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An ambulance arrives at Sikandrarao Hospital in Hathras after more than a hundred people were killed in a stampede Alamy
Tragedy

116 people killed in stampede at religious gathering in India

Most of the people killed were women, according to the state chief medical officer.

AT LEAST 116 people were crushed to death at an overcrowded Hindu religious gathering in northern India today, government officials said, the worst such tragedy in more than a decade.

A large crowd had gathered for a sermon by a popular preacher near the northern Indian city of Hathras but a strong dust storm sparked panic as they were leaving.

Many people were crushed or trampled, falling on top of each other, with some collapsing into a roadside drain in the chaos.

Most of the people killed were women, according to state chief medical officer Umesh Kumar Tripathi.  

“The attendees were exiting the venue when a dust storm blinded their vision, leading to a melee and the subsequent tragic incident,” Chaitra V., divisional commissioner of Aligarh city in Uttar Pradesh state, told AFP.

“We are focusing on providing relief and medical aid for the victims,” she added.

Senior police officer Shalabh Mathur said that it appeared “more people had come than permission was asked for”.

Several hours after the crush, Chaitra said that “the death toll stands at 116″, with at least 18 others injured.

Lines of ambulances rushed the injured to hospitals after the tragedy.

Mourners gathered outside one mortuary in the town of Etah, where many of the dead were taken, seeking news of their relatives.

“When the sermon finished, everyone started running out,” Shakuntala, a woman who gave only one name, told the Press Trust of India news agency.

“People fell in a drain by the road. They started falling one on top of the other and got crushed to death.”

Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced compensation of $2,400 to the next of kin of those who died and $600 to those injured in the “tragic incident”.

“My condolences are with those who have lost their loved ones… I wish for the speedy recovery of all the injured,” Modi wrote on social media platform X.

President Droupadi Murmu said the deaths were “heart-rending” and offered her “deepest condolences”.

Yogi Adityanath, Uttar Pradesh chief minister who is also a Hindu monk, expressed his condolences to the relatives of those killed and ordered an investigation into the deaths, his office said.

Deadly incidents are not unprecedented at places of worship during major religious festivals in India, the biggest of which prompt millions of devotees to make pilgrimages to holy sites, but the death toll at the incident today was the highest in years. 

At least 112 people were killed in 2016 after a huge explosion caused by a banned fireworks display at a temple marking the Hindu new year.

The blast ripped through concrete buildings and ignited a fire at a temple complex in Kerala state, where thousands had gathered.

Another 115 devotees were killed in 2013 in a stampede at a bridge near a temple in Madhya Pradesh.

Up to 400,000 people were gathered in the area and the stampede began after a rumour spread that the bridge was about to collapse.

In 2008, 224 pilgrims were killed and more than 400 were injured in a stampede at a hilltop temple in the northern city of Jodhpur.

© AFP 2024

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