I am not afraid of pilgrimage, says Hajj stampede survivor

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TOPSHOTS Muslim pilgrims circle counterclockwise Islam's holiest shrine, the Kaaba, at the Grand Mosque in the Saudi holy city of Mecca, late on September 20, 2015. The annual hajj pilgrimage begins on September 22, and more than a million faithful have already flocked to Saudi Arabia in preparation for what will for many be the highlight of their spiritual lives. AFP PHOTO / MOHAMMED AL-SHAIKH

As pilgrims from around the world symbolically stoned the devil on Monday in the last major rite of the Hajj, the memory of a deadly stampede during last year’s stoning ritual remains all too real for Kassoum Kouanda.

Injured in the crush which killed his three companions and around 2,300 others, he vividly recalled the tragedy in an interview with media— and explained why his young wife is attending this year’s pilgrimage.

Kouanda, 50, of Burkina Faso in West Africa, is the manager of a transport and logistics company.

This is his testimony:

“I was with three other people, two friends and the imam of our local mosque who had been to Makkah three times. All three of them died,” he told media by telephone shortly before the start of this year’s Hajj on Saturday.

“I am alive. I don’t know how. Only God can know.

“We were marching to ‘stone the devil’ when we heard cries coming from the east.

“We were sandwiched between those heading towards the pillar to stone the devil and the ones coming back, on the east side,” between 8:00 and 9:00 am.

“We wanted to take refuge in a building that said it was an infirmary, but they blocked the doors because people wanted to go in.

“I just remember that I got on a dead body to reach the roof. Police came to evacuate us about 12:00 or 1:00 pm. It was very hot.

“I was immobilised because I have nerve problems and am a bit asthmatic. Getting up to the roof I was hurt in the arms and feet but today it’s OK, even if I still carry the scars.

“When I came down from the roof there were bodies everywhere. All the streets were littered with bodies.

“It’s God who knows how I got out alive and, returning to Burkina, I resolved that if God again gave me the means I would send my wife for Hajj while she is still young.

“But I gave her clear orders. I told her to follow the official guides and not people who say they have gone there several times and they know the place,” Kouanda said.

Officials have similarly told pilgrims to follow the rules.

“If I am able in coming years, I will send other relatives so that they too can have blessings, but I am not afraid because only God alone knows when you will die.”

Although it has never released the findings of its investigation into the stampede, Saudi Arabia says it has introduced new safety measures.

Pilgrims told media they had noticed organisational improvements since the stampede which injured Kouanda, the worst tragedy in the history of the Hajj.