Multiple bombings at a prayer meeting in Kochi on Sunday resulted in one fatality and numerous injuries.
Sunday morning explosions at a convention centre in Kochi, in the southern Indian state of Kerala, prompted investigations by Indian security officials. According to PTI news agency, one person was slain and more than thirty were hurt.
In Kalamassery, a township located about 10 kilometres from Kochi’s centre, there was a Jehovah’s Witness prayer meeting when the explosion happened at around 9:30 a.m.
According to the ANI news agency, there were other explosions throughout the next hour after the initial one, which happened at around nine in the morning. The three-day conference, which got underway on October 27, ended on Sunday.
Authorities reported that when the explosions happened, more than 2,000 individuals were present at the prayer service. Police, fire, and rescue services are there, and the area has been blocked off.
Unsettling photos and videos of the explosion within the conference centre that were circulated on social media and by television networks depict enormous fires inside the hall with people, including children, screaming as emergency services and law enforcement officers flee the scene.
To the bomb scene have been sent teams of counterterrorism specialists and National Security Guards. Pinarayi Vijayan, the chief minister of Kerala, stated that senior officials are keeping a tight eye on things. “That’s a really sad occurrence. Details about the incident are being gathered,” he stated.
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The Kalamassery Medical College burn unit saw ten admissions, while many patients were sent to other hospitals, according to local officials who spoke with PTI. In other hospitals and the medical college’s general ward, others have been admitted.
The explosion happened on Friday, two days after a sizable pro-Palestine demonstration in the Keralan region of Malappuram, which was sponsored by the Solidarity Youth Movement, the party’s youth arm.
A video that appeared to show Hamas leader Khaled Mashal virtually attending the protest went popular on social media, sparking controversy surrounding the gathering. Reactions against the event’s organisers and attendees have been demanded by the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party, according to The Week.
Because the militant group is not outlawed in India, the Solidarity Youth Movement claimed that the former leader of Hamas’ virtual involvement was legal.
Naor Gilon, the Israeli ambassador to India, reiterated his earlier this week requests for New Delhi to label Hamas a terrorist group and voiced outrage over the former head of Hamas’s virtual attendance at the rally in Kerala.