At least 339 dead after stampede in Cambodia

Military police look at a bridge where a stampede took place in Phnom Penh, November 23, 2010. REUTERS/ Chor Sokunthea

PHNOM PENH, (Reuters) – A stampede on a bridge in  Cambodia’s capital killed at least 339 people late today  and wounded nearly as many after thousands panicked on the last  day of a water festival, authorities and state media said.
Witnesses said the stampede began after several people were  electrocuted on a small bridge connecting Phnom Penh to nearby  Diamond Island. Most either drowned in a tributary of the Tonle  Sap lake or were trampled to death, authorities said.
State television said at least 240 of the dead were women,  citing reports from two hospitals.
Prime Minister Hun Sen apologised for the disaster and  ordered an investigation as television footage showed relatives  crying over the bodies of the dead piled up on each other.
“This is the biggest tragedy in more than 31 years after  the Pol Pot regime,” he said, referring to the murderous Khmer  Rouge regime whose agrarian revolution in 1975 killed an  estimated 1.7 million people in Cambodia under the command of  Pol Pot.
Hun Sen urged the country to remain calm and ruled out  terrorism as a cause for the catastrophe, which took place on  the third and final day of the Bon Om Touk water festival.
“It needs further investigation,” he said.
Diamond Island, a small island owned by a local bank, is  equipped with newly built conference and exhibition centres,  restaurants and entertainment areas.
It is popular among women shoppers, especially during the  water festival when retailers offer discounts on clothing and  other goods. Many of the victims had attended a concert and  were returning home to the city when the stampede started.
Phnom Penh police chief Touch Narouth told Reuters that  “many people had died in the festival” but declined to  elaborate.

Military police look at a bridge where a stampede took place in Phnom Penh, November 23, 2010. REUTERS/ Chor Sokunthea
Military police look at a bridge where a stampede took place in Phnom Penh, November 23, 2010. REUTERS/ Chor Sokunthea