Arab News

Makkah sees safe arrival of pilgrims as Hajj begins

6,000 pilgrims every three hours are expected to enter the Grand Mosque to perform tawaf

- Mohammed Al-Kinani Jeddah

Pilgrims have arrived at the Grand Mosque in Makkah to perform tawaf in the first Hajj act of the year after reaching the city on Saturday through four entry points designed to limit the spread of coronaviru­s.

Saudi Arabia, which receives almost 2.5 million pilgrims each year, has limited the number of travelers permitted to perform Hajj for the second year in a row to 60,000, as health and safety is a top priority for officials amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The pilgrims permitted to perform Hajj comprise different nationalit­ies residing in the Kingdom and must be fully vaccinated against coronaviru­s.

According to this year’s Hajj organizing plan, pilgrims are gathering in four main entry locations: Al-Taneem, Al-Shara’i, the Kor checkpoint and the Al-Shumaisi security zone.

Pilgrims residing in Makkah were also directed to head to the nearest point to join up with arrivals.

Security and health checks were followed by bus transfers to take pilgrim groups to the Grand Mosque, where they performed tawaf upon arrival. Once completed, pilgrims left the Grand Mosque

through the Bab Ali grouping station, where buses transporte­d them to temporary residences near the holy sites.

With a temperatur­e of 41 degrees Celsius in Makkah, most pilgrims were seen carrying umbrellas to protect themselves from the scorching summer heat. Security personnel and civil workers were monitoring the movement of the pilgrims, ensuring that all health instructio­ns were followed and to provide immediate help.

Hisham Saeed, spokesman of the Hajj and Umrah Ministry, said that 6,000 pilgrims every three hours are expected to enter the Grand Mosque to perform tawaf. After each group leaves, a sanitizati­on process will be carried out to ensure maximum safety.

For the security and safety of pilgrims, all entrances to Makkah are monitored by security officers and thermal-imaging cameras to prevent people without Hajj permits accessing the holy sites.

“The mountains surroundin­g Makkah and all its valleys, where people with no Hajj permits might believe they can access the holy sites, are completely monitored by the Mujahideen force and equipped with cameras to foil such attempts,” Commander of Hajj Security Forces Maj Gen. Zayed bin Abdulrahma­n Al-Tuwayan said in a press conference held in Makkah.

According to Maj. Gen. Mohammed Al-Bassami, assistant commander of Hajj Security Forces for the Grand Mosque and its surroundin­gs, officials are working closely with health authoritie­s to protect pilgrims and prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s during Hajj.

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 ?? SPA ?? The first batch of pilgrims coming from Jeddah and Madinah by the Haramain High-Speed Railway arrived in Makkah.
SPA The first batch of pilgrims coming from Jeddah and Madinah by the Haramain High-Speed Railway arrived in Makkah.

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