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Stampede kills 42
Indian flood survivors
MADRAS (India)—Thousands of flood victims
waiting in line for relief vouchers Sunday
stampeded into a government-run distribution
center in southern India, killing at least 42
people and injuring 37, police said.
Nearly 3,000 people lined up before dawn along a
narrow street leading to a school where they
were to collect coupons for provisions, R.
Nataraj, the city’s police chief, told.
Police asked the crowd to leave, saying the
center would not open for hours, but the victims
demanded that the vouchers be distributed
immediately. When the school gates opened to let
in a vehicle, the crowd mistakenly assumed the
center had opened and surged forward, he said.
A stampede ensued, crushing those in the front,
mostly women. At least 11 policemen who tried to
control the crowd were among the injured. “We
had posted several policemen at all relief
centers expecting such commotion, but what
happened here was beyond the power of all,”
Nataraj said. A witness said people became
restless after waiting for hours and began to
rush forward after seeing some movement at the
head of the line. “Many jostled with each other
to get ahead, but nobody knew who started the
whole thing,” said S. Hameed, who lives nearby.
The government of Tamil Nadu state said in a
statement that it had asked a retired High Court
judge to head an inquiry into the cause of the
incident.
The flood victims, whose homes have been damaged
or destroyed by recent downpours, lined up to
collect coupons that would have helped them get
rice, kerosene and $22 in cash. The relief
center in a government-run school did not house
victims.
This was the second such incident in Madras, the
capital of Tamil Nadu state, in the past two
months. In November, six people were killed and
20 injured in another stampede near a relief
camp in a northern district.
At least 430 people have been killed in Tamil
Nadu and half a million left homeless by storms
that have pounded the state since late October.
The state receives most of its annual rainfall
from the northeast monsoon, which is often
accompanied by cyclonic activity in the Bay of
Bengal.—Agencies
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