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<h1>Victim identification relied on tattoos and clothing to confirm identities after the blast amid chaotic hospital and police procedures.</h1> Victim identification after the Red Fort blast depended on personal markers and remnants of clothing when bodies were charred or dismembered. Families reported missing persons to local police and were advised to check hospitals; authorities used clothing descriptions and visible tattoos to call relatives to the hospital for visual identification. The account records interactions between police, hospital mortuary staff and bereaved families and the reliance on observable personal effects where conventional biometric means were unavailable.