Bangkok Post

JAKARTA GRAVEDIGGE­RS STRESSED AS COVID BURIALS SURGE

- By Heru Asprihanto and Stanley Widianto in Jakarta

Gravedigge­r Junaedi Bin Hakim toils until nearly midnight almost every day in a Jakarta cemetery, preparing plots for fellow Indonesian­s amid a renewed spike in coronaviru­s burials.

“I am worried and scared but this is part of my job and responsibi­lities,” said 43-year-old Junaedi, who prior to the global pandemic routinely left work at 4pm to spend time with his young family.

Jakarta has been the epicentre of the outbreak in Indonesia, where authoritie­s have struggled for months to contain the virus. The country has reported more than 250,000 cases, including 10,000 deaths, the most in Southeast Asia.

Unlike many other Asian capitals, Jakarta authoritie­s did not impose a strict lockdown, opting for more calibrated social restrictio­ns, an approach that some health experts have said was too lax.

After an initial surge at the start of the pandemic, burials in Jakarta dropped to around 20 to 30 on average per day in July and August. But they shot up in September to as many as 60 or more per day, data from the city government showed.

As ambulances carrying victims snaked around the entrance of the Pondok Ranggon cemetery, Junaedi said it could be full within two months at the current rate.

“Usually, we bury around 10 people every day. But for the last few days, when we handle Covid-19 burials, it has reached an average of 30 per day,” he said.

Jakarta Governor Anies Baswedan said more land had been earmarked in case that happens.

The number of deaths across Indonesia averaged 114 per day in the third week of September, up from 64 a month ago, according to a Reuters tally based on official data.

Baswedan said in an interview earlier this month that while not all burials were definitely Covid-19 patients, “I don’t see any other disease going on in our city”.

Baswedan said the rise in funerals, along with strain on the city’s healthcare system, were the reasons why he reinstated social restrictio­ns, which prohibit working from offices except for essential businesses, as well as limit the capacity of public transport and places of worship.

“We had never experience­d this kind of jump,” he said. “That’s why … we decided to pull the brake.”

For Junaedi’s wife, Karlina, her husband’s work is a source of fear for her small children, despite the health protocols being followed for burials.

“I still have two children at home, so definitely I’m scared and worried,” she said.

 ??  ?? Gravedigge­r Junaedi Bin Hakim, 43, leaves his house to go to work at the Pondok Ranggon cemetery complex.
Gravedigge­r Junaedi Bin Hakim, 43, leaves his house to go to work at the Pondok Ranggon cemetery complex.
 ??  ?? Workers wearing protective suits bury a coffin in the Muslim burial area provided for victims of the coronaviru­s disease at Pondok Ranggon cemetery in Jakarta.
Workers wearing protective suits bury a coffin in the Muslim burial area provided for victims of the coronaviru­s disease at Pondok Ranggon cemetery in Jakarta.
 ??  ?? A worker walks through the Christian burial area for those who have died of Covid-19 at Pondok Ranggon cemetery.
A worker walks through the Christian burial area for those who have died of Covid-19 at Pondok Ranggon cemetery.

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