Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Sandstorm disrupts education, flights in Iraq

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SOME state schools and offices were closed and flights were halted at Baghdad Internatio­nal Airport yesterday due to a severe sandstorm in Iraq, the latest of an unpreceden­ted number to hit the country in recent weeks.

Authoritie­s in Baghdad, including the Education Ministry, declared a day off for local government institutio­ns, with the exception of health services. Hundreds of people across the capital and southern cities went to hospitals with breathing difficulti­es, medical officials said.

Baghdad Internatio­nal Airport said in a statement it was closing its airspace and halting all flights until further notice because of low visibility. At least one sandstorm a week has hit Iraq in the past few weeks in what Iraqis say is the worst such spate in living memory.

“It’s every three or four days now,” said taxi driver Ahmed Zaman, 23. “It’s clearly a result of climate change and lack of rain, whenever there’s wind it just kicks up dust and sand.”

In Baghdad and southern Iraqi cities, a red haze of dust and sand reduced visibility to just a few hundred feet.

“We’ve had 75 cases of people with respirator­y problems,” said Ihsan Mawlood, an accident and emergency doctor in a Baghdad hospital.

Iraq is the fifth most vulnerable country in the world to the climate crisis, according to the United Nations. Drought and extreme temperatur­es are drying up farmland and making large parts of Iraq barely habitable during the summer months. The country posted record temperatur­es of at least 52 degrees Celsius (125 degrees Fahrenheit) in recent years.

 ?? ?? Cars drive by a mosque amid a sandstorm in Baghdad, Iraq, May 16, 2022.
Cars drive by a mosque amid a sandstorm in Baghdad, Iraq, May 16, 2022.

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