First Makkah Route Hajj flight to depart from Karachi airport today

Family members, relatives and friends arrive at the international departure gate of Karachi’s Jinnah International Airport to see off pilgrims departing on a Hajj flight on July 5, 2019 (AN Photo/File)
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Updated 08 May 2024
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First Makkah Route Hajj flight to depart from Karachi airport today

  • First 11 Hajj flights carrying 2,160 Pakistani pilgrims scheduled to land in Madinah on Thursday
  • Makkah Route Initiative was recently expanded to Karachi, previously available in Islamabad 

KARACHI: Pakistan will launch its month-long Hajj flight operation from today, Thursday, with 11 flights scheduled to arrive in Madinah from five major Pakistani cities, including Karachi where passengers will utilize the Makkah Route Initiative for the first time.

Pakistani officials last month confirmed Saudi Arabia’s decision to expand the Makkah Route Initiative, previously available in Islamabad, to the airport in Karachi, the country’s largest and most populous city. 

Launched in 2019, the Makkah Route Initiative allows for the completion of immigration procedures at the pilgrims’ country of departure, making it possible to bypass long immigration and customs checks on reaching Saudi Arabia. The facility significantly reduces waiting times and makes the entry process smoother and faster.

“These flights will transport pilgrims from Islamabad, Karachi, Lahore, Multan, and Peshawar to the Prince Mohammad Bin Abdulaziz International Airport (Madinah Airport), beginning a massive influx of devotees from Pakistan and other parts of the world,” state news agency APP said, adding that the first 11 flights would take 2,160 Hajj pilgrims to Madinah. 

The agency reported that Nawaf bin Said Al-Malki, Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to Pakistan, would visit the Islamabad and Karachi airports, both now operated under the Makkah Route Initiative, to bid farewell to Pakistani Hajj pilgrims.

“The pilgrims will be received by authorities concerned at the Pakistan Consulate General and the Hajj Mission of the Ministry of Religious Affairs,” APP added.

Under the Hajj flight operation, five airlines – Pakistan International Airlines, Saudi Airlines, Airblue, Serene Air, and Air Sial – will operate 259 sorties to transport around 68,000 intending pilgrims from eight major cities of Pakistan, namely Islamabad, Karachi, Lahore, Peshawar, Multan, Quetta, Sialkot, and Sukkur, to Jeddah and Madinah under the government scheme.

According to the flight schedule, the first flight, PF754 (AirSial), is scheduled to depart for Madinah at 01:45 am from Karachi, carrying around 150 intending Hajj pilgrims. The last Hajj flight, SV3727 (Saudi Airlines), will depart on June 10 from Islamabad to Jeddah, with 380 passengers onboard.

During the first 15 days, all flights will operate from various cities of Pakistan to Madinah until May 23, and afterwards, they will land at the King Abdulaziz International Airport, Jeddah, until the completion of the Hajj flight operation.

This year, around 179,210 Pakistanis will perform Hajj under both the government and private schemes, for which a month-long flight operation is scheduled to commence on May 9, tomorrow. 

Out of 179,210 pilgrims, 89,605 each will embark on the holy journey under the government and private schemes, while a quota of 25,000 and 44,802 pilgrims, respectively, have been allocated to the sponsorship schemes.


Pakistan surgical instrument exporters eye Saudi Arabia as Vision 2030 fuels health care expansion

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Pakistan surgical instrument exporters eye Saudi Arabia as Vision 2030 fuels health care expansion

  • Industry sees opportunity as Kingdom invests heavily in hospitals, medical tourism and private health care
  • Pakistan exported $445 million in surgical instruments last year but shipments to Saudi Arabia remain limited

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s globally recognized surgical instruments industry is eyeing Saudi Arabia as a “lucrative” growth market, as the Kingdom ramps up investment in health care infrastructure under its Vision 2030 reform agenda, an industry representative said.

Pakistan ranks among the world’s leading exporters of surgical instruments, with most production concentrated in the eastern city of Sialkot. The sector exported instruments worth around $445 million last year, according to the Surgical Instruments Manufacturers Association of Pakistan (SIMAP), supplying hospitals and distributors across Europe, North America and parts of Asia.

Exports to Saudi Arabia, however, have remained relatively limited, despite the Kingdom’s growing health care needs and expanding hospital network.

That is beginning to change as Saudi Arabia accelerates health care investment under Vision 2030, a sweeping economic transformation plan aimed at reducing dependence on oil and expanding public services. The strategy includes large-scale hospital construction, greater private-sector participation in health care delivery, and plans to position the Kingdom as a regional hub for medical treatment and tourism. Industry analysts say this expansion is expected to drive sustained demand for imported medical equipment and surgical instruments.

“It means the demand of surgical instruments will eventually rise [in the Kingdom],” SIMAP Chairman Dr. Zeeshan Tariq said in an interview with Arab News late last month.

“So, it’s a very lucrative and very attractive market for us right now and we want to tap that potential as soon as possible and as better as possible.”

Pakistan and Saudi Arabia maintain a long-standing strategic relationship spanning political, security and economic cooperation, underpinned by deep religious and cultural ties. In recent months, the two countries have stepped up economic engagement, including high-level visits, a defense cooperation pact signed in September, and an economic framework agreed the following month to expand bilateral trade and investment.

“Our people have gone there, and they have found some very good opportunities there and Saudi government is actively working with our government to improve that volume and recently we have [had] some high-level delegation visits,” Tariq said.

“After these visits, there have been some MoUs (memorandums of understanding) signed too. So, we are very hopeful that it will be a good opportunity.”

To capitalize on Saudi demand, Pakistani manufacturers are also navigating regulatory requirements in the Kingdom, where certification from the Saudi Food and Drug Authority (SFDA) is mandatory for medical and surgical equipment.

SIMAP has been holding seminars and training sessions to help exporters understand Saudi regulatory standards and compliance procedures. The association is also planning to establish a dedicated research and development (R&D) cell to support manufacturers seeking to upgrade product quality and meet international certification requirements.

Tariq said Saudi Arabia’s long-term health care ambitions made it a particularly attractive market for Pakistani exporters.

“There is a huge potential because I have been in talks with many Saudi government officials and they want to make Saudi Arabia the hub of medical tourism or medical treatment in all GCC and eventually all over the world,” he said.