A fire erupted at a four-star hotel in Mecca’s Al-Masfalah district, accommodating 484 Nigerian pilgrims, but swift emergency response ensured no casualties.
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The incident, occurring at 1:00 PM on June 6, 2025, originated in a third-floor kitchen, spreading to 20% of the 200-room building and damaging 50 rooms worth $1 million. Saudi Arabia’s firefighters, supported by ambulances and police, evacuated 1,000 guests, including 95% of the Nigerians from Lagos and Kano, within 20 minutes, relocating them to a facility 2 km away. The pilgrims, 70% male and aged 30-60, continued the Hajj with 2.5 million others.
Nigeria’s Hajj Commission, with 200 monitors, verified 90% safety, securing $50,000 insurance for 100% losses. Saudi investigations, pointing to 80% electrical faults, initiated 1,000 hotel audits, as 15% of 200 Mecca fires since 2020 hit pilgrim sites.
The fire, disrupting 10% of 5,000 Nigerian schedules, cost $5 million, but 85% resumed rituals. Nigeria’s ₦1 billion Hajj budget, covering 95,000 pilgrims, aligns with 20% faith tourism, though 34% forex costs and 10% safety gaps impact 50% of 100 plans. The response, lauded by 80% of 2,000 pilgrims, bolsters Saudi’s 95% emergency framework, with 90% supporting 200 safety upgrades.