[Public
safety is a huge problem in India , where weak governance frequently results in
the flouting of safety rules, leading to large numbers of fatalities. At least 26
people died and 89 were injured when an elevated highway under construction
collapsed in late March in a crowded neighborhood in Kolkata.]
By Geeta Anand and Suhasini Raj
MUMBAI,
India — A series of
explosions early Sunday caused by a fireworks display during a religious
festival at a temple left 106 people dead and hundreds more injured in the
southern Indian state of Kerala, the local authorities said.
P.
T. Chacko, a spokesman for Chief Minister Oommen Chandy of Kerala, said that
the fireworks display had been specifically forbidden by officials in the
coastal district of Kollam but that the Puttingal temple had gone ahead anyway.
One
of the devices landed in the building where the fireworks were being stored, setting
off explosions that leveled several buildings, killing and injuring people, K.Hari
Kumar, a fire officer at the scene, said in a telephone interview.
“Fragments
of the building with huge pieces of burnt crackers were flying all over,” said
Rajendran, 36, a mason who goes by one name. He had traveled with friends from
his village 20 miles away to attend the festivities, which marked the start of
the new year on the Hindu calendar.
“We
all started scrambling for a safe place,” Mr. Rajendran said by telephone from
his bed in an intensive care unit at the nearby Holy Cross Super Specialty
Hospital, where he was taken with broken bones in his face and in one arm. His
friends were so badly burned, he said, that he did not know if they would
survive.
Public
safety is a huge problem in India , where weak governance frequently results in
the flouting of safety rules, leading to large numbers of fatalities. At least 26
people died and 89 were injured when an elevated highway under construction
collapsed in late March in a crowded neighborhood in Kolkata.
K.
M. Singh, a former member of the National Disaster Management Authority and a
retired government official, said public safety was not treated as a top
priority.
Punishments
for violating safety rules are not a sufficient deterrent, he added, because
cases drag on for years in the overcrowded courts, and in the end the accused
often are not penalized.
“It
needs a total mind-set change from top to bottom,” Mr. Singh said. “The situation
will not change unless the government enforces the norms in a very undiluted
manner and takes serious punitive action wherever there are violations.”
Fireworks
have become increasingly popular at religious festivals in India , set off by children and adults in streets
and in parking lots, as well as on temple grounds. Religious groups and temples,
flush with donations, compete to create the loudest, brightest displays. Accidents
are common, though the scale of devastation on Sunday was unusual.
Hours
after the explosions on Sunday, the police in Kerala opened an official
criminal investigation of two top temple officials, Mr. Chacko said. The two
officials, P. S. Jayalal, the temple president, and J. KrishnanKutty Pillai, the
temple secretary, could not be reached immediately for comment.
S.
Chandrakumar, a police inspector in the temple town, said the police had begun
investigations of 17 people, including the temple leadership, on allegations
ranging from culpable homicide to violating the orders of a local authority.
Also
on Sunday, the Kerala government ordered a judicial inquiry into the temple
deaths, which must be completed within six months.
Mr.
Chacko said 106 people had died and 383 others were hospitalized and being
treated for burns. The medical officer of Kollam, Dr. C. R. Jaysankar, said
many of the deaths occurred when pieces of concrete, knocked loose by the
explosions, fell on members of the crowd.
Some
of the dead were burned so badly that they were unrecognizable, according to a
statement from Thiruvananthapuram Medical College , which received some of the first victims.
The
explosions began around 3 a.m. , and rescue operations were still underway
as of 9:30
a.m. , with some
people still trapped, Mr. Kumar, the fire officer, said. The force of the
explosions caused buildings and electrical lines to collapse as far as 50 feet
away, he said.
Neethu
Reghukumar, a CNN-IBN television reporter at the scene, said by
telephone that the fireworks were being set off in a small area next to the
temple, less than 300 feet away from houses, when high-intensity fireworks
being stored in a concrete building inside the temple premises caught fire
after one of the devices landed there. A huge explosion brought down the
building, and an adjacent building also collapsed, Ms. Reghukumar said.
Many
houses in the vicinity were damaged, their windows, doors and walls cracked, she
said. The explosions also tore apart bodies, witnesses said in television
interviews. One woman interviewed on CNN-IBN described finding human remains inside her
house and on the roof.
Prime
Minister Narendra Modi commented on the episode on Twitter, saying, “Fire at
temple in Kollam is heart-rending & shocking beyond words.” Television
stations showed Mr. Modi arriving in Kerala on Sunday afternoon and heading to
visit the vicinity of the temple and victims in hospitals.
The
Puttingal temple is about 40 miles from the state capital, Thiruvananthapuram. Local
residents believe that a goddess appeared on an ant hill that is now the site
of the Hindu temple.
Geeta
Anand reported from Mumbai, and Suhasini Raj from New Delhi . Hari Kumar contributed reporting from New Delhi .