Arrests In India Train Blast Investigation
Police Questioning Men Thought To Have Sold Suitcases Used By Bombers, Unclear If Linked
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Virendra Agrawal, an employee of Abinnadan Bag Centre, carries a suitcase outside the shop at Kothari market in Indore, 125 miles from Bhopal, India, Wednesday, March 14, 2007. Two of his colleagues have been arrested, police said Wednesday. (AP Photo)
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Investigators look at a burned out car of the Samjhauta Express after an explosion in Dewana, India, early Monday, Feb. 19, 2007. (AP Photo/Dainik Bhaskar)
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Survivors look on as the compartments of Samjhauta Express burn after an explosion in Dewana, India, early Monday, Feb. 19, 2007. (AP Photo/Dainik Bhaskar)
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A child, injured after fire raked through Samjhauta Express, a train traveling to Pakistan in northern India, is brought for medical attention to a hospital in New Delhi, India, Feb. 19, 2007. (AP Photo)
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The pair were picked up Tuesday in the central Indian city of Indore where authorities believe the bombers bought the suitcases that were eventually stuffed with explosives and petrol and set off on Feb. 18 aboard the train, which runs from New Delhi to Lahore, said R.C. Mishra, a senior police official.
Asked if the two men — one identified as Puran Chand, the other only by the single name Huzaifa — sold the suitcases knowing they would be used for makeshift bombs, Mishra said only that police were questioning them to see if they are linked to the actual bombers.
"They sold the suitcases and even got their covers stitched locally. But they aren't forthcoming who carried out the attack," Mishra told The Associated Press. "We are questioning them."
Police took the pair on Wednesday to Panipat, a town north of New Delhi near where the explosions were triggered.
Investigators believe suitcases bombs were used to start fires in two cars of the Samjhauta Express because they found similar devices in a third car. It is believed the bombs in the third car did not detonate because their timers were not properly synchronized.
In the days after the attack, police released sketches of two other suspects who boarded the train when it left New Delhi, but were allowed to jump off when the train slowed down about 15 minutes before the bombs went off.
The India-Pakistan train link was suspended after a 2001 attack on the Indian Parliament that New Delhi blamed on Islamabad and which nearly led to a war between the two countries.
But relations between the nuclear-armed neighbors have improved, and the train service — restarted in 2004 — is one of the most visible results.
© MMVII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


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