Jun 05, 2025 10:24 AM IST

The Bengaluru police had denied permission for RCB’s victory parade, however the group went forward with it anyway.

The Bengaluru stampede killed 11 Royal Challengers Bangalore (RCB) followers exterior the M Chinnaswamy Stadium, and questions are being raised over the victory parade of the IPL champions.

RCB followers gathered in giant numbers exterior Vidhana Soudha in Bengaluru on Wednesday to catch a glimpse of their Indian Premier League (IPL) 2025 champion group. (ANI)

The Bengaluru occasion was deliberate to start at Vidhan Soudha and conclude at M Chinnaswamy Stadium, protecting a distance of lower than 2 km. This led to an enormous crowd gathering in a confined space. The scenario was additional difficult by the police refusing permission for an open-top bus parade, including to the general chaos.

RCB posted on the group’s social media on Wednesday afternoon that the parade would certainly happen at 5 PM, hours after the police denied permission. The group additionally introduced restricted free passes on-line.

The blended messaging may need contributed to the chaos and the eventual stampede, as many followers landed exterior the stadium to get the free passes.

According to the Police, greater than 50,000 followers had gathered inside a one-kilometre radius of the stadium, and plenty of of them tried to push by means of the gates and climb boundaries put in by the authorities.

“The crowd was beyond our control. Even though we had deployed force, it was too much,” a senior officer informed HT.

It have to be famous that the rationale given for the denial of parade permission was that such a big crowd in a small space can be tough to handle for the cops.

Former cricketer blames RCB administration for the stampede

Former Indian cricketer Madan Lal has blamed the RCB administration for the chaos that erupted exterior the stadium. According to the 1983 world champion, the BCCI can’t be blamed for the incident. He additionally questioned who would take care of the households of the deceased.

“BCCI cannot be blamed. It was RCB’s responsibility, they should have worked together with the government. Who will look after the families who lost someone during the stampede?” he stated.

Lal additionally questioned the hurry within the celebrations and stated there was a giant communication hole on the facet of the organisers.

“All that joy and celebration now feels hollow and ruined. There was absolutely no need to fly RCB in and organise a celebration in such haste. What was the need for such a hurried celebration? There was a big communication gap. Sadly, in our country, human lives continue to be undervalued,” he added.