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COVID-19: Sri Lanka to allow burials for Muslims following international backlash

By Muhammad Mussa 29 Jm2 42 ◦︎ 11 Feb 21 4 Min Read
Peterpancake / Shutterstock.com

The Sri Lankan government on Wednesday allowed Muslims who have died from COVID-19 the right to be buried after an international outcry over the government’s decision to cremate those who have succumbed to the virus.

Prime minister Malinda Rajapaksa and his right-wing government had made it compulsory for all who died from COVID-19 to be cremated, arguing that the virus would contaminate underground water should bodies be buried, a claim that has no scientific evidence.

Rajapaksa, however, was forced to rescind this policy and give assurances in parliament in response to a question from an MP. Although happy with the decision, Muslim MPs and citizens said the government should now implement this right by withdrawing the cremation policy.

“Many people have been cremated before and their families are living in great agony. I am happy that they showed some compassion even at this stage, but it has to be implemented soon because people are dying every day,” said Muslim MP Rashid Bathiudeen.[1]

The international community strongly criticised Rajapaksa and protested against the policy, arguing that there was no scientific evidence that the virus would contaminate underground water wells, and that the cremation policy disregarded the Islamic beliefs that are strongly held by Sri Lankan Muslims.

The United Nations strongly condemned the cremation policy, with its special rapporteurs urging the Sri Lankan government twice to withdraw its policy that it says “foment existing prejudices, intolerance and violence”.[2]

The world body said that such policies are not only discriminatory, but also amount to human rights violations and prevent people from seeking medical help and advice out of fear of discrimination.

“The imposition of cremation as the only option for handling the bodies confirmed or suspected of COVID-19 amounts to a human rights violation,” [2] the UN said in a statement last month.

“There has been no established medical or scientific evidence in Sri Lanka or other countries that burial of dead bodies leads to increased risk of spreading communicable diseases such as COVID-19,” the statement added.

The Muslim Council of Britain (MCB), the UK’s largest Muslim organisation, also led efforts in pressuring the Sri Lankan government to abandon its discriminatory policy. The MCB helped raise awareness of the plight of Sri Lankan Muslims suffering from COVID-19, and on Monday submitted a formal complaint against the Sri Lankan government to the UN.

“The Muslim Council of Britain (MCB) has submitted a complaint to the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHCR) given the Sri Lankan government’s ongoing policy on forced cremations,”[3] the Muslim body said in a statement.

“We are very concerned that the Sri Lankan government has ignored its own committee’s advice, which allows for the safe burial of the deceased. The Sri Lankan Government policy is unprecedented; no other state has carried out such unjust and discriminatory measures.”

“The forced cremations of Muslim bodies in Sri Lanka are a serious violation of the religious freedom of a minority group. It is a violation of international law to delay returning a family member’s body for burial in a timely way unless there is good reason to do so,” [3] the legal representatives of the MCB said in a statement.

In recent years, the Sri Lankan Muslim community has come under intense discrimination and marginalisation by Rajapkasa’s nationalist government. Although they make up 10% of the Sri Lankan population, Muslim communities have come under increasing hostility by the majority Sinhala Buddhist community.

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Source: www.islam21c.com

Notes:

[1] https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2021/2/10/sri-lanka-allows-first-covid-burial

[2] https://www.ohchr.org/CH/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=26686&LangID=E

[3] https://mcb.org.uk/general/call-on-un/

Muhammad Mussa 29 Jm2 42 ◦︎ 11 Feb 21 29 Jm2 42 ◦︎ 11 Feb 21
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By Muhammad Mussa
Muhammad is a regular news contributor at Islam21c. He has covered stories of international concern, politics, religion, and other areas relevant to Muslims, since 2018. Muhammad holds a bachelor's degree in Politics and International Relations from Kingston University, in addition to a Masters in Politics of the Middle East from the School of Oriental and African Studies.
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