Tuesday, August 19, 2025 - Confusion has trailed the detention of a Nigerian pilgrim in Saudi Arabia after her name was allegedly linked to a suspicious bag wrongly tagged by Ethiopian Airlines.
The woman, Maryam Hussaini-Abdullahi, who travelled with her
husband, Abdullahi Baffa, for the lesser Hajj on August 6, was stopped from
returning home after Saudi authorities claimed her details were tied to a
“Ghana-must-go” sack containing substances believed to be marijuana.
According to Baffa, the couple travelled with just two bags
that were cleared at Malam Aminu Kano International Airport, but their luggage
was declared missing upon arrival in Jeddah.
He said the airline asked them to wait 48 hours for feedback
after filling a complaint form.
“We had no spare clothes, so we had to buy new ones in
Madinah,” Baffa explained. “About eight days later, I was told one of the bags
was available for pickup, but I refused and asked that it be returned to
Nigeria instead.”
The ordeal worsened when the couple attempted to board their
return flight. Immigration officials cleared Baffa’s documents but barred
Maryam, referring them to an investigation centre in Makkah.
At the centre, Saudi officers alleged that her name was
linked to a suspicious bag. But upon inspection, the luggage tag number did not
match those issued to the couple. Still, Maryam was ordered into detention
pending further investigation.
“She told me the investigators showed her a Ghana-must-go
sack with strange items inside. She has no connection whatsoever to that bag,”
Baffa insisted, accusing Ethiopian Airlines of negligence and a possible
cover-up.
He further claimed that airline representatives privately
admitted the bag’s contents were “not incriminating” and promised resolution,
yet his wife remains in custody.
The Nigerian Consulate in Madinah has since stepped in, with
officials confirming they are following up with Saudi authorities.
Consul General Muazam Nayaya said the mission had received a
formal complaint and would forward its findings to Abuja.
Meanwhile, a staff member of Ethiopian Airlines told newsmen
that the matter was under investigation, noting the complexity of tracing
luggage through multiple transit points.
Baffa has called on the Nigerian government to intervene
urgently and demanded that CCTV footage from Kano airport be released to prove
his wife’s innocence.
Libya, Saudi Arabia, and other Middle Eastern countries
maintain some of the world’s toughest drug laws, with possession of narcotics
often attracting severe penalties, including death.
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