Plague of snakes spark panic in Iraq province
[Beirut Daily Star: Region] A plague of snakes has caused panic in Iraq's southern province of Nasiriyah, biting cattle and worrying residents as the reptiles flee the country's water-deprived marshes.
"We have been surprised in recent days by the unprecedented number of snakes that have fled their habitat because of the dryness and heat," said Wissam al-Assadi, a veterinary officer in Shabaysh town.
"We saw some on roads, near houses and cowsheds. They have attacked cows and buffalo, and farmers have come to us looking for vaccines but we don't have any."
Jabbar Salleh, who farms land near the town, said the snakes had caused huge problems. "I will leave the region if this continues," he told AFP.
Iraq's water reserves dipped to 11 billion cubic meters in May, compared with 40 billion cubic meters three years earlier, although rainfall this past winter was normal.
Experts say Iraq faces agricultural disaster this summer if neighboring Turkey continues to retain waters from the Tigris and Euphrates rivers which have nourished Iraqi agriculture for millennia.
The situation regarding the Euphrates is the most worrying. Reserves behind Haditha dam in the country's west, the first on the river, were just 1.5 billion cubic meters on May 1, compared with eight billion two years ago.
Iraq says the problem is the many dams Turkey has built over the past 30 years to irrigate its own southeast. These dams allow Turkey to regulate the flow of rivers according to its wishes.
Posted by: Fred 2009-06-03 |