logo
Kumbh Mela stampede: A look back at deadly crowd disasters in India

Kumbh Mela stampede: A look back at deadly crowd disasters in India

Independent29-01-2025

A stampede at India's Kumbh Mela festival, the world's largest religious gathering, has left several feared dead and many injured.
Tens of thousands of Hindu devotees bathe in the sacred river confluence of the Ganges, Yamuna, and mythical Saraswati on Wednesday, a holy day during the six-week festival.
Authorities were anticipating a record 100 million devotees to participate in ritual bathing on this auspicious day.
The festival, held every 12 years, commenced on January 13th and is expected to draw more than 400 million pilgrims to the site this year.
There have been other tragic incidents in India over the past two decades.
Stampede in Uttar Pradesh in 2024
More than 100 people were killed in a stampede in northern India in July 2024 following a Hindu religious gathering, making it one of the deadliest such accidents in years. Thousands had gathered at a makeshift tent for an event led by a Hindu preacher in Uttar Pradesh state. The victims were crushed to death as they rushed to leave. Video of the aftermath showed the makeshift structure appeared to have collapsed.
Bridge collapse at the Navaratri festival in 2013
A collapsing bridge caused a stampede that killed 115 people, mostly women and children, on 13 October, 2013. Hundreds of thousands of pilgrims had come to a Hindu temple in the remote town of Ratangarh in Madhya Pradesh state on the last day of the popular 10-day Navaratri festival.
Stampede at a Hindu temple in Jodhpur in 2008
At least 168 people were killed and 100 injured when thousands of pilgrims stampeded at a Hindu temple in Jodhpur on 30 September, 2008. Severe overcrowding apparently caused the crush, as more than 12,000 people gathered at the temple to celebrate Navaratri, a Hindu festival.
Landslide rumours caused deadly crowd surge in 2008
Dozens of women and children were among the 145 people who died on 3 August, 2008, when thousands of pilgrims stampeded at a remote mountaintop temple in northern India during celebrations to honour Shakrti, a Hindu goddess. The devotees attended a nine-day religious festival at the Naina Devi Temple in the Bilaspur district of Himachal Pradesh state. Rumors of a landslide apparently started the panic, according to a senior government official.
Stampede and blaze during a religious procession in 2005
A stampede during a religious procession to a hilltop temple on 25 January, 2005, killed at least 258 people and injured 200 in western India, near the village of Wai, some 150 miles (241 kilometers) south of Mumbai. The stampede was triggered after several Hindu pilgrims inside the temple fell on a slippery floor and were crushed to death by other pilgrims who apparently walked on them. Angered over the deaths, some pilgrims started a fire that gutted hundreds of makeshift shops along a narrow walkway leading to the temple and set off the deadly rush.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Nepal's royalists demand restoration of monarchy dumped 17 years ago
Nepal's royalists demand restoration of monarchy dumped 17 years ago

Reuters

time29-05-2025

  • Reuters

Nepal's royalists demand restoration of monarchy dumped 17 years ago

KATHMANDU, May 29 (Reuters) - Thousands of supporters of Nepal's former king rallied in the capital Kathmandu on Thursday, calling for the restoration of the constitutional monarchy that was abolished 17 years ago, amid rising unhappiness with successive elected governments. Flag-waving protesters marched into the city centre from different directions shouting: 'Our king is dearer than lives ... king come back and save the country,' as riot police stood guard but did not intervene. At a similar rally in March, two people were killed and several injured. The 239-year-old monarchy was voted out in 2008 following weeks of bloody street protests. The last king of the Himalayan nation, 77-year-old Gyanendra, has lived with his family in a private house in Kathmandu as a commoner since being toppled. He has not commented on Thursday's demonstration but expressed sorrow at the violence that killed two people in March. Demonstrators are also calling for the country of 30 million people, wedged between China and India, to become a Hindu state again, a status it lost with the monarchy. 'Governments formed in the last 17 years have failed to deliver on their promises of development, creation of jobs and improvement of the living conditions of people,' said 35-year-old street vendor Rajendra Tamang. 'Thousands of young people are forced to leave the country in search of work as they see no hope here,' he said. Millions of young Nepalis are working in the Middle East, South Korea and Malaysia, mainly at construction sites, and the money they send home is a key source of income for Nepal. Supporters of the government staged a separate but smaller rally nearby in support of the republican system that replaced the monarchy. The three major political parties that jointly control nearly 200 of the 275 seats in parliament say the monarchy was consigned to history and cannot be restored. All three jointly campaigned against the monarchy and voted it out in 2008 and say their faith in the republican system was unshakeable. The Rastriya Prajatantra Party, which is campaigning for the monarchy, holds only 13 seats in parliament. A two-thirds majority or 184 lawmakers is needed to change the constitution, which was adopted in 2015, turning Nepal into a federal democratic republic. The royalists say their protests will continue until the monarchy is restored.

Community hubs in Leicester fear for future amid consultation
Community hubs in Leicester fear for future amid consultation

BBC News

time20-05-2025

  • BBC News

Community hubs in Leicester fear for future amid consultation

Groups that use council-run community centres across Leicester have voiced their fears as a consultation into their future is under City Council, which currently operates 13 community centres and 16 libraries across the city, is asking for the public's views on a new "service model" operating from 12 multi-service centres and the Central comes as the authority is looking to reduce their budget by up to £2.1m over the next three years following "a decade and a half of central government cuts in funding".But the suggestion the centres could be transferred to community organisations to run has sparked concern among users. Rupa Soni organises weekly social events for women at Rushey Mead Recreation Centre where members meet, talk and take part in activities to celebrate their Hindu faith. They are calling on the city council to retain control of the centre. Rupa says her group members are concerned they may be priced out of the centre if new owners take over and increase charges to rent out the rooms. She also does not know anyone who would be able to operate the centre Makhwana, who regularly attends the socials, said: "I don't go anywhere, I'm alone."She said her son had died, and for her "there's no other place to go". On the Mowmacre estate, residents have exactly the same concerns. Many are worried that the only nearby community building they have access to - the Tudor Centre - may suffer the same Barnes has run Stay and Play children activities for 32 years at the centre. Now working as a volunteer, she says: "If I couldn't do it, I don't know what I'd do. It's my life."Her concerns are backed by local Labour councillor Annette Byrne, who says there is unlikely to be anyone on the estate with the time, skills and resources needed to run Tudor Centre themselves."This is one of the poorest estates in Leicester. You've got liability insurance, gas, electric, water. "Who's going to take responsibility if anything goes wrong? No, we're not having that." Consultation continues The Tudor Centre and Rushey Mead Recreation Centre are two of the eleven council-run centres and libraries being considered for transfer to communities to city mayor for libraries and community centres, councillor Vi Dempster, does not deny the changes are about saving she says it "doesn't have to be a negative thing, if you do it the right way"."We are doing it in a way that is listening to and responding to people in this city," she confirms no decisions have yet been made, adding she will participate in meetings at the venues affected where she will answer people's community centres in Leicester have already been handed over to community groups to run including the Highfields Centre in 2010 and African-Caribbean Centre in consultation on these latest proposals will finish on 29 June.

Helicopter crash horror as aircraft slams into mountainside killing six
Helicopter crash horror as aircraft slams into mountainside killing six

Daily Mirror

time08-05-2025

  • Daily Mirror

Helicopter crash horror as aircraft slams into mountainside killing six

A helicopter carrying passengers to a pilgrimage site in India has crashed in the Uttarkashi district of Uttarakhand killing six people on board including the pilot, with one other person injured Six passengers have been killed after a helicopter carrying people to a pilgrimage site crashed into a mountainside. The aircraft was travelling on the Gangotri route in Uttarkashi district of Uttarakhand, India, when it came down in a forested area near Gangnani on Thursday morning. It has now been confirmed that six people on board including the pilot Captain Robin Singh have tragically been killed while another person has been injured. Eyewitnesses said the helicopter collided with a tree, prompting locals to begin sifting through the wreckage in an effort to assist any potential survivors. The crash site is located 200-250 meters down a gorge on a hillside near a village. ‌ ‌ Locals quickly arrived on the scene before rescue teams could reach the crash site in difficult terrain. The chopper had departed from Sahastradhara helipad and was en route to Kharsali when it crashed with four males and two females on board as well as the pilot. It is understood the passengers were pilgrims visiting the Char Dham, a set of four Hindu pilgrimage sites in India. The helicopter, operated by Aero Trans Service Pvt, crashed at around 8.40am near to Ganganani Nagraja Temple. Four of the passengers were from Mumbai and the other two from Andhra Pradesh, according to local reports. Uttarakhand Chief Minister Pushkar Singh Dhami said the State Disaster Response Force and district administration teams had arrived at the scene to provide relief and conduct rescue operations. "Very sad news has been received about some people getting injured in a helicopter crash near Gangaani in Uttarkashi. SDRF and district administration teams have immediately reached the spot for relief and rescue work," Mr Dhami said in a post on X. "May God grant peace to the souls of those who died in the accident and give strength to the bereaved families to bear this immense loss. "I have instructed the administration to provide all possible help to the injured and investigate the accident. I am constantly in touch with the officials in this regard and every situation is being monitored." ‌ And in a later post he wrote: "It is our top priority to make the journey of every devotee coming for Chardham Yatra safe, smooth and memorable. "We are improving the arrangements related to the Yatra every year, this is the reason why the number of devotees is setting new records every year." The exact cause of the crash is still under investigation. The District Magistrate of Uttarkashi is en route to the crash site to assess the situation. The survivors, three women, a child and the pilot, were found by local fishermen after it crashed into the Amazonas region of Bolivia. Officials launched a rescue operation on Thursday after the plane vanished off radars in central Bolivia.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store