Former Likoni MP Khalif Mwavumo has yet to receive official
communication on the whereabouts of his wife, who was among the Kenyan
pilgrims to Mecca.
However, Mr Mwavumo is hopeful that Zeinab Mwavumo, 58, is safe.
An
official from Al Buraq Hajj and Umrah travel agency has been to several
hospitals in Riyadh in search of Zeinab and this is giving her family
hope that she will return home.
“We have received
information that she was seen in one of the ambulances and the agent has
been looking for her. He called us on Saturday, at 3am, after viewing
at least 502 bodies in the morgues of several hospitals and she was not
there. That is what is giving us hope,” Mr Mwavumo told the Nation at
his home in Kizingo, Mombasa.
Mr Mwavumo’s daughter,
Halima, said she last spoke to her mother a day before she went to Mina,
where pilgrims perform a ritual called “stoning of the devil”. At least
769 pilgrims, including three Kenyans, died while 805 others were
injured in a stampede.
“He friends said they could not
trace her and were unable to communicate because she had left her phone
in the tent where they slept,” Ms Halima said, adding they were happy
that the agent was helping them trace her.
She said the
agent, whom she identified only as Mr Ahmed, had assured them that he
would continue searching for her in other hospitals where many other
injured people were taken.
“We know we are not the only
ones affected by this tragedy. Several countries have lost many of
their citizens. Therefore, we do not feel alone in this because we know
God is on our side,” Ms Halima Mwavumo added.
Last
week, Foreign Affairs Principal Secretary Karanja Kibicho said the
Kenyan ambassador and other officials in Riyadh were closely monitoring
the situation.
The dead from a number of countries,
include 169 Iranians, 87 Moroccans, 55 Egyptians, 54 Nigerians, and 45
Indians, according to the Saudi authorities.
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