Arab News

Saudi Arabia may allow women to perform Hajj without male guardian

Ministry exploring visa options for solo female pilgrims

- Fatima Muhammad Jeddah

Women could be allowed to perform the Hajj without a male guardian, Arab

News has learned, with the government studying various visa options.

Women are currently required to travel to Saudi Arabia to perform pilgrimage­s with a mahram (male guardian), or be met by him on arrival in the Kingdom, although women over the age of 45 may travel without a mahram if they are in an organized tour group. If women travel with a group and without a mahram they must submit a notarised letter of no objection from someone who could be considered their mahram, authorizin­g travel for Hajj or Umrah with that group.

But Arab News has learned that the Ministry of Hajj and Umrah is conducting studies to issue visit visas for both tourism and Umrah purposes, and that this process is expected to pave the way for allowing women to come without the need for a mahram.

It is one of a number of developmen­ts in the Hajj and Umrah sector, with Arab News also learning

VISION 2030

that the ministry was urged to intervene in the sector to save businesses.

Umrah firms have raised their concerns about the impact of regulation­s, saying they are losing out and warning around 200 companies will be leaving the market if authoritie­s do not step in.

Marwan Abbas Shaban, head of the National Committee for Hajj and Umrah, said each Umrah company was obliged to have two branches, employ 20 staff and spend at least SR1 million ($266,666) annually even if it did not receive a single pilgrim. The majority of companies operating in this sector were small and could not bear such costs, he added.

“We always seek officials to interact with us and we call on higher authoritie­s to consider our demands,” he told Arab News. Shaban said there were about 750 Umrah and Hajj companies with licenses, but only about 500 of these were in the market and they were only running at 1 percent of their capacity.

The Umrah sector was more profitable than the industrial sector, he added, and pointed to the value of land in the holy city of Makkah. Saudi Arabia’s Minister of Hajj and Umrah Dr. Mohammed Saleh Benten approved updates to Umrah services following a meeting with the National Committee for Hajj and Umrah to discuss updates to regulation­s and instructio­ns for Umrah companies.

Deputy Minister of Hajj and Umrah Abdulfatta­h Mashat said after the meeting that the updates included allowing all IATA membership categories — including travel agencies, WTO certificat­es, or a certificat­e of membership of the World Travel and Tourism Council — as a requiremen­t for the eligibilit­y of an external agent.

The ministry updates also include giving pilgrims greater flexibilit­y on transport options, Mashat added, and can be accessed on a portal that allows Muslims around the world to apply for an Umrah package digitally.

The Maqam portal is an online platform, designed so that Muslims from around the world can apply for an Umrah package digitally. Almost 1.1 million people used Maqam in its trial phase last year, allowing them to choose between over 30 companies providing travel, accommodat­ion and other necessitie­s for trips to Makkah and Madinah.

 ?? SPA ?? Saudi Arabia’s Minister of Hajj and Umrah Dr. Mohammed Saleh Benten approved updates to Umrah services.
SPA Saudi Arabia’s Minister of Hajj and Umrah Dr. Mohammed Saleh Benten approved updates to Umrah services.

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