The collapse of a minaret in a historic mosque killed at least 40 people and injured 71 in the central Moroccan city of Meknes, an official said yesterday.
Among those injured in Friday’s collapse of the minaret of the Bab Berdieyinne mosque in the old town quarter of Meknes, 51 people had already left hospital after receiving treatment, civil protection official Mohamed Ismael Alaoui said.
The 18-century mosque was packed with worshippers during Friday prayers at the time of the collapse.
PHOTO: AFP
Officials have warned that the death toll could continue to mount.
Many locals blamed the tragedy on heavy rains that lashed the region in the previous days.
“The minaret and part of the roof fell on the congregation, which had gathered for the weekly prayer,” a resident said.
Television pictures showed hundreds of people scrambling to clear debris in a desperate search for survivors.
Rescuers worked with shovels — and some with their bare hands — while others formed human chains to carry away rubble from the site of the disaster.
“Apart from the Friday prayers, the faithful were also offering funeral prayers for a deceased person whose body was inside the mosque,” an official said.
The interior ministry had said earlier that the minaret toppled at 12:45pm, giving an initial toll of at least 11 dead, which rose steadily as hours passed.
Rescuers initially struggled to sift through debris because the mosque was located in the crammed and bustling Old City and surrounded by high walls delineating the quarter.
Emergency services sent the most seriously injured to hospital in Fes, the “spiritual capital” of the kingdom, located 60km north of the town.
Those less seriously hurt were taken for treatment in Meknes itself.
The interior minister and the minister of religious affairs rushed to the site to supervise rescue operations.
Emergency workers also set up a team to offer psychological support to those traumatized by the disaster.
Morocco has suffered weeks of heavy rains, causing flooding that had already claimed several lives, cut off roads and destroyed crops in both the north and south of the country.
The tragedy at the Bab Berdieyinne mosque was the worst of its kind in the north African country, whose cities and towns have ancient quarters with buildings dating back several centuries.
Much of the mosque was made from adobe, a sun-dried brick of earth and straw. Its towering minaret was one of the town’s landmarks.
The mosque was built at the initiative of the country’s first woman minister, Khnata Bent Bakkar.
King Mohammed VI has already ordered the reconstruction of the minaret “keeping to its original form.”
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