Another Hajj Fiasco looms?
NEW: Ghana Tourist Villas offers an unforgettable holiday and business experience in Accra.
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Date: Wed, 27 Aug 2008
Date: Wed, 27 Aug 2008
NEW: Ghana Tourist Villas offers an unforgettable holiday and business experience in Accra.
By some twist of fate, the Chief Imam has just constituted a seven-member Interim Hajj Committee (IHC) to ensure a smooth Hajj programme this year, but before the dust could settle on the newly-formed body to start work, a salvo has been fired by the NHC, which are refusing to die away.
According to them, they were the legitimate and authorised body to organise the Hajj, and that the IHC should be disregarded. In the midst of all the confusion, the potential pilgrims have been left in a quagmire, not knowing who to turn to.
The government has not helped matters by maintaining a deafening silence. The Chronicle believes that it is about time government called all the factions to order, if we are to have a successful Hajj this year. We must also bear in mind that the organisation of the Hajj was a government to government arrangement, therefore, the government of Ghana has the legitimate right to get involved.
Although the government has left the handling of the pilgrimage to the office of the Chief Imam, it looks like the authority of the latter is fast being eroded, especially with the organisation of the Hajj.
The pilgrimage to Mecca, as one of the five pillars of Islam, is of spiritual significance to every Moslem. This spiritual obligation should therefore, not be seen to be taken away from the potential pilgrims, through no fault of theirs. The act of performing the Hajj should be a spiritually joyous occasion for pilgrims, but the reverse has been the case in Ghana over the past years. We cannot understand why pilgrims will be made to pay, in the region of $3,000, only to be left to sleep by the roadside, as it happened last year, due to someone's organisational inefficiency.
The government owes it as a duty to intervene now, rather than wait for the situation to get out of hand, before it goes to the Saudi government to beg for an extension of the deadline for flights into Saudi Arabia.
It would be a big embarrassment if it happens again, as the Saudi government has already issued a statement that it would not extend the deadline this year, and we believe the Saudi government should by now have had enough of Ghana.
When two elephants fight, it is the grass that suffers, and Ghanaian Moslems seem to be telling the NHC and IHC to settle their differences, in order for them to have a successful Hajj.
