Stampede at religious event in India kills at least 116 people, mostly women and children
UNB
Publish: 03 Jul 2024, 04:40 PM
LUCKNOW,
India, July 03 (AP/UNB) - Thousands of people at a religious gathering in India
rushed to leave a makeshift tent, setting off a stampede Tuesday that killed at
least 116 people and injured scores, officials said.
It was not immediately
clear what triggered the panic following an event with a Hindu guru known
locally as Bhole Baba. Local news reports cited authorities who said heat and
suffocation in the tent could have been a factor. Video of the aftermath showed
the structure appeared to have collapsed.
At least 116 people
died, most of them women and children, said Prashant Kumar, the
director-general of police in northern India's state of Uttar Pradesh, where
the stampede occurred.
More than 80 others were
injured and admitted to hospitals, senior police officer Shalabh Mathur said.
"People started
falling one upon another, one upon another. Those who were crushed died. People
there pulled them out," witness Shakuntala Devi told the Press Trust of
India news agency.
Deadly stampedes are
relatively common around Indian religious festivals, where large crowds gather
in small areas with shoddy infrastructure and few safety measures.
Police officer Rajesh
Singh said there was likely overcrowding at the event in a village in Hathras
district about 350 kilometers (220 miles) southwest of the state capital,
Lucknow.
Initial reports said
organizers had permission to host about 5,000 people, but more than 15,000 came
for the event by the Hindu preacher, who used to be a police officer in the
state before he left his job to give religious sermons. He has led other such
gatherings over the last two decades.
Indian Prime Minister
Narendra Modi offered condolences to the families of the dead and said the
federal government was working with state authorities to ensure the injured
received help.
Uttar Pradesh's chief
minister, Yogi Adityanath, called the stampede "heart-wrenching" in a
post on X. He said authorities were investigating.
"Look what happened
and how many people have lost their lives. Will anyone be accountable?"
Rajesh Kumar Jha, a member of parliament, told reporters. He said the stampede
was a failure by the state and federal governments to manage large crowds,
adding that "people will keep on dying" if authorities do not take
safety protocols seriously enough.
In 2013, pilgrims
visiting a temple for a popular Hindu festival in central Madhya Pradesh state
trampled each other amid fears that a bridge would collapse. At least 115 were
crushed to death or died in the river.
In 2011, more than 100
Hindu devotees died in a crush at a religious festival in the southern state of
Kerala.
END/UNB/AP/PR