"There is a possibility," said Minister of State for Home Kiren Rijiju, when asked whether the men - said to be members of the banned Students Islamic Movement of India or SIMI - could have been involved in the blast in which one woman was killed.
As investigators pieced together the available leads on the Improvised Explosive Device (IED) triggered explosion, the National Investigation Agency began assisting the city police which sent out teams to Chennai and Pune where the bomb blasts had occurred in the past.
Briefing reporters, he said, "all angles" were being looked into the blast, which was described as "terror attack" by the Centre.
38-year old Bhavani, who was here from Chennai, was killed and her relative and two others injured when they were hit by shrapnels in the explosion of the IED hidden in a potted plant along the compound wall of the restaurant in the central business district that is teeming with people on weekends.
Siddaramaiah said NIA and other central agencies were here and "we will keep constant contact with them and will seek all those assistance required, but investigation will be done by our police in coordination with them."
City Police Commissioner M N Reddi said "CCTV footage that we have got is very limited...Our teams are looking into it, I don't have information on leads available from it. It may take some time."
In Delhi, Rijiju told reporters, "It was a terror attack."
Emerging from a high-level security review meeting, Home Minister Rajnath Singh said an idea about the nature of the blast and who could be behind it could be ascertained only after a proper probe.
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