Cambodia stampede kills 350
CAMBODIA: Cambodia began the grim task Tuesday of identifying almost
350 people, many of them women, crushed to death in a bridge stampede
when revellers panicked at a huge water festival in Phnom Penh.
Hundreds more people were injured in the disaster, Cambodia’s
deadliest in decades, which took place late Monday on an overcrowded
narrow bridge as millions celebrated the end of the annual three-day
event.
Prime Minister Hun Sen described the disaster as Cambodia’s darkest
hour since the Khmer Rouge, whose 1975-1979 reign of terror left up to a
quarter of the Cambodian population dead.
“This is the biggest tragedy since the Pol Pot regime,” Hun Sen said
in a live television broadcast, referring to the Khmer Rouge’s late
leader. He said Cambodia would hold a national day of mourning on
Thursday.
The stampede killed 347 people and left another 410 injured, with
many of the deaths caused by suffocation and internal injuries,
government spokesman Khieu Kanharith told AFP.
About two thirds of the dead were women, he said.
It was not immediately clear what had triggered the disaster, but
Kanharith said a rumour had spread among the revellers that the bridge
was unstable. “So panic started.
It was too crowded and they had nowhere to run,” he said. “Now we
need to identify the bodies.” Several hundred worried relatives were
gathered outside the city’s Calmette Hospital trying to identify missing
loved ones.
Rows of bodies were laid out under a white tent erected over the
hospital car park, an AFP reporter said, and people were straining to
catch a glimpse of the dead.
Six policemen were fingerprinting the victims, while all around
people made frantic phone calls describing the outfits of the deceased.
Their uncovered faces showed many had sustained bloody bruises during
the stampede.
One woman said she recognized her 16-year-old niece in the makeshift
morgue.
“I heard she was killed last night, so I came here and I saw her
body,” Som Khov, 51, told AFP. “I heard she died from an electric
shock.” At the scene of the tragedy, sunglasses and flip-flops were left
scattered on the ground among lifeless bodies.
Police were seen carrying away some of the victims while others were
laid in a row on the ground.
Witnesses reported people pushing and shoving in the crowd as the
stampede broke out. “We were crossing the bridge to Diamond Island when
people started pushing from the other side. There was lots of screaming
and panic,” 23-year-old Kruon Hay told AFP at the scene.
Phnom Penh, Tuesday, AFP
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