Thanks Husky. I am a trend watcher and bring my eclectic reading to bear on my analysis. I got the feeling that someone will get demonised in this rush to peace and the best candidate is the other. Those invovled in the rush are DIE. I dont think there is any real liking on the other side.
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From Telugu Portal
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Panipat (Haryana), Feb 20 (IANS) <b>Haryana police Tuesday released the sketches of two suspects of the India-Pakistan peace train bombings and said the duo had alighted from the moving train just minutes before its two coaches were enveloped in flames following twin explosions.</b>
Making the revelation at a press conference here, <b>Haryana Inspector General of Police Sharad Kumar said both the suspects, believed to be Pakistani nationals,</b> had got into an argument with Railway Protection Force (RPF) constables inside the train as it neared Panipat Sunday night.
<b>"They told the RPF personnel that they wanted to go to Ahmedabad. They were told that the train was going to Attari. After an argument, the RPF personnel told them to get down from the train when it slowed down near Panipat. They got down from the slow moving train at around 11.30 p.m.," </b>Kumar said.
<b>The blasts from low-intensity improvised explosive devices took place at about 11.55 p.m. and set two bogies on fire instantly.</b>
<b>Survivors from the ill-fated coaches of the train gave the facial description of the suspects from which the sketches were made, police officials said.</b>
"Even though the suspects were wearing mufflers on their head and covered part of their face, the survivors were able to help make the sketch," Kumar said.
<b>Both suspects boarded the train from Old Delhi Railway Station. They got down from the train in darkness in the middle of agricultural fields, and police do not know of their whereabouts.</b>
At least 68 people were killed and 50 injured when two bogies of the Delhi-Attari train - that links up with the Samjhauta Express to Lahore - caught fire after <b>improvised explosives with digital timers and kerosene bottles burst minutes before midnight Sunday.</b>
A police team from Mumbai, which had investigated last year's serial blasts in the city's local trains, arrive here to join the investigations.
The police official said that 30-35 people had been interrogated in connection with the blasts that occurred near this Haryana town.
<b>"No arrests have been made so far," Kumar said, adding that a Pakistani national, Usman Mohammed from Karachi, has also been detained for questioning.</b>
<b>Usman, who was drunk when he was detained, was in the bogey in which a suitcase with explosives was recovered. He told police that he threw the suitcase out when the other two bogies caught fire.
"He is helping us in the investigations," Kumar told reporters at a press conference here.</b>
Haryana police officials showed reporters the digital timers, pipes and kerosene-filled plastic bottles recovered from the suitcase.
Appealing to the people to come forward with information, Kumar said the blasts showed that a group of five-six people could be involved. He, however, refused to name any particular terrorist organisation.
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So it could be the wrong train or the two perpetrators were not jihadi enough to be at site of their deed and told a lie about Ahmedabad to get of the train.
The RPF constable is the key witness. He must have made out their accent. Bet he regrets letting them get off the train at Panipat.
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From Telugu Portal
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->
Panipat (Haryana), Feb 20 (IANS) <b>Haryana police Tuesday released the sketches of two suspects of the India-Pakistan peace train bombings and said the duo had alighted from the moving train just minutes before its two coaches were enveloped in flames following twin explosions.</b>
Making the revelation at a press conference here, <b>Haryana Inspector General of Police Sharad Kumar said both the suspects, believed to be Pakistani nationals,</b> had got into an argument with Railway Protection Force (RPF) constables inside the train as it neared Panipat Sunday night.
<b>"They told the RPF personnel that they wanted to go to Ahmedabad. They were told that the train was going to Attari. After an argument, the RPF personnel told them to get down from the train when it slowed down near Panipat. They got down from the slow moving train at around 11.30 p.m.," </b>Kumar said.
<b>The blasts from low-intensity improvised explosive devices took place at about 11.55 p.m. and set two bogies on fire instantly.</b>
<b>Survivors from the ill-fated coaches of the train gave the facial description of the suspects from which the sketches were made, police officials said.</b>
"Even though the suspects were wearing mufflers on their head and covered part of their face, the survivors were able to help make the sketch," Kumar said.
<b>Both suspects boarded the train from Old Delhi Railway Station. They got down from the train in darkness in the middle of agricultural fields, and police do not know of their whereabouts.</b>
At least 68 people were killed and 50 injured when two bogies of the Delhi-Attari train - that links up with the Samjhauta Express to Lahore - caught fire after <b>improvised explosives with digital timers and kerosene bottles burst minutes before midnight Sunday.</b>
A police team from Mumbai, which had investigated last year's serial blasts in the city's local trains, arrive here to join the investigations.
The police official said that 30-35 people had been interrogated in connection with the blasts that occurred near this Haryana town.
<b>"No arrests have been made so far," Kumar said, adding that a Pakistani national, Usman Mohammed from Karachi, has also been detained for questioning.</b>
<b>Usman, who was drunk when he was detained, was in the bogey in which a suitcase with explosives was recovered. He told police that he threw the suitcase out when the other two bogies caught fire.
"He is helping us in the investigations," Kumar told reporters at a press conference here.</b>
Haryana police officials showed reporters the digital timers, pipes and kerosene-filled plastic bottles recovered from the suitcase.
Appealing to the people to come forward with information, Kumar said the blasts showed that a group of five-six people could be involved. He, however, refused to name any particular terrorist organisation.
<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
So it could be the wrong train or the two perpetrators were not jihadi enough to be at site of their deed and told a lie about Ahmedabad to get of the train.
The RPF constable is the key witness. He must have made out their accent. Bet he regrets letting them get off the train at Panipat.
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