© Ahmad
Masood / Reuters
|
Mecca’s Hajj stampede
death toll has surpassed 1,450 people, AP reported, citing the sum-up of
official figures from 19 of the nations affected. The tally, reported by Saudi
Arabia as 769, makes it the deadliest-ever incident during the annual
pilgrimage.
Hundreds
of people are still presumed missing weeks after the deadly September 24
stampede, but the number of victims has been steadily growing with the release
of new statements by countries whose citizens were killed.
The
new death toll collected by AP, which is based on such official publications,
is nearly double Riyadh’s latest figures.
RT report continues:
Iran,
which has blamed the Saudis for the stampede, has announced that 465 of its
citizens died near Mina outside the holy city of Mecca. This figure also
includes those unaccounted for, as Tehran does not hope to find them alive.
On
Wednesday, the Iranian supreme leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, threatened Saudi
Arabia with “harsh” measures if it fails to repatriate the bodies of Iranian
pilgrims as soon as possible.
“The
Islamic Republic of Iran has so far showed self-restraint, observed Islamic
decency and brotherly respect in the Islamic world,” Ayatollah Khamenei said in
a statement aired on Iranian state television. “But they should know that
Iran’s hand is superior to many others and has more capabilities.”
Egypt
follows Iran with the second-highest death toll, which the country has put at
148 people, according to AP. There were also 120 Indonesians among those
killed, the third highest death toll.
Overall,
more than 20 countries from across Africa, Asia and the Middle East have
reported having citizens killed and missing.
- Iran: 465 killed
- Egypt: 148 killed
- Indonesia: 120 killed
- India: 101 killed
- Nigeria: 99 killed (200+ still missing)
- Pakistan: 93 killed
- Mali: 70 killed
- Bangladesh: 63 killed
- Senegal: 54 killed
- Benin: 51 killed
- Cameroon: 42 killed
- Ethiopia: 31 killed
- Sudan: 30 killed
- Morocco: 27 killed
- Algeria: 25 killed
- Ghana: 12 killed
- Chad: 11 killed
- Kenya: 8 killed
- Turkey: 3 killed
The
deadly stampede occurred on September 24 near an exit from a monorail train
station that was close to the tent camps accommodating thousands of pilgrims
who had come for the five-day celebration of Islam’s second-biggest holiday,
Eid Al-Ahda.
If AP’s tally is accurate,
it would make this year’s stampede the deadliest-ever Hajj incident. The
previous anti-record dates back to 1990, when 1,426 people were killed in a
stampede inside a pedestrian tunnel leading out of Mecca towards Mina.
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