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Sri Lanka pilgrims jump into lake to escape elephants running amok during parade


Dozens of pilgrims jumped into a lake to escape agitated elephants that ran amok during an annual Buddhist procession in Sri Lanka, police said Wednesday.

At least one woman was hospitalized and many more injured during the stampede at the Esala Perahera parade in Kandy, a popular pilgrimage destination, on Tuesday night.

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Police said five young elephants adorned with decorative cover-ings for the procession went berserk, forcing spectators to jump into a lake to avoid getting trampled.

VIDEO: Two elephants run amok at religious parade in Sri Lanka.
At least 17 people were injured after two agitated elephants in a Buddhist parade panicked, causing a stampede in Colombo pic.twitter.com/8C6DPl6Ixp

— AFP News Agency (@AFP) September 10, 2019

The pageant was suspended until the runaway animals were chained and subdued.

Footage shared on social media showed one of the creatures shaking off its decorative clothing and charging down a street in Kandy with several handlers in hot pursuit.

After nightly parades, the religious festivities end on August 30 with the display of a relic casket — believed to contain a tooth belonging to the Buddha — atop an elephant.

The centuries-old cultural event has been criticized for alleged cruelty to animals, with activists demanding an end to the use of captive elephants.

In 2019, at least 17 people were injured when elephants ran amok at a temple festival in Colombo.

Three years before that, a woman was killed when two elephants triggered a stampede at another festival.

Official records show there are about 200 domesticated elephants in the island nation, along with a wild population of around 7,500.

Read more: Elephants honored in Thailand as part of nation’s heritage

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