<p>Survivors of the 26/11 Mumbai terror attack today expressed happiness over the hanging of Ajmal Kasab, the sole surviving terrorist from the 26/11 terror attack.<br /><br /></p>.<p>Kasab was hanged to death at 7.30 AM at Yerwada jail in Pune early this morning, after President Pranab Mukherjee rejected his mercy plea earlier this month.<br /><br />"I am very much happy that Kasab has been hanged. But I would have been happier if this would have been done in public. It is a good news that a terrorist has been hanged... Wish this should have been done on the anniversary of the attack this year," 13-year-old Devika Rotwan, who was shot in the right leg in the terror attack, said.<br /><br />Devika, who studies in class IX now, had gone to the Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus (CST) with her family members and was waiting for a train, when two terrorists opened fire.<br /><br />Bhisham Mansukhani, who escaped the attack at the Taj Hotel, told PTI, "I am taken aback! It is surprising! I feel the death penalty is more of a political thing. I think by executing the death penalty the government is trying to earn brownie points and use this as a tool to brandish this during elections."<br /><br />Mansukhani was on the roof-top of the Taj Mahal hotel in Colaba in south Mumbai on the dreadful night of November 26.<br /><br />"By hanging Kasab, the government is trying to show that they have delivered justice, but to me this seems to be a political thing," he said.<br /><br />Dr Kuresh Zorabi, whose bakery opposite Chabad House (Nariman House) in south Mumbai, was splattered with bullet holes in the 26/11 attack, said, "It is surprising and shocking, but at the same time I am little disappointed that all this was kept secret. This is difficult to digest for a second. I am thrilled that Kasab has been hanged. This will serve as a lesson to terrorists that India can take strict action against them."<br /><br />Though Zorabi is content that Kasab has been hanged to death, he hopes that other perpetrators of the 26/11 attack, who are in Pakistan also meet a similar fate.</p>
<p>Survivors of the 26/11 Mumbai terror attack today expressed happiness over the hanging of Ajmal Kasab, the sole surviving terrorist from the 26/11 terror attack.<br /><br /></p>.<p>Kasab was hanged to death at 7.30 AM at Yerwada jail in Pune early this morning, after President Pranab Mukherjee rejected his mercy plea earlier this month.<br /><br />"I am very much happy that Kasab has been hanged. But I would have been happier if this would have been done in public. It is a good news that a terrorist has been hanged... Wish this should have been done on the anniversary of the attack this year," 13-year-old Devika Rotwan, who was shot in the right leg in the terror attack, said.<br /><br />Devika, who studies in class IX now, had gone to the Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus (CST) with her family members and was waiting for a train, when two terrorists opened fire.<br /><br />Bhisham Mansukhani, who escaped the attack at the Taj Hotel, told PTI, "I am taken aback! It is surprising! I feel the death penalty is more of a political thing. I think by executing the death penalty the government is trying to earn brownie points and use this as a tool to brandish this during elections."<br /><br />Mansukhani was on the roof-top of the Taj Mahal hotel in Colaba in south Mumbai on the dreadful night of November 26.<br /><br />"By hanging Kasab, the government is trying to show that they have delivered justice, but to me this seems to be a political thing," he said.<br /><br />Dr Kuresh Zorabi, whose bakery opposite Chabad House (Nariman House) in south Mumbai, was splattered with bullet holes in the 26/11 attack, said, "It is surprising and shocking, but at the same time I am little disappointed that all this was kept secret. This is difficult to digest for a second. I am thrilled that Kasab has been hanged. This will serve as a lesson to terrorists that India can take strict action against them."<br /><br />Though Zorabi is content that Kasab has been hanged to death, he hopes that other perpetrators of the 26/11 attack, who are in Pakistan also meet a similar fate.</p>