Pakistan to operate 42 Hajj flights under Road to Makkah project this year

Pakistani airport workers load baggages into a plane at Islamabad International Airport in Islamabad, Pakistan, on May 8, 2018. (AFP/File)
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Updated 04 June 2022
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Pakistan to operate 42 Hajj flights under Road to Makkah project this year

  • Under the project, all immigration requirements of pilgrims are to be fulfilled at the airport of origin 
  • Pakistan will operate flights under Road to Makkah project from Islamabad, transport 14,007 pilgrims

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will operate 42 flights to transport 14,007 Hajj pilgrims to Saudi Arabia under the Road to Makkah initiative this year, the Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority (PCAA) said on Friday. 

Under the Road to Makkah project, all immigration requirements of pilgrims are to be fulfilled at the airport of origin. This saves pilgrims several hours upon reaching the kingdom since they can just enter the country, having gone through immigration already at home. 

These 42 flights will be operated from the Islamabad airport, where Pakistan implemented a pilot project in 2019. The Road to Makkah initiative also includes other Muslim countries, such as Indonesia and Malaysia. 

On Friday, Pakistan’s Religious Affairs Minister Mufti Abdul Shakoor and Saudi Arabia’s ambassador Nawaf bin Said Al-Malki visited the Islamabad airport to observe the pre-departure immigration arrangement for Pakistani Hajj pilgrims under the Road to Makkah initiative. 

“The minister and the ambassador expressed their satisfaction and appreciated the arrangements made at IIAP (Islamabad International Airport),” the PCAA said in a statement. 

“Total Hujjaj (pilgrims) traveling from IIAP through Route to Makkah is 14,007. Total flights operating from IIAP would be 42.” 




Pakistan’s Religious Affairs Minister Mufti Abdul Shakoor (second left) and Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to Islamabad, Nawaf bin Said Al-Malki (third left) visit the Islamabad airport to observe the pre-departure immigration arrangement for Pakistani Hajj pilgrims under the Road to Makkah initiative in Islamabad on June 3, 2022. (PCAA)

Of these flights, the Pakistan International Airlines will operate 18, Saudi Airline 18, Airblue four and Serene Air will operate two, according to the PCAA. 

The first Hajj flight would depart from Islamabad on June 6, with 106 special flights to be operated by the government for around 32,000 pilgrims traveling on an official quota. 

Saudi Arabia will let up to one million people join the Hajj pilgrimage this year, expanding it to participants from outside the kingdom after two years of tight COVID restrictions. However, pilgrims this year must be under age 65 and fully vaccinated against the coronavirus. 

Pakistan has been allotted a quota of 81,132 pilgrims for this year’s Hajj, with 32,000 people using a government scheme and 48,000 traveling through private operators. 


Pakistan remembers Benazir Bhutto, first woman PM in Muslim world, on death anniversary

Updated 27 December 2025
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Pakistan remembers Benazir Bhutto, first woman PM in Muslim world, on death anniversary

  • Bhutto was daughter of ex-PM Zulfikar Ali Bhutto who was hanged during reign of former military ruler Gen. Zia-ul-Haq
  • Year before assassination in 2007, Bhutto signed landmark deal with rival Nawaz Sharif to prevent army interventions

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and other Pakistani leaders on Saturday paid tribute to Benazir Bhutto, the first woman prime minister in the Muslim world who was assassinated 18 years ago in a gun and bomb attack after a rally in the city of Rawalpindi.

Born on Jun. 21, 1953, Bhutto was elected premier for the first time in 1988 at the age of 35. She was deposed in 1990, re-elected in 1993, and ousted again in 1996, amid allegations of corruption and mismanagement which she denied as being politically motivated.

Bhutto only entered politics after her father was hanged in 1979 during military ruler Gen. Zia-ul-Haq’s reign. Throughout her political career, she had a complex and often adversarial relationship with the now ruling Sharif family, but despite the differences signed a ‘Charter of Democracy’ in 2006 with three-time former PM Nawaz Sharif, pledging to strengthen democratic institutions and prevent military interventions in Pakistan in the future.

She was assassinated a year and a half later.

“Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto took exemplary steps to strengthen the role of women, protect the rights of minorities, and make Pakistan a peaceful, progressive, and democratic state,” PM Shehbaz Sharif, younger brother of ex-PM Nawaz Sharif, said in a statement on Saturday.

“Her sacrifices and services are a beacon of light for the nation.”

President Asif Ali Zardari, Bhutto’s widower, said Bhutto believed in an inclusive Pakistan, rejected sectarianism, bigotry and intolerance, and consistently spoke for the protection of minorities.

“Her vision was of a federation where citizens of all faiths could live with dignity and equal rights,” he said. “For the youth of Pakistan, her life offers a clear lesson: speak up for justice, organize peacefully and do not surrender hope in the face of adversity.”

Powerful families like the Bhuttos and the Sharifs of Pakistan to the Gandhis of India and the Bandaranaike family of Sri Lanka have long dominated politics in this diverse region since independence from British colonial rule. But none have escaped tragedy at the hands of rebels, militants or ambitious military leaders.

It was Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, Bhutto’s father, who founded the troubled Bhutto dynasty, becoming the country’s first popularly elected prime minister before being toppled by the army in 1977 and later hanged. Both his sons died in mysterious circumstances.

Before her assassination on Dec. 27, 2007, Bhutto survived another suicide attack on her motorcade that killed nearly 150 people as she returned to Pakistan after eight years in exile in October 2007.

Bhutto’s Oxford-educated son, Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari, now leads her Pakistan Peoples Party, founded by her father, and was foreign minister in the last administration of PM Shehbaz Sharif.

Aseefa Bhutto Zardari, Bhutto’s daughter who is currently the first lady of Pakistan, said her mother lived with courage and led with compassion in life.

“Her strength lives on in every voice that refuses injustice,” she said on X.

Pakistan has been ruled by military regimes for almost half its history since independence from Britain in 1947. Both former premiers Imran Khan and the elder Sharif, Nawaz, have alleged that they were ousted by the military after they fell out with the generals. The army says it does not interfere in politics.