Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Muslims to raise concerns over Iranaithiv­u burial with global bodies

Senior Muslim officials said they were disappoint­ed at the government’s decision to allocate the Iranaitivu Isle for the burials

- BY JAMILA HUSAIN

A leading Muslim organisati­on in Sri Lanka will this week send an official letter of concern to the global Organizati­on of Islamic Cooperatio­n and the World Muslim Congress, seeking their interventi­on to urge the Sri Lankan government to allocate a decent land for the burial of Muslim COVID-19 victims.

The Daily Mirror learns that the Sri Lanka Islamic Centre, which is a member of the World Muslim Congress will raise serious concerns with the global bodies and will also send a letter to the World Muslim Congress office in Geneva urging for immediate interventi­on after the government announced that burials of the COVID-19 dead would take place on the Iranaithiv­u Island, in the Gulf of Mannar.

Senior Muslim officials said they were disappoint­ed at the government’s decision to allocate the Iranaithiv­u Isle for the burials and instead urged the government to find a suitable land elsewhere in the country.

The Daily Mirror learns that two lands have been proposed by the Muslim community - the Kupiyawatt­a burial grounds in Colombo and a five acre land in Mannar, in the north which belongs to a local mosque in the area, where ground water level reports have been carried out by the Geologists from the Department of Geology from the University of Peradeniya.

When questioned, a senior geologist from the Geology Department of the Peradeniya University confirmed that ground water level reports had been carried out on both the lands and the proposed land in Mannar was found to have low water levels.

Senior Muslim officials said the proposed land in Mannar was ready to undertake burials of the COVID19 dead immediatel­y and were concerned why these requests were ignored by the health authoritie­s who were notified.

Meanwhile Minister of Water Supply, Vasudeva Nanayakkar­a told Daily Mirror that according to his knowledge, he was not aware of any feasibilit­y report carried out on the Iranaithiv­u Island to bury COVID-19 dead but said he had proposed two more lands, one in the North and another in the East which had low water levels and was suitable to bury the COVID19 dead. He said he had handed over these recommenda­tions to the expert committee for them to decide.

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