Red Fort to Bodhgaya — inside India’s unending cycle of explosions
From Delhi’s Red Fort to Mumbai’s trains, India’s history of bomb blasts reveals a dark pattern of terror evolution — precision attacks aimed at panic, not just destruction.
- Nov 11, 2025,
- Updated Nov 11, 2025 12:06 PM IST

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The 2025 Red Fort blast outside Lal Quila Metro shocked Delhi, killing eight and injuring several. Investigators are probing possible terror links, with high alert sounded across the capital.

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In 2024, Bengaluru’s Rameshwaram Café turned into chaos as an IED explosion injured ten. The attack, captured on CCTV, reignited fears of urban terror strikes in India’s tech hub.

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A sleeper coach on the Bhopal–Ujjain passenger train exploded in 2017, leaving the compartment engulfed in smoke. The low-intensity blast signaled a chilling return of rail-route attacks.

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Bodhgaya’s 2013 serial explosions at the Mahabodhi Temple wounded two monks, defiling one of Buddhism’s holiest sites. The Indian Mujahideen-linked act struck at global spiritual heritage.

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Hyderabad’s Dilsukhnagar twin blasts in 2013 killed 18 and injured over 130. Within seconds, a grocery store became ground zero — the city’s worst attack since the 2007 Mecca Masjid blast.

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Mumbai relived horror in 2011 when triple blasts ripped through Dadar, Opera House, and Zaveri Bazaar. Twenty-seven people died, exposing deep-rooted sleeper cells within India’s financial capital.

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In 2008, coordinated bombings rocked Delhi’s markets and metro zones — Karol Bagh, Connaught Place, and Greater Kailash. 26 dead, 135 injured, and three unexploded devices narrowly defused.

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The 2006 Mumbai train bombings remain one of India’s darkest evenings — seven blasts in 11 minutes, 189 lives lost. The use of pressure cookers signaled a chilling precision in terror tactics.

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From metros to marketplaces, India’s bomb attacks reveal a shifting terror strategy — smaller, smarter, and psychologically targeted to create panic more than physical destruction.
