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Tragedy Strikes India’s Bihar: 46 Drown, Including 37 Children, During Hindu Festival

Tragedy Strikes India’s Bihar: 46 Drown, Including 37 Children, During Hindu Festival
  • PublishedSeptember 27, 2024

A wave of grief has washed over eastern India’s Bihar state after at least 46 people, including 37 children and seven women, drowned during the three-day Jivitputrika festival, BBC reports.

The deaths, which occurred across 15 districts in the past 24 hours, are attributed to the victims taking ritual baths in rivers and ponds swollen by recent flooding.

The Jivitputrika festival, celebrated annually, marks the well-being of children. Mothers traditionally fast for their children during this period. Officials in Bihar have stated that many individuals disregarded the hazardous water levels in rivers while participating in the festival’s bathing rituals.

Disaster management officials are expressing concern that the death toll may rise further. The state government has announced compensation for the families of the victims.

This tragedy highlights the recurring dangers associated with large religious gatherings in India, where safety measures are often neglected. In July, a stampede at a religious gathering in Uttar Pradesh state resulted in the deaths of 121 people. In 2018, a train rammed into a crowd celebrating Dusshera, a Hindu festival, leading to the deaths of nearly 60 people.

Michelle Larsen

Michelle Larsen is a 23-year-old journalist and editor for Wyoming Star. Michelle has covered a variety of topics on both local (crime, politics, environment, sports in the USA) and global issues (USA around the globe; Middle East tensions, European security and politics, Ukraine war, conflicts in Africa, etc.), shaping the narrative and ensuring the quality of published content on Wyoming Star, providing the readership with essential information to shape their opinion on what is happening. Michelle has also interviewed political experts on the matters unfolding on the US political landscape and those around the world to provide the readership with better understanding of these complex processes.