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regular-article-logo Monday, 23 December 2024

Hathras stampede: Checked over 100 bodies but couldn't find my sister, says brother of missing woman

Rakesh Kumar said he reached the postmortem house in Agra on his motorcycle on Wednesday morning to search for his sister, Harbeji Devi

PTI Agra Published 03.07.24, 04:36 PM
Bags and other belongings lying at the scene a day after a massive stampede that took place during a 'satsang' (religious congregation), in Sikandara Rao area in Hathras district.

Bags and other belongings lying at the scene a day after a massive stampede that took place during a 'satsang' (religious congregation), in Sikandara Rao area in Hathras district. PTI picture.

"I turned over more than 100 dead bodies to check their faces," a brother, whose 50-year-old sister has been missing since the stampede incident in Uttar Pradesh's Hathras, said here on Wednesday.

After visiting the postmortem houses in Hathras, Etah and Aligarh, "where a large number of dead bodies were lying and the situation was horrifying", Rakesh Kumar (46) said he reached the postmortem house here on his motorcycle in the morning to search for his sister, Harbeji Devi.

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The death toll in the stampede that broke out in a 'satsang' in Hathras rose to 121 on Wednesday and police filed an FIR against the organisers, accusing them of hiding evidence and flouting conditions with 2.5 lakh people crammed into a venue in which only 80,000 were permitted.

The victims were part of the crowd which had gathered near Phulrai village in the Sikandrarau area of Hathras for the 'satsang' by religious preacher Baba Narayan Hari, also known as Saakar Vishwa Hari Bhole Baba.

The incident took place as the 'satsang' ended. Some accounts said people slipped in the slush as they ran after the preacher's car, triggering the stampede. "On Tuesday, I got a call from my brother-in-law, who lives in a village in Aligarh, informing me that Harbeji had gone to the 'satsang' but has not returned, while their neighbours (who also went to attend the programme) have reached home," Kumar, a resident of Uttar Pradesh's Kasganj, said.

Kumar immediately left for the stampede site on his motorcycle but did not find his sister.

"I was informed that some bodies had been sent to Hathras and Aligarh. I then went there looking for my sister. I also checked the emergency ward, where injured people were being treated, but couldn't find her.

"I have even checked the list of the deceased released by the administration and called every helpline number, trying to locate her but all my efforts have been in vain. I have not found her yet and I am still trying," he said.

Harbeji has four children, two daughters and two sons, Kumar added.

Like Kumar, there were many other people, who had reached the postmortem house here from nearby districts in search of their missing family members or to collect the bodies of their loved ones.

Mathura's Vishal Kumar said that after he heard about the incident, he went to the spot and searched everywhere but could not find his mother, Pushpa Devi.

"Eventually, we learnt that her body had been sent to Agra for postmortem, so I came here," Vishal Kumar said, adding that his mother was a follower of Bhole Baba for almost a decade.

According to Chief Medical Officer, Agra, Dr Arun Srivastava, 21 bodies have been brought here for the postmortem since the stampede incident occurred on Tuesday.

Maya Devi, a follower of Bhole Baba who attended the event, said she came to know about the incident after she boarded the bus to return here.

"I was given the responsibility of providing water to the attendees at the event. I was unaware of what had happened until I reached my bus," Devi, who is a resident here, said.

Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Telegraph Online staff and has been published from a syndicated feed.

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