The Passport Department has established two centers to deal with the processing of punitive charges against Haj violators without any further delay, announced Maj. Gen. Ayad Loqman Al-Harbi, commander of Haj forces in the Passport Department.
Addressing a press conference on Friday evening here, Al-Harbi said the Passport Department has established a center each in Taif and Shamaisy to deal firmly with the Haj violators, including smugglers of illegal pilgrims.
“All violators caught by security forces are being referred to these two centers where punitive actions are processed. These two centers are working 24x7 to avoid any scope of delay.”
The commander said Saudi citizens and others charged with smuggling pilgrims are being fined SR10,000 per pilgrim and will be referred to courts for further punishment.
He added that expatriates caught in violation will be deported and barred for returning to the Kingdom for at least 10 years.
Al-Harbi said that the electronic system is being effectively used by the Passport Department to curb and prevent any infiltration in Makkah as part of the drive by the Ministry of Interior.
He said that 1,169,977 pilgrims had arrived in the Kingdom until Friday afternoon, the majority of them at King Abdulaziz International Airport in Jeddah, Prince Mohammed bin Abdulaziz International Airport in Madinah and Jeddah Islamic Port.
Al-Harbi explained that 1,102,069 pilgrims arrived by air, 54,300 by road and 13,608 by sea as on Friday.
He said 232 pilgrims, including citizens and expatriates from GCC countries, were arrested by the Passport Department for having forged Haj permits.
So far, he added, 21 smugglers caught inside the Kingdom were penalized up to SR 860,000 by passport authorities.
He urged all expatriates and Saudi citizens to comply with regulations and perform a violation-free Haj.
TAIF — The total number of Haj and Umrah regulation violators has reached 27,000 persons as of Thursday, according to the National Center of General Statistics. All of them tried to enter Makkah and the ritual sites through the Eastern entry points.
Among the violators were a Saudi, a Gulf citizen and an Arab expatriate. Some of the expatriates who violated the regulations were legal residents holding residency permits while others did not. Many tried to enter Makkah via remote areas but they were spotted and arrested.
Quarantine measures for infectious diseases in place
Saturday 27 September 2014
The Ministry of Health staged a drill at Jeddah Islamic Port on Thursday to identify and quarantine pilgrims suffering from infectious diseases.
The drill took place under the direct supervision of Wael Thaskandi, who is in charge of the quarantine department at the port.
The operation involved taking two 'infected' pilgrims from a passenger liner and ferrying them to the infectious department at King Fahd Hospital in Jeddah.
Adel Mohammed bin Turkistani, head of the health surveillance committee at the port, described it as a successful operation. “Everything went well except for some minute observations,” he said.
Officials from customs, immigration, command and control, and security departments took part. The "patients" were transported safely to the hospital.
Turkistani said the operation showed that the ministry was ready to tackle any emergency. He said the ministry was making every effort to serve the guests of Allah properly.
The ministry has deployed teams of officials at 14 ports of entry in the western province to check for infected pilgrims.
Health Ministry spokesman Khalid Al-Mirghalani said that the health requirements for this year focused on several diseases such as Ebola, Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus, yellow fever, meningitis, polio and vaccination against seasonal influenza.
The ministry has announced that vaccination against meningitis is mandatory for all local and international Haj pilgrims, while flu shots are recommended. He said that vaccinations should be taken at least 10 days before pilgrims arrive in the Kingdom.
He said vaccinations against meningitis are valid for three years. Explaining the seriousness of meningitis, Al-Mirghalani said that pilgrims coming from areas where the illness is widespread, can cause an outbreak during the Haj season.
He said that congestion and overcrowding would ensure the disease spreads quicker. The vaccine is given to adults and children over two years of age and is not administered to pregnant women.
Al-Mirghalani said the ministry's national scientific committee, which acts as a command center for the pilgrimage, monitors pilgrims arriving from all countries.
He said the quarantine requirements for Haj visas have been sent to all Saudi overseas missions through the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Riyadh.
Countries where yellow fever is endemic are Angola, Benin, Sudan, Senegal, Burkina Faso, Central African Republic, Cameroon, Burundi, Chad, Uganda, Congo, Côte d'Ivoire, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Ethiopia, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Gabon, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Equatorial Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Togo, Kenya, Liberia, Sao Tomé and Principe, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda, Tanzania, Mali, Ecuador, French Guiana, Guyana, Brazil, Bolivia, Suriname, Peru, Panama, Trinidad and Tobago, Venezuela, Colombia, Argentina and Paraguay.
Polio vaccinations are also compulsory for pilgrims from many African countries, and Pakistan, India, Nepal and Afghanistan. A dose of oral polio medication is compulsory for countries including Uganda, Kenya, Benin, Angola, Togo, Niger, Burkina Faso, Mali, Central African Republic, Chad, Côte d'Ivoire, Ghana, Democratic Republic of the Congo and Ethiopia.
On arrival, pilgrims from these countries would be given another oral dose of polio vaccine irrespective of their age.
Besides these vaccinations, Al-Mirghalani advised pilgrims to take precautions against influenza. The flu vaccine is not mandatory but it is desirable to take it considering the present climate and the susceptibility of pilgrims.
Al-Mirghalani advised that high-risk patients who have chronic ailments such as diabetes, hypertension and renal problems, should take the flu vaccine, which would help them perform their Haj and Umrah rituals without problems.
The official said pilgrims must pack their food in sealed containers.
http://www.arabnews.com/saudi-arabia/news/636351
Ebola and MERS ‘key challenge’ for ministry
Saturday 27 September 2014
Tackling the Ebola and Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) diseases remain the major focus of the Ministry of Health this Haj season, a senior official from the ministry in Makkah said.
Anis Sindhi, adviser to the minister of health and deputy chairman of the ministry’s central command center, was speaking on behalf of Acting Health Minister Adel Fakeih at a conference in Makkah that discussed ways of protecting Haj pilgrims from infectious diseases.
“While trying to prevent all infectious diseases during this pilgrimage, our focus is on Ebola and the MERS coronavirus diseases, which have shaken up some parts of the globe,” Sindhi said.
He said the central command center, set up three months ago, has chalked out a comprehensive program to overcome these challenges.
He said that pilgrims from the three Ebola-hit countries — Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea — were not being allowed to perform Haj this year. The ministry has also issued a travel advisory with respect to these three countries.
“Supported by our own experience in the Kingdom, we also follow the guidelines set by the World Health Organization and the Center for Disease Control and Prevention based in Atlanta.”
The two-day meeting, held under the patronage of Fakeih, was organized by the Makkah health department at the Noor Specialist Hospital.
Local and foreign delegates addressed the meeting.
Tariq Madani, chairman of the ministry’s MERS control and prevention committee, said that public support had helped reduced the number of MERS cases in the Kingdom.
“We should not be complacent with this situation. We should work hard to create wider public awareness to combat the disease,” he said.
Madani reaffirmed the link between MERS and camels after research proved that viruses isolated from a Saudi patient and his camel were 100 percent similar.
http://www.arabnews.com/featured/news/636386 Pilgrims on Interpol list held 
A group of pilgrims wanted by different security agencies, including Interpol,
for their crimes in the past were arrested on their arrival.
Saturday 27 September 2014
Niyaf Al-Rowais, Passport Department chief at King Abdulaziz International Airport in Jeddah, said a group of pilgrims wanted by different security agencies, including Interpol, for their crimes in the past were arrested on their arrival.
“As soon as their biometrics were scanned, they were found to have a history,” Al-Rowais said.
He said another 25 pilgrims were sent back to their countries for arriving in the country on fake passports.
He said the electronic fingerprinting this year was being done for men only. Women and children have been excluded this year. The Passport Directorate has been provided with 142 machines to uncover forgeries.
http://www.arabnews.com/saudi-arabia/news/636336 80 S. Asian pilgrims succumb to illness 
Indian Haj mission volunteers guide pilgrims in Makkah
Saturday 27 September 2014
Eighty pilgrims from India, Pakistan and Bangladesh have died of illness or from old age until Wednesday.
Some 33 Indian pilgrims have died so far with the majority of them having been buried in Makkah, according to Indian officials. The pilgrim who died aboard a flight on Wednesday was an Indian pilgrim hailing from Maharashtra.
Ghulam Shabbir Hussain, 84, and a resident of Akola in Maharashtra fell sick during the Air India flight and died during the journey.
According to the Pakistan Haj directorate, a total of 25 Pakistani pilgrims have died since the beginning of the Haj season. Among them are two cases of premature births in Makkah.
The Bangladesh Haj mission said that a total of 79,604 pilgrims had arrived in the Kingdom by Wednesday. Of these, 22 pilgrims died with most deaths occurring in Makkah.
A 16-member team of the Bangladesh Haj delegation headed by secretary of the Ministry of Religious Affairs Chowdhury Maryland Babul Hassan has arrived.
Recently, the Kingdom raised concerns about the increase in the number of acutely chronically ill foreign pilgrims who have arrived in the Kingdom endangering the health of fellow pilgrims and taxing the health facilities in the holy cities.
According to a top official in the Health Ministry, many Muslims in different parts of the world strongly believe that death during Haj or in the holy cities will help them attain a place in paradise. This belief leads them to hide some facts of their health history as they are determined to perform the pilgrimage.
“The misconception that dying in the holy cities or during the Haj will swiftly help them attain heaven is one of the leading reasons for the increase in the number of old and chronically ill patients during the annual pilgrimage,” the official said.
http://www.arabnews.com/saudi-arabia/news/636326