Shanghai Daily

Muslims celebrate a somber Eid

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MUSLIMS around the world began marking a somber Eid al-Fitr yesterday amid rising hostilitie­s between Israel and Palestinia­ns, in the second celebratio­n in the shadow of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The three-day festival, which marks the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan, is traditiona­lly celebrated with mosque prayers, family feasts and shopping for new clothes, gifts and sweets.

But casting a pall on the festival, already subdued due to the raging pandemic, was deadly violence between Israel and Palestinia­ns, with fears growing that it could spiral into full-blown conflict.

Tensions have soared over Israel’s planned eviction of Palestinia­ns from a district in annexed east Jerusalem, which the Jewish state sees as part of its eternal capital but is considered occupied by the United Nations. Israel yesterday scrambled to quell riots between Arabs and Jews on its own streets after days of exchanging deadly fire with Palestinia­n militants in Gaza.

In Gaza, 83 people have been killed so far, including 17 children, and more than 480 wounded in days of relentless Israeli air strikes on the crowded coastal enclave.

Echoing the mood in much of the Muslim world, Saudi Arabia’s King Salman voiced scathing criticism of Israel in a phone call on Wednesday with Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan on the occasion of Eid.

The king “stressed Saudi Arabia’s strong condemnati­on of the Israeli measures in Jerusalem and the acts of violence carried out by Israel... (and) affirmed that the kingdom stands by the Palestinia­n people,” the official Saudi Press Agency reported.

State media broadcast images of King Salman, 85, performing

Eid prayers in the planned megacity of Neom in northweste­rn Saudi Arabia.

Mask-clad worshipper­s entered the Grand Mosque in the holy city of Mecca along socially distanced paths to pray before the Kaaba, a cubeshaped structure sacred to Muslims.

The scene was in contrast to Eid last year, when mosques in Saudi Arabia, home to Islam’s holiest sites, were largely devoid of worshipper­s and sermons were banned due to strict coronaviru­s curbs.

The Prophet’s Mosque in the holy city of Medina separately announced its “complete readiness” to receive worshipper­s for Eid prayers, state media reported.

In Afghanista­n, a three-day Eid cease-fire agreed by the warring Taliban and government came into force, offering a glimmer of hope to warweary Afghans after weeks of deadly violence. Fighting has intensifie­d since the United States missed a May 1 deadline, agreed with the Taliban last year, to withdraw all of its troops.

“I feel so relaxed and peaceful today because it is Eid and there is no fighting,” said Mirajuddin, who was visiting Kabul zoo with his five children, all dressed in new clothes.

In Iran, supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was set to pardon or commute the jail sentences of more than 2,000 convicted prisoners for Eid, according to his website.

Worshipper­s wearing masks joined communal prayers in the streets of Indonesia’s capital, Jakarta. The world’s most populous Muslim-majority nation allowed mosque prayers in low-risk areas, but mosques in areas where there was more risk of the virus spreading closed their doors.

 ??  ?? Muslim women blow up balloons for the Eid al-Fitr holiday, which marks the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan, after the morning prayer at the al-Aqsa mosque compound, with the Dome of the Rock in the background, in Old Jerusalem yesterday. — AFP
Muslim women blow up balloons for the Eid al-Fitr holiday, which marks the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan, after the morning prayer at the al-Aqsa mosque compound, with the Dome of the Rock in the background, in Old Jerusalem yesterday. — AFP

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