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Chaos at Haridwar Mansa Devi Temple Stampede: 6 people dead and 34 others injured

Chaos at Haridwar Mansa Devi Temple Stampede: 6 people dead and 34 others injured

Chaos at Haridwar Mansa Devi Temple Stampede: 6 people dead and 34 others injured

Haridwar Mansa Devi temple stampede, an Image from July 27, 2025 captures the heartbreaking moment at Haridwar’s Mansa Devi temple when a surge of pilgrims caused panic and tragedy. The clip shows someone shouting peeche jaao (“go back”) as people desperately try to flee a tightening human crush—highlighting systemic lapses in crowd control during one of the holiest pilgrimages.

Haridwar Mansa Devi temple stampede

On the morning of July 27, 2025, during the peak Shravan/Sawan month, a rumor spread that a high-voltage electric wire had fallen on the stairway path to the temple. Within minutes, fear escalated into chaos. The narrow, steep lanes became a deadly bottleneck, with at least six confirmed deaths and around 30–35 injured . According to authorities, Uttarakhand Power Corporation Limited (UPCL) later clarified that no actual live wire or electrocution hazard existed

Haridwar Mansa Devi temple stampede: Video Evidence| The Moment of Crisis

The viral footage shows pilgrims scrambling and pushing in every direction. A man is heard urging the crowd to move back (“peeche jaao”), and some try climbing nearby structures to escape the crush.The video underscores how quickly rumors and overcrowding can turn sacred ground into a site of tragedy.

You can Watch here:  CLICK HERE

Why Did This Happen? Underlying Causes

✅ Confirmed Casualties in the Haridwar Stampede (Mansa Devi Temple):

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Haridwar Mansa Devi temple stampede: PM MODI RESPONSE

Prime Minister Narendra Modi expressed condolences to the families of the deceased and prayed for speedy recovery of the injured . Uttarakhand Chief Minister Pushkar Singh Dhami announced a magisterial inquiry, compensation for victims, and tighter safety protocols going forward.

Prevention: What Needs to Change

  1. Improve crowd flow design: Multiple entry/exit routes, wider ramps, and restricted entries with digital passes.

  2. Install rumor control mechanisms: Loudspeaker warnings, official staffing to counter false alarms.

  3. Strengthen infrastructure: Ban overcrowded stairways; deploy human or mechanical buffer zones.

  4. Emergency prep during peak season: SDRF teams, medical tents, and rapid evacuation systems around pilgrim hotspots.

  5. Transparent accountability: Follow-through on inquiries and visible enforcement of regulations around temple safety

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The tragic Haridwar stampede on July 27, 2025 reveals how quickly panic can escalate in crowded religious gatherings. With six lives lost and dozens injured, authorities and civil society must demand thorough reforms in crowd management and infrastructure—before faith becomes fatal.

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