27 crushed to death in India stampede

Indian devotees gather after a stampede at a religious festival in Godavari in the Rajahmundry district some 200 kilometres north-east of Hyderabad on July 14, 2015. AFP PHOTO

What you need to know:

  • Festival sees thousands of people bathe in the Godavari river.
  • Crowd apparently grew angry at being made to wait and started pushing.

GODAVARI, India

A stampede on the banks of a holy river killed at least 27 pilgrims on Tuesday in southern India in a tragic beginning to a religious festival season.

The stampede in Rajahmundry, on the border of the twin states of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, erupted about two hours after the dawn start of the Maha Pushkaralu festival which sees thousands of people bathe in the Godavari river.

“Twenty-seven people have now been confirmed dead in the stampede and another 29 are injured,” Parakala Prabhakar, a spokesman for Andhra Pradesh’s Chief Minister Chandrababu Naidu, told AFP.

District official H. Arun Kumar put the number of injured at 40 while confirming that 27 people had died.

While the identities of all the victims had yet to become clear, police and other officials said most of the victims were women and included a 15-year-old girl. Images broadcast on television showed tearful relatives grieving over lines of bodies on the river bank.

Rescuers wearing life jackets could also be seen trying to haul lifeless bodies into their inflatable rafts which were patrolling the river.

A. Srinivasan Rao, a deputy superintendent of police in Andhra Pradesh, said the disaster happened when crowds built up around one set of steps leading to the water, known as ghats.

“The first set of worshippers were coming out of the river after taking a dip and then got in the way of others who wanted to be in the water at an auspicious time,” Rao told AFP.

However Satyamurthy Chebolu, a volunteer for an organisation that helps run the festival, said the stampede happened when authorities sealed off a bathing ghat meant for the public in order to allow VIPs privacy.

The crowd apparently grew angry at being made to wait, and started pushing past the barriers.

“The problem was that they let VIPs go into the water while keeping the public at bay, so eventually the public got angry and demanded they be allowed to enter the ghat too,” Chebolu told AFP from the scene.

“Some people started pushing from the back of the crowd, and that turned into a stampede where people got trampled. The police tried to stop them but the crowd easily pushed the police away. “The crowd was huge — there were maybe 20,000 people in the area, and maybe 3,000 people in the stampede.”