DUBAI: Fourteen people have gone on trial in Saudi Arabia over a crane collapse in Makkah that killed 111 pilgrims and injured hundreds more just days before the start of Haj last year, local media reported on Thursday. State-linked newspapers said six Saudis, including a billionaire, as well as two Pakistanis, a Canadian, a Jordanian, a Palestinian, an Egyptian, an Emirati and a Filipino are on trial. The defendants’ names were not made public.

The Okaz newspaper says the defendants are accused of negligence, damaging public property and ignoring safety guidelines. It appears all are employees of the Saudi Binladin Group, the construction giant that was operating the crane.

Amid unusually strong winds, the 1,350-tonne crane collapsed onto the Grand Mosque, bringing down slabs of concrete on worshippers below.

The Saudi Gazette reported that 170 employees of the Binladin Group had been questioned by investigators ahead of the court proceedings. Okaz said prosecutors decided not to file charges against 42 others who were under investigation, including 16 members of the Binladin family.

After the incident, King Salman partly blamed the construction giant, saying the crane’s arm should not have been left up when it was not in use. The king ordered about $267,000 to be paid to the relatives of those killed, and the same amount to those permanently injured. Those with lesser injuries were to receive half that amount.

However, Nigerian and Pakistani officials say Saudi Arabia has yet to pay the promised compensation. Six Nigerians and 11 Pakistanis were among those killed in the crane collapse, according to Nigeria’s Haj Commission and Pakistan’s Religious Affairs Ministry.

Published in Dawn, August 12th, 2016

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