India has confirmed that Monday's deadly explosion outside Delhi's Red Fort, which claimed 12 lives and left over 30 injured, is being treated as a terror incident. The statement from the cabinet, led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, cements speculation that the blast was carried out by anti-national forces.
Eyewitnesses described the scene as chaotic, with the explosion causing nearby vehicles to catch fire and throwing bodies into the air. The investigation is now in the hands of India's national investigation agency, which has been given expansive powers to carry out raids and arrests.
Five people have already been detained in connection with the blast, including those arrested from the Pulwama district of Kashmir in relation to an alleged "interstate and transnational terror" cell linked to the Islamist group Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM). The Pakistan-based insurgent group is believed to be primarily active in India-administered Kashmir.
Police claims have revealed that they uncovered over 2,900kg of explosives materials, chemicals, detonators, and guns during early morning raids. Several sources close to the investigation believe the driver of the car that caused the explosion may be part of the same terror cell as those arrested earlier this week.
This latest incident comes after an attack in April when gunmen targeted over 20 Hindu tourists, killing them all, with India blaming Pakistan for masterminding the assault. The conflict escalated into a diplomatic row between the two nuclear-armed nations, but ultimately ended with a US-led ceasefire stopping hostilities.
India's confirmation of the Red Fort blast as a terror incident risks pushing the two countries back towards full hostilities that could destabilise the region further. The government has vowed to take action against any party behind the attack, with Home Minister Amit Shah instructing his officials to "hunt down each and every culprit".
Eyewitnesses described the scene as chaotic, with the explosion causing nearby vehicles to catch fire and throwing bodies into the air. The investigation is now in the hands of India's national investigation agency, which has been given expansive powers to carry out raids and arrests.
Five people have already been detained in connection with the blast, including those arrested from the Pulwama district of Kashmir in relation to an alleged "interstate and transnational terror" cell linked to the Islamist group Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM). The Pakistan-based insurgent group is believed to be primarily active in India-administered Kashmir.
Police claims have revealed that they uncovered over 2,900kg of explosives materials, chemicals, detonators, and guns during early morning raids. Several sources close to the investigation believe the driver of the car that caused the explosion may be part of the same terror cell as those arrested earlier this week.
This latest incident comes after an attack in April when gunmen targeted over 20 Hindu tourists, killing them all, with India blaming Pakistan for masterminding the assault. The conflict escalated into a diplomatic row between the two nuclear-armed nations, but ultimately ended with a US-led ceasefire stopping hostilities.
India's confirmation of the Red Fort blast as a terror incident risks pushing the two countries back towards full hostilities that could destabilise the region further. The government has vowed to take action against any party behind the attack, with Home Minister Amit Shah instructing his officials to "hunt down each and every culprit".