In a rare twist of fate, 171 female pilgrims from Nigeria who set out to fulfil a cardinal pillar of their faith in Saudi Arabia, ended up, first as detainees and then as deportees, to complete an awful trajectory in a quest to be ‘better Muslims.’
They were subjected to harrowing
experience by Saudi authorities in their pursuit of performing a
religious obligation to their creator.
Saudi Arabia Wednesday
deported the 171 female pilgrims who had gone to the Holy Land from
Katsina and Taraba States. They all landed at the Mallam Aminu Kano International Airport (MAKIA), Kano from the Medina Airport, all looking dejected and
with tales of woes from an unaccomplished mission. They perfectly cut
the image of disappointed pilgrims captured by Kwesi Brew in his poem,
“Lest We Should Be the Last.”
The pilgrims were deported aboard Max Air aircraft, with registration number 5N MBB at about 4.58pm Wednesday.
They lamented that for three days they were detained at the Medina airport under discomforting conditions.
Their crime is that they failed to show up at the airport with their
guardians (husbands or male partners) described as Muharram.
The Saud immigration law stipulates that female pilgrims coming to Saudi Arabia who are 40 years
and below must be accompanied by their husbands or guardians, failing
which they will not be cleared by the immigration at the point of entry,
even when they have valid entry visas.
Already, posers are being
raised on why Saudi Arabia, which had hitherto granted Nigeria the
concession to allow its female pilgrims travel without male escorts as
long as they are accompanied by officials of the National Hajj
Commission of Nigeria (NAHCON), withdrew the concession to Nigeria.
According to a source familiar with Nigeria’s preparations for the pilgrimage , “I wonder what triggered this development; the male escort requirement has never been an issue all these years.”
When
THISDAY spoke to Alhaji Tasiu Umar Malumfashi, husband of three women
among those deported, he merely dismissed the rule as “totally
embarrassing, shocking not only to me but to the entire family”. After
picking up his three wives, he left the airport in a huff.
But
the Kano State Executive Secretary of the Pilgrims’ Welfare Board,
Alhaji Laminu Rabiu, who also came to the airport to receive the
deported pilgrims, described the action as deceitful, since the pilgrims
were in Saudi Arabia for the hajj.
About 1,000 Nigerian women in all were detained in Saudi Arabia over their failure to travel with their approved male chaperons.
One
of the deported pilgrims, who identified herself as Aishatu Ismail from
Taraba State, told reporters that “we have seen hell because the
security people in Medina detained us for three days without food and care.
“The
Saudi authorities caged us in one open space without allowing us to
move an inch, and we were given no food; neither were we allowed to even
buy any with our money As you can see us now, we spent three days without food at the Medina airport.”
She lamented that all through their detention, “No any official of the Federal Government or state came to our rescue. Nobody attended
to us in Medina, partly because the security officials over there just
caged us and did not allow anybody to come close to us, all because they
say we do not have guardians in our intended hajj exercise. We were
terribly humiliated by the Saudi authorities.”
However, their ordeal seems not enough to dissuade Ismail and others from performing the hajj exercise in the future.
“I
also hope that if the issue is settled between the Nigerian officials
and the Saudi authorities, we may likely be going back for the pilgrimage,” she said.
THISDAY
gathered that out of the 171 deported pilgrims, Katsina State has 111
members who were later flown to Katsina airport from Kano Wednesday. The
Taraba State contingent,numbering 60, were taken to Kano pilgrims’ camp pending the arrival of their state officials who will take them back to Taraba.
Sources
at MAKIA told THISDAY that the deported 171 pilgrims had flown to Mecca
through the Katsina airport, while the Taraba pilgrims departed through
the Yola Airport.
THISDAY observed that most of the deported
pilgrims were in tears, as they wore long faces and looked dejected
while recounting the horrible experience they had in the hands of the
Saudi Arabia authorities.
THIS DAY
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