Pakistan, Malaysia fret over Jamaat coronavirus trouble; 20,000 quarantined

As of April 4, of the 3,483 cases in Malaysia, 44.36% were linked to a Jamaat event

nizamuddin jamaat (File) People leaving the Nizamuddin premises in Delhi | PTI

The Tablighi Jamaat Islamic missionary group has been at the centre of media attention in India over the past week. An event of the Tablighi Jamaat in Delhi in early March is being blamed for the spurt in coronavirus cases in India in recent weeks. On Sunday, Lav Agarwal, a senior official in the Union ministry of health and family welfare, said that due to the Tablighi Jamaat event, coronavirus cases were rising in India every four days. Agarwal said that “had the incident not happened, the case doubling rate in the country would have been 7.4 days".

As of Sunday morning, about 30 per cent of the coronavirus cases in India were linked to the Tablighi Jamaat event in Delhi. The Hindustan Times reported that 21,200 people linked to the Jamaat event had been quarantined.

The Tablighi Jamaat is not only facing the heat in India. It has also been blamed for accelerating the spread of the coronavirus in Malaysia and Pakistan.

Pakistan quarantine

Another event, organised by the Pakistani Tablighi Jamaat, in Lahore between March 10 and 12, had been described as being a "super-spreader" of coronavirus. On Sunday, media outlets in Pakistan reported that about 20,000 people, who attended the Tablighi Jamaat event, had been quarantined and authorities were still searching for "tens of thousands more" participants.

Pakistan's Daily Times reported that "more than 100,000 people” attended the Tablighi Jamaat event in Lahore.

Giving a provincial break-up of Tablighi Jamaat participants who were quarantined, Daily Times reported 5,300 preachers had been isolated in Khuber Pakhtunkhwa province, 7,000 in Lahore and 8,000 people in Sindh. Dozens were forced to go into self-isolation in Balochistan.

The Daily Times reported, "At least 154 worshippers who went to last month’s Jamaat had tested positive for coronavirus, with two fatalities".

Like the event in Delhi, several foreign nationals also attended the Lahore Tablighi Jamaat event. These included visitors from China, Indonesia and Afghanistan.

The Pakistan government had requested the Tablighi Jamaat to cancel its event given the coronavirus outbreak. A federal minister, Fawad Chaudhary, had condemned the “stubbornness of the clergy” for allowing the Tablighi Jamaat event to continue.

Two people who tested positive for coronavirus in Gaza were reported to have attended the Lahore Tablighi Jamaat event.

‘Numbers to hit 50,000’

Meanwhile, the Pakistan government expects the number of coronavirus cases in the country to soar to 50,000 by April 25. This figure was revealed in an action plan document about fighting the coronavirus that was submitted to the country's Supreme Court last week.

Geo TV reported, "According to the breakdown provided in the report, around 7,000 cases of the total are expected to be critical in nature while around 2,500 could be a cause for concern. The government estimates that a further 41,000 cases could be of a mild nature."

As of Monday morning, Pakistan has reported 3,156 cases of coronavirus and 47 people have died of the virus so far.

Malaysia link

Malaysia’s New Straits Times newspaper reported on March 17 that of the 673 coronavirus cases in Malaysia identified till them, two-thirds were linked to a Tablighi Jamaat event in Sri Petaling. The Sri Petaling Jamaat event, held from February 27 to March 1, saw participation by around 16,000 people, including 1,500 foreigners.

On Saturday, New Straits Times reported that of the 3,483 coronavirus cases reported in Malaysia, 1,545 (or about 44.36 per cent) were linked to the Tablighi Jamaat meeting. The Malaysian government described it as the largest coronavirus cluster in the country.

Dozens of people from Malaysia are believed to have attended the Tablighi Jamaat event in Hazrat Nizamuddin, Delhi.