Key Points

A tragic stampede during Royal Challengers Bangalore's IPL victory celebration claimed 11 lives and injured 33 people at M Chinnaswamy Stadium. Medical authorities at Bowring and Lady Curzon Hospital treated 18 injured persons, with 10 requiring hospital admission. Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah ordered a magisterial inquiry and announced compensation for victims' families. The incident highlighted severe crowd management challenges, with the stadium's 35,000 capacity overwhelmed by 2-3 lakh enthusiastic fans.

Key Points: Bengaluru Stadium Stampede 11 Dead RCB Victory Celebration Tragedy

  • 11 people died during Royal Challengers Bangalore victory celebration
  • Bowring Hospital treated 18 injured patients
  • CM Siddaramaiah orders magisterial inquiry
  • Massive crowd overwhelmed stadium capacity
2 min read

Taking full care of patients, Bengaluru's Bowring and Lady Curzon hospital administers to 11 injured in stadium stampede

Deadly stampede at M Chinnaswamy Stadium during RCB IPL celebration leaves 11 dead, 33 injured. Magisterial inquiry ordered by Karnataka CM.

"We did not request RCB or the KCA, they organised it - Dr G Parameshwara, Karnataka Home Minister"

Bengaluru, June 5

In the wake of the stampede at M Chinnaswamy Stadium that claimed 11 lives and injured 33 others, Medical authorities at Bowring and Lady Curzon Hospital reported receiving six bodies and 18 injured on the day of the incident.

Speaking to the media, Medical superintendent Dr T. Kemparaju said, "After the stampede, we received 18 injured persons and six bodies. Out of the 18 injured persons, eight received treatment and went home, and the remaining 10 patients were admitted to the hospital for observation. Among the 10 persons admitted to the hospital, three sustained fractures in the legs. We have received instructions to take full care of the patients."

Meanwhile, Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah has ordered a magisterial inquiry into the incident. The tragedy unfolded when thousands of fans overwhelmed the stadium area during Royal Challengers Bangalore's IPL victory celebration.

Karnataka Home Minister Dr G Parameshwara confirmed that the state government had no role in organising the event.

"We did not request RCB or the KCA, they organised it (the victory celebration). They are the ones who brought the team to Bengaluru. The government also felt it should facilitate this, as it was the Bengaluru team. I feel very sorry that this incident happened," Parameshwara said after inspecting the site.

CM Siddaramaiah, addressing the media, said, "11 died and 33 were injured in the stampede. This tragedy should not have happened. The government expresses deep sorrow over this incident." He announced a compensation of Rs 10 lakh for the families of the deceased and assured that all the injured will receive free medical treatment.

"I have ordered a magisterial inquiry and given 15 days. People even broke the gates of the stadium. There was a stampede. No one expected such a huge crowd. The stadium has a capacity of only 35,000 people, but 2-3 lakh people came," the Chief Minister said, underlining the scale of the crowd and security strain.

The Home Minister will convene a meeting with Bengaluru Police Commissioner, senior police officials, DCPs, and Karnataka State Cricket Association (KSCA) representatives at the stadium on Thursday to review crowd management lapses.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya K.
Heartbreaking incident! 😔 The hospital staff deserves appreciation for their quick response. But why wasn't crowd control planned better? IPL is massive in India, authorities should have anticipated this. Hope the inquiry brings accountability.
R
Rahul S.
Typical Indian mentality - everyone wants to be first without thinking of consequences. Stadium capacity is 35k but 3 lakh people came? This is madness! Kudos to Bowring hospital doctors for handling the crisis professionally.
A
Ananya M.
As a Bengaluru resident, I'm shocked but not surprised. Our city's infrastructure can't handle such crowds. The government compensation is good, but prevention is better than cure. Where were the police barricades? Why no crowd management experts consulted?
V
Vikram J.
The hospital's response gives me hope in our healthcare system. But the bigger question - when will we learn? Similar stampedes happen during Kumbh Mela, political rallies... We need national crowd management protocols. Jai Hind!
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Sneha R.
My cousin was among those treated at Bowring hospital. The doctors were angels! But the organizers should be held responsible - they made money from IPL but didn't invest in proper safety measures. Shameful!
K
Karthik P.
While the compensation is good, 10 lakhs can't bring back lives. We need systemic changes - better urban planning, crowd control training for police, and public awareness campaigns about safety in large gatherings. This shouldn't happen in 21st century India.

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