1.1081657-3522662253
Nigerian pilgrims leave the arrival hall of Mallam Aminu Kano International Airport shortly after their arrival from the muslim holy city of Madina on September 26, 2012. Saudi Arabia has denied entry to some 1,000 Nigerian woman seeking to visit for Hajj because they were not accompanied by men, with most stuck at the Jeddah airport, Nigerian officials said on September 26. About 171 of the women returned home to Nigeria on a flight the same day, an official said. AFP PHOTO / Aminu ABUBAKAR Image Credit: AFP

Kano: Saudi authorities have deported 150 female Nigerian pilgrims and detained another 1,000 because they came unaccompanied by men.

Mohammed Bello, chairman of Nigeria’s national haj, or Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca, said 150 women on one flight had been stopped at the airport for “lack of... lawful male accompanying pilgrim”.

“This ugly development continued with subsequent flights that arrived at the kingdom,” he said, adding that 1,000 were still being held at the airport in Jeddah.

Women in Saudi Arabia are regarded as minors and require the permission of their guardian — father, brother, or husband — to leave the country, receive some kinds of medical treatment or work. They are not allowed to drive and are usually expected to be accompanied by a male chaperone. Nigeria has some 80 million Muslims. Many practice a relaxed version of Islam, but even in stricter northern states that impose sharia law, women can usually move around freely on their own.

A group of the women arrived in tears back at Nigeria’s airport in Kano, the largely Muslim north’s biggest city. Nigeria’s parliament resolved to send a delegation to Saudi Arabia to “interface with the Saudi authorities over the issues surrounding the detained Nigerian female pilgrims”. Alhaji Laminu Rabi’u, head of the Kano Pilgrims Board, described the deportations as “condemnable”. All Muslims who are able are required to perform the haj at least once, as one of the five pillars of Islam. The number of people taking part has risen dramatically over the last 80 years from around 20,000 in 1932 to nearly three million in 2011.