<p>Lashkar e Toiba founder Hafiz Mohammad Saeed led a gathering of thousands in offering funeral prayers for Ajmal Kasab, the lone surviving terrorist involved in the Mumbai attacks who was hanged earlier this week, a media report said on Saturday.<br /><br /></p>.<p>Saeed, mastermind of the 2008 assault on Mumbai, offered ‘ghayabana namaz-e-janaza’ (funeral prayers in absentia) for Kasab at the conclusion of a two-day training session of the Jamaat-ud-Dawah at its headquarters at Muridke near Lahore.<br /><br />The event was attended by thousands of people, the Urdu newspaper Daily Express reported.<br /><br />It did not say when the event was held.<br /><br />Kasab, 25, who was part of a team of 10 Lashkar-e-Taiba terrorists who killed 166 people during three days of carnage in Mumbai four years ago, was hanged in a Pune jail on Wednesday.<br /><br />The Pakistani Taliban have threatened to target Indians to avenge Kasab’s execution.<br /><br />The Lashkar e Toiba has described Kasab as a “hero” who will inspire more terror attacks. Shortly after Kasab’s hanging, the JuD refused to comment on the issue.<br /><br />“We have decided not to issue any statement on the hanging of Kasab as we think it is not appropriate,” Habibullah Salfi, a member of the JuD’s media arm, said.<br /><br />The Jamaat ud Dawah claims it has no links with Lashkar e Toiba.<br /><br />Following the Mumbai attacks, the United Nations Security Council had declared the JuD a front for the banned Lashkar e Toiba. Earlier this year, the United States offered a 10-million-dollar bounty for Saeed.</p>
<p>Lashkar e Toiba founder Hafiz Mohammad Saeed led a gathering of thousands in offering funeral prayers for Ajmal Kasab, the lone surviving terrorist involved in the Mumbai attacks who was hanged earlier this week, a media report said on Saturday.<br /><br /></p>.<p>Saeed, mastermind of the 2008 assault on Mumbai, offered ‘ghayabana namaz-e-janaza’ (funeral prayers in absentia) for Kasab at the conclusion of a two-day training session of the Jamaat-ud-Dawah at its headquarters at Muridke near Lahore.<br /><br />The event was attended by thousands of people, the Urdu newspaper Daily Express reported.<br /><br />It did not say when the event was held.<br /><br />Kasab, 25, who was part of a team of 10 Lashkar-e-Taiba terrorists who killed 166 people during three days of carnage in Mumbai four years ago, was hanged in a Pune jail on Wednesday.<br /><br />The Pakistani Taliban have threatened to target Indians to avenge Kasab’s execution.<br /><br />The Lashkar e Toiba has described Kasab as a “hero” who will inspire more terror attacks. Shortly after Kasab’s hanging, the JuD refused to comment on the issue.<br /><br />“We have decided not to issue any statement on the hanging of Kasab as we think it is not appropriate,” Habibullah Salfi, a member of the JuD’s media arm, said.<br /><br />The Jamaat ud Dawah claims it has no links with Lashkar e Toiba.<br /><br />Following the Mumbai attacks, the United Nations Security Council had declared the JuD a front for the banned Lashkar e Toiba. Earlier this year, the United States offered a 10-million-dollar bounty for Saeed.</p>