Saudi Senior Scholars Urge Muslims Worldwide to Pray at Home during Ramadan over Virus

Saudi Arabia's highest religious body urged Muslims worldwide to pray at home during Ramadan if their countries require social distancing to combat coronavirus. (AFP)
Saudi Arabia's highest religious body urged Muslims worldwide to pray at home during Ramadan if their countries require social distancing to combat coronavirus. (AFP)
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Saudi Senior Scholars Urge Muslims Worldwide to Pray at Home during Ramadan over Virus

Saudi Arabia's highest religious body urged Muslims worldwide to pray at home during Ramadan if their countries require social distancing to combat coronavirus. (AFP)
Saudi Arabia's highest religious body urged Muslims worldwide to pray at home during Ramadan if their countries require social distancing to combat coronavirus. (AFP)

Saudi Arabia's highest religious body, the Council of Senior Scholars, urged Muslims worldwide to pray at home during the holy fasting month of Ramadan if their countries require social distancing to combat coronavirus, reported the Saudi Press Agency (SPA) on Sunday.

"Muslims shall avoid gatherings, because they are the main cause of the spread of infection...and shall remember that preserving the lives of people is a great act that brings them closer to God," it said in a statement.

Public gatherings include mass prayers and breaking fast and suhour meals.

Ramadan is set to begin next week.

The council recommended that Muslims perform regular and Taraweeh (optional evening) prayers at home if their country advised them to do so due to the virus outbreak.

Muslims must set an example in how to fully respect preventive measures in their countries, added the council. Islamic Sharia allows for different forms of worship whereby the worshipper can do no harm to himself and others.

Earlier this week, Saudi Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdulaziz Al al-Sheikh said that Muslim prayers during Ramadan and for the subsequent Eid al-Fitr feast should be performed at home if the coronavirus outbreak continues.

Saudi Arabia in mid-March stopped people performing their five daily prayers and the weekly Friday prayer inside mosques as part of efforts to limit the spread of the coronavirus.

On Thursday, the Prophet’s Mosque in the holy city of Madinah said it was banning events which dispense evening meals in the mosque to those in need during Ramadan to break their daily fast.



Syria’s Leader Meets with Bahraini Diplomatic Delegation

The leader of Syria's new administration, Ahmed al-Sharaa meets Bahraini Foreign Minister Abdul Latif Al-Zayani in Damascus, Syria, January 8, 2025. (Bahrain News Agency/Handout via Reuters)
The leader of Syria's new administration, Ahmed al-Sharaa meets Bahraini Foreign Minister Abdul Latif Al-Zayani in Damascus, Syria, January 8, 2025. (Bahrain News Agency/Handout via Reuters)
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Syria’s Leader Meets with Bahraini Diplomatic Delegation

The leader of Syria's new administration, Ahmed al-Sharaa meets Bahraini Foreign Minister Abdul Latif Al-Zayani in Damascus, Syria, January 8, 2025. (Bahrain News Agency/Handout via Reuters)
The leader of Syria's new administration, Ahmed al-Sharaa meets Bahraini Foreign Minister Abdul Latif Al-Zayani in Damascus, Syria, January 8, 2025. (Bahrain News Agency/Handout via Reuters)

Syria's de facto leader Ahmed al-Sharaa received a delegation from Bahrain on Wednesday and met with the Bahraini foreign minister, state media reported.

The visit was the latest in a flurry of diplomatic overtures by Arab countries to Syria’s new leaders after they overthrew former President Bashar al-Assad in a lightning rebel offensive.

Like other Gulf countries, Bahrain had cut off diplomatic ties with Syria under Assad’s rule during the Syrian civil war, but it reopened its embassy in Damascus in 2018 and gradually restored ties with the Assad government.

Bahrain is the current head of the Arab summit, and days after Assad’s ouster it had sent a message to al-Sharaa offering its cooperation with the new authorities and saying, “We look forward to Syria regaining its authentic role in the Arab League.”