UN Report Flags JeM Role in Delhi Red Fort Blast; Warns of Masood Azhar’s Women-only Terror Wing
The UN report links JeM to the Red Fort blast killing 15 and reports JeM leader Masood Azhar's October creation of a women-only wing supporting attacks.
- In its 37th report, the UN linked Jaish-e-Mohammed to the November 10 attack after a member country said JeM claimed responsibility.
- Earlier, on October 8, JeM chief Masood Azhar announced the creation of Jamaat-ul-Muminat, an alleged women's wing not listed by the UN but said to support terrorist activities.
- The blast killed 15 people, injured others and set multiple vehicles ablaze near Lal Quila Metro Station on November 10.
- UN member states disagree on JeM's status, with one saying it remains active and another calling it inactive, while Pakistan maintains JeM and Lashkar-e-Taiba are no longer active after sanctions.
- The UN's 37th report also references the Pahalgam attack in April 2025, which resulted in the deaths of 26 civilians, and investigators uncovered a suspected terror module in Faridabad recently.
15 Articles
15 Articles
UN Flags Jaish Role in Red Fort Attack, Questions ‘Inactive’ Status of Pakistan-Based Terror Groups
The United Nations’ 37th report of the Analytical Support and Sanctions Monitoring Team says one member state confirmed JeM claimed responsibility for the November 10, 2025, strike near Delhi’s Red Fort.
Major revelation in Red Fort blast case; UN report links incident with Pakistan-based Jaish
A major revelation has emerged in the 37th report of the United Nations regarding terrorism in South Asia. The UN’s Analytical Support and Sanctions Monitoring Team has linked the Pakistan-based terrorist organisation Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) to the attack that took place near the Red Fort in New Delhi on November 10, in which 15 people were reportedly killed. According to the report, a member country informed the UN that JeM had claimed responsi…
Pak's hypocrisy exposed again? UN report links Jaish to Red Fort terror attack
A UN sanctions monitoring report has linked Jaish-e-Mohammed to the November 10 blast near Delhi's Red Fort that killed 15 people, challenging claims that the Pakistan-based terror outfit is defunct.
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