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Hajj 2011: Saudi-Iran Tensions Overshadow Pilgrimage

Hajj 2011 Security

First Posted: 11/01/11 10:22 PM ET Updated: 11/05/11 05:36 PM ET

By Omar Sacirbey
Religion News Service

(RNS) Reports last month that Iran plotted to assassinate Saudi Arabia's ambassador to the U.S. have enflamed animosity between the two Muslim powers, and raised concerns that violence could mar this year's hajj pilgrimage that starts on Friday (Nov. 4).

More than 1.7 million pilgrims have already arrived in Mecca, the Saudi city where Islam was founded 1,400 years ago. A record 2.8 million pilgrims performed the hajj last year, including more than 14,000 Americans and almost 100,000 Iranians. Saudi authorities expect similar numbers this year.

"If people want to create havoc, this is the place to do it," said Nail Al-Jubeir, a spokesman for the Saudi Embassy in Washington, D.C. "We're always on heightened alert during hajj."

Iran is primarily Shiite Muslim, a branch of Islam that claims about 15 percent of the world's Muslims. Saudi Arabia is predominantly Sunni Muslim and home to the Wahhabi sect, some of whose members consider Shiites to be heretics.

The ancient Sunni-Shia split over who would be the Prophet Muhammad's successor has fueled a battle for regional supremacy between the two neighbors.

Security for the hajj starts beyond Saudi Arabia's borders. To be able to keep track of pilgrims and control their numbers, Saudi Arabia's Hajj Ministry issues a fixed number of "hajj visas" to individual countries every year.

Saudi Arabia also created a special police unit this year to prevent people without hajj visas from entering pilgrimage areas. Yet visa recipients are hard to vet.

"It is next to impossible to determine the true identity of an Iraqi, Palestinian, Somalian or Afghan tribesman, yet thousands of pilgrims have been granted visas to travel to Saudi Arabia from these locations," noted a 2007 report from Stratfor, an Austin, Texas-based intelligence and analysis company.

The Saudi government has also set up special police and military units trained to respond to attacks by extremists, according to local news reports. In recent months, these forces have staged training exercises at Mecca's Grand Mosque and other sites along the pilgrimage route.

In accordance with Islamic tradition, pilgrims are forbidden from any displays of temper or argument, and are prohibited from killing animals or bugs, let alone committing violence. Nevertheless, violence has sometimes blemished the hajj.

In 1979, militants from an Islamic sect seized control of the Grand Mosque before Saudi security forces defeated them two weeks later. More than 300 pilgrims, militants, and Saudi security officers were killed.

In 1987, after years of letting Iranian pilgrims stage anti-American and anti-Israeli demonstrations during the hajj, Saudi security forces killed dozens Iranian pilgrims, causing a stampede that killed dozens more. More than 400 people were killed altogether.

Two years later, a bomb blamed on Shiite pilgrims from Kuwait killed one pilgrim.

Pilgrims walk around the holy Kaaba
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Muslim piligrims walk around the holy Kaaba inside Mecca's Grand Mosque on Oct. 31, 2011, as more than 1.5 million Muslims have arrived in Saudi Arabia for the hajj pilgrimage to the shrine city, the world's largest annual human assembly which peaks on Nov. 5, according to local state media.

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By Omar Sacirbey Religion News Service (RNS) Reports last month that Iran plotted to assassinate Saudi Arabia's ambassador to the U.S. have enflamed animosity between the two Muslim powers, and ra...
By Omar Sacirbey Religion News Service (RNS) Reports last month that Iran plotted to assassinate Saudi Arabia's ambassador to the U.S. have enflamed animosity between the two Muslim powers, and ra...
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iLdoRight
Encouraging The Rightest Rightness
07:29 AM on 11/04/2011
If they could get the maintenance engineers on both sides to adjust their tension adjusting nuts counterclockwise about 200 turns that should reduce the tension enough so that almost no harm would come to anyone by foul play. Or something like that. Perhaps.
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Boobuzuela
Satire identical to actual Republican positions
11:26 PM on 11/02/2011
Wake up you foolish people.

The end of the war with Iraq only gave Washington the "room" to feel they can now launch an attack or Iran, or support Israel in doing so.

We will be at war before Christmas.
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surferlaments
Help me Rhonda...
03:15 AM on 11/04/2011
you are like that minister that tried to predict the end of the world. before christmas.... so funny. as far as supporting Israel, i am all for that. where do i sign up?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ProgressivePicon86
A 50th state Progressive.
11:16 PM on 11/02/2011
I hope everybody partaking on the Hajj will be safe and no violence ensues.
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CubnKira
11:05 PM on 11/02/2011
Shia/Sunni, one thing is certain. Only a muslim can even visit Mecca. No churches allowed in the entire country even though they have a million foreign workers, mostly Christian from the Phillipines. Not even a bible allowed. Talk about prejudice and lack of tolerance, it is Saudi Arabia, where Obama bowed to their royalty and Bush was not much better.
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Boobuzuela
Satire identical to actual Republican positions
11:40 PM on 11/02/2011
How these folks (Muslims) OR the Jews for that matter, can believe they're God's special people when he won't allow either group to touch pork is just beyond me.

No bacon. Ever. No ham sandwiches. No pulled pork BBQ sandwiches. No pork ribs, St Louis Style, KC Style, or Tehran Style.

Is it any wonder I'm a Christian???
tonybfine
fractional reserve lending is counterfeiting
12:25 AM on 11/03/2011
I was raised a sort of Christian (my parents were both Christians but lost their faith in WWII) but I don't know how anyone can eat the meat of pigs. Firstly it tastes like humans do. Secondly pigs are sweet and intelligent creatures (more likely we evolved from pigs than have some common ancestor with chimpanzees). Thirdly if you saw Food Inc and what they did to the poor creatures you would want to make some restitution to the whole pig race. So I think Muslims and Jews, for different reasons than mine, are more civilized than Christians.
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surferlaments
Help me Rhonda...
03:18 AM on 11/04/2011
was there a point to what you said..... or are you a comedian?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Chapin Smith
I am His Noodly Appendage
10:59 PM on 11/02/2011
Anti-Muslim bigotry in an article about inter-sect Muslim relations? Who'd a'thunk?!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bbriani3842
400+ yrs of science & STILL no evidence for a god
10:09 PM on 11/02/2011
It's a friggin' meteorite .... hello! It's a meteorite! There's a bigger one in Arizona ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Andres64
Religion is a sectually transmitted disease.
10:20 PM on 11/02/2011
This one would have been amazing to see.

http://www.imca.cc/insights/2009/IMCA-Insights11.htm
tonybfine
fractional reserve lending is counterfeiting
12:32 AM on 11/03/2011
you are right. it is a meteorite. I expect someone saw it land and thought that it came in such glory that God must have sent it for them to worship by walking around. it is probably the devotion, prayer and meditation that makes it holy. I think this is actually a pretty nice pilgrimage and ceremony. here people walk miles sometimes carrying wooden crosses on Good Friday to visit some holy mud at the Sanctuario at Chimayo which has healing powers. It is not what these things are, it is the practice and the suspension of disbelief. IMHO.
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01:20 PM on 11/02/2011
And they are praying to what?? a rock?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bbriani3842
400+ yrs of science & STILL no evidence for a god
10:10 PM on 11/02/2011
No ... a meteorite ....
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ProgressivePicon86
A 50th state Progressive.
11:18 PM on 11/02/2011
I am sorry, are you a Christian or within any other denomination of faith? because if so, there is a pretty good chance your faith prays to objects too. You know those things called crosses? people sometimes kneel in front of it and pay to a deity. be a bit more respectful.
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iLdoRight
Encouraging The Rightest Rightness
07:33 AM on 11/04/2011
You made a good point, extremely few want to learn how to do it right.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
08:59 AM on 11/02/2011
Ever thought you'd root for the Saudis?
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Praetoria Cohors
Pragmatic Libertarian
09:23 AM on 11/02/2011
Good question.
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10:44 AM on 11/02/2011
I'm rooting for both sides, and neither.
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conchop
logic ethics quality
08:45 AM on 11/02/2011
Forget the divinities and the supreme being - its all about political power. It just helps a leader to have said God is on his side and the mere providence of that leaders position proves that the leader is omnipotent.

If a Supreme Creator were to manifest HERSELF/HIMSELF to the world right this minute, how would the religious respond?

Bear in mind that its a huge universe and if you are a "true believer", regardless of your brand of religion, you have to believe that the Supreme Creator concocted the huge universe and the natural gifts on earth. We seem to have an illogical and unethical way of treating each other and these natural gifts.

So we can all fuss and feud with each other, overuse and ruin nature, and make our religious claims of the one true religion all we want. The truth is we have got to do better by each other and by nature.

Therefore, IMHO, all you fervent fundamentalists, regardless of your religion, seem hardly worth the time, money, blood, and destruction you have wrought. Until you make things genuinely better in a measurable way, your dogmas make you the real Devil. I have very little use for your religions.
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kawika
10:25 AM on 11/02/2011
Amen.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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builder101
VOTE!
08:39 AM on 11/02/2011
Wow, look at that crowd. Is it to late to get a vendor booth?
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Boobuzuela
Satire identical to actual Republican positions
11:14 PM on 11/02/2011
Whatta ya gonna sell? Hebrew Nationals, no, that' wouldn't work...Corn Dogs,...no, that either, ahh, KEBABS!!!
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gx5000
Life's too short, be happy..
12:49 PM on 11/04/2011
Mace pepper spray and vests....good start.
Maybe shares in US Private Prisons ?
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08:02 AM on 11/02/2011
The Sunni are like the Catholics and the Shiite are like the evangelical. The new groups or sects do not agree with traditional religions and have issues constantly. The different is that they become more dominating and violent inclined
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Freenation
08:46 AM on 11/02/2011
You probably need sunlight: Saudis represent wahabism which does not even like their fellow moderate Sunnis forget about Shias...and as for Shias being violent probably you are taking too much yellow cake stories in for breakfast...
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Praetoria Cohors
Pragmatic Libertarian
09:25 AM on 11/02/2011
Muqtada al-Sadr ring any bells?
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09:33 AM on 11/02/2011
"an­d as for Shias being violent probably you are taking too much yellow cake stories in for breakfast"'

I think Shia Muslims have shown themseves to be just as capable of violence as the Sunnis. Sadly, no religion, with the possible exception of Buddhism, is immune from being savagely violent to those who don't accept it.
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