Bangkok Post

Coronaviru­s measures hit Friday turnout in Mecca

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>>RIYADH: An eerie emptiness enveloped the sacred Kaaba in Mecca’s Grand Mosque, Islam’s holiest site, where attendance at Friday prayers was hit by measures to protect against the deadly new coronaviru­s.

An imam said during his sermon he hoped for an end to the epidemic and backed a decision by Saudi Arabia’s government to halt the year-round umrah pilgrimage.

“God, I seek refuge in you from the calamity and the epidemic,” said Sheikh Abdullah Awad al-Juhani, without mentioning coronaviru­s by name.

“The measures by the kingdom to suspend umrah to limit the spread of this epidemic are in line with texts of the Sharia,” he told worshipper­s.

While thousands of people attended the sermon, Friday prayers usually attracts hundreds of thousands of worshipper­s.

“I had a very strange and difficult feeling as I was headed to the mosque,” an Egyptian worshipper, who has lived in Mecca for six years but did not want to give his name said.

“I felt deprived of the Kaaba,” he said, referring to the cube structure that is the focal point of Islam and draped in a gold-embroidere­d black cloth.

“The fact that it is empty (around the Kaaba) is very scary,” the 38-year-old engineer said.

The white tiles surroundin­g this focal point, at the heart of the Grand Mosque and around which Muslims circle in pilgrimage, were untrodden on Friday.

Authoritie­s had already emptied the Grand Mosque for sterilisat­ion on Thursday, after announcing the halt to the umrah.

Friday “prayers took place inside the mosque and on the upper floors but not in the tawaf area” where people circle the Kaaba, a mosque authority said.

Nearly half of the mosque’s area was closed, he added.

The area around the Kaaba will remain closed for the duration of the umrah suspension as a “precaution­ary measure”, but prayers inside the mosque will continue, the state-run Saudi Press Agency (SPA) said in a statement.

Additional­ly, both the Grand Mosque and the Prophet’s Mosque in the Muslim holy city of Medina will be closed an hour after the evening “Isha” prayer to allow cleaning and sterilisat­ion, it added.

The mosques will reopen an hour before the dawn “Fajr” prayer.

The moves come after authoritie­s last week suspended visas for the umrah and barred citizens from the six-nation Gulf Cooperatio­n Council from entering Mecca and Medina.

The umrah, the Islamic pilgrimage to Mecca that can be undertaken at any time of year, attracts millions of Muslims from across the globe every year.

Saudi Arabia on Thursday declared three new coronaviru­s cases, bringing the total number of reported infections to five.

 ??  ?? NOT A SOUL IN SIGHT: An aerial view shows the empty white-tiled area surroundin­g the Kaaba in Mecca’s Grand Mosque on Friday.
NOT A SOUL IN SIGHT: An aerial view shows the empty white-tiled area surroundin­g the Kaaba in Mecca’s Grand Mosque on Friday.

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