About 8,500 Pakistani Hajj pilgrims arrive in Saudi Arabia in five days

Mask-clad Pakistani travellers arriving to Saudi Arabia to perform the year-round Umrah pilgrimage, walk with their luggage at King Abdulaziz International Airport in the Red Sea coastal city of Jeddah on November 30, 2020. (AFP/ File)
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Updated 11 June 2022
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About 8,500 Pakistani Hajj pilgrims arrive in Saudi Arabia in five days

  • More than 1,500 Pakistani pilgrims will be flown to Madinah on Saturday 
  • Hajj flight operation, comprising 106 flights, will conclude on June 30 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Religious Affairs Minister Mufti Abdul Shakoor on Saturday said that around 8,500 Pakistani pilgrims had arrived in Saudi Arabia to perform the Hajj pilgrimage, since the start of a special flight operation by Pakistan on June 6. 

The first Hajj flight carrying Pakistani pilgrims departed from Islamabad on June 6. 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. 

“Through Hajj flights operation in the last five days, 8,500 pilgrims have arrived in Saudi Arabia, more than 1,500 pilgrims will be flown to Madinah by 5 Hajj flights on Saturday,” the Pakistani religious affairs ministry said in a statement. 

Pakistan will operate 42 flights to transport 14,007 Hajj pilgrims to Saudi Arabia under the “Road to Makkah” initiative this year. 

Under the initiative, 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 Indonesia and Malaysia. 

Saudi Arabia has allowed up to one million people to join the Hajj pilgrimage this year, inviting pilgrims from foreign countries for the first time after two years of COVID-19 restrictions saw the annual pilgrimage limited to residents of the kingdom. 

Pilgrims this year must be under the age of 65 and fully vaccinated against the coronavirus.


Pakistan, seven Muslim nations back Palestinian technocratic body, stress Gaza-West Bank unity

Updated 15 January 2026
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Pakistan, seven Muslim nations back Palestinian technocratic body, stress Gaza-West Bank unity

  • The National Committee for the Administration of the Gaza Strip was announced on January 14
  • Muslim nations call for consolidation of the ceasefire and unimpeded humanitarian aid into Gaza

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan and seven other Muslim-majority countries on Thursday welcomed the formation of a temporary Palestinian technocratic body to administer Gaza, stressing that it must manage daily civilian affairs while preserving the institutional and territorial link between the Gaza Strip and the West Bank amid the ongoing peace efforts.

In a joint statement, the foreign ministers of Pakistan, Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Türkiye, Indonesia and the United Arab Emirates said the newly announced National Committee for the Administration of the Gaza Strip would play a central role during the second phase of a broader peace plan aimed at ending the war and paving the way for Palestinian self-governance.

“The Ministers emphasize the importance of the National Committee commencing its duties in managing the day-to-day affairs of the people of Gaza, while preserving the institutional and territorial link between the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, ensuring the unity of Gaza, and rejecting any attempts to divide it,” the statement said.

The committee, announced on Jan. 14, is a temporary transitional body established under United Nations Security Council Resolution 2803 and is to operate in coordination with the Palestinian Authority, the ministers said.

The statement said the move forms part of the second phase of US President Donald Trump’s Comprehensive Peace Plan for Gaza, which the ministers said they supported, praising Trump’s efforts to end the war, ensure the withdrawal of Israeli forces and prevent the annexation of the occupied West Bank.

The top leaders of all eight Muslim countries attended a meeting with Trump in New York last September, shortly before he unveiled the Gaza peace plan.

The ministers also called for the consolidation of the ceasefire, unimpeded humanitarian aid into Gaza, early recovery and reconstruction and the eventual return of the Palestinian Authority to administer the territory, leading to a just and sustainable peace based on UN resolutions and a two-state solution on pre-1967 lines with East Jerusalem as the Palestinian capital.