In a day of “battle with bombs,” the Surat police unearthed 18 live bombs and its bomb squad succeeded in defusing all of them, averting a major tragedy in the second largest commercial center of Gujarat.
It was the third consecutive day live bombs and explosives were found in Surat. As panic spread in the diamond and art silk city, all schools and colleges were closed and children sent back home. Shutters of cinema halls and shopping malls were also downed. These places will remain closed on Wednesday too.
Whether the terrorists were playing a hide-and-seek game with the police or all the bombs were planted simultaneously was not clear. But the bombs were found almost one after another from day-break till evening.
Of the18 bombs, as many as 10 were found in the labour dominated Varacha Road and Katargam areas alone. In Saturday’s blasts also, the labour dominated old city areas were targeted. The bombs and the explosive-laden cars were recovered from Varacha Road or nearby areas in the city in the last two days. As if throwing a direct challenge to the police, two of the bombs were found right in front of the Labheswar police chowky and Sardarpura police stations. Two bombs were planted in the diamond market adjacent to the Varacha Road, one in the Radhakrishna textile market and two on a fly-over.
Surprisingly, unlike in Ahmedabad and most other places, the bombs were not totally concealed. Most of the bombs were “boat-shaped” and wrapped in coloured papers. They were kept at strategic points, including behind street hoardings or near garbage dumps.
The entire day the police and civic authorities repeatedly urged people to maintain peace and patience and cooperate with them.
Minister of State for Home Amit Shah also appealed to people not to panic or spread rumours.
He said the police were on maximum alert to protect the lives and property of people.
In Ahmedabad, life, by and large, was normal.
However, in one incident, panic-stricken parents rushed to a school in Chandlodiya locality to get their wards following rumour of a bomb in a near-by area.