Baghdad - The weather in Baghdad has been biblical of late.
Great walls of sand, driven by scorching hot winds, have crashed
against the walls and windows of the city, delaying historic business
deals, waylaying diplomatic visits, even interfering with the city's
power supply.
Iraqis on the streets of the capital lean into the wind, squint,
and cover their faces with scarves or surgical masks as they battle
the gritty gale. On Sunday the mercury has climbed to 43 degrees
Celsius, and meteorologists forecast no relief in the next 24 hours
at least.
On Saturday, the sandstorms obliged US Vice President Joe Biden to
cancel a planned visit to Iraqi President Jalal Talabani in northern
Iraq's semi-autonomous region (Biden telephoned to send his regrets
and promised to visit again, Iraqi state television reported).
Last week, a sandstorm delayed bidding on eight Iraqi oil and gas
fields - the first such bids since the fall of Saddam Hussein -
because flights could not land.
The country, parched by two years of drought, has not seen such a
punishing wave of sandstorms in decades, government scientists say.
The Ministry of Agriculture and local authorities are urging
citizens to combat desertification. Shepherds are being asked to
minimize the damage their animals do by grazing on desert plants,
particularly around urban areas, to help keep the dust anchored by
roots.
'The dust storms will continue through the summer,' Fadel
al-Firaji, director of the Ministry of Agriculture's
anti-desertification department, told the German Press Agency dpa.
'The bedouin in the desert, the stripping of the land's natural
vegetation, and the planting of grain crops in an arbitrary and
ill-advised manner are to blame,' he said.
'Since the 1991 (Gulf War), military vehicles have been moving
through desert areas,' he added. 'This removed the packed, solid
surface layer of the desert and exposed the land to wind erosion,
which in turn damaged the shrubs in the desert. The problem worsened
after the tragic events of the 2003 (invasion of the Iraq).'
The storms almost completely halted the electrical supply to
Baghdad last week.
'The storms have hurt the production of electrical power because
the dust clogs the massive filters used to filter out air coming in
to fuel gas powerplants,' Iraqi Minister of Electricity Karim Wahid
said. 'We have had to shut down the plants to clean or change the
filters.'
'We usually clean these filters once a year, but lately the
weather has made this maintenance more urgent. The cleaning requires
hours of work and obliges us to stop the power plants from 9:00 am.
to 7:00 pm,' he said.
The higher temperatures and the dust have also sent residents
rushing to hospital, Mohammed Bahadli, a 35-year-old doctor said.
'The relentless storms have clogged the hospitals with tons of
people suffering from chest and respiratory diseases and asthma. The
corridors have been packed with hundreds of coughing, gasping
patients. Many have died,' he said.
To counter the problem, vendors are doing a brisk business in
surgical masks, now available in a variety of colours and sizes for
250 Iraqi dinars (21 US cents) a piece. They are particularly
popular with civil-servants, professionals, and anyone who must work
in an outdoor market.
Indoors, ordinary families face a daily, losing battle to keep
their houses clean.
'Since the storms started more than a week ago, I haven't been
doing much else but clearing off the dust blanketing all the
furniture, even the bed,' Faiza Sabri, a 43-year-old government
clerk, told dpa.
'And since there's no electricity, we can't run the air
conditioner, which would at least help filter out some of the dust,'
she said. 'We're left with no choice but to open the windows
sometimes, just to let in a little air.'
Outdoors, despite all the money being spent on planting trees
along Baghdad's streets and public squares, and reconstructing
buildings destroyed during the March 2003 'Shock and Awe' bombing
campaign, the city looks drab and dusty.
When the storms finally subside, Baghdad residents, who have faced
invasion, lethal bombings, a collapse in such basic services as power
and water, will now face the daunting task of sweeping up the desert
sands the punishing winds have driven into their city.
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