It鈥檚 hard to imagine losing a loved one and not being able to give them a proper send-off, but a family in Kolaka regency, Southeast Sulawesi who recently lost someone suspected of having COVID-19 is facing criticism in Indonesia for deliberately ignoring safety protocol by holding a proper wake for her.
According to reports, a 34-year-old female patient died on Monday after five days of isolation at the Bahteramas General Hospital in the nearby city of Kendari, where she had been under observation for exhibiting COVID-19 symptoms but had not officially tested positive for the disease.听
Videos of her family bringing her body home for a wake have gone viral, reportedly after they insisted that she was not infected with the coronavirus.
https://twitter.com/kharimakharima1/status/1242565625144176640?s=20
In the next video, members of the family removed the plastic wrap of the deceased, kissed her, and prepared her for a bathing ritual, as is customary in Islam before burial.
Manusia鈥 keras kepala ,kepala batu ,mengikuti kemasanya sendiri tanpa memikirkan orang lain …sumpah gw marah ngeliat ini ?? 😠😠👊
Kan kasihan orang di sekitarnya Yg tdk tau apa鈥 ??
Mayat covid-19 malah di bukak mau di mandiin lagi …鈥 sarang hamnida (@kharimakharima1)
Rabiul Awal, Southeast Sulawesi鈥檚 spokesperson for COVID-19-related matters, confirmed that the family deliberately refused to follow COVID-19 protocol related to handling of dead bodies despite warnings from local health authorities.
鈥淭he hospital offered a handling protocol like the one for deceased patients who have tested positive for COVID-19, but the family insisted and refused. We have evidence in a release signed by the deceased鈥檚 husband,鈥 Rabiul said, .
Rabiul said that the body was initially sealed in an airtight plastic wrap and was set for burial without a wake or funeral, as has become government protocol for dead COVID-19 patients in order to prevent the coronavirus in the deceased from infecting others.
鈥淚f [the family] understood this, then they would鈥檝e avoided [holding the wake]. But there鈥檚 the family perspective as well,鈥 he said.
After the above videos went viral, the police and military say that they will take against anyone who refuses to follow COVID-19 protocol on handling of the deceased.听
Vice President Ma鈥檙uf Amin had previously called on the Indonesian Ulema Council (MUI), the country鈥檚 highest Islamic clerical body, to issue a fatwa (religious edict) so government protocol on handling of dead bodies can be observed.
As of March 25, Indonesia has 790 confirmed COVID-19 cases, including 31 recoveries and 58 deaths.
