Blasts in the capitals of India and Pakistan on Monday and Tuesday killed 13 and 12 people, respectively.
Indian police invoke ‘antiterror’ law after Delhi Red Fort blast kills at least 12 people
By Caolán Magee and Usaid Siddiqui
Share
Save
Blasts in the capitals of India and Pakistan on Monday and Tuesday killed 13 and 12 people, respectively.
Blasts in the capitals of India and Pakistan on Monday and Tuesday killed 13 and 12 people, respectively.
Indian police invoke ‘antiterror’ law after Delhi Red Fort blast kills at least 12 people
By Caolán Magee and Usaid Siddiqui
Share
Save

India confirms deadly Delhi car blast being treated as ‘terror incident’

Kashmir is focus of arrests after Delhi car blast linked to ‘terror module’

Indian police carry out sweeping raids in disputed Kashmir

Red Fort blast and an inter-State terror module: What we know

Delhi blast: The night that shook India's capital city

Aftermath of deadly Delhi explosion as emergency services search for survivors

Indian capital car blast kills at least eight

Blast from confiscated explosives at police station in Indian-controlled Kashmir kills nine

Deadly terror attack in Islamabad puts Pakistan in ‘state of war’, says minister

8 dead, many injured in car explosion near India's historic Red Fort - UPI.com

Blasts in the capitals of India and Pakistan on Monday and Tuesday killed 13 and 12 people, respectively.

Police in the Indian capital territory of Delhi invoke an 'anti-terror' law as they investigate a deadly car explosion.

India's 'anti-terrorism' force is leading the probe into the blast that killed 12 people in New Delhi on Monday.

Indian police are investigating a deadly car explosion in the capital, New Delhi, under a stringent 'antiterrorism' law.

India says 'antinational forces' behind the deadly Delhi blast. Analysts say a harsher crackdown awaits Kashmir.

Statement from Modi cabinet vows justice for lives lost as death toll from explosion outside Red Fort rises to 12