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Home » At least 1800 hospitalised in Iraq as sandstorm halts flights and triggers power outages – UK Times
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At least 1800 hospitalised in Iraq as sandstorm halts flights and triggers power outages – UK Times

By uk-times.com15 April 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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Sandstorms in central and southern Iraq have led to the hospitalisation of more than 1,800 people due to respiratory issues, health officials said.

Mazen al-Egeili, a local official in the Muthanna province in the south of the country told AFP news agency that at least 700 people were hospitalised due to suffocation on Monday.

Iraq’s environment ministry had earlier warned that the country might see more such “dust days”.

In the Najaf province, authorities told the outlet that over 250 people were taken to the hospital over breathing difficulties and at least 322 people were taken to local hospitals in Diwaniyah province.

Reports suggest there were several children among the afflicted.

In the Dhi Qar and Basra provinces, health authorities reported at least 530 people were hospitalised.

Airports in the southern provinces of Najaf and Basra were temporarily shut as visibility was severely impaired due to the sandstorm – deemed to be the biggest this year.

TOPSHOT - A pedestrian struggles to breathe as he walks along the side of a road through low visibility conditions due to a massive dust storm in Iraq’s central city of Najaf on 14 April 2025

TOPSHOT – A pedestrian struggles to breathe as he walks along the side of a road through low visibility conditions due to a massive dust storm in Iraq’s central city of Najaf on 14 April 2025 (AFP via Getty Images)

Visibility was low as dust covered the streets and landmarks and drivers reportedly kept car headlights on to see the road.

A paramedic in an ambulance helps a person use a respirator as a massive dust storm hits Iraq's central city of Najaf on 14 April 2025

A paramedic in an ambulance helps a person use a respirator as a massive dust storm hits Iraq’s central city of Najaf on 14 April 2025 (AFP via Getty Images)

Sandstorms in Iraq are common but experts say that climate crisis is making them more severe and frequent. United Nations says that Iraq is one of the five countries most impacted by some effects of climate change.

According to experts, sandstorms are also exacerbated by low rainfall and desertification. According to the Iraqi ministry of environment, desertification has ravaged 71 per cent of the country’s arable land. It says that an additional 10,000 hectares are becoming barren each year.

An Iraqi worker wipes his face with water from a modern irrigation sprinkler system in a wheat field in the desert of Najaf as a heavy sandstorm hit the area in central Iraq on 10 April 2025

An Iraqi worker wipes his face with water from a modern irrigation sprinkler system in a wheat field in the desert of Najaf as a heavy sandstorm hit the area in central Iraq on 10 April 2025 (AFP via Getty Images)

Footage shared on social media and local media outlets showed people wearing face masks to protect themselves against the dust. Paramedics were reportedly stationed in public places in the affected provinces to assist people facing difficulties in breathing.

The sandstorm also led to power outages in the affected provinces.

TOPSHOT - A wheelchair-bound person is assisted by others to cross to a traffic island in the middle of a road in low visibility conditions amidst a massive dust storm in Iraq's southern city of Basra on 14 April 2025

TOPSHOT – A wheelchair-bound person is assisted by others to cross to a traffic island in the middle of a road in low visibility conditions amidst a massive dust storm in Iraq’s southern city of Basra on 14 April 2025 (AFP via Getty Images)

According to local weather services, conditions are expected to get better by Tuesday.

In 2022, one person died due to a severe sandstorm in Iraq and at least 5000 were hospitalised.

A man sits along the bank of the Shatt al-Arab waterway amid a massive dust storm in Iraq's southern city of Basra on 14 April 2025. Around 1,500 people were sent to hospitals with respiratory problems on 14 April as a storm hit central and southern Iraq, health officials said

A man sits along the bank of the Shatt al-Arab waterway amid a massive dust storm in Iraq’s southern city of Basra on 14 April 2025. Around 1,500 people were sent to hospitals with respiratory problems on 14 April as a storm hit central and southern Iraq, health officials said (AFP via Getty Images)

At the time, Azzam Alwash, head of the Nature Iraq non-profit organisation, told AP that “climate change alone doesn’t give the whole picture” and that inappropriate farming practices and mismanagement of water resources have contributed to the problems.

Sandstorm disrupts daily life in Iraq’s Najaf

“Climate change has become a very convenient excuse for officials to avoid responsibility for not taking action over the last 20 to 40 years,” he said.

Desertification and rising water salinity are also factors, Mr Alwash said at the time. “These are policy issues.”

The World Bank has warned that Iraq could suffer a 20 per cent drop in water resources by 2050.

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