Officials: Landslide at Shiite shrine in Iraq kills 7
A
landslide collapsed the ceiling of a Shiite shrine in central Iraq over the
weekend and killed at least seven people, including a child, officials said
Monday as rescuers continued to search for survivors.
The landslide struck Qattarat al-Imam
Ali shrine near the holy city of Karbala, about 80 kilometers (50 miles) south
of Baghdad, on Saturday. According to Iraq’s civil defense, the landslide hit
the ceiling of the shrine, which lies in a natural depression, causing it to
cave in and dumping a torrent of rock and mud inside the structure. The
entrance, walls and the minarets of the shrine, which was built on the place of
a water source in the desert, remained standing.
Among the dead were four women, two
men and a child, the civil defense said, adding that search teams had rescued
six people. On Monday, rescuers were using a bulldozer to try to remove the
rubble and search for survivors. The cause of the landslide was not immediately
known; the civil defense blamed high humidity.
Nassif
Gassim al-Khatabi, Karbala’s provincial governor, said Sunday the shrine area
would be closed pending an investigation. In 2019, at least 31 pilgrims
were killed and about 100 were injured when a walkway collapsed and set off a
stampede in Karbala when thousands of Shiite Muslims were marking Ashoura, one
of the most solemn days of their religious calendar.
Iraq is is mired in a monthslong power struggle between rival
Shiite blocs that has further weakened the country’s caretaker government and
its ability to provide basic services.
References:
BBC News, CNN News, NDTV , The News, Al-Jazeera, CNBC, Economist, Times of
India, Sky sports, New York Time, Sky News,
Indianexpress
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