While BJP insiders admit that the incident has dented the government’s image and has led to the party putting off the election of its state chief, the Mohan Charan Majhi dispensation has also come under fire from the Opposition.
“A high-level committee of ministers headed by Deputy Chief Minister Pravati Parida was constituted to oversee (Rath Yatra) preparations. Has anyone seen the panel members on the ground? Are they not responsible for the mess? Why has action not been taken against them?” an Opposition leader asked.
A smooth conduct of the Jagannath Rath Yatra in Puri has traditionally been seen in Odisha as public validation for successive governments.
During a review meeting with the administration on June 22, the Majhi government directed that the Rath Yatra must be “incident-free”.
The Majhi government, which barely had a month last year to prepare for the annual event, pulled out all stops this year and started preparations for the “memorable event” barely a week after Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressed a rally on June 22 in Bhubaneswar, where he said that the BJP government was completing one year in power while the state was gearing up for the Rath Yatra.
Last Friday, the BJP government came under attack for the delay in pulling the chariot of Lord Jagannath, which only moved a few metres before the day ended. It also came under attack for “lapses” in crowd management that left over 200 devotees ill.
As per tradition, in the Rath Yatra, also known as Gundicha Yatra, the Lord along with his siblings – elder brother Lord Balabhadra and sister Devi Subhadra – embark on a nine-day sojourn from their 12th century shrine to the Gundicha Temple, their birthplace, covering a distance of around 3 km. After a ceremonial procession called “Pahandi”, the deities are taken to the Gundicha Temple on three large chariots, where they stay till the “Bahuda Yatra” (return car festival), which is scheduled for July 5 this year. Millions of people join the procession to pull the chariots.
BJD chief and ex-CM Naveen Patnak, who is now Leader of the Opposition (LoP) in the Assembly, took to social media to slam the government’s “incompetence” in conducting the Puri Rath Yatra. “The stampede, which occurred just a day after the abysmal failure to manage crowds during the Rath Yatra, exposes the government’s glaring incompetence in ensuring a peaceful festival for the devotees,” he said in an X post on Sunday.
Calling the incident a “man-made disaster”, the Congress slammed the Majhi government, accusing it of “prioritising VVIP movements during the event over safety of common people”.
Despite attacks from the Opposition, state law minister Prithviraj Harichandran tried to justify the delay claiming “everything happens according to the Lord’s wish”. After the procession reached the Gundicha Temple, Harichandran said the Yatra had been “incident-free”.
Hours after his remarks, a swelling crowd advanced towards the chariots around 4 am on Sunday leading to a stampede. Making matters worse, two vehicles carrying materials for the rituals entered the spot.
Eyewitnesses said the ensuing “chaos” lasted for 20 minutes, claiming there were no policemen or senior officials to help the devotees. With no system in place for ambulances to move freely, relatives of the devotees pulled out the injured from the crowd and shifted them to hospitals. “My wife and others would have been saved had there been arrangements for the smooth movement of ambulances,” said the husband of a deceased woman.
The aftermath
Almost immediately after the stampede, CM Majhi ordered an administrative probe, shunted out the Collector and SP of Puri and suspended two senior police officers for “dereliction of duty”. He also apologised to the devotees, indicating the sensitivity of the issue.
A major administrative shake-up has also been initiated with a senior bureaucrat and a police officer, who have prior experience of handling the Rath Yatra, being roped in to supervise the remaining event. The move is being seen as the government’s effort to restore the people’s faith in the administration.
While the probe is scheduled to be completed in a month, preliminary reports suggest lack of coordination between administrative wings, poor planning by the police and deploying inexperienced officers to manage the situation led to the incident.
State BJP chief Manmohan Samal expressed concern over the incident but said the state government “took the right decision at the right time”. “We will be careful to ensure that such incidents do not recur,” he said.