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Published 28 Dec, 2017 05:46am

Charges to stay unchanged in new Haj policy

ISLAMABAD: The government has announced that Haj charges for the year 2018 will be the same as they were in 2017.

Announcing the Haj Policy 2018 on Wednesday, Minister for Religious Affairs Sardar Muhammad Yousuf said there would be a special quota for the elderly to facilitate senior citizens.

He said that 179,210 Pakistanis would perform Haj next year and a special quota of 10,000 had been allocated for applicants above the age of 80 years.

The minister said that Haj charges would remain Rs280,000 for intending pilgrims proceeding from northern parts of the country, including Islamabad and Lahore, and Rs270,000 for those going from southern areas, including Karachi.

The month of Zilhaj of the Hijri calendar is set to fall September next year and the ministry has decided to invite applications for the government haj scheme from Jan 15 to 24 next year. The balloting for successful applicants will be held on Jan 26.

Special quota introduced for the elderly

The federal cabinet approved the Haj Policy 2018 on Tuesday and the religious affairs minister shared details of the policy with the media on Wednesday.

Under the new Haj policy, 60 per cent applicants or 179,210 intending pilgrims would perform Haj under the government scheme and the rest would perform the religious duty through private Haj operators.

The minister said that it was a longstanding demand of the intending pilgrims belonging to remote areas of the country for increasing the number of private Haj operators to create a healthy competition among them.

“New companies will be incorporated and a decision in this regard will be taken by a high-level committee already working on it,” the minister added.

He said that an agreement with the Saudi government for Haj 2018 would be finalised in February next year. He said that shortcomings and problems faced by the pilgrims in previous years would not be experienced by the intending pilgrims next year as improvements were being made each year to provide maximum facilities to the people.

“This is the fifth Haj policy of this government and by the grace of Almighty Allah there has not been a single incident of any major financial corruption or gross mismanagement during these years,” Sardar Yousuf said, adding: “There are a few isolated incidents related to space or transport, but we should also consider the magnitude of the Haj activity and there have been serious terror threats too over the last couple of years in Saudi Arabia.”

The government has decided to maintain the ‘hardship quota’ at two per cent of the total intending pilgrims under the government Haj scheme.

The hardship quota is reserved seats for ‘broken family’, newly-born infant cases and applicants belonging to far-flung or rural areas, including Gilgit-Baltistan and Balochistan.

Under the so-called broken family quota, the husband will be allowed to accompany his wife if he remains unsuccessful in the balloting. And in case of a child (male or female) under 16 years of age, his/her father, brother or an elder member of the same family will accompany him/her.

The religious affairs ministry had decreased the hardship quota from five to three per cent in the Haj Policy 2016 to accommodate the maximum number of intending pilgrims through an open balloting.

The minister said his ministry was holding talks with all stakeholders to reduce the duration of Haj operations from 38 to 30 days, adding that it was possible due to availability of efficient air and land mobility.

Published in Dawn, December 28th, 2017

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