Saudi Binladin Group partly blamed for Mecca crane deaths

Collapse at the Grand Mosque in Mecca killed at least 111 and injured more than 390

Muslim pilgrims walk past the site of a crane collapse that killed more than a hundred people on Friday. Photograph: Mosa’ab Elshamy/AP Photo
Muslim pilgrims walk past the site of a crane collapse that killed more than a hundred people on Friday. Photograph: Mosa’ab Elshamy/AP Photo

Saudi Arabia has partly blamed the construction giant Saudi Binladin Group for the collapse of a crane at Mecca that killed at least 111 people and injured more than 390 ahead of the hajj.

The crash came days before millions arrive in the kingdom for the pilgrimage, which is required at least once in the life of every able-bodied Muslim.

Friday’s collapse came amid high winds and a rainstorm, but a royal decree from King Salman said the Binladin group should not have left the crane’s arm up when it was not in use.

An Arabic version of the decree, carried by the state-run Saudi Press Agency, said the group was partly to blame for the collapse. The news agency’s English service did not report that detail, but did say leaders of the company have been banned from travelling abroad.

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Binladin has not released any statements about the crane collapse and its representatives have not been made available for comment. The royal decree also blamed the group for not using up-to-date safety measures and failing to co-ordinate with meteorological officials.

Dozens of cranes surround Mecca’s Grand Mosque, part of the massive construction effort headed by the group.

The Binladin family has been close to Saudi Arabia's ruling family for decades and runs major building projects. Al-Qaeda's late leader Osama bin Laden was a renegade son disowned by the family in the 1990s. – (PA)