Family members who lost loved ones in the 2008 Mumbai attacks hold a memorial service on the fourth anniversary of the violence.<br/> <br />The assault left 166 people dead when Pakistan-based militants rampaged through luxury five star hotels, a main railway station, a popular cafe and a Jewish centre in the city.<br/> <br />Pakistani national Mohammad Ajmal Kasab, pictured moving through Mumbai's train station with an AK-47, was the only surviving gunman.<br/> <br />He was executed last week on November 21.<br/> <br />But the daughter of a police officer gunned down in the assault said his death does not mean full closure.<br/> <br />(SOUNDBITE) (English) DAUGHTER OF FORMER SENIOR POLICE OFFICER, DIVYA SAYING:<br/> <br />"I would request the government not to consider this (hanging of Ajmal Kasab) an end to 26/11, because I don't think 26/11 is ever going to end and Mumbai is ever going to forget and if the government forgets then it becomes our responsibility to not let them forget."<br/> <br />Some on the streets of Mumbai, though, felt justice had been done.<br/> <br />(SOUNDBITE) (Hindi) A LOCAL RESIDENT, MANIK BORADE, SAYING:<br/> <br />"Kasab's execution has sent out a message that militants should not attack Mumbai again. It has created fear among them, because if they attack again, the government will act promptly."<br/> <br />The three days of attacks still cloud relations between nuclear-armed rivals Pakistan and India.
