LA Times
 
Blast in India's high-tech capital, Bangalore, wounds 16

 
 
 
By Mark Magnier  
April 17, 2013, 5:15  a.m.

 
NEW DELHI, India -- An _explosion_ 
(http://www.latimes.com/topic/unrest-conflicts-war/terrorism/boston-marathon-bombing-(2013)-EVCAL00036.topic)
   
Wednesday near the office of a political party in the high-tech capital of  
Bangalore wounded 16 people, including eight police officers, officials  said. 
 
Early evidence suggests that a low-intensity bomb of the type often used in 
 roadside attacks was placed in a motorcycle that was parked near a temple 
about  300 feet from an office of the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata 
Party,  authorities said. 
Police made up a disproportionate share of the injured because they had 
been  guarding the political office when the explosion happened around 10:45 
a.m.  local time. The blast also damaged two vans, a police vehicle and a 
motorbike,  officials said. 
The Bharatiya Janata Party runs the government in southern Karnataka state, 
 of which Bangalore is the capital, but the BJP is an opposition party on 
the  national stage. State assembly elections are scheduled for May 5. 
Bangalore police said most of the injuries from the blast were not serious. 
 Junior Home Minister R.P.N. Singh in New Delhi urged people not to spread 
rumors  until a proper investigation was completed. 
"We appeal to everyone that peace should be maintained," he said, adding 
that  terrorism was a global scourge as evidenced by Monday's bombing during 
the  Boston Marathon. 
Some analysts said a reported link between the blast and local politics  
should be treated warily. "I don’t see any political election connection 
here,"  said Ajai Sahni, executive director of the Institute of Conflict 
Management in  New Delhi. "It’s too early to speculate. Right now anyone could 
be 
behind the  Bangalore attack." 
No group or individual took immediate responsibility for the attack. 
Video from the scene shortly after the blast showed cars destroyed, window  
panes shattered, glasses strewn across the road and a large fire from one 
of the  vehicles. Nearby, forensic experts collected objects from the area as 
a crowd  gathered to gawk. 
In February, 17 people died and more than 100 were wounded in the city of  
Hyderabad when twin bombs planted on bicycles about 500 feet apart exploded 
near  a crowded market. That had been the first major bomb attack since 
September  2011, when a blast outside Delhi's High Court killed 13 people. 
Bangalore, known as India's technology hub, and its nearby suburbs house 
many  top software companies and research facilities. In 2008, nine bomb 
explosions  rocked the city, killing two people and wounding more than 20. In 
2010, two  bombs exploded in a crowded cricket stadium, injuring 15 people.  
"It is our good fortune that no one died," Sahni said. "This can’t be 
defined  as an act to merely scare people because this attack was intended to 
cause  damage and injuries."

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