Anger as Muslim Covid victims in Sri Lanka are cremated against wishes
MUSLIMS in the UK whose family members in Sri Lanka have been cremated because they died of Covid-19-related causes have complained to the UN Human Rights Committee (UNHRC) that enforced cremation breaches their religious rights, Al Jazeera has reported.
Muslims were calling for the immediate suspension of the practice, because according to Islam, the dead should be buried.
Sri Lanka, where most people are Buddhist, made cremation mandatory last March for people who die, or are suspected to have died, from the coronavirus.
The Muslim group alleges that international and Sri Lankan medical experts say there is no evidence that Covid-19 is communicable from dead bodies, the Guardian reported.
The UK publication said the United Nations had reached out to the Sri Lankan government – in April last year and January this year – urging it to respect the wishes of those who sought burial, and to recognise that the disregard of Muslims’ feelings may lead to their not presenting bodies for cremation. Al Jazeera cited Zara Mohammed, the secretary-general of the Muslim Council of Britain, as describing the country’s cremation policy as unprecedented.
“No other state has carried out such unjust and discriminatory measures,” she said.
“We very much hope that the Sri Lankan government will change its policy in line with the World Health Organization’s advice.”
Tayab Ali, a lawyer at Bindmans who represents the Muslim Council of Britain and the families, said the practice was heartless.
“Our clients were already suffering from the distress of losing a family member to Covid.
“It is truly heartless for the Sri Lankan government to add to that distress by unnecessarily forcing the bodies of loved ones to be cremated,” Ali said.
It is alleged that as many as 200 Muslims have been cremated in Sri Lanka.
In January a Sri Lankan expert committee accepted that burial was permissible, but the government took no action.
CHINA’S participation in the World Health Organization (WHO)-led Covax alliance shows China’s concrete commitment to the equitable distribution of coronavirus vaccines. Delivering on the promise of making the Covid-19 vaccine a global public good, China has pledged 10 million doses to Covax.
In his address to the World Economic Forum in January, President Cyril Ramaphosa stressed the need for a collaborative effort to combat the scourge of the virus, which has cost the lives of more than two million people globally.
“We are deeply concerned about the problem of ‘vaccine nationalism’, which, unless addressed, will endanger the recovery of all countries. Ending the pandemic worldwide will require greater collaboration on the roll out of vaccines, ensuring that no country is left behind in this effort,” Ramaphosa said.
Chinese President Xi Jinping and Ramaphosa were in early communication with each other, and jointly initiated the extraordinary China-Africa summit on solidarity against Covid-19.
This solidarity will require a multi-year commitment as the virus will not disappear tomorrow, because it has the ability to mutate and so combat the vaccines that medical science uses to defeat it. People around the world are hoping that an effective Covid-19 vaccine will allow economic activity to return to normal.
At least seven vaccines against the coronavirus that causes Covid-19 have won approval for public or emergency use in several countries, with Russia winning the global race to get regulatory approval for a vaccine with its Sputnik V vaccine.
Depending on the different technologies used, the effectiveness of the available vaccines ranges between 50% and 95%, based on clinical trials, some of which have also been conducted in South Africa.
Although there remain intellectual disputes over what analytical approach works best and how will the vaccines protect in mass inoculation drives, all of the approved vaccines have outperformed the WHO’s efficacy requirement.
On February 3, humanity reached an important milestone as the number of humans inoculated against the virus exceeded the number of confirmed cases.
The novel coronavirus that causes Covid-19 won’t just disappear by itself despite claims by former US president Donald Trump in March that this would happen soon, so people must learn to coexist with it, according to qualified health experts.
Effective vaccines and adequate inoculation will be the only way to stop the pandemic and prevent societies from being paralysed again by the virus, which is why China’s support for the Covax programme is important as many African countries lack the financial resources to buy the vaccines from the pharmaceutical companies.
Sinovac Biotech said on February 6 that its Covid-19 vaccine had been formally approved for use by the general public by China's medical products regulator. It marks the second Covid19 vaccine approved for public use in China, after a vaccine developed by a Beijing institute affiliated to stateowned China National Pharmaceutical Group (Sinopharm) was approved in December.
Both vaccines have been used in China’s vaccination programme mainly targeting key groups deemed to be at higher risk of exposure to the virus. Indonesia, Turkey, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Uruguay and Laos have granted emergency authorisation for the CoronaVac vaccine developed by Sinovac.
Approval of the two-dose regimen by China's national medical products administration is based on the results from two months of late-stage clinical trials overseas. Sinovac aims to produce more than one billion doses per year.
Sinovac's vaccine is being tested in Phase III clinical trials in countries including Brazil, Turkey and Indonesia. The Brazil trial found that the vaccine was 83.7% effective against the disease that requires medical treatment, and 100% effective against hospitalisation, severe cases and death.
When Covid-19 took hold early last year, Chinese scientists immediately got to work and shared the gene sequence of the novel coronavirus in a matter of days.
Covax is preparing to deliver two billion doses this year around the world. This unprecedented undertaking has been made possible only through international co-operation as various parties brought their skills to the effort.
Collaboration will benefit African countries as they seek to improve the lives of all their citizens and leave the deprivations of last year behind them.