Investigators hunt for perpetrators of twin bombings in Hyderabad which left at least 15 dead and more than 100 injured.
India's major cities have been put on high alert after two explosions killed at least 15 people and injured more than 100 others in the southern city of Hyderabad, officials have said.
Investigators hunted on Friday for perpetrators of the twin bomb attacks near a cinema and a bus stand in a busy neighbourhood of the city, which has seen several disturbances in the recent past.
A blast outside a temple in 2000 killed two people, while in 2007, 40 people were killed in bombings in the city.
Local police said they were trying to determine the cause of the explosions, as officials from the National Investigation Agency and commandos from the National Security Guard arrived from New Delhi to help with the investigation.
Top state police officer V Dinesh Reddy said improvised explosive devices with nitrogen compound were used in the blasts, which he blamed on a "terrorist network".
"The authorities are keeping very tight-lipped about who might be to blame, Al Jazeera's Sohail Rahman, reporting from Hyderabad, said.
They are not pointing anything at the moment, as investigations are under way, he said.
"A lot of assumptions are being made in the local media, but as far as authorities are concerned, they are keeping very tight-lipped, Rahman said.
Witnesses said one of the crude devices went off about 15 metres from the entrance to the Venkatadri Cinema in the popular retail district of Dilsukh Nagar.
Manmohan Singh, the Indian prime minister, pledged punishment of those responsible for the "dastardly act", which came with the nation on alert after the hanging of a separatist earlier this month.
Mohammed Afzal Guru was executed after being convicted of involvement in a 2001 attack on India's parliament, in which nine policemen were killed.
Many in Indian-administered Kashmir believe Guru did not receive a fair trial, and the secrecy with which the execution was carried out fuelled anger in a region where anti-India sentiment runs deep.
The attacks have raised questions over whether Australia's cricket team will go ahead with a scheduled international match to be played in the city starting on March 2, although the tourists said the Test was still on for now.
'No specific intelligence'
Sushil Kumar Shinde, India's home minister, who visited the blast site on Friday, said that while authorities had received intelligence of a possible threat of attack, "it was not specific".
"The investigation has just started ... we will find out everything," he said.
The bombings, the first to strike India since 2011, hit a mainly Hindu district in Hyderabad, a southern hub of India's computing industry which has a large Muslim population.
Al Jazeera's Rahman, earlier reporting from New Delhi, said: "The devastation is pretty widespread. This part of the city is a very popular bazar area, very popular with young people when they are going out in the evening," he said.
Ranjan Mathai, India's foreign secretary, said the culprits were not known but did not rule out foreign involvement.
"I am not sure there is any evidence it could be homegrown terrorism," he said.
'Brave people'
John Kerry, the US secretary of state, said in a tweet that he had expressed his sympathies for the "brave people" of Hyderabad when he met India’s foreign secretary in Washington.
Ban Ki-Moon, the UN secretary-general, "strongly condemn[ed] the indiscriminate attacks".
The government has been heavily criticised for its failure to arrest the masterminds behind previous bombings.
The explosions came on the same day as India's parliament opened for a crucial budget session.
Rajnath Singh, the president of the main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party, demanded a thorough investigation into the blasts.
His party called for a general strike in the state on Friday.
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