'Our whole life depends on water': Climate change, pollution and dams
threaten Iraq’s Marsh Arabs
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[October 14, 2021]
By Charlotte Bruneau and Thaier Al-Sudani
CHEBAYESH MARSHES, Iraq (Reuters) - On an
island surrounded by the narrow waterways of the Chebayesh Marshes in
southern Iraq, Sabah Thamer al-Baher rises with the sun to milk his herd
of water buffalo.
This summer has been tough for Baher, a father of two. Iraq's 2020-2021
rainfall season was the second driest in 40 years, according to the
United Nations, causing the salinity of the wetlands to rise to
dangerous levels.
Animals fell sick and died, and Baher was forced to buy fresh drinking
water for his own herd of around 20 buffaloes, his only source of
income.
Another drought is predicted for 2023 as climate change, pollution and
upstream damming keep Iraq trapped in a cycle of recurring water crises.
"The marshes are our life. If droughts persist, we will stop to exist,
because our whole life depends on water and raising water buffaloes,"
said 37-year-old Baher.
Baher and his family are Marsh Arabs, the wetlands' indigenous
population that was displaced in the 1990s when Saddam Hussein dammed
and drained the marshes to flush out rebels hiding in the reeds.
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After his overthrow in 2003, the marshes were partly reflooded and many
Marsh Arabs returned, including Baher's family.
However, conditions have pushed the wetlands' fragile ecosystem off
balance, endangering biodiversity and livelihoods, said Jassim al-Asadi,
an environmentalist born in the marshes.
"The less water, the saltier it is," Christophe Chauveau, a French
veterinarian who surveyed the marshes for Agronomists and Veterinarians
Without Borders said, adding that buffalos drink less and produce less
milk when the water quality drops.
According to the Max Planck Institute, the temperature rise in the
Middle East during summer has been more than 0.5 degrees Celsius per
decade - about twice as high as the global average.
Iraq's neighbours are also suffering from droughts and rising
temperatures, which has led to regional water disputes. The water
ministry said earlier this year that water flows from Iran and Turkey
were reduced by 50 percent throughout the summer.
PRIORITIES
Then there is the matter of pollution coming from upstream. In 2019, the
government said that 5 million cubic metres a day of raw sewage water
were being pumped directly into the Tigris, one of the rivers that feed
Iraq's marshes.
Environmentalist Azzam Alwash said there was an urgent need for Iraq to
commit to a long-term water management strategy as its fast-growing
population of nearly 40 million is estimated to double by 2050.
Aoun Dhiab, spokesperson for the water ministry, said the government's
strategy was to preserve the deeper, permanent water bodies of the
marshes across a minimum of 2,800 square kilometres (1080 square miles).
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Sabah Thamer al-Baher sits at his home in the Chebayesh marsh, Dhi
Qar province, Iraq, August 15, 2021. Iraq's 2020-2021 rainfall
season was the second driest in 40 years, according to the United
Nations, causing the salinity of the wetlands to rise to dangerous
levels. Animals fell sick and died, and Baher was forced to buy
fresh drinking water for his own herd of around 20 buffaloes, his
only source of income. Another drought is predicted for 2023 as
climate change, pollution and upstream damming keep Iraq trapped in
a cycle of recurring water crises. "The marshes are our life. If
droughts persist, we will stop to exist, because our whole life
depends on water and raising water buffaloes," said Baher. REUTERS/Thaier
al-Sudani
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"This is what we are planning, to preserve the
permanent water bodies to protect the ecological resources and fish
stock," he said.
Dhiab said water levels in the marshes had partially improved since
the summer, with less evaporation due to falling temperatures and
that the wetlands shrink and expand naturally depending on the
season.
He also said the government could not allocate more water to the
marshes when there were shortages of drinking water in summer.
"Of course people in the marshes want more water, but we need to
prioritise. The priority goes to drinking water, to the
municipalities and to preserving the Shatt al-Arab river," he said.
Drought and pollution of the Shatt al-Arab river caused a crisis in
southern Iraq in 2018, when thousands were hospitalised with
water-borne diseases.
The consequences are nonetheless punishing for the Marsh Arabs. With
his youngest daughter nestled in his arms and drinking buffalo milk
out of her feeder, Baher watches his nephews tend to a sick buffalo.
In summer, some of Baher's relatives moved their herds altogether to
deeper parts of the marshes, where salinity levels were lower, but
fighting over the best spots as families were forced to share
shrinking spaces.
Estimates on the marshes' current population vary widely. Once
400,000 in the 1950s, around 250,000 people returned when the
marshes were reflooded.
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While diminishing water supplies pushed farmers this year to move to
the cities, where a lack of jobs and services have led to protests
in the past, Baher, like many other young herders, hopes that he
will be able to remain here.
"I felt like a stranger in the city," he said, remembering when the
marshes were drained. "When the water came back to the marshes, we
regained our freedom."
(Reporting by Charlotte Bruneau and Thaier Al-Sudani; Editing by
Raissa Kasolowsky)
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