Toronto Star

Death toll climbs higher in Saudi hajj stampede

New numbers estimate death toll at 1,399 in disaster near Mecca

- JON GAMBRELL THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

DUBAI— The crush and stampede last month outside of Saudi Arabia’s holy city of Mecca killed at least1,399 people during the hajj pilgrimage, a new tally Thursday showed, 630 more than the kingdom’s official toll.

The Associated Press count of dead from the disaster — the worst tragedy to strike the hajj in a quartercen­tury — is based on tolls offered by 18 countries through their officials or state media broadcasts.

The tolls are said to only include those killed in the disaster at Mina, near Mecca.

Any disaster at the hajj, a pillar of Islamic faith, could be seen as a blow to the kingdom’s cherished stewardshi­p of Islam’s holiest sites. This season saw two, including the Sept. 11 collapse of a crane at Mecca’s Grand Mosque that killed 111 people.

Saudi Arabia has been hesitant to release updated casualty figures from the Sept. 24 stampede in Mina, even as hundreds of people remain missing.

“Discrediti­ng the Saudi handling of the hajj undermines the kingdom’s prestige and legitimacy across the Islamic world,” Bruce Riedel, a former CIA officer who now runs the Washington-based Brookings Institutio­n’s intelligen­ce project, wrote on one of the think-tank’s blogs this week.

The Associated Press count of the dead is based on tolls offered by 18 of the over 100 countries that took part in the hajj this year.

Iran said it had 465 pilgrims killed, while Egypt lost 148 and Indonesia 120.

Others include Nigeria with 99, Pakistan with 89, India with 81, Mali with 70, Bangladesh with 63, Senegal with 54, Benin with 51, Cameroon with 42, Ethiopia with 31, Morocco with 27, Algeria with 25, Ghana with 12, Chad with11, Kenya with eight and Turkey with three.

Saudi officials have said their official figure of 769 killed and 934 injured remains accurate, though an investigat­ion into the causes of the tragedy is ongoing and authoritie­s have not updated the casualty toll since Sept. 26, two days after the disaster. Authoritie­s have said the crush and stampede occurred when two waves of pilgrims converged on a narrow road, causing hundreds of people to suffocate or be trampled to death.

Shiite power Iran, the Mideast rival of Sunni Saudi Arabia, has blamed the disaster on the kingdom’s “mismanagem­ent.” It also accused Riyadh of a coverup, saying the real death toll exceeds 4,700, without providing evidence to support its claim.

Iran has called for an independen­t body to take over planning and administer­ing the five-day hajj pilgrimage, required of all able Muslims once in their lifetimes.

But the ruling Al Saud family likely would never give up its role in administer­ing the holy sites, which along with Saudi Arabia’s oil wealth gives it major influence in the Muslim world. King Salman himself is known as the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques.

The dispute comes as Saudi Arabia leads a coalition in Yemen’s civil war targeting Shiite rebels known as Houthis, who have backing from Iran.

Meanwhile, the kingdom has suffered gun and bomb attacks by an affiliate of the extremist Islamic State group, which holds a third of Iraq and Syria in its self-declared “caliphate.”

Like Al Qaeda before it, the Islamic State group opposes the Saudi royal family’s control over the holy sites, especially as Saudi Arabia is a member of the U.S.-led coalition targeting the militant group in airstrikes.

With hundreds missing, a final death toll remains in question, even as the latest count brings the number of dead even closer to the deadliest disaster to ever strike the hajj — a stampede in 1990 that killed 1,426 people.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada