Published on 02:29 PM, September 24, 2015

Death toll from Saudi Hajj stampede rises to 717

Medical personnel tend to a wounded pilgrim following a crush caused by large numbers of people pushing at Mina, outside the Muslim holy city of Mecca September 24, 2015. The death toll from a stampede during the annual Muslim hajj pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia on Thursday has risen to 453 people of various nationalities, the Saudi civil defence said. Photo: Reuters

- it breakes out during symbolic stoning of the devil ritual in Mina

- cause of the stampede is not known Immediately

- 109 killed in crane collapse at Mecca's Grand Mosque on Sep 11

- Bangladesh embassy yet to confirm whether there is any Bangladeshi among the victims

- hotlines opened at the consulate are +966537375859 and +966509360082

At least 717 people taking part in the Hajj pilgrimage have been killed in a stampede near the Islamic holy city of Mecca, officials in Saudi Arabia said.
Another 863 people were injured in the incident at Mina, which occurred as two million pilgrims were taking part in the Hajj's last major rite.
They converge on Mina to throw stones at pillars representing the devil.
Preparations for the Hajj were marred when a crane collapsed at Mecca's Grand Mosque this month, killing 109 people.

Also READ: Bangladeshi woman killed in Mina stampede: Official



'Sudden surge'

Mina, a large valley about 5km (3 miles) from Mecca, is the location of the three Jamarat pillars and also houses more than 160,000 tents where pilgrims spend the night during the pilgrimage.

Also READ:Mina stampede: No info on Bangladeshi casualty yet

The Saudi civil defence directorate said in a statement that the stampede occurred on Thursday morning at the junction of Street 204 and Street 223, as pilgrims walked towards the five-story structure which surrounds the pillars, known as the Jamarat Bridge.

The Saudi civil defence authority said rescue operations are under way. Photo: Saudi Civil Defence Directorate
The incident happened when there was a "sudden increase" in the number of pilgrims heading towards pillars, the statement said.
This "resulted in a stampede among the pilgrims and the collapse of a large number of them", it added.
Security personnel and the Saudi Red Crescent were "immediately" deployed to prevent more people heading towards the area, the directorate said.

Hajj: Previous tragedies

2006: 364 pilgrims die in a crush at foot of Jamarat Bridge in Mina
1997: 340 pilgrims are killed when fire fuelled by high winds sweeps through Mina's tent city
1994: 270 pilgrims die in a stampede during the stoning ritual
1990: 1,426 pilgrims, mainly Asian, die in a stampede in an overcrowded tunnel leading to holy sites
1987: 402 people die when security forces break up an anti-US demonstration by Iranian pilgrims

Bangladeshi citizens are yet to be reported dead or injured in a stampede at Mina of Saudi Arabia. Saudi medics tend to injured pilgrims after they arrived by ambulance at an emergency hospital following the deadly stampede in Mina, near the holy city of Mecca, on the first day of Eid al-Azha on September 24, 2015. Photo: AFP

The hundreds of wounded have been taken to four hospitals in the area.

Amateur video and photographs posted on social media showed the bodies of dozens of pilgrims on the ground. They were all dressed in the simple white garments worn during the Hajj.

The civil defence directorate said the victims were of "different nationalities", without providing details.

Iran's state news agency, Irna, said at least 43 Iranians were among the dead.

BBC Hausa Service correspondent Tchima Illa Issoufou, who was with some of those affected in Mina, said many pilgrims from Niger were also killed.

The UK Foreign Office said it was in contact with the local authorities and was urgently seeking more information about whether British nationals were involved.

Saudi-owned al-Arabiya TV reported that the head of the central Hajj committee, Prince Khaled al-Faisal, had blamed the stampede on "some pilgrims with African nationalities".

But the head of Iran's Hajj organisation, Said Ohadi, told Irna that two routes to the Jamarat pillars had been inexplicably closed off by the Saudi authorities, resulting in the build-up in pilgrims.