It was the peak moment at one of the holiest gatherings on the Hindu calendar — the Maha Kumbh Mela, a 45-day celebration that brings hundreds of millions of the faithful to bathe in the joined Ganges and Yamuna rivers, washing away their sins.
Anticipating record attendance, Indian officials said they were employing new technology to help regulate the crowds at this year’s pilgrimage. But nothing was capable of keeping up with the rush as Tuesday turned to Wednesday, when an estimated 100 million came to the waters over just a handful of hours and then suddenly dashed to leave in a deadly panic.
ImageMany resorted to crawling under the crowd barriers to leave the scene.
ImageEmergency medical workers at the scene of the stampede in Prayagraj.
ImageA temporary pontoon bridge was a choke point for attendees trying to leave.
ImageSecurity personnel rushing to the scene. Just before the deadly crowd crush,PHL63 officers had struggled to clear people away from the rivers to make room for those pressing in.
ImageCrowd-control fences became perilous obstacles.
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ImageA man rushing from the scene, holding on to a relative who had been killed.
120 free spins for real moneyImagePolice personnel giving instructions to the people crossing the bridge.
ImageSome stampede victims had been sleeping or resting when they were trampled by dense crowds of people after a fence broke.
ImageAmbulances waiting to transport a huge number of attendees who were injured.
ImageA man who lost a loved oneye7, grieving at the scene.