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Saudis Open Huge Slaughterhouse

MBBC NEWS -- Saturday, 11 March, 2000


Camels are brought to the new slaughterhouse


Saudi Arabia has opened what it says is the world's biggest slaughterhouse, in preparation for the Muslim sacrifice of hundreds of thousands of cattle and sheep at the climax of the pilgrimage, or Hajj, to Mecca.

Crown Prince Abdullah bin Abdel Aziz inaugurated the 500,000 square metre complex in the Mina valley, near Mecca.

The Muaissem slaughterhouse cost 470 million rials ($125m) to build.

Its 10,000 workers will be able to slaughter 200,000 animals a day in keeping with Islamic tradition.

Some two million pilgrims will slaughter cattle, sheep and camels in memory of Abraham's readiness to sacrifice his son Ishmael, before God spared the boy's life.

The high point of the Hajj this year falls next Wednesday and runs into the feast of the sacrifice, Eid al-Adha, the following day.

Safety measures

Before the Saudi authorities began an intensive abattoir-building programme about a decade ago, pilgrims either slaughtered the beasts themselves or hired butchers to do the deed and the plain ran with blood. After opening the Muaissem slaughterhouse, Prince Abdullah inspected the 250,000 fireproofed, air conditioned tents in the pilgrims' camp.

The use of fireproof tents began in 1998, a year after 343 pilgrims were killed when a blaze started by a stove swept through a tent camp in Mina.

Since then, old tents, gas stoves and gas canisters have been banned.

On Friday, a senior cleric urged pilgrims to be patient as hundreds of thousands of pilgrims waited to pray at Mecca's Grand Mosque.

Some pilgrims fell to the ground in the crush, reviving fears of a stampede in 1998 which left 180 dead. A similar stampede in 1994 left 270 dead.

But there have been no injuries so far this year.

Aided by surveillance cameras, security personnel, dressed in the traditional Saudi white garb, mingled among the pilgrims to direct the crowds.


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