A Pakistani court indicted seven Pakistani suspects on terror charges today in connection with last year's attack on the Indian city of Bombay, a defence lawyer said.
Pakistani security agencies have also detained a former army major for possible links with two men arrested in Chicago on terrorism charges, an army spokesman said.
According to US court documents, the Chicago pair discussed a planned attack on a Danish newspaper with members of the banned Pakistan-based group Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), which has been blamed for the attack in Bombay, also known as Mumbai, a year ago in which 166 people were killed.
Pakistan is under pressure from both India, which wants it to crack down on militants operating in disputed Kashmir, and from the United States, which wants it to root out Taliban fighters to help put down an insurgency in neighbouring Afghanistan.
A lawyer for one of the seven men charged with taking part in the Mumbai attack said they had pleaded not guilty. They are allegedly linked to LeT.
"The statements recorded and the evidence produced against the accused are contradictory to the charges," lawyer Shahbaz Rajput told Reuters.
India has refused to resume peace talks with Pakistan and sought to bring international pressure on Islamabad to act against militants operating from its soil, including LeT.
Washington wants relations between the uneasy, nuclear-armed neighbours to improve so its crucial ally Pakistan can focus on fighting Taliban militants, as well as helping in the war in Afghanistan.
Reuters