Pressure has mounted on
Saudi authorities to take responsibility for Thursday’s death of over 700
pilgrims in the country in a disaster many believe could have been avoided. At least 717 people died
during a stampede as nearly 3 million Muslims from around the world rounded off
this year’s hajj with an important ceremony in Mina, about four kilometres from
Mecca.
The
tragedy came about two weeks after a crane collapse killed over 100 pilgrims,
among them six Nigerians.
Preliminary
details say three Nigerians died in the latest disaster, alongside three
Kenyans and eight Egyptians.
Iran
has 131 deaths, India: 14, Pakistan: 6, Turkey: 4, Indonesia: 3, Netherlands:
1. Over 800 people were injured.
PREMIUM TIMES report continues:
Despite
the large number of fatalities, Saudi authorities blamed pilgrims of “African
nationalities” for the disaster.
Comments
by Saudi health minister, Khaled al-Falih that the incident were mostly caused
by Africans who failed to follow instructions angered several affected
countries.
The
leader of Nigeria’s delegation to hajj, and the Emir of Kano, Muhammadu Sanusi
II, urged the Saudi government to refrain from pointing accusing fingers at
pilgrims for the deaths.
Emir
Sanusi said the incident should not have happened in the first place.
“It
happened on the designated ways for incoming and outgoing pilgrims to the site,
[where they were] crossing each other,” he told the BBC.
“We
are therefore urging the Saudi authorities not to apportion blame to the
pilgrims for not obeying instructions.”
Iran’s
Security Council, which country has the highest number of casualties so far,
accused the Saudi government of incompetence.
The
council demanded that the Saudi government takes responsibility for the death
of 717 people as well as the treatment of over 860 people in the stampede.
“The unavoidable fact is
that the Saudi government has been incompetent in this regard and with regard
to the management of the Hajj pilgrimage, and Riyadh must accept responsibility
for this,” a spokesperson for the council, Keyvan Khosravi, was reported to
have said.
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