Pilgrims warned of Hajj rip-off

Trusted article source icon
Thursday, September 06, 2012
Profile image for Leicester Mercury

Leicester Mercury

Travel agent watchdogs have issued a warning to pilgrims from Leicester heading off for the Hajj to beware of the dangers of booking with unlicensed companies.

Thousands of Muslims will to be heading Saudi Arabia for the pilgrimage which takes place between October 24 and 29.

The Association of British Travel Agents (ABTA) has warned that many pay for travel arrangements that are sub-standard, or in the worst cases non-existent, leaving travellers out of pocket by thousands of pounds.

Every year pilgrims pay thousands of pounds for specialist Hajj flight and accommodation arrangements.

SAVE 30% ON YOUR PAYDAY LOAN

Meetthelenders

View details

Print voucher

visit us at www.meetthelenders.co.uk/blogs to Save 30% off your loan fees with Quick Quid, Read our article for instructions

Contact: 0115 8962299

Valid until: Friday, May 31 2013

ABTA risk manager Steve Abrahamson said: "Every year the police and trading standards offices have to deal with cases of Hajj pilgrims who have lost substantial amounts of money or arrived in Saudi Arabia to find that their accommodation and other travel arrangements are of a much lower standard than they had paid for."

By UK law, if a travel company books a customer on a flight-based package holiday, it must have an ATOL (Air Travel Organisers' Licensing) licence in place to ensure the customer is financially protected in the event something goes wrong.

If the travel companies are not members of ABTA, they are not policed by its code of conduct which ensures customers receive high standards of service, fair terms of trading and accurate booking information.

ABTA membership also means that if something should go wrong before or after the trip, pilgrims would be able to use ABTA's cost-effective and swift complaint handling service.

ABTA said whether someone is offering a Hajj trip or a holiday, the same laws applied and companies must have an ATOL licence when selling flights and accommodation as a package or act as an agent for a company that does.

Hajj pilgrims should always check that they are legitimate ABTA members and that they hold an ATOL licence.

Pilgrims are encouraged to check with ATOL on 020 7453 6700 whether the company they are booking with is registered.

www.abta.com

0
Tweet this article
Report

Comments

  • Profile image for MrBud

    by MrBud

    Thursday, September 06 2012, 11:07PM

    “Leicestermale' how can a Muslim brother do it to a brother"
    Wake up mate, what world u living in, they love doing all this!”

  • Profile image for Factory_kid

    by Factory_kid

    Thursday, September 06 2012, 10:16PM

    “Well thanks for the great advice. Not sure about you but I don't spend time in mosques or Islamic centres. However should I find myself in one of these places I will sure be careful to keep a lookout for these wonferful posters.”

  • Profile image for leicestermale

    by leicestermale

    Thursday, September 06 2012, 10:10PM

    “The advertisements for Hajj pilgrimages I am talking about, visit your local mosque or Islamic Centre, lovely colourful posters with promises of great pilgrimages, but no ABTA or ATOL mentions.

    These crooks can take you money and run!
    http://tinyurl.com/c9x9zjm

    Muslims need to be very careful, how can a brother do this to you ?”

  • Profile image for Factory_kid

    by Factory_kid

    Thursday, September 06 2012, 9:50PM

    “That's funny as I cannot see any advertisements embedded in this story.”

  • Profile image for leicestermale

    by leicestermale

    Thursday, September 06 2012, 8:33PM

    “I notice the lack of ABTA of ATOL on these advertisements.”

        Your comments awaiting moderation

        Be the first to comment

        max 4000 characters
         
         
         
         
         
         

        Tell us about your area

        Got some interesting news? Write about it and let your whole community know.

          Write an article