Pakistan launches second phase of Hajj flight operations

A departing Muslim pilgrim has a drink from a man as he sits next to other women in Saudi Arabia's holy city of Makkah on June 20, 2024. (AFP/File)
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Updated 15 May 2025
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Pakistan launches second phase of Hajj flight operations

  • Over 89,000 pilgrims to travel under government scheme during 33-day-long Hajj flight operations
  • Pilgrims will travel to Makkah and Madinah via 342 flights, last one to depart Pakistan on May 31

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has launched the second phase of Pakistan Hajj flight operations for pilgrims traveling under the government-sponsored scheme, state broadcaster Radio Pakistan reported on Thursday.

Over 89,000 pilgrims will travel under the government’s scheme during Pakistan’s 33-day-long Hajj flight operations, which started on April 29. Pilgrims will travel to Makkah and Madinah via 342 flights in total, with the last one departing from Pakistan on May 31.

On Wednesday, as the second phase of operations started, Minister for Religious Affairs and Interfaith Harmony Sardar Muhammad Yousaf received 305 pilgrims at Jeddah airport. They had arrived directly from Islamabad under the Makkah Route Initiative.

“Almost 46,000 pilgrims will arrive in Makkah via Jeddah by the 31st of this month,” Radio Pakistan reported. “They will then proceed to Madinah after performing Hajj.”

The Makkah Route Initiative is designed to streamline immigration processes by enabling pilgrims to complete official travel formalities at their departure airports. Initially tested in Islamabad in 2019, the program was later expanded to Karachi, benefitting tens of thousands of Pakistani travelers. This saves pilgrims several hours upon arrival in the Kingdom, as they can simply enter the country without having to go through immigration again. 

Around 50,500 Pakistani pilgrims will travel to Saudi Arabia under the initiative this year. The scheme was launched in 2019 by the Saudi Ministry of Hajj and Umrah and has been implemented in five countries: Pakistan, Malaysia, Indonesia, Morocco and Bangladesh.

This year’s annual pilgrimage will take place in June, with nearly 89,000 Pakistanis expected to perform Hajj under the government scheme and over 23,620 Pakistanis through private tour operators.


Türkiye hands over MILGEM corvette warship to Pakistan amid deepening defense ties

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Türkiye hands over MILGEM corvette warship to Pakistan amid deepening defense ties

  • Türkiye delivered the first of its four MILGEM corvettes, PNS Babur, to Pakistan in 2023
  • Pakistan, Turkiye friendship to endure “until the end of time,” says President Erdoğan

ISLAMABAD: Türkiye handed over its second MILGEM corvette warship named “PNS Khaibar” to Pakistan this week, the Turkish embassy in Islamabad said in a statement, as both countries enhance their bilateral defense ties. 

Pakistan signed a contract in July 2018 to buy four corvettes for its navy with the Turkish state-owned defense firm ASFAT. The MILGEM project is a Turkish warship program that aims to develop multipurpose corvettes and frigates that can be deployed in a range of missions, including reconnaissance, surveillance, early warning, anti-submarine warfare, surface-to-surface and surface-to-air warfare, and amphibious operations.

The first of the four MILGEM corvettes, PNS Babur, was delivered in 2023. 

“At a ship delivery ceremony held at the İstanbul Naval Shipyard Command, the MILGEM corvette PNS Khaibar was officially handed over to Pakistan marking yet another milestone in bilateral defense cooperation,” the Turkish embassy said in a press release on Saturday. 

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan highlighted the close relations between the two countries in a speech at the handing over ceremony. 

“The Türkiye–Pakistan friendship, rooted deep in our shared history and tested over centuries, will— Allah willing— endure until the end of time, flourish, and grow ever stronger,” the embassy quoted Erdoğan as saying. 

The development takes place as Türkiye and Pakistan move to strengthen their defense relations. Islamabad and Ankara have warmed up to each other after Türkiye’s public condemnation of Indian cross-border strikes in Pakistan earlier this year that sparked a brief military conflict between both sides. 

In July, Türkiye’s foreign and defense ministers also arrived in Pakistan for a series of high-level meetings focusing on counterterrorism, defense cooperation and broader strategic ties.