Saudi Arabia to allow 1mn Haj pilgrims this year
Gulf Times
Muslims pray around the Holy Kaaba, at the Grand Mosque complex in the city of Makkah, during the fasting month of Ramadan, yesterday.
Saudi Arabia said yesterday it will permit 1mn Muslims from inside and outside the country to participate in this year’s Haj, a sharp uptick after pandemic restrictions forced two years of drastically pared-down pilgrimages.The move, while falling short of reinstating normal Haj conditions, offered hopeful news for many Muslims outside the kingdom who have been barred from making the trip since 2019. Usually one of the world’s largest religious gatherings, about 2.5mn people took part in 2019.But after the onset of the coronavirus pandemic in 2020, Saudi authorities allowed only 1,000 pilgrims to participate.The following year, they upped the total to 60,000 fully vaccinated Saudi citizens and residents chosen through a lottery.This year the Saudi Haj ministry “has authorised one million pilgrims, both foreign and domestic, to perform the Haj,” it said in a pre-dawn statement yesterday.The pilgrimage, which will take place in July, will be limited to vaccinated Muslims under age 65, the statement said.Those coming from outside Saudi Arabia, who must apply for Haj visas, will this year also be required to submit a negative Covid-19 PCR result from a test taken within 72 hours of travel. The government wants to promote pilgrims’ safety “while ensuring that the maximum number of Muslims worldwide can perform the Haj”, the statement said.The Haj consists of a series of religious rites that are completed over five days in the holiest city, Makkah, and surrounding areas of western Saudi Arabia.Authorities took a number of special measures to reduce the spread of the coronavirus last year, including dividing pilgrims into groups of 20 and handing out disinfectants, masks and sterilised pebbles for the “stoning of Satan” ritual.“We have been in great sadness and pain in the past two years because of the small number of pilgrims,” 36-year-old Cairo resident Mohamed Tamer said yesterday.“I am very happy that the Haj will return to normality to some extent,” he added, though he also expressed worry about rising costs including for flights and hotels.Reactions to yesterday’s announcement were generally positive on social media, though some Twitter users criticised the age cap.“Such great news, but imposing age restrictions is heartbreaking for many aged Haj aspirants,” one user wrote in response to the Haj ministry’s announcement.Others voiced concern about what would happen to pilgrims who financed trips to Makkah — only to have their plans ruined by a positive Covid-19 test. Before the pandemic, Muslim pilgrimages were key revenue earners for the kingdom, bringing in some $12bn annually.The kingdom of approximately 34mn people has so far recorded more than 751,000 coronavirus cases, including 9,055 deaths, according to health ministry data.In early March it announced the lifting of most Covid restrictions including social distancing in public spaces and quarantine for vaccinated arrivals, moves that were expected to facilitate an increase in Muslim pilgrims.