Staff

Staff

After the controversial law on global security and the massive protest against it, the French government has approved another controversial bill, this time called: "law on separatism", provoking another popular protest.

France's Prime Minister Castex openly said that this bill targets what he called radical Islam, enemy of the Republic. President Emmanuel Macron has promoted the bill to target separatists undermining the nation.

A rarely seen police cordon surrounded the demonstration entirely, from the beginning till the end. Every hundred meters, the police charged the demonstration and made arrests. Some were wounded.

Macron had said that the presumed radical black block has to be destroyed. Therefore the police had clear orders: zero tolerance. However, this time the violence did not come from the demonstrators.

Human rights groups have raised concerns over the law, saying it would discriminate and stigmatize French Muslims.

The bill in question requires that everyone strictly respects the French republican principles of secularism, whatever that might mean.

The funding of Muslim associations and mosques will be closely monitored. The main association in defense of Muslims, the CCIF, was dissolved. All organizations will have to sign a declaration on secularism if they want to receive funds from the state. In case of non-compliance, they would have to refund the money.

The proposed bill will be discussed in the French parliament and members of the majority party already declared that they want to modify the text; some want to soften it, while others want it to be even more repressive.

Press TV

 London : At noon today 400 Sri Lankan Muslims living in the UK and their supporters came together to hold a spontaneously organised demonstration to protest the enforced cremation of suspected Covid-infected bodies of Muslims and Christians who have died, in front of the Sri Lankan High Commission in London. The 400 demonstrators joined the protest in stages, of a hundred at a time to maintain social distancing. Below is South Asia Solidarity Group’s message in support of the protest which was read out at the demonstration by Baazir Rahman, one of the organisers of the protest.

“We at South Asia Solidarity Group, stand in solidarity with the Muslim, Christian and Catholic communities of Sri Lanka who are at present facing the thoroughly inhumane and arbitrary policy laid down by the Sri Lankan government, which outlaws burials and imposes mandatory cremations of people who are believed to have died of COVID 19 infections. The change in policy was sudden and deployed without any transparency or reliable scientific justification.

The death of a loved one, especially during these times of the pandemic, whether by COVID or otherwise, has now begun to strike fear into the hearts of persons belonging to minority communities. Mourning and grieving for their loved ones has become a fraught political issue, provoking great pain and anger amongst Muslims and Christians.

The deployment of this policy has resulted in a range of arbitrary practices, such as taking the body of the dead person, summarily, from the person’s home to the police morgue, or not even allowing the family any form of funerary rites, at times cremating it before the COVID 19 test results are even available and even cremating those who were not COVID positive. The invasion by the State, into the private grief of minority community members, in particular, the Muslim community, appears vengeful and it is clear such a policy is being carried out to appease extremist Sinhala Buddhist opinion which was already targeting the Muslim community as the spreaders of the COVID 19 virus in Sri Lanka.

We are told that the experts committee set up by the government for this purpose has recommended this change in policy. But this committee has been publicly criticized by the country’s leading epidemiologists and virologists, who were not invited to sit on the experts committee.. The WHO has clearly stated that burials are safe. Several other UN bodies and international human rights organisations and the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka have invoked international covenants on religious freedoms and rights of religious practice and have asked the government to desist from forcible cremations against the wishes of religious minorities, especially since such a policy has no scientific basis. Many civil society and religious groups within the country have also appealed to the government but all to no avail.

This will inevitably polarize the different communities even further but we see total indifference to the concerns of the minority communities on the part of the Sri Lankan majoritarian government. After the end of the long civil war of thirty years in which vast numbers of Tamil civilians perished, the majoritarian state turned its attention on the Muslim community. Many of its policies have had the effect of harassing and persecuting the Muslim minority community especially, in order to appease the Sinhala Buddhist nationalist vote bank it has nurtured.

The election of the President and the current parliament have triggered the dramatic politicization of the administrative organs of the state and the judiciary at such a rapid rate, in the service of the executive. The 20th amendment to the Sri Lankan constitution which became law recently consolidates virtually all state power in the hands of the President, rendering even parliament a subordinate institution. This leaves very little space for democratic forces in the country to challenge this form of untrammeled power.

The applications by eleven families seeking legal remedy to the issue of forcible cremations to the Supreme Court have been turned down by a majority of judges on the bench to proceed further for a substantive hearing. Having been frustrated in their efforts to take forward a legal challenge to this draconian policy, the community is gradually turning to forms of civic disobedience, where people are refusing to pay for the cremations as demanded by the government and are also beginning to refuse the ashes following cremation. Such is the trauma and pain felt within the communities.

This mandatory cremation policy is yet another step in the majoritarian agenda of the current government, rendering life for minority communities in Sri Lanka quite intolerable.We voice our opposition to this cruel and unnecessary mandating of cremations and stand in solidarity with the minority communities of Sri Lanka. We also stand in solidarity with those voices in Sri Lanka which are challenging majoritarianism and the growing authoritarianism, through the concentration of power in one executive institution.”

Haidar Mansuri, 34, and 28-year-old Shabila Chand in India's northern state of Uttar Pradesh decided to get married after a year-long courtship.

Shabila left her home in Azamgarh to marry Kushinagar resident Haidar.

As they were about to get married on Dec. 8, someone informed the police and members of right-wing Hindu groups Bajrang Dal and Hindu Vahini, and they reached the spot. They alleged that the boy was a Muslim and girl a Hindu, which they claimed was a case of "love jihad", a term used by right-wing groups alleging Muslim men target Hindu women for conversion to Islam by pretending that they love them.

“I don’t want to comment on this issue any further. We have suffered a lot,” Haidar told Anadolu Agency.

A local activist Armaan Khan, who was facilitating this marriage, said: “I was asked by Haidar Mansuri to help him marry Shabila Chand. I called a qazi [a Muslim cleric who conducts marriages] for solemnizing the Nikah [wedding].

"Meanwhile, members of some right-wing outfits landed at the spot. Police officials were called and it was alleged that the marriage was taking place between a Muslim and a Hindu,” said Armaan.

The couple along with the qazi was taken to a police station. The girl, a Muslim, had left her parents’ home in Azamgarh without informing them as they opposed her marriage with Haidar. Her parents lodged a police complaint that their daughter had gone missing. The couple were kept overnight at the police station and next day the couple was allowed to marry after the police found that the both were Muslims.”

Two days after the incident, police clarified that the action taken by them did not amount to violation of human rights of any person. The police argued that they did not break any law and only investigated a criminal case under the new stringent Anti-Conversion Law.


Law could be used to harass Hindu-Muslim couples 

Last month, India's largest state Uttar Pradesh, under pressure from right-wing Hindu groups, introduced a controversial law named "Prohibition of Unlawful Conversion Ordinance 2020", against the so-called "love jihad".

The new law provides that interfaith couples, who want to get married, must inform district magistrates two months in advance and it prohibits deceitful and forcible conversions, including conversion for marriage. The law also suggests an imprisonment of up to 10 years for offenders. The ordinance was passed amid media hype and intense discussion over "love jihad".

Critics argue that the law aims to target Muslim men and could be used to harass Hindu-Muslim couples. But many other BJP-ruled states have prepared or are preparing similar laws.

Many police complaints were registered as soon as the new law came into force in Uttar Pradesh, but several of them appeared motivated without any credible evidence.

The first case in the state was registered in the Bareilly district, in which the police arrested the accused person within a week and sent him to prison.

But a week later in the same district when the family of a girl lodged an FIR, or first information report, the police refused to register the case apparently because in this case the accused persons were Hindus and not Muslims.

On Dec. 5, Shahid Mian, who lives in Premnagar police station of the Bareilly district, lodged an FIR that his 22-year-old daughter was kidnapped by three people.

Shahid filed a case against Siddharth Saxena alias Aman, his sister Chanchal and Manoj Kumar Saxena, the owner of a firm.

Shahid told Anadolu Agency: "On 1 December, my daughter went missing. We lodged a police complaint on 5 December that my daughter had been abducted by Manoj and Aman. The police recovered the girl the very next day but we were not allowed to meet her. We are worried about her welfare."

However, Bareilly’s Superintendent of Police Ravindra Kumar said the girl has said that she wants to live with Aman. He said both the girl and the boy are adults and they are free to marry and there is no such thing as forced conversion in this case. But in similar cases, the Muslim men are immediately booked and arrested when complaints are lodged against them.


Muslim man arrested immediately

In another such case, 22-year-old Rashid Ali and his brother Salim were arrested recently in the Moradabad district of the state when Rashid was going to register marriage with his wife.

Police say that the young woman's family had lodged a complaint that Rashid had forcibly converted and married their daughter.

But Rashid told reporters that his wife had married him without any pressure on July 24 and they were going to register the marriage.

Local people said some people of right wing Bajrang Dal created a ruckus and put pressure on the police to arrest the young man by registering a case under the new ordinance.

According to some critics, in some cases when the young Muslim men were arrested, neither their nor the women's statements were taken although they were adults./aa

The Turkish Culture and Tourism Ministry on Sunday brought back a historical statue of Cybele, pre-historic goddess of fertility, which was smuggled to Israel in 1960s and sold there.

The statue was finally returned after hard work of Turkish authorities after they proved its origins and halted audition process in the US.

Minister Mehmet Nuri Ersoy told a meeting in Istanbul Archeology Museums that Turkish authorities did their best to introduce ancient artifacts in an effort to contribute to the cultural and historical background of human civilization, and protect the country's cultural wealth.

The 1,700-year-old statue is believed to be dating back to the 3rd century AD and was originated in the Anatolian territory according to the inscriptions and its typological features. Turkish authorities said the return process of the statue began after their Israeli counterparts got in touch about the item’s sale.

After Turkey confirmed based on the available evidence that the statue was illegally taken out of the country, the owner of the statue agreed to return it to Turkey without a judiciary process.

Cybele was a "mother" goddess of fertility and a protectress and was regarded as the mistress of wild nature, historians argue, and that its origins date back to the 8th century BC. The influence of the goddess was present in the Mediterranean basin, especially Anatolia.

The lions on both sides of the Cybele, worshipped since prehistoric times, indicate the mother goddess' dominance over both nature and animals. According to its inscription, the statue was presented to the 12 major Greek deities as an offering. "Hermeios' son, Asclepiades from Sideropolis erected the votive statue to Twelve Olympians," is written on the statue.

The statue is planned to be taken to the western Afyonkarahisar province of Turkey where a new museum will be built and the statue will be exhibited./aa

Turkish security forces have neutralized a total of 68 terrorists in domestic and cross-border anti-terror operations over the past month, the National Defense Ministry announced on Sunday.

Spokeswoman Lt. Col. Sebnem Aktop told a news conference that the Turkish Armed Forces continued their operations against terror groups, including PKK, YPG -- the PKK's Syrian branch -- and Daesh/ISIS, saying a total of 33 operations have been conducted.

Turkish authorities use the word “neutralize” to imply the terrorists in question surrendered or were killed or captured.

Aktop said Ankara has been following developments closely after an agreement between the central government in Baghdad and the Kurdish Regional Government was inked on Oct. 9 in Iraq on the northern region of Sinjar to "restore public order and stability."

Iraqi security forces started to implement a deployment plan on Dec. 1 in the center of the Sinjar district of the Nineveh province in an effort to enhance stability and security in the area and enable displaced locals to return to their homes.

The Sinjar deal, inked under the auspices of the UN on the status of the region, envisages clearing the region of the PKK terrorists.


The PKK terror organization managed to establish a foothold in Sinjar in 2014 under the pretext of protecting the Ezidi community from Daesh/ISIS terrorists.

The spokeswoman noted that a total of 5,753 people who attempted to cross the border illegally were held in line with border security regulations during the period, adding that 34,264 people were pushed back before crossing the border.

She added that 39 terrorists, with 24 of them from Fetullah Terrorist Organization (FETO), were also captured.

Aktop also said Turkey, as a guarantor country in Idlib, northwestern Syria, ensured the implementation of the cease-fire, which reduced the tension to a large extent, and helped approximately 450,000 citizens of Idlib return to their homes.

Referring to the A400M aircraft project, she added that the retrofit activities are planned to be carried out for the first time outside of Spain, at the 2nd Air Maintenance Plant Directorate in Turkey's central Kayseri province.

She said Turkey plans to launch the retrofit activity of the first aircraft in the coming days and complete it within July 2021.

"The Turkish Armed Forces continue their contribution to peace with approximately 3,000 personnel in 14 missions and 11 different regions on three continents," Aktop stressed.


Terror groups

FETO and its US-based leader Fetullah Gulen orchestrated the defeated coup of July 15, 2016 which left 251 people martyred and nearly 2,200 injured.

Ankara also accuses FETO of being behind a long-running campaign to overthrow the state through infiltration of Turkish institutions, particularly the military, police, and judiciary.

Since the coup attempt, tens of thousands of FETO suspects have been arrested, including many in the armed forces, police, judicial system, and education sector.

In 2013, Turkey became one of the first countries to declare Daesh/ISIS a terror group.

The country has since been attacked by Daesh/ISIS terrorists multiple times, with 315 people killed and hundreds more injured in at least 10 suicide bombings, seven bomb attacks and four armed assaults.

In response, Turkey launched anti-terror operations at home and abroad to prevent further attacks.

In its more than 30-year terror campaign against Turkey, the PKK -- listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the US, and EU -- has been responsible for the deaths of some 40,000 people, including women, children, and infants./aa

Turkish security forces seized 877 ancient bronze coins in Istanbul on Sunday in an anti-smuggling operation, authorities said.

The gendarmerie busted the workplace of a suspect, only known by initials E.A, to seize coins belonging to the Hellenistic period after they learned the suspect would try to put the historical artifacts on the market, said the sources on condition of anonymity due to restrictions on speaking to media.

The suspect was arrested while attempting to escape with a bag.

The confiscated coins were handed in to the Istanbul Archeology Museum.

The coins were found to be minted in various cities of the Pontus Region and has value of mass find./aa

The Dayton Peace Agreement brought "much-needed peace" to the people of Bosnia and Herzegovina after years of bitter fighting, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said in a video message on Saturday.

Participating in a virtual event organized by the Office of the High Representative in Bosnia and Herzegovina to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the Dayton Peace Accords, he said that the agreement ended the war and genocide in the country.

The peace agreement reached at Dayton city of US, on Nov. 21 1995 was formally signed in Paris, on Dec. 14. These accord ended the more than three-year-long Bosnian War.

"The achievements of Dayton have been remarkable. That said many things have changed in the last quarter-century. Therefore, we need to adapt to new realities. We need to have a better functioning system that will increase the welfare of all citizens of Bosnia-Herzegovina," said Cavusoglu.

He underlined that Turkey has a "strong commitment" to the territorial integrity and fundamental structure of Bosnia and Herzegovina as a single, sovereign state, comprising two entities and the Brcko District in the northern part of the country.

"The integrity, unity, and sovereignty of Bosnia and Herzegovina are crucial for Turkey. It is also a key element for maintaining peace and stability in the Balkans and beyond," said the Turkish foreign minister, adding that Turkey also supports efforts to improve regional cooperation for prosperity in the region.

Cavusoglu also stressed the support of Turkey in Bosnia-Herzegovina’s progress towards Euro-Atlantic integration.

Urging the participants to look into the future, while not forgetting the past, the Turkish minister said that the suffering of innocent people during the siege of Sarajevo and the Srebrenica Genocide is still fresh in the minds.

"Justice and peace go hand in hand. Accountability serves as a strong deterrent for future crimes and also consolidates peace. Remembering the past and honoring those who lost their lives will remind us that we should protect peace at all costs,” he said.


Ultra-nationalism brings sufferings

He emphasized that the language of hatred, intolerance, cultural and ethnic divisions, or ultra-nationalism brings nothing but suffering.

"Lessons learned from the pains of the past should guide us towards stronger cooperation in the region. We should appreciate our cultural differences. This is our richness," he added.

Noting that respecting the "other" is key for peaceful coexistence, Cavusoglu said that this is true not only for the Balkans but also for wider Europe and across the globe.

"The sufferings of 25 years ago must be a bitter reminder that rising xenophobia, racism, and Islamophobia especially in Europe must be prevented. This can only be achieved with strong political leadership that acts with wisdom rather than populism," he said.

He also pointed out that Turkey, as a member of the Peace Implementation Council Steering Committee, will continue to "fully support" the maintenance of peace and stability in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

"The future can be better when we are together," he concluded.

The role of High Representative was created under the General Framework Agreement for Peace in Bosnia and Herzegovina, usually referred to as the Dayton Peace Agreement. The brutal three-and-a-half-year war of Bosnia had resulted in around 100,000 deaths and one or worst human rights abuses in the recent past./aa

For this year’s Hanukkah, Amir is lighting menorah candles and reciting blessings to celebrate the holiday’s eight nights, as many Jews are around the world.

But he does so in secret, worried that Chinese officials will come around – as they often do on religious occasions – to enforce a ban against Judaism, pressuring him to renounce his faith. Sometimes, he’s even called in for interrogations.

“Every time we celebrate, we are scared,” said Amir, not his real name as he asked not to be identified over worries of retaliation. "Whatever we do, we’re always very careful to make sure the authorities don’t find out.”

Since 2015, Chinese leader Xi Jinping has waged a harsh campaign against foreign influence and unapproved religion, part of a push to ‘Sinicise’ faith – ripping down church crosses and mosque onion domes, and detaining more than a million Muslims in the western Xinjiang region.

As well as Christians and Muslims, Mr Xi’s suppression has hit China’s tiny congregation of Jews, whose ancestors settled more than a millennium ago along the Yellow River in Kaifeng, then the capital of the Northern Song Dynasty.

That such a small group can attract the Communist Party’s ire shows how far the crackdown has spread. Only about 1,000 people in Kaifeng claim Jewish heritage, and of those, only around 100 or are practising Jews, experts say – barely a splash in China’s sea of 1.4 billion. Even at its peak in the 1500s, the community only numbered around 5,000.

“It’s government policy – China doesn’t want to recognise us as Jews,” one man, who dreams of training as a rabbi in Israel, told the Telegraph. “Their goal is to make sure the next generation doesn’t have any Jewish identity.”

At home, he teaches everything he knows to his child, just as his forebears – most likely merchants from Persia – did for generations.

In that way, Kaifeng’s Jewish heritage survived dynasties, wars, natural disasters and the Cultural Revolution, when many destroyed genealogical records to hide their lineage. It has also helped them manage without a rabbi for more than 150 years.

They are fighting to keep their history alive, even though “asserting their desires to be connected with their Jewish heritage falls afoul of the official [Chinese] position on unauthorised religions,” said Anson Laytner, a retired rabbi and president of the Sino-Judaic Institute.

Even for the five faiths that the Party does recognise and regulate – Buddhism, Daoism, Islam, Protestantism and Catholicism – pressures abound. Buddhist temples, for instance, are allowed to display portraits of Mr Xi but not of the exiled spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama.

Chinese authorities are also concerned about undue foreign influence if the Kaifeng Jewish community is allowed to build links with Jews abroad.

“In terms of numbers, it’s so insignificant, but in terms of potential attention, it’s much, much bigger,” said Noam Urbach, an Israeli academic who has studied the Kaifeng Jews. Their existence can “raise a lot of attention among the international Jewish community.”

In Kaifeng, stones engraved as far back as 1489 with the community’s beliefs and ancestry have been removed from the spot where they once marked a 12th-century synagogue.

An ancient well, believed to be the synagogue’s last ruins, has likewise vanished under a cloak of cement. The authorities have also torn down the city’s few Hebrew signs that once marked the Teaching Torah Lane.

In that same lane, a spot where a few dozen Jews – some of whom were government officials – used to meet for services is now plastered in propaganda about China’s “management of religious affairs.” They include reminders that Judaism is prohibited. A security camera is directed at the entrance.

A handful of schools that taught Hebrew and Judaism – established by foreign Jews visiting Kaifeng – have been forced to shutter. Exhibits in a museum and historic merchant guild hall that documented the history of Jews in the city have also disappeared in favour of large pictures of Mr Xi.

The crackdown is so intense that Kaifeng residents are afraid to dine together in public. “It’s a small place,” one Jewish man said. “Restaurant managers know that we are the Jews, and they will report us to the authorities.”

Across the city, the remaining trace of Jewish heritage appears to be two tombstones with the star of David and epitaphs in Chinese and Hebrew – but even this, they fear, will soon be gone.

Yet the Jews in Kaifeng are remarkably resilient, and have found ways to keep their faith alive underground.

Each week, meetings are held in secret to celebrate Shabbat, the Jewish day of rest. Many don’t eat pork, though keeping fully kosher is risky and expensive. But for holidays, they pool money for kosher meat and wine procured through a network of friendly intermediaries.

At home, residents decorate with photos of Israel, stars of David and traditional Passover seder plates, and serve guests tea in jars that used to hold yahrzeit candles lit in memory of the dead.

One man flung open a cabinet revealing a prayer shawl and a collection of kippahs, a head-covering for men. Most proudly pronounce Israel with a Hebrew accent.

Unable to obtain religious materials, they buy Bibles and read the Old Testament – more or less the same content as the Torah – and disregard the New Testament.

They also pass around dog-eared pamphlets with translations compiled during a brief revival when Jewish scholars, rabbis and tourists flocked to Kaifeng as China opened up in the 1990s.

Now, “no print shop dares to help us copy these,” said one resident.

Groups like Mr Laytner’s Sino-Judaic Institute and Shavei Israel had previously set up centres to teach Hebrew and Jewish history and traditions, and helped some to emigrate. But both groups were expelled a few years ago, among the first targets of the government crackdown.

Mr Laytner does not consider the suppression to be specifically anti-Semitic – a sentiment experts say is unusual in China. The country sheltered thousands of European Jews fleeing the Nazis, and today, many Chinese view Jews favourably, typecasting them as an affluent bunch in influential positions – bankers, politicians, lawyers, doctors, film directors.

“In fact, the history works in their favour, because Jews were treated like garbage all over the world, but the Chinese accepted them,” said Moshe Yehuda Bernstein, a researcher in Australia who has written on the Kaifeng Jews.

“It’s something the Chinese could be proud of, yet recently in this clampdown on unofficial religions, they’ve taken away all historical evidence of a Jewish presence in Kaifeng, which is absurd.”

China’s ministry of foreign affairs denied the “so-called suppression,” instead highlighting that it had once welcomed Jewish refugees in a written response to the Telegraph.

Kaifeng Jews hope Israel will support them, though they aren't considered Jews under Israeli law – after generations of inter-marriage, Judaism has not been consistently passed down the maternal line. Mr Laytner also doubts that Israel wants to jeopardise Sino-Israeli relations “for the sake of a couple of thousand people."

Indeed Israel has deepened trade ties with China over recent years. The Israeli embassy didn't respond to multiple requests for comment.

But while those in Kaifeng insist they’re proud to be Chinese and only want to preserve their history and traditions, the crackdown has been very painful.

“We love our country; we’re not criminals; we just don’t eat pork,” said Amir, blinking away tears. “Why do we have to practice our faith in secret, and live floating on the fringes of society? It’s really hard to bear.”

Germany is set to enter a strict lockdown from Wednesday onwards due to the “exponential growth” in coronavirus cases, with restrictions on private gatherings and the closure of shops and schools.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel made the announcement in Berlin on Sunday after a consultation with state leaders, saying “we are forced to act and we are acting now”.

"With increasing mobility and additional contacts in the pre-Christmas period, Germany is now in exponential growth of infection numbers," she said.

Mrs Merkel conceded that Germany’s so-called ‘lockdown light’, which began in November, has “not done enough” to curb rising infection rates across the country.

Mrs Merkel had hoped the measures which were put in place in November – including the closure of bars and restaurants as well as a restriction on private gatherings – would stop the spread of the virus, however recent case numbers indicate this has not happened.

Mrs Merkel said she understood the concerns of the public with new measures coming in ahead of Christmas, but that “there is an urgent need to take action to prevent an overload of our healthcare systems”.

Bavarian leader Markus Söder, whose state has been among the hardest hit by the virus, said on Sunday the measures were urgently needed as “coronavirus has gotten out of control” in Germany.

From Wednesday, December 16th, private gatherings will be restricted to five people from a maximum of two households. From December 24th to 26th, the two-household restriction will be lifted, but meetings are limited to “the closest family circles”, Berlin’s Tagesspiegel reports.

Germany will also put in place a strict nationwide gathering and assembly ban on New Years Eve and New Years Day, along with a federal ban on the sale of fireworks. The use of fireworks is to be banned in municipalities across the country.

All shops will be required to close from December 16th until January 10th, with the exception of pharmacies, supermarkets, post offices, banks and petrol stations. Hairdressers and massage services must also close.

Schools, kindergartens and day care centres will also close over the same period.

Churches may remain open, however singing is banned and mask and distance requirements will be enforced.

German states are free to put in place stricter measures depending on infection rates, with Bavaria putting in place a night-time curfew to apply from 9pm to 5am.

Despite entering what has been nicknamed ‘lockdown light’ in early November, new coronavirus case numbers have remained high across Germany – with figures from Sunday morning higher than those from a week ago.

Germany’s Robert Koch Institute reported 20,200 new infections on Sunday morning, higher than the 17,700 reported the previous Sunday. A total of 496 deaths from the virus were recorded across Germany on Sunday, with Friday’s mark of 598 fatalities a record since the pandemic began.

The lockdown decision comes as Germany has promised to beef up police and security protection of the country’s vaccination infrastructure due to warnings of radicalised attacks from anti-vaccine campaigners.

Georg Maier (SPD), the chairman of Germany’s state interior minister committee, has said more must be done to protect the country’s vaccine infrastructure from a radicalised and ‘violent’ anti-vaccine movement.

The chairman warned that riots at recent protests showed “that the scene is quite ready and able to use violence”, reports Berlin's Tagesspiegel.

State officials in Berlin have already promised to guard the city’s six vaccination centres with security forces, while authorities on Sunday said vaccine doses would be stored in secret locations and would be transported to the centres under police guard.

Allama Nur Hossain Kasemi, the Secretary General of Hefazat-e-Islam Bangladesh, is no more.

He died on Sunday, December 13 at around 1:15 pm in the ICU of the United Hospital in the capital.

Secretary General Allama Nur Hossain Kasemi’s Press Secretary Mufti Munir Ahmed confirmed the matter.

He was admitted to the United Hospital in the capital on December 1 due to shortness of breath. He was immediately transferred to the ICU on Thursday, December 10 night after his condition suddenly deteriorated.

Munir Ahmed also said that Nur Hossain Kasemi had cold and shortness of breath but had tested negative for coronavirus on several occasions.

Nur Hossain Kasemi has been the Dhaka Metropolitan President of the organization since its inception. A new committee was formed on November 15 after the death of Amir Allama Ahmad Shafi. Allama Babungari was elected Amir and Nur Hossain Kasemi was elected secretary general of the committee.

He is simultaneously the Secretary General of Hefazat-e-Islam Bangladesh and Jamiat-e-Ulamaye Islam Bangladesh, Vice-President of Al Hayatul Ulaya, Senior Vice-President of Befaqul Madarishil Arabia Bangladesh and Shaykhul Hadith and Director General of Jamia Madania of Baridhara Dhaka and Jamia Sobhania of Mahmud Nagar.

One of his last efforts, was supporting the Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, by declaring a boycott of French products in response to official French support for the offensive caricatures.

The editor-in-chief of "Al-Mujtama" Magazine Mr. Muhammad Salem Al-Rashed and all the staff of the magazine offer their sincere condolences to the family of the deceased, his students and loved ones, and mourn for the Islamic nation a glorious scholar who spent all his life calling for the values of truth and justice.

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