Security forces have been on high alert since the Delhi blast near Red Fort, which has killed atleast 15 people. A day after the blasts, multiple courts in Delhi and schools received hoax bomb threats.
Al-Falah University in Haryana has come under intense scrutiny after intelligence agencies uncovered several alarming details linking past students to terror activities. The development follows the arrest of Dr. Umar Nabi, accused in the November 10 Delhi blast, whose connection to the un
Further, Asaduddin Owaisi demanded accountability from the Union Home Minister Amit Shah's earlier assurance to Parliament that no local Kashmiri had joined terror groups in the past six months.
The Ministry of Information and Broadcasting on Tuesday issued an advisory for the private satellite TV channels asking them to exercise the highest level of discretion and sensitivity while reporting on the terror incident near Red Fort in the national capital and related matters.
The Al Falah University has come under scrutiny after the arrest of several doctors in connection with the November 10 blast near Delhi's Red Fort, which killed 15 people and injured many others. The suicide bomber, Dr Umar Un Nabi, a Kashmiri resident, was associated with the varsity.
Congress MP Imraan Masood on Tuesday sparked a row after he referred to Dr Umar Un Nabi, the man who carried out the blast near Delhi's Red Fort that killed 15 people, as "a misguided youth".
As per court sources, the NIA submitted before court that they need his custody to unearth the larger conspiracy behind the November 10 bast near the Red Fort in the city.
On November 10, a blast near Delhi's Red Fort killed 15 people and injured many others. The prime accused, Dr Umar Un Nabi, a Kashmiri resident, was in the wheel carrying the explosive material.
In the wake of several doctors being suspected of their involvement in the Delhi blast case, the Jammu and Kashmir Police and the hospital administration inspected the lockers of staff and doctors at Sri Maharaja Gulab Singh Hospital in Jammu.
A cluster of nine shell companies registered at the same address has also drawn the agency's attention, and the investigators believe these entities were created to route funds or obscure beneficial ownership.
Sources told ANI that the searches began around 5 am after the agency registered an Enforcement Case Information Report (ECIR) against Haryana's Faridabad-based Al-Falah University and its trustees earlier this week to investigate suspected financial irregularities.