ADVERTISEMENT
High court horror: Splattered blood, flying body parts
IANS
Last Updated IST

Horror-struck lawyers, journalists, litigants and locals ran in all directions, stumbling into victims, bags and what looked like their remains, lying on the road.

It was only after the heavy smoke triggered by the "terrible explosion" withered away did they come to terms with the monstrosity of the act.

Hysteria, panic and dread followed. Some burst into tears, some were too stunned to cry. Some picked themselves together, some were not left with the limbs to move.
The fact that it was a terror attack sunk in, sending a chill down people's spine. Flashbacks of 26/11 and the Mumbai blasts in July played in the minds. People nervously repeated prayers in their heads. It was the second bombing at the Delhi High Court in four months.

Ten people were declared dead within half-an-hour of the blast and the toll was feared to go up. It was the 19th terror attack in the capital in the last 15 years.

People were waiting to get inside the court rooms to get their cases resolved but the wait for some ended with their lives.

People throng the Delhi High Court on Wednesdays as it is the day when public interest litigations (PIL) are allowed. Perhaps the day was chosen to inflict maximum damage.
Around 300 people were waiting outside various gates of the court when the blast took place.

The counter of the Gate No.5, where the bomb exploded, collapsed immediately, raising fears that who ever was standing there may have been killed. The court complex was in shambles.

Bhagwan Das, an eyewitness, recounted his "close encounter" with a moment of terror that left him numbed. "I saw some people losing their hands and legs. Their bodies drenched in blood. It was terrible," Das told IANS, himself in a state of shock.

According to another witnesses, there were around 100 people in the court complex at the time of the blast. The explosion left a massive, 3x4 feet crater in the ground.
Tonk Prasad, a guard stationed at one of the gates, said the first image he recalled after the blast was that of 60-70 people lying around in pools of blood.

“There were two people whose legs were badly mangled. They were crying for help...there was smoke all around and a stench,” Prasad told IANS.

People sitting behind the six counters of the court were also injured.
Rahul Gupta, an activist, said: “I was in the queue to get the entry pass when there was this sudden, deafening sound. My first reaction was to duck...there was smoke all around and for the first few seconds, it was just a haze."

“When I turned around, there were scores of people around me, all in pools of blood. Then I realised that I was also hurt on my right hand with a sharpenel,” he added.
If terror has a colour, it was there, splashed in red on clothes, road, and wherever the intensity of the blast took it.

Soon, ambulances, police jeeps, National Security Guard (NSG) commandos, National Investigation Agency (NIA) and OB vans rushed to the spot. People, half-alive and with severed limbs, were put into vans to be taken to Safdarjung Hospital, All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) and Ram Manohar Lohia (RML). Those who suffered mild injuries were taken to the high court dispensary.

As lawyers in the court and policemen helped rush the victims to the hospital, the area was cordoned off. And the journalists went onto cover the biggest news story of the week -- which will soon be referred to as 7/9. 

ADVERTISEMENT
(Published 07 September 2011, 14:40 IST)