India’s tragic week: 50 dead in train crashes, road carnage and stampedes
From temple stampedes to train collisions, India’s first week of November saw over 50 lives lost. A grim reminder that the nation’s safety crisis continues to spiral unchecked.
- Nov 6, 2025,
- Updated Nov 6, 2025 12:42 PM IST

- 1/9
India’s first week of November has turned grim — five major tragedies across states, over 50 dead, hundreds injured. Temples, tracks, and highways became sudden sites of horror.

- 2/9
In Andhra Pradesh’s Kasibugga, what began as devotion ended in despair. A stampede at the Lord Venkateswara temple left nine dead, most of them women — crushed in sacred chaos.

- 3/9
Officials revealed the temple had been built without permits — no crowd control, no safety plan. A holy site turned death trap, raising questions about illegal religious structures.

- 4/9
Chhattisgarh’s Bilaspur witnessed one of the week’s deadliest rail crashes. A passenger MEMU train plowed into a stationary goods train — 11 dead, 20 injured, and haunting questions on oversight.

- 5/9
In Uttar Pradesh’s Mirzapur, six pilgrims were mowed down by the Howrah-Kalka Mail while crossing tracks after a holy bath. A moment of faith turned fatal on the rails. (Representative pic)

- 6/9
On Telangana’s Hyderabad-Bijapur highway, dawn turned deadly as a TSRTC bus collided with a truck. Twenty lives lost in twisted metal — families shattered before sunrise.

- 7/9
A dumper truck gone rogue in Jaipur’s Lohamandi tore through traffic — 13 dead, vehicles crushed, chaos on asphalt. Investigators say rage, not malfunction, fueled the bloodshed.

- 8/9
The NCRB’s 2023 report paints a chilling backdrop — 1,217 accidental deaths daily, most from road and rail accidents. A crisis normalized, claiming 4.4 lakh lives in one year. (Representative pic)

- 9/9
From reckless driving to lax safety checks and overcrowded temples — India’s tragedies share a pattern: preventable losses that repeat, week after week, headline after headline.
