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Arabia
66 Pilgrims Injured in Makkah Flash Floods
2004-01-25
At least 66 pilgrims were injured, five of them seriously, when flash floods hit parts of Makkah on Friday, hampering traffic on Umm Al-Joud, Al-Mansour and Al-Haj Streets.
No earthquakes? No plague of locusts? But the hajj doesn't officially start until next week. Stay tuned for more moving religious experiences...
Civil defense officers rescued 47 pilgrims and seven families from the rainwaters. Col. Jameel Arbaeen, director of civil defense in Makkah, said his department had used a helicopter to rescue the families from a flooded area in Umm Al-Joud, west of the city. Forty-seven pilgrims from Egypt were stranded in their bus in the flooded Al-Mansour Street.
Forgot to mark their doorways with the blood of a goat, did they? Y'gotta pay attention to that religious detail...
Dr. Aymen Niazi, director of the emergency, safety and ambulance service department, confirmed that 66 pilgrims had been injured. Thirty-seven of them were treated at Ajyad Hospital while 29 others were taken to health centers, he said. The Saudi Red Crescent Society said it had deployed 32 rescue teams to help pilgrims. “We have not received any call informing us of deaths or serious injuries,” Al-Nadwah Arabic daily reported quoting a Red Crescent official. Police diverted buses carrying pilgrims onto safer roads. Because of the rains, street vendors selling umbrellas in Makkah made sizable profits. Limousine drivers also exploited the situation, some charging SR30 instead of the usual SR10 to take pilgrims a short distance. More than 1.2 million pilgrims have already arrived from abroad for the Haj which is scheduled to start on Jan. 30. According to Maj. Gen. Abdul Aziz Sajeeni, director general of the Passports Department, more than one million pilgrims have come by air.
Posted by:Fred Pruitt

#1  In the cities around Dhahran, they built curbs (Western contractors or concrete molds, heh) on almost all of the streets... no storm drains, but curbs. This allows the water to accumulate, instead of being swallowed by the sand of the frequent empty lots. When they do get a desert gully-washer, it just floods the streets. Of course (need we say it?) these people have almost zero experience with anything having to do with flooding... so you can expect everything from drowning in 8" of water to stalled vehicles (oooh!) to accidents to turban skiing...
Posted by: .com   2004-1-25 8:10:08 PM  

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