Skip to main content

Minaret collapse kills 36 in Morocco

People sift through the rubble of the minaret collapse in Meknes, Morocco, on Friday.
People sift through the rubble of the minaret collapse in Meknes, Morocco, on Friday.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Minaret in Meknes, Morocco, was 400 years old
  • Incident came as worshipers were gathering in northern town
  • King ordered that mosque be rebuilt
RELATED TOPICS

(CNN) -- A 400-year-old minaret collapsed Friday on worshipers in Meknes, Morocco, killing 36 and injuring 71, the official news agency Maghreb Arabe Presse reported, citing the Interior Ministry.

The collapse occurred as hundreds of people were gathering in Bab Berdieyinne mosque in Meknes, a town in northern Morocco located 140 km (87 miles) southeast of Rabat, it said.

"We were in the middle of prayers" when the structure collapsed, said one victim told Morocco TV from his hospital bed.

The incident occurred after several days of unrelenting rain, the television station reported. It broadcast video showing dozens of people inside the mosque carrying survivors out of the damaged structure to waiting ambulances.

King Mohammed VI has ordered that the mosque be rebuilt as soon as possible and that its original architecture be preserved, it said.