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Home»Technology
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Saudi Arabia Announces AI-Powered Hajj Crowd Management System

Annie GerberBy Annie GerberApril 2, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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Saudi Arabia Announces AI-Powered Hajj
Saudi Arabia Announces AI-Powered Hajj

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Every year, Makkah experiences a unique kind of controlled chaos as the city is asked to take in over two million people who come from 180 different countries, speak hundreds of dialects, and bear the burden of a once-in-a-lifetime spiritual obligation.

You can see how incredibly intricate this operation is when you stand inside the General Transport Center’s control room and watch dozens of screens flicker with live satellite feeds and crowd density maps. For centuries, people have performed the Hajj. However, the current approach to managing it doesn’t resemble any previous attempts.

Category Details
Initiative Name AI-Powered Hajj Crowd Management & Smart Hajj Platform
Launched By Ministry of Interior, Royal Commission for Makkah City and Holy Sites
Technology Partner King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology (KACST)
Key Technologies Artificial Intelligence, Remote Sensing, GIS, Satellite Imagery, Real-Time Data Analytics
Languages Supported 35 (sermon translation), 11 (Manara robot), multiple (Nusuk App)
Annual Pilgrims Managed 2+ million from 180 countries
Key App Nusuk App with AI-Powered Personal Assistant
AI Robot Deployed Manara (voice-activated, religious guidance)
Program Alignment Saudi Vision 2030
Health Support 937 Health Call Centre (multilingual, 24/7, including Urdu)
Reference Website Saudi Ministry of Hajj and Umrah

Saudi Arabia has been discreetly developing what could be the most sophisticated crowd intelligence system ever used at a religious gathering. Using high-resolution satellite imagery, geospatial artificial intelligence, and real-time data streams, the joint platform—created by the Ministry of Interior, the Royal Commission for Makkah City and Holy Sites, and the King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology—monitors vehicle and human movement throughout Makkah at a level of detail that would have seemed unthinkable even ten years ago. Heat islands are detectable by the system. Unusual crowd patterns may be flagged.

By comparing data from past Hajj seasons with current crowd dynamics, it enables operators to predict congestion before it escalates into a crisis.

The fact that the stakes are not hypothetical sets this announcement apart from previous government tech announcements. Every crowd control decision made in these sacred locations is clouded by the memory of the 2015 Mina stampede, which claimed the lives of over 2,000 pilgrims (the official count is still up for debate). When officials state that real-time data is “crucial for swift decision-making,” they are speaking with real seriousness. This is not a pilot program for smart cities. It’s a system made to prevent death.

This operation’s communication component is equally impressive. AI translation systems simultaneously delivered the sermon in 35 languages in real time during the Arafat sermon, a highly charged moment at the heart of the Hajj experience. The sermon was delivered in their mother tongue to pilgrims who stood on that plain, some of whom had given their lives to be there.

It’s difficult to ignore how different that is from pilgrims’ experiences even fifteen years ago, when they mostly relied on group leaders or other worshippers who may or may not speak their language fluently to guide them through the rites.

A large portion of this load is carried on the ground by the Nusuk App. Pilgrims can ask questions, comprehend procedures, and interact with service teams without the need for a nearby translator thanks to its AI-powered assistant, which provides voice translation in multiple languages.

Another is Manara, a voice-activated robot that offers religious guidance in eleven languages with what officials call “cultural sensitivity.” It remains to be seen if a robot can actually provide religious guidance that is culturally sensitive. However, the goal is obvious: lessen the barrier between a pilgrim’s need and the resources available to address it.

In order to facilitate on-the-spot communication in any language a pilgrim may speak, field teams are equipped with AI-powered devices that can process both speech and images. That ability is truly significant in a medical emergency, when seconds count and a pilgrim is confused, afraid, or unable to speak in Arabic or English.

The same goal is reflected in the Saudi Health Ministry’s 937 Call Center, which operates around-the-clock in several languages, including Urdu: no pilgrim should be lost due to a language barrier in an emergency.

Some of this may sound like official government propaganda. Saudi Arabia has a strong incentive to portray the Hajj as a contemporary, well-run event because it is essential to the nation’s religious legitimacy and significant tourism earnings.

It makes sense to be skeptical. But the technology being described here, satellite geospatial intelligence combined with GIS analysis and AI-driven crowd modeling, is real, documented, and increasingly mature. The question isn’t whether it exists. The question is how well it performs under the pressure of two million people moving through narrow streets in 40-degree heat.

What Saudi Arabia seems to be building, deliberately or not, is a global reference case for managing mass gatherings. No other event on earth combines this scale, this diversity of participants, and this concentration of movement in such a compressed geography. Large crowds are a problem for cities hosting major summits or the Olympics.

They don’t deal with crowds that speak 180 different languages, arrive across weeks, and follow highly specific ritual routes that cannot simply be redirected without spiritual consequence. Every algorithm deployed here is solving a problem that no other system has had to solve quite like this.

There’s a feeling, watching all of this unfold, that the Hajj is becoming something of an unlikely laboratory for urban AI. The lessons being learned in Makkah — about crowd prediction, multilingual emergency response, satellite-assisted mobility management — will almost certainly migrate outward. They already are. And somewhere in that control room, as operators adjust crowd distribution based on real-time satellite data, the old and the new are sitting side by side, neither displacing the other, both pointed in the same direction.

Saudi Arabia Announces AI-Powered Hajj
Annie Gerber

Please email Annie@abudhabi-news.com

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