Los Angeles Times

Iran halts pilgrimage visits to Saudi Arabia

Report that two boys were molested by airport security in Jidda adds to tension.

- By Ramin Mostaghim Mostaghim is a special correspond­ent. Times staff writer Patrick J. McDonnell in Beirut contribute­d to this report.

TEHRAN — Iran suspended pilgrimage visits to Saudi Arabia on Monday in the latest manifestat­ion of escalating tensions between the two regional rivals.

The move comes after allegation­s that security personnel at the airport in the Saudi city of Jidda sexually molested a pair of Iranian teenage boys last month as the two pilgrims were headed home.

Ali Jannati, Iran’s minister of culture and Islamic guidance, told local media that flights for the “minor hajj” travel period had been suspended until further notice. The minor, or off-season, hajj encompasse­s the months not included in the official period of pilgrimage to Mecca.

In his comments, the Iranian minister said Saudi officials had vowed to punish those responsibl­e. Details of the allegation­s have not been released. Saudi authoritie­s have not commented publicly on the case.

But the reported assaults have caused outrage here. On Saturday, angry protesters gathered outside the Saudi Embassy in Tehran and demanded that attackers be brought to justice.

Tensions are already running high between predominan­tly Shiite Iran and mostly Sunni Saudi Arabia, hubs of the two major branches of Islam. The nations are backing opposing sides in sectarian-fueled proxy wars in Syria and Yemen and are also at odds over events in Iraq, Bahrain, Lebanon and elsewhere.

The pilgrimage has occasional­ly emerged as a wellspring of regional tensions. In 1987, clashes between Iranian Shiite pilgrims and Saudi security forces in Mecca left hundreds dead. Each side blamed the other for the bloody incident.

About 500,000 Iranians visit Saudi Arabia annually during the minor hajj period, according to official estimates. An additional 100,000 pilgrims from Iran make the trip during the weeks of official pilgrimage, officials say.

Hajj-related travel is big business in much of the Muslim world. Special flights transport the pilgrims from Iran and elsewhere to Saudi Arabia.

In Iran, an extensive network of travel agencies, tour organizers and middlemen help make arrangemen­ts and secure visas for pilgrims. One Iranian travel agent who declined to be named for privacy reasons said pilgrims were being advised to fly to Kuwait or other nations to seek Saudi visas.

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