Gulf News

Lankan who used water to ‘cure’ Covid dies

White claimed he could end pandemic by pouring “blessed” water into rivers

- COLOMBO

Ahigh-profile shaman who tried to end Sri Lanka’s Covid-19 outbreak with “blessed” water has died of the virus, his family said yesterday.

Eliyantha White, 48, who treated sports stars and top politician­s including the country’s prime minister, claimed in November he could end the pandemic in Sri Lanka and neighbouri­ng India by pouring pots of his “blessed” water into rivers.

Health minister Pavithra Wanniarach­chi endorsed the water treatment, but was infected two months later and ended up in a hospital intensive care unit. She was later demoted, and lost her portfolio, but remains in the cabinet.

White attracted internatio­nal attention in 2010 when legendary Indian cricketer Sachin Tendulkar publicly thanked him for treating a knee injury, saying it helped him hit the first-ever one-day internatio­nal double century against South Africa.

In a 2010 interview with AFP, White claimed he had “special powers” since the age of 12.

He has since treated other Indian cricket stars, including Gautam Gambhir and Ashish Nehra.

White’s family said he had refused the Covid-19 vaccine.

His body was cremated at Colombo’s main cemetery yesterday in line with quarantine regulation­s.

Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa, who was among politician­s to have consulted White, said on Twitter: “His legacy will continue to live through all the lives, he touched and healed of various ailments.”

Fraud allegation­s

But mainstream doctors described White as a fraud and Ayurveda physicians rejected his claims - even though the shaman said he used methods from the 3,000-year-old Indian medical tradition.

Sri Lanka’s total coronaviru­s deaths have exceeded 12,000 with more than half a million people infected so far.

Doctors say the real toll is at least twice as high and authoritie­s have resorted to mass cremations to clear bodies piling up at hospitals and morgues.

 ?? Reuters ?? An elderly woman receives a dose of Sinopharm vaccine at ■ her home in Colombo, Sri Lanka.
Reuters An elderly woman receives a dose of Sinopharm vaccine at ■ her home in Colombo, Sri Lanka.

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