First group of Hajj pilgrims depart for Saudi Arabia since 2016
More than 270 Yemeni pilgrims have left the country for Saudi Arabia for the first time since 2016 as the tensions between the two Arab countries eases.
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The flight by Yemen’s national carrier Yemenia — also known as Yemen Airways — took off from Sana’a International Airport at 8 p.m. local time (1700 GMT), heading to the Saudi coastal city of Jeddah, said Yemeni airport chief Khalid al-Shayyef.
He further explained the flight was the first of five transferring this year’s Yemeni pilgrims from Sana’a to Saudi Arabia for the annual ritual of Hajj, the pilgrimage to the holy city of Mecca required once in a lifetime of every financially-able and physically-fit Muslim, according to an AP report.
In addition to the Saturday’s flight, two more departures have been scheduled for Monday and Wednesday, while officials from Yemen’s popular Ansarullah resistance movement and Saudi authorities were working on scheduling two more flights, al-Shayyef noted as cited in the report.
Thousands of Yemeni pilgrims travel by bus to Saudi Arabia, or to the southern port city of Aden – an arduous 12-hour journey due to checkpoints – where they can fly to the neighboring country.
“We can no longer bear the burdens and hardships of traveling to Aden,” Akram Mohamed Murshid, one of the pilgrims boarding the plane, said.
“Hopefully, the blockade will end and the airport will remain open. We are very happy and relieved, and I cannot describe the feeling,” said Mohammad Askar, another Mecca-bound pilgrim.
The Yemeni Minister of Public Works and Roads, Ghaleb Mutlaq, said nearly 200 flights would be needed to accommodate the 24,000 people who wanted to take part in the highly spiritual pilgrimage.
“We consider what is happening today as a good gesture, so that airports, especially Sana’a airport, will be opened to Yemeni travelers,” Najeeb al-Aji, Yemeni Minister of Guidance, Hajj and Umrah, told journalists.
Saudi Arabia initiated a brutal war of aggression against Yemen in March 2015, enlisting the assistance of some of its regional allies, including the United Arab Emirates, as well as massive shipments of advance weaponry from the US and Western Europe.
The war further led to the killing of tens of thousands of Yemenis and turned the entire nation into the scene of the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.