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Saudi Arabia raises pandemic capacity to 1 million pilgrims for this year's hajj

Saudi Arabia raised the number of hajj pilgrims allowed this year to one million from inside and outside the kingdom, Saudi state news agency SAP reported early on Saturday.

Only fully vaccinated pilgrims under 65 allowed can attend, state media reports

Muslim pilgrims circumambulating around the Kaaba, Islam's holiest shrine, at the grand mosque in the holy Saudi city of Mecca during the annual Hajj pilgrimage in July 2021. (Fayez Nureldine/AFP/Getty Images)

Saudi Arabia will let up to a million people join the hajj pilgrimage this year, greatly expanding the key event to participants from outside the kingdom after two years of tight COVID-19 restrictions, state media said on Saturday.

Pilgrims to Mecca this year must be under age 65 and fully vaccinated against the coronavirus, the Ministry of Hajj and Umrah said in a statement carried by the SPA news agency.

Participants from abroad will be allowed this year but must present a recent negative PCR test, and health precautions will be observed, it said.

Last year, the kingdom limited the annual hajj, one of Islam's five main pillars, to 60,000 domestic participants, compared to the prepandemic 2.5 million.

Visits to the holiest sites of Islam in Mecca and Medina for the week-long hajj, and the lesser, year-round umrah pilgrimage, previously earned the kingdom about $12 billion US a year, according to official data.