[URL="http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/41875000/jpg/_41875898_rescuers_afp203b.jpg"][/URL] Rescue efforts have been hampered by heavy rain
At least 130 people have been killed and 300 injured by seven bombs on the train network in the Indian financial capital Mumbai (Bombay), police say.
The first of the near-simultaneous blasts went off at about 1830 local time (1300 GMT), during the rush hour in the suburbs on the Western Railway.
Correspondents spoke of scenes of pandemonium, with people jumping from trains and bodies flung onto tracks.
There have been a number of bomb attacks in Mumbai in recent years.
[URL="http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/shared/img/o.gif"][/URL]
The city and the capital Delhi have been put on high alert, and Mumbai's entire rail network has been shut down, stranding hundreds of thousands of commuters.
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh appealed for calm and described the incidents as a "shocking and cowardly attempt to spread a feeling of hatred".
[URL="http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/41875000/gif/_41875750_mumbai_blasts3_203.gif"][/URL]
Pakistani leaders also condemned the blasts as a "despicable act of terrorism".
Police said the co-ordinated blasts took place at Matunga, Khar, Mahim, Jogeshwari, Borivali and Bhayandar, with most on moving trains and two at stations.
Local reports said the bombs appeared to have targeted first-class compartments, as commuters were returning home from the city's financial district.
A shopkeeper near one explosion said it was so powerful they thought they had been hit by lightning.
Television images show dazed and bloodied commuters being carried by fellow passengers to waiting ambulances, as rescue workers clambered through wreckage to reach victims.
The force of the blasts ripped doors and windows off carriages, and scattered luggage.
Clothes and shoes were strewn along the tracks.
A medical student at a hospital in Parel, which has received many of the wounded, told the BBC News website the "floors are filled with bloodstains".
"There were so many [injured people], I couldn't really count," Sunny Jain said.
"There are not enough ambulances and many people are making their own way to the station. They are coming in taxis and by foot."
Repeated target
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attacks, which are the worst in the city for more than a decade.
[URL="http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/shared/img/o.gif"][/URL]
Home Minister Shivraj Patil told reporters authorities had "some" information an attack was coming, "but place and time was not known".
Analysts say Mumbai has been a repeated target because it is a financial hub and a centre for the underworld.
More than 250 people died in a string of blasts in the financial district of the city in 1993.
Correspondents say Tuesday's bombers could hardly have struck a target with greater impact - both practical and psychological.
The city's suburban train system is one of the busiest in the world, carrying more than six million commuters a day.
The BBC world affairs correspondent Mike Wooldridge says the blasts also expose the vulnerability of India's commercial capital - the hub of a nation with an image of rapid change. The blasts came hours after suspected Islamic extremists killed seven people in grenade attacks in the summer capital of Kashmir, Srinagar.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/5169332.stm
At least 130 people have been killed and 300 injured by seven bombs on the train network in the Indian financial capital Mumbai (Bombay), police say.
The first of the near-simultaneous blasts went off at about 1830 local time (1300 GMT), during the rush hour in the suburbs on the Western Railway.
Correspondents spoke of scenes of pandemonium, with people jumping from trains and bodies flung onto tracks.
There have been a number of bomb attacks in Mumbai in recent years.
[URL="http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/shared/img/o.gif"][/URL]
The city and the capital Delhi have been put on high alert, and Mumbai's entire rail network has been shut down, stranding hundreds of thousands of commuters.
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh appealed for calm and described the incidents as a "shocking and cowardly attempt to spread a feeling of hatred".
[URL="http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/41875000/gif/_41875750_mumbai_blasts3_203.gif"][/URL]
Pakistani leaders also condemned the blasts as a "despicable act of terrorism".
Police said the co-ordinated blasts took place at Matunga, Khar, Mahim, Jogeshwari, Borivali and Bhayandar, with most on moving trains and two at stations.
Local reports said the bombs appeared to have targeted first-class compartments, as commuters were returning home from the city's financial district.
A shopkeeper near one explosion said it was so powerful they thought they had been hit by lightning.
Television images show dazed and bloodied commuters being carried by fellow passengers to waiting ambulances, as rescue workers clambered through wreckage to reach victims.
The force of the blasts ripped doors and windows off carriages, and scattered luggage.
Clothes and shoes were strewn along the tracks.
A medical student at a hospital in Parel, which has received many of the wounded, told the BBC News website the "floors are filled with bloodstains".
"There were so many [injured people], I couldn't really count," Sunny Jain said.
"There are not enough ambulances and many people are making their own way to the station. They are coming in taxis and by foot."
Repeated target
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attacks, which are the worst in the city for more than a decade.
[URL="http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/shared/img/o.gif"][/URL]
Home Minister Shivraj Patil told reporters authorities had "some" information an attack was coming, "but place and time was not known".
Analysts say Mumbai has been a repeated target because it is a financial hub and a centre for the underworld.
More than 250 people died in a string of blasts in the financial district of the city in 1993.
Correspondents say Tuesday's bombers could hardly have struck a target with greater impact - both practical and psychological.
The city's suburban train system is one of the busiest in the world, carrying more than six million commuters a day.
The BBC world affairs correspondent Mike Wooldridge says the blasts also expose the vulnerability of India's commercial capital - the hub of a nation with an image of rapid change. The blasts came hours after suspected Islamic extremists killed seven people in grenade attacks in the summer capital of Kashmir, Srinagar.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/5169332.stm