Kuwait Times

Church coronaviru­s restrictio­ns hit the African faithful

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LAGOS: Nigerian police with megaphones struggled to keep the faithful in bustling Lagos away from church on Sunday, as worshipper­s in Africa faced tough restrictio­ns aimed at halting the spread of coronaviru­s. “Go home, coronaviru­s is not a joke,” a uniformed officer shouted at a crowd in the tightly-packed slum Makoko. Authoritie­s in the city of around 20 million have limited religious gatherings to no more than 50 people - a miniscule number compared to the thousands who regularly pack out churches.

Tensions rose as worshipper­s clustered at the gate of Makoko’s Celestial Church of Christ only to find policemen handing out fliers on the dangers of the virus blocking their way. “No-one told us that the churches were closed,” shouted Judith, a young woman dressed up in her best Sunday outfit of a sparkling dress. “We want to pray, coronaviru­s is not here - it is the whites who brought it to us.” Florence Uche, a regular at the Methodist Church of the Trinity on Lagos island, said she would not miss the Sunday service for “anything in the world”.

But she still had her temperatur­e taken at the entrance and insisted she was not hugging her fellow worshipper­s any more. “God told me three days ago to spread the word that the spirit of coronaviru­s is dead. We will soon attend its funeral,” she said, brandishin­g a bottle of hand sanitizer. Some 30 kilometers away in neighborin­g Ogun state, thousands of believers flocked to one of Nigeria’s largest Pentecosta­l churches despite similar limitation­s from local authoritie­s.

“Coronaviru­s cannot stop God’s children, but I assure you that the solution will be found this week,” Bishop David Oyedepo told those gathered at the Living Faith World Outreach Ministries. The roughly 10,000 people praying and singing was still far short of the 50,000 that the church can hold as worshipper­s were told to gather in homes and local church branches to follow the service on television. “Our markets are open so there is no way to curb this but only God can save Africa from this pandemic,” the bishop said.

‘For our health’

From Kenya, to South Africa, to Nigeria, authoritie­s across the continent have imposed draconian limits on their deeply religious population­s to curb the rising number of confirmed infections. Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation of some 190 million people, currently has 27 recorded cases, but testing has been limited. Most places of worship were closed in Kinshasa, the chaotic capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo, for the first time in living memory.

“Since we were born we can’t remember anything like this,” Catholic priest Father Michel from the shuttered Notre Dame de Fatima said. “But it is for our own good, for our health.” Services were broadcast over the internet and radio, and donations were made online after religious leaders told citizens to take the new virus as seriously as the Ebola epidemic that has ravaged the country. “It is quite shocking as Sunday is the day dedicated to Jesus,” said 16-year-old high school student Deborah. “But we understand that it is for our own security.”—AFP

 ??  ?? LAGOS: The Apostolic Church headquarte­rs is closed to worshipper­s in compliance with government directive on social gatherings at Ojota in Lagos yesterday. —AFP
LAGOS: The Apostolic Church headquarte­rs is closed to worshipper­s in compliance with government directive on social gatherings at Ojota in Lagos yesterday. —AFP

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