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Virus fears, Mecca work downsize hajj pilgrimage
Fears of an outbreak of the deadly MERS virus in Saudi Arabia and
construction in the holy city of Mecca have forced cuts in the numbers
of pilgrims permitted to perform this year's hajj.
Millions of Muslims during the annual pilgrimage head to Mecca and
Medina, Islam's two holiest sites, providing a possible means for MERS
to spread around the globe as pilgrims who may become infected return to
their home countries.
Fearful of such a scenario, the authorities have reduced by half the
number of pilgrims coming from within Saudi Arabia, and by about 20
percent those from abroad.
"This is an exceptional and temporary decision," Hajj Minister Bandar Hajjar announced last month.
MERS, short for Middle East Respiratory Syndrome coronavirus which
can lead to acute pneumonis and renal failure, claimed its first victim
in Saudi Arabia in June 2012.
Since then, a total of 90 cases and 45 confirmed MERS deaths have
been recorded worldwide, in countries including Jordan, Qatar and the
United Arab Emirates, Tunisia, Britain, France and Italy.
Saudi Arabia, which has already recorded 69 MERS cases, 38 of them
fatal, has urged the elderly and chronically ill, as well as children
and pregnant women, not to perform the annual hajj that falls this year
in October.
But the health ministry so far has not taken any special measures at
airports to detect visitors who may be infected, deputy health minister
Ziad Memish told AFP.
"We have not taken any precautionary measures at airports since the
World Health Organisation has not recommended them," he said.
WHO health security chief Keiji Fukuda said the organisation would
issue general guidelines aimed at minimising the risk of infections
spreading.
"We do recognise that this is a risk for travellers and that there
are certain steps that individual travellers and countries can take, for
example for people who have serious medical conditions," Fukuda told
reporters.
In a statement on Thursday, the WHO also urged countries with pilgrims heading to Saudi Arabia to raise awareness of the threat.
"It is important for countries to use all practical and effective
means possible to communicate information on a range of issues before,
during and after umrah and hajj to all key groups," the agency said.
Experts are struggling to understand MERS, for which there is no vaccine.
It does not appear to spread easily but currently has an extremely
high fatality rate of 55 percent. It is a cousin of SARS, which erupted
in Asia in 2003 and infected 8,273 people, nine percent of whom died.
Like SARS, MERS is thought to have jumped from animals to humans, and
shares the former's flu-like symptoms -- but differs by causing kidney
failure.
The 2012 hajj drew 3.1 million people -- and this year's event occurs
as the northern hemisphere slides into the season for coughs and
sneezes.
-- 'We have to be worried' --
So far, MERS has essentially been found in nations with health
services capable of tracing and tackling such diseases. But the hajj
draws a broad spectrum of Muslims, including from poor countries which
struggle to cope even with commonplace diseases.
The hajj has successfully ridden out two previous viral episodes in the past decade -- SARS in 2003 and H1N1 influenza in 2009.
The difference this time is that Saudi Arabia itself is the apparent incubator of MERS.
Leading virologist Laurent Kaiser of Geneva University Hospitals told
AFP: "It's really a balance between too much precaution and no
precaution. At this time, we have to be worried, we have to be careful."
So far no outbreaks of the virus have been reported in Mecca where
millions of Muslim faithful have for months been performing the minor
pilgrimage umrah that takes place all year round.
"Their numbers have reached five million since the beginning of the
umrah season" 10 months ago, Mecca governor Prince Khaled al-Faisal said
on Sunday.
"There are currently 400,000 pilgrims" in the kingdom's holiest shrines Mecca and Medina, Faisal added.
Aside from the virus fears, Saudi authorities have also cited
construction work to expand the Grand Mosque in Mecca as reason to keep
down the number of pilgrims being allowed to perform this year's hajj.
Hajjar said the expansion work would increase the area of the mosque
by 400,000 square metres (4.3 million square feet), raising its capacity
to accommodate 2.2 million people at the same time.
The mosque houses the Kaaba -- the cube-shaped structure towards which Muslims worldwide pray.
Hajj officials have also reported a decrease in the numbers of
pilgrims performing umrah during the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan
that began on July 10, compared with past years, due to the expansion
work.
"Companies here have received permits for 500,000 pilgrims from all
over the world for Ramadan, while this number was one million last
year," a board member of the Mecca Chamber of Commerce, Saad al-Qurashi,
told AFP.
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