ISLAMABAD: Pakistan started its Hajj flight operation on Monday after the first batch of pilgrims took off from the Islamabad International Airport shortly before the break of dawn at 3:30am.
Saudi Arabia has allowed up to one million people to join the Hajj pilgrimage this year, expanding it to participants from outside the kingdom after two years of tight COVID-19 restrictions.
Unlike the past, however, pilgrims this year must be under age 65 and fully vaccinated against the coronavirus.
The Pakistani pilgrims, who embarked on their spiritual journey from Islamabad, benefitted from the Makkah route initiative which allows all immigration requirements to be fulfilled at the airport of origin.
Another Hajj flight also departed from Pakistan’s eastern city of Lahore in the presence Punjab Governor Muhammad Baligh-ur-Rehman.
“Islamabad (IIAP) and Lahore (AIIAP) airports see first Hajj flights take off under Road to Makkah 2022 initiative,” confirmed the Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority (PCAA) in a Twitter post. “Governor Punjab garlanded Madina bound Hajj passengers at [the Allama Iqbal International Airport] and asked them to pray for Pakistan’s prosperity while at the two Holy Mosques.”
The Hajj, or the annual Islamic pilgrimage to Makkah, is a mandatory religious duty for all Muslims who are required to carry it out at least once in their lifetime if they are physically and financially capable.
A leading Pakistani religious scholar also urged pilgrims from his country to strictly abide by the code of conduct issued by Saudi Arabia, saying they should only focus on annual Islamic ritual while visiting the kingdom.
“As per the Saudi government’s instructions, all kind of political and sectarian activities are prohibited,” Hafiz Tahir Mehmood Ashrafi told the Associated Press of Pakistan news agency in an interview while adding the pilgrims must “focus on their worship wholeheartedly.”
Last month, a group of Pakistani nationals in Saudi Arabia shouted slogans against the current administration of the country whose officials were visiting the Prophet’s Mosque in Madinah.
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.