Muslims around the world are celebrating the holiday of Eid al Fitr.
After the Ramadan month of fasting, Muslims celebrate Eid al Fitr with a day of prayers, feasts and family visits.
Capital cities including Damascus, Baghdad and Beirut were crowded with worshippers heading to mosques and cemeteries.
Many Muslims visit the graves of their loved ones after the early morning prayer on the first day of Eid al Fitr.
Visitors bring bouquets of flowers, jugs of water for plants and brooms to clean gravestones.
“After the Eid prayer we always visit our dead… to pray and pay our respects, may God have mercy and forgive them on this blessed day,” said Atheer Mohamed in Baghdad’s Azamiya cemetery.
Be the first to get Breaking News
Install the Sky News app for free
Islam’s holidays follow a lunar calendar.
Ukraine war latest: Putin’s war ’cause of NATO enlargement’; Ukraine troops on US tank training; Russia makes some advances in Bakhmut
Ukraine war: ‘They didn’t even let me say goodbye – it’s been almost a year since I last saw my mum, since I heard her voice’
NATO allies ‘agree Ukraine will become member’
But some countries rely on astronomical calculations rather than physical sightings.
This frequently leads to disagreements between religious authorities in different countries – and sometimes in the same country – over the start date of Eid al Fitr.