*** Medics work to identify the 45 killed in Israeli stampede | THE DAILY TRIBUNE | KINGDOM OF BAHRAIN

Medics work to identify the 45 killed in Israeli stampede

Reuters | Mount Meron

The Daily Tribune – www.newsofbahrain.com

Medical teams worked on Friday to identify 45 people crushed to death in a stampede at a religious festival on the slopes of Israel’s Mount Meron, with children among the dead.

Witnesses spoke of seeing a "pyramid" of people who were asphyxiated or trampled in a passageway around 3 metres (10 feet) wide at the crowded event in the Galilee.

Tens of thousands of ultra-Orthodox Jews had thronged to the tomb of 2nd-century sage Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai for the annual Lag B'Omer commemorations that include all-night prayer, mystical songs and dance.

The festival was segregated by gender, and medics said the injuries and deaths were concentrated in the men's section.

Police asked family members of those who were still missing to provide pictures and personal information to help with the identification process.

By late afternoon, the Health Ministry said 32 of the dead had been identified. As sunset neared, the process was halted for 24 hours in observance of the Jewish Sabbath, and would resume on Saturday evening.

US President Joe Biden spoke with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to offer condolences and said the United States was working to confirm reports that Americans may have died or been injured.

Netanyahu called the crush one of the "heaviest disasters" in Israeli history and promised a thorough investigation to ensure it did not happen again. The country will observe a day of mourning on Sunday.

Crowds had picked the site in northern Israel despite warnings to maintain COVID-19 social distancing.

Videos posted on social media in the minutes after the crush showed ultra-Orthodox men clambering desperately through gaps in sheets of torn corrugated iron to escape the crush.

People who stayed on the scene through the night questioned how the situation so quickly spiralled out of control, though there had been a concern for years about safety risks at the annual event.

"There was some kind of mess, police, screaming, a big mess, and after half an hour it looked like a scene of a suicide bombing attack, numerous people coming out from there on stretchers," said 19-year-old festival-goer Hayim Cohen.