India, Kashmir and Red Fort
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NEW DELHI-Investigations into the Red Fort blast that killed 12 people and injured dozens have revealed a sophisticated, white-collar terror network directly controlled by Pakistan’s ISI, but routed through Afghanistan,
Police in India's capital say a car exploded near the city's historic Red Fort , killing at least eight people and triggering a fire that damaged several vehicles parked nearby
Red Fort blast news update: A purported video of Umar Nabi, who drove the Hyundai i20 car that exploded near the Red Fort on November 10, has surfaced on social media. In it, he is heard talking about “martyrdom operations” and “suicide bombing”.
A car explosion in New Delhi's Red Fort area, popular with tourists to the Indian capital city, has killed several people and injured many more, local media reported. The cause of the explosion is not immediately clear, but it occurred in a parked car outside Gate 1 of the Red Fort metro station.
Government says the deadliest explosion in a decade in Delhi was a ‘heinous terror incident, perpetrated by anti-national forces’
Investigative agencies have said that the video was recorded two months before last week’s explosion. In the video, Nabi can be seen trying to justify suicide bombing, but as per the police, he failed
Italian journalist Francesca Marino tells NDTV the Red Fort suicide attack signals a renewed JeM offensive, rooted in Pakistan-backed radicalisation, Balakot fallout and a rebuilding terror network now preparing for larger strikes.
A terror investigation into the 10 November Red Fort blast has unexpectedly exposed major flaws in India’s accreditation system. As Al-Falah University came under scrutiny, NAAC, AIU and Delhi Police simultaneously flagged alleged fake accreditation claims,
Narendra Modi has described the attack that killed at least eight people as a "conspiracy", vowing to bring those responsible to justice.
Investigators looking into the fatal car blast near the Red Fort report that the suspect created a hidden communication network through Threema — a Switzerland-based encrypted messaging platform that is prohibited in India.