Rouhani accuses Saudis over hajj tragedy

  • 29/09/2015
Muslim pilgrims cast stones at pillars symbolising Satan in Mena (Reuters)
Muslim pilgrims cast stones at pillars symbolising Satan in Mena (Reuters)

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani has accused Saudi Arabia of incompetence over the deadly hajj stampede and demanded an investigation of the disaster, in his address to the UN General Assembly.

A total of 769 pilgrims including 226 Iranians were killed in the worst tragedy to hit the hajj in a quarter-century.

The pilgrims were taking part in a "grand and global spiritual gathering of the hajj" but "fell victim to the incompetence and mismanagement of those in charge," said Rouhani on Monday.

Iran has been deeply critical of Saudi Arabia over the tragedy, accusing its regional rival of serious safety lapses.

The Iranian president was to cut short his visit to New York and return to Tehran after his address to attend a repatriation ceremony for the bodies of the victims.

Rouhani urged Riyadh to allow immediate consular access to quickly identify the bodies and ensure their return home.

He called for "an independent and precise investigation into the causes of this disaster and ways of preventing its repetition in the future."

The remarks came amid tensions between Iran and Saudi Arabia over the conflicts in Yemen and Syria. Riyadh views Tehran as trying to use them to expand its influence in the region.

The wars in Syria and Yemen are among the key issues to be discussed during the UN General Assembly debate.

Rouhani was making his first visit to the United Nations since the nuclear accord was reached with the so-called P5+1 -- Britain, China, France, Russia, the United States, plus Germany.

Iran raises its hajj stampede toll to 226

A total of 226 Iranian pilgrims were killed in last week's hajj stampede in Saudi Arabia, authorities in Tehran say, raising the toll from 169.

The number of Iranians still missing after Thursday's tragedy stood at 248, and 27 were being treated for injuries, said the chief of Iran's hajj organisation, Said Ohadi, cited by the official IRNA news agency on Monday (local time).

AFP