMBAI BLASTS 12 blasts257 dead713 injured123 arrested and tried686 witnesses testify35,000 pages of evidence submitted13 years to reach verdicts 1993 blasts in pictures Did it have to take so long? Profile: Fugitive gangster
He said prosecution and defence lawyers would begin submissions on sentencing from 11 December, a process which he expected to take "a month and a half".
"This is for the first time in the judicial history of India and perhaps the world that 100 people have been held guilty in one trial," he said.
There have been few trials in India's legal history to match this one.
Evidence has been taken from more than 600 witnesses.
The bombings are believed to have been carried out by one of the city's notorious underworld crime syndicates, which were then dominated by Muslims.
Their motive is said to have been revenge for religious riots a few months earlier that left more than 2,000 people dead across India, most of them Muslims.
The man thought to have masterminded the plot, underworld don Dawood Ibrahim, has still not been caught.
India says he and another key suspect, Tiger Memon, are hiding in Pakistan, a charge Pakistan has denied.
Most of the accused have been in jail for the past 13 years.
The case has taken so long that 12 of the accused have died and others have been imprisoned for so much longer than their likely sentence that a guilty verdict may still result in them walking free.