assam  

[Assam] How DOES India Feel About This?

Chan Mahanta
Mon, 12 Apr 2004 15:17:13 -0700

FROM the NY TIMES

Agence France-Presse
Relatives of Indians killed in a stampede are overcome with grief in
Lucknow, India.

India Birthday Stampede for Saris Kills 21
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Published: April 12, 2004

Filed at 3:33 p.m. ET

LUCKNOW, India (AP) -- Thousands of people crowding into a park for a
politician's birthday celebration and to receive free saris stampeded
Monday, killing 21 women and children, officials said.

The stampede came two weeks ahead of parliamentary elections in Lucknow,
the capital of India's politically crucial Uttar Pradesh state and the
constituency of Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee, who was headed to the
city after the stampede.
Advertisement


The confirmed death toll stood at 21, said Lucknow's senior police
superintendent, Rajiv Ranjan Verma. Doctors said 28 others were injured.

Thousands of people, mostly women, had gathered under a huge white canopy
to celebrate the birthday of Lalji Tandon, the state's opposition leader --
and to receive saris being given to poor women.

But opposition parties sought to make it a political issue. The main
opposition Congress party said the distribution of saris amounted to luring
voters and a violation of the code of conduct set by the Election
Commission. The party demanded the Election Commission investigate the
incident.

Chief Election Commissioner T.S. Krishnamurthy told reporters in New Delhi
that his officials were collecting information about the incident. Tandon
said the function was organized by a group of his supporters, and that
neither he, or his party, was directly involved.

Indian politicians commonly give away food, liquor, blankets and other
gifts at election time to attract crowds and win votes.

``We came with the hope that we would hear his speech. He celebrated his
birthday and gave us death,'' Ketaki Devi, who ran out of the park to save
herself, told reporters. ``I saw several women fall down. They didn't get
up.''

The dead included eight women aged 45 to 60, and seven young girls who had
lined up to receive saris, said Dr. Lalit Saxena, one of the doctors who
took the bodies to three city hospitals.

The stampede began when rumors spread through the crowd that there were no
more saris to be given away.

``We tried to stop the distribution but before we could, everything went
haywire and old women were trampled to death,'' said Brijendra Yadav, one
of the organizers.

After the chaos, hundreds of sandals were strewn across the park and chairs
were overturned. Thousands of saris still waiting to be given away lay near
the stage in bundles.

``There were mostly old ladies from poor families who had come to get
saris,'' said Renuka Sharma, who was in a bookstore across the road when
the stampede began.

In the hours after the stampede, bodies were stacked atop each either on
the floor of a small ambulance. There were no stretchers, and no hospital
workers accompanied the bodies.

Indian television showed relatives of the dead wailing as they stepped into
the ambulance one by one, turning over the faces and the lifeless limbs to
find their kin. A woman in a red sari shrieked hysterically as she looked
around, scrambled among the dead, and found the body of her daughter.

``We were not given prior information of the event. It is the
responsibility of the organizers to inform the police,'' said Verma, the
police superintendent. ``There will be an inquiry against them for
carelessness, resulting in the deaths of so many people.''


_______________________________________________
Assam mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://pikespeak.uccs.edu/mailman/listinfo/assam

Mailing list FAQ:
http://pikespeak.uccs.edu/assam/assam-faq.html
To unsubscribe or change options:
http://pikespeak.uccs.edu/mailman/options/assam