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Over 600 Europe-bound migrants returned to Libya — navy

Navy did not specify whether boats had technical problems or not

By - May 03,2021 - Last updated at May 03,2021

Migrants arrive at the naval base in the Libyan capital of Tripoli on Thursday after the coastguard intercepted an inflatable boat carrying 99 Europe-bound migrants off its west coast (AFP photo)

TRIPOLI — More than 600 migrants hoping to reach Europe from Libya have been stopped since Friday, the navy said, as the International Organisation for Migration warned Libya was "not a safe port".

Three groups of illegal migrants were intercepted at sea on Friday and Saturday by Libya's coastguard and units in charge of securing ports, the navy said in a statement, released overnight Saturday to Sunday.

It said the 638 people were mostly citizens from sub-Saharan African nations trying to reach Europe, and they were brought to a naval base in the capital Tripoli ahead of handing them over to an anti-immigration squad run by the interior ministry.

The navy said a first group of 334 migrants, who were on board four inflatable boats, were "rescued" on Friday.

Two other groups, of 132 and 172 people, were assisted separately on Friday and Saturday.

The navy did not say if the boats were sinking or had technical problems.

International agencies have repeatedly denounced the return to Libya of migrants intercepted at sea, due to the chaotic situation in the country and poor conditions in detention centres.

The IOM repeated its concerns late Saturday.

"Today, 172 migrants, including women and children, were returned to Libya by the coast guard," it said.

"Our teams provided emergency assistance to more than 600 migrants intercepted over the past 48 hours, it added.

"We reiterate that Libya is not a safe port."

Libya is a major route for migrants trying to reach Europe via the Mediterranean, and traffickers have thrived in the lawlessness that followed the 2011 overthrow of leader Muammar Qadhafi.

UK says Iran's treatment of Zaghari-Ratcliffe is 'torture'

By - May 03,2021 - Last updated at May 03,2021

Richard Ratcliffe argues his wife is being held hostage as part of a diplomatic stratagem (AFP photo)

LONDON — Iran's treatment of detained dual national Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe amounts to "torture" and she is being held hostage, Britain said on Sunday, after she was convicted anew and banned from leaving the Islamic republic.

The British-Iranian woman has been held in Iran since 2016. In late April, she was sentenced to a year's imprisonment and banned from leaving the country for a further 12 months.

British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab, who spoke to Zaghari-Ratcliffe on Wednesday, said she was being held "unlawfully" and "being treated in the most abusive" way.

"I think it amounts to torture the way she's being treated, and there is a very clear, unequivocal obligation on the Iranians to release her," he told BBC television on Sunday.

Her husband Richard Ratcliffe argues she is being held hostage as part of a diplomatic stratagem.

"I think it's very difficult to argue against that characterisation," Raab said, going further than previous UK denunciations over the case.

"It is clear that she is subjected to a cat and mouse game that the Iranians, or certainly part of the Iranian system, engage with and they try and use her for leverage on the UK."

 

Tank debt 

 

Richard Ratcliffe has linked his wife's plight to a British debt dating back more than 40 years for army tanks paid for by the shah of Iran.

When the shah was ousted in the 1979 revolution, Britain refused to deliver the tanks to the new Islamic republic.

London admits it owes Iran several hundred million pounds over the contract involving a British intermediate company, International Military Services (IMS), but is reportedly constrained by international sanctions in its ability to repay.

"We recognise the IMS debt should be repaid and we're looking at arrangements for securing that," Raab told Times Radio.

But Raab said nuclear talks currently ongoing with Iran and its upcoming presidential elections formed a difficult backdrop in all negotiations.

Dual-national detainees including Zaghari-Ratcliffe "shouldn't be held as leverage in any negotiations", the minister stressed. "It's just a basic moral decency."

Zaghari-Ratcliffe, 42, appeared in court last month to face new charges of "propaganda against the system", a week after she finished a five-year sentence for plotting to overthrow the regime, accusations she strenuously denies.

Richard Ratcliffe said the family hoped she could at least serve any new sentence under house arrest, with her parents in Tehran. But the situation was "bleak", he told AFP last week.

 

Daughter's calendar 

 

Zaghari-Ratcliffe was initially detained while on holiday in Iran in 2016, when she was working as a project manager for the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the news agency and data firm's philanthropic wing.

She has been under house arrest in recent months and had her ankle tag removed, giving her more freedom of movement and allowing her to visit other relatives in Tehran.

In March, legal campaign group Redress handed a report to the UK government which it said "confirms the severity of the ill-treatment that Nazanin has suffered".

The organisation said it "considers that Iran's treatment of Nazanin constitutes torture".

Iranian authorities have denied that Zaghari-Ratcliffe has been mistreated.

Richard Ratcliffe said secretive court hearings in London over the tank debt had again been postponed last week, and noted the personal toll suffered by the family.

Ahead of Christmas, their young daughter Gabriella made an advent calendar to count down the expected end of her mother's previous five-year sentence.

"We have not yet discussed with her what two more years without mummy means," he said in an article published Saturday on the website Declassified UK.

"Though again she wants me to sleep in her room at night."

Iran FM asks Soleimani family for 'forgiveness' after leak

By - May 03,2021 - Last updated at May 03,2021

TEHRAN — Iran's foreign minister on Sunday asked the family of Qassem Soleimani for "forgiveness" following his leaked comments that the revered late commander had played too big a role in diplomacy.

Soleimani, the commander of the Revolutionary Guards' foreign operations arm, was killed in a US air strike in neighbouring Iraq last year.

Media outside Iran published the three-hour recording of Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif last Sunday, triggering a heated debate ahead of presidential elections and amid talks with world powers in Vienna to revive a nuclear deal.

"My remarks... do not diminish the status and irreplaceable role of martyr Soleimani," Zarif wrote on Instagram.

"The pure feelings of those who love the great martyr Major General Qassem Soleimani and his family, especially his brave daughter Zeinab — who is as dear to me as my own children — have been hurt," Zarif added.

Zeinab Soleimani posted a photo Tuesday on Twitter showing her father's hand shortly after being assassinated, calling it "the cost" paid by those in "the field for the sake of diplomacy".

In the audiotape, Zarif talked about the military having too much influence on diplomacy, and mentioned the significant role played by Soleimani.

“In the Islamic republic the military field rules,” Zarif said in the recording, quoted by the New York Times. “I have sacrificed diplomacy for the military field rather than the field servicing diplomacy.”

Zarif has been under fire from conservative politicians and media for the leaked recording, with remarks on Soleimani hitting a nerve.

“If I knew a word of them would be published publicly I would not have said them,” Zarif said.

“I have forgiven all those I believe accused me ... I hope the great people of Iran, all those who love [Soleimani], and especially the gracious Soleimani family, forgive me as well,” he added.

Saudi Arabia to lift travel curbs on 'immunised' citizens

By - May 03,2021 - Last updated at May 03,2021

RIYADH — Saudi Arabia will permit citizens immunised against COVID-19 to travel abroad from May 17, the interior ministry said on Sunday, more than a year after Saudis were barred from external trips.

The ministry said three categories of people would be considered immunised — those who have received two doses of the coronavirus vaccine, those administered a single dose at least 14 days prior to travel, and people who have recovered from the infection within the last six months.

Saudis under the age of 18 — an age group that is not receiving vaccines — would also be allowed to travel from May 17, provided they carry an insurance policy approved by the central bank, the ministry said in a statement published by the official Saudi Press Agency.

"The decision to lift the suspension on citizens travelling outside Saudi Arabia will go into effect at 1:00 am on May 17," the ministry said, adding that the kingdom will re-open its land, sea and air borders.

The policy represents an incentive for citizens, barred from travelling abroad since the pandemic began, to get vaccinated.

The kingdom's health ministry said it has administered more than 9 million coronavirus vaccine doses, in a country with a population of over 34 million.

The country has reported more than 419,000 coronavirus infections and nearly 7,000 deaths from COVID-19.

Last month, Saudi Arabia permitted only people immunised against COVID-19 to perform the year-round umrah pilgrimage from the start of Ramadan, the holy fasting month for Muslims.

It is unclear whether that policy, which comes amid an uptick in coronavirus infections in the kingdom, would be extended to the annual Hajj pilgrimage later this year.

Iraqi police questioned after 21 prisoners escape jail

By - May 03,2021 - Last updated at May 03,2021

BAGHDAD — Iraqi police were questioned Sunday after 21 prisoners escaped jail, the latest breakout to highlight failings in the country's security system.

Ten of the escaped prisoners, all convicted on drug and terrorism charges, had been recaptured by Sunday afternoon after a manhunt was launched at dawn.

The interior minister immediately "ordered the confinement to the barracks of all officers and police" at Hilal district prison in Mouthanna province 300 kilometres south of the capital Baghdad, while an investigation into the escape was carried out.

It was not immediately clear how the prisoners broke out, but in corruption-riddled Iraq, escapes are often achieved by paying off security forces.

Other detainees get help from armed groups or tribes, often equipped with heavy arms.

Transparency International ranks the country 21st from bottom in its Corruption Perceptions Index.

In mid-March, men from a powerful pro-Iran armed group disguised as soldiers freed a drug trafficker under police escort while en route to court in Amara, another town in rural southern Iraq.

In an effort to flush out the escapees and discourage accomplices from sheltering them, Mouthanna's governor promised "a financial reward to anyone who catches a fugitive", while law enforcement officers enlisted the help of tribal leaders in the manhunt.

Prison breaks are particularly sensitive in Iraq, where thousands of Iraqis and foreigners have been convicted of “terrorism”, mainly as part of the Daesh terror group in recent years.

Extremist groups — from Daesh and Al-Qaeda before it — have already organised bold escapes from Iraqi prisons, and regularly vow to carry out others.

Iraq is regularly criticised by human rights activists for the conditions of its jails.

Cells built to hold around 20 detainees are often packed with 50, a source working in the jails told AFP.

Prisoners are often caught smuggling phones or passing on information during family visits.

 

Napoleon’s Mideast campaign still contentious, two centuries on

By - May 02,2021 - Last updated at May 02,2021

This photo taken on April 21 shows an aerial view of the old city of Jaffa, where French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte and his soldiers launched an attack between March 3-7, 1799 against the Ottoman-controlled city before capturing it (AFP photo)

CAIRO — Napoleon Bonaparte’s bloody campaign in Egypt and Palestine, which marked the start of modern European colonialism in the Middle East, remains contentious two centuries after the French emperor’s death.

The Corsican general set sail eastwards with 300 ships in 1798, aiming to conquer Egypt and block a crucial route between Britain and its colonial territories in India.

It was an occupation that was to leave thousands dead in Egypt and Palestine.

But Bonaparte also brought some 160 scholars and engineers, who produced mountains of research that would play a key role in transforming Egypt into a modern state.

For Egyptian writer Mohamed Salmawy, speaking ahead of the May 5 bicentenary of Napoleon’s death, the venture was a mix of “fire and light”.

“It was a military campaign, for sure, and Egyptians put up resistance to French forces. But it was also the start of an era of intellectual progress,” he said.

The “Description de l’Egypte” resulting from the mission was an encyclopaedic account of Egypt’s society, history, fauna and flora.

French troops’ discovery of the Rosetta Stone also allowed hieroglyphs to be deciphered for the first time, opening up the field of Egyptology.

Ruler Mohamed Ali drew heavily on Napoleonic research as he built the modern Egyptian state, says French-Egyptian writer Robert Sole.

But Arab nationalist Gamal Abdel Nasser, who helped topple Mohamed Ali’s dynasty in 1952, used the episode to promote an anti-colonial national identity.

For historian Al Hussein Hassan Hammad, at Cairo’s Al Azhar University, Napoleon’s scientists were, like his troops, on an imperial mission “to serve the French presence in Egypt... and exploit its wealth”.

 

Repression -

 

When Bonaparte’s fleet anchored in 1798 close to Alexandria, he ordered soldiers to daub walls with the message: “Egyptians, you will be told that I am coming to destroy your religion: it is a lie, do not believe it!”

But his claims of religious tolerance soon gave way to repression after he toppled the centuries-old Mamluk dynasty in July 1798.

When Egyptians revolted against their occupiers that October, French troops brutally crushed the uprising.

They killed thousands and even bombed the Al Azhar Mosque, a key authority for Sunni Muslims worldwide.

Many Egyptians today see the episode as “the first imperialist aggression of the modern age against the Muslim Orient”, Sole said.

That sentiment is echoed in the neighbouring Gaza Strip.

Napoleon seized the ancient port city with little resistance in February 1799, having marched through the Sinai Desert after British admiral Horatio Nelson destroyed his fleet.

“He is a small man who has caused great chaos in this region,” said Ghassan Wisha, head of history at the Islamic University of Gaza.

“Napoleon came here not only with soldiers but also with scientists and agricultural specialists. But he used science to justify the occupation. He lied.”

 

‘Dark, negative image’ 

 

Rashad Al Madani, a retired Gaza history lecturer, said the city had been “a centre for honey, oil and agriculture, and a strategic point between Asia and Europe”.

Napoleon wrote that Gaza’s hills, covered with “forests of olive trees”, reminded him of Languedoc in southern France.

Two centuries on, those groves have given way to a forest of concrete.

Gaza is home to 2 million Palestinians, many of them refugees, ruled by Islamist movement Hamas and strangled by an Israeli blockade.

Madani would remind his students of Napoleon’s massacre of some 3,000 people in the port town of Jaffa further up the coast.

“The French occupation was worse than that of Israel,” he said.

Small reminders of Napoleon remain in Gaza.

The Qasr Al Basha, the Pasha’s Palace where the emperor-to-be reportedly stayed, still stands.

It is a modest sandstone edifice surrounded by scruffy concrete buildings and electric wires.

The palace, first built in the 13th century, had long born Napoleon’s name.

But tellingly, after Islamist movement Hamas seized power in Gaza in 2007, it changed the name.

The palace has become a museum, and the first-floor bedroom where the general stayed, unfurnished today, is filled with Byzantine artefacts.

“The population of Gaza today has a dark, negative image of all military campaigns, including that of Napoleon,” said Wisha.

 

‘Still sensitive’ 

 

It was in Acre, a sleepy port town further north, that Palestinians found a local hero in the struggle against Napoleon.

Ahmad Al Jazzar is still admired by many for holding out for two months against a crushing French siege.

“In our history books, Ahmad Al Jazzar is seen as a strong character, a hero,” said Madani.

But Jazzar — Arabic for “butcher” — was also “a cruel being, an aggressor”, he said.

“Many students didn’t like it when I told them that.”

And the Arab leader’s French rival sparks similar strong reactions.

Marianne Khoury, the executive producer of Egyptian Youssef Chahine’s film Adieu Bonaparte, said Napoleon’s campaign was still “excessively controversial”.

For many in France, the 1985 film was “unacceptable”, she said.

“How could Chahine as an Arab director dare to talk about Bonaparte?”

Some Egyptians, for their part, recognise the scientific progress the French invasion brought.

“But the same time, there is the colonial aspect, which is still sensitive, and many Egyptians don’t accept it,” she said.

Algeria detains leading opposition figure

By - Apr 29,2021 - Last updated at Apr 29,2021

In this file photo taken on Tuesday, an Algerian protester marches with a sign calling for the liberation of opposition figure Karim Tabbou during a demonstration against the ruling class in the capital Algiers (AFP photo)


ALGIERS — A leading Algerian opposition activist has been detained and is to appear before prosecutors on Thursday, his lawyer said, weeks ahead of elections he and other opponents have pledged to boycott.

Karim Tabbou, a key figure in demonstrations that forced longtime president Abdelaziz Bouteflika to resign in 2019, was handed a one-year suspended sentence last year for "undermining state security".

His detention comes as the pro-democracy protest movement known as Hirak has sought to regain some of the momentum it lost when it suspended street rallies just over a year ago due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Tabbou was summoned to the police station on Wednesday evening to respond to a complaint filed against him by Bouzid Lazhari, the president of the National Council for Human Rights, an official body.

The 47-year-old was to appear before a prosecutor on Thursday, lawyer Me Ali Fellah Benali said on social media.

"Algeria's youth is determined to fight for their right to a dignified life," Tabbou told AFP ahead of his detention.

He became one of the most recognisable leaders at mass demonstrations that broke out in February 2019.

The Hirak protest movement was sparked in February 2019 over Bouteflika's bid for a fifth term in office.

The ailing autocrat was forced to step down weeks later, but the Hirak has continued its demonstrations, demanding a sweeping overhaul of a ruling system in place since Algeria's independence from France in 1962.

Since the group's second anniversary in February, thousands have returned to the streets, defying a coronavirus ban on gatherings.

Ordinary Algerians 'fed up' 

 

Tabbou said his own party, the Democratic Social Union, was now "the largest political party" in the North African country, despite it being unregistered by the authorities.

His detention comes as activists warn of an increasing climate of repression, with political opponents and journalists targeted in the run-up to the legislative elections on June 12.

Earlier this month, security forces arrested eight people they said were linked to the Hirak movement over an allegedly foreign-financed criminal association.

President Abdelmadjid Tebboune this month warned Hirak activists against "non-innocent activities" that "attempt to hinder the democratic process".

Authorities say the protest movement is being infiltrated by Islamist activists who are trying to drag it towards violence.

President Tebboune served as a prime minister under Bouteflika and won a presidential election in December 2019, in a poll that was boycotted by the protest movement. Official data put the turnout at less than 40 per cent.

In further moves dismissed by the protest movement as window dressing, Tebboune oversaw a constitutional referendum late last year and brought the legislative elections forward, in a bid to soothe the political and socioeconomic crisis.

"This election does not concern us," activist Tabbou told AFP.

"The regime mobilised colossal resources to hold a false presidential election, a false referendum -- and now it organises false legislative elections," he said.

Ordinary Algerians were fed up, he said. "We see the country as a barracks".

 

NE Syria running out of Covid-19 testing kits, IRC warns

By - Apr 29,2021 - Last updated at Apr 29,2021



BEIRUT — The Kurdish-ruled region of northeastern Syria will run out of Covid-19 testing equipment in a week, the International Rescue Committee(IRC) warned on Thursday.

The area has witnessed a surge in cases in recent weeks and the health crisis it faces will be made worse if testing stops, the aid organisation said in a statement.

"Testing capacity in the northeast has never been sufficient, and now it may be lost altogether," IRC's regional policy director Misty Buswell said.

The IRC said the semi-autonomous region's only Covid laboratory, located in the city of Qamishli, "could be forced to stop Covid testing in less than seven days due to a critical shortage" of kits.

"This would have a devastating impact on testing capacity, with health professionals no longer able to identify new cases, track trends, or gain an understanding of the true spread of the disease - just as cases are surging," it said.

IRC said the war-battered region's anti-Covid health infrastructure was "getting very close" to breaking point.

The number of detected cases in northeast Syria stands at only 15,769, but testing has been limited. The figure rose by 243 per cent between March and April and close to half of tests were positive over the past week.

"Currently, 83 per cent of patients who receive invasive ventilation in the region are not surviving and we fear that things will only get worse," Buswell said.


Northeast Syria has been allocated 100,000 vaccine doses from a batch that arrived in Damascus courtesy of Covax last week, but it has yet to receive them and there is no clear schedule for their delivery.

IRC said there was an urgent need for international support and funding for the Covid response effort in the region, access to which is difficult.

The region's main humanitarian lifeline, the Al Yarubiyah border crossing with Iraq, has remained closed at the behest of Russia, a UN Security Council permanent member.

Palestinian leaders weigh delay of long-awaited vote

By - Apr 29,2021 - Last updated at Apr 29,2021

Palestinian supporters of Mohammed Dahlan's ‘Future’Party rally against a possible delay of elections in Jerusalem on Wednesday (AFP photo)


RAMALLAH, Palestinian Territories — Palestinian leaders were set to decide on Thursday whether to hold elections next month as scheduled or call a delay that could trigger further frustration in a divided society which last voted in 2006.

Palestinians in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and blockaded Gaza Strip have voiced hope that the polls could help restore credibility and heal rifts.

Fateh, which controls the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority(PA), reached an agreement with its long-standing rival Hamas, the Islamists who control Gaza, to hold legislative polls on May 22 and a presidential vote on July 31.

The official Wafa news agency said on Thursday that PA president Mahmud Abbas, also Fatah's leader, would chair a meeting "tonight in Ramallah that includes all the political factions to discuss the latest with the elections and whether they should be held or cancelled."

"A final decision" would be made before Friday, Wafa reported.

Hamas said on Wednesday it "rejects any attempt to postpone the elections".

Hamas won a surprise victory in the 2006 elections but it was not recognised by Abbas. The Islamists took power in Gaza the following year in a week of bloody clashes.

Abbas critics charge that he is seeking to buy time as Fatah's prospects have been threatened by splinter factions, including one led by a nephew of iconic Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and another by a powerful, exiled former Fateh security chief, Mohammed Dahlan."If Abbas delays elections, we will start with demonstrations," Daoud Abu Libdeh, a candidate with Dahlan's "Future" faction, told AFP in Jerusalem.

Jerusalem 

Palestinians insist on the right to hold elections in Israeli-occupied East Jerusalem, which Palestinians claim as the capital of their future state.

During the last Palestinian election, East Jerusalem residents cast ballots on the outskirts of the city and thousands voted in post offices, a symbolic move agreed to by Israel.

Israel, which now bans all Palestinian political activity across Jerusalem, has not commented on whether it would allow voting in the city.

In a meeting with EU diplomats this week, Israeli foreign ministry political director Alon Bar said elections were "an internal Palestinian issue, and that Israel has no intention of intervening in them nor preventing them."

Wafa quoted top official Fateh Mahmoud Aloul as saying that holding elections that excluded Jerusalem would be "treason".

Palestinian journalist and Abbas critic Nadia Harhash, a candidate on the "Together We Can" electoral list, said using Jerusalem as an excuse for postponement "is definitely not a smart move for the PA".

She argued it would give Israel de facto veto power over the Palestinian right to vote.

Hamas said a delay amount to a surrender to "the [Israeli] occupation's veto".

Tensions in Jerusalem surged at the weekend as Palestinians clashed with Israeli police over the right to gather in an Old City plaza after evening Ramadan prayers.

Following several days of unrest that left dozens injured, Israeli police removed the barricades blocking Damascus Gate, allowing Palestinians to resume their gatherings.

Hamas said such "heroic victories" should encourage Palestinians to press ahead with Jerusalem voting.

Factions -

 The elections are seen in part as a unified effort by Hamas and Fatah to bolster international faith in Palestinian governance ahead of possible renewed US-led diplomacy under President Joe Biden, after four years of Donald Trump that saw Washington endorse key Israeli objectives.

Harhash argued that Abbas had hoped the elections would allow Fateh and Hamas to continue sharing power, but felt threatened by the emergence of strong splinter factions and the rise of new political groups critical of his leadership.

The main challenges to Abbas include the "Freedom list" headed by Arafat's nephew Nasser Al Kidwa, which has been endorsed by Marwan Barghouti, who is serving multiple life sentences in Israel prison.

Dahlan, who poses another threat, has been credited with bringing coronavirus vaccines into Gaza and distributing financial aid across the enclave, as well as in the West Bank.

Fires a chronic threat to Iraqi lives, property

By - Apr 29,2021 - Last updated at Apr 29,2021

BAGHDAD — Worn-out fuses, tangled wiring criss-crossing illegal buildings, poor construction and generators exposed to extreme heat have become a potent recipe in Iraq for frequent deadly and destructive blazes.

Between January and March alone, the interior ministry recorded 7,000 fires, the deadliest of which erupted on Sunday in a COVID-19 hospital in Baghdad.

Eighty-two people died and over 100 others were injured in the inferno, which sparked shock and outrage in the country.

Baghdad, a sprawling metropolis of 10 million people, has the tragic distinction of being the Iraqi city hit by the most fires every year.

Major General Jawdat Abderrahman, spokesman for the Iraqi civil defence, said "40 per cent of the fires in Iraq occur in Baghdad", with 2,800 just since the start of 2021.

In Iraqi cities, urban chaos reigns.

New shopping centres are thrown up haphazardly, and around one in 10 people live in informal neighbourhoods with ad hoc connections to water and electricity networks.

“The majority of buildings are not up to standard and thousands do not even have building permits,” civil defence head Maj. Gen. Kazem Buhan told AFP.

 

Urban chaos

 

The result is a cocktail of fire hazards.

A central Baghdad shop owner told AFP that in 2014, the civil defence asked all businesses to install fire extinguishers.

“Some bought them, but not all,” he said, declining to give his name.

But no one, he added, wants to tackle the underlying issues and overhaul their whole electrical system, in a country whose infrastructure has suffered under 40 years of conflicts only interrupted by a decade of international embargo.

“Most business owners wouldn’t even be able to pick out the cable that provides their power, or know where it comes from,” the shopkeeper said.

Inside buildings, the combination of cheap, flammable construction materials and poor electrical wiring can easily turn a spark into an inferno in minutes.

When the Ibn Al Khatib hospital was engulfed by flames in the pre-dawn hours of Sunday, Prime Minister Mustafa Al Kadhemi said at an emergency Cabinet meeting, “Don’t tell me it’s an electrical fault”.

“Such a level of negligence is no longer a mistake, but a crime.”

Outside, there’s another host of dangers.

For years, the state has provided only enough electricity for a few hours of power a day.

That has left Iraqis reliant on private generators that are stored, along with fuel tanks, outside under thin sheets of corrugated iron — meagre protection from the blazing sun and heat that can regularly reach 55ºC in summer.

 

Lack of resources

 

The day of the Ibn al-Khatib hospital blaze, another fire broke out in a shopping centre in central Iraq.

The next day, blazes hit several shops in a commercial district in Tikrit, north of Baghdad, and a restaurant in Erbil in the Kurdistan region.

And on Tuesday, a small electrical fire broke out at a hospital in Babylon, south of Baghdad, but was quickly controlled.

Water shortages are a further strain.

New dams in Iran and Turkey along the Tigris and Euphrates, and the tributaries that feed them, have reduced water flows into Iraq by half.

In the centre and north of the country, where extremists still have footholds, thousands of hectares of agricultural land burn every year, mainly in scorching summer fires that threaten Iraq’s agricultural sector, already in dire straits.

While some are due to heat, human error or accident, most are the result of arson, with fires set in neighbourly or ethnic feuds or by extremists.

In the face of so many blazes, limited resources blight firefighters’ efforts.

Civil defence chief Buhan cited a lack of hydrants, an outdated fleet of fire trucks, the newest a decade old, and not a single firefighting aircraft.

In 18 years, there have been “more than 420 deaths” in the civil defence ranks, he said.

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