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Malaysia says Islamic event linked to virus cases, days after 250,000 gathered in Pakistan

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KUALA LUMPUR: Over half of Malaysia's 428 cases of coronavirus were linked to an international Islamic gathering held last month, its health ministry said Sunday, just two days after hundreds of thousands of worshippers gathered for the annual Tablighi Ijtema congregation in eastern Pakistan.

The Southeast Asian nation announced a spike of 190 new infections over the weekend, mostly linked to a global Islamic event attended by almost 20,000 people. "Of the 428 cases, 243 are participants from the religious event in Sri Petaling mosque," Noor Hisham Abdullah, the director-general of the health ministry, told AFP.

Authorities said participants at the gathering — from February 27 to March 1 — came from Bangladesh, Brunei, the Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand. Around 14,500 of the participants were Malaysian.

Brunei reported 10 new cases on Saturday, raising the total to 50, most in people who attended the Malaysia gathering. Singapore has also announced cases linked to the event.

On Friday, Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin warned Malaysia of a second wave of infections spread and urged people to avoid mass gatherings.
250,000 pilgrims in Pakistan despite virus warnings
Ahmad Farouk, a lecturer at Monash University, told AFP that authorities should shut down mosques for at least two weeks to contain the spread of the virus.

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Islamic worshippers board a truck before their departure from the annual Tablighi Ijtema religious gathering in Raiwind on the outskirts of Lahore, Pakistan, March 13, 2020. AFP/Arif Ali


At 250,000 people had congregated in camps near Lahore since Wednesday earlier this week for the annual, five-day Tablighi Ijtema congregation, ignoring government warnings that such events could propagate the novel coronavirus pandemic.

However, organisers late Thursday had to curtail the annual event — which had drawn people from across the country — but cited rainy weather as the cause for the early closure.

"Most of the people have returned to their homes but still tens of thousands of people are here. They will return today," one of the event's organisers Ehsanullah, who goes by one name, told AFP on Friday.

'Proceed as planned'
Organisers of the Tablighi Ijtema seemed to ignore government advice to postpone, with Ehsanullah saying: "The government asked us to cancel the gathering because of the coronavirus but our elders and organisers decided that the gathering will proceed as planned."

The movement was founded by religious scholars more than five decades ago and focuses exclusively on preaching Islam.

It usually sees hundreds of camps and sub-camps set up on a dusty site outside Lahore to accommodate people from across Pakistan, giving the gathering a festival feel.

277450_7395496_updates.jpg

Islamic worshippers board a truck before their departure from the annual Tablighi Ijtema religious gathering in Raiwind on the outskirts of Lahore, Pakistan, March 13, 2020. AFP/Arif Ali

Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi on Friday, however, had asked people not to worry. "Thank God, the coronavirus pandemic is under control in Pakistan," he had said.

"The border needs to be closed for the next 15 days. The days of the Raiwind gathering have been reduced and Punjab Chief Minister Usman Buzdar informed that arrangements have been made in Dera Ghazi Khan," the foreign minister had said.

Punjab reports first case, Sindh confirms 18
Punjab reported its first case of coronavirus earlier today (Sunday) almost 20 days after Pakistan reported the first two cases in Sindh on February 26. The provincial chief secretary also announced that section 144 had been imposed for at least three weeks after new cases were reported in the country.

The pandemic — which originated in the Chinese city of Wuhan on December 1, 2019 — has so far infected 53 confirmed cases in Pakistan but there have been no deaths as officials have tested fewer than 500 potential cases in the country of about 215 million, where health care is frequently inadequate.

Sindh's tally rose to 35 on Sunday, as 13 new cases were confirmed in Sukkur and another five in Karachi. One case was also reported from Islamabad.

Balochistan has at least 10 cases and Gilgit-Baltistan has three. Khyber Pakhtunkhwa has yet to report a case.

Among cities, Karachi remains the worst-affected city with a total of 22 cases. Of the rest, Islamabad has four, whereas Quetta and Hyderabad have one each.

Seven people were kept under quarantine in Taftan.

Public gatherings banned globally
Many countries are advising against large gatherings in a bid to slow the spread of the highly communicable virus. Some nations — like France and Italy — have banned them altogether.

The federal government has issued orders for closure of Pakistan's western borders with Iran and Afghanistan but provinces were also forced to act independently, banning public gatherings and shutting down schools.

Schools in three of Pakistan's four provinces are closed for March and authorities are conducting basic screenings of passengers arriving by air from overseas. Sindh said its schools would reopen in June, effectively terming the closure as 'summer vacations'.


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https://www.geo.tv/latest/277450-ma...-cases-days-after-250000-gathered-in-pakistan

A very careless nations....all are equally responsible. Malaysia should have controlled its national not to attend such big gathering. But blame Pakistan is not correct .
 
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Fake news. It was an Islamic gathering in Malaysia. GEO is peddling anti goverment fake news more aggressively since its owner was charged by NAB.

How rally at Malaysian mosque became Covid-19 hotspot
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Only half of the Malaysian participants at the Islamic gathering at the Sri Petaling mosque have come forward for testing. - AP

KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters): Worshippers slept in packed tents outside the golden-domed mosque, waking before dawn to kneel on rows of prayer mats laid out in its cavernous central hall. All the while, the coronavirus was passing unnoticed among the guests.

The Muslim gathering held at the end of last month at a sprawling mosque complex on the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur has emerged as a source of hundreds of new coronavirus infections spanning Southeast Asia.


A 34-year-old Malaysian man who attended the event died on Tuesday (March 17), Malaysia's Minister of Health Adham Baba said, the first death linked to the Feb 27-March 1 event at the Sri Petaling mosque compound.

It was attended by 16,000 people, including 1,500 foreigners.
Out of Malaysia's 673 confirmed coronavirus cases, nearly two-thirds are linked to the four-day meeting, Adham said. It is not clear who brought the virus there in the first place.

Reuters spoke to six attendees and reviewed pictures and posts on social media, and the accounts and evidence showed several ways in which the outbreak could have spread.

The hosts, the Islamic missionary movement Tablighi Jama'at, which traces its roots back to India a century ago, on Monday suspended missionary activities but did not comment directly on the Malaysian event.

Tablighi Jama'at did not respond to a request for further comment. The mosque where the event was held was closed on Tuesday and a guest said he was one of dozens of worshippers still there under quarantine. Calls to the mosque went unanswered.

Malaysia plans to shut its borders, restrict internal movement and close schools, universities and most businesses, as it seeks to control its coronavirus outbreak. All mosques will be closed for two weeks.

"I was very surprised actually that it went ahead," said Surachet Wae-asae, a former Thai lawmaker who attended the event but has since tested negative for the coronavirus after returning home.

"But in Malaysia God is very important. The belief is strong."

The prime minister's office and the health ministry declined to comment further about the event.

The packed gathering, where guests had to take shuttle buses to sleep at other venues, was attended by nationals from dozens of countries, including Canada, Nigeria, India and Australia, according to an attendee list posted on social media.

There were also citizens of China and South Korea - two countries with high rates of coronavirus infections.

Social media posts show hundreds of worshippers praying shoulder-to-shoulder inside the mosque, while some guests posted selfies as they shared food.

It was not clear how many guests were residents of Malaysia, but cases linked to the gathering are popping up daily across Southeast Asia.

"We sat close to each other," a 30-year-old Cambodian man who attended the event told Reuters from a hospital in Cambodia's Battambang province, where he was being treated after testing positive for the coronavirus on Monday.

"Holding hands at the religious ceremony was done with people of many countries. When I met people, I held hands, it was normal. I don't know who I was infected by," he said, asking not to be named due to fears of discrimination at his mosque.

None of the event leaders talked about washing hands, the coronavirus or health precautions during the event, but most guests washed their hands regularly, two guests said. Washing hands among other parts of the body is part of Muslim worship.

Another attendee from Cambodia said guests from different countries shared plates when meals were served.

Only half of the Malaysian participants who attended have come forward for testing, the health minister has said, raising fears that the outbreak from the mosque could be more far-reaching.

Brunei has confirmed 50 cases linked to the mosque gathering, out of a total of 56 cases. Singapore has announced five linked to the event, Cambodia 13 and Thailand at least two.

Vietnam, the Philippines and Indonesia, which had nearly 700 of its citizens attend, are all investigating.

That a large religious pilgrimage should have gone ahead, at a time when the epidemic had killed 2,700 people and was spreading from Italy to Iran, has drawn criticism.

More than 182,000 people have now been infected by the coronavirus globally and 7,165 have died.

"That Tablighi event in KL... could also cause a regional spike and it was irresponsible for the authorities to have allowed it to be held," Singapore diplomat Bilahari Kausikan said on his Facebook page.

It is not the only religious event to spread the virus on a mass scale. Thousands of cases in South Korea are linked to services of the Shincheonji Church of Jesus in the city of Daegu.

At the time of the event in Malaysia, the country was in political turmoil. The country had a one-man government in the 94-year-old interim prime minister Mahathir Mohamad, who had quit and was temporarily re-appointed the same day.

Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin was sworn in as the new premier on March 1 and banned mass gatherings on March 13. Prior to that, there was only advice from the health ministry to minimise public exposure.

Some attendees defended the event, saying that at the time the situation in Malaysia - which had announced 25 known cases by Feb 28 - was not severe.

"We were not worried then as the Covid-19 situation at the time appeared under control," said Khuzaifah Kamazlan, a 34-year-old religious teacher based in Kuala Lumpur who attended the event but has tested negative for the coronavirus.

Khuzaifah said some of the worshippers who attended the event have since refused to be tested for coronavirus, preferring to rely on God to protect them.

Karim, a 44-year-old Malaysian who attended the gathering and was later tested positive for coronavirus, says the government should have cancelled the event.

"We are a bit disappointed that this outbreak has been blamed entirely on us. That view is unfair. There was no ban on our gathering," said Karim, who gave only his first name.

"Now I am concerned because I am positive. Please pray for me." - Reuters


https://www.thestar.com.my/news/reg...y-at-malaysian-mosque-became-covid-19-hotspot
 
I live in a country with the best medical system that money can buy and from what I have seen Allah takes anyone at any age and at anytime when he wants and there is nothing you can do about it. Your money, your medicines, your facilities are useless when the angel of death comes.
 
@Areesh what to say of your educated masses and handsome PM who is allowing them to gather.

These people are neither politically, neither religiously aligned with Imran Khan.
No news suggest that gather ever took place.
 
Fear, anxiety as besieged Gaza confirms first 2 coronavirus cases
Authorities in the coastal enclave have shut restaurants and cafes, while Friday prayers have also been suspended.

by Farah Najjar & Maram Humaid
10 hours ago
7ad1357cec5240c18d6e15dd3b1ef741_18.jpg

Palestinians spray disinfectant as a precaution against the spread of the coronavirus, in Gaza City [Mohammed Saber/EPA]

Palestinian officials have announced the first two cases of COVID-19, the disease caused by the new coronavirus, in the besieged Gaza Strip.

Deputy Health Minister Youssef Abulreesh said late on Saturday the two Palestinian patients had returned from Pakistan via Gaza's Rafah border with neighbouring Egypt on Thursday.
The pair exhibited symptoms of the illness, which include a dry cough and high fever, Abulreesh told a news conference.

He added that the two were placed in quarantine upon arrival and are now in a field hospital in the border town of Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...s-cases-ongoing-blockade-200322072036366.html

 
One thing i can confirm with certainty.... Every Pakistani mosque i have ever visited, their carpets are epicenter of all sort of viruses. People have dirt dripping from their feet and they step on the carpet, right where people put their nose. Lack of sunlight and fresh air multiply those germs.
Even worst are the grave worship centers, their no cleaning is observed and junkies are in abundance. People put their nose and heads at dirty streets and passages.

Fear, anxiety as besieged Gaza confirms first 2 coronavirus cases
Authorities in the coastal enclave have shut restaurants and cafes, while Friday prayers have also been suspended.

by Farah Najjar & Maram Humaid
10 hours ago
7ad1357cec5240c18d6e15dd3b1ef741_18.jpg

Palestinians spray disinfectant as a precaution against the spread of the coronavirus, in Gaza City [Mohammed Saber/EPA]

Palestinian officials have announced the first two cases of COVID-19, the disease caused by the new coronavirus, in the besieged Gaza Strip.

Deputy Health Minister Youssef Abulreesh said late on Saturday the two Palestinian patients had returned from Pakistan via Gaza's Rafah border with neighbouring Egypt on Thursday.
The pair exhibited symptoms of the illness, which include a dry cough and high fever, Abulreesh told a news conference.

He added that the two were placed in quarantine upon arrival and are now in a field hospital in the border town of Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...s-cases-ongoing-blockade-200322072036366.html

Al-Jazeera can go to hell... they are mostly lying about Pakistan, they are friends of Imran Khan so this is enough said.
 
A very careless nations....all are equally responsible. Malaysia should have controlled its national not to attend such big gathering. But blame Pakistan is not correct .
The way this article and its headline written is very misleading. I saw the news about gathering in Malaysia and more recently in Indonesia (which was apparently cancelled last minute after all the participant already gathered in that town), and both event was organized by Tablighi Jamaat. From this article, if i understand correctly, the same tablighi jamaat (i think) also did an event in Pakistan right before the event in Malaysia. All the events are independent of each other and I don't think any country is blaming another.
 
One thing i can confirm with certainty.... Every Pakistani mosque i have ever visited, their carpets are epicenter of all sort of viruses. People have dirt dripping from their feet and they step on the carpet, right where people put their nose. Lack of sunlight and fresh air multiply those germs.
Even worst are the grave worship centers, their no cleaning is observed and junkies are in abundance. People put their nose and heads at dirty streets and passages.



Al-Jazeera can go to hell... they are mostly lying about Pakistan, they are friends of Imran Khan so this is enough said.
Nothing stopping from taking their own prayer mat.
 
One thing i can confirm with certainty.... Every Pakistani mosque i have ever visited, their carpets are epicenter of all sort of viruses. People have dirt dripping from their feet and they step on the carpet, right where people put their nose. Lack of sunlight and fresh air multiply those germs.
Even worst are the grave worship centers, their no cleaning is observed and junkies are in abundance. People put their nose and heads at dirty streets and passages.



Al-Jazeera can go to hell... they are mostly lying about Pakistan, they are friends of Imran Khan so this is enough said.
You were doing so well until your last sentence of NS worship.
 
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