Tens of millions of Hindus bathe in Ganges for Kumbh Mela festival
Ash-smeared naked saints led the ritual bathing before dawn - which is said to cleanse pilgrims of their sins - with millions following them into the swirling river waters at the festival site in Allahabad in northern India.

Tens of millions of Hindus gathered Sunday for a holy bath in India’s sacred river Ganges on the most auspicious day of the world’s largest religious festival.
Ash-smeared naked saints led the ritual bathing before dawn - which is said to cleanse pilgrims of their sins - with millions following them into the swirling river waters at the festival site in Allahabad in northern India.
The population of the city has swollen from its normal 1.2 million to about 40 million on Sunday morning, with about 20 million packed inside the vast sealed off bathing area on the banks of the river, spokesman Ashok Sharma said.
Amid the crush, the thousands of volunteers on duty and police were urging pilgrims to take one short dip and then leave the freezing waters to make space for the flow of humanity behind them.
“Aerial surveys by choppers, flying cameras and our estimates put the figure at around 2O million people taking a holy dip in the rivers,” Sharma told news agency AFP.