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Serial Blast in New Dehli's Market
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Re: Serial Blast in New Dehli's Market
Originally posted by Adnans View PostJee Yeah New Dehli ke aik Market mein hoa hai
abh yeah kisi bhi ilaqay mein hoa ho chahe Muslim, Sikh ya Essai hoon laiken khun tu insaniat ke hee hoa na
Fall view from inside my car
near my work place :)
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Five bombs explode in Indian capital, 30 killed, 100 injured
NEW DELHI - At least five bombs exploded in quick succession in crowded markets and streets in the heart of India's capital New Delhi on Saturday, killing at least 30 people and injuring scores more, police said.
Police have defused three bombs in other localities and detained six people in connection with the incidents.
The Indian Mujahideen militant group, which says it has carried out several major attacks in recent months, sent an email to local television stations saying it was responsible for the blasts.
Police and witnesses said two went off in dustbins in and around Connaught Place, a shopping and dining area popular with tourists and locals in the centre of the city. Others exploded in busy markets around the city, within minutes of each other.
'Around 6:30 pm we heard a very loud noise, then we saw people running all over the place,' said Chanchal Kumar, a witness whose shirt was soaked in blood of several victims he had helped shift into ambulances.
'There were about 100-200 people around this place,' he said, adding the blast site was crowded with shoppers on a busy weekend ahead of Hindu and Muslim festivals.
The Indian Mujahideen email talked of nine bombs. Police said they had found and defused three bombs.
'So far 18 people have died,' Delhi police commissioner Y.S. Dadwal told reporters.
Hundreds of people have been killed in a wave of bombings in India in recent years, mostly blamed on Muslim militants, with targets ranging from mosques and Hindu temples to trains.
In July, at least 45 people were killed after a series of bombs ripped through Ahmedabad, the main city of the western state of Gujarat. The attack came a day after bombs killed one woman in the IT hub of Bangalore.
The failure to prevent the attacks has become an embarrassment for the Congress party-led coalition government, with elections less than a year away.
Police say the Indian Mujahideen is an offshoot of the banned Students' Islamic Movement of India, but say local Muslims appear to have been given training and backing from militant groups in neighbouring Pakistan and Bangladesh.
'I can just say that these blasts have been planned by the enemies of the country and they will be taught a lesson,' junior home minister Sriprakash Jaiswal told reporters at one site.
Arun Jaitley, a senior leader of the main Hindu nationalist opposition Bharatiya Janata Party, told the NDTV channel the profile of the bombers had changed over the last three years and attacks could no longer be blamed on outsiders.
'Homegrown terrorists are on the increase,' he said. 'We cannot shut our eyes to that reality.'
One bomb exploded in a newly constructed park in the centre of the Connaught Place roundabout, built above one of the main stations of the Delhi Metro. Police closed down the Metro and major markets in the city as a precaution.
Bomb in a dustbin
Another bomb went off in a dustbin near a metro station entrance on a main arterial road leading into the area, housing the offices of several foreign banks and multinational companies.
Injured people were carried away in police vans while a three-wheeler auto-rickshaw parked near one dustbin was badly damaged, witnesses said.
'It was a huge blast,' said another witness, Sanjeev Gole. 'I was around the corner from the road. I came running down and I saw at least four to five people lying on the road.'
Other attacks came in the Ghaffar Market area of Karol Bagh, which is a busy area full of electronics shops and is packed at weekends, and in Greater Kailash 1, home to restaurants and high-end retail outlets.
Broadcasts showed badly damaged cars with windows shattered at one site, with mangled motorbikes alongside personal belongings, some of them bloodstained, and abandoned shoes.
Wounded people were shown being carried away by rescuers, one leaving a trail of blood on the ground.
Hundreds of people milled around as police cordoned off the sites of explosions, with some people angry authorities had failed to prevent the blasts.
The deadliest attack in recent years came in July 2006, when seven bombs exploded on Mumbai's railway system killing more than 180 people.
The last major attack to hit the capital was in 2005, when about 66 people were killed when three bombs exploded in busy markets.
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Re: Serial Blast in New Dehli's Market
Originally posted by SherAli View Postsorry ji mera vo maqsad nai tha. men india se hun to mujhe lazman sochna he ki kahan hua? koi apna to nai tha? apna saga sambandhi. mera maqsad vo nahin tha. sorry
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Re: Serial Blast in New Dehli's Market
Originally posted by *khushi* View Post
May Allah guid3 us all to right path
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