This story is from May 14, 2008

Jaipur blasts: RDX used, HuJI suspected

Highly-explosive RDX was used in the serial blasts that rocked Jaipur even as tell-tale signs pointed towards involvement of Bangladesh-based HuJI in the blasts.
Jaipur blasts: RDX used, HuJI suspected
JAIPUR: Highly-explosive RDX was used in the serial blasts that rocked Jaipur on Tuesday, a senior police official said on Wednesday as tell-tale signs pointed towards the involvement of Bangladesh- based Harkat-ul-Jehadi Islami in the serial blasts. (Watch)
The explosive devices were fitted with timers and planted on cycles, a modus operandi similar to the one used in last year's blasts on court premises in Uttar Pradesh in which HuJI was involved, police said.
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(Watch)
Eight persons including a man injured in the blasts and a rickshaw puller are being questioned, they said, noting that seven teams of Rajasthan police and intelligence branch have begun the probe into the blasts. (Watch)
"It was a cent per cent terrorist attack on the pattern of blasts on the court premises in UP in November last year. RDX was used in containers tagged to cycles along with timer devices," Additional Director General of Police (Crime) A K Jain said.
An examination of the blast sites indicated that the bombs were filled with ball bearings and small iron pieces to act as splinters, sources close to the investigation said.
HuJI may have been able to form sleeper cells in Rajasthan, they said, adding that a proper investigation into the blast at a sufi shrine in Ajmer last year could have been a pointer.
"We have collected sufficient evidence from the places of the blasts. They are being analysed by our technical experts," Superintendent of Police, Jaipur, Raghvendra Suhasa said, noting that one unexploded bomb, found from the blast site, has been defused.
Union Home Secretary Madhukar Gupta told mediapersons in New Delhi that "our priority now apart from vigilance and being on the alert will be to get hold of the people responsible" for the blasts.
Sources said the blasts triggered in areas close to two Hanuman temples in the old city could have been aimed at disturbing communal peace.
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