Saudis allow Qatari pilgrims to attend hajj
Qatari pilgrims began arriving in Saudi Arabia yesterday, Saudi media reported, after Riyadh said it was opening up its border and airports for those attending the annual hajj pilgrimage despite a diplomatic rift that cut travel ties.
Qatar welcomed the Saudi decision to open the border and provide flights for Qatari pilgrims, but saw the move as politically motivated, Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani said.
Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt severed transport links with Qatar in June and imposed sanctions, accusing it of supporting Islamist militants and Iran, which Doha denies.
The state-run Saudi Press Agency said the Salwa border point would be open for Qataris performing the hajj, which this year runs from late August to early September.
Saudi-owned al-Arabiya television and state television reported that 50 Qatari pilgrims had entered Saudi territory yesterday through the Salwa crossing, which was opened for the first time since the boycott of Qatar began.
The pilgrims entered as guests of the Saudi king, al-Arabiya said. There was no immediate confirmation of the report by border officials on the Qatari side of the frontier.
“Despite the fact it’s been politically motivated to ban the Qatari people from hajj and politically motivated that they allow them (in) ... we welcome such a step, which is a step forward to get rid of this blockade that is imposed against my country,” Sheikh Mohammed told a news conference during a visit to Sweden.
He did not elaborate on what he meant by “politically motivated.”
Saudi Arabia had already said Qatari pilgrims would not be affected by the travel restrictions, but some Qataris have said they faced difficulties organizing the trip.
Qatari pilgrims can cross the frontier without the permits usually needed to be obtained in advance for the hajj, SPA said. The Saudi king has ordered the dispatch of a Saudi Airlines plane to fly Qatari pilgrims to Jeddah at his own expense, SPA added.
Qatari pilgrims would also be able to pass through two of the kingdom’s airports, it added.
Between 2 million and 3 million Muslims from around the world travel to Mecca, Islam’s holiest city, for the pilgrimage each year.
It was not clear how far the opening of the border to pilgrims would go to help heal the rift, the worst involving United States-allied Gulf Arab countries for years.
Some Qataris said that even with permission to enter Saudi Arabia, they would be concerned for their safety.
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