|
Blame shifted towards
Saudi authorities on Friday after a stampede at the hajj killed at least 717
people, in the worst tragedy to strike the annual Muslim pilgrimage in a
quarter of a century. The disaster, which also left several hundred people injured,
was the second deadly accident to hit worshippers this month, after a crane
collapse in the holy city of Mecca killed more than 100.
Tragedy
strikes again at the hajj in Mecca ©I.de Véricourt/V.Lefai, vl/abm/jfs (AFP)
|
At
the scene, bodies lay in piles, surrounded by discarded personal belongings and
flattened water bottles, while rescue workers laid bodies in long rows on
stretchers, limbs protruding from beneath white sheets.
AFP report continues:
The
stampede broke out in Mina, about five kilometres (three miles) from Mecca,
during the symbolic stoning of the devil ritual. The Saudi civil defence
service said it was still counting the dead, who included pilgrims from
different countries.
Saudi
emergency personnel stand near bodies of Hajj pilgrims at the site where at
least 717 were killed and hundreds wounded in a stampede in Mina, near the holy
city of Mecca on September 24, 2015
|
A
total of 131 Iranians were among more than 700 pilgrims killed in a stampede at
the annual hajj, the head of the country's pilgrimage organization said on
Friday.
Said
Ohadi told the official IRNA news agency that the death toll could rise as 60
Iranians were also injured.
Iranian
leaders have been deeply critical of the Saudi authorities over what they
charge were flawed crowd control measures.
"The
government of Saudi Arabia must accept the huge responsibility for this catastrophe,"
Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said.
King
Salman ordered "a revision" of hajj organization so that pilgrims can
"carry out their rituals in complete safety", the official Saudi
Press Agency said, while Crown Prince Mohammed bin Nayyef, who chair's the
kingdom's hajj committee, ordered an inquiry.
A
Saudi minister blamed the pilgrims for the tragedy, saying they had not
followed hajj rules.
"Many
pilgrims move without respecting the timetables" set for the hajj, Health
Minister Khaled al-Falih told El-Ekhbariya television.
"If
the pilgrims had followed instructions, this type of accident could have been
avoided."
- 'Great heat and
fatigue' -
The
stampede began at around 9:00 am (0600 GMT), shortly after the civil defence
said on Twitter it was dealing with a "crowding" incident in Mina.
Hundreds
of thousands of pilgrims had converged on Mina to throw pebbles at one of three
walls representing Satan, for the last major ritual of the hajj, which
officially ends on Sunday.
Interior
ministry spokesman General Mansur al-Turki said the stampede was caused when
"a large number of pilgrims were in motion at the same time" at an
intersection of two streets in Mina.
"The
great heat and fatigue of the pilgrims contributed to the large number of
victims," he said. Temperatures in Mina had reached 46 degrees Celsius
(115 degrees Fahrenheit) Thursday.
Witnesses,
however, blamed the authorities.
"There
was crowding," said Ahmed Abu Bakr, a 45-year-old Libyan who escaped the
stampede with his mother. "The police had closed all entrances and exits
to the pilgrims' camp, leaving them only one."
Abu
Bakr said the police appeared inexperienced, complaining that "they don't
even know the roads and the places around here".
After
the incident helicopters patrolled overhead and ambulance sirens wailed as the
injured were rushed to hospitals, AFP reporters said.
At
one facility, a steady stream of ambulances discharged pilgrims on stretchers.
The
disaster came as the world's 1.5 billion Muslims marked Eid al-Adha, the Feast
of Sacrifice, the most important holiday on the Islamic calendar.
It
was the second major accident this year for hajj pilgrims, after a construction
crane collapsed on September 11 at Mecca's Grand Mosque, Islam's holiest site,
killing 109 people, including many foreigners.
-
Foreign casualties? -
The
hajj is among the five pillars of Islam, and every capable Muslim must perform
it at least once in a lifetime. Official figures released Thursday said
1,952,817 pilgrims had performed this year's hajj, including almost 1.4 million
foreigners.
For
years the event was marred by stampedes and fires, but it had been largely
incident-free for nearly a decade following safety improvements.
In
the last major incident, in January 2006, 364 pilgrims were killed in a
stampede during the stoning ritual, and in 1990, 1,426 mainly Asian pilgrims
died in a tunnel stampede at Mina after a ventilation system failure.
There
was little immediate information on the nationalities of the dead, though
officials in Turkey said at least 18 of its citizens were reported missing.
In
Shiite-dominated Iran, supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei blamed
"improper measures" and "mismanagement" by Saudi
authorities, who he said "must accept the huge responsibility for this
catastrophe".
Condolences
came from capitals around the region and the globe, including from UN Secretary
General Ban Ki-moon, while Pope Francis expressed solidarity with Muslims and
voiced the "closeness of the church" in the face of the tragedy.
The
stoning ritual emulates the Prophet Abraham, who is said to have stoned the
devil at three locations when he tried to dissuade Abraham from God's order to
sacrifice his son Ishmael.
At
the last moment, God spares the boy, sending a sheep to be sacrificed in his
place.
Muslims
worldwide commemorated Abraham's willingness to sacrifice his son by
slaughtering cows, sheep and other animals on Thursday as part of Eid al-Adha.
Eid celebrations were also
marred in neighbouring Yemen, where an Islamic State suicide bomber struck a
mosque in the capital Sanaa in an attack targeting Shiite rebels, leaving 25
dead.
No comments:
Post a Comment