LUCKNOW, July 29: Police in India said on Friday that an explosion in a train that left 13 people dead and dozens wounded was caused by a bomb planted in a toilet. Indian railway officials had earlier suggested the blast late on Thursday near Jaunpur town in northern Uttar Pradesh state may have been caused by a cooking gas cylinder, sometimes carried by villagers on trains.
But bomb experts discounted this on Friday.
“There is enough evidence to confirm the use of RDX explosive,” a member of a police bomb squad, who did not want to be named, told Reuters from the site. Uttar Pradesh Home (interior) Secretary Alok Sinha said authorities did not have any specific leads on who was behind the blast which occurred in an unreserved coach.
“It certainly is not an accident. It is some explosive planted in the coach,” Sinha told Reuters.
“But who could have been behind it has not been ascertained.” The RDX high explosive — also known as hexogen — has been used in occupied Kashmir and in India’s restive northeast region. The rebels have frequently targeted trains in the past.
In Thursday’s explosion, witnesses said some bodies were flung from the door of the moving train after the explosion. —Reuters






























