Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Man arrested after claiming Mecca pilgrimage for Queen

In the clip, he held up a banner saying: “Umrah for the soul of Queen Elizabeth II, we ask God to accept her in heaven and among the righteous.”

Man arrested after claiming Mecca pilgrimage for Queen

Saudi authorities have arrested a man who claimed to have travelled to the Muslim holy city of Mecca to perform an umrah pilgrimage on behalf of the late Queen Elizabeth II.

The man, a Yemeni national, on Monday published a video clip of himself on social media at the Grand Mosque in Mecca, Islam's holiest site, where non-Muslims are forbidden.


In the clip, he held up a banner saying: "Umrah for the soul of Queen Elizabeth II, we ask God to accept her in heaven and among the righteous."

The footage was widely circulated on Saudi social media, with Twitter users calling for the man's arrest.

Saudi Arabia forbids pilgrims to Mecca from carrying banners or chanting slogans.

And while it is acceptable to perform umrah on behalf on deceased Muslims, this does not apply to non-Muslims like the queen, who was supreme governor of the Church of England, the mother church of the worldwide Anglican communion.

Security forces at the Grand Mosque "arrested a resident of Yemeni nationality who appeared in a video clip carrying a banner inside the Grand Mosque, violating the regulations and instructions for umrah," said a statement carried by state media late Monday.

"He was arrested, legal measures were taken against him and he was referred to the public prosecution."

State television broadcast segments about the incident that included the controversial video clip, but with the banner blurred.

The umrah is a pilgrimage that can be undertaken at any time -- distinct from the hajj, which takes place once annually and usually draws millions from around the globe.

The queen died on Thursday and her funeral is planned for September 19.

(AFP)

More For You

Labour faces 'credibility gap' over immigration, survey finds

A Border Force vessel delivers migrants to Dover port after intercepting a small boat crossing on December 17, 2025 in Dover, England.

(Photo by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)

Labour faces 'credibility gap' over immigration, survey finds

A MAJORITY of voters wrongly believe that immigration is rising, despite official figures showing a sharp decline, according to a poll by a UK charity. The findings highlight a widening credibility gap for the Labour government over its handling of migration.

Net migration to the UK fell by more than two-thirds to 204,000 in the year ending June 2025, a post-pandemic low, yet 67 per cent of those surveyed thought immigration had increased, reported the Guardian.

Keep ReadingShow less