Bangladesh cuts pilgrimage package costs for next year’s Hajj

The Bangladeshi government has reduced by nearly $1,000 the cost of Hajj packages for 2024. (AFP/File Photo)
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Updated 03 November 2023
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Bangladesh cuts pilgrimage package costs for next year’s Hajj

  • Bangladesh last year struggled to fulfill Hajj quota due to travel costs
  • 127,000 pilgrims from Bangladesh will perform holy rituals next year

DHAKA: The Bangladeshi government has reduced by nearly $1,000 the cost of Hajj packages for 2024, after skyrocketing prices during the 2023 pilgrimage season prevented many from undertaking the spiritual journey.

One of the most populous Muslim-majority countries, Bangladesh last year struggled to fulfill the Hajj quota granted by Saudi Arabia amid rising travel costs. Eventually, several thousand prospective pilgrims could not go.

The decision to lower the cost next year was announced by State Minister for Religious Affairs Faridul Haque Khan on Thursday.

The minimum cost of Hajj from Bangladesh will be $5,260 — a significant decrease compared with the minimum cost of $6,210 in 2023.

The new policy is expected to bring great relief to pilgrims, Shahadat Hossain, president of the Hajj Agencies Association of Bangladesh, told Arab News.

“With this newly announced by government reduced Hajj package, pilgrims will be encouraged to perform the holy Hajj and I believe we will be able to fulfil our Hajj quota this year,” he said.

“It will help our pilgrims a lot in their Hajj journey. Reducing the Hajj package price was a major issue for us since last year.”

Around 127,000 pilgrims from Bangladesh will perform the Hajj next year, facilitated by pre-immigration services under the Makkah Route initiative — a flagship program launched by Saudi Arabia in 2019.

Makkah Route allows pilgrims to save time by completing all visa, customs and health requirements at their airports of origin. Upon arrival, pilgrims can enter Saudi Arabia without waiting.

Bangladesh is among seven Muslim-majority countries — alongside Pakistan, Indonesia, Malaysia, Morocco, Turkiye and Cote d’Ivoire — where the Kingdom opened the program.

Registration for next year’s Hajj will begin in Bangladesh next week.

Abdul Hannan, a 61-year-old farmer from southern Barisal district, has been saving money for the journey for many years.

“Performing the holy Hajj has been my long-cherished dream since childhood,” he told Arab News.

“Despite the high costs, I was getting ready for the pilgrimage next year. Now, the government has reduced the cost by around $1,000, so it’s a great relief to me.”

It will make things easier for many others, including Mansurul Haider, 58, a small trader from Cumilla in eastern Bangladesh.

“Most of Muslims in Bangladesh are not very rich but all of them nurture the dream of performing the holy Hajj at least once in their lifetime,” he said.

“The new Hajj package announced by the government will be a great relief to me. Otherwise, I wouldn’t have any other choice but to sell a piece of my ancestral land.”


UN urges release of ‘arbitrarily detained’ Venezuelans

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UN urges release of ‘arbitrarily detained’ Venezuelans

  • “I urge the unconditional release of all those arbitrarily detained for their civic engagement,” Turk said
  • The rights group Foro Penal estimates that there are at least 889 “political prisoners“

GENEVA: UN rights chief Volker Turk on Tuesday urged Venezuela to free all activists arbitrarily detained by the authorities for their “civic engagement.”
Turk told the Human Rights Council that since he last updated the top United Nations rights body in June, the situation in Venezuela had not improved.
“I urge the unconditional release of all those arbitrarily detained for their civic engagement — including Rocio San Miguel, Javier Tarazona, Carlos Julio Rojas, Eduardo Torres, and Kennedy Tejeda — their family members, and four adolescents who remain in custody after the 2024 elections,” he said.
The protests that followed the July presidential election, when President Nicolas Maduro claimed a third term despite accusations of fraud from the opposition and numerous countries, resulted in 28 deaths and around 2,400 arrests, with nearly 2,000 people released since then.
The rights group Foro Penal estimates that there are at least 889 “political prisoners” in the country’s prisons.
Turk said many people were being driven out of the country by intimidation and persecution.
“We continue to see sweeping restrictions on freedom of expression and peaceful assembly; arbitrary detention and enforced disappearances; as well as acute social and economic strain,” he said.
“The crackdown on civic space has intensified, suffocating people’s freedoms.

- Reprisals -

Turk said the Venezuelan authorities had stepped up reprisals against family members of those perceived to be voicing dissent, both within the country and abroad.
“Since July, my office has documented the detention of at least 17 people — most of them women, children, and older people — in connection with the activities of their relatives,” he said.
“The fate and whereabouts of 12 more family members remain unknown.”
In February 2024, Venezuela suspended the UN rights office’s activities in the country and ordered its staff to leave within 72 hours, just days after authorities detained lawyer and prominent activist Rocio San Miguel.
The office was able to resume its operations 10 months later, but Turk announced on Tuesday that it is currently without “international staff.”
“We have made every possible effort to restore our presence — including requesting visas and engaging with the authorities — but, unfortunately, without success.
“My office is always open to constructive engagement, and I hope the authorities will promptly enable my colleagues to resume all our activities in the country,” he said, without giving further details.