Angry over what it described as Saudi sabotage, Iran on Thursday said that Iranian citizens would not participate this year in the hajj, the annual pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia, the host country of Islam’s holiest places.
Saudi Arabia said Iran was to blame for the problem, accusing Tehran of making unacceptable demands.
It was unclear from the statements by both sides whether the dispute was intractable or could still be solved ahead of the hajj, which takes place in September.
The statements reflected the worsening relationship between Iran and Saudi Arabia, longtime regional rivals that are on opposite sides of conflicts in Syria and Yemen.
Millions of Muslim pilgrims worldwide visit the sacred Saudi cities of Mecca and Medina during the hajj, and the Saudi kingdom takes great pride in hosting the event, as well as a lesser pilgrimage that can be done any time, known as the umrah.
Last year’s hajj was marred by a catastrophic stampede that according to outside estimates killed more than 2,400 people. Iran said more than 460 were Iranians.
Saudi Arabia has said 769 people were killed, but has not explained the discrepancy in the death tolls. Nor has Saudi Arabia disclosed any results from what it promised would be a thorough investigation of the stampede, regarded as one of the worst in the history of the hajj.
The stampede added to the longstanding tensions between Iran and Saudi Arabia.
In January, Saudi Arabia severed diplomatic relations with Iran after Iranian protesters burned the Saudi embassy in Tehran, angered over Riyadh’s execution of an outspoken Shiite cleric.
The absence of diplomatic relations further complicated any plans by Iranians who wished to make the hajj this year, because they cannot obtain Saudi visas in Iran, and direct transportation has been halted.
An Iranian delegation held four days of talks with Saudi Arabia last month to discuss hajj arrangements, a rare face-to-face negotiation between the countries in the months since diplomatic ties were severed.
However, Iranian Minister of Culture Ali Jannati on Thursday said that the talks had gone poorly. Asserting that there would be no hajj participation by Iran this year, he blamed the Saudis.
“Their attitude was cold and inappropriate,” Jannati said in remarks quoted by the Iranian state-sponsored Web site Press TV.
“Conditions are not prepared for conducting hajj; we have lost the time, we made our utmost effort, but the sabotage is coming from the Saudis,” he said.
Another senior Iranian figure, Ayatollah Nasser Makarem Shirazi, did not go as far as Jannati in saying there would be no hajj participation by Iran this year, but he strongly suggested it.
“The Saudi behavior is evidently insulting,” he said in remarks quoted by the official Islamic Republic News Agency. “We want a hajj pilgrimage performed with dignity and respect.”
The Saudi ministry responsible for the hajj arrangements rebutted the Iranian statements, saying Iran’s negotiators had insisted, among other things, on the granting of visas inside Iran. The Saudis have said visas can be obtained through an online system used by all visiting pilgrims, according to a news report on the dispute by al-Jazeera.
“Iran is the only country that refused to sign the agreement on the hajj,” Saudi minister of hajj and umrah Mohammad Bintin was quoted as saying in the report.
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