|
HYDERABAD, India: The police continued to find and
defuse bombs throughout the southern Indian city of Hyderabad on
Sunday, a day after a pair of synchronized explosions ripped through
two popular gathering spots, killing at least 42 people and wounding
scores of others.
State and national officials are calling the blasts in Hyderabad, a
city with a history of Muslim-Hindu tensions, acts of terrorism.
After the attacks, the police defused 19 more bombs - all fitted
with timers and placed in plastic bags - at bus stops, movie theaters,
road intersections and pedestrian bridges. The police said each of the
bombs contained ball bearings and ammonium.
India's home minister, Shivraj Patil, said the country was virtually
helpless in the face of terror attacks. "We have to take timely action
on the basis of information received. But our country is so big that
even if we have the information that something is planned we do not
know where or when," he said.
The explosions just minutes apart. The first hit an open-air
auditorium in a public park during a laser show about the history of
Hyderabad, killing at least 11 people. There were unconfirmed reports
of two explosions at the park.
The second blast ripped through a popular restaurant, Gokul Chaat,
the heart of Hyderabad's commercial district. The police and witnesses
say the restaurant was packed with patrons. At least 30 were killed.
By Sunday morning, the death toll had risen to 42 as victims died of
wounds suffered in the attacks, said K. Jana Reddy, the state home
minister.
Both attacks appeared calculated to cause maximum carnage.
"The metal pellets in the bombs had worked as deadly missiles,
killing more people," said Dr. K. Shastry, a senior doctor at a large
hospital, which received many dead and wounded.
On Sunday, the chief minister of Andhra Pradesh, of which Hyderabad
is the capital, pointed to Islamist militant groups in neighboring
Pakistan and Bangladesh.
"Available information points to the involvement of terrorist
organizations based in Bangladesh and Pakistan," the minister, Y. S.
Rajasekhara Reddy, said Sunday after an emergency state cabinet
meeting. Reddy said three children were among those killed in the
attacks.
The Press Trust of India news agency reported Sunday that
intelligence agencies were investigating a possible link to a
Bangladesh-based militant group, Harkatul Jihad Al-Islami.
Harkatul, which is banned in Bangladesh, wants to establish strict
Islamic rule in the Muslim-majority nation governed by secular laws.
The Bangladeshi Foreign Ministry said it had not been informed of the
allegations.
Indian officials have blamed militant groups based in Pakistan or
Bangladesh for several attacks, saying Islamabad and Dhaka were not
doing enough to crack down on anti-India groups.
A national Home Ministry official said Sunday that about 22 people
were being questioned in connection with the weekend attack. The police
reported that one man had been arrested near Hyderabad on suspicion of
selling bicycle ball bearings that were used as pellets in the bombs.
Discuss this article on the forums. (0 posts)
http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/08/26/news/india.php
|