COVID-19: Maldives ‘received Sri Lanka request over burials’

COLOMBO: The Maldives president’s office says it is discussing how to provide a “humane response” to a request from neighboring Sri Lanka to allow burials for Muslims who die of COVID-19, The Associated Press said.

Presidential spokesman Ibrahim Hood said that President Ibrahim Mohammed Solih has received a request from Sri Lanka to look into the possibility of allowing such burials.

“The request has been received. At present we are considering and discussions are ongoing with regard to what would be the appropriate and humane response,” Hood told The Associated Press.

There was no immediate confirmation from Sri Lanka of such a request.

Sri Lanka’s government in March announced it will cremate the bodies of all people who die of COVID-19, saying the coronavirus could contaminate underground water.

Sri Lankan Muslims have urged the government to allow burials, citing their religious beliefs.

They accuse the government of denying Muslims a basic right without scientific grounds, since many countries in the world allow burials, The Associated Press reported.

Sri Lanka’s confirmed cases since March reached 33,477 on Tuesday, including 154 fatalities.

Authorities in Sri Lanka said on Tuesday that more than 3,000 COVID-19 cases have been detected in the country’s highly congested prisons, as infections also surge in Colombo and its suburbs.

They said that 2,984 inmates and 103 guards have been confirmed to have the disease in seven prisons around the country.