Gulf Times

Sri Lankan Muslims protest cremations of Covid-19 victims

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Sri Lanka’s minority Muslims demonstrat­ed in Colombo yesterday demanding an end to forced cremations of Covid-19 victims as Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan arrived on an official visit.

Dozens of Muslims carried a mock janazah, or coffin, denouncing the Sri Lankan government’s policy of banning burials of virus victims disregardi­ng their funeral rites.

The demonstrat­ion was aimed at the visit of Khan who two weeks ago had weighed in on the plight of Muslims in Sri Lanka.

Khan had welcomed an announceme­nt by Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa on February 10 that burials would be allowed, but a day later Colombo backtracke­d and said there would be no change in the cremation-only policy.

“Respect Prime Minister’s statement and allow burials,” said a banner carried by the demonstrat­ors who assembled at an open space in front of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s office.

His government has rejected internatio­nal pleas and recommenda­tions from its own experts to allow Muslims to bury their dead in line with Islamic custom.

The government first banned burials in April amid concerns — which experts say are baseless — by influentia­l Buddhist monks that burying bodies could contaminat­e groundwate­r and spread the virus.

The World Health Organisati­on has said there is no such risk, recommendi­ng both burial and cremation of virus victims.

Traditiona­lly, Muslims bury their dead. Sri Lanka’s majority Buddhists, who are strong backers of the current government, are typically cremated, as are Hindus.

In December, the authoritie­s ordered the forced cremation of at least 19 Muslim Covid-19 victims, including a baby, after their families refused to claim their bodies from a hospital morgue.

This stoked dismay and anger among the Muslim community, moderates and abroad, with the 57-member Organisati­on of Islamic Co-operation repeatedly expressing concern.

Muslim community leaders say more than half the 450 Covid-19 victims were from the Muslim minority which accounts for just 10% of the 21mn population.

Muslims have a disproport­ionate number of fatalities because they don’t seek treatment, fearing they will be cremated if they are diagnosed with the virus, they have said.

 ??  ?? Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan walks with Sri Lanka’s Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa during the welcome ceremony yesterday at Sri Lanka’s airport in Katunayake.
Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan walks with Sri Lanka’s Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa during the welcome ceremony yesterday at Sri Lanka’s airport in Katunayake.

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