(Credit: OpenAI )
The FSL team worked through the night near Red Fort Metro, collecting over 40 crucial samples. Two bullets, one live round, and traces of two different types of explosives have been found. The team believes one explosive is ammonium nitrate, the other even more powerful. Each shattered piece of metal and debris could reveal the scale of this plot, as investigators carefully document every fragment to reconstruct the blast’s chain of events.
According to officials, one explosive resembled ammonium nitrate, while the second sample was much stronger — possibly of military grade. Final confirmation awaits forensic lab tests. FSL scientists are working in three shifts to accelerate analysis, under direct orders to deliver a detailed report without delay. The authorities fear that these bombs might have been assembled by trained hands familiar with high-grade materials.
In a related development, two professors from Al-Falah University, Dr. Muzammil Ganaie and Dr. Shaheen Sayeed, were arrested after 360 kilograms of ammonium nitrate were recovered in Faridabad. Investigators suspect the chemical connection between the Faridabad recovery and the Delhi blast samples. If confirmed, it would expose an organized network linking academic circles to terror modules, shocking the country’s intelligence community.
The FSL team has gathered 40-plus pieces of evidence — from vehicle debris to human tissue. Experts believe that analyzing the chemical residues on these fragments will help trace the exact explosives used. Forensic officers are also studying burn marks, metallic splinters, and chemical coatings, which could identify where and how the devices were made. Every micro-particle could tell a part of the larger story of who planted the bomb and how they slipped away.
Among the horrifying discoveries were dismembered human remains — a headless body, mutilated fingers, and a torn stomach. Police suspect these could belong to the perpetrators themselves, but only DNA tests can confirm. Experts say the intensity of the blast was so high that identification is nearly impossible without advanced forensic mapping. Teams are comparing the remains with missing person reports and CCTV footage from nearby areas.
Investigators are tracing chemical suppliers and rechecking CCTV trails around Red Fort and nearby roads. Intelligence agencies suspect that the explosives were planted hours before detonation, possibly by someone who knew the surveillance blind spots. Delhi Police, NIA, and FSL are jointly verifying every angle — from academic links to terror financiers. Officials say the explosive pattern suggests coordination between multiple handlers, not a lone attacker.
A special 10-member FSL task force is now operating around the clock. Their mission: identify the explosive formula, match it with previous cases, and link it to any known terror signature. Once the final report arrives, the NIA will piece together the full puzzle — who planted it, where the explosives came from, and what message this deadly act was meant to send. Delhi waits anxiously as the mystery deepens.
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