Indonesia Islamic council hopes for halal ruling before mass vaccination
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[January 06, 2021]
By Agustinus Beo Da Costa and Stanley Widianto
JAKARTA (Reuters) - Indonesia's highest
Muslim clerical council hopes to issue a ruling on whether a COVID-19
vaccine is halal, or permissible under Islam, before the country is due
to start a mass inoculation programme using a Chinese vaccine next
week.The world's largest Muslim-majority country plans to launch
vaccinations on Jan. 13 after obtaining 3 million doses from China's
Sinovac Biotech.
Controversy over whether vaccines adhere to Islamic principles has
stymied public health responses before, including in 2018, when the
Indonesian Ulema Council (MUI) issued a fatwa declaring that a measles
vaccine was forbidden under Islam.
"Hopefully the edict can be declared before the government starts its
vaccination program," said Muti Arintawati, an official at MUI in charge
of analysing food and drugs to assess whether they are halal.
She said data was still being gathered before MUI could make a final
edict.
Indonesia is struggling with the worst COVID-19 outbreak in Southeast
Asia and authorities are relying on a vaccine to help alleviate dual
health and economic crises ravaging the country.
Asked about the risk of public resistance, a health ministry official
said the government would wait to see how MUI handled the issue.
In a bid to boost acceptance, President Joko Widodo has said he will be
the first to receive a vaccine shot next week.
Dicky Budiman, a researcher at Australia's Griffith University, said
authorities needed to be transparent on the halal certification to
reassure the public.
The New York Times reported that Sinovac told Indonesia's state-owned
drugmaker Bio Farma that the vaccines were "manufactured free of porcine
materials."
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An analyst of Global Halal Center walks inside a
laboratorium, where the Sinovac's vaccine for the
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) was analyzed for Halal
certification, in Bogor, Indonesia, January 6, 2021.
REUTERS/Willy Kurniawan
Bambang Heriyanto, Bio Farma's corporate secretary, confirmed
receiving the statement, but said the halal status was decided by
MUI. Sinovac did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Ahmad Ishomuddin, an official at Nahdlatul Ulama, Indonesia's
biggest mainstream Muslim organisation, said emergency vaccines that
were not halal could be used if there were no other options.
Indonesia's food and drug agency (BPOM) needs to issue emergency use
approval for vaccinations to start.
In neighbouring Malaysia, religious authorities have declared
COVID-19 vaccines were permissible for Muslims, and mandatory for
those the government has identified to receive them.
Malaysia does not require vaccines to be certified halal, though
authorities are planning to introduce a certification framework this
year to allay concerns among some Muslims.
(Additional reporting by Rozanna Latiff in Kuala Lumpur; Editing by
Ed Davies and Kim Coghill)
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