Hathras disaster that killed 100 not a ‘stampede’, signals urgent need for risk planning

Crowd behaviour is often not the main cause of such incidents. Rigorous planning and monitoring can significantly reduce the impact of these events.

Hathras disaster that killed 100 not a ‘stampede’, signals urgent need for risk planning

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A catastrophe involving large crowds at a religious gathering in Hathras yesterday resulted in the deaths of over 100 people, with many more injured.

The disaster, in the Hathras district of Uttar Pradesh, unfolded during a Satsang (spiritual discourse) by a popular preacher which drew thousands of devotees.

This is the latest in a long list of crowd disasters in India.

Although much of the media coverage has described this event as a crowd “stampede”, this obscures failings in how the event was planned and run.

Many such catastrophes in India

In recent history, India has witnessed several tragic crowd-related catastrophes.

On January 1 2022, a disaster at the Mata Vaishno Devi shrine in Jammu and Kashmir resulted in 12 deaths and 15 injuries. The incident was triggered by an argument among pilgrims during New Year celebrations.

On December 28 2022, a stampede at a political rally in Andhra Pradesh state in India’s south led to eight deaths as supporters surged towards the stage.

On November 25 2023, a crowd incident at a university concert in Kerala in India’s south caused four deaths and numerous injuries.

In 1954, millions gathered for a religious pilgrimage at the Prayag Kumbh Mela in northern India, resulting in a crowd disaster that claimed around 800 lives. This incident remains the deadliest crowd disaster in India’s history.

A global database of deaths from crowd accidents shows...

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