At least 11 dead and scores injured in blast at Delhi court

 

Delhi

Suggested Topics

Fear and anger gripped India's capital yesterday after a bomb exploded outside a court in Delhi, killing at least 11 people and wounding around 75.

It was the second such attack at the location within four months.

Up to 100 people had been gathered at the Delhi High Court preparing to enter the complex and file petitions when the high explosive device, believed to have been placed in a suitcase left at a gate, went off at around 10.15am. The explosion created a wave of shrapnel that left around 75 people injured and sent lawyers and their clients fleeing in terror.

Last night, as hospitals in the city battled to treat the injured, some of whom were said to be in a critical condition, several Indian television channels said they received an email from an Islamist militant group claiming responsibility for the attack. The

Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami is operational in Pakistan, India and Bangladesh and has been linked to previous attacks. Despite the claim, government officials and investigators said it was too early apportion blame until inquiries were complete. Sketches were issued of two men wanted by the police.

Speaking from neighbouring Bangladesh, where he is on an official visit, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh issued a statement, that said India would “never succumb to the pressure of terrorists”. He added: “This is a long war in which all political parties and all the people of India will have to stand united so that this scourge of terrorism is crushed.”

Yet for all the talk of standing together, there was fury among many of those caught up in the blast, the deadliest in the city since 2008.

Rahul Gandhi, a senior member of the ruling Congress Party and son of the late prime minister Rajiv Gandhi, was reportedly heckled when he visited a hospital where many of the injured had been taken.

At the court, a number of people asked why more had not been done to protect the premises, located close to the India Gate monument which was the site of a failed car bomb attack on May 26. The Delhi High Court Bar Council president Rakesh Tikku told reporters: “The Home Minister visited the blast site and he assured that better arrangements will maintained here, like installation of CCTV cameras, the lack of which is a major setback of such mishaps.”

The timing of the blast appeared to be designed to ensure the maximum number of people were injured. Renu Sehgal, a 42-year-old housewife with a case before the court, had just received a pass to enter the complex and was standing her uncle and mother while her husband parked

their car when the explosion happened. “The sound was so huge and suddenly people started running. We were all in such a big panic. I’m lucky I survived,” she told the Associated Press.

The bomb was the latest in India since three devices exploded in Mumbai in July, killing 20 people. Given that security in cities such as Delhi had supposedly been raised in the aftermath of the attacks, yesterday’s incident sparked fresh questions about the ability of the authorities to protect the public. “Have we become so vulnerable that terrorist groups can almost strike at will?” Arun Jaitley, a senior member of the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party, said in parliament.

Independent Comment
blog comments powered by Disqus
Top stories
News in pictures
World news in pictures
UK news in pictures
UK news in pictures
More stories
       
Independent
Travel Shop
Lake Como and the Bernina Express
Seven nights half-board from £749pp Find out more
Dubrovnik and the Dalmatian coast
Seven nights half-board from only £859pp Find out more
Prague city break
Three nights from only £199pp Find out more
 
Independent Dating
and  

By clicking 'Search' you
are agreeing to our
Terms of Use.

iJobs Job Widget
iJobs General

Senior Electrical Engineering Consultant – Renewable Energy Grid Connections.

Negotiable Depending on Experience: The Green Recruitment Company: The Green R...

BREEAM Consultant

£25000 - £30000 Per Annum: The Green Recruitment Company: The Green Recruitmen...

Design Engineer - ProE, Hand Calcs

Negotiable: Progressive Recruitment: Dear Sumadhab, A growing engineering comp...

Year 6 Teacher / Year Group Leader

Negotiable: Randstad Education Ilford: We are currently recruiting for a Year ...

Day In a Page

Beards, brawn and body art

Beards, brawn and body art

Meet London’s new batch of male models
Scandi-geeks descend on Nordicana for fan-convention

Scandi-geeks descend on Nordicana for fan-convention

British love of shows such as The Bridge, Borgen and The Killing shows no sign of fading
Behind the rhetoric what is really being done to combat desertification?

The Great Green Wall of Africa,

Behind the rhetoric what is really being done to combat desertification?
Laughter Inc: the cheering growth of the chuckle industry

Laughter Inc

The cheering growth of the chuckle industry
The bad science scandal: how fact-fabrication is damaging UK's global name for research

The bad science scandal

How fact-fabrication is damaging UK's global name for research
To the manor born: The female aristocrats battling to inherit the title

Female aristocrats battle to inherit the title

A passionate protest is gathering pace among the women of Britain's aristocracy, who believe that men should no longer automatically inherit the family pile and title.
Love struck: Photographs of JFK's visit to Berlin 50 years ago reveal a nation instantly smitten

In pictures: JFK's visit to Berlin in 1963

Photographer Ulrich Mack accompanied Kennedy on the entire trip. The results are an astonishing record of a watershed moment.
Eat shoots and leaves: Mark Hix gets creative with fresh peas, mangetouts and sugar snaps

Mark Hix gets creative with English peas

English peas and their offsprings, such as mangetouts and sugar snaps, are great tossed into a salad, says our chef.
Ceviche with a smile: Chef Martin Morales has turned South America's elegant cuisine into one of London's hottest food trends

Chef Martin Morales: Ceviche with a smile

Morales has turned South America's elegant cuisine into one of London's hottest food trends
Incredible edible: Guerrilla gardeners are planting veg for the masses in West Yorkshire

Incredible edible: Guerrilla gardeners

Holly Williams joins the volunteers who have turned a small town into a thriving community with a guerrilla gardening scheme that has provided a blueprint for sustainability.
Seasoned to taste: The restaurants that draw happy diners back year after year

Seasoned to taste: Food institutions

In an industry famed for short-lived success and pop-up pretenders, it takes something special to stick around.
Anatomy of a waiter: Service staff spill the secrets of their trade

Anatomy of a waiter: Staff spill their secrets

Next Sunday is the first ever National Waiters' Day. To celebrate, we share tales from the restaurant trenches by those in the front line.
Drink in the sun: The season's best wines

Drink in the sun: The season's best wines

From complex English sparkling wine to juicy Sicilian reds...
Iran election: Farewell Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, we’ll miss you – but not that much...

Robert Fisk

Farewell Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, we’ll miss you – but not that much...
India sends its final telegram -(Stop)-

After 163 years India sends its final telegram -(Stop)-

Mobile phones and the internet have superseded the once-essential service