I am sorry I am posting something that is not exactly as per the group's  objectives, but I felt its important. I am requesting the moderators to please  not send this across if they believe its not appropriate.
 I checked on the internet about the guns used in the Mumbai Attacks. It  seems that the Heckler & Koch guns were brought in to Afghanistan by the US  Security Agency Blackwater, against the specific contract details with the Gun  Manufacturer. Blackwater had an agreement with Heckler & Koch to provide  training in using Heckler & Koch guns. Heckler & Koch guns are used  by Pakistans elite forces Special Service Group that has been trained by the US  Miltary till the late nineties.
   
Blackwater, a private security company which has been contracted to protect  high-profile US officials and foreign dignitaries in Iraq, had been using  Heckler & Koch machine guns in both Iraq and Afghanistan, German broadcaster  ARD's "Report Mainz" program reported Monday, Feb. 19.
The German arms  manufacturer contacted the program shortly before the report was aired on Monday  night and said it would cut all its ties to the US firm, according to "Report  Mainz."
The German company on its Web site described its work with  Blackwater as a "unique and strategic partnership" in which the two firms were  cooperating to develop "special edition" firearms and offer training courses in  the United States to use Heckler & Koch weapons. 
Bildunterschrift: Großansicht  des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift:  The firms' cooperation was meant to be about  training courses in North Carolina
There was no mention of  Iraq or Afghanistan, and the company reportedly denied it had developed a weapon  for Blackwater, as reported by the TV program. 
 The German government had not given Heckler & Koch permission to provide  Blackwater with firearms, "Report Mainz" said, referring to information it  received from Germany's Economics Ministry.
Exploiting a  loophole?
Heckler & Koch would not provide the program with  information as to how Blackwater got its weapons. However, it may have taken  advantage of a loophole by merely transferring the firearms to its US  subsidiary, which then handed over the wares, the report  suggested.
Blackwater has been under intense scrutiny from the US  Congress as a result of the high number of civilian deaths and injuries the  company has caused in Iraq. The most controversial incident was in September,  when Blackwater guards were said to have fatally shot 17 Iraqi civilians in  Baghdad.
The company is neither subject to Iraqi law, nor governed by US  military tribunals, which allows it to operate without fear of  repercussions.
Politicians want oversight
"It is scandalous  and unacceptable that a German arms company cooperates with such a lawless  mercenary troop 
 although it must know that this firm is involved in illegal  killings in Iraq," Green party parliamentarian Hans Christian Ströbele told  the program's reporters.
The Social Democrats' foreign policy  spokesman, Gert Weisskirchen, called for legislation to prevent German firms  from participating in the "privatization of war" and said that "such cooperation  should be scrutinized."
Free Democratic Party parliamentarian Werner  Hoyer echoed those comments, saying that there was a gap in legislation that  needed to be closed.