(LWJ) — A Pakistan-based terrorist group that is closely linked to al Qaeda has claimed credit for a bombing that killed 11 people and wounded scores more at a security checkpoint outside the Delhi High Court.

A bomb planted in a briefcase was detonated at a queue where lawyers and other visitors obtain security passes. Police said that 11 people have been killed so far and 76 more were wounded, some critically. The blast left a “deep crater” in the ground.

The Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami, or HUJI said it detonated the bomb to force India to repeal a death sentence of Afzal Guru, who has been placed on death row for the December 2001 terror assault on the Indian Parliament that killed six policemen, a civilian, and five members of the assault team. The Pakistan-based Lashakr-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammad carried out the 2001 attack in Dehli.

HUJI sent an email to Indian news agencies immediately after the attack to claim credit.

“We owe the responsibility of todays blasts at high court delhi. . . . our demand is that Afzal Guru’s death sentence should be repealede immediately else we would target major high courts & THE SUPREME COURT OF… [sic]” the email read, according to the Hindustan Times.

HUJI is an al Qaeda-linked group that operates in Pakistan, India, Afghanistan, and Bangladesh. The US designated HUJI as a terrorist entity in 2010, and Kits leader, Ilyas Kashmiri was also added to the list of global terrorists.

Keep reading…

0 Shares