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Stampede Strikes Hajj Pilgrimage Near Mecca, Killing Hundreds

Saudi police and national guard are deployed to the area of a stampede in the Mina valley near the Saudi holy city of Mecca Thursday. Officials say the accident killed hundreds of people.
Awad Awad AFP/Getty Images
Saudi police and national guard are deployed to the area of a stampede in the Mina valley near the Saudi holy city of Mecca Thursday. Officials say the accident killed hundreds of people.

The annual hajj pilgrimage to Mecca was struck by tragedy Thursday, as a stampede struck an area near the holy city, killing at least 453 people and leaving more than 700 injured, according to Saudi Arabian officials.

Both the death toll and the number of injured have risen as authorities get reports from the site; we'll update this post with new information.

The stampede occurred on a street in Mina, a large valley where thousands of pilgrims camp overnight on their way to Mecca. It's the deadliest incident to occur at the Hajj since at least 2006, when a stampede occurred in the same area, reports Arab News.

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More than 4,000 people are now engaged in attending to the victims, Saudia Arabia's civil defense directorate says.

From Beirut, NPR's Alison Meuse reports:

"The victims were performing one of the holiest rites in Islam. Every year, Muslims from all over the world converge on the holy city of Mecca in an ancient pilgrimage. "Last year, the hajj drew more than two million people. Because of the high volume of worshipers, stampedes are an almost yearly occurrence. "Saudi Arabia has been working to expand the ancient route. But that's also come with dangers. Two weeks ago, around 100 worshipers died when a crane crashed in the Grand Mosque amid heavy winds."

In addition to offering more than 160,000 tents for pilgrims, Mina is also home to the Jamarat site, where "pilgrims carry out a symbolic stoning of the devil by throwing pebbles against three stone walls," Gulf News reports.

Masses of people had been trying to reach that area, which includes a huge pedestrian bridge, when a sudden surge of pilgrims close to an intersection sparked the stampede, the Saudi Press Agency says.

Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.