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When Indian television news broadcasts
appealed for blood donors yesterday, a day after 80 people were killed in bomb
blasts in India's Jaipur city, Yaseef Khan rushed to help.
Khan insisted that someone check his blood type and use his blood to save a
child, joining hundreds of volunteers in other hospitals in the historic city
queuing to help the blast victims.
"How can I sit at home when people are crying for blood?" Khan said.
Both Muslims like Khan and Hindus united yesterday to help victims of the
bomb blasts, offering the use of their mobile phones, and distributing food and
fruit juices as relatives swarmed hospitals of Jaipur from the early hours of
the morning.
"Bombing cannot divide the Hindus and Muslims, it never succeeded and people
should know that it is not going to work," Sohail Illyas, a Muslim man who
lives in the walled city, said after meeting his Hindu neighbor following the
blasts.
Asha Sharma, 32, was relieved when a young man came to her with his mobile
phone, insisting that calls were free.
"I was wondering how to inform mother that papa is all right, now I am
happy," she said in Jaipur's main hospital.
Volunteers from the Sant Nirakari Mandal, a local voluntary organization
made up of both Hindus and Muslims, distributed free medicines to patients who
could not afford them.
"We have also handed over 300 packaged fruit juices to the hospital for
patients," K.K. Joshi, a senior volunteer said.
Many were seen helping the police in mortuaries, counting bodies and putting
them into waiting vans, as people thronged the mortuaries in an effort to get
the bodies of their relatives.
In another hospital, 29-year-old Nirender Singh, invited everyone to his tea
stall for a free cup.
Doctors and bomb victims were glad for his generosity. "We managed to save
at least 150 lives last night because of help from these unknown people,"
Rakesh Sharma, an orthopaedic surgeon said yesterday. "When the victims started
to arrive in swarms, we were getting scared, but not anymore."
"Neither the Hindus nor the Muslims here want to fight," said Mohiuddin
Qureshi, a gemstone trader who works in a market that was bombed. "Our lives
are together, our businesses are together. This is the work of outsiders," said
Qureshi, who went to 10 burials yesterday.
Police earlier yesterday imposed a daylong curfew which they lifted in the
evening. The curfew was meant to prevent any retaliatory violence.
Authorities suspect militants were behind the blasts, and they moved quickly
to stop any potential clashes between the city's Hindu majority and its sizable
Muslim minority. Police were deployed in force and people kept off the streets
of Jaipur's old walled city, where all seven bombs went off on Tuesday.
The bombers may have been aiming "to create communal tension," said
Vasundhara Raje, the chief minister of Rajasthan state, of which Jaipur is the
capital. "But there is peace in the city. The curfew was a precaution."
In talks with Raje on phone, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Home Minister
Shivraj Patil assured her of all possible federal help in the aftermath of the
blast. A company of the National Security Guard reached Rajasthan to assist
police in the probe, Raje told a press conference. Raje appealed to the people
to maintain peace.
"We are still in the process of investigating. I don't want to jump to
conclusions," Foreign Secretary Shiv Shankar Menon said.
Police in Jaipur have so far questioned nearly a dozen people. But no
arrests have been made, and Raje told reporters that authorities only "have
some slender leads." Nearly 200 people were wounded in the explosions. Police
said an eighth bomb was found and defused.
"Obviously, it's a terrorist plot," A.S. Gill, the police chief of
Rajasthan, said hours after the attack. "The way it has been done, the attempt
was to cause the maximum damage to human life."
Brajesh Kumar, 15, was on his way to the temple when the bomb exploded. "I
heard a big noise and then I felt something pierce my leg and chest," he said
from a hospital bed yesterday. He had broken a rib and shrapnel in his feet and
chest, he said.
Another bomb exploded near the city's Johari Bazaar jewelry market, a
popular tourist attraction. Bombing sites were littered with dropped shopping
bags, mangled bicycles, damaged cars and overturned bicycle rickshaws, the most
popular mode of transport in the crowded lanes of Jaipur.
No group has claimed responsibility for the attack, but India's junior home
minister, Sriprakash Jaiswal, said, "One can't rule out the involvement of a
foreign power," using language commonly understood to refer to Pakistan.
Maharashtra Director General of Police Anami Narayan Roy told Arab News
major cities of the state including Mumbai were placed under high alert.
Security was also beefed up at religious and historical places, government
buildings and defense installations. All police commissioners and district
superintendents of police have been ordered to remain alert, Roy said and
appealed to the people to remain calm and maintain communal harmony.
The State Intelligence Department was monitoring all incoming and outgoing
national and international calls through cell phones and regular landlines. The
SID was particularly monitoring calls originating from or being received in
Mumbai, Pune, Aurangabad and Nashik, as these places are alleged to be the
hotbed of terrorists who are suspected to have carried out terrorists acts in
the past.
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By: Nilofar Suhrawardy & Shahid Raza Burney
Arab News - May 15, 2008
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