Qatar urges Saudi Arabia to lift 'discriminatory' hajj restrictions on its citizens

Qatar urges Saudi Arabia to lift 'discriminatory' hajj restrictions on its citizens
Some 12,000 Qataris performed hajj in September 2016, but months later Saudi Arabia and its allies cut ties with Qatar and imposed a land, sea, and air blockade on Doha.
2 min read
Qatar also called for the removal of "discriminatory" measures against Qataris [Getty]
Qatar has urged Saudi Arabia to remove "obstacles and restrictions" for its residents wishing to perform the hajj pilgrimage, as the two Gulf neighbours remain locked in a bitter diplomatic dispute.

The call late on Thursday follows Saudi Arabia, home to Islam's holiest cities of Mecca and Medina, announcing electronic registration for Qatar residents to allow them to perform the Umrah or minor pilgrimage during the holy month of Ramadan.

Qataris and foreign residents of the Gulf state would then be allowed to land at Jeddah or Medina airports, said a statement carried by the official Saudi Press Agency on Tuesday.

But Qatar's National Human Rights Committee said the new measure was "nominal" and insufficient, as air travel remained blocked and the only border post has been shut for almost two years.

Its Ministry of Islamic Affairs, meanwhile, called on Saudi authorities "to lift all obstacles and restrictions imposed on Qatari citizens and residents wishing to perform their religious rituals."

Read more: Qatar says Saudi Arabia barring citizens from hajj pilgrimage

The travel restrictions mean Qatari religious tour operators are unable to travel to Saudi Arabia to make the necessary arrangements for pilgrims, like other countries, the ministry said.

The ministry also called for the removal of "discriminatory" measures against Qataris and residents of the Gulf state.

Some 12,000 Qataris performed hajj in September 2016, but months later Saudi Arabia and its allies cut ties with Qatar and imposed a blockade over its alleged support for radical Islamic groups.

A few dozen Qatari pilgrims have travelled independently to Saudi Arabia over the past two years, when the Saudis briefly opened the only border post between the two countries for pilgrims.

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