Bengaluru stampede: ‘Police tried to implement the queues but people pushed from all sides. And we fell down ‘. Bharat News

Bengaluru: A teenage girl is keen to see her cricketing heroes. A young technology whose laptop is still waiting at his table. A woman takes on the shoulders by friends, panting for life. A student got torn clothes, his mother’s cry was echoing through the corridors of the hospital.Everyone increased a crushed crowd on Wednesday during the victory parade of Royal Challengers Bangalore, which made happiness in joy.Fourteen -year -old Divyamika – called Dimple – watched the final on Tuesday night while cheering for RCB. The next afternoon, she went to the Chinnaswamy Stadium with her mother, aunt and Grandount to see RCB players celebrating her long -awaited IPL title. Around 4.50pm, began pushing out in the crowd. Caught in a stampede, Dimple was trampled.“My daughter called me and kept crying, asked me to go to the boring hospital. She did not say why. My granddaughter was crushed.” “He had just started Class IX. He went to celebrate, not to die.”In Vydehi Hospital, another tragedy was coming out. Went to the stadium with 21 -year -old Bhimik friends. Separating in the crowd, he was later found to be unconscious, clothes torn. A friend said, “We tried to revive him in the police jeep, but he did not make it.” His mother’s cry echoed: “Chinnu, get up. Your mother has come.”His parents accused the delay in medical care and added insults when Chief Minister Siddaramaiah’s visit organized the hospital formalities. “If he told us that he was leaving, we would not let him happen. He was our only son,” said his father.The Tamil Nadu native and RCB fan, Devi, had given up a few hours of work to attend the parade. He “I am taking my friend” I am taking the metro! ” And reached the stadium after failing to get online tickets. “His laptop is still on the table and his bags are there, but he is not there,” his colleague said, waiting outside the hospital.The 24 -year -old came with 12 colleagues from the core. “We were waiting near Gate 7. The police tried to implement the queues, but people pushed from behind. We fell. People ran on us,” said his friend. “There was no ambulance. We took Sahana to a tonic shop and begged a car for help. He could not be saved.”