Millennium Post

Haj pilgrimage by sea route likely to resume after 23 years

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NEW DELHI: After a gap of nearly a quarter-century, the air at the Mumbai port may once again be filled with chanting of ‘Talbiyah’, a prayer Muslims invoke before they set off for or during the annual Haj pilgrimage.

A high-level committee, formed by the government to frame the Haj Policy, 2018, is exploring reviving the option of sending pilgrims via sea route to Jeddah, Saudi Arabia next year onwards.

The practice of ferrying devotees between Mumbai and Jeddah by waterways was stopped from 1995 on account of MV Akbari, the ship which would transport pilgrims, growing old, a source in the Union Minority Affairs Ministry said.

The option is now being weighed in the light of a 2012 Supreme Court order to the government to abolish by 2022 the subsidy offered to Haj pilgrims who travel by air.

Dispatchin­g pilgrims through ships will help cut down travel expenses by “nearly half ” as compared to airfares, thus compensati­ng them for the absence of subsidy, a source in the ministry said.

At present, devotees undertake the journey by air from 21 embarkatio­n points, including Mumbai and Delhi, across the country.

An economy class ticket for the around five-hour flight between Mumbai and Jeddah would roughly cost anything between INR 25,000 and INR 52,000 (without subsidy). If one boards from Delhi, the ticket price for the same category varies from INR 18,000 to INR 61,000 per head.

“Another advantage with ships available these days is they are modern and well-equipped to ferry 4,000 to 5,000 persons at a time. They can cover the 2,300-odd nautical miles one-side distance between the two port cities within just twothree days,” the source added. One nautical mile is equivalent to 1.8 km. When asked, MOS for Minority Affairs Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi, who attended the panel’s meeting in Mumbai earlier this week, confirmed that the alternativ­e is being given a thought to.

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