Fri, Dec 30, 2005 - Page 1 News List

Indian police in search for science conference killers

AFP , BANGALORE, INDIA

An attack on an international science conference in southern India in which a professor was killed and four delegates wounded was likely the work of terrorists, police said yesterday.

A gunman sprayed bullets at delegates to an infrastructure management conference in the technology hub of Bangalore as their meeting was ending on Wednesday night and they were were leaving for dinner.

Although only one person opened fire before fleeing, police said the attacker may have had accomplices.

Officers found one AK-47 automatic rifle, a live grenade and 11 empty cartridges near the auditorium at the Indian Institute of Science, where around 300 scientists had been attending the conference.

"Though it is a bit early to confirm the nature of the shooting, evidence collected so far from the scene ... has all the markings of a terror attack," said B.S. Sial, director-general of police in Karnataka state, of which Bangalore is the capital.

"We don't rule out the possibility of a militant or terror outfit behind the shootout," he added.

Security in Bangalore was drastically tightened yesterday as police launched a massive hunt for those behind the attack which killed M.C. Puri, a professor of mathematics at the Indian Institute of Technology in New Delhi.

Entry and exit points to the city were sealed and police brought in sniffer dogs and stepped up foot patrols, officials said.

"We are also keeping a track of all mobile and [fixed-line] phone calls being made or received throughout the state," said Sial.

"Several hotels and lodges are being searched for the suspects and collecting information," he added.

Political leaders and police chiefs from Karnataka were meeting to review security in the city, state officials said.

There has been no immediate claim of responsibility for the shooting. The Indian media said police were investigating possible links to militant groups fighting Indian rule in Kashmir.

"It was like crackers exploding. Suddenly I saw one man falling. He said, `I have been shot. Call an ambulance'. That's when I realized that some firing was happening," said A.N. Sukumaran, a security supervisor.

The intruder escaped under the cover of darkness.

The shooting sparked panic among delegates who tried frantically to find friends and colleagues. None of the foreign participants was injured.

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