Adil Najam
In a tragic development – and what is clearly the most serious threat to recent headways in the India-Pakistan peace process – a train bound from India to Pakistan (Samjhota Express) caught fire, reportedly because of two crude home-made bombs which exploded. Over 60 people are reported dead, most of them Pakistanis returning home, but the death toll also includes many Indians, including some Indian officials.


Here are some details, according to the BBC:
At least 64 people have been killed in a series of explosions and a fire on a Pakistan-bound train in the northern Indian state of Haryana, officials say. Passengers reported hearing two blasts as the train passed near Panipat, about 80km (50 miles) north of Delhi. The train – the Samjhauta Express – was part of a service taking passengers from Delhi to Lahore in Pakistan. A spokesman for Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said the explosions were probably an “act of terror”. A number of other passengers were injured, and officials say the death toll may rise. The Samjhauta Express is one of two train services connecting India and Pakistan. After a two-year gap, it was reopened in 2004 as part of the peace process between the two countries.
Bloomberg adds the following information:
The blasts, which occurred after 11 p.m. last evening, were caused by crude explosives and struck two coaches of the train, India’s Railways Minister Lalu Prasad told reporters today in a televised interview in New Delhi. Pakistan condemned the blasts, saying India must conduct a thorough investigation into the act of terrorism. The train service between Indian and Pakistan is used by people who can’t afford air travel between the nuclear-armed neighbors that fought three wars since independence from British rule in 1947 and started talks to improve relations in 2003. The divided Himalayan territory of Kashmir is at the center of a dispute between the two countries that claim the region in full….
“Preliminary investigations show most of the victims are Pakistanis,” Pakistan’s foreign ministry spokeswoman Tasnim Aslam said in a phone interview from capital Islamabad today. “We expect India to conduct a thorough inquiry to find out the reasons behind this act.” The Pakistan High Commission in the Indian capital is being informed about possible casualties, zonal railways official B.N. Mathur said. A railway guard manning a signal cabin on the route between Delhi and Attari heard two explosions when the train crossed the station near Panipat, a refinery town, Mathur told reporters from the blast site….
India had the responsibility of providing security to the train in its part of the country, Aslam said, refusing to comment on the impact of the blasts on peace talks between the two countries. “We don’t know the motive behind the blasts.”

Pakistan has recently seen a spate of bombings in its major cities, and even before this some in government were pointing towards a ‘foreign hand’ in these bombings. Both countries have long played this game of ‘blame the foreign hand’, including in the recent tragic train bombings in Mumbai. The impulse to do so at the first sign of trouble is a natural one in the sub-continent. Given the deep distrust that exists between the two, it may even be understandable. But irrespective of the short-term political gains such finger-pointing might gain, it is not a very useful way to deal with deep tensions. One certainly hopes that this will not slide to that level and if, indeed, the purpose of those who did this terrible act was to hurt the peace process, then both countries will work together to make sure that this does not happen.
It is a good sign that Pakistan has announced that the visit by the Pakistan Foreign Minister to India will not be canceled. The signals from the Pakistan Foreign Ministry are sober but reasonable. According to The News:
Pakistan Foreign Minister Khurshid Kasuri Monday condemned a train blast in India which killed at least 66 people as a “horrendous act of terrorism” and said most of the victims were Pakistanis. Kasuri said he had asked the Indian government to investigate the incident overnight on a Samjhota Express. “It is a horrendous act of terrorism,” Kasuri told reporters during a function at the foreign office. “I would like the Indian government to investigate this incident. We are waiting for the results of the investigation,” he said. The minister said he had instructed the Pakistani High Commission in New Delhi to send staff to the site to help Pakistan nationals caught up in the blast.
The main leaders in India, including the Prime Minister and President, have also sent the right signals, including condolences to those who have died. The overtures from both sides are to focus on finding the terrorists who committed this atrocity. One hopes that their attentions will remain focussed on this purpose rather than succumbing to the impulse of scoring political points through the unwarranted politics of incrimination. Most of all, one hopes that neither country will allow the peace process to be derailed by this blast.
@YLH. Mumbai blasts’ inquiry has been completed and the guilty, including Hindu offenders, have been sentenced based on solid proofs.
Religion doesn’t creat terrorists, human mind does which has free will. Just yesterday I was in a Sunday Mass of a church and the subject of the sermon was “forgiveness.” The Bible says “love your enemy” and I wondered about things happening in Iraq. Who is responsible for that? The Bible? or the man?
@ATP readers, please forgive me for taking up this issue here. This blog is not for such things. But as I have suffered two serial blasts in my city, and this train blast again has happened in my country and has harmed those who were our guests, I could not stop my emotional response.
I want to echo the sentiments of the writeup and of those expressing need for goodwill amongst our two countries.
Sure there are Hindu terrorists and there are Muslim terrorists and there are terrorists of all kinds. Part of the problem is that we find it necessary to apply those religious adjectives to describe them. At their root they are all just terrorists. By applying these labels to them we only try to demonize the labels and instill sympathy for their acts amongst those of the same label. I will certainly nt find this act any less reprehensible if it turns out to have been the work of a Hindu. I will only find it more sad.
Jyoti,
That strange… so if Mumbai blasts happen and Hindus die does it have to be Pakistanis ? I have expressed a view. I am actually quite certain of it.
As for your claim “no religion.. ” and yet every religion creates terrorists. What does that tell us?
This was no ordinary train. Special security checks were in place due to international and sensitive nature of this journey. Indian government has some responsibility for the lax security arrangements.
@ YLH: Terrorist is a terrorist. No religion tells to kill innocents. Just because the train was coming from India, it does not prove that “Hindu terrorism” was responsible for it.
The latest news is that one person has been detained in the Samjhauta Express blast. http://www.rediff.com/news/2007/feb/19samblast23.h tm
According to the Indian Railway Minister Lalu Yadav, “On the basis of information given by eyewitnesses (including one of the injured, a Pakistani national Rana Shaukat Ali) one person who was present in one of the two coaches that caught fire has been detained.”
I do hope that “we” ( India & Pakistan) will fight this menace of terrorism together. Nobody but innocent lives are lost to this danger which is now spreading in South Asia at an alarming rate.