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Lawyers and litigants with blood soaked clothes ran helter-skelter as soon as the blast took place.
Stunned by the deadly blast, a middle-aged woman who had come to secure bail for her relative could not speak while litigant Rahul Gupta who was barely 10 metres away from the site had problems hearing.
Gupta, who was at the reception counter near the blast site, said he cannot hear after the deafening blast.
"I heard a loud noise and smoke coming out following by cries of people," said Narendra Kumar Singh, a guard at a construction site outside the court.
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A woman lawyer, who refused to identify herself, said she heard a loud noise while she was coming towards the court.
"By the time I could come police had cordoned off the roads and people were being taken to hospitals. I parked my car and walked to the gate. I am really terrified and hope none of my friends have been injured in the incident."
Another lawyer said the gate where the blast happened is one of the most crowded gates at the high court premises and it was the "peak hour" at the court.
"This is the time when hundreds of people come here for making passes to enter the high court. I was 200 metres away when the blast took place," he said.
R P Luthra, another lawyer, who helped police personnel take out the injured from the spot, termed the scene as "horrific". "I was issuing passes to my client to enable them to watch court proceedings when I heard the blast," Luthra said, adding "The Delhi police personnel did a good job in rushing the injured to hospitals."
As the blast took place near a counter where passes are issued for senior citizens, a lot of spectacles were seen strewn around.
The pass counter was badly damaged in the blast.
Soon after the blast took place, several lawyers including High Court Bar Association Vice President K K Uppal was seen helping the injured to waiting ambulances.