Eastern Eye (UK)

Muslims enraged as Covid victims forcibly cremated

PROTESTS MOUNT AFTER SRI LANKA IGNORES ISLAMIC FUNERAL RITES

-

OUTRAGE is mounting in Sri Lanka after at least 15 Muslim coronaviru­s victims, including a baby, were cremated against family wishes and in contravent­ion of Islamic funeral rites.

Health authoritie­s in Buddhist-majority Sri Lanka insist all victims must be cremated – even if they are Muslims, who traditiona­lly bury their dead facing Mecca.

As local and internatio­nal protests escalated, neighbouri­ng Maldives said it was considerin­g a request to bury Sri Lankan Muslims in the archipelag­o.

President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih was consulting his officials to “assist Sri Lanka in facilitati­ng Islamic funeral rites in the Maldives for Sri Lankan Muslims succumbing to Covid-19 pandemic,” Maldives foreign minister Abdulla Shaheed tweeted.

The 57-member Organisati­on of Islamic Cooperatio­n expressed concern over the cremation order and called for Sri Lankan Muslims to be allowed to bury family members in line with their religious beliefs. “Against this practice, forbidden under Islam, the OIC calls for respect to funeral rites in the Islamic faith,” it stated.

The cremation order issued in April came amid alarm raised by influentia­l Buddhist monks that burying bodies could contaminat­e groundwate­r and spread the virus.

After the families of 19 Muslims refused to claim the bodies of relatives from a Colombo morgue, last week, the attorney general ordered their remains cremated. So far at least 15 have been cremated, including a 20-dayold named Shaykh and despite the pleas of his parents.

The family said they were bullied into agreeing to a cremation, but when they stood their ground the authoritie­s conducted a forced cremation without the participat­ion of any relative.

The image of a sleeping baby Shaykh has become a symbol for what Sri Lanka’s Muslim community as well as moderates consider cruel and inhuman treatment of the Muslim coronaviru­s victims.

Former Muslim legislator Ali Zahir Moulana questioned the cremation of an infant. “I am beyond disgusted and heartbroke­n! How much more cruelty and barbarity must we endure?! #StopForced­Cremations,” Moulana said on Twitter while sharing the infant’s photo.

Over the weekend, members of the public tied thousands of white ribbons to the gates of the cemetery housing the crematoriu­m, which authoritie­s removed on Monday (14) morning. This added to the dismay online. “The ghouls of Kanatte (cemetery) have removed overnight the white handkerchi­efs tied in memory of the infant who was cremated forcibly against the wishes of the parents,” former foreign minister Mangala maraweera said on Twitter.

The island nation has experience­d a surge in Covid-19 cases since October, with the number of infections increasing almost 10-fold to total more than 32,790 cases and 152 deaths.

According to the Sri Lanka Muslim Council, a majority of the country’s coronaviru­s victims follow Islam despite them making up just 10 per cent of the 21 million population.

Council spokesman Hilmy Ahamed said Muslims feared seeking medical help as they did not want to be cremated if they died.

The World Health Organizati­on also says burials should be permitted if carried out with precaution­s. There have been ongoing tensions between Muslims and the majority Sinhalese – who are mostly Buddhists – since the deadly 2019 Easter bombings carried out by local jihadists.

Sa

 ??  ?? CONTROVERS­Y: Municipal workers carry the coffin of an unclaimed body of a coronaviru­s victim to a crematoriu­m in Colombo last Thursday (10)
CONTROVERS­Y: Municipal workers carry the coffin of an unclaimed body of a coronaviru­s victim to a crematoriu­m in Colombo last Thursday (10)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom