HYDERABAD, India (AP) — At least 27 people were killed and dozens
injured Tuesday in a stampede during a Hindu religious bathing festival
on a river bank in southern India.
The stampede occurred in Andhra
Pradesh state as tens of thousands of people pushed forward to bathe in
the Godavari River on the first day of the Pushkaralu festival, said
Arun Kumar, a state administrator.
The stampede was triggered by
some pilgrims who were trying to retrieve their shoes, which had fallen
off in the rush to the river bank, police said.
Kumar said the
incident, which occurred in the town of Rajahmundry, happened not long
after the 12-day bathing festival started in the early morning hours.
Andhra Pradesh's chief minister, Chandrababu Naidu, said 27 people had died in the stampede.
An additional 34 people were hospitalized with injuries, Kumar said.
Festival
participants believe a bath in the river can rid them of their sins,
and many believe it is more auspicious to bathe on the festival's first
day.
V. Satyanarayana, a pilgrim who was at the site, said the stampede lasted nearly 20 minutes.
"It
was a frightening situation, with women and children crying for help,"
he said. "The policemen on duty were helpless and it took more than an
hour to bring the situation under control."
With the bodies of victims lying around, relatives wailed and cried for help.
Some pilgrims said ambulances took time to reach the site because the roads were overcrowded with people.
Officials
said that a small place like Rajahmundry could not cope with the rush
of hundreds of thousands of people, and that the situation became almost
unmanageable.
Thousands of pilgrims, riding in buses, trains and
other vehicles, started reaching the pilgrimage center two days ahead of
the start of the festival.
"There is a false belief that taking a
holy dip in the river on the first day of the festival will be more
auspicious," said Swamy Swaroopanand, a Hindu holy man. "It's the same
as taking dip on any other day."
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi expressed grief over the tragedy, tweeting that he was "deeply pained" by it.
Rajahmundry
is 450 kilometers (280 miles) east of Hyderabad, the joint capital of
Andhra Pradesh and newly created Telangana state.
About 24 million
people are expected to take part in the festival at varying points
along the Godavari River, which flows through the two states.
Deadly
stampedes are fairly common during Indian religious festivals, where
large crowds gather in small areas with few safety or crowd control
measures.
In October 2013, a stampede in Madhya Pradesh state in central India killed more than 110 people, mostly women and children.

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