Additional
Reporting By Angy Ghannam, IOL Staff
CAIRO,
December 4 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Most Arab states
announced they will start celebrating Eid al-Fitr, the feast marking
the end of the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan, from Thursday,
December 5.
According
to the Muslim lunar calendar, Eid al-Fitr begins the morning after the
sighting of the crescent moon ending Ramadan.
Muslim
religious authorities in Palestine, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan,
Syria, Lebanon, Tunis, Libya, Yemen, United Arab Emirates, Iraq,
Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, Sudan, Somalia, Algeria, Turkey, announced
that the new moon was sighted after sundown on Wednesday, December 4.
Also,
France, Britain, Germany, Russia, Holland and Central Asia announced
that Eid will start there on Thursday. Meanwhile, Malaysia and China
declared they will celebrate Eid on Friday, December 6.
An
Iraqi official said UN arms experts will suspend their inspections in
Iraq for part of the holidays, which last several days.
"There
will be no inspections tomorrow (Thursday) or the day after, but they
will resume on Saturday," the official close to the operations
told Agence France-Presse (AFP), asking not to be named.
The
inspectors were not available to confirm the report, but a senior
official hinted earlier at a suspension for the holidays.
Ramadan,
the ninth month of the Muslim calendar, is a special time of worship,
Koran reading, charitable acts and individual reflection and
purification.