Ramadan pilgrimage season in Saudi Arabia
mostly free from MERS
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[August 04, 2014]
RIYADH (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia
reported 10 confirmed new cases of a deadly respiratory disease during
Islam's fasting month of Ramadan, and subsequent Eid al-Fitra holiday,
after fears that an influx of pilgrims over the period might spread the
infection more widely.
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Notices of any new confirmed cases are published at the end of every
day by the Health Ministry. Ramadan ended a week ago and the Eid al-Fitra
holiday ran until late last week.
Hundreds of people were infected by Middle East Respiratory Syndrome
(MERS) in the kingdom in April and May, raising concerns about the
pilgrimage in Ramadan and during October's Haj, when millions of
people will travel to Mecca and Medina.
MERS, which is thought to originate in camels, causes coughing,
fever and pneumonia in some and has killed around 40 percent of
people it has infected in the kingdom.
Since 2012, when MERS was identified, Saudi Arabia has reported 298
deaths from the disease and 721 confirmed cases of infection.
This year and in 2013 there were outbreaks in April and May followed
by a drop-off in new confirmed cases.
Of the people the Health Ministry confirmed were infected by MERS
from the start of Ramadan on June 29 until the end of Eid al-Fitra,
two were in Jeddah, the main arrival port for pilgrims and one was
in the city of Taif near Mecca. Another MERS patient in Mecca, whose
infection had already been confirmed, died of the disease.
The disease is thought to have an incubation period of around two
weeks and testing by the authorities can take several days.
While all Muslims must try to make the annual Haj pilgrimage once in
their lifetime, they are also encouraged to carry out the Umrah
pilgrimage to Mecca and Medina which can happen at any time of year,
but is particularly popular during Ramadan.
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For a second consecutive year, the authorities have said they will
restrict Haj visas in 2014 for safety reasons connected to
construction work aimed at enlarging the Great Mosque at Mecca.
Saudi Arabia and the World Health Organisation have said they are
imposing no travel or other restrictions due to MERS during the Haj,
but have encouraged very young or old pilgrims, and those suffering
from chronic disease, not to come this year.
(The story corrects number of people infected in Mecca in paragraph
7)
(Reporting By Angus McDowall; Editing by Stephen Powell)
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