Friday, 11 September 2015

Saudi Arabia kills 107, injures 238 at Mecca's Grand Mosque ahead of haj







A massive construction crane crashed into Mecca's Grand Mosque in stormy weather on Friday,
Saudi Arabia killing at least 107 people and injuring 238, Saudi authorities said, days before the annual haj pilgrimage.
The civil defence agency said on Twitter that emergency teams were sent to the scene after a
 "crane fell at the Grand Mosque," one of Islam's most revered sites.

Abdel Aziz Naqoor, who said he works at the mosque, told AFP he saw the crane fall after being hit by the storm.

That came about an hour after it tweeted that Mecca was "witnessing medium to heavy rains," and pictures on social media showed lightning.


Ahmed bin Mohammad al-Mansoori, spokesman for the two holy mosques, was quoted by the official Saudi Press Agency as saying part of a crane collapsed at 5:10 pm (1410 GMT) "as a result of strong winds and heavy rains."

The Kaaba is a massive cube-shaped structure at the centre of the mosque towards which Muslims worldwide pray and which has a major role in the haj.

"If it weren't for Al-Tawaf bridge the injuries and deaths would have been worse," he said, referring to a covered walkway that surrounds the holy Kaaba and broke the crane's fall.

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