Kuwait Times

COVID-19: Asia’s mosques deserted

Coronaviru­s keeps Ramadan faithful away

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JAKARTA: It is a Ramadan like never before for Muslims across Asia as mosques that would normally be packed for prayers are deserted and in some places locked up as government­s enforced measures to stem the spread of the novel coronaviru­s. At Indonesia’s main Istiqlal mosque, the biggest in Southeast Asia, the call to evening Maghib prayers and a message asking people to pray at home echo in the empty hall - a stark contrast to last year when thousands thronged in to pray.

Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim country, has confirmed 8,882 cases of the coronaviru­s and at least 743 people have died. In Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh, the gates of the Mayor Mohammad Hanif Jame Mosque were padlocked. In the Pakistani city of Karachi, police patrolled outside the Faizan-e-Madina, one of the city’s biggest mosques, to stop worshipper­s from gathering and no one was performing Taraweeh, a special prayer during Ramadan.

Pakistan has reported more than 11,000 cases of the coronaviru­s, including 237 deaths. In India, only five worshipper­s joined an evening prayer on the first day of Ramadan in New Delhi’s imposing Jama Masjid as the call to prayers drifted out over the deserted courtyard. Last year, worshipper­s spilled onto the ornate front terrace of the redbrick 17th century mosque.

India has reported 26,496 cases of the coronaviru­s and 824 deaths. Health experts have warned that the rapid spread of the coronaviru­s in poor, densely populated parts of South Asia - home to a fifth of the world’s population - could easily overwhelm weak public health systems.

Iran to reopen mosques

Meanwhile, Iran plans to reopen mosques in parts of the country that have been consistent­ly free of the coronaviru­s outbreak as restrictio­ns on Iranians gradually ease, President Hassan Rouhani said on Sunday. Iran, one of the Middle Eastern countries hardest hit by the pandemic, will be divided up into white, yellow and red regions based on the number of infections and deaths, Rouhani said, according to the presidency’s website. Activities in each region will be restricted accordingl­y, so an area that has been consistent­ly free of infections or deaths will be labeled white and mosques could be reopened and Friday prayers resumed, Rouhani said. He said the label given to any region in the Islamic Republic could change and he did not specify when the color-coding program would come into force.

 ?? — AFP ?? MAKKAH: Saudi policemen stand guard next to the Kaaba in Makkah’s Grand Mosque during the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, amid unpreceden­ted bans on family gatherings and mass prayers due to the coronaviru­s (COVID-19) pandemic.
— AFP MAKKAH: Saudi policemen stand guard next to the Kaaba in Makkah’s Grand Mosque during the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, amid unpreceden­ted bans on family gatherings and mass prayers due to the coronaviru­s (COVID-19) pandemic.
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