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British Muslim tour operators face liquidation following changes to Saudi hajj

British Muslim tour operators face liquidation following changes to Saudi hajj


Tour operators that specialise in organising trips to the Muslim Hajj pilgrimage have spoken of their concern for the future of their industry after a last-minute overhaul of the event’s booking system.

With only a couple of weeks to go before the start of this year’s pilgrimage – which runs from 7 to 12 July – the Saudi Arabian government has announced that European pilgrims will no longer be able to book via tour operators.

Instead they must enter a lottery through an online portal called Motawif. Those randomly selected are then able to book accommodation and transport themselves through the website.

Those who have already booked through one of the approximately 120 British tour operators previously approved by the Saudi Ministry of Hajj are now unable to travel on their original itineraries. Anyone booking with an ATOL-protected company will be issued with a full refund.

The operators themselves will be left out of pocket, however, with customer deposits from this year’s Hajj and that of the cancelled 2020 event still held by hotels in Saudi Arabia.

Such is the financial pressure on travel businesses operating in this market that many may be forced into liquidation as a result of the changes.

London-based tour operators Hajj Travel Ltd were left with no choice but to cease trading today after 15 years in business, said owner Abdelkader Keterouci: “We haven’t had the Hajj for the last two years because of Covid-19, and this year should have been the opportunity to cover our losses of the last two years.”

The Hajj – seen as an obligation for all able-bodied Muslims at least once in their lifetime – usually attracts around 2 million pilgrims a year. In 2020, that was reduced to 10,000; then in 2021, 65,000 people from Saudi Arabia were permitted to attend. Before the pandemic, British Muslims accounted for around 25,000 of those travelling, with quotas granted to approved tour operators.

Of the 150 pilgrims booked to travel to Mecca with Hajj Travel Ltd this year, only six will now be going, said Keterouci. Most were simply not willing to trust their savings with an untested online portal, so didn’t even enter the lottery. Packages with Hajj Travel cost £6,800 per person.

Keterouci is angry at not even having been directly informed of the new system by the Saudi authorities. Four weeks before the 2022 event, Hajj Travel received a request from the Ministry of Hajj to provide updates on the hotels and transport providers they work with in…

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