Khaleej Times

Haj: Saudi ready to tackle any situation

- Reuters

makkah —- Saudi health officials overseeing the Haj pilgrimage later this week say they are prepared to handle any outbreak of disease or a stampede like the one that killed hundreds of worshipper­s two years ago.

Saudi Arabia said on Monday that over 1.735 million pilgrims have arrived from abroad for the ritual, a once-in-a-lifetime religious duty for every able-bodied Muslim who can afford the journey.

Hussein Ghanam, who oversees the health ministry’s Haj operations, said the authoritie­s are prepared in case of another stampede.

“There is an integrated fleet of ambulances, each of which is considered its own fully equipped intensive-care unit. The ambulances circulates on the roads between the tents,” he said. Some 30,000 health workers will be on hand, and 5,000 hospital beds are available.

The Saudi Red Crescent is supporting the ministry with 350 ambulances and four medivac helicopter­s, director Mohammed bin Abdullah Al Qassim said. It has opened several new health centres this year and run simulation­s to practice emergency response.

“Thanks to God we have extra supplies plus special equipment and vehicles to deal with catastroph­es directly and move them to the closest hospital,” Qassim told reporters on Sunday.

Nearly 90,000 Iranians are expected to attend the Haj this year for the first time since the 2015 crush.

Another perennial concern is the potential for spreading disease among the pilgrims, who spend five days in close quarters with each other, often eating outside and sleeping on the ground near holy sites.

Ghanam said the ministry was prepared to control communicab­le diseases like the potentiall­y fatal Middle East respirator­y syndrome (Mers) coronaviru­s, which has been most prevalent in Saudi Arabia over the past five years. “We have a precedent of repeated success in past years in dealing with the outbreak of corona, SARS, and swine and bird flu,” he said.

The World Health Organisati­on said there were 26 newly reported cases of Mers in Saudi Arabia in July and August, including six deaths. In addition, more than half a million people in neighbouri­ng Yemen have been infected with cholera and 1,975 people died since an epidemic began in April in that country, according to the WHO.—

30K health workers will be on hand, and 5,000 hospital beds are available

 ?? AFP ?? Pilgrims pray around the holy Kaaba at the Grand Mosque, ahead of the annual Haj pilgrimage in the holy city of Makkah, Saudi Arabia . —
AFP Pilgrims pray around the holy Kaaba at the Grand Mosque, ahead of the annual Haj pilgrimage in the holy city of Makkah, Saudi Arabia . —

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