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Rajesh Hingorani waits for customers as traders open shops near Taj Mahal hotel in Mumbai, India, Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2008. The scarred and traumatized city struggled back to its feet Monday, reopening schools and businesses, as residents tried to come to terms with the string of terror attacks that killed 172 people in the three days of violence that started Wednesday night.
A man smokes as he watches the stock ticker board outside Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE), unseen, in Mumbai, India, Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2008. BSE's benchmark Sensex plunged by 325 points in early trade Tuesday. The scarred and traumatized city struggled back to its feet Monday, reopening schools and businesses, as residents tried to come to terms with the string of terror attacks that killed 172 people in the three days of violence that started Wednesday night.
People watch the stock ticker board outside Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE), unseen, in Mumbai, India, Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2008. BSE's benchmark Sensex plunged by 325 points in early trade Tuesday. The scarred and traumatized city struggled back to its feet Monday, reopening schools and businesses, as residents tried to come to terms with the string of terror attacks that killed 172 people in the three days of violence that started Wednesday night.
A roadside vendor waits for customers at a market in Mumbai, India, Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2008. The scarred and traumatized city struggled back to its feet Monday, reopening schools and businesses, as residents tried to come to terms with the string of terror attacks that brought bloodshed to the heart of Mumbai. The mourning for the 172 people killed in the three days of violence that started Wednesday night was not over, however.
A young school girl asks for corn at a local market in Mumbai, India, Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2008. The scarred and traumatized city struggled back to its feet Monday, reopening schools and businesses, as residents tried to come to terms with the string of terror attacks that brought bloodshed to the heart of Mumbai. The mourning for the 172 people killed in the three days of violence that started Wednesday night was not over, however.
An Indian policeman keeps watch as people go about their daily chores in Mumbai, India, Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2008. The scarred and traumatized city struggled back to its feet Monday, reopening schools and businesses, as residents tried to come to terms with the string of terror attacks that brought bloodshed to the heart of Mumbai. The mourning for the 172 people killed in the three days of violence that started Wednesday night was not over, however.
Local people read newspapers in front of an old structure with the pictures of Indian mythological gods at a street leading towards the Taj Mahal Hotel in Mumbai, India, Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2008. The scarred and traumatized city struggled back to its feet Monday, reopening schools and businesses, as residents tried to come to terms with the string of terror attacks that brought bloodshed to the heart of Mumbai. The mourning for the 172 people killed in the three days of violence that started Wednesday night was not over, however.