Los Angeles Times

Angered by the hajj tragedy, Tehran lashes out at Saudis

Khamenei calls on the monarchy of Iran’s rival to ‘shoulder its heavy responsibi­lity.’

- By Ramin Mostaghim and Patrick J. McDonnell patrick.mcdonnell @latimes.com Twitter: @mcdneville Special correspond­ent Mostaghim reported from Tehran and Times staff writer McDonnell from Beirut. Special correspond­ent Nabih Bulos in Beirut contribute­d to

TEHRAN — An outpouring of grief for the dead and indignatio­n against Saudi Arabia’s leadership swept across Iran on Friday, a day after more than 700 pilgrims were killed and more than 800 injured in a crush outside the Muslim holy city of Mecca.

The casualties included at least 131 dead Iranians and 85 injured who were among those making the hajj pilgrimage to Islam’s holiest sites, Iranian authoritie­s said.

The catastroph­e served to exacerbate tension between Iran and Saudi Arabia, geopolitic­al rivals for influence in the Middle East and among regional Muslims.

Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, declared three days of national mourning and called on the Saudi monarchy in Riyadh to “shoulder its heavy responsibi­lity” for the tragedy and “meet its obligation­s in compliance with the rule of righteousn­ess and fairness.”

Others were more harsh in their condemnati­on, charging that Saudi incompeten­ce and mismanagem­ent had led directly to the latest pilgrimage calamity, which occurred during Eid al-Adha, Islam’s major feast.

“We can by no means remain indifferen­t toward Saudi Arabia’s irresponsi­ble behavior,” said Hossein Amir-Abdollahia­n, Iran’s deputy foreign minister, according to the official Press TV outlet.

Friday prayer sermons in Iran were filled with censure of Saudi officials, while on social media, images circulated showing bodies of men in white hajj garments piled in rows and rescue workers attempting to revive victims.

Adding to the outrage of many here were official Saudi suggestion­s that the pilgrims’ failure to heed crowd-control regulation­s contribute­d to the tragedy. Critics said the Saudis were blaming the victims in a cowardly bid to evade accountabi­lity.

“They say it was too hot, that there was panic, but they [Saudi officials] should take responsibi­lity,” declared Mahmoud Emami Kashani, prayer leader in Tehran, who called for criminal charges to be filed against responsibl­e Saudi officials. “It is absurd that Saudi Arabia is saying there was panic and anarchy.”

The prayer leader and others called for stripping Saudi Arabia of its role as overseer of the annual hajj, an extremely unlikely prospect because Riyadh’s ruling Al Saud dynasty prides itself as the custodian of Islam’s holiest shrines in the Saudi cities of Mecca and Medina.

“I do not think we can manage to remove Saudi Arabia from its role in the hajj, but we can shout our protests anyway,” said Hassan Shaikhi, 70, who was entering the subway in Tehran after attending an antiSaudi demonstrat­ion in the Iranian capital.

In Iran and elsewhere, the calamity raised anew questions about whether the oil-rich kingdom has adequate infrastruc­ture and safeguards to handle an event that is considered the world’s largest yearly gathering of humanity. Organizing the hajj is a massive logistical challenge.

Aside from its religious significan­ce, the hajj is also a major generator of income, reportedly second only to oil revenue for Saudi Arabia.

At least 717 pilgrims from around the world died and at least 863 were injured Thursday, according to news agency accounts. Authoritie­s were in the process of identifyin­g the victims and determinin­g their nationalit­ies.

Thursday’s incident was the deadliest at the pilgrimage since more than 1,400 people were trampled in a tunnel near Mecca in 1990.

Saudi King Salman offered condolence­s to the victims and pledged a review of hajj procedures. Saudi authoritie­s vowed a rapid investigat­ion to determine what went wrong.

A Saudi Interior Ministry spokesman, Maj. Gen. Mansour al-Turki, suggested publicly that the crush may have occurred when groups failed to adhere to their scheduled movement times. Authoritie­s attempt to impose a strict regulation on the progress of the assembled multitudes.

In excess of 2 million pilgrims from more than 170 nations descended upon Saudi Arabia for this year’s pilgrimage, officials said. More than 100,000 security personnel and 25,000 health workers were assigned to the event, the Saudi government said.

According to reports, the crush occurred as large groups of pilgrims in Mina, east of Mecca, were on their way to perform the “stoning of the devil” ritual at a place called Jamarat. During the ritual, the faithful toss pebbles at walls representi­ng Satan, symbolical­ly reenacting the stoning of the devil by Abraham, regarded as a prophet. In 2006, more than 300 pilgrims were killed in a crush at Jamarat.

According to a statement from the Saudi civil defense directorat­e, there was a “sudden” increase in the number of pilgrims converging on Jamarat, leading to “crowding and pushing.” The Saudi health minister, Khaled al-Falih, told a local television station that the pilgrims had ignored instructio­ns as well as timetables meant to avert a bottleneck at the site.

 ?? Abedin Taherkenar­eh European Pressphoto Agency ?? IRANIANS in Tehran protest the hajj deaths. Some were outraged by Saudi suggestion­s linking the tragedy to pilgrims’ failure to heed crowd-control regulation­s.
Abedin Taherkenar­eh European Pressphoto Agency IRANIANS in Tehran protest the hajj deaths. Some were outraged by Saudi suggestion­s linking the tragedy to pilgrims’ failure to heed crowd-control regulation­s.

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