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IRAQ WARS
Drought puts Iraq at risk of jihadist resurgence: study
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) Sept 1, 2018

Iraqi amputees take the plunge to forget horrors of IS
Arbil, Iraq (AFP) Sept 2, 2018 - With artificial limbs in the place of legs they lost to jihadists, a group of Iraqis plunged into a swimming pool for a special race aimed at helping them overcome the horrors of war.

Abdel Zahra Kazem, a soldier from southern Iraq who was wounded in an attack in Baghdad, said getting back in the pool had helped him to rediscover one of his passions in life.

"I've swum since I was a child and today I can start again," he said by the poolside at a hotel in Arbil, capital of the autonomous Kurdistan region of northern Iraq.

Rabie Abdellatif lost a leg in an attack by the Islamic State (IS) jihadist group in Iraq's second city Mosul, which was left in ruins by the government's battle against the jihadists.

Thanks to his artificial limb, he said he has recovered "80 percent of my capabilities from life before".

"I can drive my car. I can work," he told AFP, his swimsuit and cap still dripping wet.

By the side of the pool, half a dozen men with artificial legs waited in the shade for their turn splashing in the water.

They were watched by officials from Kurdistan and Kuwait, which has provided funding for the rehabilitation of civilians and fighters from Iraqi Kurdish and federal forces.

The aim, said Arbil governor Nawzad Hadi, is to "give life and hope" to victims of IS.

Tens of thousands of Iraqi security personnel were wounded in the three-year battle against IS, which at its peak controlled nearly a third of the country as well as swathes of neighbouring Syria.

Hundreds of thousands of civilians have also been wounded in attacks perpetrated for years by extremist groups across Iraq, which declared victory over IS in December.

Iraq risks a jihadist resurgence if it fails to tackle a critical drought and other climate-related security issues, according to a study presented to the UN Security Council and made public Saturday.

"The combination of its hydrological limitations, increasing temperatures and extreme weather events puts pressure on basic resources and undermines livelihood security for Iraq's population," the Expert Working Group on Climate-Related Security Risks warned in its report.

"Failure to monitor and manage these climate-related risks will increase the risk of ISIS and post-ISIS terrorist groups gaining support and regaining strength within resource-constrained communities," it said.

The jihadist organisation, also known as the Islamic State group, seized a third of Iraq's territory in 2014 before being beaten back in a sweeping government offensive last year.

The water study, presented to the Security Council in July, draws a clear link between climate change and security.

Iraq is in the midst of a devastating drought and water levels are at their lowest since 1931.

The flow of water in the country's rivers has shrunk by 40 percent in recent decades, battering the country's agricultural sector threatening the population's water security.

The shortage stems from the "climate change and increasingly erratic precipitation across the region, a decline in water flows from Iran and Turkey, weak irrigation systems due to damage to infrastructure during the war, and a lack of economic and political investment," the report read.

"The absence of an adequate national water management policy exacerbates and compounds these critical threats."

While the agriculture sector is Iraq's top employer after the oil industry, its ministry is alloted one of the lowest federal budgets.

The Ministry of Water Resources also suffers financial constraints and has not been able to modernise the country's water infrastructure despite plans being in place for over two decades.

Baghdad does not have formal agreements with its neighbours on equitable distribution of water resources.

Scarce rainfall and dam projects in neighbouring countries have put more than seven million people living along the banks of the Tigris River at risk of displacement, the report said.

Water shortages could also increase inter-communal tensions, particularly in rural areas, it added.

The working group urged the UN's mission in Iraq to monitor and report on the risks of climate change and to support the authorities by integrating climate and displacement into their post-IS plans.


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IRAQ WARS
Suicide bomber kills 2 Iraq policemen
Kirkuk, Iraq (AFP) Aug 31, 2018
A suicide bomber has killed two Iraqi policemen near a former bastion of the Islamic State group, days after IS claimed a similar attack near Syria's border, a security official said Friday. On Thursday morning a "suicide bomber wearing an explosive vest drove a booby-trapped car into a federal police checkpoint" near Hawija, north of Baghdad, one official said. "Two policemen were killed and a third one wounded," in the attack, the official added. Hawija is one of the last IS holdouts retak ... read more

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