At least nine people were killed and 27 injured when a pile of confiscated explosives blew up at a police station in Indian Kashmir, the region's police chief said on Saturday, days after a car blast in New Delhi killed eight people.
The dead included policemen, government officials and forensic staff who were examining the explosives at the time, Nalin Prabhat, director general of police for the federally administered region of Jammu and Kashmir, told a news conference.
He said the cause of the blast late on Friday and the extent of the damage were being investigated.
Indicating there was no terror involvement in the incident, Prabhat said forensic and chemical examinations of previously recovered explosive materials were under way when "an accidental explosion" occurred on Friday night.
"Any other speculation into the cause of this incident is unnecessary," he said.
The identification of the bodies was under way, a police source said.
Earlier, a local police official told Reuters an explosion had ripped through Nowgam police station. The official said fire had engulfed the compound and fire tenders had been rushed to the spot.
The blast occurred four days after a deadly car explosion in the Indian capital New Delhi killed at least eight people in what the government has called a terrorist incident.

US proposes plan to end Iran war, as Trump signals progress
US expected to send thousands more soldiers to Middle East
US safety agency says tracking system failed at LaGuardia during jet collision
Russia fires record 948 drones against Ukraine over 24 hours, Kyiv says
Death toll rises to 69 in Colombian military plane crash
One killed, five injured in Bahrain from Iran strikes
Qatar is not directly mediating between US and Iran, ministry spokesperson says
Germany, France in rare rebuke of Trump over Iran war
