As insults fly, Iran-Saudi Hajj row aggravates regional rifts

Iran says it lost at least 169 pilgrims when two large groups of pilgrims converged on at a crossroads in Mina

PHOTO: INQUIRER/AP

DUBAI:
For regional adversaries at loggerheads over the crises in Iraq, Syria and Yemen, the disaster at the Hajj is unlikely to be a game changer in the contest between Iran and Saudi Arabia, merely adding venom to their mutual acrimony.

But a deepening of already profound mistrust between the conservative Sunni kingdom and the revolutionary Shia theocracy will make the task of stabilising the Middle East's many trouble spots even harder to achieve than it already is.

While the Gulf rivals have managed to put aside bad blood after past flare-ups, such moments of detente happened in a much more stable Middle East, years before turmoil in Iraq and Arab Spring uprisings unleashed sectarian hatreds across the region.

Read: 36 Pakistanis dead in Hajj stampede

Today, Iranian and Saudi participation would be crucial in stabilising Iraq, Syria, Yemen or Lebanon, where the two sides back sectarian proxy forces that are either at daggers drawn or openly at war in conflicts killing thousands each month.

Riyadh also accuses Tehran of fomenting trouble in Bahrain and even Saudi Arabia itself. Tehran accuses Riyadh of plotting its destruction with Washington.

The animosity worsened in the wake of the deadliest disaster to befall the annual Hajj pilgrimage in 25 years.

Iran says it lost at least 169 pilgrims when two large groups of pilgrims converged on Thursday at a crossroads in Mina, a few kilometres east of Mecca, on their way to perform the "stoning of the devil" ritual at Jamarat.

Read: Iran's Khamenei demands Saudi apology for Hajj deaths

Iran demanded an apology. Demonstrators protested in Tehran, chanting "Death to the Saudi dynasty". Saudis commentators insinuated that Iranian pilgrims themselves were at fault.

Invective poured onto social media.

"It's a lie that Satan's representative, Khamenei, mourns the Mina incident victims," Saudi prince Khaled Al Saud tweeted, referring to Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Dirty hands

"His dirty hands are stained with the blood of the children of Syria and the Sunnis of Iraq," the prince told his nearly quarter of a million followers.

A cartoon published by Iran's Tasnim news agency showed King Salman of Saudi Arabia as a camel trampling pilgrims.

Even before the Hajj tragedy, prominent figures in both countries exchanged critical tirades. In May, Khamenei denounced Saudi Arabia for its military campaign in Yemen by comparing the kingdom to the pagans who ruled the Arabian Peninsula before the advent of Islam in the seventh century.

At the United Nations, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani on Sunday lamented that Riyadh had rebuffed his repeated attempts at reconciliation since his election in 2013.

"We are disappointed about the cold relations between Iran and Saudi Arabia," he said. "The rift between Tehran and Riyadh is not in the interest of either country."

"Also when Saudis started killing people in Yemen, Riyadh drifted even further away from Iran and many other Islamic countries," Rouhani told an audience of US think-tanks and journalists on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly.

Read: Saudi prince’s convoy triggered Hajj stampede: report


Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir, a longtime adviser to the kingdom's rulers, wearily accused Tehran of playing politics. "We will reveal the facts when they emerge, and we will not hold anything back," he said.

Iranians are sceptical about that. But analysts across the region agree the depth of the crisis may be determined largely by the results of the Saudi probe and how much is published.

Former Iranian lawmaker Elias Hazrati told Reuters by phone from Tehran that Iran was not playing politics over the Hajj.

Mismanagement

"Tehran is simply asking Riyadh to take responsibility," he said. "If this incident happened only once we could call it an accident, but this is happening every few years. The Saudis' mismanagement is the problem of all the Islamic world, not Tehran."

Saudi commentators point the finger at Tehran.

Jamal Khashoggi, head of a Saudi news channel owned by a prince, said investigators were looking at the actions of a large number of Iranian pilgrims who "happened to be in the wrong place in the wrong time".

"I think Saudi Arabia will speak very loudly on the issue when the result of the investigations come out. No statement has been made officially, but now it seems that the Iranians will be blamed because they took their Hajis in the wrong direction at the wrong time. That was very irresponsible," he said.

Read: Iran says 131 nationals among Hajj stampede dead

The rivals have overcome previous crises in their relations.

A late 1990s rapprochement followed a 1996 truck-bombing in the kingdom that killed 19 US service personnel and clashes at the 1987 Hajj between Iranian protesters and Saudi police that led to the death of 400 people, mainly Iranians.

Saudi Arabia and the United States accused Iran of orchestrating the 1996 attack. Iran denied any role.

But the rapprochement happened at a time of relative Gulf stability, above all when Iraq was ruled by a Sunni, Saddam Hussein, seen by Gulf Arab states as a buffer against Iran. Now a worsening of Iran-Saudi rivalry could have broad consequences.

Influence

Not only are the two competitors openly tussling for influence in Arab countries, but Saudi Arabia is worried that Washington has realigned with Tehran at Arab expense by backing a deal settling Iran's long-standing nuclear dispute.

Alive to what he sees as a US-Iran detente, Saudi Arabia's new monarch, King Salman, is pushing for Sunni Muslim Middle East countries to set aside differences over political Islam and focus on what it sees as the more urgent threat from Tehran.

The diplomatic heft that Riyadh employs in such efforts is rooted in its prestigious role as custodian of Islam's holiest places.

Iranian commentator Hazrati said Riyadh appeared to believe that if it accepted blame for the disaster it would be seen as weakness and lead to calls for the kingdom to give up its custodianship to an international body.

Saudi Arabia's critics in the past urged Riyadh to transfer management of the Hajj and holy places to the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, the world's largest Muslim body.

OIC Secretary-General Iyad Ameen Madani, a Saudi cleric and former Hajj minister, issued a statement after the disaster expressing confidence in Saudi Arabia's hosting of the event.

In a statement, he expressed the hope that "no party would seek to take advantage of the pilgrimage and pilgrims ... in a controversial context that would divide rather than unite".
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