Rueben Dass
India suffered two terrorist incidents in a span of a few days, one of which was successful and the other thwarted in time. On November 10, a car packed with explosives was detonated by a suicide bomber near the Red Fort in Delhi during the evening rush hour. The blast killed 15 and injured 28 people.
The attack was perpetrated by a cell of medical doctors dubbed the “white collar terror module,” allegedly linked to Pakistan-based terror group Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) and Ansar Ghazwat-ul-Hind, a group affiliated with al-Qaida. The suicide bomber was identified as Umar un-Nabi, a doctor working at Al-Falah University in Faridabad. Other co-conspirators include Nabi’s colleagues at the university, namely Muzammil Shakeel Ganai, Adeel Ahmed Rather, Muzaffar Ahmed Rather, and Dr. Shaheen Shahid, the alleged financier of the Delhi cell and senior member of JeM’s women’s wing.
A day before the Delhi blasts, Gujarat counterterrorism officials arrested another medical doctor identified as Dr. Ahmed Mohiyuddin Saiyed from Telangana and two other individuals who were allegedly plotting to carry out a bio-terror attack using ricin. The cell was uncovered during a routine stop of Saiyed’s car, in which police found a cache of firearms, ammunition, and castor bean cake, a precursor for the manufacture of ricin.
