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The annual Muslim
pilgrimage to
Mecca
and
Medina
, known as the Haj, has been plagued by many disasters in recent years.
Thousands of people, most of them pilgrims involved in one of the world’s
greatest religious rituals, have died in tragedies linked to Islam’s holiest
shrines.
Some of these were the result of political and religious disputes.
The worst disasters were:
---2006- Stampede at Jamarat kills over 360
people and injures over 289.
---2006
- Collapse of Makkah hostel housing pilgrims kills 76.
—Feb. 1, 2004: 244 pilgrims
killed and a similar number injured, some critically, in a stampede during
the devil-stoning ritual.
—March 5, 2001: 35 killed in stampede during stoning of the devil ritual in
Mina.
—April 9, 1998: About 180 pilgrims were trampled to death when panic erupted
after several fell off an overpass during the stoning of the devil ritual in
Mina.
—April 15, 1997: Fires driven by high winds tear through a sprawling,
overcrowded tent city at Mina, trapping and killing more than 340 pilgrims and
injuring 1,500. Aid workers and diplomats said the death toll was at least 500.
—May 23, 1994: 270 pilgrims, most of them Indonesian, killed in stampede in
Mecca
as worshippers surge toward cavern for symbolic ritual of “stoning the
devil.”
—July 2, 1990: 1,426 pilgrims, many of them Malaysians, Indonesian and
Pakistanis, killed in
Mecca
stampede in overcrowded pedestrian tunnel leading to holy sites. It was worst
hajj tragedy of modern times.
—July 9, 1989: Two bombs explode in
Mecca
, killing one pilgrim, wounding 16. Saudi authorities blame Iranian-inspired
terrorists and later behead 16 Kuwaiti Shiite Muslims for bombings.
Iran
denied involvement.
—July 31, 1987: 402 people, mostly Iranian pilgrims, killed and 649 wounded in
Mecca
when security forces clash with Iranian staging illegal anti-U.S.
demonstration.
—Aug. 3, 1980: Pakistani jetliner carrying hundreds of Muslim pilgrims catches
fire soon after take-off from Jeddah to
Riyadh
, Saudi capital, suffocating many as smoke spread through cabin. Aircraft’s
fuselage collapsed after emergency landing, killing more. A total of 301 people
died. Investigators found fire probably caused when passenger lit kerosene stove
in aisle to brew tea.
—Nov. 20, 1979: About 1,200 Sunni Muslim extremists storm the Grand Mosque in
Mecca
in what Saudi officials later said was an attempt to kidnap King Khalid and
force him to abdicate. But monarch had stomach ache that day and did not go to
mosque as scheduled. Most attackers escaped during the two-week siege, broken
when government forces, aided by French commandos, stormed mosque Dec. 4. Some
75 extremists, including their leader, killed in battle around 38-acre complex.
Another 170 captured and many beheaded. Scores of Saudi military personnel also
slain.
—Dec. 4, 1974: 191 people killed when chartered Dutch DC-8 airliner carrying
home Indonesian pilgrim’s crashes in
Sri Lanka
.
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