The UAE’s Federal National Council (FNC) approved the draft of federal law which regulates the cemeteries in UAE and burial procedures followed.
The new draft of federal law details the procedures for transporting, bathing and burying bodies.
The penalties for the violators and regulations for the authorities concerned are also defined in the draft regarding the monitoring, inspection and guarding of burial grounds.
ناقش الفريق سمو الشيخ سيف بن زايد آل نهيان، نائب رئيس مجلس الوزراء، وزير الداخلية، مشروع القانون الاتحادي في شأن تنظيم المقابر وإجراءات الدفن، ضمن جدول أعمال جلسة #المجلس_الوطني_الاتحادي.#وزارة_الدولة_لشؤون_المجلس_الوطني_الاتحادي #التكامل_بين_الحكومة_والمجلس
— وزارة المجلس الوطني (@mfnca) March 17, 2021
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The draft law lays the basic rules of the authorities in regulating cemeteries. The authorities are tasked to determine the areas and places suitable for graves for the burial of martyrs, and to bury those people who had died of infectious diseases.
Graveyard Rules
The council has come up with four distinct categories:
An "electronic database" is created by the council for keeping records of all deaths, human organs and remains, which are buried in cemeteries.
The draft law prohibits the transfer of bodies, human organs and remains inside or outside of health facilities by any mode of conveyance. It also stipulated that transportation costs should be incurred by an individual if the person wants to transport body or human organs/remains abroad.
Penalties
The authorities are empowered to impose a penalty between Dh10,000 and Dh50,000 for the following offences:
Apart from this, a one-year jail term or a penalty between Dh10,000 and Dh100,000 can be imposed, or both can be enforced, for an offence related to burial of a corpse or body parts in a burial ground that is not approved by the authorities.
There is a separate penalty of a one-year jail term and a fine between Dh10,000 and Dh20,000 for an individual who prepares a place for a burial of a corpse, which has not been designated by the authorities.
A permit is required to bring a body in the country or take it abroad and any violation will attract a fine between Dh50,000 and Dh100,000.
Any bid to vandalise a grave or a cemetery will lead to an imprisonment between five and seven years, or a fine from Dh100,000 to Dh200,000, or both these penalties can be imposed by the authorities.
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