Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

FROM MALDIVES TO IRANAITIVU .... VIA ERAGAMA AND MARICHCHIK­ATTU

- By M. S. M. Ayub

OIC Secretary General Yousef Al Othaimeen said OIC is “concerned with the situation of Muslims in Sri Lanka as they are denied the right to burial, according to their faith”

Muslims in Sri Lanka have been agitating against the government’s policy of mandatory cremation of cadavers of those who die of COVID-19 since March 31 last year when the government decided not to allow burial for COVID-19 victims

When President Gotabaya Rajapaksa on November 10 instructed the officials to find a dry land to burry bodies of those who die of COVID19, pro-government media and monks protested against burial of such bodies. It must also be noted that the President gave the instructio­ns while the government was claiming that health officials had not given the green light to bury COVID19 victims.

A month later, on December 10 - incidental­ly on the Internatio­nal Human Rights Day - Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa also instructed the health officials to find a dry land for the same purpose. Accordingl­y, Water Supply Minister Vasudeva Nanayakkar­a said on December 27 that geologists of his ministry had found two areas – Eragama in Ampara District and Marichchik­attu in Mannar District – where ground water cannot be found even at a depth of 30 feet even during the rainy season.

Then again the pro-government media in the guise of giving opportunit­y for all relevant views became a forum for the anti-burial groups. A group of leading monks walked in procession to the Presidenti­al Secretaria­t in Galle Face to hand over a letter to the President condemning the government’s apparent decision to allow burial. However, there was no such decision then. When the Prime Minister told Parliament on February 10 that the government would allow burial again protests emerged even belittling him.

Neverthele­ss, when the Health Minister Pavithra Wanniarach­chi in fact issued the gazette notificati­on on February 25 allowing both cremation and burial as methods of disposal of cadavers of COVID-19 victims, against the backdrop of the UNHRC preparing to adopt another resolution on Sri Lanka, surprising­ly no protests were seen or heard.

Could this happen? Then how did this happen? Were the opposing groups – all at once – scientific­ally enlightene­d by some divine power that the coronaviru­s is not waterborne and therefore the possibilit­y of COVID-19 spreading by burial of dead bodies is extremely remote? That was impossible. But it is justifiabl­e if one concluded that it was the government leaders who had quieted them. If so, one could further go on to conclude that it was the same leaders who had been behind the protests against the burial thus far.

It must be remembered that in a similar pattern, all the anti-muslim media bombardmen­ts that followed the Easter Sunday terrorist attacks in 2019 had subsided miraculous­ly during the Presidenti­al election in the same year. Dr. Shafi Shihabdeen, Rishad Bathiudeen, Madrasas, Quazi Courts and many other issues that had been the main topics for the media and the politician­s affiliated to the SLPP vanished in a flash.

Muslims in Sri Lanka have been agitating against the government’s policy of mandatory cremation of cadavers of those die of COVID-19 since March 31 last year when the government decided not to allow burial for COVID-19 victims. These agitations have been continuing while the United Nations, the Organizati­on of Islamic Cooperatio­n (OIC) and the internatio­nal human rights organizati­ons such as Amnesty Internatio­nal (AI) have been making representa­tions to the Sri Lankan authoritie­s to allow burial also as a method of disposal of bodies of COVID-19 victims.

Another point to realize the politics behind this controvers­y is that at least not a murmur was heard against the first guideline on the issue on March 27 last year by the Health Ministry which allowed both cremation and burial. However, going against the guidelines of the World Health Organizati­on (WHO), the authoritie­s changed the local guidelines in three days, banning burial. Government Medical Officers’ Associatio­n (GMOA) on April 3 had written to the DGHS suggesting reviewing the decision on mandatory cremation.

On April 2, President’s Counsel Ali Sabry, a strong loyalist of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa spoke in support of burial during a televised interview. There was a weird silence on the matter then apparently because all these views were expressed by the people of “our camp.”

It was interestin­g to note that the Muslims who went all the way to Geneva in 2012 to bail out the Sri Lankan government from the allegation­s of human rights violations at the UNHRC had to plead with the same UNHRC to protect their human rights in respect of funeral rights from the same government.

United Nations High Commission­er for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet in her report had criticized the Sri Lankan government for imposing mandatory cremation on Muslim COVID-19 victims. The Organizati­on of Islamic Cooperatio­n (OIC) which comprises 57 member states raised the issue of Sri Lanka’s COVID-19 cremations at the 46th UNHRC sessions in Geneva on February 23. Speaking at the sixth meeting of the high level segment of the session, OIC Secretary General

Yousef Al Othaimeen said the OIC is “concerned with the situation of Muslims in Sri Lanka as they are denied the right to burial,” according to their faith.

Three days after this, on February 26, Sri Lankan authoritie­s who were dragging their feet on the matter for nearly 11 months allowed burial for COVID-19 victims. And then they announced that these burials would take place in Iranaithiv­u, an island in the Gulf of Mannar, which is situated 20 km from the mainland in Kilinochch­i District. That decision has also run into controvers­y as both Muslims as well as Tamils have opposed the idea. It is not clear as to why the authoritie­s ignored the findings of the geologists of the Water Supply Ministry.

The decision to bury bodies in Iranaithiv­u reminds us the Aesop’s fable on the dinner hosted by the fox to the stork where the former served soup in a flat dish and all the stork could do was to wet the very tip of its bill.

First they approved burial and then banned it. Then the President instructed the officials to search a dry land for the burial which was forgotten amidst protests. Again the Prime Minister gave the same instructio­n which was also ended up in the trash bin due to the same reason, despite the Water Supply Ministry having identified two locations. Health Ministry appointed two committees of experts headed by Consultant Judicial Medical Officer and Forensic Pathologis­t, Dr. Channa Perera and Senior Professor in Microbiolo­gy and former Dean of the Colombo Medical Faculty, Prof. Jennifer Perera to decide on the matter. The first committee held the view that only cremation could be allowed whereas the other committee approved both options. Those conflictin­g views further delayed a final decision.

Then it was reported in December that the President had requested the Maldivian government to facilitate funeral rites of Sri Lankan Muslims in the Maldives, which was also forgotten amidst criticism. A former official of the Maldives described his country in his twitter account then as “Islamic Republic of Kabrusthan” (Cemetery). Did the President select the Maldives as it is a Muslim country? Now they are trying to transport the bodies to Iranaithiv­u ignoring Eragama and Marichchik­attu, two areas considerab­ly populated by Muslims from where one cannot expect protests, while claiming that this is a temporary measure.

Sri Lankan authoritie­s’ fear about coronaviru­s seems to be selective. When politician­s go to villages people throng the place in large numbers without maintain the health instructio­ns including the “social distance.” It is also a well-known fact that the number of PCR tests conducted daily is far below the requiremen­t. There is a sharp drop of reported COVID-19 cases for the past few days and the GMOA attributes it to the drasticall­y reduced number of tests. The Colombo Mayoress told a few weeks ago that 249 out of 971 (25%) tests conducted in Colombo had given positive results. Going by that ratio one has to surmise that there must be at least 150,000 COVID-19 patients mingling among others in the city. But the authoritie­s are planning to take the bodies of COVID-19 victims to the Maldives and Iranaithiv­u. All these things taking place while the entire world is watching.

United Nations High Commission­er for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet in her report had criticized the Sri Lankan government for imposing mandatory cremation on Muslim COVID-19 victims

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