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Mixed messages, mismanagement, mess: Who's responsible for stampede at RCB event?
Mixed messages, mismanagement, mess: Who's responsible for stampede at RCB event?

India Today

time13 hours ago

  • Sport
  • India Today

Mixed messages, mismanagement, mess: Who's responsible for stampede at RCB event?

The road outside Chinnaswamy Stadium turned chaotic on Thursday as an unprecedented crowd gathered for a felicitation event of Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) after their historic IPL win. Over 2 lakh RCB fans turned up to celebrate at a venue that could only host 30,000 people. What followed was a deadly stampede that exposing glaring lapses, confusion, and a complete breakdown in coordination between the franchise, local authorities, and event the players were being felicitated inside, complete chaos unfolded on the road and 11 people lost their lives while another 47 were injured. Despite the tragedy just outside, the felicitation ceremony continued, drawing criticism over what many called gross the state government announced a magisterial inquiry and asked the panel to submit a report within 15 days. A solatium of Rs 10 lakh has been announced for families of the deceased by the state government. But the bigger question remains - why was this not planned properly? Why did the event continue despite the chaos unfolding outside? Who is responsible?FREE PASSES Initially, passes were issued for the event. But few had managed to get passes and after it was announced that everyone would be allowed inside, there was a huge rush once the gates were OR NO PARADE?advertisementOriginally, an open-top bus parade was planned to run from Vidhana Soudha to Chinnaswamy Stadium. But around 1 PM, officials announced the parade had been cancelled due to traffic congestion. Instead, the team would meet Chief Minister Siddaramaiah at Vidhana Soudha and proceed directly to the this, RCB's official X (formerly Twitter) account continued to promote a 'Victory Parade,' encouraging fans to gather in large numbers. At 3:14 PM, the account posted:At 3:14 pm, RCB shared a tweet, "RCB Victory Parade: Today at 5 pm IST. Victory Parade will be followed by celebrations at the Chinnaswamy stadium. We request all fans to follow guidelines set by police and other authorities, so that everyone can enjoy the roadshow peacefully." The revised advisory also said that entry to the venue will be restricted to those with valid passesThe RCB, however, also shared a link to free result? Massive crowds gathered in anticipation of a grand celebration. With no barricades or real crowd management in place, the scene turned into a logistical nightmare. Eyewitnesses described a near-stampede outside the stadium gates, with children and elderly fans struggling to stay on their feet in the 2 AMBULANCESadvertisementVisuals showed police shifting injured and unconscious people to a nearby hospital. Besides those dead and injured, many who came to watch the celebrations Naz, Consulting Editor – Sports, who was at the stadium said people started pushing into the crowd, trying to move either to the left or the right side of the stadium. In the melee, young people-mostly girls and some teenage boys-got trampled upon. There were no security personnel in this area. Security had restricted themselves to only the said because there were only two ambulances inside, some weren't lucky enough to get one."Those who didn't get an ambulance were carried in the arms by security personnel. These security people ran towards the main road to find cars to take these unconscious people to the nearby hospital. Because the roads immediately outside the stadium were blocked by crowds, unconscious people had to be carried for 500 metres to reach a point where regular traffic was flowing," he PLANNINGKarnataka Minister Priyank Kharge admitted that the event could have been planned has owned up responsibility. This could have been avoided with better planning and coordination. We did what best we could we couldn't manage crowd," he cops present at the site failed to control the crowd and a mismanagement was clearly visible. Politicians turned the celebration into a photo-op frenzy and many even brought their families to Vidhana Soudha to pose with the ATTENDS EVENT DESPITE CHAOSWhat raised further eyebrows was the presence of Karnataka's Deputy Chief Minister DK Shivakumar, who not only attended the felicitation event at the stadium but also brushed off concerns later.'It was just a 10-minute event,' he told reporters, offering a feeble justification in the wake of the chaos.'I went to the stadium and gave them a direction and requested that the programme should be closed within 10 minutes. The RCB team also agreed. We requested Virat Kohli also to just go. For courtesy sake, to show that they handed over the gift to Karnataka, they gave the cup to me and we closed the event,'BCCI WASHES ITS HANDS OFFAdding to the mess, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) issued a statement saying it had 'no role' in the event and cited 'local lapses' for the secretary Devajit Saikia said, "I think there were some lapses. The BCCI has no role in it."IPL Chairman Arun Dhumal told India Today, "For the BCCI, the IPL concluded last night. We had no knowledge of such an incident occurring, so how can we be held responsible for it?"He added, "How can we be held responsible for something like this? It is indeed a very tragic incident, and we extend our deepest condolences. But we cannot be held accountable for something over which we had no control."'RCB WANTED EVENT'Karnataka Home Minister G Parameshwar on Thursday said RCB and the Karnataka State Cricket Association (KSCA) wanted to do this ceremony."It is not us. We didn't make any request regarding the celebration to RCB and KSCA. They organised this. We felt that the government should felicitate. Just because it was a Bengaluru team, we felt that we should be a part of the celebration. That's all. We didn't ask that we would do this but it's RCB and KSCA who brought the team to Bengaluru for celebrations," he said while speaking to questions mount over accountability, many are now asking whether a cricketing celebration was worth the risk to public InMust Watch

This Five-Star Salmon Recipe Is Kind of a Big Dill
This Five-Star Salmon Recipe Is Kind of a Big Dill

New York Times

timea day ago

  • Health
  • New York Times

This Five-Star Salmon Recipe Is Kind of a Big Dill

I spent the weekend thinking about my herb garden. How much deck space do I give the cilantro? Where might the verbena and the borage really thrive? Thai basil: Big pot or medium one? These springtime real estate deals beget the pestos and relishes, the salads and salsas, and the tisanes, tinctures and fragrant, leafy green garlands that will enliven my cooking all summer long. One plant that I'm really feeling this season is dill. I love throwing feathery fistfuls of it into anything that could use some freshness. I'm nuts about it even when it goes to seed, adding the crowns to pots of shrimp, mussels and clams. And I know I'll be using an overflowing cup of it to make Naz Deravian's baked salmon and dill rice. The dill-flecked rice is baked until most of the water is absorbed. Then salmon fillets, smeared with a honey-turmeric glaze, are set on top and everything is returned to the oven, until the salmon is tender and silky and the rice fluffy and fragrant. Although Naz doesn't call for it in so many words, squeezing the juice from the zested lemon over the fish at the end is a bright complement to the herbaceous earthiness. For me this year, like every year, it's herb girl summer. Featured Recipe View Recipe → Shami kebab: 'The Rolls-Royce of Desi kebabs,' these traditional beef-and-chickpea patties have crispy shells that hide a soft, richly spiced interior. Zainab Shah's exquisite version is perfect to make in advance — you can freeze the uncooked patties, then slip them, still frozen, into your hot pan. Make a big batch for Eid al-Adha, which starts tomorrow evening, and celebrate in style. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Kara Young, already on a Broadway streak, could make Tony history with her role in 'Purpose'

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment

Kara Young, already on a Broadway streak, could make Tony history with her role in 'Purpose'

NEW YORK -- Don't bother asking Kara Young which one of her roles is her favorite. They're all her favorite. 'Every single time I'm doing a show, I feel like it is the most important thing on the planet,' she says. 'I don't have a favorite. It's like this: Every, every single project has held its own weight.' Right now, the weighty project on her mind is Broadway's celebrated 'Purpose,' Branden Jacobs-Jenkins' drawing-room drama at the Helen Hayes Theater about an accomplished Black family revealing its hypocrisy and fault lines during a snowed-in gathering. 'There's so much in this play,' says Young, who plays an outsider who witnesses the implosion. 'Like a lot of the great writers, he creates these universes in a line or the space between the words.' 'Purpose' is set in the Jasper family's living room in an upper-middle-class neighborhood in Chicago. The patriarch is Pastor Solomon Jasper, a Civil Rights legend, and his steely wife, Claudine. They are reuniting with their two sons — Junior, a disgraced former state senator, recently released after serving a prison sentence for embezzling funds, and Naz, who fled divinity school and is now a nature photographer. Young plays Aziza, a Harlem-bred social worker who has been close friends with Naz but didn't know anything about his family. 'This kind of thing never happens to me! I never meet famous people and you've been famous this whole time?' she screams. Her awe quickly fades as sibling jealousies, parental frustrations, past sins and the pressures of legacy come tumbling out over a fraught dinner. There is some slapping. 'We are so susceptible to get angry with the people we love the most,' says Young. 'What we're seeing in the less than 12 hours of them being together for the first time in two years, they're sitting down and having dinner, and all of these things come up, as they often do.' Young's work has earned her a Tony Award nomination and a chance to make history. Already the first Black person to be nominated four times consecutively, if she wins, she'll be the first Black performer to win two Tonys in a row. Young made her Broadway debut in 2021 in 'Clyde's,' was in 'Cost of Living' the next year and co-starred opposite Leslie Odom Jr. in 2024's 'Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch,' winning a Tony. Jacobs-Jenkins calls Aziz in his script a 'deeply perceptive person and empathetic' and that could also apply to Young, She says she closely identifies with her character in 'Purpose,' — they're both Harlem-bred advocates for others, hoping to make the planet better. 'I feel connected to that core of her,' says Young. 'Every single play I've done since my 10-minute play festivals, I'm always like, 'Wow, this feels like this can change the world,' you know? And I feel like at the core of Aziza, that's how she feels. She wants to change the world.' 'Purpose,' directed by Phylicia Rashad, also stars LaTanya Richardson Jackson, Harry Lennix, Jon Michael Hill, Alana Arenas and Glenn Davis. Hill, who as Naz also earned a Tony nomination for best lead male actor in a play, calls Young 'the heart and joy of our little family over there at the Helen Hayes.' 'She enters the building and she just makes time for everyone and is genuinely excited to see people and hear about how they're doing,' he says. 'I've really never seen anyone have as much room in their consciousness and their being for everyone she encounters. She approaches every day with joy and curiosity and enthusiasm.' If there's one story that shows who Young is, it would be from the day of the Met Gala, which she and cast members of 'Purpose' were invited, along with its playwright. That same day, Jacobs-Jenkins won the Pulitzer Prize for drama. Young found out while getting her makeup done and began screaming. When she got to the gala — a look-at-me moment, if there ever was one — she was a walking advertisement for the play. 'I told everybody, 'You have to come and see this play. He just won a Pulitzer!'' Hill was right behind her and smiling as Young made connections and introductions. 'She was just going up to everyone and introducing us and talking about our show and trying to get folks in the door.' Young made her 2016 stage debut in Patricia Ione Lloyd's play 'Pretty Hunger' at the Public Theater, a play about a 7-year-old Black girl who didn't know she was Black. The playwright told her she wrote it with Young in mind. 'Ione Lloyd is one of the people who really made me see myself as an artist,' she says. 'She's the one that kind of set a path for me in a really beautiful way.' Next up for Young is the movie 'Is God Is,' which playwright Aleshea Harris is directing from her own 2018 stage play. Sterling K. Brown, Vivica A. Fox and Janelle Monáe are in the cast. Young calls it 'a spaghetti Western-meets-Tarantino-meets-the Greeks.' Next summer on Broadway, she'll star in a revival of 'The Whoopi Monologues' opposite Kerry Washington. After that, who knows? 'I don't know what's next, but I can't wait, whatever that is,' she says. 'If something comes along, it's about jumping into the next thing. If there's life in me, I got to live it.'

Kara Young, already on a Broadway streak, could make Tony history with her role in 'Purpose'
Kara Young, already on a Broadway streak, could make Tony history with her role in 'Purpose'

San Francisco Chronicle​

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Kara Young, already on a Broadway streak, could make Tony history with her role in 'Purpose'

NEW YORK (AP) — Don't bother asking Kara Young which one of her roles is her favorite. They're all her favorite. 'Every single time I'm doing a show, I feel like it is the most important thing on the planet,' she says. 'I don't have a favorite. It's like this: Every, every single project has held its own weight.' Right now, the weighty project on her mind is Broadway's celebrated 'Purpose,' Branden Jacobs-Jenkins' drawing-room drama at the Helen Hayes Theater about an accomplished Black family revealing its hypocrisy and fault lines during a snowed-in gathering. 'There's so much in this play,' says Young, who plays an outsider who witnesses the implosion. 'Like a lot of the great writers, he creates these universes in a line or the space between the words.' A tense family gathering 'Purpose' is set in the Jasper family's living room in an upper-middle-class neighborhood in Chicago. The patriarch is Pastor Solomon Jasper, a Civil Rights legend, and his steely wife, Claudine. They are reuniting with their two sons — Junior, a disgraced former state senator, recently released after serving a prison sentence for embezzling funds, and Naz, who fled divinity school and is now a nature photographer. Young plays Aziza, a Harlem-bred social worker who has been close friends with Naz but didn't know anything about his family. 'This kind of thing never happens to me! I never meet famous people and you've been famous this whole time?' she screams. Her awe quickly fades as sibling jealousies, parental frustrations, past sins and the pressures of legacy come tumbling out over a fraught dinner. There is some slapping. 'We are so susceptible to get angry with the people we love the most,' says Young. 'What we're seeing in the less than 12 hours of them being together for the first time in two years, they're sitting down and having dinner, and all of these things come up, as they often do.' Young poised to make history Young's work has earned her a Tony Award nomination and a chance to make history. Already the first Black person to be nominated four times consecutively, if she wins, she'll be the first Black performer to win two Tonys in a row. Young made her Broadway debut in 2021 in 'Clyde's,' was in 'Cost of Living' the next year and co-starred opposite Leslie Odom Jr. in 2024's 'Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch,' winning a Tony. Jacobs-Jenkins calls Aziz in his script a 'deeply perceptive person and empathetic' and that could also apply to Young, She says she closely identifies with her character in 'Purpose,' — they're both Harlem-bred advocates for others, hoping to make the planet better. 'I feel connected to that core of her,' says Young. 'Every single play I've done since my 10-minute play festivals, I'm always like, 'Wow, this feels like this can change the world,' you know? And I feel like at the core of Aziza, that's how she feels. She wants to change the world.' 'Purpose,' directed by Phylicia Rashad, also stars LaTanya Richardson Jackson, Harry Lennix, Jon Michael Hill, Alana Arenas and Glenn Davis. 'Joy and curiosity and enthusiasm' Hill, who as Naz also earned a Tony nomination for best lead male actor in a play, calls Young 'the heart and joy of our little family over there at the Helen Hayes.' 'She enters the building and she just makes time for everyone and is genuinely excited to see people and hear about how they're doing,' he says. 'I've really never seen anyone have as much room in their consciousness and their being for everyone she encounters. She approaches every day with joy and curiosity and enthusiasm.' If there's one story that shows who Young is, it would be from the day of the Met Gala, which she and cast members of 'Purpose' were invited, along with its playwright. That same day, Jacobs-Jenkins won the Pulitzer Prize for drama. Young found out while getting her makeup done and began screaming. When she got to the gala — a look-at-me moment, if there ever was one — she was a walking advertisement for the play. 'I told everybody, 'You have to come and see this play. He just won a Pulitzer!'' Hill was right behind her and smiling as Young made connections and introductions. 'She was just going up to everyone and introducing us and talking about our show and trying to get folks in the door.' Young made her 2016 stage debut in Patricia Ione Lloyd's play 'Pretty Hunger' at the Public Theater, a play about a 7-year-old Black girl who didn't know she was Black. The playwright told her she wrote it with Young in mind. 'Ione Lloyd is one of the people who really made me see myself as an artist,' she says. 'She's the one that kind of set a path for me in a really beautiful way.' Next up for Young is the movie 'Is God Is,' which playwright Aleshea Harris is directing from her own 2018 stage play. Sterling K. Brown, Vivica A. Fox and Janelle Monáe are in the cast. Young calls it 'a spaghetti Western-meets-Tarantino-meets-the Greeks.' Next summer on Broadway, she'll star in a revival of 'The Whoopi Monologues' opposite Kerry Washington. After that, who knows? 'I don't know what's next, but I can't wait, whatever that is,' she says. 'If something comes along, it's about jumping into the next thing. If there's life in me, I got to live it.'

Kara Young, already on a Broadway streak, could make Tony history with her role in ‘Purpose'
Kara Young, already on a Broadway streak, could make Tony history with her role in ‘Purpose'

Winnipeg Free Press

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Winnipeg Free Press

Kara Young, already on a Broadway streak, could make Tony history with her role in ‘Purpose'

NEW YORK (AP) — Don't bother asking Kara Young which one of her roles is her favorite. They're all her favorite. 'Every single time I'm doing a show, I feel like it is the most important thing on the planet,' she says. 'I don't have a favorite. It's like this: Every, every single project has held its own weight.' Right now, the weighty project on her mind is Broadway's celebrated 'Purpose,' Branden Jacobs-Jenkins' drawing-room drama at the Helen Hayes Theater about an accomplished Black family revealing its hypocrisy and fault lines during a snowed-in gathering. 'There's so much in this play,' says Young, who plays an outsider who witnesses the implosion. 'Like a lot of the great writers, he creates these universes in a line or the space between the words.' A tense family gathering 'Purpose' is set in the Jasper family's living room in an upper-middle-class neighborhood in Chicago. The patriarch is Pastor Solomon Jasper, a Civil Rights legend, and his steely wife, Claudine. They are reuniting with their two sons — Junior, a disgraced former state senator, recently released after serving a prison sentence for embezzling funds, and Naz, who fled divinity school and is now a nature photographer. Young plays Aziza, a Harlem-bred social worker who has been close friends with Naz but didn't know anything about his family. 'This kind of thing never happens to me! I never meet famous people and you've been famous this whole time?' she screams. Her awe quickly fades as sibling jealousies, parental frustrations, past sins and the pressures of legacy come tumbling out over a fraught dinner. There is some slapping. 'We are so susceptible to get angry with the people we love the most,' says Young. 'What we're seeing in the less than 12 hours of them being together for the first time in two years, they're sitting down and having dinner, and all of these things come up, as they often do.' Young poised to make history Young's work has earned her a Tony Award nomination and a chance to make history. Already the first Black person to be nominated four times consecutively, if she wins, she'll be the first Black performer to win two Tonys in a row. Young made her Broadway debut in 2021 in 'Clyde's,' was in 'Cost of Living' the next year and co-starred opposite Leslie Odom Jr. in 2024's 'Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch,' winning a Tony. Jacobs-Jenkins calls Aziz in his script a 'deeply perceptive person and empathetic' and that could also apply to Young, She says she closely identifies with her character in 'Purpose,' — they're both Harlem-bred advocates for others, hoping to make the planet better. 'I feel connected to that core of her,' says Young. 'Every single play I've done since my 10-minute play festivals, I'm always like, 'Wow, this feels like this can change the world,' you know? And I feel like at the core of Aziza, that's how she feels. She wants to change the world.' 'Purpose,' directed by Phylicia Rashad, also stars LaTanya Richardson Jackson, Harry Lennix, Jon Michael Hill, Alana Arenas and Glenn Davis. 'Joy and curiosity and enthusiasm' Hill, who as Naz also earned a Tony nomination for best lead male actor in a play, calls Young 'the heart and joy of our little family over there at the Helen Hayes.' 'She enters the building and she just makes time for everyone and is genuinely excited to see people and hear about how they're doing,' he says. 'I've really never seen anyone have as much room in their consciousness and their being for everyone she encounters. She approaches every day with joy and curiosity and enthusiasm.' If there's one story that shows who Young is, it would be from the day of the Met Gala, which she and cast members of 'Purpose' were invited, along with its playwright. That same day, Jacobs-Jenkins won the Pulitzer Prize for drama. Young found out while getting her makeup done and began screaming. When she got to the gala — a look-at-me moment, if there ever was one — she was a walking advertisement for the play. 'I told everybody, 'You have to come and see this play. He just won a Pulitzer!'' Hill was right behind her and smiling as Young made connections and introductions. 'She was just going up to everyone and introducing us and talking about our show and trying to get folks in the door.' Young made her 2016 stage debut in Patricia Ione Lloyd's play 'Pretty Hunger' at the Public Theater, a play about a 7-year-old Black girl who didn't know she was Black. The playwright told her she wrote it with Young in mind. Weekly A weekly look at what's happening in Winnipeg's arts and entertainment scene. 'Ione Lloyd is one of the people who really made me see myself as an artist,' she says. 'She's the one that kind of set a path for me in a really beautiful way.' Next up for Young is the movie 'Is God Is,' which playwright Aleshea Harris is directing from her own 2018 stage play. Sterling K. Brown, Vivica A. Fox and Janelle Monáe are in the cast. Young calls it 'a spaghetti Western-meets-Tarantino-meets-the Greeks.' Next summer on Broadway, she'll star in a revival of 'The Whoopi Monologues' opposite Kerry Washington. After that, who knows? 'I don't know what's next, but I can't wait, whatever that is,' she says. 'If something comes along, it's about jumping into the next thing. If there's life in me, I got to live it.' ___ For more coverage of the 2025 Tony Awards, visit:

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