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Downpour halts Sri Lanka Test as Australia tighten grip

Incessant afternoon rain forced an early end to day three of the first Test between Australia and Sri Lanka on Friday, with the visitors leading by 518 and former home skipper Dinesh Chandimal waging a lone battle on 63.Sri Lanka were 136-5 by lunch in Galle, with wicketkeeper Kusal Mendis also at the crease on 10, after losing two more wickets from their overnight 44-3.The break was called early and players were kept off the pitch through the afternoon, with officials calling an end 90 minutes before the scheduled finish.Kamindu Mendis departed for 15 after an edge to the keeper off Mitchell Starc, further denting the Bradman-like average he maintained at the start of his Test comeback last year. Captain Dhananjaya de Silva looked comfortable before rushing down the track to Matthew Kuhnemann and missing the ball completely, gifting Alex Carey a regulation stumping and leaving for 22.Left-arm speedster Starc expertly created rough patches outside the off stump, while Nathan Lyon relentlessly probed away from the other end. Chandimal, who was promoted to the crucial number three position last year and has since averaged over 50, stood firm despite the uphill battle to avoid the follow-on. Australia declared on 654-6 late on the second day after opener Usman Khawaja’s career-best 232.The opening day saw stand-in skipper Steve Smith join the elite club of 10,000 career Test run-makers, the fifteenth player and fourth Australian to reach the milestone.Picturesque Galle will also host the second and final match of the series next week before a two-match ODI series in Colombo. 

Chandimal wages lone battle as Australia tighten grip on first Test

Sri Lanka’s Dinesh Chandimal was waging a lone battle on 63 with Australia ahead by 518 runs and tightening their grip on the first Test before rain forced early lunch Friday.The hosts were 136-5 by the first break on day three in Galle with wicketkeeper Kusal Mendis also at the crease on 10 after losing two more wickets overnight. Kamindu Mendis departed for 15 after an edge to the keeper off Mitchell Starc, further denting the Bradman-like average he maintained at the start of his Test comeback last year. Captain Dhananjaya de Silva looked comfortable in his brief stay before rushing down the track to Matthew Kuhnemann and missing the ball completely, gifting Alex Carey a regulation stumping and leaving for 22.Left-arm speedster Starc expertly created rough patches outside the off-stump while Nathan Lyon relentlessly probed away from the other end. Chandimal, who was promoted to the crucial number three position last year and has averaged over 50 since, stood firm and bunkered in for an uphill battle in avoiding the follow-on. Australia declared on 654-6 late on the second day after opener Usman Khawaja’s career-best 232.The opening day saw stand-in skipper Steve Smith join the elite club of 10,000 career Test run-makers, the fifteenth player and fourth Aussie to the milestone.Picturesque Galle will also host the second and final match of the series next week before a two-match ODI series in Colombo. 

India’s Kohli flops on return to domestic cricket

Superstar Indian cricketer Virat Kohli flopped on his first domestic cricket match in more than a decade Friday to the dismay of thousands who turned out to see him play.International stars were ordered by India’s cricket board to return to domestic matches in a bid to lift their form following a soul-searching 3-1 series defeat in Australia.Kohli, 36, and other team titans have made regular appearances in the lucrative Indian Premier League (IPL), but this week marked his return to the Ranji Trophy — the country’s premier red-ball tournament — after a 12-year absence. He strode in to bat for home team Delhi on day two of their match against Railways to roars and chants of his name from the stands. After a circumspect start and a few play-and-misses on the off-side, Kohli drove fast bowler Himanshu Sangwan for a rasping straight drive to bring the crowd to its feet.But the joy was shortlived as the next ball went straight through his defence and the off-stump went cartwheeling with him on six. Dejected fans began making their way to the exit even as Kohli was walking back to the pavilion, and the stadium numbers soon dwindled from thousands to less than a few hundred.India skipper Rohit Sharma had also faltered on his return to Ranji cricket last week when he scored just three off 19 balls for Mumbai.Rohit and fellow opener Yashasvi Jaiswal opted out of this week’s match.Both Kohli and Rohit have faced severe scrutiny over their recent batting struggles in Australia, with questions raised on their future in Test cricket.Kohli scored an unbeaten century in the first Test but his other eight innings in the series produced just 90 runs in total.Rohit, 37, who missed the only India win of the series in the first Test because of the birth of his second child, managed 31 runs in three matches.India’s next Test assignment will be their tour to England for five matches starting in June.

Unfazed devotees shrug off stampede at India mega-festival

Throngs of devotees at the world’s biggest religious gathering bathed in Indian rivers on Thursday, undeterred by a stampede a day earlier that killed at least 30 people.The Kumbh Mela attracts tens of millions of Hindu faithful every 12 years to the northern city of Prayagraj, but has a record of deadly crowd incidents. Wednesday’s pre-dawn disaster, which saw a surging crowd spill out of a police cordon and trample bystanders, prompted some spooked pilgrims to leave the festival. But many more were still arriving in the stampede’s aftermath to participate in what they said was a matter of religious obligation.”We’ve obviously heard about the stampede,” said 21-year-old Naveen Pradhan, who arrived at the festival with his family hours after the disaster. “But this is a holy thing, a religious thing, something we should do as Hindus, and my family wouldn’t have missed this no matter what,” he told AFP.The six-week Kumbh Mela is the single biggest milestone on the Hindu religious calendar, and Wednesday marked one of the holiest days of the festival, coinciding with an alignment of the Solar System’s planets. Despite the early morning disaster, saffron-clad holy men continued with the day’s rituals, leading millions into a sin-cleansing dip by the confluence of the Ganges and Yamuna rivers.More than 10 million others immersed themselves in the waters between midnight and midday on Thursday, according to organisers.”The journey was challenging — the trains were packed, the train stations were packed,” pharmacist Padmabati Dam told AFP.”We were tired after such a long journey but as soon as we took a dip in the river we just felt so fresh and happy. It was as if all that inconvenience was really worth it.” – ‘Wanted to underplay it’ -The Kumbh Mela is rooted in a mythological Hindu battle between deities and demons for control of a pitcher containing the nectar of immortality. Organisers have likened the scale of this year’s festival to a temporary country, forecasting up to 400 million pilgrims would visit before the final day on February 26. Authorities have been criticised for repeatedly downplaying the stampede over the course of the day before finally issuing a statement praising their response to the accident. Police waited nearly 18 hours after Wednesday’s stampede to give an official death toll, an apparent effort to minimise disruption to the events. “Information is the first thing that must flow in such a circumstance, but that is exactly what did not happen,” New Delhi-based writer and analyst Nilanjan Mukhopadhyay told AFP.”They wanted to underplay it,” he added. “It was basically them saying too bad it happened, but it wasn’t their fault.”- ‘Probe the situation’ -Even before the tragedy, attendees were fuming over what they said was poor crowd management.Reserved pathways and cordoned-off areas for eminent attendees have been a source of vehement complaints.Those grievances were picked up by Indian opposition leader Rahul Gandhi, who blamed the disaster on poor crowd control that had prioritised the comfort of distinguished visitors.The Uttar Pradesh state government, responsible for overseeing the festival, ordered an overhaul of crowd management on Thursday, including a ban on VIP passes and vehicle traffic, local media reported.”We will probe the situation,” retired judge Harsh Kumar, appointed to head a government investigation into the stampede, told reporters. “We will review in a way that this is not repeated.”Police this year installed hundreds of cameras at the festival site and on roads leading to the sprawling encampment, mounted on poles and a fleet of overhead drones. The surveillance network feeds into an artificial intelligence system at a command and control centre meant to alert staff if sections of the crowd get so concentrated that they pose a safety threat. Previous Kumbh Mela festivals have also seen deadly crowd incidents.More than 400 people died after they were trampled or drowned on a single day of the festival in 1954, one of the largest tolls in a crowd-related disaster globally.Another 36 people were crushed to death in 2013, the last time the festival was staged in Prayagraj.

Survivors of India festival stampede recount deadly crush

Hindu pilgrim Parvati Gupta braved jostling crowds to be at the world’s largest religious festival in India but will leave with injuries that will keep her bedridden for months.The 45-year-old travelled alongside tens of millions of faithful from around the country to be at the Kumbh Mela, a 12-yearly gathering of sin-cleansing ritual bathing in sacred rivers. Rather than exulting in the holy rites she performed in the waters in the dead of the night, Parvati was on Thursday lying in hospital, wincing in pain and unable to speak.Her family had already resolved to depart the festival and were on the move when a surging crowd spilled over police cordons, knocking her to the ground, trampling her and breaking her leg.”The atmosphere was festive but… just when we were about to leave we lost our balance with all the pushing and shoving,” relative Anita Gupta, keeping vigil by Parvati’s bedside, told AFP.Both women had travelled to the Kumbh Mela on a train overflowing with pilgrims, arriving in the northern city of Prayagraj hours after schedule and forced to sleep in the open after they were unable to find a room.Anita credited a group of men for saving them from death after they formed a protective cordon around the pair when the throng began to swell. But her account of those moments, matched by others in the ward, suggested serious safety lapses and a hapless official response to a stampede that killed at least 30 people.Anita said that several routes leading from the riverside had been blocked by police, causing the chaos and overcrowding that led to the accident.Gauri Sharma, another woman wounded in the crush, said blame rested squarely on the shoulders of festival organisers. “Authorities had closed off some routes, leaving us stuck in one place,” she told AFP. “Then the entire crowd piled up, with people pushing and pressing against each other.”- ‘Attained salvation’ -Wednesday marked one of the holiest days in the six-week Kumbh Mela, and authorities seemed determined not to let the deadly stampede dampen festivities. Millions of people have participated in sacred bathing rituals as normal and periodic police briefings on Wednesday refused to confirm deaths while downplaying the severity of the accident. “There was no stampede. It was just overcrowding due to which some devotees got injured,” police officer Rajesh Dwivedi said at one briefing nearly 12 hours after the fatal crush. An official statement issued that evening credited police at the scene for quickly bringing the situation under control and ambulances for swiftly attending to the injured.”Eyewitnesses praised the swift action” of police, saying that “their timely intervention prevented a major disaster”, the statement said.Police finally confirmed that 30 people had been killed and dozens more injured nearly 18 hours after the stampede, once the sun had set and the day’s bathing was drawing to an end.Several present at the stampede said they believed the police toll was likely understated. “I am sure that more people died,” Anita said. Many were also quick to dismiss the official account of the response to the accident. “Why couldn’t they have prepared better?” Prayagraj resident Rahul Shukla told AFP.”Everyone knew well in advance that the festival would host more than 100 million people.”The 27-year-old said he was grieved by the deaths.But, he added, “those who died at such a holy spot must have immediately attained salvation”.

Afghan women cricketers reunite in first game after fleeing Taliban

Afghanistan’s women cricketers on Thursday played their first game since fleeing the Taliban three years ago, a charity match in Australia that captain Nahida Sapan hoped would spark “a movement for change”.Hundreds of women athletes fled Afghanistan as the Taliban took over in August 2021, escaping a hardline stance that essentially banned women’s sport and education. Most of the national women’s cricket side settled as refugees in Australia, where they reunited for the first time on Thursday to play a charity match in Melbourne.”Together, we’re building not just a team, we’re building a movement for change and promise,” Sapan said in the run-up to the game. “We have big hopes for this match because this match can open doors for Afghan women, for education, sport and in the future.” The Afghanistan Cricket Board made a significant stride in November 2020 when it handed 25 promising women cricketers professional contracts. But before the fledgling squad had a chance to play together, the Taliban captured capital Kabul and declared an end to women’s cricket. “We have sacrificed a lot to be here today,” said cricketer Firooza Amiri after the match.”The situation in Afghanistan is very terrible. Women don’t have their rights. “I can live freely in Australia and live my life the way I want. “But back home in Afghanistan… I can only say it is very heartbreaking and very hard to live in that situation.”- ‘Profound sadness’ -Diana Barakzai, who helped found Afghanistan’s first women’s cricket programme almost 20 years ago, said Thursday’s match was an “amazing moment”. “I’m sure it’s a big message for the world, that the world will do something for Afghan women,” she told AFP. “Especially for opening the school doors, opening up work for women.”Of the 25 women once contracted by the Afghanistan Cricket Board, 22 are now settled in the Australian cities of Melbourne and Canberra.Some of these players have lobbied the governing International Cricket Council in the hopes of forming a refugee team with some kind of official status. “A profound sadness remains that we, as women, cannot represent our country like the male cricketers,” some players wrote in a joint letter last year. “The creation of this team will allow all Afghan women who want to represent their country to come together under one banner.” The council has so far ignored these calls.Thursday’s game was played at Melbourne’s Junction Oval, a storied ground where a young Shane Warne once plied his trade.The Afghan side played an invitational outfit representing Cricket Without Borders, a charity which aims to draw young women into the game.Clad in cricket pads, helmets and blue shirts of a similar shade to the national men’s side, the Afghan XI gathered for a brief team prayer before batting first. After setting a target of 103 runs from 20 overs, they were pipped with just four balls to spare. Shazia Zazai, the former Afghan national captain, top scored with 40 runs from 45 balls. Governing body Cricket Australia threw its weight behind the match, pledging to “advocate” for the Afghan women’s side at the highest levels.”I’m just so proud of everyone across Australian cricket who’s worked to support the players since they’ve been in Australia,” chief executive Nick Hockley said earlier this week.Citing human rights concerns, Australia has in recent years boycotted a series of non-tournament fixtures against the Afghanistan men’s side. 

Afghan women cricketers reunite in first game after fleeing Taliban

Afghanistan’s women cricketers on Thursday played their first game since fleeing the Taliban three years ago, a charity match in Australia that captain Nahida Sapan said she hoped would spark “a movement for change”.Hundreds of women athletes fled Afghanistan as the Taliban took over in August 2021, escaping a hardline stance that essentially banned women’s sport and education. Most of the national women’s cricket side settled as refugees in Australia, where they reunited for the first time on Thursday to play a charity match in Melbourne.”Together, we’re building not just a team, we’re building a movement for change and promise,” captain Sapan said in the run-up to the game. “We have big hopes for this match because this match can open doors for Afghan women, for education, sport and in the future.” The Afghanistan Cricket Board made a significant stride in November 2020 when it handed 25 promising women cricketers professional contracts. But before this fledgling squad had a chance to play together, the Taliban captured capital Kabul and declared an end to women’s cricket. “We have never played before together as a team,” said cricketer Firooza Amiri.”We are going to represent millions of Afghan women that are in Afghanistan and denied their rights.”It’s very special for all of us to get back together after three years, (after) leaving everything and losing everything back home in Afghanistan.”- ‘Profound sadness’ -Of the 25 women once contracted by the Afghanistan Cricket Board, 22 are now settled in the Australian cities of Melbourne and Canberra.Some of these players have lobbied the governing International Cricket Council in the hopes of forming a refugee team with some kind of official status. “A profound sadness remains that we, as women, cannot represent our country like the male cricketers,” some players wrote in a joint letter last year. “The creation of this team will allow all Afghan women who want to represent their country to come together under one banner.” The council has so far ignored these calls.Thursday’s game was played at Melbourne’s Junction Oval, a storied ground where a young Shane Warne once plied his trade.The Afghan side played an invitational outfit representing Cricket Without Borders, a charity which aims to draw young women into the game.Governing body Cricket Australia threw its weight behind the match, pledging to “advocate” for the Afghan women’s side at the highest levels.”I’m just so proud of everyone across Australian cricket who’s worked to support the players since they’ve been in Australia,” chief executive Nick Hockley said earlier this week.Citing human rights concerns, Australia has in recent years boycotted a series of non-tournament fixtures against the Afghanistan men’s side. 

At least 30 dead in India stampede at Hindu mega-festival

A pre-dawn stampede at the world’s largest religious gathering killed at least 30 people in India on Wednesday, with many more injured after a surging crowd spilled out of a police cordon and trampled bystanders.Deadly crowd incidents are a frequent occurrence at Indian religious festivals, including the Kumbh Mela, which attracts tens of millions of devotees every 12 years to the northern city of Prayagraj.As pilgrims rushed to participate in a sacred day of ritual bathing, people sleeping and sitting on the ground near the rivers told AFP they were trampled by huge swells of devotees coming towards them in the darkness.”The entire crowd fell on top of me, trampling me as it moved forward,” pilgrim Renu Devi, 48, told AFP. “When the crowd surged, elderly people and women were crushed, and no one came forward to help.”Rescue teams carrying victims from the accident site weaved through piles of clothes, shoes and other discarded belongings. Police were seen carrying stretchers bearing the bodies of victims draped with thick blankets.”Thirty devotees have unfortunately died,” senior police officer Vaibhav Krishna told reporters during an evening news conference at the festival. “Ninety injured were taken to the hospital.”Krishna’s briefing came nearly 18 hours after the stampede and was the first official death toll given by authorities. Festivities had otherwise been allowed to continue almost as normal during the day, with millions still trekking to the riverbanks to immerse themselves in the water.Prime Minister Narendra Modi called the stampede “extremely sad” and offered his “deepest condolences” to relatives of those killed. “I wish for the speedy recovery of all injured,” he added. Dozens of relatives were anxiously waiting for news outside a large tent serving as a purpose-built hospital for the festival near the disaster site.- ‘Please cooperate’ -The six-week Kumbh Mela is the single biggest milestone on the Hindu religious calendar.Wednesday marks one of the holiest days in the festival, when saffron-clad holy men lead millions in a sin-cleansing ritual of bathing at the confluence of the Ganges and Yamuna rivers in tandem with a planetary alignment in the Solar System. Officials had attempted to divert crowds away from the disaster site, instructing them to bathe at other locations.”We humbly request all devotees do not come to the main bathing spot,” said one festival staffer, his voice crackling through his megaphone. “Please cooperate with security personnel.”But even as news of the stampede spread, crowds pushed through cordons to move towards the river, shrugging off aggressive orders from police to turn back.Officials from the Uttar Pradesh state government, responsible for staging the festival, said millions had participated in the ritual bathing through the day.Indian opposition leader Rahul Gandhi blamed the disaster on poor crowd control that prioritised the comfort of distinguished visitors.”Mismanagement and the administration’s special focus on VIP movement instead of common devotees are responsible for this tragic incident,” he wrote on social media. – ‘My family got scared’ -Railway police superintendent Ashtabhuja Singh told AFP that special train services taking pilgrims to Prayagraj were still running, after earlier reports that they had been halted due to crowding in the city. “My family got scared, so we’re leaving,” attendee Sanjay Nishad told AFP.The Kumbh Mela is rooted in a mythological Hindu battle between deities and demons for control of a pitcher containing the nectar of immortality. Organisers have likened the scale of this year’s festival to a temporary country, forecasting up to 400 million pilgrims would visit before the final day on February 26. Police this year installed hundreds of cameras at the festival site and on roads leading to the sprawling encampment, mounted on poles and a fleet of overhead drones. The surveillance network feeds into a sophisticated command and control centre meant to alert staff if sections of the crowd get so concentrated that they pose a safety threat. “If you see advertisements it seems like the government is providing world class facilities,” university student Ruchi Bharti told AFP not far from the riverbank.”But this stampede proved that was all a lie.”More than 400 people died after they were trampled or drowned at the Kumbh Mela on a single day of the festival in 1954, one of the largest tolls in a crowd-related disaster globally.Another 36 people were crushed to death in 2013, the last time the festival was staged in Prayagraj. 

Lion cub gifted to Pakistani YouTube star causes wedding chaos

A Pakistani YouTube star who was gifted a lion cub on his wedding day has avoided jail after promising a judge to upload animal rights videos for a year.Rajab Butt has one of the largest online followings in the South Asian country and his week-long nuptials in late December were plastered over celebrity gossip websites. When a sleepy lion cub, resembling young Simba from the 2019 “Lion King” film, was presented to him in a gold-chained cage in front of thousands of guests who partied late into the night in the eastern megacity of Lahore, pictures spread rapidly online.Butt captioned a video of the event “it’s raining gifts”, racking up nearly 10 million views.The morning after, police raided his house, confiscated the cub and kept the newly-wed in custody overnight.”We found out about the lion cub through social media,” said Faisal Mushtaq, an inspector from the Punjab provincial wildlife department.Police officers went to Butt’s house and found the lion cub roaming around the garage, he said.”It was in a poor condition, as it was very cold,” said Mushtaq. Last week, Butt pleaded guilty to owning an undocumented wild animal but the judge waived a possible fine and prison sentence of up to two years for a more tailored punishment.Every month for one year, he must post a five-minute video dedicated to animal rights, said the order by judge Hamid Ul Rahman Nasir. The social media influencer agreed to the conditions, after admitting in a court statement that he “set a poor example” by accepting the gift and going on to “glorify it”.Butt is one of the country’s highest-paid YouTube stars, according to the platform, and usually posts videos about his family’s daily life, from arguments to new car purchases.Tanvir Janjua, a veteran wildlife official in Punjab, said the cub was likely bought for between 700,000 and 800,000 Pakistani rupees ($2,500-$2,900).”It is so wrong, morally and legally, to take away such a small cub from its mother,” which was likely still feeding it, he told AFP.- New regulations -A week after the YouTuber was arrested, an adult lion escaped from his cage, running through the narrow streets of a Lahore neighbourhood as residents clambered to their rooftops. The full-grown adult male was eventually shot dead by a security guard, prompting heated outrage on social media about the dangers of keeping a big cat in a residential area. Big cats are imported and bred across Pakistan, seen as symbols of wealth and power to the elite that own them.Last year, Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz, which rules the government, banned supporters from bringing lions — the symbol of the party — to political rallies.However, stringent new regulations banning private ownership of big cats in residential areas are currently making their way through Punjab’s provincial government. Breeders would have to buy a licence and have at least 10 acres (four hectares) of land on a site approved by wildlife officials. – ‘Never be your pet’ -The gifted lion cub, which hasn’t been named, is now enjoying the winter sun in an open pen at Lahore’s sprawling Safari Zoo on the edge of the city, under the watchful eye of a handler.Janjua, also the zoo’s deputy director, has conducted hundreds of raids against owners, breeders and poachers over the past 33 years to confiscate wild animals, including lions which often had their teeth and claws removed.”Look at these YouTubers who use these animals to get clicks. What kind of a message are they spreading by being cruel to these animals?” he said, scornful of those who parade them in their cars and at political rallies. “They can never be your pet. For two or three months it won’t say anything but after that, it will turn aggressive.”As he nears retirement, Janjua says attitudes towards animals have worsened throughout his career. Laws, however, have improved, he says. “Now wildlife officials have dedicated uniforms, weapons and we will get our own courts,” he told AFP. “The courts that already exist are now strict about animal cruelty.”

At least 15 dead in India stampede at Hindu mega-festival

A pre-dawn stampede at the world’s largest religious gathering killed at least 15 people in India Wednesday, with many more injured after a surging crowd spilled out of a police cordon and trampled bystanders. Deadly crowd incidents are a frequent occurrence at Indian religious festivals, including the Kumbh Mela, which attracts tens of millions of devotees every 12 years to the northern city of Prayagraj.As pilgrims rushed to participate in a sacred day of ritual bathing, people sleeping and sitting on the ground near the rivers told AFP they were trampled by huge swells of devotees coming towards them in the darkness.”The entire crowd fell on top of me, trampling me as it moved forward,” pilgrim Renu Devi, 48, told AFP. “When the crowd surged, elderly people and women were crushed, and no one came forward to help.”Rescue teams carrying victims from the accident site weaved through piles of clothes, shoes and other discarded belongings. Police were seen carrying stretchers bearing the bodies of victims draped with thick blankets.”At least 15 people” were killed with dozens more injured, a doctor at a hospital tending to survivors told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity as they were not authorised to talk to media. Hours after the stampede, which took place around 1:00 am (1930 GMT Tuesday), authorities had not announced any official death toll. Prime Minister Narendra Modi confirmed people had died in the incident, calling it “extremely sad” and offering his “deepest condolences” to relatives of those killed. “I wish for the speedy recovery of all injured,” he added. Dozens of relatives were anxiously waiting for news outside a large tent serving as a purpose-built hospital for the festival near the disaster site.- ‘Please cooperate’ -The six-week Kumbh Mela is the single biggest milestone on the Hindu religious calendar.Wednesday marks one of the holiest days in the festival, when saffron-clad holy men typically lead millions in a sin-cleansing ritual of bathing at the confluence of the Ganges and Yamuna rivers.Instead, officials were strolling the festival with loudhailers pleading with pilgrims to keep away from the disaster site and bathe at other locations.”We humbly request all devotees do not come to the main bathing spot,” said one festival staffer, his voice crackling through his megaphone. “Please cooperate with security personnel.”But even as news of the stampede spread, crowds pushed through cordons to move towards the riverbed, shrugging off aggressive orders from police to turn back.Officials from the Uttar Pradesh state government, responsible for staging the festival, said millions continued to bathe in the hours after the stampede.Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath told reporters that medical workers were treating those seriously injured in the crush, adding that the situation was “under control”.Indian opposition leader Rahul Gandhi blamed the disaster on poor crowd control that prioritised the comfort of distinguished visitors.”Mismanagement and the administration’s special focus on VIP movement instead of common devotees are responsible for this tragic incident,” he wrote on social media. – ‘My family got scared’ -Railway police superintendent Ashtabhuja Singh told AFP that special train services taking pilgrims to Prayagraj were still running, after earlier reports that they had been halted due to crowding in the city. “My family got scared, so we’re leaving,” attendee Sanjay Nishad told AFP.The Kumbh Mela is rooted in a mythological Hindu battle between deities and demons for control of a pitcher containing the nectar of immortality. Organisers have likened the scale of this year’s festival to a temporary country, forecasting up to 400 million pilgrims would visit before the final day on February 26. Police this year installed hundreds of cameras at the festival site and on roads leading to the sprawling encampment, mounted on poles and a fleet of overhead drones. The surveillance network feeds into a sophisticated command and control centre meant to alert staff if sections of the crowd get so concentrated that they pose a safety threat. “If you see advertisements it seems like the government is providing world class facilities,” university student Ruchi Bharti told AFP not far from the riverbank.”But this stampede proved that was all a lie.”More than 400 people died after they were trampled or drowned at the Kumbh Mela on a single day of the festival in 1954, one of the largest tolls in a crowd-related disaster globally.Another 36 people were crushed to death in 2013, the last time the festival was staged in Prayagraj.Â