Pakistan says Hajj arrangements in final stages, pilgrims trained in 107 cities

This aerial view shows Muslims visiting the Grand Mosque in the Saudi holy city of Mecca on June 8, 2025, at the end of the annual Hajj pilgrimage. (AFP/File)
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Updated 19 February 2026
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Pakistan says Hajj arrangements in final stages, pilgrims trained in 107 cities

  • Training held in 183 sessions nationwide to prepare pilgrims for rituals, logistics
  • Authorities say accommodation, transport, visas being finalized in Saudi Arabia and Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s religious affairs ministry said on Thursday preparations for the annual Hajj pilgrimage for 2026 were in their final stages, with pilgrims already trained across 107 cities ahead of the journey to Saudi Arabia later this year.

Pakistan sends one of the world’s largest Hajj contingents each year, requiring months of logistical coordination between Islamabad and Saudi authorities to manage housing in Makkah and Madinah, transport to holy sites and training in religious rites.

Authorities say training is considered essential because many Pakistani pilgrims travel abroad for the first time and must learn both rituals and administrative procedures before departure.

“A total of 183 training workshops have been conducted in 107 cities to educate pilgrims about Hajj rituals and administrative matters,” Federal Secretary Religious Affairs Dr. Sajid Mahmood Chauhan said in statement after Federal Minister for Religious Affairs Sardar Muhammad Yousaf chaired a high-level meeting to review Hajj arrangements, including accommodation, transport, vaccinations and travel documentation for pilgrims.

Chauhan added the second phase of one-day training sessions would begin immediately after Eid-ul-Fitr.

Officials said arrangements including accommodation, transport in Mina and Arafat, and food services had entered the final phase of preparation, while vaccination, air tickets and visa issuance would begin soon.

“Makkah and Madinah accommodation has been secured better than last year,” Director General Hajj Abdul Wahab Soomro told the meeting, according to the statement.

Meanwhile, the religious affairs minister instructed authorities to ensure “ideal arrangements” both in Pakistan and Saudi Arabia and emphasized that pilgrims and support staff should represent the country positively during the pilgrimage.

Pakistan has been allocated a total Hajj quota of 179,210 pilgrims for 2026, according to the country’s approved Hajj policy.

Of these, 119,210 pilgrims will travel under the government scheme while 60,000 will go through private tour operators, with applications processed on a first-come, first-served basis and supported by digitized monitoring and training arrangements. 


On World Wildlife Day, WWF warns wildlife crime, overharvesting threaten Pakistan’s natural heritage 

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On World Wildlife Day, WWF warns wildlife crime, overharvesting threaten Pakistan’s natural heritage 

  • Pakistan identified as both source and transit route for illegal wildlife trade
  • Unsustainable harvesting of medicinal plants puts biodiversity, rural livelihoods at risk

ISLAMABAD: WWF-Pakistan on Tuesday called for urgent national action to combat illegal wildlife trade and unsustainable harvesting practices, warning that wildlife crime and overexploitation are placing Pakistan’s biodiversity under increasing pressure.

Marking World Wildlife Day 2026, the conservation group said Pakistan’s ecosystems are under strain from trafficking of animals and plants, as well as rising commercial demand for high-value medicinal and aromatic species.

Globally, more than 20 percent of medicinal plant species are threatened with extinction due to habitat loss, climate change and illegal trade. WWF-Pakistan said similar pressures are visible domestically, where wildlife trafficking and indiscriminate plant extraction are eroding ecosystem stability and community livelihoods.

“Effective conservation cannot succeed without strong enforcement and informed communities,” said Rab Nawaz, Senior Director Programmes at WWF-Pakistan. 

“By strengthening institutional capacity and engaging local stakeholders, we are improving Pakistan’s ability to prevent wildlife crime and protect vulnerable species before they disappear from the wild.”

WWF-Pakistan said the country functions both as a source and transit route for illegal wildlife trade, with reptiles, mammals and high-value medicinal plants among the most targeted species. The organization said it is working with government departments and partners to strengthen enforcement systems, improve inter-agency coordination and build the capacity of wildlife officials and judicial actors.

“We have developed a comprehensive training curriculum and an Illegal Wildlife Trade Prevention Strategy and are conducting trainings nationwide on SMART monitoring, species identification, wildlife crime investigation, ranger safety, safe animal handling, and community engagement,” said Muhammad Jamshed Iqbal Chaudhry, Senior Manager Conservation WWF-Pakistan. “More than 1,200 individuals- including community members, students, journalists, and local leaders- have been engaged through awareness sessions and webinars.”

The group cited recent field-based conservation efforts at Deva Vatala National Park, carried out with local communities and the Azad Jammu and Kashmir Wildlife Department, which led to the rescue and release of species including rock pythons, Indian pangolins, barking deer and Alexandrine parakeets.

This year’s World Wildlife Day theme, “Medicinal and Aromatic Plants: Conserving health, heritage and livelihoods,” highlights growing concern over commercial exploitation of plant species widely used in traditional medicine and the herbal industry.

WWF-Pakistan said species such as Saussurea costus (Kuth), Nardostachys jatamansi (Jatamansi) and Commiphora wightii (Guggal) are often harvested indiscriminately, limiting natural regeneration. In arid regions like Balochistan and Sindh, Guggal is extracted for its resin, while high-altitude species including Ephedera and Bergenia ciliata (Zakhm-e-hayat) are sourced from northern forests.

“Medicinal and aromatic plants are deeply intertwined with Pakistan’s natural heritage, health care systems, and rural economies,” Rab Nawaz said. “Protecting these species through sustainable harvesting, stronger regulation, and community engagement is essential to safeguard both biodiversity and livelihoods for future generations.”

WWF-Pakistan warned that continued overexploitation could undermine ecosystem services that communities depend on and called for stronger regulation, enforcement and community-led conservation initiatives to prevent irreversible biodiversity loss.