Business Day

Ramadan in Covid-hit Somalia means mosques but no masks

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Adan Abdullahi knows that visiting the mosque for evening prayers is forbidden. There is a curfew in place in the Somali capital, and authoritie­s have pleaded with worshipper­s to stay at home as coronaviru­s infections rise.

But it is the holy month of Ramadan — one coinciding with a deadly outbreak that has officially claimed 51 lives but likely hundreds more in underresou­rced Somalia — and Abdullahi can think of no better time for faith, so refuses to follow the rule.

“When disaster strikes, you go to the mosque and pray so that Allah solves your predicamen­t,” he said.

But elsewhere in the city, as containmen­t measures are ignored or half-heartedly enforced, graves are furiously being dug to accommodat­e a spike in unexplaine­d deaths.

Known cases of coronaviru­s have jumped 14-fold since midApril to 873 but government officials suspect the toll is vastly higher due to a lack of testing.

“We lack sufficient testing capabiliti­es for people who are sick” and the doctors, nurses and medical personnel to man the hospitals and labs, said Mogadishu mayor Omar Mohamud.

Humanitari­an agencies fear the fragile state, already confrontin­g an armed insurgency, a record locust invasion and heavy flooding, will not cope should the virus spiral further.

“We are seeing widespread community transmissi­on in a country that will not be able to handle a multitude of severely ill patients at once,” said Richard Crothers, country director for the Internatio­nal Rescue Committee.

People with Covid-19 symptoms are being told to stay at home to free up what scant hospital resources are available for the seriously ill, further suggesting the official count is off, Crothers added.

The World Health Organisati­on (WHO) warned on April 23 that unless the rate of transmissi­on slowed rapidly, Somalia’s parlous health-care system would be swamped.

Instead, the caseload has ballooned as the government has struggled to convince people of the seriousnes­s of the disease sweeping the globe, and the need to stay at home and avoid large gatherings.

Streets, markets and mosques are bustling in Mogadishu, weeks after the first Somalis tested positive for Covid-19. Police on patrol use megaphones to urge bystanders to keep their distance, and posters in the streets carry government advice about the disease, but few pay attention. “Nothing’s changed here. We can still visit others, and go anywhere we want,” said resident Ali Moallim Nur.

A curfew has proved fruitless in the capital — especially so during Ramadan, a time when Somalis visit one another’s homes in the evening to break their fast together, and pray even more than usual.

Some idling at restaurant­s and cafés have been told to move on but police in the Muslim-majority country are reluctant to target the devout, or punish mosques that remain open for evening prayers, despite the breach of curfew.

“Can you imagine, it is Ramadan, and you are asked not to go to the mosque?” said Abdullahi in disbelief. “Ramadan is all about devotion to Allah and going to his house for prayer. I still perform the prayers, and I understand there is Covid-19, but we pray God will save us from this disease.”

But in Barakat, a Mogadishu suburb, cemetery worker Ali

Maow said the number of burials doubled in April, with sometimes 25 bodies arriving on a single day. “Before this coronaviru­s, it was maybe 10 or 12 a day — you can see the increase. I can’t say if they died because of the virus, but most are elderly,” he said.

Islamic tradition dictates burials should occur within hours of death, making autopsies and other medical testing more difficult.

Mayor Mohamud said as many as 500 unexplaine­d deaths occurred between April 19 and April 29 in Mogadishu, an anomaly city authoritie­s suspect, but cannot prove, is linked to coronaviru­s.

Authoritie­s must also contend with a stigma rife in Somalia that views those wearing face masks in public with suspicion and hostility.

“Hardly anyone is wearing face masks. Those that do are harassed, and called ‘Mr Coronaviru­s’,” said Abdirahman Mohamed Jimale, a Mogadishu resident. “They say ‘you’re sick, get away from me’.”

Mohamed Sharif, a chauffeur for an internatio­nal agency, said he has to wear a face mask at work, but found people outright avoided him or even ran away in his presence. “People are very ignorant [of the disease] here, and that is why most of them are sick without knowing it.”

51 is the official number of coronaviru­s deaths

500 unexplaine­d deaths occurred in Mogadishu between April 19 and April 29

I STILL PERFORM THE PRAYERS, AND I UNDERSTAND THERE IS COVID-19, BUT WE PRAY GOD WILL SAVE US FROM THIS DISEASE

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