logo
Spring gatherings: Duhok celebrates Nowruz

Spring gatherings: Duhok celebrates Nowruz

Shafaq News04-04-2025
Shafaq News/ On Friday, thousands of residents gathered in Duhok to celebrate Nowruz, the Kurdish New Year, after the holiday was postponed due to its overlap with Ramadan and Eid al-Fitr.
Families pitched tents in valleys and mountain areas, joining in traditional dancing, music, and meals. Large crowds were reported across the province as locals embraced the spring weather.
'We couldn't celebrate Nowruz at the usual time because of Ramadan and Eid,' said Salim Saeed, a resident of Al-Amediya. 'Today, we came to enjoy nature, dance, and eat our favorite Kurdish dishes,' he said
Some visitors voiced concern over the dry season. 'There's been very little rainfall,' said Abdullah Ali, adding, 'We haven't seen the greenery we're used to. We hope for more rain to revive the landscape.'
Despite the conditions, the mood remained festive. 'We danced to our favorite Kurdish songs in traditional clothes,' said Laveen Jamal. 'It's been a joyful day.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hellish Heat: Iraqi workers trapped in a climate-labor crisis
Hellish Heat: Iraqi workers trapped in a climate-labor crisis

Shafaq News

time9 hours ago

  • Shafaq News

Hellish Heat: Iraqi workers trapped in a climate-labor crisis

Shafaq News As temperatures in Iraq routinely soar above 50°C during the summer months, a silent humanitarian crisis is playing out in the country's bakeries, fish markets, and traditional kitchens. Far from air-conditioned offices or shaded infrastructure, thousands of informal and daily-wage workers are enduring prolonged exposure to life-threatening heat—without protective regulation, legal enforcement, or viable alternatives. This environmental-labor emergency is considered a chronic public health and governance failure, exacerbated by climate change and the state's inability to protect its most vulnerable citizens. Iraq's Escalating Climate Extremes Iraq is already one of the most climate-vulnerable countries in the world. In 2025, Baghdad and other provinces recorded several consecutive days between 48-50°C, and the Iraq Meteorological Organization forecasts longer and more intense heatwaves in the coming months. According to the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), Iraq is facing 'a critical convergence of rising temperatures, declining water availability, and growing urban vulnerability.' The country's urban centers—already burdened by poor infrastructure and weak public health services—are especially ill-equipped to handle prolonged extreme heat events. The problem is not simply environmental, but systemic: climate change is interacting with weak labor protections and economic precarity to create conditions of extreme risk for Iraq's working class. Health Hazards in Iraq's 'Indoor Outdoors' Despite the assumption that extreme heat is primarily a concern for outdoor laborers, indoor workers in unventilated, fire-adjacent environments face a parallel—and often more intense—threat. In kitchens, bakeries, and grill stations, workers labor directly beside open flames and gas-powered ovens, often for 12-hour shifts. 'The sun is not our problem—the fire is,' said fish griller Hossam al-Din Abbas, explaining to Shafaq News that heat exposure is not only constant but intensified by the close-range proximity to high-temperature cooking stations. 'Halting work during dangerous heat is entirely up to employers. If we stop, we don't eat.' 'I've been doing this for 15 years. Every summer it gets worse. I've passed out, burned myself more times than I can count,' said bakery worker Kareem Farhan. 'We stand facing the fire for seven, sometimes ten hours straight. I've had to take weeks off because my body gave out—but I come back, because I need the job.' 'Many workers quit during the summer. It's just too much. But I've gotten used to it,' Farhan added. 'Used to being sick. Used to being tired. It's survival.' Medical professionals have verified these hazards, warning that prolonged heat exposure without ventilation causes circulatory strain, joint inflammation, muscle cramps, and chronic fatigue. The World Health Organization (WHO) confirms that occupational heat stress can lead to 'serious health outcomes, including cardiovascular and kidney diseases, especially when combined with poor air quality and lack of rest periods.' Yet in Iraq, these risks are normalized. Workers return to stifling stations day after day, often without contracts, health insurance, or even access to basic first aid. Legal Protections on Paper, Not in Practice Iraq's 2015 Labor Law technically mandates essential safety provisions: proper gear, medical checks, and visible health instructions. But enforcement is virtually nonexistent, particularly in the sprawling informal sector, where inspections are rare and employment terms are unregulated. Legal expert Nour al-Din Mahdi confirmed to Shafaq News that the absence of institutional oversight allows employers to 'violate basic safety requirements with impunity.' 'The Labor Law includes clear instructions for providing first-aid kits, protective gear, and regular health check-ups,' he added. 'But without inspections or penalties, these laws mean nothing in the informal sector.' Restaurant owner Abdulaziz Abdelwahid told Shafaq News that closing during summer isn't feasible when the business is the only livelihood. 'Injuries and resignations happen, but we can't stop—this is how we feed our families.' In essence, employers and employees alike are trapped in a mutual vulnerability: owners can't afford to close, and workers can't afford to stop—leaving no room for safety, even as conditions become lethal. Culture of Silence One of the most troubling dynamics is the near-total absence of complaints. Despite widespread suffering, no formal reports have been submitted by bakery or grill workers to Iraq's General Federation of Trade Unions. According to the union representative, Sattar al-Danbous, the federation has received no formal reports from bakery or grill workers, even during peak heat. 'This silence reflects not acceptance but fear—of losing jobs, of being uninsured, and of institutions that workers don't trust to protect them. Many simply view suffering as part of survival.' For many, physical harm becomes part of the job—baked into a labor culture where enduring risk is the price of economic survival. No Heat Limits, No Central Authority Across the Gulf, countries like the UAE, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia have implemented mandatory midday breaks or outright bans on outdoor labor during peak summer hours. These policies are informed by rising global awareness of occupational heat stress as a health hazard and economic risk. In contrast, Iraq has no such laws. There is no national heat index system, no binding protocol for temperature-based work stoppages, and no centralized body responsible for monitoring thermal conditions in workplaces. Labor unions occasionally issue safety advisories, but without inspections or consequences, most recommendations go ignored. The International Labour Organization (ILO) has warned that without regulatory frameworks to protect against heat exposure, countries in the Middle East face 'increased rates of occupational illness, productivity losses, and premature mortality.' The Intersection of Climate, Poverty, and Neglect At its core, this crisis is not only about temperature. It is about inequality, deregulation, and environmental neglect. The state's failure to prepare for and respond to climate-induced labor risks is not an oversight—it is a structural issue deeply tied to Iraq's broader challenges: unstable governance, weakened public institutions, and reliance on an informal economy that employs over 60% of the workforce. Climate change has not created this vulnerability, but it has exposed and magnified it. If Iraq continues on this trajectory—without national heat standards, without enforcement of labor laws, and adaptation plans—the human toll will grow exponentially. Climate scientists warn that Iraq's average summer temperatures may rise by 2–3°C by 2050, making current conditions not an anomaly—but a baseline. Written and edited by Shafaq News staff.

Wildfires burn 110 hectares in Feyli Ilam as drought
Wildfires burn 110 hectares in Feyli Ilam as drought

Shafaq News

timea day ago

  • Shafaq News

Wildfires burn 110 hectares in Feyli Ilam as drought

Shafaq News – Ilam Since the start of the Iranian calendar year in March, thirteen wildfires have scorched over 110 hectares of forest in Ilam province, turning large swaths of woodland into ashes. Ali Reza Mohammadi, head of Ilam's Department of Environment, attributed the fires to severe drought and low rainfall during the summer season, adding that human negligence has also severely damaged the region's forests and ecosystems. He also praised local citizens, environmental groups, and the provincial crisis committee for helping extinguish the fires, stressing that media outlets play a vital role in raising awareness by producing and sharing educational content on environmental protection. Mohammadi told Shafaq News that the department is deploying modern protective systems, including drones, to monitor and respond to fire outbreaks, highlighting a new contract signed with Shahrekord University, Iran, to assess ecosystem services in protected areas.

No 'underground sea': Iraq's water reserves under strain
No 'underground sea': Iraq's water reserves under strain

Shafaq News

time5 days ago

  • Shafaq News

No 'underground sea': Iraq's water reserves under strain

Shafaq News – Baghdad/Erbil On Saturday, Iraq's Green Observatory estimated the country's annual groundwater reserves at 3.4 billion cubic meters, with sustainable yields potentially exceeding 5 billion cubic meters per year. In its report, the Observatory highlighted that groundwater is present across all provinces, though salinity levels vary significantly by region. Areas close to rivers—such as Dhi Qar and large parts of Basra, Al-Diwaniyah, and Al-Samawah—tend to have saline groundwater. In contrast, sources located in Iraq's western, southern, and eastern deserts, as well as aquifers in Saladin, Kirkuk, and Nineveh, are generally suitable for agriculture but require treatment to meet drinking water standards. The report also addressed circulating claims about a vast ''underground sea'' beneath Iraq's deserts, dismissing these assertions, further warning that such unfounded narratives risk distorting public understanding and may lead to increased consumption based on the mistaken assumption that Iraq holds untapped, abundant reserves. The publication comes amid heightened public concern over water scarcity, particularly in Basra, where protests broke out earlier this month over worsening water quality, saltwater intrusion, and pollution. Official Iraqi data indicate the country could face a 20% decline in surface water availability by 2035, driven by upstream flow reductions and the escalating impacts of climate change.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store