Tuesday, 13 October 2015

MALI FACEBOOK SEARCH FOR HAJJ MISSING.

More than 2,000 people have joined the group looking for the hundreds of Malians who are still missing
A Malian woman has set up a Facebook page to help find some 200 people from Mali who are still missing after last month's Hajj pilgrimage crush.

Nabou Traore told the BBC that not enough was being done to find the missing Malians in Saudi Arabia.

People have been sharing their pictures of relatives on the social media page whom they have not heard from, as well as unidentified people in hospital.

Officials have confirmed that 60 Malian pilgrims died in the stampede.

The Saudi authorities say 769 people died in the crush, although officials from the nations whose citizens died say the true figure is 1,480.

Ms Traore, who is a Malian based in France, decided to set up the page Les Maliens de La Bousculade de Mina (Malians of the Mina crush) after noticing several posts on her own Facebook page about the stampede.

She tried to search online about Malians caught up in the tragedy, but there were no results.

"I thought then there is a need to do something, for if I had a family member missing in that stampede, to find them would have been very complicated," she told BBC Afrique.

"So I gathered all the photos on my Facebook account, and I have asked all my contacts that lost people to centralise photos in the group.

"And I said to the other people do not hesitate to send me pictures of your missing members and I will post the photo."

The page now has more than 2,800 members.

Some of the pictures are of unidentified unconscious patients, other posts announce the confirmation of a relative's death.

Ms Traore said that some people who had joined the Facebook page had also set up a a small crisis group in Mali's capital, Bamako, to comfort families looking for their relatives.

The stampede took place during the last major rite of the pilgrimage in Mina - when stones are thrown at pillars called Jamarat, where Satan is believed to have tempted the Prophet Abraham.

It is the deadliest incident to occur during the pilgrimage in 25 years.

The incident occurred as pilgrims walked towards the Jamarat Bridge, where the pillars are located
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

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