Afghans begin Ramadan amid rising food costs and lockdown

A health worker checks the body temperature of devotees before Friday prayers on the first day of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan at Wazir Akbar Khan mosque, in Kabul, on April 24, 2020. (AFP)
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Updated 24 April 2020
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Afghans begin Ramadan amid rising food costs and lockdown

  • People affected by the lockdown warn they may perish because of poverty and increasing food prices
  • The government has only once handed over 4.5 kilos of wheat per affected household

KABUL: Afghans started Ramadan on Friday amid increasing food prices and a lockdown put in place because of coronavirus, with government officials repeatedly urging worshippers to offer Taraweeh and other prayers at home.

The government, bogged down by political turbulence and grappling with Taliban attacks, is under fire by many of those who have been deprived of daily work for failing to offer them a safety net. 

People affected by the lockdown warn they may perish because of poverty and increasing food prices rather than losing their lives as a result of the threat of the virus. 

The government has only once handed over 4.5 kilos of wheat per affected household. It is promising to distribute more rations to them in the weeks ahead.

Wealthier people have promised to increase their charitable deeds as a result of poverty levels and rising food prices. But there are no plans to prepare meals at mosques to feed the poor because of the coronavirus curbs.  

The Interior Ministry on Thursday vowed to tighten restrictions on the movement of people and traffic during Ramadan.

Health officials predict that the coming weeks will be critical in Afghanistan. Some of the country’s clerics have even suggested that people should stay at home during Eid too and refrain from visiting the homes of relatives and friends to celebrate the end of the fasting month.


Memorial for Swiss bar fire victims goes up in flames: police

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Memorial for Swiss bar fire victims goes up in flames: police

CRANS MONTANA: A memorial for the victims of the deadly New Year’s fire in Switzerland itself caught fire early Sunday, police said, adding they were investigating what sparked the blaze.
The fire that erupted at the Le Constellation bar in the ski resort town of Crans-Montana in the early hours of January 1 killed 41 people and injured 115, mainly teenagers and young adults.
A makeshift memorial, laden with flowers, candles and messages of condolence set up near the site of the tragedy, caught alight around 6:00 am (0500 GMT) on Sunday, regional police said in a statement.
“Firefighters were able to quickly bring the fire under control,” Wallis police said on X.
They said an investigation had been opened into what caused the blaze at the memorial, which long sat right in front of the burned-out bar, but had recently been moved a bit further away.
Images broadcast by Swiss public broadcaster RTS on Sunday showed the blackened top of white, igloo-like tarpaulin erected over the memorial to protect it from the weather visible behind a white screen and police tape.