The National Hajj Commission of Nigeria (NAHCON)
has acquired four new Mercedes Benz ambulances equipped with oxygen
concentrator and other resuscitating gadgets in preparation for the final Hajj
rituals, which will take place on the Arafat Day on August 10.
Pilgrims from all over the world, including Nigeria,
will next Friday converge on Mina in the outskirts of Mecca for four days to
observe the most important aspects of the Hajj rites.
The Chairman National Medical Committee of NAHCON,
Dr. Ibrahim Kana, revealed the acquisition in a statement made available to
journalists at the weekend.
He said the purchase of the ambulances was part of
the efforts of the national medical team to provide efficient services to the
pilgrims.
This is as the number of Nigerians that have been
airlifted to the holy land for the annual pilgrimage reached the 40,000 mark at
the weekend.
The provision of the ambulances at the Mashaa’ir
(religious sites) in the closing phase of the Hajj is what NAHCON has tagged as
‘Medical Caravan’.
It was learnt that the most tasking aspects of the
Hajj exercise would require the pilgrims to stand on the plains of Arafat,
passing the night at Muzdalifa and performing the devil stoning ritual at the
pillars of Jamarat.
Kana stressed that the caravan would leave for
Arafat with adequate drug provisions, including drugs for blood sugar testing
for diabetic patients.
He said NAHCON had distributed medical personnel to
the states pilgrim boards, who would depart Mecca for Mina with the pilgrims during
the Tradudiyya movement on the same bus.
Kana said a consignment of the supplies would arrive
at the medical store by today or Tuesday.
“It could be recalled that this year, the national
medical team introduced first aid rooms in all the hotels accommodating
Nigerian pilgrims in Madinah to attend to minor illnesses of the pilgrims.
“The recent additional innovation is the
introduction of a Caravan System of health delivery to the pilgrims in the
Mashaa’ir areas of Muna, Arafat and Muzdalifah this year,” Kana said.
He added that states and the relevant agencies are
to provide space for makeshift clinics for male and female pilgrims in their
tents, urging them to also provide environmental health workers to ensure cleanliness,
sanitation and hygiene inside and outside the tents in Muna. The same caravan
would travel back to Mina via Muzdalifa as prescribed.
Meanwhile, NAHCON has put the number of Nigerian
pilgrims officially airlifted to Saudi Arabia to 40,993 in 84 flights in all.
The commission updated the toll following the
departure of 545 pilgrims and nine officials from Minna, Niger State, aboard
Max Air flight NJ7164 for Madinah yesterday morning.
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