NIA searches Saokat Molla’s home and party office, son questioned in Bhangar blast case
As per reports, in a chilling revelation that peels back the layers of a meticulously plotted terror plot, the DNA sample of Dr. Umar Mohammad matches with his mother and brother, the driver of the white Hyundai i20 that detonated in a fiery inferno near Delhi's Red Fort on 10th November killing nine innocent lives and leaving several critically injured. 100% DNA matched from Umar's fragmented bones, teeth, and tattered clothing scavenged from the wreckage, cross-verified against samples from his own mother—detained in Pulwama for the grim task—and his brother, who were hauled in for questioning mere hours after the explosion.
As the National Investigation Agency (NIA) seizes the reins of this high-stakes investigation, the findings expose a sinister web of "white-collar" terrorism, where stethoscopes concealed blueprints for bombs, turning a routine evening commute into a monument of mourning.The timeline of terror unfurls Umar, owner of the doomed Hyundai i20 car, reportedly spiraled into panic after the arrests of his colleagues—Dr. Muzammil Shakeel, nabbed alongside a staggering nearly 3,000 kg of explosives unearthed from Faridabad hideouts, and Dr. Adil Rather, the poster-pushing propagandist for the banned Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) in Srinagar—both threads in the same treacherous tapestry linking back to Monday's terror mayhem. Hours before the blast, CCTV captured Umar slipping into a mosque on Asaf Ali Road near Ram Leela Maidan around noon, lingering for a somber three-hour prayer vigil that now reeks of final rites, before drifting to the Sunehri Masjid parking lot at 3:19 PM to stash the vehicle like a ticking time capsule. As forensic hounds trace the vehicle's eerie journey from Faridabad's medical corridors to Delhi's crowded veins. Shakeel and Rather, fellow Al Falah University alumni turned alleged accomplices, dangle as key suspects in the NIA's crosshairs, their detentions igniting fears of a broader syndicate preying on educated elites to orchestrate urban assaults.
This DNA bombshell doesn't just close one chapter—it blasts open a Pandora's box of vulnerabilities in India's security lattice, where radical whispers infiltrate ivory towers of academia and medicine. Umar's mother, her world devastated by the Pulwama summons for that maternal match, embodies the human wreckage trailing these ideological infernos, while his brother's interrogations peel away family facades cracked by conspiracy. With the NIA's mandate to dismantle explosive supply chains and terror modules, the capital braces for ripple arrests, urging a reckoning on how professionals pivot from healing hands to havoc. In the shadow of the Red Fort's timeless ramparts, now etched with fresh grief, this saga screams for vigilance: the enemy isn't always at the gates, but sometimes in the white coat next door, plotting under prayer's quiet veil.