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Inside cell 1784: How 26/11 accused Tahawwur Rana lives in isolation at Tihar Jail

Extradited after 16 years, the alleged Lashkar-e-Taiba operative is under constant surveillance in a high-risk ward, requesting only books and a western toilet as he awaits trial in India.

EPN Desk 17 May 2025 06:14

Tahawwur Rana

In Tihar Jail’s fortress-like confines, inmate number 1784 lives in a ward designed not just for isolation — but for containment of the nation’s most high-risk prisoners. That number belongs to Tahawwur Rana, the man extradited from the US 16 years after being accused of playing a key role in the deadly 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks.

Rana, a former Pakistani military doctor and close associate of Lashkar-e-Taiba operative David Coleman Headley, now occupies a single cell in a sparsely populated block of India’s most secure prison. “No prisoner from the other wards is allowed entry,” a Tihar official confirmed. “He is being held in complete isolation, under constant surveillance.”

Rana’s neighbors — six notorious gangsters — are also kept in solitary cells, with no opportunity for interaction. The silence is deliberate.

Brought to India on April 10 following a lengthy legal battle in US courts, Rana is accused of facilitating Headley’s reconnaissance missions in Mumbai ahead of the 2008 attacks, which killed 166 people. The National Investigation Agency (NIA) alleges that he provided critical logistical support to the attackers. He was remanded to judicial custody by a Delhi court last week and is scheduled to remain in Tihar until June 6.

Within the sterile confines of Cell 1784, Rana leads a quiet, tightly monitored existence. “He speaks only in English and has made just two requests: some books and a western-style toilet,” said the Tihar official.

Daily life inside his cell is rigid and minimal. Breakfast arrives at 7 a.m.—tea, biscuits, bread, and dalia (cracked wheat). Lunch is a simple combination of dal, rice, and vegetables. Tea and snacks follow in the evening, with a near-identical dinner served later. “He’s not eating much,” the official noted.

Security protocols surrounding Rana are extreme. CCTV cameras monitor his every move. He remains under suicide watch 24/7. Separate cooks prepare his meals, which are tested by prison staff before being served. Even comfort comes with restraint: six blankets—three of which are used as a buffer on his cot—and a single fan.

From a Chicago businessman to an accused terror conspirator in solitary confinement, Tahawwur Rana’s descent into India’s harshest penal system is not just a procedural development — it’s a symbol of the long arm of justice stretching across borders, and years.

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