WATCH: Iranian pilgrims taunt coronavirus with ‘communal licking’ of religious shrines despite outbreak

WATCH: Iranian pilgrims taunt coronavirus with ‘communal licking’ of religious shrines despite outbreak
Over-zealous pilgrims are reportedly engaging in a bizarre and dangerous way of dispelling fears over the COVID-19 virus in Iran.
3 min read
01 March, 2020
The video went viral on social media [Screenshot]
Pilgrims to religious shrines in Iran have reportedly attempted to defy fears about the novel coronavirus by licking religious shrines to prove that they will not get sick.

A video posted to twitter shows three people, including one who appears to be a child, licking the glass coverings and metal grilles at religious shrines in Qom and Mashhad.

Qom, which is a prominent centre of religious pilgrimage for Shia Muslims, is also the epicentre of the virus in Iran.

"Stop playing with people’s beliefs, coronavirus is nothing in the Shia shrines,” one man is recorded saying at the Fatima Masumeh shrine in Qom, in response to calls for authorities to close pilgrimage sites amid the outbreak.

"Im licking this and I don't care what happens," another man is shown saying, before licking a metal grille housing a prominent grave site.

The man's actions prompted those around him to recite prayers loudly.

Religious sites in Iran, which attract millions of pilgrims each year, have remained open to travellers despite the Islamic Republic having the largest COVID-19 virus outbreak in the Middle East.

Tehran's response to the crisis contrasts that of Saudi authorities, who have halted access to Mecca and Medina and suspended visas for the year-round "umrah" pilgrimage, an unprecedented move that has left tens of thousands of Muslim pilgrims around the world in limbo.

The kingdom on Thursday also suspended visas for tourists from countries affected by the virus as fears of a pandemic deepen.

Amid pressure over its seemingly inadequate response to the COVID-19 outbreak, Iran on Wednesday said it would restrict access to several Shia Muslim holy sites throughout the country.  

Authorities will also suspend Friday prayers in areas heavily affected by the virus. 

According to Unnamed health system sources quoted by the BBC, at least 210 people had died of the coronavirus in Iran - far beyond the official death toll of 54. A health ministry spokesman angrily denied that figure.

While Iran has rejected the claim as rumour, it has has scrambled to bring the outbreak under control, shutting schools, suspending cultural and sporting events.

Read also: Family fear Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe has contracted novel coronavirus in Iranian jail

It has even halted meetings of the cabinet and parliament, amid the disease's spread among the country's political elite.

On Saturday, recently-elected Iranian MP Mohammad Ali Ramazani died after being tested positive for the deadly virus a few days earlier, The Independent reported.

Iran's coronavirus death toll is the highest for any country other than China - where COVID-19 first emerged.

One of Iran's seven vice presidents, Massoumeh Ebtekar, and Deputy Health Minister Iraj Harirchi are among several senior officials who have been infected.

Many of Iran's neighbours have reported coronavirus infections in people linked to Iran, and most have imposed restrictions on travel to and from the Islamic republic.

On Wednesday, Iranian authorities announced domestic travel restrictions for people with confirmed or suspected infections.



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