Texarkana Gazette

Drying times

Iraq's ❛pearl of the south❜ Lake Sawa parched amid water crisis

- SAMYA KULLAB

LAKE SAWA, Iraq — Hussam al-Aqouli remembers the exact spot along southern Iraq’s Lake Sawa where his two daughters once dipped their feet into clear waters. Now he stands there two years on, and the barren earth cracks beneath him.

This year, for the first time in its centuries-long history, the lake dried up. A combinatio­n of mismanagem­ent by local investors, government neglect and climate change has ground down its azure shores to chunks of salt.

Lake Sawa is only the latest casualty in this broad country-wide struggle with water shortages that experts say is induced by climate change, including record low rainfall and back-to-back drought. The stress on water resources is driving up competitio­n for the precious resource among businessme­n, farmers and herders, with the poorest Iraqis counting among the worst hit amid the disaster.

“This lake was known as the pearl of the south,” said al-Aqouli, 35, a native of the nearby city of Samawa, looking out onto the dry cavernous emptiness. “Now it is our tragedy.”

Between the capital Baghdad and the oil-rich heartland of Basra, Muthanna is among Iraq’s poorest provinces. The number of those living under the poverty line in the province is almost three times the national average.

Desert expanses dominate the landscape with a narrow ribbon of farmland along the Euphrates River in the north. Economic developmen­t was hindered by the country’s turbulent history, neglect by the Baath party regime since the 1980s, then later by wars and sanctions.

Locals call the area surroundin­g Lake Sawa “atshan” — or simply “thirsty” in Arabic.

Formed over limestone rock and studded with gypsum formations, the lake has no inlet or outlet, and the source of its waters had mystified experts for centuries, fueling fantastica­l folklore and religious tales that locals recite as historical fact.

Al-Aqouli spent his childhood frequentin­g the lake with his family. He hoped he could do the same when he started a family, he said. Instead he spends his days on social media writing long blog posts and urging Iraqis to take action. Often, he feels hopeless.

The lake rises 16 feet above sea level and is about 3 miles long and 1 mile wide.

Lake Sawa appears in some old Islamic texts. It is said the lake miraculous­ly formed on the day the Prophet Muhammad was born in 570 A.D. Thousands of religious tourists visited the site annually to submerge themselves in its holy waters, which they believe are blessed by God.

The lake’s rich mineral deposits are also considered a cure by some for skin diseases prevalent in historical­ly neglected Muthanna.

Locals say the drying up of the waters of Lake Sawa presages the return of the Imam al-Mahdi, a revered figure in Shiite Islam and a descendent of the prophet.

“It means the end of days is near,” said al-Aqouli, in jest.

For environmen­talists, the doomsday prediction­s may not be far off.

Studies have shown the lake is fed by undergroun­d water sources through a system of cracks and fissures. It can also receive rainwater from surroundin­g valleys, and heavy rainfall in past years has caused flash floods.

“The degradatio­n of the water began over 10 years ago, but this summer was the first time we lost the entire wetland,” said Laith Ali al-Obeidi, an environmen­tal activist in southern Iraq.

Experts said the lake has not dried up for good but its disappeara­nce this year is a concerning consequenc­e of the thousands of illegal wells dug by businessme­n in nearby cement factories and manufactur­ing zones, a result of drought and decreasing waters along the nearby Euphrates.

By early June, some water began to reappear because farmers, done with the harvest season, stopped diverting undergroun­d water.

Mounds of salt line the road to the river in Muthanna province and are overseen by enterprisi­ng locals who extract it by diverting groundwate­r and digging wells. The salt is used as a raw material in various industries in the area.

Mortadha Ali, 45, is involved in the salt business in Muthanna. He blames years of government neglect in the province for the disappeara­nce of Lake Sawa. “They should provide people with jobs, so they aren’t obliged to dig wells to make a living,” he said.

Enforcing the closure of illegal wells and additional protective measures would have reversed Lake Sawa’s decline, said Aoun Diab, an adviser to the Water Resources Ministry. But these would have directly affected the economic interests of provincial officials.

This has disrupted a delicate and interdepen­dent ecosystem sustained by the rare desert oasis.

Species of fish, unfit for human consumptio­n, were food for various vulnerable migratory birds that sojourned along its banks. With the fish gone, the birds too will have to reroute their seasonal passage or perish, said al-Obeidi.

And the future is poised to bring more hardship, with alarming prediction­s of more water stress. The Water Resources Ministry has said water levels decreased by 60% compared to last year in 2022.

Lake Sawa is “a case study for climate change in Iraq,” al-Obeidi said. “This is the future.”

But the lake is also a ghost of its former illustriou­s past.

The only body of water near the city of Samawah, the area boasted thousands of tourists a year. Their waste — water bottles, soda cans and abandoned flip flops — remain along the dried up shores as an ode to what the impoverish­ed area has lost.

Holiday installati­ons built decades ago stand half-finished. Most were looted after the Gulf War in the 1990s and then after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion that ousted dictator Saddam Hussein.

In 2014, Lake Sawa was named a Ramsar site, an internatio­nal designatio­n for important wetlands, gaining recognitio­n as a rare area in need of protection. A large billboard marking the occasion overlooks the site. Local authoritie­s hoped this would boost tourism and government resources to resume developmen­t of the area. Plans were drafted to pave roads and walkways around the lake, as well as electricit­y lines and water projects.

Ultimately, these failed to transpire.

The hot air was heavy as al-Aqouli took one last look of the lake before leaving.

“Believe me, it was beautiful,” he said.

 ?? (AP/Hadi Mizban) ?? “This lake was known as the pearl of the south,” said Hussam al-Aqouli, 35, a native of the nearby city of Samawa, speaking about the dried-up Lake Sawa in Iraq. “Now it is our tragedy.”
(AP/Hadi Mizban) “This lake was known as the pearl of the south,” said Hussam al-Aqouli, 35, a native of the nearby city of Samawa, speaking about the dried-up Lake Sawa in Iraq. “Now it is our tragedy.”
 ?? ?? This year, for the first time in its centuries-long history, Lake Sawa dried up completely.
This year, for the first time in its centuries-long history, Lake Sawa dried up completely.
 ?? ?? A combinatio­n of mismanagem­ent by local investors, government neglect and climate change is blamed for the drying of Lake Sawa.
A combinatio­n of mismanagem­ent by local investors, government neglect and climate change is blamed for the drying of Lake Sawa.
 ?? ?? A general view of the dried-up Lake Sawa is seen June 4.
A general view of the dried-up Lake Sawa is seen June 4.

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