At least nine killed and 32 injured in Indian Kashmir police station explosion
The incident, which happened during a forensic examination of seized explosives, has destroyed buildings and vehicles, days after a deadly car blast in New Delhi linked to a suspected militant cell.
Saturday 15 November 2025 11:41, UK
At least nine people have been killed and 32 injured after a cache of confiscated explosives detonated inside a police station in Indian-administered Kashmir.
The accidental blast occurred late on Friday in the Nowgam area of Srinagar, as forensic and police personnel were evaluating the explosive material, according to police director-general Nalin Prabhat.
Most of the dead were officers and forensic staff, police said, adding that several of the injured remained in a critical condition.
The massive explosion tore through the police station, setting the building and several vehicles on fire.
"The intensity of the blast was such that some body parts were recovered from nearby houses, around 100-200m away from the police station," a police source said.
A series of smaller successive blasts slowed rescue operations.
The police station blast comes just days after a deadly car explosion in New Delhi on Monday, which killed at least eight people near the city's historic Red Fort.
The car explosion occurred hours after police in Kashmir said they had dismantled a suspected militant cell operating from the region, arresting at least seven people, including two doctors from Indian cities.
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Police also seized a large quantity of bomb-making material in Faridabad, near New Delhi.
Indian security forces have conducted multiple raids across Kashmir during their investigation, questioning hundreds and detaining dozens.
Authorities said DNA testing identified the car's driver as a Kashmiri doctor, and government forces demolished his family home in Pulwama district on Thursday night.
In the past, security forces have demolished the homes of individuals they allege were linked to militants opposing Indian rule in Kashmir as a form of punishment.
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India and Pakistan both claim all of Kashmir, though each controls only part of the territory.
Militants in the Indian-administered region have been fighting against New Delhi since 1989, with India labeling it Pakistan-backed terrorism.
Pakistan denies the claim, saying that many Kashmiris view it as a legitimate struggle for independence.