The Guardian (USA)

Thousands suffer heat stress on hajj pilgrimage as temperatur­es reach 48C

- Agence France-Presse

More than 2,000 people suffered heat stress during the hajj pilgrimage, Saudi officials said on Thursday, after temperatur­es soared to 48C (118F).

Over 1.8 million Muslim worshipper­s performed the days-long hajj, mostly held outdoors at the height of the Saudi desert summer. Many elderly were among the pilgrims after a Covidera maximum age limit was scrapped.

Saudi officials said about 1,700 heat stress cases were recorded on Thursday – as huge numbers of pilgrims remain at the holy sites one day after the main rituals finished – added to the 287 reported earlier.

“The number of heat stress cases since the beginning of this day has reached 1,721,” the Saudi health ministry said, urging people to stay out of the sun and drink plenty of water.

Officials did not provide a death toll but at least 230 people – many from Indonesia – died during the pilgrimage, according to numbers announced by various countries which did not list causes of death.

According to the consul general of Indonesia, the world’s largest Muslim country, at least 209 Indonesian­s died during the hajj.

“It is inaccurate to say that a lot of Indonesian pilgrims died because of heatstroke­s,” said Eko Hartono, adding that causes of death were mostly due to heart and respirator­y ailments.

But he did acknowledg­e that some pilgrims had “fainted” during the dayslong pilgrimage “because of the heat”.

Iran’s oldest pilgrim this year, aged 114, died of a heart attack, the semi-official Fars news agency said, reporting 10 Iranian deaths.

Eight Algerians and four Moroccans died, officials said, while an Egyptian pro-government media outlet said eight pilgrims from the country had died.

Hundreds of people were treated for heart problems, including one 78year-old Filipino man who had successful open-heart surgery in Mecca, the health ministry said.

The real figure for heat stress – which includes heatstroke, exhaustion, cramps and rashes – is probably far higher, as many sufferers were not admitted to hospitals or clinics.

People struggling in the heat was a common sight, especially after the daylong outdoor prayers at Mount Arafat, where overheatin­g phones shut down and shade was hard to find.

The hajj has a history of deadly catastroph­es including crowd crushes and militant attacks, but this year’s main challenge came from the extreme temperatur­es.

The kingdom dispatched thousands of paramedics and set up field hospitals to help contain the risks. It was the biggest hajj since 2.5 million visitors came in pre-Covid 2019.

The Gulf climate is so harsh that in 2021, the United Nations’ intergover­nmental panel on climate change warned that parts of it could become uninhabita­ble by the end of the century due to global warming.

Maximum summer temperatur­es of 50C (122F) could become an annual occurrence by the end of the century, experts say.

 ?? Pilgrimage. Photograph: Ashraf Amra/EPA ?? Muslim pilgrims use umbrellas to protect themselves from the heat as they gather on Mount Arafat, Saudi Arabia, during the 2023 Hajj
Pilgrimage. Photograph: Ashraf Amra/EPA Muslim pilgrims use umbrellas to protect themselves from the heat as they gather on Mount Arafat, Saudi Arabia, during the 2023 Hajj

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