Security has been tightened at all metro stations and prominent location across Delhi after a series of bomb threats were received via emails, an official said on Monday.
The emails stated “Delhi banega Khalistan” and warned of blasts at the Delhi Army School, Red Fort and metro stations within the next three days. The messages claimed that explosions would take place at the Army school at 1.11 pm, the Vidhan Sabha at 3.11 pm and the Red Fort at 9.11 am today, the official told. PTI.
Following the threat specifically mentioning metro services, the Delhi Police stepped up security deployment across all stations of the Delhi Metro Rail Corporation network.
“A high alert has been sounded across the city. Additional forces have been deployed at all metro stations and vital installations. Anti-sabotage checks and random frisking are also being carried out,’ said the police officer.
Teams of the bomb disposal squad and dog squad have been deployed at sensitive locations, including the Red Fort, Delhi Secretariat and the Assembly complex, he said.
Another senior officer said that coordination meetings were held with officials of the Delhi Metro and other agencies to review security preparedness.
“We have asked our counterparts in Uttar Pradesh and Haryana to step up security at metro stations falling under their jurisdictions as well. Surveillance has been enhanced and CCTV monitoring intensified,” he said.
Delhi Secretariat, Delhi Assembly, Red Fort and two schools, had also received bomb threats emails earlier in the day, which were later declared hoaxes following extensive searches by security agencies.
“Our cyber teams are trying to trace the IP addresses using which some miscreants are issuing bomb threats. Such criminals are using Virtual Private Network (VPN) to send emails to mislead police investigation. But our experts will find out the culprits,” a senior police officer said.
On November, 10, 2025, Delhi was rocked by a major blast after a car laden with explosives blew up near the Red Fort on the evening at a busy traffic signal.
The blast killed 15 people and injured over 20 others. It was carried out using a white Hyundai i20 driven by Dr. Umar Nabi, a suspect linked to the Jaish-e-Mohammed terror outfit.

