Over 50,000 Ganesha idols immersed in Mumbai

September 28, 2015 11:50 am | Updated 11:50 am IST - Mumbai

Indian devotees prepare to immerse an idol of elephant-headed Hindu god Ganesha in the Arabian Sea in Mumbai, India, Sunday, Sept. 27, 2015. The immersion of idols marks the end of ten-days long Ganesha Chaturthi festival that celebrates the birth of the Hindu god. (AP Photo/Rajanish Kakade)

Indian devotees prepare to immerse an idol of elephant-headed Hindu god Ganesha in the Arabian Sea in Mumbai, India, Sunday, Sept. 27, 2015. The immersion of idols marks the end of ten-days long Ganesha Chaturthi festival that celebrates the birth of the Hindu god. (AP Photo/Rajanish Kakade)

A peaceful ‘visarjan’ of Lord Ganesha idols marked the end to the ten-day long festival on Monday as lakhs of devotees bid adieu to the elephant-headed deity, including the famous ‘Lalbaugcha Raja’ idol.

The immersion process which started since early hours on Sunday culminated this morning with over 50,000 idols being immersed amidst fanfare and tight security.

According to Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai (MCGM) statement, till 7 am on Monday, a total 50,250 idols were immersed at the designated natural and artificial spots, including at major sites Girgaon Chowpatty, Juhu beach, Powai lake, Dadar, Madh jetty, Marve.

It included 9,714 ‘sarvajanik’ idols, 40,302 ’gharguti’ (those at homes) and 234 ‘gauri’ idols that were immersed at 71 natural sites and 26 artificial spots across the city and in the suburbs.

A total 2,577 immersions took place in the artificial lakes, the release said.

An elaborate security arrangement was put in place for the large-scaled immersion by Civic administration, Mumbai Police, fire brigade, SRPF (State Reserve Police Force) and ITBP (Indo-Tibetan Border Police).

While the entire ‘visarjan’ remained peaceful, only one incident took place where a 15-year-old was saved from drowning at the Girgaon Chowpatty.

“Except the Girgaon Chowpatty where a boy was saved from drowning, entire festivities went peaceful,” an officer at MCGM’s Disaster Management control room said.

A senior police officer told PTI cranes, watchtowers, drones, coast guard’s helicopters and floodlights were installed at most of the major immersion spots.

A strong team of 35,055 assistant sub-inspectors and constables, 4,500 women constables along with 250 women officers, 1,000 SRPF jawans and 250 ITBP personnel, have been deployed to maintain law and order.

In 2014, the civic body had given permissions to 1,188 Ganpati mandals all across the city, while it placed stringent norms this year also to check illegal erection of pandals.

The traffic police also ensured smooth vehicular movement on the immersion routes as it closed 49 roads, while marked 55 roads as ‘one way’.

(Photos: AP and Reuters)

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