CCTV footage shows prime suspect Dr Umar Nabi near a mosque close to Ramlila Maidan hours before the Delhi blast. He was seen entering the Sunehri Masjid parking lot and leaving shortly before the Hyundai i20 exploded, killing 13
Police cordoned off a Faridabad area after seizing a red Ford EcoSport linked to suspects in the Delhi blast that killed 13. Registered to Dr Umar Nabi, the car was allegedly used for reconnaissance by the busted “white-collar terror module.”
Four doctors linked to the “white-collar terror module” raised over Rs 26 lakh to fund materials for the Red Fort blast, officials said. The group bought 26 quintals of NPK fertiliser for explosives, with financial disputes emerging before the deadly explosion
Centre termed the Red Fort blast a terror act, with investigators revealing that Pulwama-based Dr Umar Nabi planned the attack for December 6. Links to Jaish-e-Mohammed, a Turkiye visit, and a radicalised ‘doctor module’ emerged in the probe
The family of Dr Umar Nabi, the man suspected to be behind the Red Fort Metro Station blast in Delhi, has denied his involvement in terror activities, describing him as an introvert and a dedicated academic. The NIA is now investigating