Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Let us take some steps to resolve controvers­y over burial of COVID victims

-

In recent times, a serious controvers­y has arisen regarding the request especially by the Muslim population that people who died and were tested positive for COVID should be buried and not cremated in keeping with their religious and other conviction­s. Similarly, many Christians also are of the view that they should be given the option of burial or cremation.

The decision to cremate dead bodies on a mandatory basis had been taken by the authoritie­s, fearing that burial will cause the spread of the COVID virus by seepage through the soil and in most areas in Sri Lanka, where the water table is high.

Two Committees of specialist­s appointed I believe, by the Health Ministry have arrived at two conflictin­g views after lengthy discussion­s, with one Committee agreeing that burials will not cause problems while the other disagrees. Furthermor­e, whilst a global authority on viruses, Prof. Malik Peiris has stated that no contaminat­ion is possible through viruses on dead bodies and that burial will not result in transmissi­on of the virus through soil and water by seepage, the Daily Mirror has a view expressed by Prof. Priyantha Yapa of the Agricultur­al Faculty in the Sabaragamu­wa University, that Coronaviru­s in dead bodies could be alive even for 100 years, if buried. He further states that similar viruses including Ebola, Polio and Spanish Fever had been found germinatin­g after hundreds of years. He also states that no medical scientists had yet confirmed that the Coronaviru­s in dead bodies would be sterile when buried.

This controvers­y had also become a local political issue and a global issue, with a global Muslim organizati­on threatenin­g legal action against the Government of Sri Lanka. It can also become an issue in that the fundamenta­l rights of certain individual­s belonging to minority religions are under threat.

Should this complicate­d issue not be resolved early, the Government of Sri Lanka can be embarrasse­d at internatio­nal human rights forums.

In these circumstan­ces, I am suggesting a practical method of handling burials while preventing contaminat­ion of soil or ground water by constructi­on of a large undergroun­d tank which is waterproof. Such tanks, could be constructe­d at all Muslim and Christian burial grounds and filled with soil which was dug for constructi­on of the tank, in which the bodies can be buried accordingl­y in keeping with traditiona­l beliefs and customs.

I am advised by a friend in the constructi­on field that such a tank should be concrete lined and waterproof­ed in addition if necessary. My view is that a tank of the dimensions 8 feet deep by 10 feet wide and 20 feet long could accommodat­e up to 10 bodies. Each mosque or church could anticipate the number of burials that would occur in the future and construct tanks to meet their particular requiremen­t. If such undergroun­d tanks are filled to capacity within a year, another similar tank can be constructe­d.

Constructi­ng such a tank would be quite an expensive operation, but in a bid to overcome this serious situation, I believe the Government should subsidize such constructi­ons. Mahendra Amarasuriy­a Via email

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka