Pakistan preparing for extension of Makkah Route for next year's Hajj

This undated file photo shows a Saudi immigration officer returning passport to a Pakistani Hajj pilgrim at Islamabad airport. (SPA)
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Updated 09 October 2020
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Pakistan preparing for extension of Makkah Route for next year's Hajj

  • Ministry says waiting for approval from Saudi authorities to include Lahore, Karachi, Peshawar and Quetta in the program
  • After the project's success in Islamabad last year, PM Imran Khan sought its expansion to the four provincial capitals

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has started preparations for the expansion of Saudi Arabia's flagship pre-departure immigration facility, Makkah Route, to include more Pakistani airports for Hajj 2021, the Religious Affairs Ministry said on Thursday.
Makkah Route was finalized during Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman’s visit to Pakistan in February last year, giving immigration clearance to 22,000 Pakistani pilgrims prior to their Hajj departure during the project's pilot phase in Islamabad.

“We have started work on the expansion of the Makkah Route project in other Pakistani cities during Hajj 2021. We have established contact with Saudi Hajj authorities and will work with them for the expansion of this facility,” the ministry's spokesman, Imran Siddiqui, told Arab News.
Siddiqui said Pakistan will wait for official approval from Saudi authorities to include also Lahore, Karachi, Peshawar and Quetta in the program, once the kingdom announces the Hajj season next year. The ministry's plan to have the four cities, besides Islamabad, under the initiative was upended during Hajj 2020 by the coronavirus pandemic.
Some 2.5 million pilgrims visit the holiest sites of Islam in Makkah and Madinah during the week-long Hajj each year, but this year only a limited number of people residing in Saudi Arabia were permitted to perform the pilgrimage.
An inter-ministerial meeting held by the Religious Affairs Ministry on Wednesday deliberated arrangements for the project's expansion.
“After the success of the project in Islamabad last year, Prime Minister Imran Khan ordered to expand the project to four provincial capitals,” the ministry said in a statement after the meeting.
Siddiqui added they were "very hopeful" that Saudi Arabia would agree to the Makkah Route extension. "Their feedback of Islamabad pilot project was very positive and encouraging."
“Saudi government under King Salman and Crown Prince MBS has always facilitated and gave priority to Pakistani Hajj pilgrims. But we also have to wait for the COVID-19 situation till Hajj time next year and decide according to precautionary measures issued by Saudi government."


Pakistan deputy PM directs authorities to monitor food prices ahead of Ramadan 

Updated 27 January 2026
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Pakistan deputy PM directs authorities to monitor food prices ahead of Ramadan 

  • Prices of essential food items surge during holy month of Ramadan due to hoarding, profiteering by traders
  • Deputy PM Ishaq Dar directs authorities to prevent artificial price hikes, exploitation of consumers in Ramadan

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar on Tuesday directed authorities to monitor prices of essential food items ahead of Ramadan to prevent artificial price hikes and consumers from getting exploited, his office said. 

Pakistani increasingly shop for essential food items during the holy month of Ramadan, as millions across the country fast from dawn till sunset. Prices of essential food items surge during the holy month every year as traders often indulge in hoarding and profiteering. 

Dar chaired a meeting to review the availability and prices of essential commodities across the country on Tuesday, his office said. 

“DPM/FM [foreign minister] directed federal & provincial authorities to continue close monitoring, particularly in view of the approaching month of Ramazan, to prevent any artificial price hike or exploitation of consumers by unscrupulous elements,” Dar’s office said in a statement.

A central moon sighting committee in Pakistan, the Ruet-e-Hilal Committee, determines when Ramadan begins. The Islamic month is expected to start this year after mid-February, around Feb. 17 or Feb. 18.

Pakistan’s government also announces subsidies for the masses during the holy month to lower the prices of essential food items. 

In 2024, the Shehbaz Sharif-led government announced a Ramadan package comprising a subsidy of $26.8 million (Rs7.5 billion) to lower the prices of essential items for over 30,96,00,000 families.