Pune blast shows advance in terror technology: Experts
February 16th, 2010 - 11:30 am ICT by IANSGandhinagar, Feb 16 (IANS) The material used in Saturday’s Pune blast that killed nine people is substantially different from what was used in the deadly serial blasts in Ahmedabad in 2008, and shows a worrying advance in terror technology, according to forensic experts.
The team from the Forensic Science Laboratory (FSL) here who are in Pune to assist the police in the blast probe say RDX was the main explosive used at the German Bakery in Pune, and it is substantially more lethal than the ammonium nitrate used in Ahmedabad and elsewhere in 2008.
The FSL team has picked up over two kg of material from the site of the Pune explosion for detailed analysis.
The analysis will not only help investigations into this particular blast but also provide insight into the evolving use of technology by terrorists, highly placed sources at the FSL here said.
These sources have reasons to believe that tech-savvy brains are assisting the terror network as is emerging from the upgradation in technology being put to use to carry out the blasts.
RDX — or cyclotrimethylenetrinitramine, to give it its chemical name — is far lighter than the ammonium nitrate that would have to be used for an equivalent blast. In Pune, two men are suspected to have carried the RDX in their backpacks and left them inside the crowded German Bakery before going out and triggering the blast.
In contrast, for the 2008 blasts carried out in Ahmedabad and elsewhere in the country, ammonium nitrate had been added to fuel oil to create a lethal mix termed ANFO which was further fortified with iron shrapnel inside and placed in close proximity to cooking gas cylinders to magnify impact.
This technique was used to deadly effect in the Ahmedabad blasts particularly those carried out at hospitals where the injured victims of previous blasts were being brought in for treatment.
Police investigators in Gujarat are closely looking at the seizures of ammonium nitrate, gelatine sticks and detonators from various parts of the state over the last two days though preliminary indications point to it being organised pilferage by quarry operators.
“We are exploring all angles and will be able to arrive at some definitive conclusions only after a more detailed interrogation of those arrested in this connection,” a senior police officer of Gujarat said.
- Pune Police confirms use of RDX in German Bakery blast - Feb 16, 2010
- Indian Mujahideen suspected behind Mumbai blasts - Jul 14, 2011
- Probe widens in Mumbai blasts, detonators remain mystery - Jul 18, 2011
- Indian Mujahideen link suspected in Pune bombing - Feb 14, 2010
- Pune toll is 10, police divided over alleged arrests (Roundup) - Feb 16, 2010
- Indian Mujahideen emerges prime suspect in Pune blast (Lead) - Apr 08, 2010
- Pune was 'important base' of Indian Mujahideen - Feb 15, 2010
- Fertiliser bomb fears persist despite ammonium nitrate ban - Aug 09, 2011
- Cops probe Pune blast, Aurangabad RDX cache link - Sep 09, 2010
- Arms, explosives seized from Pune businessman - Sep 18, 2011
- Traces of potassium chlorate, nitrate in explosive: Police - Feb 15, 2012
- Two nabbed for Pune blast, toll rises to 10 - Feb 16, 2010
- Mumbai bombs may have been deadly cocktail of explosives - Jul 14, 2011
- Every aspect of Pune bombing being probed: police - Feb 16, 2010
- Terror strike: Home Ministry issues fresh alert for Delhi, Indore, Kanpur - Feb 14, 2010
Tags: ahmedabad, ammonium nitrate, anfo, bakery, brains, close proximity, cyclotrimethylenetrinitramine, explosive, forensic experts, forensic science laboratory, gas cylinders, gujarat, lethal mix, police investigators, seizures, serial blasts, shrapnel, technology experts, terror network, upgradation