31 Killed in Ashura Commemorations Stampede in Karbala, Iraq
At least 31
people have been killed in a stampede during commemorations for the Shia holy
day of Ashura in the Iraqi city of Karbala, officials say.
A health
ministry spokesman said another 100 people were injured and warned that the
death toll could rise.
The stampede
reportedly occurred when a pilgrim tripped while hundreds of thousands were
performing a ritual.
Ashura
commemorates the martyrdom in battle of the Imam Hussein, a grandson of the
Prophet Muhammad, in 680AD.
Every year,
millions of Shia Muslim pilgrims travel to Karbala for Ashura, which falls on
the 10th of Muharram, the first month of the Islamic lunar calendar. It is
marked with mourning rituals and passion plays re-enacting Hussein's martyrdom.
One of the
rituals is known as the "Tuwairij run", which sees pilgrims run down
streets leading to the Imam Hussein Mosque in commemoration of the run from the
ancient village of Tuwairij to Karbala that was undertaken during the 7th
Century battle by the cousins of Hussein's half-brother Abbas.
A spokesman
for Karbala province's media office told the BBC that as hundreds of thousands
of people undertook the Tuwairij run one person stumbled and fell over, causing
others to fall and triggering the deadly stampede.
However,
security officials told the Associated Press that the stampede began when
a walkway collapsed.
In
2004, more than 140 people were killed in a series of near-simultaneous
bombings at shrines in Karbala and Baghdad during Ashura.
The
following year, at least 965 pilgrims were killed in a stampede on a
bridge over the River Tigris in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad, during a
different Shia holy day. Panic spread among the pilgrims over rumours that
there were suicide bombers.
FROM bbc.com/news/world-middle-east
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