Umrah Controversy Triggers Calls For Tighter NAHCON Screening
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Calls for stricter pilgrimage screening have grown after comments by Prophet Israel Oladele Ogundipe about his visit to Makkah and Madinah for Umrah triggered debate among sections of the Muslim community in Nigeria.
Mallam Ibrahim Agunbiade, identified as Taalib Jami’ei of Islamic Propagation, Rabwa, Saudi Arabia, said in a statement on Saturday that the concern is about preserving the religious boundaries of Islamic rites, not promoting hostility between faith communities.
According to Agunbiade, both Hajj and Umrah are acts of worship legislated specifically for Muslims and should not be treated as cultural tours or general spiritual travel. He said this places a clear duty on the National Hajj Commission of Nigeria (NAHCON) to strengthen how intending pilgrims are profiled and approved.
He cited Qur’an 9:28, which says, “O you who believe! Indeed the polytheists are impure, so let them not approach Al-Masjid Al-Haram after this year,” and said scholars have long interpreted the verse as restricting access to the sacred precinct in Makkah to Muslims.
Agunbiade also referenced Qur’an 3:97, which establishes Hajj as an obligation for those who are able, and said the verse is understood within Islamic scholarship as applying to believers who profess Islam.
He further cited narrations in Sahih al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim, where Islam is described as being built on five pillars, including Hajj, and where non-Muslim participation in Hajj was disallowed after the ninth year of Hijrah.
Based on those references, he said NAHCON should move beyond routine paperwork where needed and adopt deeper verification procedures, especially in sensitive or high-profile cases that may create public confusion.
“If a person has genuinely embraced Islam, that conversion should be clear, documented and confirmed through recognised Islamic authorities,” he said.
Agunbiade warned that weak screening could produce avoidable tension, affect public trust and raise questions about compliance with long-settled religious rulings tied to the holy sites.
He said his position should not be read as opposition to peaceful coexistence. According to him, Islam encourages mutual respect across faiths, but that principle does not erase boundaries around forms of worship that are doctrinally reserved for Muslims.
The statement has renewed discussion about NAHCON’s role as regulator and facilitator of Nigerian pilgrim participation in Saudi Arabia. Commentators following the matter say the immediate policy question is whether existing verification methods are strong enough to prevent recurring disputes.
Agunbiade called for a structured, transparent and consistently applied framework that can be reviewed publicly and implemented without discrimination. He said clear standards would protect the integrity of Hajj and Umrah administration while reducing room for controversy in future pilgrimage seasons.
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Source: This article was originally published by Independent Nigeria. All rights reserved to the original publisher.
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