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Kasab was arrested after a shootout with police on the first day of the attacks. He was treated for wounds and has since been held in solitary confinement in Mumbai's Arthur Road Jail. Monday's develoment came days after Pakistan gave a dossier to India with details of its investigation into the terrorist groups that New Delhi claims were responsible. Pakistan Foreign Ministry spokesman Abdul Basit declined to comment on Kasab's court admission. Late last month the special court also issued arrest warrants for 22 Pakistani nationals accused of masterminding the attacks. India blames Pakistan-based Islamist militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba. The founder of the group, Hafiz Mohammed Saeed, was arrested with two other senior figures by Pakistani authorities in December. A court in the eastern Pakistani city of Lahore freed Saeed, a hard-line Islamic cleric, in June saying there was no evidence against him. The federal government will appeal the verdict. In his statement Monday, Kasab named Saeed as a conspirator. Anand Chavan, the chief minister of Maharashtra state of which Mumbai is the capital, congratulated the prosecution team and said "the court should give the maximum punishment" to Kasab.
[Associated
Press;
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