The kingdom has deployed tens of thousands of security forces and medics and is also using modern technology including surveillance drones to maintain order.
Around 2.5 million Muslim pilgrims take part in a symbolic stoning of the devil in the final days of the hajj pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia pic.twitter.com/LoRaHQIf59
— TRT World Now (@TRTWorldNow) August 11, 2019
Nearly 2-1/2 million pilgrims, mostly from abroad, have arrived for the five-day ritual, a religious duty once in a lifetime for every able-bodied Muslim who can afford it. They are asked to follow carefully orchestrated schedules for each stage of Hajj.
Confectioner Alaa Watad from Syria’s Idlib province, the last major rebel enclave in the country’s civil war, said his hometown was “drenched in blood”.
“We pray to God from the bottom of our hearts to bring relief to us and to Syria,” said Muhammad al-Jarak, another pilgrim from Idlib.
Pakistani pilgrims, meanwhile, expressed concern about Occupied Kashmir after Indian authorities last week revoked the special status of the disputed Himalayan valley which has long been a flashpoint for regional tensions.
“I prayed [in Makkah] for a very strong Pakistani government and nation and for the whole of the Muslim Ummah [community] to be united and strong financially, morally and mentally,” said Syed Sajjad Ali Bukhari, a pensioner living in Canada.
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