The toll in the deadliest tragedy to ever strike the annual hajj 
pilgrimage rose Wednesday to at least 1,621 people killed, a new tally 
showed, as hundreds still reportedly remain missing.
The Associated Press count is more than double Saudi Arabia’s 
official tally of 769 killed and 934 injured in the Sept. 24 disaster in
 Mina, a few miles from the holy city of Mecca. Saudi officials have
 not
 updated their tally since Sept. 26.
Officials in the Saudi health and interior ministries have not 
responded to recent AP requests for comment. On Sunday, Saudi Prince 
Turki al-Faisal rejected the idea of sharing the administration of the 
hajj with other Muslim nations, raised by regional rival Iran, saying 
Riyadh considers it both “a matter of sovereignty” and a “privilege.”
The AP figure comes from state media reports and officials’ comments 
from 19 of the over 180 countries that sent citizens to the five-day 
annual pilgrimage.
Iran says it had 465 pilgrims killed, while Egypt lost 182, Nigeria 168 and Indonesia 126.
Others include India with 114, Pakistan with 100, Bangladesh with 92,
 Mali with 70, Senegal with 54, Benin with 51, Cameroon with 42, Morocco
 with 33, Ethiopia with 31, Sudan with 30, Algeria with 25, Ghana with 
12, Chad with 11, Kenya with eight and Turkey with seven.


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