Iran initially announced in December that the first Umrah pilgrims would travel on Dec. 19, following an agreement between Tehran and Riyadh to allow the pilgrimage to take place after a pause of eight years.
However, the first flight and subsequent ones were cancelled due to Riyadh failing to provide the “necessary final permits” for the entry of Iranian planes into Saudi airports, the spokesman of Iran Air Hessam Qorbanali had told national TV.
“The relevant authorities have announced that it is just a technical issue and that there is no political dispute as the bilateral agreement regarding Umrah pilgrimage is well-established and Saudi Arabia is committed to it,” Kanaani said during a televised press conference on Monday.
Saudi Arabia did not comment on the matter.
Kanaani added that Iran’s head of Hajj and Pilgrimage was in Saudi Arabia with a team of experts to resolve the problems.
According to Tasnim news agency, representatives of Iran’s Civil Aviation Organization are also in Saudi Arabia working on the issues.
China mediated an agreement in March under which Iran and Saudi Arabia resumed full diplomatic relations which were cut in 2016 over Riyadh’s execution of a Shia Muslim cleric and the storming of the Saudi Embassy in Tehran.
Umrah, known as the “lesser pilgrimage”, can be undertaken at any time of the year and is not generally deemed compulsory in Islam.