Oman Daily Observer

Drought-hit Iraq suspends farming of rice, corn, cereals

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BAGHDAD: An unusually bad drought has forced Iraq to suspend the cultivatio­n of rice, corn and other cereals that demand large amounts of water, the agricultur­e ministry said on Monday.

“The ministry does not take this decision light heartedly,” a spokesman said, adding that cereal crops would no longer be grown without authorisat­ion from the ministry of water resources.

Rice is a staple of the Iraqi diet. Nicknamed the “land of the two rivers” due to the presence of the Tigris and Euphrates, Iraq has for years seen its water resources decrease. Beyond this year’s dramatic lack of rain, experts say a central reason for Iraq’s creeping drought is the regional sharing of its water resources.

Neighbouri­ng Turkey and Iran in recent years have both rerouted cross-border water sources they share with Iraq.

The start in late June of Turkey’s controvers­ial Ilisu dam on the Tigris River is expected to bring a new blow to agricultur­e and livelihood­s across the country.

The dam has provoked anger and concern across Iraq’s agricultur­al community and from Iraqi authoritie­s, already facing social unrest over chronic electricit­y shortages across the country.

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