More than seven people—and possibly as many as 15—have been killed and many more injured in a crowd crush at the world’s largest religious festival in northern India, according to reports.
Witnesses counted several bodies, and a doctor at the festival site in the city of Prayagraj in Uttar Pradesh confirmed that 15 people were killed in the crush near a river bank early on Wednesday morning.
Footage of rescue teams carrying victims away from the religious site showed clothes, shoes, and other discarded belongings strewn all over the ground as police officers carried stretchers bearing the bodies of victims draped with blankets to waiting ambulances.
The final death toll is yet to be confirmed, and relatives of injured victims were anxiously waiting for news outside a large tent serving as a purpose-built hospital for the festival, approximately a kilometre (half a mile) from the accident site. The Mahakumbh Mela, or Great Pitcher Festival, is the single biggest milestone on the Hindu religious calendar, and up to 400 million pilgrims were expected to visit before the festival’s final day on February 26.
The festival is being held on a 10,000-acre site where makeshift tents have been constructed to accommodate pilgrims. Wednesday marks one of the holiest days in the six-week festival, with holy men due to lead pilgrims in a procession of sin-cleansing bathing at the confluence of the Ganges and Yamuna rivers in Prayagraj.
Officials with loudhailers had urged pilgrims to keep away from the water as the crush started in the early hours of Wednesday morning.
Held every 12 years in four locations—Prayagraj, Haridwar, Nashik, and Ujjain—Hindus believe the festival is an opportunity for them to wash their sins away as they gather on the banks of sacred rivers to take part in a day of ritual bathing.
Deadly crowd crushes regularly occur at Indian religious festivals, and the Mahakumbh—often called simply the Kumbh—brings a grim track record for deadly incidents.
More than 400 people died on a single day of the festival in 1954 after being trampled or drowned, in what remains one of the deadliest incidents of its kind.
Another 36 people were crushed to death in 2013—the last time the festival was staged in Prayagraj.
Police this year had installed hundreds of cameras at the festival site and on roads leading to the encampment, with a control centre meant to alert staff if sections of the crowd became too dense and posed a safety threat.