3 Spectators At Air Force's Chennai Airshow Die

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    3 Spectators At Air Force's Chennai Airshow Die



    Chennai:

    At least three spectators who had come to watch the Indian Air Force’s air show in Chennai have died, a senior police officer confirmed to NDTV.

    One of them, sources said, was dead by the time he was taken to the Royapettah Government Hospital. 

    Another man had reportedly suffered a sun stroke while he was riding his bike. The biker was on the stretch connecting GOSH Hospital and Wallajah Road and was stuck in traffic for more than an hour. 

    “Volunteers even identified his condition as he was losing control amid the stranded crowd and helped him get off the bike,” an eyewitness told NDTV. 

    A senior medical officer said, “Only after the postmortem examination we will be able to identify the cause of death”.

    Questions are being raised over the Indian Air Force aggressively pushing this event to set a Limca Book of World Record by aiming to mobilise 15 lakh spectators and the Chennai City Police’s poor crowd and traffic management.

    Everything had been going smoothly ahead of the event, with largescale traffic diversion and parking regulations. But closer to the air show — scheduled at 11 am — the crowd got so large that the elevated MRTS railway stations along the Marina Beach road had turned into a sea of people. 

    Chaos broke out after the event when with the entire crowd started to disperse. Every inch of the space on the Beach road appeared occupied. 

    There was no adequate arrangement for drinking water in the spectators’ area. With temperature soaring and no public transport, hundreds had to walk three to four kilometres on the jam-packed roads to get any public conveyance.

    Many – children among them — just sat on the sidewalk tired and dehydrated. Many were seen attending to fainted or weary individuals. 

    With no effective police regulation on the ground, vehicles and two wheelers haphazardly entered both ways and remained stuck for more than two hours on most roads. 

    Many police personnel were busy returning on their two wheelers, turning into mute spectators. They  neither regulated the situation nor intervened to help stranded  ambulances until there was public uproar. 

    Most eateries on these stretches were shut and shops that were open ran out of water and soft drinks soon.

    A mother who had brought her  two children said “The state government has failed us. No proper arrangements at all either at the venue or on the roads” 

    The Chennai police had deployed 6,500 police personnel and 1,500 home guards for security. 

    It is not clear if the Tamil Nadu government — which has a culture of objecting to mass gatherings citing security concerns — had expressed its concern to the Air Force and advised against hyping the show.

    The air show had included a show by the Special Garud Force commandos in a simulated rescue operation and in freeing the hostage. It also showcased 72 aircraft, including Rafale, indigenously manufactured state-of-the-art Light Combat Aircraft Tejas, Light Combat helicopter Prachand, and Heritage aircraft Dakota.



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