Coronavirus
Islamic scholar who called ‘coronavirus’ God’s punishment to China gets infected
Ayatollah Sayed Hadi al-Modaressi, a native of Iraq’s holy Karbala city, is currently being treated under quarantine and is recovering, his office and family members said.
“My uncle, may God protect him, is being treated and his health is consistently progressing,” his nephew Mohsen Almodaressi said in a Facebook post, warning against those who spread rumours.
Recall that the Islamic scholar said that coronavirus was God’s punishment, specifically against China, for the government accusing Muslims.
See what he said;
“It is obvious that the spread of this virus is an act of Allah. How do we know this? The spread of the coronavirus began in China, an ancient and vast country, the population of which makes up one seventh of humanity. More than a billion people live in that country.
The authorities in that country are tyrannical and they laid siege to more than a million Muslims and placed them under house arrest. The journalists in that country began to mock the niqab of Muslim women and they forced Muslim men to eat pork and drink wine.
Allah sent a disease upon them and this disease laid siege to 40 million [Chinese people]. The same niqab that they mocked has been forced upon them, both men and women, by Allah, by means of the state authorities and officials.
“Islam forbade people from eating insects, but [the Chinese] mocked this matter. And there you have it, this disease spread from the world of animals – be it bats, ants, or snakes, the result is the same – to the human world and it has scared humanity in its entirety.”
The announcement of his diagnosis comes as Iraq’s health ministry on Saturday confirmed an increase in the number of people infected with the coronavirus to 55.
At least four of those diagnosed with the novel virus have died while four others have recovered, according to authorities.
Iraq on Friday evening announced further measures to contain the novel coronavirus after representatives of Iraq’s top Shia cleric took the rare step of not delivering his weekly sermon to worshippers.
The Iraqi government’s crisis unit said shopping centres will only open three hours a day, schools and universities will be closed until March 21, and public administrations will only open for a few hours a day, effective immediately.
Foreign nationals arriving from France and Spain will be denied entry.
Authorities had already closed the borders with neighbouring Iran, which has seen the world’s second-deadliest outbreak and banned the entry of foreign nationals travelling from there and other badly affected countries.
Schools, universities, cinemas and other public spaces had been closed for the past week, but restaurants, malls and cafes have remained open.
READ ALSO: Spain’s equality minister tests positive for Coronavirus
On Friday, representatives who usually read Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani’s address at a packed mosque, broadcast live on state television, did not appear.
Religious authorities had already closed the shrine of Imam Hussein, grandson of the Prophet Mohammed, where his sermon is usually delivered, to mitigate the risk of contagion.
The 89-year-old Sistani is based in the Shia holy city of Najaf, south of Karbala, and never appears in public.
An official at the site in the holy city of Karbala told AFP that “the cancellation of Friday prayers at the Imam Hussein shrine is a first since 2003”, the year an American-led invasion toppled veteran dictator Saddam Hussein.
Sources close to Sistani’s office confirmed the unprecedented nature of the decision.
Authorities are particularly worried about coronavirus spreading via Shia holy sites, which attract millions of pilgrims including many from Iran.
Provincial authorities have barred non-residents from entering Karbala province from Friday.
Sistani had dedicated part of his last two sermons to the health situation in the country of 40 million.
The virus has fuelled panic among Iraqis who say the war-ravaged country’s health system cannot handle the epidemic.
The COVID-19 was first detected in China in early December but has since spread across much of the world. Worldwide, more than 100,000 cases have been confirmed and the death toll stands at 3,600.
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