NEW DELHI: There will be no subsidy for Haj from this year and the funds saved will be used for providing education to minorities, Minority Affairs Minister Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi said here, while projecting the move as an effort by the government to “empower minorities” without appeasement.
The minister also said a record number of 1.75 lakh Muslims will undertake the pilgrimage this year from India despite the subsidy withdrawal.
“There will be no subsidy on Haj now,” he told reporters, adding that the government had spent over Rs 250 crore last year on subsidizing the annual pilgrimage of Muslims to Saudi Arabia.
The decision is in line with a 2012 Supreme Court order, asking the government to do away with the subsidy, a long standing demand of the BJP.
The BJP had cited the subsidy as an example of “Muslim appeasement” by parties such as the Congress.
Following the order, the subsidy was being gradually reduced every year. “It is part of the Modi government’s efforts to empower minorities with dignity and without appeasement,” Naqvi said.
The funds would be utilized for providing education to minorities, he said.
Asked if the subsidy withdrawal will make the cost of the pilgrimage too high for many Muslims, Naqvi said the government was making efforts to bring it down.
The Saudi Arabian government has agreed to allow Indians to go on Haj by the sea route and officials of the two countries will work out the modalities, he said.
Reacting cautiously to the government’s decision, the Congress said it hopes that the Modi government will honor the apex court’s direction and utilize this money for the education and development of the disempowered among the minorities, including young girls.
The All India Muslim Personal Law Board (AIMPLB) said the government’s decision on revoking Haj subsidy has no meaning as there was no such concession and Muslims were being cheated in its name.
All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen chief Asaduddin Owaisi said the subsidy had to be stopped, since it was a Supreme Court judgment.
“But it is important to see where the funds saved will be utilized. Will they increase allocation of funds for scholarships to Muslim girls?
“The verdict is around the corner. Let’s see if government makes a separate allocation for funds to scholarships to Muslims, especially girls,” he said.
Welcoming the Centre’s decision, the Vishva Hindu Parishad said the money saved from it should be utilized for the education of poor Hindu girls.
Various Muslim organizations said that the move will have little effect on the pilgrimage as it was airlines that were benefiting from the subsidy.
It will not have much effect because the subsidy was meant for Air India and not for the pilgrims, said Jamiat Ulama-i-Hind president Kari Mohammad Usman.
All India Muslim Majlis-e-Mushawarat (AIMMM), a federation of Muslim outfits, said that the government should end all kinds of subsidies given for religious purposes.
AIMMM president Naved Hamid demanded that the government should float a global tender so that the Haj pilgrims could avail cost-effective travel.
According to sources in the minority affairs ministry, till 2017, the notional savings following gradual abolition of subsidy since 2012 was to tune of Rs 636.56 crore. In case, the government had chosen to reduce the subsidy gradually till 2022, the total national savings would have been around Rs 5970.6 crore, the sources said.
Haj pilgrims from certain regions will have an additional option to choose from where they want to fly to Saudi Arabia for the annual pilgrimage, Naqvi said and claimed that this would bring down the cost by up to 70 per cent on some routes.
There are a total of 21 Haj embarkation points (EPs) in the country – Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai, Bengaluru, Lucknow, Hyderabad, Cochin, Indore, Srinagar, Bhopal, Guwahati, Mangaluru, Aurangabad, Varanasi, Jaipur, Nagpur, Ranchi, Gaya, Ahmedabad and Goa.
Haj aspirants – for whom the 10 airports of Srinagar, Guwahati, Ranchi, Gaya, Indore, Bhopal, Mangaluru, Goa, Aurangabad and Varanasi are the nearest EPs – will now get an additional economical option to fly from.
The pilgrims from Jammu and Kashmir, whose nearest EP is Srinagar, can opt to travel from Delhi now, helping them save on (per head) airfare. In 2017, the airfare for the pilgrimage from Srinagar was Rs 1,09,692 as against Rs 73,697 from Delhi.
The airfare for Haj 2018 may vary, ministry sources said.
Similarly, aspirants whose basic EPs are Guwahati, Ranchi and Gaya will have the alternative of undertaking the journey from Kolkata. Those having Indore, Bhopal, Goa and Aurangabad as the nearest airports, can opt for flying from Mumbai.
Those with Varanasi as the basic airport can choose Lucknow as their optional embarkation point while those with Mangaluru as their EP will have the option of Bengaluru.
Embarkation point once selected cannot be changed later on as tendering will be done accordingly, the sources said.-PTI