Deccan Chronicle

44 killed in stampede at Jewish religious pilgrimage in Israel

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Jerusalem, April 30: In one of the worst peacetime tragedies in Israel, at least 44 people were crushed to death and about 150 others injured in a stampede overnight at an overcrowde­d Jewish religious gathering in the country’s north attended by tens of thousands of people flouting the Coronaviru­s-related restrictio­ns.

The mass gathering was organised to celebrate the Lag B’Omer, an annual religious holiday marked with all-night bonfires, prayer and dancing, at Mount Meron. The town is the site of the tomb of Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai, a second-century sage, and is considered to be one of the holiest sites in the Jewish world. Israel recently eased mask-wearing requiremen­ts in open areas and other restrictio­ns after the success of a massive vaccinatio­n drive that significan­tly brought down coronaviru­s-related cases.

The resulting “normalcy”, with limitation­s, saw rejoicing crowds across Israel on Thursday evening with youngsters, especially school children, coming out in large numbers in open spaces putting bonfires that accompanie­d the Lag BaOmer festivitie­s. Tens of thousands of ultra-orthodox Jews participat­ed in the tragic event Thursday night at the tomb of Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai, making it the largest event held in Israel since the Coronaviru­s pandemic broke out last year.

A preliminar­y police investigat­ion revealed that some of the attendees slipped on the stairs, creating a “human avalanche” that crushed members of the crowd. A Magen David Adom (MDA) rescue service official confirmed that at least 38 people had been killed with the numbers likely to go even higher. “Our paramedics have treated hundreds of people, including several in serious condition. All the wounded were evacuated to hospital”, he said.

Some 150 people were injured in the accident. Zaka, an ambulance service, said the death toll had risen to 44. MDA DirectorGe­neral Eli Bin told the Ynet news site that the wounded were being evacuated to the Ziv hospital in Safed, the Galilee Medical Center in Nahariya, Rambam hospital in

Haifa, Poriya hospital in Tiberias, and Hadassah Ein Kerem hospital in Jerusalem.

Firefighte­rs worked to free the trapped, supported by Israeli Air Force helicopter­s and rescue services. Police were trying to clear the tens of thousands who attended the event from the area. At around midnight on Thursday, organisers had estimated that some

100,000 people were at the site, with an additional

100,000 expected to arrive by Friday morning, local media reported.

A police official told the local media that dozens of participan­ts in a concert had “slipped,” falling on those below them while walking along a slippery walkway and causing a crushing domino effect.

 ?? — AFP ?? An Ultra-Orthodox Jewish woman comforts another at a cemetary in Benei Brak, as people attend the funeral of one of the victims of a stampede, when tens of thousands of people were gathered to celebrate the festival of Lag Baomer at a site in Meron in northern Israel early on Friday.
— AFP An Ultra-Orthodox Jewish woman comforts another at a cemetary in Benei Brak, as people attend the funeral of one of the victims of a stampede, when tens of thousands of people were gathered to celebrate the festival of Lag Baomer at a site in Meron in northern Israel early on Friday.

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