Mumbai:
A day after a terror strike rocked Mumbai, Prime Minister Manmohan
Singh said the perpetrators must be "pursued relentlessly" as
investigators scrambled for clues on a rain-soaked Thursday and a
weary metropolis picked up the pieces.
Seventeen people were killed and 131 others injured in
synchronised blasts that rocked India's financial capital,
striking the congested areas of Dadar, Zaveri Bazar and Opera
House within minutes of each other Wednesday evening -- but a day
after, there was no breakthrough on who was behind it.
Manmohan Singh, who visited the metropolis Thursday evening with
Congress president Sonia Gandhi, condemned the "barbaric" bomb
blasts, promising "the government will do everything in its power
to prevent such attacks in future".
He said the government was coordinating "efforts and resources to
relentlessly pursue the perpetrators... (who) have sought to
subvert".
The prime minister and Sonia Gandhi visited some of the injured in
J.J. Hospital.
Maharashtra Anti-Terrorism Squad (ATS) chief Rakesh Maria vowed
that they would "ensure no matter wherever the accused are, we
will identify them and bring them to book" as he appealed for
faith and trust.
Officials refused to name any particular group suspected to be
behind the blasts for which there has so far been no claim of
responsibility. But they said they were looking at "all angles" to
identify the perpetrators.
Mumbai spirit
Resigned, outraged or simply stoic, Mumbaikars rallied around to
battle the crisis, 31 months after the Nov 26-29, 2008 terror
assault, India's worst. They waited outside morgues to claim the
bodies of their kin, lined up at hospitals or packed into trains
and buses to go about their daily work.
"I am a Mumbaikar and we shall not be scared by these terror
attacks. Like me, lakhs of co-commuters are in the trains, buses
and roads. It actually helps give strength to each other," Archana
Shukla said as she went to work.
In Zaveri Bazar, Mumbai's most popular address for jewellery that
Wednesday saw its third terror strike, merchants were shocked. But
they firmly said they were staying put.
"What is the point in shifting base? Are other business locations
safer?" asked Raju Solanki, a gold jeweller.
That was a question even experts were loathe to answer as
investigators began unravelling the conspiracy behind this latest
assault by yet unknown terrorists.
Clues
Various agencies, including the National Security Guard (NSG), the
Central Forensic Science Laboratory (CFSL), the National
Investigation Agency (NIA) and Mumbai Police, were involved in the
probe.
As the investigators were searching for clues, the only thing that
was sure was union Home Secretary R.K. Singh saying the ammonium
nitrate-based IEDs were "not crude" but indicated "some level of
sophistication".
A top doctor at one of the hospitals where the bodies of the dead
were taken for a post-mortem examination said an electric circuit,
that may have triggered the blast, was found on one of them,
leading to speculation that it may have been a suicide bomber at
work.
Sources said traces of ammonium nitrate, also confirmed by Home
Minister P. Chidambaram, and fuel had been found in the
explosives.
"Ammonium nitrate was used with a timer. The fact that they all
took place within minutes of each other -- eight-to-10 minutes --
shows that it was a coordinated terror attack," Chidambaram said.
The CCTV footage holds the key. Sources told IANS that some of the
footage was marred by the rain and bad light Wednesday evening.
Hours after visiting the terror sites, Chidambaram said 131 people
had been taken to 13 hospitals with injuries. He said one severed
head was also found at the site that could take the death toll to
18.
Addressing a press conference in Mumbai, he admitted there was no
prior intelligence input.
Policy failure
Quick to seize the initiative, Bharatiya Janata Party leader L.K.
Advani pointed the needle of suspicion towards Pakistan.
"It is a policy failure, not intelligence failure. There have been
repeated attacks on Mumbai, this is a failure of policy," Advani
told reporters during his trip to the city.
Advani quoted reports of a probable link between the blast and the
Indian Mujahideen (IM) and said even if it were behind the attack
it was being sustained by Pakistan.
"The last attack on our land is proved to have been engineered by
the ISI (Inter-Services Intelligence)," Advani said.
"So far as India is concerned, the government of India should shed
its ambivalence to terrorism," Advani said.
Pakistan's foreign minister comes to New Delhi for talks July
26-27 and External Affairs Minister S.M. Krishna said the terror
strikes would not impact the strategic dialogue.
The timing of the attack has raised suspicions in informed
strategic circles over whether the serial blasts were engineered
by those who wanted to derail the peace process in the
subcontinent.
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