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Hamas allows pilgrims to leave Gaza Strip for Haj
Web posted at: 11/7/2009 4:59:51
Source ::: AFP
 | | A Palestinian man gets vaccinated against the H1N1 flu before leaving the Rafah border crossing in the southern Gaza Strip yesterday, on his way to performing the annual Haj pilgrimage in Makkah. |
Gaza: Hamas said yesterday it is allowing Muslims to leave the Gaza Strip on the annual pilgrimage to Makkah after blocking them last year because of a Palestinian political dispute.
“The first wave of around 1,000 Haj pilgrims from the Gaza Strip is now travelling to Egypt through the Rafah border crossing,” Hamas religious affairs minister Taleb Abu Shaar said.
“We are coordinating with our brothers in the (West Bank political capital of) Ramallah to allow 4,500 pilgrims from Gaza to make the pilgrimage this year,” he added.
Hamas prevented pilgrims from leaving Gaza last year to protest Saudi Arabia’s policy of only granting visas through president Mahmoud Abbas’s Palestinian Authority in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
The Palestinians have been deeply divided since Hamas seized power in Gaza in June 2007, driving out forces loyal to Abbas in a week of bloody clashes and cleaving the territories into hostile rival camps. This year, however, the West Bank religious affairs ministry has reached an agreement with its Hamas-run counterpart to jointly issue the visas to residents. In another rare instance of cooperation, the West Bank government shipped 5,000 swine flu vaccinations to Gaza to be given to pilgrims, a Hamas health ministry official said.
“We will administer the vaccine at the Rafah crossing itself to make sure that everyone gets vaccinated,” Jihad Ahmed, the head of the ministry’s vaccination programme said.
This will be the first time the vaccine has been used in Gaza, which has no recorded cases of A(H1N1). Israel and Egypt have sealed Gaza off from all but vital aid and strictly restricted travel since Hamas seized power.
The Rafah crossing with Egypt, Gaza’s only border terminal not controlled by Israel, is occasionally opened to allow humanitarian cases, students and Palestinians with Egyptian visas to leave the territory.
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