Opening summary
Hello and welcome to the Guardian’s live coverage of deadly crowd crushes at India’s Kumbh Mela festival.
At least 38 people and as many as 100 are feared to have died in crushes in the early hours of Wednesday, local officials have said, as people went to bathe in a river as part of a Hindu ritual.
People were crushed at about 4am on Wednesday as people surged forward in three separate areas at the confluence of the rivers in the city of Prayagraj which is the holiest place to bathe.
The scale of the tragedy is still unclear but we will bring you the latest news as we have it.
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This year’s celebration is particularly significant as the Maha or grand Kumbh Mela only takes places every 144 years, marking the 12th Kumbh Mela and a special celestial alignment of the sun, moon and Jupiter.
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More than 400 million people, the biggest crowd in its history, were expected to attend this year’s festivities, to be held over 45 days in Prayagraj in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh.
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Prayagraj is considered particularly holy to Hindus because it is home to Triveni Sangam, the sacred confluence of the Ganges, Yamuna and mythical Saraswati rivers. Over the course of the gathering, there are several shahi san, holy bathing days when the devotees immerse themselves in the waters in the belief it will purify the soul.
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Hello and welcome to the Guardian’s live coverage of deadly crowd crushes at India’s Kumbh Mela festival.
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At least 38 people and as many as 100 are feared to have died in crushes in the early hours of Wednesday, local officials have said, as people went to bathe in a river as part of a Hindu ritual.
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People were crushed at about 4am on Wednesday as people surged forward in three separate areas at the confluence of the rivers in the city of Prayagraj which is the holiest place to bathe.
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The scale of the tragedy is still unclear but we will bring you the latest news as we have it.
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Key events
Some more pics from the scene:
What is the Kumbh Mela?
Hannah Ellis-Petersen
The Kumbh Mela pilgrimage takes place every 12 years and is widely seen as the “festival of festivals” in the Hindu religious calendar in India, attended by a vibrant mix of sadhus or holy men, ascetics, pilgrims and tourists.
This year’s celebration is particularly significant as the Maha or grand Kumbh Mela only takes places every 144 years, marking the 12th Kumbh Mela and a special celestial alignment of the sun, moon and Jupiter.
More than 400 million people, the biggest crowd in its history, were expected to attend this year’s festivities, to be held over 45 days in Prayagraj in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh.
Prayagraj is considered particularly holy to Hindus because it is home to Triveni Sangam, the sacred confluence of the Ganges, Yamuna and mythical Saraswati rivers. Over the course of the gathering, there are several shahi san, holy bathing days when the devotees immerse themselves in the waters in the belief it will purify the soul.
Hannah Ellis-Petersen
Wednesday is when the sadhus (holy people), all 13 sects of them, take their holy baths in the Ganges.
The holy bathing time is at 4am and that is around the time that the crowd crushes are thought to have started. It appears three separate crushes took place, as people surged forward, into groups of people who were sitting or lying on the ground on the banks of the river.
Hannah Ellis-Petersen
One paramilitary officer at the scene said: “there were multiple stampedes. there were at least 200 injured and I’d say around 50 dead. I saw them with my own eyes”
The government is still not giving official figures.
One doctor has told the news agency AFP at least 15 people are so far known to have been killed in the crowd crushes.
“At least 15 people have died for now. Others are being treated,” said the doctor in Prayagraj city, speaking on condition of anonymity as they were not authorised to talk to media.
Other local officials have said the death toll is even higher. We’ll bring you more updates when we have them.
Hannah Ellis-Petersen
There is now a very heavy police and paramilitary presence but the crowds here are still very thick.
There are shoes and clothes all over the floor at the scene where the crowd crush happened.
Akharas, the holy sects of sadhus (holy people), have officially cancelled their bathing today which was due to start around 4am:
Hannah Ellis-Petersen
The government was making announcements on Tuesday night telling people to get in the water, dip twice and leave the site instantly, calling it a sin to do the third dip because they wanted to get people away from the site so quickly.
Hannah Ellis-Petersen
Despite word spreading of the crushes, large crowds are still heading towards the river to take a dip.
29 January is one of the holiest days of the Kumbh Mela. It’s the day when most people will come to take a holy bath.
Hundreds of millions of people had been expected to come but it seems numbers have exceeded even what the government expected. Over the past 24 hours people have been arriving non-stop.
Pictures are also beginning to emerge from the scene, showing ambulances and injured pilgrims being carried away by rescue workers:
The Times of India reports that ambulances have rushed to the scene in Prayagraj, home to the sacred confluence of the Ganges, Yamuna and mythical Saraswati rivers.
“Some people have got injured and have been hospitalised after a barrier broke at the Sangam [confluence]. We are yet to have the exact count of those injured,” one official was quoted by the paper as saying.
“We came in a batch of 60 people in two buses, we were nine people in the group. Suddenly there was pushing in the crowd, and we got trapped. A lot of us fell down and the crowd went uncontrolled,” one woman told PTI Videos from outside the hospital where the injured were taken.
“There was no chance for escape, there was pushing from all sides.
Opening summary
Hello and welcome to the Guardian’s live coverage of deadly crowd crushes at India’s Kumbh Mela festival.
At least 38 people and as many as 100 are feared to have died in crushes in the early hours of Wednesday, local officials have said, as people went to bathe in a river as part of a Hindu ritual.
People were crushed at about 4am on Wednesday as people surged forward in three separate areas at the confluence of the rivers in the city of Prayagraj which is the holiest place to bathe.
The scale of the tragedy is still unclear but we will bring you the latest news as we have it.