Opinion
Previewing The Recurring Camp Tent Headaches During Hajj Rites In Mina.

By Ibrahim Muhammad.
Experience and records over the years have shown that between 80 and 90 per cent of the challenges that place Hajj administrators, especially the National Hajj Commission of Nigeria (NAHCON) and private Hajj operators, under the weight of negative spotlight usually originate from issues surrounding tent allocation to VIP pilgrims during the Tashreek days in Mina.
The premium camp facilities, popularly known as Tent A and Tent A Plus, are reserved for pilgrims who pay for high-end Hajj packages priced in US dollars, while pilgrims from state Muslim pilgrims welfare boards are mostly accommodated under the Tent D category.
The challenge of space management in Mina is a global issue arising from the limited size of the valley compared to the huge number of pilgrims occupying the same space during Hajj.
However, there are three major loopholes that make the annual challenge more troubling. These include the insincerity of service providers regarding the actual space secured for their clients, the tendency of some tour operators to market packages they do not have, and the growing quest for luxury in a place historically associated with sacrifice and hardship.
In 2016, a research project using the Mina Tent Distribution Algorithm (MTDA) was conducted to improve the utilisation of available accommodation space in Mina. The MTDA employed seven functions to determine the best-fit accommodation for pilgrims within the available tents.
Experimental results showed that the system outperformed eight other allocation models by successfully accommodating 80 per cent of pilgrims within 76.2 per cent of the available space in Mina. Yet, even the best experimental result did not guarantee accommodation for all pilgrims within the tent facilities.
Mina covers an area of approximately 7.82 square kilometres, with only about 61 per cent of the landmass effectively utilised due to the rocky and hilly terrain. Tent sizes vary between 8 square metres, 6 by 8 metres, and 12 by 8 metres.
Over the last 15 years, the issue of how many pilgrims Mina can comfortably accommodate has remained a recurring pre-Hajj concern among participating countries.
Before the introduction of additional service lanes and support infrastructure, the tent city was originally designed to host about 850,000 pilgrims, with each pilgrim expected to have a sleeping space within Mina.
However, the construction of support facilities such as the Al Mashaaer Railway, medical centres, security posts, ministry offices, emergency response centres, and fire service stations has significantly reduced available accommodation space.
These facilities now consume nearly 20 per cent of the original capacity projections.
In reality, Mina can no longer comfortably host 800,000 pilgrims, talk less of the over 1.2 million pilgrims expected for this year’s Hajj. Another factor contributing to the space crisis is the introduction of mattresses inside tents.
Unlike previous years when pilgrims slept on rugs, mattresses now occupy additional space and further compress accommodation capacity.
This year, there have already been complaints from many of the top Hajj-participating countries over inadequate tent space allocation for their pilgrims in Mina.
Anticipating possible shortages, the Saudi Ministry of Hajj had in previous years directed many pilgrims, especially those from Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries, to proceed directly from their hotels in Makkah to Arafat, thereby skipping the first day in Mina to ease congestion.
Although Kidana Development Company added 79 two-storey accommodation complexes with 7,838 restrooms after earlier expanding existing facilities with 18 additional complexes, the challenge persists because the structures themselves occupy substantial portions of land.
Therefore, the issue of securing comfortable accommodation in Mina within the current global Hajj allocation of about 2.3 million pilgrims will continue to remain a major challenge for Saudi authorities and Hajj-participating countries.
This year may not be different. There are indications that some private Hajj operators failed to secure Tent A spaces for their clients but still marketed their packages as Tent A services, whereas the actual bookings were made under Tent B or Tent C categories.
Any Nigerian elite who pays $15,000 or more for Tent A services and eventually discovers that he has been placed elsewhere may trigger serious outrage in Mina over the perceived deception.
However, the Saudi Ministry of Hajj’s implementation of “No NUSUK No Hajj” helped to free up more space in Tent D for State pilgrims last year.
The influx of unauthorized pilgrims into Tent D was drastically decreased, but Tent A was an exception.
Governors, senators, highly influential politicians, and their family members are among the regular subscribers to Tent A packages.
Any disappointment involving this category of pilgrims will certainly attract public attention and widespread criticism.
Way Forward NAHCON, as the apex Hajj regulatory body in Nigeria, should establish a special committee to work closely with private tour operators in verifying the exact category of tents secured for VIP pilgrims before movement to Mina.
Such a committee should engage directly with the service providers handling Masha’ir services to confirm the actual allocation granted to each pilgrim.
Private tour operators found to have downgraded pilgrims from the agreed tent category should be compelled to notify affected clients before the Hajj rites commence, issue appropriate apologies, and arrange refunds where necessary.
Pilgrims who pay premium fees deserve transparency, accountability, and the exact services promised to them.
Mohammed is the National Coordinator Independent Hajj Reporters From Makkah
Opinion
A Tale of Two Kidnappings: Nigeria’s Deepening Security Divide
By Tony Ogunlowo
Two high-profile kidnapping cases in recent weeks have once again drawn national attention to Nigeria’s worsening insecurity and the uneven response to victims across social classes.
One case involved more than 45 pupils and teachers abducted from a school in Oyo State, while another involved the relatives of a former minister. The minister’s sister and her two sons were reportedly rescued in a highly publicised security operation, while the fate of the abducted schoolchildren remains unclear.
Reports indicate that at least two teachers were killed during the incident. Nigeria continues to battle widespread kidnapping. According to security observers, thousands of cases are reported annually, with many others going unreported due to fear and distrust of the system. Families are often left to negotiate directly with abductors amid limited police capacity.
The 2014 Chibok abduction, in which 276 schoolgirls were kidnapped, remains a painful reference point, as not all victims have been rescued years later.The article argues that the contrasting outcomes of recent rescue efforts reflect a broader perception of inequality in security response, with claims that high-profile victims may receive faster intervention than ordinary citizens.
Successive governments have repeatedly pledged to adopt tougher measures against kidnapping and banditry. However, insecurity persists, with critics questioning the effectiveness of current strategies, including forest security initiatives and intelligence operations. Concerns have also been raised about limited surveillance capacity, delayed response times, and the need for improved coordination among security agencies.
The piece concludes that addressing insecurity requires long-term solutions focused not only on enforcement but also on tackling underlying socio-economic challenges such as poverty and unemployment, which continue to drive criminal activity.
Opinion
Political Economist Reviews Tinubu’s Democracy Day Speech, Highlights Economic Challenges
By Adefolarin A. Olamilekan
Nigeria marked 27 years of uninterrupted democratic governance on May 29, 2026, having sustained civilian rule since 1999.President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, in his Democracy Day address, noted that Nigerians have consistently exercised their democratic rights through elections, peaceful transitions of power, and institutional dispute resolution rather than violence. He also stressed that the true value of democracy must be reflected in improved living standards and economic well-being.
However, while acknowledging democratic progress, the author argues that many Nigerians continue to face significant economic hardship despite ongoing reforms. Since assuming office in 2023, the Tinubu administration has introduced economic policies aimed at stabilising public finances, increasing government revenue, and attracting investment.
According to government statements, these reforms have improved fiscal transparency, reduced revenue leakages, and boosted allocations to federal, state, and local governments. Authorities also maintain that increased investor confidence has supported growth across key sectors, including agriculture, energy, manufacturing, mining, transportation, and technology.
Key reforms highlighted include efforts to expand domestic refining capacity, strengthen energy security, and address long-standing challenges in the power sector. The signing of the Electricity Act, which liberalises the electricity market and encourages private-sector participation, was also cited as a major policy milestone.
Despite these measures, the article notes that many households continue to face rising living costs, reduced purchasing power, and broader economic uncertainty. The author further observes that Nigeria’s fiscal environment remains constrained by debt obligations, infrastructure gaps, and the need for economic diversification. The piece concludes that the central test of Nigeria’s democracy lies in its ability to translate political stability into inclusive economic growth and improved welfare for citizens.
Opinion
Chinese Miners Are Not the Architects of Nigeria’s Banditry: A Response to Farooq A. Kperogi
By Dr Austin Maho
A recent article published by Farooq A. Kperogi in his syndicated weekly column, titled “How Chinese Miners Fuel Nigeria’s Terrorist Banditry”, raises an urgent question: What is the nexus between illegal mining and Nigeria’s security challenges?
It is a discussion Nigerians must have. However, going through the article, it quickly narrows into a familiar pattern: “Chinese miners fuel banditry”. The evidence cited does not support that causal leap. Worse, the framing obscures the real drivers of violence, ignores Chinese victims of the same crisis, and recycles a geopolitical cliche that paints Chinese investment as uniquely predatory. Nigerians deserve to know the truth, not create a foreign bogeyman to wish away a national crisis.
Blaming “Chinese miners” oversimplifies a complex crisis and risks xenophobic scapegoating of innocent foreigners.
1: Illegal mining is a symptom, not the disease. Banditry predates Chinese presence. Kperogi himself concedes that “illegal mining is not the sole driver of Nigeria’s insecurity.” That caveat should be the headline, not a footnote. Banditry in Zamfara exploded between 2011 and 2014, long before Chinese-linked companies became visible in the area. The 2019 Zamfara mining ban was imposed because bandit attacks were already rampant, not the other way around.
The roots are well documented: decades of state neglect, collapsed agricultural livelihoods, farmer-herder clashes exacerbated by climate stress, proliferation of small arms after Libya’s collapse, and the hollowing out of traditional conflict-resolution systems. In Niger State’s Shiroro LGA, communities were displaced by terrorists like Dogo Gide and ISWAP before any foreign company showed up. Mining did not create the terror. Terror created ungoverned space, and all kinds of actors, local and foreign criminals, rushed into the vacuum.
To say Chinese miners “fuel” banditry reverses cause and effect. As Engr. Adamu Garba Musa asked: “If bandits are disturbing people, how come the company is working successfully?” The answer is grim but obvious: companies survive by paying what villagers cannot – protection levies, extortion, coercion, shakedown or their investments go up in flames. This is not sponsorship. Conflating the two criminalises victims of coercion.
2: Chinese nationals are victims, not masterminds, of kidnapping and banditry. If Chinese-linked firms were financing bandits, why are Chinese citizens routinely kidnapped by those same bandits? The record is public:
-June 2022: Four Chinese workers abducted for ransom at a mining site in Shiroro, Niger State.
-January 2023: Two Chinese nationals kidnapped in Ogun State. One police officer killed during the attack.
-October 2023: Three Chinese expatriates taken in Osun State; millions allegedly paid for release.
-March 2024: A Chinese engineer abducted in Zamfara. Local police confirmed bandits demanded N100m.
August 2025: 2. Two Chinese miners killed in Kaduna when bandits attacked their site.
These are not isolated. The Chinese Embassy in Abuja has repeatedly issued security alerts and, in February 2026, called allegations of terror financing “completely baseless” while reaffirming “zero tolerance” policy toward its companies or citizens engaging in illegal mining abroad. It urged Chinese firms operating in Nigeria to strictly comply with Nigerian laws and regulations, and said the Chinese government supports legal enforcement by the Nigerian government against any individual or entity found violating those laws.
The statement also pushed back on narratives linking Chinese miners to banditry, noting that Chinese citizens have themselves been frequent victims of kidnapping and violent attacks at mining sites across Nigeria. The embassy called for objective, fact-based reporting rather than generalisations that stigmatise foreign investors. It reaffirmed China’s commitment to working with Nigerian authorities to promote lawful, orderly mining cooperation and to jointly safeguard security, adding that Beijing is willing to cooperate with Nigerian investigations and take action against any Chinese nationals proven to be involved in illegal activities.
No businessman kidnaps his own assets. The pattern is clear: Chinese firms, like Nigerian ones, operate in high-risk zones because minerals are there. They hire security, pay levies under duress, and sometimes lose staff. That makes them victims of state failure, not authors of it.
3: Narrowing it down to the “Chinese” label hides a Nigerian problem: elite complicity and regulatory failure. Every credible report Kperogi cites names the same prime mover: “politically connected Nigerians.” Dr. Maurice Ogbonnaya’s ISS work indicts “politically connected Nigerians”. The ENACT brief blames “Nigerians in high positions of authority”. The WikkiTimes investigation references licenses held by Nigerian companies, Eso Terra Investment Limited and Majelo Global Resources Limited.
In Nigeria’s mining sector, foreigners cannot hold titles directly. They partner with Nigerian license holders, who handle community relations, security, and politics. When WikkiTimes reports that “bandits were paid N3 million every week”, the question is: who negotiated that? Who knew the Dogo Gide faction’s account number? The fixers, facilitators, and profit-sharers are Nigerian. Chinese are mainly hired hands in the mines to provide their technical expertise and financing. Yet the headline becomes “Chinese Miners.” This is how structural corruption is laundered into ethnic outsourcing. We fire the cook and keep the menu.
4: “80 illegal” does not equal “80% Chinese”. The NEITI/ANEEJ report cited by Reuters says 80% of mining in the Northwest is illegal. It does not say 80% is Chinese. Artisanal and small-scale mining in Nigeria employs 500,000+ Nigerians, per the Ministry of Solid Minerals. They dig without licenses, sell to middlemen, and pay local chiefs. Chinese buyers are part of a long chain that includes Lebanese, Indian, Nigerian, and Togolese traders. Singling out one nationality distorts the narrative and leads to ethnic profiling.
Moreover, the same ministry Kperogi credits for reform has licensed Chinese firms that do operate legally. Examples abound: Segilola Gold in Osun, Ganfeng Lithium in Nasarawa, and others are publicly listed, pay taxes, royalties, and publish ESG reports. In February 2026, the ministry announced 388 new mineral buying centres to formalise trade. Many Chinese buyers have registered. The government’s own data shows a move toward compliance, not a conspiracy.
5: The geopolitical context: Who benefits when “China” is the villain? Kperogi’s piece lands in a crowded media ecosystem where “China in Africa” is shorthand for exploitation. Western outlets have run dozens of stories on Chinese illegal mining in Ghana, Zimbabwe, and DRC. Some are factual; many are thinly sourced. The pattern is to frame China as a unitary actor – “China” mines, “China” bribes, “China” funds terror – while Western firms are “companies” and Nigerian elites are “collaborators.”
That framing has costs. In 2023, a viral rumor that “Chinese miners were arming bandits” triggered attacks on Chinese workers in Zamfara. In 2024, the House of Reps had to debunk claims that Chinese firms were importing weapons. Narrative has body counts. Nigeria should not be a proxy in great-power competition. Our security analysis must be evidence-led, not geopolitics-led. If a Canadian or Australian firm paid bandits to access a site, we would call it what it is: corporate criminality under duress. We would not indict Canada.
6: What a serious policy response looks like – without xenophobia. Kperogi ends with six proposals. Most are sound. But they will fail if built on a faulty diagnosis. Here’s a refined version:
-Map the entire value chain, not just the foreign face. Publish beneficial owners, yes, including Nigerian PEPs. Name the local chiefs who collect surface rents, the DSS officers who escort minerals, and the customs agents who clear containers.
-Traceability must be nationality blind. Blockchain or paper, the standard should apply to every buyer: Chinese, Lebanese, Nigerian. The 388 buying centres are a start. Expand them.
-Prosecute the extorted and the extorter differently. A company that reports bandit levies to the NSA should be treated as a witness, not a sponsor. Create a safe harbour for firms that disclose payments under duress. That dries up terror financing faster than arrests.
-Secure mines the way we secure oil facilities. The reason bandits don’t tax oil fields is the Joint Task Force. The Mining Marshals arresting 350+ people is progress. Scale it, and embed military cover for legal sites.
-Diplomacy, not demagoguery. China has leverage over its nationals. In 2024, Beijing blacklisted 3 firms caught in Ghana’s galamsey. Nigeria should give the Chinese Embassy a docket of allegations and demand action. Public shaming without due process just drives illegality underground.
-Fix the livelihood crisis. Banditry pays because farming doesn’t. No amount of mining reform will work if 70% of Zamfara youth are jobless. Formalize artisanal miners into cooperatives, as Alake suggests. Give them equipment, not just arrests.
Nigeria’s minerals should be a blessing. Today they are a curse. But the curse is not Mandarin. It is impunity. It is the governor who takes a cut, the general who sells a license, the chief who rents his forest, and the bandit who taxes everyone.
Chinese firms that break the law should face the law. So should Nigerian firms. So should the officials who enable them. But to suggest that “Chinese miners fuel banditry” is to substitute a slogan for a strategy. It tells villagers in Shiroro that their enemy is a foreigner, not the governance void that left them defenceless.
Many Chinese nationals have been kidnapped, killed, and extorted in this crisis. They want what Nigerians want: roads without ambushes, sites without levies, contracts without bribes. An enabling environment for legal business is not a Chinese demand. It is a Nigerian right.
We should listen to Prof. Tade Aina and dig deeper. But let’s dig for the truth, not for a scapegoat. Banditry will end when the Nigerian state returns, with laws, with force, and with legitimacy. No embassy, East or West, can do that for us.
Dr Austin Maho is a member of the Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE) and publisher of Daybreak Nigeria
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