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Dozens killed
as blasts rock Indian city
JAIPUR (India)—A series of bombs tore through crowded markets in the
Indian tourist city of Jaipur late Tuesday, killing at least 60 people
in what police said was a terror attack. One of the bombs went off near
a Hindu temple, leaving blood splattered on the street and cycles and
rickshaws in a mangled heap, television showed.
“Sixty people have died and 150 are injured,” said Vasundhara Raje,
chief minister of the desert state of Rajasthan of which Jaipur is the
capital. “We will not tolerate such activities at all,” he warned.
Police said seven blasts took place within minutes of each other in
Jaipur, about 260 kilometres (160 miles) from New Delhi.
“It’s a terror attack. There was no (intelligence) report of this,”
police director general A.S. Gill told television stations. Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh condemned the blasts and appealed for calm.
Historic Jaipur, which has a population of more than two million, is one
of India’s top tourist resorts and a favourite attraction for
foreigners.
State borders were sealed and a high alert sounded in Rajasthan state
and neighbouring areas, police said. They said there were no immediate
reports of any backlash and also appealed for calm. “There is peace in
the town. Nobody should worry,” Arvind Jain, a senior police official,
told NDTV television.
Jaipur is popularly known as the ‘pink city’ because of the ochre-pink
hue of its old buildings and crenellated city walls. India has been
plagued by bombings across the country in recent years and routinely
points the finger at foreign-based Islamic militant groups fighting its
rule in the Himalayan state of Kashmir.
Within just the last year they have included bombings in the southern
city of Hyderabad which killed 43 people, at a cinema in Punjab state in
northern India which left six dead, and a series of explosions outside
courts in three northern cities that killed 13.
A hospital official says at least 45 people have been killed in six bomb
blasts that ripped through crowded areas of a city in western India. N.S.
Shekhawat, the superintendent of the Sawai Man Singh hospital in Jaipur,
where most of the bodies were taken, confirmed that at least 45 people
had been killed. Another 100 people were wounded in Tuesday’s attacks,
police said.
A.S. Gill, a top police official, said six explosions took place in
markets and several other areas of the historic city. Jaipur sits in a
region dotted with palaces and ancient cities that draw hundreds of
thousands of Indian and foreign tourists every year. A seventh bomb was
defused before it exploded, Gill said.
Bombs ripped through crowded parts of an ancient city in western India
on Tuesday, killing at least 45 people and wounding 100 others, police
and hospital officials said.
The six explosions in Jaipur took place in markets and several other
areas of the city in Rajasthan, a region dotted with palaces and temples
that draws hundreds of thousands of Indian and foreign tourists every
year, said A.S. Gill, the state’s police chief.—Agencies
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