Sri Lanka pilgrims flee as elephant runs amok

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Thirteen people were taken to a hospital and treated for minor injuries.

Video footage shared on social media shows a parade of elephants, covered in red, blue and gold robes from trunk to tail, in front of a large crowd.

PHOTOS: SCREENGRABS FROM A C FAWZUL ALEEM/FACEBOOK

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COLOMBO – A Hindu religious festival in Sri Lanka ended in chaos after an elephant in the procession panicked, with 13 people in the crowd injured as they fled, police said on July 7.

Video footage shared on social media shows one of the elephant’s keepers trying to pull the agitated animal by its tail in a desperate attempt to control it, while screaming devotees lining the street rush to escape.

The images show a parade of elephants, covered in red, blue and gold robes from trunk to tail, in front of a large crowd while cymbals clang.

Thirteen people were taken to hospital and treated for minor injuries in Kataragama town, 280km south of the capital Colombo, a police spokesman said.

A spokesman for the state-run Kataragama hospital said on July 7, the day after the incident, that all the injured had been discharged.

Elephants are considered sacred in Sri Lanka, but animal cruelty laws are rarely enforced.

Animal rights groups have criticised the widespread use of elephants at temple ceremonies in the country.

There have been instances when the animals have gone berserk at parades involving loud music and fireworks.

In August 2023, dozens of pilgrims jumped into a lake in the central city of Kandy to escape five agitated young elephants. Several people were hurt and one woman was hospitalised.

In 2019, at least 17 people were injured when elephants

ran amok at a temple festival in Colombo.

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

The government has banned the capture of wild elephants, but dozens of calves have been stolen in recent years, often after their mothers were killed by their captors. AFP

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