Deadly crush at Timbuktu mosque

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Sixteen people, mostly women and children, have been killed in a crush at the famous Djinguereber mosque in Timbuktu, sources have told the BBC. The crush happened during the Mouloud festival to mark the birth of the Prophet Muhammad, when people walk around the mud mosque in northern Mali. The worshippers had to use a different path than usual because of renovations to the 14th Century building. Timbuktu, in the Sahara Desert, was once a centre of Islamic learning. One report says the crush happened when an elderly woman fell down while thousands of people were attempting to circle the mosque three times. Some 40 people were injured, the police say, according to Reuters news agency. "I lost my sister. She was 16 and had gone to pray," said local resident, Ali Kounta, reports the AFP news agency. The Djinguereber mosque is the largest in Timbuktu. The once wealthy city helped spread Islam across West Africa. Its fortunes declined after the 16th Century, as the region's main trade routes switched to the Atlantic Ocean, instead of the Sahara Desert. Source: BBC

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