The Delhi blast probe uncovers a terrifying network: Fugitive IM operative Mirza Shadab Baig, wanted in the 2008 serial bombings, is connected to Al-Falah University, the same institution linked to the Red Fort explosion. Understand the white-collar terror module and the Azamgarh connection.

Delhi Blast Probe
The recent car blast near the Red Fort has not only exposed a chilling modern-day “white-collar terror module” involving doctors and highly educated professionals but has also cast a disturbing retrospective light on India’s past terror strikes. At the epicenter of this dual investigation is Al-Falah University in Faridabad, which has become the unlikely nexus point for both the present-day tragedy and the devastating 2008 serial bombings. The renewed scrutiny has immediately intensified the hunt for one of the longest-surviving fugitives linked to the earlier attacks: Mirza Shadab Baig.
Baig, a key Indian Mujahideen (IM) operative and an alumnus of Al-Falah University, has been missing since 2008 following the infamous Batla House encounter. Investigators have now confirmed that Baig, who earned his B. Tech in Electronics and Instrumentation from the same institution in 2007, used his technical acumen and educational background to advance the terror agenda.

