Tuesday, May 3, 2011

By Vanessa Allen

President Barack Obama and White House staff were today debating the release of video showing Osama Bin Laden being buried at sea.

The dead terror chief was given an Islamic burial in the North Arabian Sea in a bid to stop his fanatical followers turning his final resting place into a shrine.

Officials did not reveal the exact location where sailors on the American aircraft carrier the USS Carl Vinson lowered his body in to the water.

But two Pentagon officials said the burial was videotaped and that it probably will be released soon.

The officials said photos of the body prior to its disposal in the North Arabian Sea also may be released.

John Brennan, the White House counter-terrorism chief, told reporters that the administration was still deliberating on release of the material. Making it public might satisfy those who would otherwise doubt that it was bin Laden who was killed.

The U.S. claimed the sea burial was handled in accordance with Muslim laws which demand the body should be washed, wrapped and buried within 24 hours.

An official said ‘preparations for at-sea burial began at 1.10am EST (6.10am UK time)’ and were completed 50 minutes later.

The body was placed in a white sheet and then a weighted bag, and a military officer read ‘prepared religious remarks’, which were translated into Arabic by a native speaker, before the body was eased into the sea.

The decision has exercised conspiracy theorists, who demanded to know why Bin Laden’s body was not preserved and displayed to prove the U.S. had actually killed him, while some clerics dubbed it a deliberate insult to Islam.

The defence official made no comment on claims that Saudi Arabia had refused to accept Saudi-born Bin Laden’s corpse for burial.


The White House is understood to have been warned it would be difficult to find any country willing to accept his remains.

The haste of the burial has been questioned, as the U.S. has not always observed the 24-hour rule for Muslim burials.

In 2003 the bodies of Saddam Hussein’s sons Uday and Qusay were embalmed and held for 11 days before they were released for burial.

The U.S. is also thought to have been anxious to avoid burying the corpse on land over fears the grave would become a rallying point for militants, even if left unmarked.

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ISLAMIC BURIAL TRADITION

Funerals in Islam follow specific rites procedures.

Sharia law (Islamic religious law) calls for burial of the body which includes a ritual where the body is bathed and shrouded followed by salah (prayer).

Cremation of the body is forbidden as most burials occur in a grave with the head facing Mecca.

The body should be lowered into the water, 'in a vessel of clay or a weight tied to its feet', and as far as possible, it should 'not be lowered at a point where it is eaten up immediately by sea predators'.

Tradition dictates that the body is washed by Muslim men and a funeral prayer is said, then it is buried as soon as possible, usually within 24 hours.

The body is wrapped in a shroud of white cloth and the face is moved toward mecca. The remains are always buried in the earth.

Similar to the orthodox Jewish tradition, bodies cannot be embalmed or in any way preserved and the coffin, if used, must be wooden.
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Islamic teachings say burials such as Bin Laden’s are permissible if the person has died while travelling at sea and they are too far from land to permit a burial.

But Bin Laden died on land and should have been buried with his head pointed towards Mecca, clerics said.

Radical preacher Omar Bakri Mohammed, who is banned from returning to Britain, said: ‘The Americans want to humiliate Muslims through this burial.’

Dubai’s highest official of religious law, grand mufti Mohammed al-Qubaisi, said: ‘Sea burials are permissible for Muslims in extraordinary circumstances. This is not one of them.

‘They [the U.S.] can say they buried him at sea, but they cannot say they did it according to Islam.

‘If the family does not want him, it’s really simple in Islam – you dig up a grave anywhere, even on a remote island, you say the prayers and that’s it.’

Islamic scholar Abdul Sattar al-Janabi, who preaches in Baghdad, added: ‘What was done by the Americans is forbidden by Islam and might provoke some Muslims.

‘It is not acceptable and it is almost a crime to throw the body of a Muslim man into the sea.’

But Mohammed Qudah, a professor of Islamic law at the University of Jordan, suggested burial at sea was not forbidden.

He said: ‘The land and the sea belong to God, who is able to protect and raise the dead at the end of times for Judgment Day.’



source:dailymail.co.uk

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