Survivors recall the stampede and crush at last year's Haj

Published September 10, 2016
Rabia Noor, left, who survived last year's hajj pilgrimage stampede and lost her parents hold their photographs with sisters, Sobia Noor center, and Yasmin Noor in Multan.  — AP
Rabia Noor, left, who survived last year's hajj pilgrimage stampede and lost her parents hold their photographs with sisters, Sobia Noor center, and Yasmin Noor in Multan. — AP

A stampede and crush killed more than 2,400 pilgrims at the annual Haj in Saudi Arabia last year. Some of the survivors recount their experience:

Kauser Parveen of Abbottabad, Pakistan, who said her brother, Mohammad Sajid, fell nearby, but she could not help him:

"I was feeling extreme suffocation and, in a moment, fainted. While I was collapsing, I saw my brother from a distance on the ground screaming for help and water. People in the crowd were snatching bottles of water from each other. I saw people piling up on people already collapsed."

Kauser Parveen, 40, right, who survived last year's Haj stampede and lost her brother, sits with her sister-in-law Abida Shaheen with the picture of her brother Mohammad Sajid, 45, in Abbottabad.─ AP
Kauser Parveen, 40, right, who survived last year's Haj stampede and lost her brother, sits with her sister-in-law Abida Shaheen with the picture of her brother Mohammad Sajid, 45, in Abbottabad.─ AP

Assigue Ouologuem, a 74-year-old retired postal worker from Mali, who lost consciousness in the crowd and found himself by the side of the road:

"The younger ones were lucky enough to escape quickly, but the elderly and the women had trouble getting out of the crush of people."

Dawood Raza, a 51-year-old businessman from Peshawar, Pakistan, who said he pushed himself toward a wall after he began suffocating:

"The scene was much like a slaughterhouse where sacrificed animals are dumped on one another. People were screaming for help, but there was no one to listen. Police officers seemed confused and looked like they were not trained to handle this kind of situation."

Haji Dawood, 51, who survived last year's stampede during the hajj pilgrimage talks in Peshawar,
Haji Dawood, 51, who survived last year's stampede during the hajj pilgrimage talks in Peshawar,

Mohamed Nasim, a civil servant from Quetta, Pakistan, who was walking with his wife, 44-year-old Zar Bibi:

"Somehow, I lost my wife's hand and, in an attempt to catch her back, I was pushed hard toward the concrete barrier and my arm and hand were injured. I fell near the concrete block and passed out."

"I still avoid looking into eyes of my four children, though they always console me. I feel guilty that I could not bring back their mother after the Haj."

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