Five Delhi schools received bomb threat emails on Wednesday morning, triggering fresh alarms in the national capital as part of a disturbing three‑day series of hoax threats, reported Deccan Herald (. Authorities evacuated vulnerable campuses, conducted thorough searches, and escalated cyber‑forensic efforts to trace the origin of the emails.
In its latest alert, Delhi Police confirmed that the emails were received around sunrise at St. Thomas School in Dwarka, Vasant Valley School in Vasant Kunj, Mother’s International School in Hauz Khas, Richmond Global School in Paschim Vihar, and Sardar Patel Vidyalaya in Lodi Estate. This comes after similar threats targeted St. Thomas twice this week and also St. Stephen’s College on Tuesday, followed by CRPF and Navy schools earlier in the week. So far, security checks have yielded no explosives or suspicious packages, leading officials to believe these are deliberately orchestrated hoaxes intended to cause panic.
Morning dawned with heightened tension as campus staff—from overnight caretakers to cleaning crews—were quickly ushered out following advice from bomb disposal squads, fire teams, dog units, and Delhi Police. By late morning, investigations revealed no dangerous materials, but anxiety lingered among parents, school administrators, and students as the cyber cell pored over email headers to track the sender’s identity, suspected to be concealed via VPNs.
Delhi Fire Services officials reported they received calls prompting them to dispatch fire tenders and escort bomb teams to each affected site. At St. Thomas School, two separate threat emails just 24 hours apart raised concerns about a coordinated effort. Delhi Police stated that nearly ten schools and one college were impacted in the past three days. The intensity of the hoaxes prompted swift deployment of multi‑agency teams and the early activation of an SOP established after last year’s wave of fake threats.
The city’s Directorate of Education, under court orders, has mandated stringent protocols including CCTV surveillance, evacuation plans, regular audits, and exhaustive incident reports. Schools are required to submit monthly safety checklists; meanwhile government authorities are exploring stronger penalties for perpetrators, but warn that actual prosecution may be complicated by anonymity and technical obstacles.
Delhi Police officials confirmed that all reported threats have been declared hoaxes. Still, the cyber cell is actively working to trace the emails, which may have originated abroad or through anonymised networks. Police are liaising with international cybersecurity agencies and email providers to request IP logs and server data. The investigation includes examining whether there is any link to past waves of similar hoaxes—most notably the widespread false alarms in 2024 that affected over 200 schools, an airport, and other public institutions.
Analysts have speculated motives ranging from mischief and attention‑seeking to politically motivated provocation. One theory under investigation involves individuals exploiting school vulnerabilities to amplify fear and chaos without actual intent to harm. The repetition of threats against the same institution suggests a systematic approach rather than random mischief.
While security protocols successfully contained the immediate panic, experts caution this could be a distressing pattern of future threats. Parents and teachers continue to demand stronger countermeasures, including tighter email filtering, improved cybersecurity infrastructure, and stricter legal deterrents. Some suggest introducing mandatory verification stamps for official school communications and using automated systems to filter suspicious outgoing messages.
City officials have reassured the public that no real threat exists, and declared that “maximum precaution” is being exercised until a credible suspect or pattern is identified. Meanwhile, parents continue to urge calm and cooperation, with many bringing children to school later in the morning after school reopenings were confirmed.
This series of alerts is not unique to Delhi. Similar hoaxes have been reported in Vadodara, Jaipur, and Mumbai over the past year. In Delhi, the lingering echo of the 2024 bomb hoax wave—which affected hundreds of sites and forced schools to shut down for days—continues to shape policies and responses. The city’s resilience is evident in the coordinated evacuation and investigation efforts, but the repeated disruptions are causing education fatigue and psychological strain among children.
As of now, no credible evidence of explosives has been found, and all threats are being treated as hoaxes. Delhi Police have urged the public not to panic and to promptly report suspicious emails or communications. Parents are encouraged to follow official school notifications and maintain open lines with institutions.
The next phase in the probe will involve deeper cyber forensics to unmask the sender, whose pattern suggests a worrying evolution in school-targeted threats. Delhi’s authorities have vowed to bring technical means and legal muscle together, ensuring that no school remains vulnerable to viral hoaxes that target the hearts of communities.
Photo Credit: Economic Times