There is compelling evidence of a foreign conspiracy in the Delhi explosion. Accused individuals involved in the Red Fort bombing received suicide bombing videos from abroad via encrypted apps. Agencies investigating the Delhi bombings revealed that these videos were shared by Jaish's doctor module.
Over three dozen such videos were shared by foreign handlers with doctors involved in the blast, who have now been arrested.
One such doctor, Muzammil Ahmed Gani, revealed operational details during the investigation. He explained to the agencies that these videos detailed the objectives of a suicide bomber, and how such tendencies develop.
According to investigative agencies, similar videos are utilized by other global terrorist organizations.
Agencies are now probing who else, apart from Muzammil, received these videos from handlers as part of the Red Fort bombing module.
Through these videos, the terrorists were independently building bombs, funding their purchases themselves, showcasing their radicalization. It's reported that these terrorists amassed 2.6 million INR and gathered four vehicles. Both Dr. Muzammil and Dr. Umar were entirely brainwashed by these videos. It was Dr. Umar who detonated a blast with his car outside the Red Fort, resulting in his death in the explosion.
Investigative agencies are working relentlessly to trace these handlers.
According to an Indian Express report, three handlers identified in the Delhi case are 'Hanjullah', 'Nisar', and 'Ukasha', though these might be codenames.
The report suggests that the person using the name 'Hanjullah' sent nearly 40 videos to Muzammil Ahmed Gani, the individual who collected the explosives for the attack.
So far, investigative agencies have arrested six individuals in connection with the Delhi blast and are interrogating several others.
Why use encrypted applications for sending videos?
If a sender wishes their videos to remain unseen by the world, they opt for End-to-End Encrypted apps. Unlike default modes in regular messaging apps like SMS, Facebook Messenger, and Instagram DM, videos are at risk of being seen by anyone on the server or network.
Encrypted apps, however, offer End-to-End Encryption, allowing only the sender and receiver to decrypt and view the video, impervious to others including the app company, government, or hackers.