Crowd crush at Puri's Jagannath Rath Yatra kills two, injures over 150 in Odisha, India
A surge of devotees at Marichikot Square during India's annual Jagannath Rath Yatra festival in Puri, Odisha, on July 16 killed two people and hospitalised more than 100, raising fresh safety concerns about crowd management at one of Hinduism's largest pilgrimages.
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Summary
A crowd surge at Marichikot Square during the annual Jagannath Rath Yatra in Puri, Odisha, on July 16 killed two devotees by suffocation and injured over 150 more, with nearly 100 hospitalised. The Rath Yatra, one of Hinduism's largest annual festivals, draws millions of pilgrims to India's Puri temple, straining local infrastructure each year. Early reports from Indian outlets described the incident as "stampede-like," with overcrowding at a key square. The Odisha government's crowd management arrangements came under immediate scrutiny.
Why it matters
India has a long history of deadly crowd crushes at religious gatherings, and the Rath Yatra has previously seen near-miss crowd incidents at scale. Each recurrence tests whether state authorities can implement the systematic crowd flow and emergency-capacity measures recommended after past disasters.
What to watch
- Official Odisha government inquiry findings on crowd management failures
- Whether the state orders changes to the Rath Yatra route or access control for future years
- Final casualty count from Odisha police and health authorities