Lagos bans pregnant women from 2025 Hajj

Lagos bans pregnant women from 2025 Hajj

The Lagos State Government has officially barred pregnant women from participating in this year's Hajj pilgrimage, citing health and safety concerns.

The announcement was made on Wednesday in Badagry by the Commissioner for Home Affairs, Olanrewaju Ibrahim Layode, who stressed that the rigorous nature of the pilgrimage poses significant risks to the health of expectant mothers.

Layode noted that the state's decision aligns with the directive issued by the National Hajj Commission of Nigeria (NAHCON), which has instructed State Muslim Pilgrims' Welfare Boards not to register pregnant women for the pilgrimage.

Supporting the directive, NAHCON's Commissioner for Planning, Research, Statistics, Information, and Library Services (PRSILS), Professor Abubakar Yagawal, reiterated the policy while addressing preparations for the pilgrimage, including the establishment of medical clinics in Makkah and Madinah and the distribution of Yellow Cards to various states.

Layode added that the Lagos State Ministry of Home Affairs is also acting on the directive of Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu, who has emphasized the need to ensure that only medically fit individuals are cleared for the pilgrimage.

Governor Sanwo-Olu, during the First Family of Lagos State and Ministry of Home Affairs Eid-el-Fitr celebration, at the Lagos House, Marina, said: "By May, those travelling to Makkah will begin to travel. Please ensure you are in good health. If you are ill, refrain from travelling for the 2025 Hajj; stay back and pray here in Nigeria."

According to the Commissioner for Home Affairs, "It is very dangerous, very delicate for expectant women to go for hajj exercise.

"The processes are rigorous. From Medina to Makkah, the Tawaf, the Safa and Marwah, these are not things an expectant woman should undergo. It's not about fashion or naming a child after a prophet because they were born in Saudi Arabia."

The commissioner revealed that in previous years, some women had attempted to hide their pregnancies in order to partake in the pilgrimage, with instances of individuals allegedly submitting their husbands' urine for medical screening.

To prevent such deceptive practices, the state government has introduced advanced medical screening measures, including the deployment of mobile diagnostic vans equipped to detect pregnancies and tuberculosis at designated screening centres.

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