Six Nigerian pilgrims have been
confirmed dead while four have been declared missing in the crane
accident which took place in a Mosque in Kaabah, Mecca, Saudi Arabia on
Friday. The deceased, it was learnt on Sunday, had been buried in Saudi
Arabia.
The spokesperson for National Hajj Commission of Nigeria, Uba Mana, confirmed the death of the six Nigerians in a telephone interview with our correspondent on Sunday.
He said, “There
are six Nigerians that lost their lives; in Islam, you don’t bring
corpses back home. You bury them where they died. Preparations are on
the way for their burial as I speak with you now. But I’m sure they will
be buried here (Saudi Arabia).”
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN)
also reported on Sunday that four female pilgrims from Gombe State had
been declared missing following the crash. One other female pilgrim got
injured during the incident.
The State Amirul-Hajj, Alhaji Abdullahi Mai-Kano, disclosed this while sympathising with the state pilgrims in Mecca over the mishap on Sunday.
Mai-Kano said that the four pilgrims were from Akko, Dukku and Nafada local governments areas of the state.
He said the other faithful sustained injury on her head, but had been treated and discharged.
He
said the four pilgrims were declared missing after a thorough
verification and bed checking in the three houses accommodating the
state pilgrims. The hajj commission had on Saturday said that while
three Nigerians were injured in the crane crash, no Nigerian was among
the dead.
NAHCON had however stated
that investigations by the Nigerian medical team and the Saudi
authorities “are still ongoing on the matter.”
Mana had said, “For
now, no Nigerian has been confirmed to be among the dead. But three
Nigerians are believed to have been injured. Investigations by the Saudi
authorities and our medical personnel are still ongoing, but not
concluded. Our medical personnel are visiting hospitals to find out if
there are Nigerian casualties. But so far, no Nigerian is among the
dead.
The incident won’t
affect pilgrimage because airlifting is ongoing. We have already
airlifted over 80 per cent of our pilgrims. We don’t intend to stop,
people are not scared. We have told our people to be cautious and
observe what to do to protect themselves.”
NAN
correspondents recall that the crane that was being used for the
expansion of the grand mosque crashed killing many pilgrims with several
others sustained varying degrees of injury.
Apprehension was experienced at home on whether Nigerian pilgrims were involved.
But the government of Saudi Arabia had said they of identifying the victims before their burial.
They promised to contact all countries that might have lost any of her citizens in the crane accident.
While
an investigative committee was said to have commenced searching for the
cause of the collapse of the crane, a former Head of Mecca’s religious
police, Sheikh Ahmed al-Ghandi, was said to have attributed the accident to an act of God.
Members
of the Nigerian Armed Forces on Holy pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia were
said to have extended medical treatment to other Nigerian pilgrims in
Mecca.
The Director of Islamic Affairs in Nigerian Army, Col. Shehu Garba Mustapha, was reported to have said that it was part of their training that anywhere they find themselves, they must protect Nigerians.
Mustapha
who is also the leader of the Armed Forces delegation to Saudi Arabia
had said, 400 Armed Forces officers and personnel, including their
families were in Saudi Arabia for the 2015 Hajj exercise.
In the aftermath of the above tragic crane accident at Makkah Grand Mosque in Mecca,
Saudi authorities have announced that families of each of the 111
people who lost their lives in the accident will be paid compensation of
(SR1,000,000) one million Saudi Riyals – approximately N70 Million.
According to The Nation, top officials of the Saudi Binladin Group have been banned from traveling outside the kingdom after the construction company was partially blamed for the accident.
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