Summary The electrical mains unit is intact, so there could not have been a short circuit.
NEW DELHI, (AFP) - Police said Tuesday they were investigating a blaze that devastated a church in the Indian capital, as hundreds of Christians took to the streets to protest what they said was a deliberate attack.
A church spokesman said there was a strong smell of kerosene after the fire that destroyed most of Saint Sebastian s, one of Delhi s biggest churches, on Monday morning.
"It is a deliberate attack. We don t know who has done it but it was well planned," Savarimuthu Sankar, a spokesman for the Delhi Catholic Archdiocese, told AFP.
"The electrical mains unit is intact, so there could not have been a short circuit."
Police said they had registered a case of "mischief by fire" and were questioning various people, including the church watchman.
"The police have assured us that they will constitute a special team to investigate as early as possible and nab the culprits," Delhi Archbishop Anil Couto told the NDTV news network.
Around 1,500 members of Delhi s Christian community protested outside the city s police headquarters on Tuesday, shouting slogans and carrying placards to demand action over the fire.
Fears of religious polarisation have grown in India since the right-wing Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party stormed to power in May.
Parliamentarian Derek O Brien called on the authorities to act swiftly.
"Horrified. Angry. Saddened with news of Delhi church burnt/destroyed," he tweeted.
Just 2.3 percent of India s total population of 1.2 billion are Christian
