logo
New life for ancient rivers: Iraq's water initiative gains UN acclaim

New life for ancient rivers: Iraq's water initiative gains UN acclaim

Shafaq News24-05-2025
Shafaq News/ Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani unveiled a regional initiative to protect the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, as Iraq faces one of its most critical water crises in decades.
Speaking at the 5th Baghdad International Water Conference, held on Saturday under the theme Water and Technology: Partnership for Development, al-Sudani outlined a strategy focused on joint water management, modernized irrigation, and cross-border cooperation.
'We live through economic, social, and security challenges, all of which depend on the availability of water,' al-Sudani said. 'This is not just an infrastructure issue—it touches every part of life and demands collective responsibility.'
The initiative drew praise from Marco Arcieri, president of the UN-affiliated International Commission on Irrigation and Drainage (ICID), who commended Iraq's historic leadership in water systems.
'Iraq has always been a pioneer in water management,' Arcieri said. 'With today's technologies and regional collaboration, it can lead once again.'
He emphasized that global partners are actively supporting Iraq in deploying advanced technologies to bolster water and food security.
Iraq's water supply has been shrinking rapidly. Flows from the Tigris and Euphrates—its main water sources—have dropped by up to 40% due to upstream dams, climate change, and prolonged droughts, leading to shrinking reservoirs, dying farmlands, polluted water, and the growing displacement of rural communities.
Supporting the prime minister's call, Water Resources Minister Aoun Diab described Iraq as one of the most water-stressed nations in the world, grappling with 'complex and overlapping challenges.'
'The biggest threat isn't just water scarcity—it's the lack of cooperation,' Diab said, urging neighboring countries to engage in joint river basin management.
Diab also noted that Iraq is pursuing a plan to improve water governance and align with sustainable development goals.
Speaking on behalf of President Abdul Latif Rashid, Presidential Advisor Mohammed Amin underscored Iraq's downstream vulnerability in both river basins, calling for a binding agreement with Turkiye to secure a fair water share.
'This is not a temporary challenge—it is a national crisis,' Amin said, adding that climate change and unregulated water usage are accelerating the problem.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US army kills senior ISIS leader in Syria
US army kills senior ISIS leader in Syria

Rudaw Net

time19 minutes ago

  • Rudaw Net

US army kills senior ISIS leader in Syria

ERBIL, Kurdistan Region - The United States army announced on Friday that it carried out a raid in Aleppo province in northern Syria, killing a senior Islamic State (ISIS) leader and two of his sons. The raid took place in al-Bab town. The suspected ISIS leader, Dhiya' Zawba Muslih al-Hardani, and his two ISIS-affiliated sons were killed, US Central Command (CENTCOM) said in a statement. 'These ISIS individuals posed a threat to US and Coalition Forces, as well as the new Syrian Government. Three women and three children were also on the target and were unharmed,' it added. General Michael "Erik" Kurilla said the US would 'continue to relentlessly pursue ISIS terrorists wherever they are. ISIS terrorists are not safe where they sleep, where they operate, and where they hide.' Since its defeat in 2019, ISIS has been trying to regain strength, especially after a coalition of opposition groups led by the now-dissolved Hay'at Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) toppled the regime of Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad on December 8. Kurdish authorities in northeast Syria (Rojava), who defeated ISIS in Syria with the help of the US-led global coalition, have repeatedly warned of the growing threat posed by ISIS. In mid-January, commander of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) Mazloum Abdi said there is a 'need to intensify efforts to continue the fight against ISIS if we don't want to see it make a comeback.'

Turkish parliament forms PKK peace talks commission
Turkish parliament forms PKK peace talks commission

Rudaw Net

timean hour ago

  • Rudaw Net

Turkish parliament forms PKK peace talks commission

Also in Turkey DEM Party meets jailed PKK leader PKK demands constitutional changes in Turkey, refuses amnesty Ten dead in western Turkey wildfires DEM Party rebukes call by Erdogan's ally to dissolve A+ A- ERBIL, Kurdistan Region - The Turkish parliament on Friday announced the formation of a 51-member commission as part of peace talks with the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK). Parties have been asked to submit their candidates by Thursday. Parliament speaker Numan Kurtulmus sent letters to most of the political parties in the legislature, asking them to submit the names of their lawmakers that will join the commission, reported the state-run Anadolu Agency. The ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) is entitled to 21 members, followed by the main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) with ten members. The pro-Kurdish Peoples' Equality and Democracy Party (DEM Party) and the far-right Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) each will have four members. The rest will be distributed over smaller parties. The ultranationalist Good Party (IYI) has refused to take part. The formation of the commission is part of ongoing peace talks, or what Ankara calls terror-free Turkey, between the state and the PKK, which has decided to dissolve itself and lay down arms after decades of devastating war. A first group of PKK fighters burned their weapons earlier this month. Sezai Temelli, a DEM Party lawmaker, told Rudaw on Tuesday that the commission's main task will be to ensure 'legal and political guarantees for the disarmament process.' Some PKK fighters based in Duhok province told Rudaw earlier this month that they fear reprisals if they return to Turkey, with many opting to remain in the mountains instead. Cemil Bayik, co-chair of the executive council of PKK umbrella group the Kurdistan Communities Union (KCK), said in an interview with the PKK-affiliated Yeni Yasam news outlet on Thursday that they do not seek an amnesty but are demanding constitutional changes. 'These laws need to change, not just for the Kurds, but for all democratic forces, for all left-wing forces. Democratic laws need to evolve. Freedom laws need to evolve. The constitution has failed," he said. The PKK was formed in response to institutionalized discrimination against Turkey's Kurdish population.

Palestinian Authority Daily: Hamas Is Preventing Gaza Residents From Reaching Aid Distribution Centers
Palestinian Authority Daily: Hamas Is Preventing Gaza Residents From Reaching Aid Distribution Centers

Memri

timean hour ago

  • Memri

Palestinian Authority Daily: Hamas Is Preventing Gaza Residents From Reaching Aid Distribution Centers

In its June 19, 2025 editorial, the Palestinian Authority Al-Hayat Al-Jadida daily stated that Hamas is murdering and otherwise preventing Gaza residents from reaching the U.S.-backed humanitarian aid distribution centers established in the Gaza Strip. It said that "death squads" from Hamas's Al-Sahm unit[1] hunt down Gazans coming to the distribution centers, shoot at them and kill them on the pretext that they are collaborating with the distribution centers and with Israel. The article added that Hamas does not hesitate to target Gaza residents in order to maintain its monopoly on the distribution of food and thus its control, and that Hamas steals the food aid and sells it on the black market. To prove its argument, the article presented social media posts by Gazans accusing Hamas of murdering their loved ones when they tried to reach the distribution centers. One post was by Hiba Al-Mishal, who said that her brother Osama was murdered by a Hamas squad while he was en route to the distribution center. She wrote on her Facebook account that a squad from Hamas's Al-Sahm unit had stopped a bus her brother and some other young men were traveling on, took them outside, and shot them several times, and that they were subsequently denied medical treatment and died. She also wrote that Hamas had forced other civilians to beat them.[2] Illustration in Hamas mouthpiece depicts execution of collaborators ( May 31, 2025) The following are translated excerpts from the Al-Hayat Al-Jadida editorial that was published June 19, 2025. [3] "Alongside the reports that exposed Israeli occupation forces' massacres of displaced persons looking for food, and [their] shooting at them, numerous reports out of Gaza say that Hamas is killing many civilians looking for a sack of flour on the pretext that they are collaborating with the American food distribution centers!! This is being revealed not only in reports but also in messages and [social media] posts by families whose relatives have been targeted by the treacherous Hamas. "Examples of this include: an announcement by the Shahin family from Deir Al-Balah about [Hamas'] treacherous bullets that took the life of their son Siraj Al-Din Hisham Salameh Shahin[4]; a statement by the Al-Hilou family about five of its members being killed [5]; and a post by Hiba Al-Mishal, the sister of the murdered Osama Al-Mishal, in which she revealed that a group of Hamas members called the Al-Sahm Unit (!!!) had obstructed a bus in which her brother and several young men were traveling to one of the food distribution centers. [The Hamas members] took them off [the bus] and shot them, after 'falsely and oppressively accusing them of collaboration.' [Then, Hamas members] followed the wounded [young men] to the entrance of Nasser Hospital, where they shot them again, 'prevented the doctors and nurses from treating them, and even urged people to beat them with sticks and iron pipes. [All] this happened amid the painful silence and the worrying cooperation [of those present].' This caused the deaths of her brother and the others who were on the bus with him. "In the post, Hiba demanded 'justice for my brother and every innocent young man killed in an oppressive manner,' writing: 'We do not want revenge – just truth and justice, because honor does not die and blood is not erased with excuses or washed away by silence.' She declared: 'All those who participated, remained silent or justified this crime are responsible before Allah, history and the mothers, sisters, daughters and wives of the slain and their families.'" The editorial went on to emphasize: "Objectively – even if Hamas's claims are true and its accusations [of collaboration] are not unfounded – such matters should be dealt with honestly by the authorities and according to the law, and not through the death squads that Hamas is establishing, undoubtedly for the sole purpose of maintaining control of the wounded Gaza Strip. "These are just accusations, without investigation, judges or courts, and this is how the [Hamas] militia rules, with no law, consideration or respect and esteem for people's most fundamental rights: for a crust of bread, a safe environment, or, in case of [legal] uncertainty, the right to a fair trial. "In today's destructive crisis, Hamas has no choice but to set up death squads [to operate] against anyone who opposes its theft and tries to find a sack of flour outside its control and far from its black market... It is not only Israel that is creating this terrible reality; Hamas is complicit in this industry of death, hunting down the hungry with the death squads it calls Al-Sahm, in order to inform anyone who approaches [the distribution centers] that do not belong to Hamas that their only [fate] will be to fall victim to the arrows of the Al-Sahm Unit. "This is the bitter reality: Hamas and its Al-Sahm Unit, which hunts down those who seek nothing but a crust of bread."

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