Business Day

Dangerous job of digging graves in Jakarta

- Agency Staff Jakarta /AFP

Gravedigge­r Junaidi Hakim shouts “hurry up” as he summons his weary colleagues in a neverendin­g race to bury coronaviru­s victims at a Jakarta cemetery.

The team switches quickly from digging fresh graves to burying the bodies, aiming to get the task done in under 10 minutes to lessen the chance of getting infected themselves.

“The most worrying part is when we’re unloading a coffin because we have to touch it,” says 42-year-old Hakim, a father of four. “We feel a bit relieved after it’s buried.”

The 50 gravedigge­rs at Pondok Ranggon cemetery — one of two earmarked for Covid-19 victims in the Indonesian capital — are working up to 15 hours a day, seven days a week. They dig at least 20 fresh graves daily, marked with white wooden poles that list the name, birth date and day the person died.

But they can hardly keep up with the influx of confirmed and suspected virus victims.

“The ambulances never stop bringing us bodies,” says Hakim.

The team struggles to keep up in the searing tropical heat, with sobbing relatives never far away. Families are urged not to linger, robbing them of the chance to perform prayers for loved ones.

“My heart breaks seeing those crying families,” says Minar, 54, who like many Indonesian­s goes by one name. “I’ve been digging graves for 33 years now and I’ve never been this tired before.”

The challenges are compounded in the fasting month of Ramadan when many in Indonesia, the world’s biggest Muslim-majority nation, do not eat or drink in daylight hours.

Naman Suherman says he is able to overcome gnawing thirst and hunger in the belief he is doing something “noble” for victims whose covered burial pits are sprinkled with pink flowers. “What strengthen­s my faith on this job is knowing that I can help take the deceased to their final resting place,” the 55year-old gravedigge­r says.

How many people the virus has claimed across the Southeast Asian archipelag­o of more than 260-million is unclear. An official death toll of 1,191 by Monday is believed to be well below reality, and Indonesia has one of the world’s lowest testing rates.

Government officials acknowledg­e data is patchy and incomplete.

At least 2,107 people have been buried under Covid-19 safety protocols in epicentre Jakarta alone, nearly double the reported national toll.

Other cities have also seen unusually high burial figures in recent months, suggesting even more victims.

Volunteer database KawalCovid-19, which was created by health and technology profession­als, has estimated there have been more than 3,000 virus deaths in just 16 of the country’s 34 provinces.

That would be no surprise for the gravedigge­rs at Pondok Ranggon cemetery who have seen their workload soar. But most did not know the risks, at first burying virus victims without protective equipment.

“Initially, none of us knew about coronaviru­s,” said Minar. “We didn’t know what this disease was like until I learnt from the television news that it was infectious. The next day I rushed to buy my own face mask. Several days later we started getting personal protective equipment.”

Despite those precaution­s, gravedigge­r Hakim says neighbours suddenly started keeping a wide berth since the first cases appeared in March. “Though they don’t say it out loud, I can feel they’re keeping a distance,” he says. “Like they’re afraid of me.”

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