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Complete Chaos': Dozens Killed in Stampede at Religious Festival in India
An Indian woman, caught in a stampede, reacts after not finding her relative whom she last saw at the sight of the accident at the Railway Hospital in Allahabad on February 10, 2013. (Photo: AFP/Getty Images)

Complete Chaos': Dozens Killed in Stampede at Religious Festival in India

"There was no doctor or ambulance for at least two hours after the accident."

An Indian woman, caught in a stampede, reacts after not finding her relative whom she last saw at the sight of the accident at the Railway Hospital in Allahabad on February 10, 2013. (Photo: AFP/Getty Images)

(TheBlaze/AP) -- The death toll from a stampede in a train station in northern India, where millions of devotees had gathered for a Hindu festival, rose to 31 on Monday, hospital officials said.

Medical superintendent Dr. P. Padmakar of the main state-run hospital said that at least 30 other pilgrims were injured in the crush at the main rail station in the city of Allahabad. Padmakar said 23 of the dead were women.

Tens of thousands of people were in the Allahabad station when a section of a footbridge there collapsed, leading to the stampede late Sunday.

Indian television stations showed large crowds pushing and jostling at the train station as policemen struggled to restore order.

"There was complete chaos. There was no doctor or ambulance for at least two hours after the accident," an eyewitness told NDTV news channel.

Indian railway travellers watch Indian authorities remove the body of a person that was killed during a stampede at the railway station in Allahabad, on February 10, 2013. (Photo: AFP/Getty Images)

An estimated 30 million Hindus were expected to take a dip at the Sangam, the confluence of the Ganges, the Yamuna and the Saraswati rivers on Sunday, one of the holiest bathing days of the Kumbh Mela, or Pitcher Festival. The festival lasts 55 days and is one of the world's largest religious gatherings.

The auspicious bathing days are decided by the alignment of stars, and the most dramatic feature of the festival is the Naga sadhus - ascetics with ash rubbed all over their bodies, wearing only marigold garlands - leaping joyfully into the holy waters.

According to Hindu mythology, the Kumbh Mela celebrates the victory of gods over demons in a furious battle over nectar that would give them immortality. As one of the gods fled with a pitcher of the nectar across the skies, it spilled on four Indian towns: Allahabad, Nasik, Ujjain and Haridwar.

The Kumbh Mela is held four times every 12 years in those towns. Hindus believe that sins accumulated in past and current lives require them to continue the cycle of death and rebirth until they are cleansed. If they bathe at the Ganges on the most auspicious day of the festival, believers say they can rid themselves of their sins.

Here's video of the festival before the tragedy:

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Associated Press writer Biswajeet Banerjee contributed to this report.

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