Over 14,000 Chinese Muslims have arrived in Mecca, Saudi Arabia for the Hajj pilgrimage, China's religious authority said on Saturday.
The State Administration for Religious Affairs (SARA) said on Saturday that 37 flights were chartered to take the Chinese Muslims to the annual Islamic pilgrimage in Mecca, Saudi Arabia.
SARA vice head Zhang Yantong and other officials, including Saudi Arabia's deputy ambassador to China, saw the pilgrims off at the Beijing Capital International Airport, the China News Agency (CNA) reported on Saturday.
Zhang said the Communist Party of China has always paid great attention to the Hajj and wished the pilgrims well, and hopes Chinese Muslims give a positive image, according to CNA.
A total of 297 Muslims boarded a chartered flight in Lanzhou, Gansu's capital on August 15, according to the Gansu Entry-Exit Inspection and Quarantine Bureau.
It was reportedly Gansu's first chartered flight this year to the Hajj.
Yang Zhibo, vice president of the China Islamic Association, told CNA on Saturday that over 10,000 Chinese Muslims have been going to Mecca each year since 2012, and that the number will rise since Mecca is an expanding city.
SARA is working with relevant authorities to provide medical services, security, accommodations and transportation to the pilgrims, according to CNA.