Gulf Today

Conflict and crippling drought ravage Iraq’s prized date palms

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BASRA: Sweet Iraqi dates adorn tables in homes across the country, but the fruit tree and national symbol HAS Come under threat From Conlict and crippling drought.

Shopping in the southern city of Basra, Leila only buys“the queen of dates ”— those produced in the surroundin­g province.

Her husband Mehdi, 68, said the couple have the sweet fruit “every lunchtime, and also for snacks between meals.”

The pair devours a kilo over two to three days, at a cost of 5,000 dinars, or just over $4 (3.40 euros).

But high unemployme­nt and price hikes mean not all families can afford such luxury.

For trader Salem Hussein, who has been selling dates for 40 years, the decline set in long ago — before the drought and Even this Century’s series of DEADLY Conlicts.

The 1980-1988 iran-iraq war decimated the groves of date palms on Iraqi soil, he said, dressed in a sky blue robe and white skullcap.

The majority of trees lining the Shatt Al Arab waterway, marking the border between the two countries, were incinerate­d by shells and rockets.

Hussein once dreamt of expanding palm groves and introducin­g even more varieties than the 450 already boasted by Iraq, which used to be known as the land of 30 million palm trees.

The country’s dates were long exported “to the United States, Japan and India,” recalled the 66-year-old.

“We thought of developing and doubling the number of palms, but the igure only Falls.”

OFICIAL Estimates put THE DECLINE At 50 per cent of pre-1980 numbers.

“We hoped for a better future — and it got even worse,” Hussein lamented.

Iraqi agricultur­e has been especially hard hit by drought this year, resultING In An OFICIAL BAN on THE Growing of rice and cereals which require a lot of water and the deaths of thousands of animals.

With Iraqi farmers hiking their prices due to the drought, seller Aqil Antuch has adapted to keep his cash-strapped customers happy.

He now sells dates imported from Iran, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait at his central Basra shop, which he has run for 25 years.

“The Saudis, who produce a high quantity, want to sell their merchandis­e and lower the price to 1,500 dinars per kilo,” said Antuch, 52.

It’s a far cry from decades past. Saddam Hussein “never let a foreign date enter Iraq,” he said of the former leader, who presided over the Iran-iraq war and was deposed by the Us-led military invasion in 2003.

Shopper Mehdi remembers palm trees in his garden during the dictatorsh­ip, when Iraq was under an internatio­nal trade embargo.

“We would go to the agricultur­e OFICE with A sick palm tree AND they would examine it like a patient at the doctor’s,” he said.

But, in recent years, farming has also been hit by an exodus from rural areas, As Iraqis lock to CITIES AND Informal neighbourh­oods.

Irrigation channels have become open sewers and the rows of trees which once provided shade have disappeare­d.

Palm groves have also been ripped up to make way for oil installati­ons, the country’s biggest source of revenue.

Other groves have been snapped up for constructi­on of new buildings.

In a cruel irony, the majority of dates now sold in Iraq come from trees which irst took root In THE Country, BEFORE being replanted in other Gulf states decades ago.

 ?? File / Agence France-presse ?? A man picks up dates from a palm tree at a farm in Basra.
File / Agence France-presse A man picks up dates from a palm tree at a farm in Basra.

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