Opinions of Thursday, 13 December 2007
Columnist: Alhassan, Amin Dr.
The recent Daily Graphic news story of the ordeal of prospective Hajj pilgrims in Accra and the uncertainty of their flight arrangements for this year comes as a shock and leaves one wondering what curse has Allah slapped on the leadership of the Muslim community in Ghana. Last year 499 Ghanaian Muslims, most of them elderly, after going through similar uncertainty of flight arrangements, and being left without any decent hotel arrangements had to go back home disappointed without fulfilling their wish. This year we seem to be heading for such a similar experience.
It appears the magnitude of this record of stinking abysmal failure has not yet dawned on the different layers of leadership of the Muslim community in Ghana. By layers of leadership I am referring to the leadership at the political level both in government and in opposition, at the associational level and the religious level.
One school of thought has it that the main reason why the Hajj process suffers from perennial maladministration is the issue of free hajj tickets that are more or less funded through the inflation of ordinary pilgrims’ ticket prices. Serving on the committee responsible for organizing the Hajj is more about scrambling to get free air tickets than serving Allah.
Last year the painful, ironic twist was that most of the free riders whose tickets were subsidized by the ordinary prospective pilgrims, got seats to go. The fully paid ordinary folks did not. You do not need a sermon to remind you that going on Hajj as a free rider places a high moral demand on you.
Why should prospective pilgrims who have paid for the market value of their tickets be treated with contempt? Organizing chartered flights to Hajj is a tour business and should meet hospitality standards that the Ghana Tourist Board and the Ministry of Tourism have set out. The clients must be treated with respect and they should get value for their money. The pilgrims are not asking for favors, for heaven’s sake!
The decision by the Minister of Interior, Mr. Kwamena Bartels to set up an investigation committee to look into this year’s organization of the Hajj is a commendable step and I hope it will go beyond the possible prosecution of anyone found guilty to culminate in the overhauling of the entire Hajj process in Ghana for subsequent years.
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