Bombs Kill More Than 50 in Indian Capital 
By REUTERS

Filed at 12:39 p.m. ET

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Three powerful bombs ripped through New Delhi markets
packed with families and shoppers on Saturday ahead of the biggest Hindu and
Muslim festivals of the year, killing over 50 people and wounding scores
more.

Charred bodies, blood, glass and smoking debris littered the scenes as
rescuers frantically pulled out the dead and injured while thousands of
survivors milled around in shock trying to find out what had happened to
missing relatives.

At least 51 people were killed in the blasts which occurred within minutes
of each other, said an aide to Delhi state Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit.
Fifty-four people were injured, the aide said.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh declared it an act of terrorism, while adding
it was too early to speculate who was responsible.

``There was a huge sound,'' said Sunita, who lives near one of the
devastated markets, in an area also poplar with foreign backpackers. ``I saw
many people lying on the ground. I saw a child's arm cut off and somebody
else's brain smashed out. It was very bad. Very bad.''

Singh and other officials called for calm and police in the financial
capital, Mumbai, put the city on high alert. Markets around Delhi began
closing down as emergency vehicles battled their way through gridlocked
streets.

``He is very distressed,'' Singh's spokesman told reporters. ''India
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/international/countriesandterritories/in
dia/index.html?inline=nyt-geo>  will never be defeated by terrorism.''

India has blamed previous attacks on the capital on Pakistan
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/international/countriesandterritories/pa
kistan/index.html?inline=nyt-geo> -based militants, including one on
parliament in 2001 that killed more than a dozen people and brought India
and Pakistan to the brink of nuclear war.

But the country is also racked by scores of rebellions and two cinema blasts
blamed on Sikh separatists killed one person and injured dozens in May.

As it has with previous attacks, Pakistan immediately condemned ``these
terrorist blasts.'' Indian officials said the powerful explosive RDX was
used in all three explosions. 

US WARNING

The United States recently warned its citizens of a possible terrorist
attack on U.S. interests in Delhi and elsewhere and Indian authorities are
hunting a suspected al Qaeda operative here. The city's American Embassy
School canceled all classes for Monday after Saturday's attacks.

``We saw bodies terribly charred, limbs missing. It was a horrible sight, a
terrible sight,'' one British tourist told NDTV television. ``Don't let the
terrorists win.''

The first blast was reported in the Paharganj district, near the main New
Delhi railway station and an area popular with foreign backpackers.
Shopkeepers there cleared their carts and used them as makeshift stretchers
to rush victims to hospital.

Other explosions were at the Sarojini Nagar market in south Delhi and in
Govindpuri, a southern suburb.

Chief Minister Dikshit said the attacks were clearly planned to spark
terror.

``It is something that has been planned, that is quite obvious,'' she told
reporters. ``It was someone whose intentions are not good, that is also
obvious.

``It's a very sad day for all of us. The fact that these blasts came and
took away so many lives has dampened our spirits and made us feel very
sad.''

On Tuesday, Hindus celebrate Diwali, or the festival of lights, and later in
the week Muslims end the fasting month of Ramadan with Eid al-Fitr.

Delhi's 14 million people are mostly Hindu, like in the rest of India, but
there are about 1.7 Muslim residents in the city.

The blasts occurred just on dusk on a fine autumn evening, with Delhi's
markets and streets crammed with families, holidaymakers and shoppers, many
dressed in their colorful best for the coming festivals.

The wail of scores of sirens were punctuated by almost continuous explosions
from fireworks being set off ahead of Diwali.

The blast at Govindpuri occurred near an overcrowded bus and could have been
much worse, officials said.

The conductor noticed two men had left their bag behind and shouted at them,
while a passenger opened it. The conductor hurled the bag into nearby brush,
where it exploded.


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