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IRIN Middle East | Middle East | IRAQ | IRAQ: Sunnis donate blood for Shi段te stampede victims | Health | Breaking News
Tuesday 1 November 2005
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IRAQ: Sunnis donate blood for Shi段te stampede victims


[ This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]


BAGHDAD, 6 Sep 2005 (IRIN) - Sunni religious leaders have called on their followers to donate blood for Shi段te victims of the tragic stampede in Baghdad last week.

The call was made in good faith, following a reported shortage of supplies.

More than 1,110 people were killed and more than 900 wounded in the Kadhimiya district, where several million pilgrims gathered to visit the burial place of a revered Shi段te leader, Iraqi officials said.

The stampede, on 31 August, happened after rumours that a suicide bomber was about to attack. Hundreds of people on a bridge over the river Tigris ran for take cover.

The railings gave way under pressure and many people drowned, officials said.

展e asked all our Muslim brothers to donate blood in order to help the victims of the disaster which brought sadness to all of us, especially because this reminds us of the calamity that Fallujah went through when US soldiers were fighting insurgents earlier this year and last, Adnan al-Dulaymi, a spokesperson for the Sunni council in Fallujah said.

The call has reportedly resulted in queues of people at the doors of the main hospitals in the capital over the past few days.

Imams in Fallujah have been using loudspeaker systems during prayer time in mosques to call on people to make donations.

Khalid Mahmoud, a senior official at the Ministry of Health, said that they had received more than 1,800 of bottles of blood from the city of Fallujah and around 1,200 from the Shi段te city of Amarah, in the south of the country.

展e thank all the people who have helped innocent people from this unexpected incident and that we are able to supply the wounded due to continuing donations, Mahmoud noted.

According to the official, there were concerns that main blood bank in the capital did not have sufficient supplies.

的t was the best way to guarantee that we participate in saving the lives of many and to show to the world that our country is for all Iraqis, because we are brothers, al-Dulaymi added.

Mahmoud also explained that the number of deaths was likely to increase due to the fact that many parents had buried their loved ones immediately after the accident and deaths had not been registered. In addition, some bodies had only been discovered recently.

The central blood bank has informed the authorities that it would need a continuous supply to support emergency requirements.

[ENDS]


Theme(s) Health
Other recent IRAQ reports:

Steps taken to head off bird flu, 27/Oct/05

Government hails poll as fair as Sunnis call for recount, 26/Oct/05

Concern for journalists safety following bombings , 25/Oct/05

Palestinian refugees complain of persecution and seek to leave, 20/Oct/05

Saddam Hussein goes on trial, but some still support him, 19/Oct/05

Other recent Health reports:

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KENYA: Limited immunisation campaign launched after measles outbreak, 28/Oct/05

IRAQ: Steps taken to head off bird flu, 27/Oct/05

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