A
professor of Islamic Eschatology, human rights activist and Director of
Muslim Rights Concern, Ishaq Akintola, who witnessed the September 24
stampede in Mina, Saudi Arabia, tells BAYO AKINLOYE of PUNCH what really
happened at the Hajj stampede.
- As an eyewitness of the tragic stampede in Mina, what would you say went wrong?
We
performed this rite last year; we did it the year before that and the
road was free. For the past 10 years there had been no pandemonium; and
no stampede on that road. It (stampede) used to happen almost every year
in the past, but for the past 10 years, the Saudi authorities have been
able to control the human traffic, by creating different routes for
entry and exit of the place. But, on that fateful day, we found out that
some of those who had thrown their own stones made a U-turn instead of
moving ahead to take a detour. They came through the route meant for
entrance and not exit. They came towards us. They were in a very large
group and the road was not spacious enough to allow a free flow of those
of us coming to throw stones at the Devil and those who had stoned the
Devil. The road could not take those coming and those going. And I
discovered that most of those who took the wrong way were Egyptians…
How did you know they were Egyptians?
I
knew they were Egyptians because I heard them speak the Egyptian
dialect of Arabic. And, of course, I studied in Egypt for five years. I
know the dialect. Knowing that the road would not contain those of us
going to perform the Hajj rite and the Egyptians who had already done
theirs, we pleaded with them, we tried to persuade them to take the
right route to avoid any ugly incident but they refused; the reason
being that their camp was based close to the venue of the stoning. And
if they were asked to take the other way round to their camp, it would
take them a long time to do so.
They
forgot that by facing us, they constituted themselves into a threat to
life — too many lives and their own lives as well. Even if we had
attempted to go back for them to pass through, it would have been
impossible because a mass of pilgrims had built up and we were pushing
one another. The road became narrower and breathing became difficult.
In
the commotion, the Saudi police after noticing that the situation was
getting out of hand climbed roofs of buildings and started splashing
cold water on the crowd so that it could give us some comfort — because
at that point, people were already tired and collapsing. They had walked
10km from Monzabizah to Mina and from Mina they were walking another
three kilometres to the Jumrah. At some point, we had to stand still. We
tried to move to one side but it was impossible to do so as people
coming from behind were pushing us forward. Consequently, we were forced
to push those in front of us. I think it was just a few minutes that my
group passed through the opposing crowds that the stampede began. I
knew it was a tragedy waiting to happen.
- Were there other factors that led to the tragic chaos?
Besides,
one major reason why that horrible stampede happened was that those who
took the wrong route and disobeyed the authorities were able to do so
because the Saudi security authorities became negligent; they were
complacent. The security men were not at their posts when the commotion
began. Saudi soldiers and policemen used to be at the Jumrah to ensure
that once pilgrims have performed the stoning rite, they cannot use the
same route in which they came in. If the soldiers and policemen had
disallowed those who had finished stoning the Devil from using the entry
route as the exit, the stampede would have been avoided.
- But the Saudi authorities said Africans, which included Nigerians, who embarked on the stoning rite caused the stampede. How true is that?
In their
statements, they usually refer to these countries (Egypt, Morocco,
Libya, and Tunisia) as Arab nations. And, our camps have always been
separated from those of the camps of the Arab nations. The Egyptians
were not in the African camp. The African camp was different; our
location was different. It is still different today.
To
support our hypothesis that this was what caused the stampede, the next
day after the Saudi authorities saw the stampede and the monumental
loss of lives and properties they had caused, they made sure that they
brought so many security agents as much as possible to the appropriate
points stopping those who had performed the rite of stoning the Devil
from returning to their camps through the route they came in. Therefore,
on the second and third day of stoning the Devil, there was adequate
security personnel to ensure that people who were going to stone the
Devil were not blocked or hindered by those who were returning after
having performed their own rite. Thus, they did not allow on the second
day, those same Egyptians or people from other countries to create the
fatal chaos we experienced on the first day, from using the entrance as
exit route.
In spite of the
deaths recorded people still went ahead to perform their rites the
second and third day and the road was free. I would say it was laxity on
the part of Saudi security agencies that caused the stampede.
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