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Mosque targeted, 31 dead, curfew clamped

AT LEAST 31 people died and over 100 were injured in three explosions in Muslim-dominated Malegaon, 300 km from Mumbai, on Friday. It was the first instance of serial bombings specifically targeting Muslims in Maharashtra. The bombs went off between 1.46 p.m. and 1.50 p.m., one in a town square and two outside the Bada Kabrastan mosque-cum-graveyard. Terror-stricken men and boys poured out, stumbling over corpses in their hurry to get away.

Published on: Sep 9, 2006, 01:34:00 IST
None | By , Malegaon
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AT LEAST 31 people died and over 100 were injured in three explosions in Muslim-dominated Malegaon, 300 km from Mumbai, on Friday. It was the first instance of serial bombings specifically targeting Muslims in Maharashtra.

HT Image
HT Image

The bombs went off between 1.46 p.m. and 1.50 p.m., one in a town square and two outside the Bada Kabrastan mosque-cum-graveyard. Terror-stricken men and boys poured out, stumbling over corpses in their hurry to get away.

"Arre bhago mat, bhago mat (Don't run, don't run)," onlookers screamed.

Maharashtra Chief Minister Vilasrao Deshmukh said two bombs were rigged to bicycles. "We found packets with the explosives attached to these bicycles," he said.

Eyewitnesses said up to 2,500 worshippers had gathered for prayers on Shab-e-bara'at -- 'Night of Salvation' -- when Muslims pray for the dead, ask forgiveness for sins and feed the hungry and the poor. Some of the dead were beggars who had gathered at the mosque.

"I was standing at a shop outside the mosque after I finished my prayers, when I heard loud explosions. Suddenly everything was covered under a heavy blanket of smoke," said Muzambir Sheikh, an eyewitness.

With no ambulances around, the injured were loaded on handcarts and taken to a 32-bed local hospital which was quickly overwhelmed. Many injured were taken to clinics in the Hindu part of town. And the volunteers who came to help included those from the Bajrang Dal and the BJP. Some of the injured were taken to the nearest big town, Nashik, a three-hour drive away, and a few to Mumbai.
Fearful, confused and angry, mobs helped victims, attacked a police station and burned a fire tender and a police vehicle. Islamic preachers from the town -- known for its history of communal riots -- then stepped in to calm the crowds.

"Yeh apne desh ki gaadi hai, yeh aapke paise se kharidi hai (These vehicles belong to your country, they have been bought with your money)," a maulana appealed over the mosque's loudspeakers, asking people to stop attacks on the few police vehicles that had reached the area.

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