King: SR1m for family of each crane victim
JEDDAH:
Custodian
of the Two Holy Mosques King Salman on Tuesday ordered that top
officials of the Saudi Binladin Group be banned from traveling outside
the kingdom after probers pinned the blame partially on the construction
company for Friday’s deadly crane crash in Makkah.
A royal court
announcement carried by the Saudi Press Agency (SPA) said the king is
reviewing the report of the Accident Investigation Committee, which
suggested negligence on the part of the Saudi Binladin Group, but
concluded that it found an “absence of criminal suspicion.”
The report said “the main reason for the accident is the strong winds while the crane was in a wrong position.”
Some
111 people were killed and 331 injured when the giant crane being used
in the expansion project at the Grand Mosque toppled and crashed into a
portion of the mataf (circumambulation area) around the holy Kaaba on
Sept. 11.
Pending completion of the investigation, all members of the
Board of Directors of Binladin Group, as well as Bakr bin Mohammed bin
Ladin and senior executives in the group and others connected with the
project are banned from leaving the kingdom, said the royal court order.
King Salman also ordered the payment of the following to the families of the victims:
1. SR1,000,000 to the family of each person killed in this accident;
2. SR1,000,000 to each injured whose injury resulted in permanent disability;
3. SR500,000 to each of the other injured.
According to SPA, such payment would not deprive the families of the
deceased as well as the injured from the right to claim for private
right before the competent judicial authorities.
The king also issued directives to host two family members of the deceased as the king's guests to perform Haj next year.
“The
injured who cannot perform Haj this year can perform Hajjnext year as
the king's guests. The families of the injured who stay in hospitals for
treatment shall be granted visit visas to take care of the injured
during the remaining period of Hajj and return back to their country,”
the royal court said.
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