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Cambodia stampede kills at least 345 at festival

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Cambodia PM says no one responsible for stampede


Cambodia PM says no one responsible for stampede

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Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen cries during a ceremony on a national day of mourning for the 456 people killed in a stampede on a bridge on November 22, in Phnom Penh November 25, 2010. Credit: Reuters/Chor Sokunthea


By Prak Chan Thul
PHNOM PENH | Mon Nov 29, 2010 6:42am EST

PHNOM PENH (Reuters) - Cambodia's prime minister said on Monday no state officials were to blame for a stampede last week that killed 351 people and ruled out resignations in the aftermath of the country's worst tragedy in three decades. Long-serving premier Hun Sen said calls for senior figures within the government and security forces to step down were politically motivated to serve opposition parties, but he said mistakes had been made and the situation was badly handled.

"No one will resign from their positions after what happened," Hun Sen said during the opening of a new government building in the capital, Phnom Penh. "The incident happened because of carelessness and we didn't expect this thing to happen," he added. "The biggest mistake was that we had not fully understood the situation." The stampede caused the biggest loss of life in Cambodia since the ultra-Maoist Khmer Rouge's regime's four-year reign of terror in the late 1970s, during which an estimated 1.7 million people were executed or died of starvation or disease.

The accident happened late on Monday last week when hoards of people celebrating an annual Water Festival on a man-made entertainment island crossed a narrow bridge at the same time. For some reason, the crowd suddenly panicked. Footage showed hundreds piled on top of each other, screaming for help, wedged under bodies, dead, alive and unconscious for about three hours. Security personnel appeared disorganized and unsure of how to rescue survivors.

A government committee announced the findings of its investigation on Monday and said the panic was caused by the slight swaying of the Diamond Gate bridge -- as part of its design -- under the weight of at least 7,000 people, who thought it was about to collapse. It also said large movements of people in both directions, along with rumors that some people had been electrocuted, added to the chaos. Investigators said there were no electrocutions and no one had died from drowning, contrary to some witness accounts, and suffocation was the cause of most of the deaths.

TIMELY RESCUE

"The panic caused the stampede," said Deputy Prime Minister Sok An, who is head of the committee. "People were jammed at all ends and the ones in the middle were the victims." Investigators said rescue efforts were timely and the number of people involved in the operation was sufficient. People pour into Phnom Penh from the countryside for the three-day festival and investigators estimated 4 million had attended. The city has a population of up to 2 million. The death toll was 456, but that was later scaled down to 351 when officials said many bodies had been counted twice. Hundreds were injured.

Hun Sen, whose government has promised $12,000 for the families of each victim, had been widely expected to absolve his government of blame and analysts say it is unlikely there will be any repercussions for his powerful Cambodian People's Party (CPP), which enjoys a huge parliamentary majority. Experts attribute Hun Sen's quarter-century in office to his blend of populism and cronyism and say it is unlikely the government or the judiciary will pursue any action against the CPP's influential allies among the police and business elite.

But many Cambodians believe heads should roll and say someone should take the blame for the handling of the rescue effort. "If they had worked faster, they might have saved many more lives," said survivor Chum Srey, 30. "They must take responsibility for this, for the sake of the families." The opposition Sam Rainsy Party (SRP) said the government was "careless and incompetent." "With the loss of nearly 400 lives and many injuries, there must be people responsible," said party member Yim Sovann.

(Editing by Martin Petty)

 

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Cambodian Buddhist monks and local authority officials pray during a Buddhist ceremony Wednesday, Dec. 8, 2010, for the re-opening of a bridge on which hundreds of people stampeded during a water festival last month in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Monks prayed for happiness and safety Wednesday at a ceremony to reopen the bridge where at least 353 revelers were trampled to death in the riverside tragedy.​
 

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Cambodian Buddhist monks bless Wednesday, Dec. 8, 2010, with holy water a bridge on which hundreds of people stampeded to death during a water festival last month in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.​
 

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A Cambodian man lights candles to mark the Buddhist ceremony for re-opening a bridge on which hundreds of people stampeded to death during a water festival last month in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.​
 
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