The worst hit are the pilgrims going through the licensed Hajj and Umrah operators who have been stranded at different airports for the past few days. Already, most of the tour operators are under severe pressure from their pilgrims over the delay.
Several intending pilgrims had been passing the night at the
Lagos airport due to flight hitches.
Flight delays by Arik Air affected a number of pilgrims. The
airline announced on Monday it was set to airlift the pilgrims.
“This is not the first time I would be travelling for Hajj,
but this year is different, I’ve been here since Tuesday and still don’t know
when I will be airlifted, this is so unfair. I would not have believed it if I
was told that I would still be in Nigeria by this time,” a pilgrim who gave her
name as Alhaja Bilikisu, told our correspondent.
Another aggrieved pilgrim, Musa Dakoko said, “Why open one
to sleep in an open space when a simple communication as to change in plans
could have worked? I have always dreamed of travelling for Hajj but these
people want to kill that dream for me this year. I feel very pained and
frustrated.”
Arik Air, which has only airlifted 300 out of about 7,000
passengers allocated to it by the National Hajj Commission of Nigeria, promised
to resume the airlift within 24 hours, this was on Saturday when our
correspondent contacted the PR & Communications Manager, Adebanji Ola.
Out of about 73,000 pilgrims registered with the various
state pilgrims’ welfare boards, about 62,000 have been airlifted as of the time
of filing this report with about 10,000 still left on the ground in Nigeria.
The National President of the Association of Hajj and Umrah
Operators of Nigeria, Alhaji Nasidi Yahaya, said that all hands were on deck to
airlift all intending pilgrims before the closure of Saudi’s airspace.
He said, “We are still pushing. There is an agreement with
Max Air to do the flight for them. Hopefully by tomorrow, we will start the
flights with bigger aircraft. We visited Max Air this evening and they said
they have applied for slots to start immediately.”
“The General Authority of Civil Aviation in Saudi, the
Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority, Hajj Commission and ourselves, we are on top
of the issue, there is no cause for alarm.”
The Supreme Court of Saudi Arabia on Sunday announced that
Monday, June 19, will mark the first day of Dhul-Hijjah, after sighting the new
crescent in the Kingdom.
“Arafat Day falls on Tuesday, June 27, while Wednesday, June
28, will be the first day of Eid Al Adha,’’ the Saudi Arabia apex court said in
the statement.