Monday evening was busy as usual near the Red Fort metro station in India's capital Delhi when the sound of a loud blast broke through the cacophony on the streets. An explosion in a car killed at least eight people and injured more than 20. It was so powerful that several vehicles nearby almost melted, and people could hear the blast from kilometres away. The police are still investigating what caused the blast but the fact that it happened in one of the most secure and busy areas of Delhi has shocked people. On one side is Chandni Chowk - a busy trading and clothing hub that is busier than usual at this time of the year due to the peak wedding season.
Sandwiched between the two is the road where the explosion took place. Within minutes, confusion and alarm spread from the scene to the rest of the city.
Mohamed Hafiz, who lives less than 200m from the spot, said his house shook and he and others ran out thinking it was an earthquake. What he saw on the street terrified him: people were running in all directions, cars were on fire, and bodies lay on the road. Some locals were trying to help the injured. 'There was blood everywhere. People were in shock. The scene was too disturbing - I could even see body parts,' he said.
As local media broke the news, fear and panic swept through the city. Police declared a high alert, and neighbouring states quickly followed suit.
As we entered Delhi from the neighbouring suburb of Noida, we could see a long queue of vehicles at the border as policemen searched them one by one. Everyone - the people in the vehicles and the policemen - looked tense as they all appeared to be in disbelief that something like this had happened in their city for the first time in more than a decade.
Mohammed Azghar, whose brother was in the area where the blast took place, expressed his desperation: 'My brother has been missing since the explosion. We haven't had any contact with him.' The lack of answers and the horror of the blast left the local community shaken but hoping that normalcy and safety would return to their beloved city.
Sandwiched between the two is the road where the explosion took place. Within minutes, confusion and alarm spread from the scene to the rest of the city.
Mohamed Hafiz, who lives less than 200m from the spot, said his house shook and he and others ran out thinking it was an earthquake. What he saw on the street terrified him: people were running in all directions, cars were on fire, and bodies lay on the road. Some locals were trying to help the injured. 'There was blood everywhere. People were in shock. The scene was too disturbing - I could even see body parts,' he said.
As local media broke the news, fear and panic swept through the city. Police declared a high alert, and neighbouring states quickly followed suit.
As we entered Delhi from the neighbouring suburb of Noida, we could see a long queue of vehicles at the border as policemen searched them one by one. Everyone - the people in the vehicles and the policemen - looked tense as they all appeared to be in disbelief that something like this had happened in their city for the first time in more than a decade.
Mohammed Azghar, whose brother was in the area where the blast took place, expressed his desperation: 'My brother has been missing since the explosion. We haven't had any contact with him.' The lack of answers and the horror of the blast left the local community shaken but hoping that normalcy and safety would return to their beloved city.



















