Yesterday, many of us watched videos and looked at the effect of the stampede that left many pilgrims dead. I was personally too in shock to write about it until now. Presently, the blame shifting has begun and Iran is seriously pained after losing about 90 of her people. They are blaming Saudi for not taking proper precaution in keeping the lives of visitors safe during the yearly pilgrimage.
However, Saudi authourities are blaming the pilgrims for not following instructions.
But pilgrims claim there was no crowd control, hence the disaster that occurred killing hundreds of people and leaving great numbers injured.
Yahoo News Reports: Mina (Saudi Arabia) (AFP) -
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 wounded, was the second deadly
accident to hit worshippers this month, after a crane collapse in the
holy city of Mecca killed more than 100.
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.
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.
Iran announced that 90 of its
nationals were among the victims, and accused regional rival Saudi
Arabia of safety errors, while pilgrims at the site blamed the
authorities and said they were afraid to continue the annual religious
rituals.
King Salman ordered
"a revision" of hajj organisation, the official Saudi Press Agency said,
while Crown Prince Mohammed bin Nayyef, who chairs the kingdom's hajj
committee, started an inquiry.
Saudi
Health Minister Khaled al-Falih blamed worshippers for the tragedy,
telling El-Ekhbariya television that if "the pilgrims had followed
instructions, this type of accident could have been avoided".
- '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, while one outspoken critic of
redevelopment at the holy sites said police were not properly trained
and lacked the language skills for communicating with foreign pilgrims,
who make up the majority of those on the hajj.
"They don't have a clue how to
engage with these people," said Irfan al-Alawi, co-founder of the
Mecca-based Islamic Heritage Research Foundation.
"There's no crowd control."
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.
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 India
said 14 of its nationals died, while Jakarta said three Indonesians were
killed. Officials in Turkey said at least 18 of its citizens were
reported missing.
A total of 131 Iranians were among those killed, the head of the country's pilgrimage organisation 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.
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 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.
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