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Egypt to build desalination plant in Iraq – Al-Monitor: Independent …

An Egyptian delegation of water treatment experts visited Iraq this month for talks with Iraqi officials on addressing an acute water crisis in the Arab country.

The Ministry of Irrigation and Water Resources said June 20 that the Egyptian delegation discussed a proposal for building a water desalination plant on the Euphrates River. The station will be used to purify and desalinate seawater to help ease water shortages in southern Iraq.

Minister of Irrigation Mohamed Abdel-Ati said the visit was part of an agreementbetween Cairo and Baghdad to benefit from Egypts expertise in water management.

Egypt and Iraq are keen on making the best use of their water resources amid challenges facing the two countries in the field of water, he added.

The proposed plant on the Euphrates River will be modeled on Egypts Bahr al-Baqar wastewater treatment plant, the largest of its kind in the world. The plant has a production capacity of 5.6 million cubic meters per day.

Iraq was known in ancient times as Mesopotamia, or the land between two riversthe Tigris and the Euphrates. The country is facing its worst drought in decades amid lack of rainfall and poor management of water resources.

Iraq relies on the Tigris and Euphrates rivers for nearly all of its water needs. The two rivers originate in Turkey and flow to the Shatt Al-Arab basin in southern Iraq. While the Euphrates River crosses Syria and Iraq, the Tigris flows from Turkey into Iraq.

Turkey contributes 90% to the Euphrates River while Syria contributes 10% to the water flow. As for the Tigris, Turkey, Iraq and Iran contribute 40%, 51% and 9%, respectively.

Dams constructed by both Turkey and Iran on the two rivers, however, have either blocked or diverted water into Iraq, creating acute water shortages there.

According to the Iraqi Ministry of Water Resources, the two rivers are forecast to dry up by 2040 unless action is taken to change the current trends. The countrys Sawa Lake already dried out this year, and Razzaza Lake is shrinking.

Southern Iraq faces particularly serious water shortages. The lack of water flow out of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers combined with the rising sea level is pushing salt water from the Arabian Gulf into Iraqs rivers.

Prominent Iraqi environmentalist Azzam Alwash blames climate change for aggravating the current water crisis in Iraq.

The crisis is exacerbated by the increased salinity, rising sea level and lack of flow from the Tigris and Euphrates rivers into Iraq, Alwash, founder and CEO of the environmental group Nature Iraq, told Al-Monitor.

He said climate change causes temperatures to rise and leads to increases in the level of evaporation. The World Bank forecasts that a temperature increase of 1 Celsius would cause a 20% reduction of available freshwater in Iraq by 2050.

For instance, Lake Tharthar, one of the largest lakes in Iraq, loses around 7 billion cubic meters of water in evaporation every year, Alwash added.

According to the United Nations Environment Program, Iraq ranks as the fifth most vulnerable country in the world to climate change. Last year, the World Bank warned that southern Iraq is already exceeding critical water quality thresholds, often too contaminated for people to use.

Abbas Sharaky, professor of geology and water resources at Cairo University, said Egypt has major expertise in water desalination and the reuse of wastewater from which Iraq can benefit.

There is a similarity in the water situation in both Iraq and Egypt, Sharaky told Al-Monitor by phone. While the Nile River, Egypts only source of fresh water, originates from outside the border in Ethiopia, the Tigris and Euphrates rivers on which Iraq relies originate from Turkey and Iran, he said.

Both Cairo and Baghdad are engaged in disputes with upstream countries regarding the construction of dams on rivers without consent from downstream countries, he added.

Egypt and Ethiopia are at odds over the construction of a giant hydroelectric dam on the Blue Nile, a main tributary of the Nile River. While Cairo views the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) as an existential threat to its water share from the Nile, Addis Ababa sees it as vital to its economic development.

Years of negotiations between Egypt, Ethiopia and Sudan to reach a legally binding agreement on the filling and operation of the GERD have failed to make any breakthrough.

Egypt depends on the Nile River to meet 97% of its water needs, which amount to about 114 billion cubic meters annually. The countrys water resources, however, do not exceed 60 billion cubic meters annually, with a deficit of up to 54 billion cubic meters annually. The gap between water resources and needs is bridged by treating sewage and agricultural water with the aim of reusing it.

The Egyptian government has adopted an ambitious plan to build dozens of plants for seawater desalination to help meet the countrys growing water needs. So far, Egypt has constructed 82 desalination plants, with a total water capacity of 917,000 cubic meters per day. The government is also planning to build 14 new desalination plants to raise the capacity of water to 1.4 million cubic meters per day. Egypt has also launched a project worth 80 billion pounds ($4.26 billion) for rehabilitating canals with total lengths of 20,000 kilometers.

Sharaky said Egypt has state-of-the-art water research centers specialized in the hydrology of rivers and the development of irrigation and water supply systems.

Egypt has made long strides in building water treatment plants, the reuse of wastewater and constructing dams for harvesting rainwater, and Iraq can benefit from this Egyptian expertise in dealing with the acute water shortages in the country, he said.

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Egypt to build desalination plant in Iraq - Al-Monitor: Independent ...

Iraq Says Baghdad Hosting Irans Talks With Jordan And Egypt –

The Iraqi foreign minister announced Thursday that Irans negotiations with Jordan and Egypt have started with the mediation of the Iraqi government in Baghdad.

Fuad Hussein made the remarks during an interview with the Saudi Al-Arabiya television, without giving any further details. There were no comments from Cairo and Amman on the report.

Diplomatic representation between Egypt and Iran is at the level of interest section offices since the two countries severed tiesfollowing the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

Hussein called for turning the talks between Tehran and Riyadh into a declared dialogue, adding that the focus of Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa Al-Kadhimi's visit to Saudi Arabia last Saturday was the dialogue between Riyadh and Tehran, where he went the following day.

Despite all speculations and expectations, Kadhimis visit led to no tangible results as the visiting Iraqi premier and Iranian president did not announce any news about Tehran-Riyadh talks during their joint press conference.

Iran and Saudi Arabia -- which are locked in proxy conflicts around the region -- have held several rounds of talks in the Iraqi capital Baghdad since 2021.

It was the Islamic Republic that suspended the talks in March a day after Saudi Arabia announced it had beheaded 81 men, including seven Yemenis and a Syrian, for heinous crimes. Forty-one were Saudi Shiites, Human Rights Watch reported, apparently convicted over protests.

Saudi Arabia cut ties with Iran in 2016 when mobs attacked its embassy in Tehran after Riyadh executed 47 dissidents including the leading Shiite cleric Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr.

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Iraq Says Baghdad Hosting Irans Talks With Jordan And Egypt -

Mako Publishes Article on Disputed Territories in Iraq | The Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies – Boston University

Shamiran Mako, Assistant Professor of International Relations at the Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies at Boston University, published an article in MENA Politics the official newsletter for the American Political Science Associations (APSA) Organized Section on the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) Politics on limited statehood in the case of disputed territories in Iraq.

Makos article was part of one of the newsletters research symposiums, which was co-edited by Pardee School Assistant Professor of International Relations Noora Lori, on contingent sovereignty and areas of limited statehood. It explores the empirical and analytical leverage to be gained by identifying subnational pockets of political practices that deviate from national-level classifications of regimes in the Middle East.

In her piece, titled Foreign Intervention, Contingent Sovereignty, and Areas of Limited Statehood: The Case of Iraqs Disputed Territories, Mako explores the ways in which foreign interventions produce or reinforce areas of limited statehood and contention between national and subnational governments. By focusing on Iraqs disputed territories, she demonstrates how hybrid governance in areas of limited statehood can foster competition over territorial control by state and non-state actors at the local level, and between national and subnational governments.

The full article can be read on APSA MENAs website.

Shamiran Makois an assistant professor of international relations at the Pardee School of Global Studies at Boston University. She is also a member of the Graduate Faculty at the Political Science Department at Boston University.Her research explores the historical and contemporary drivers of inter and intra-state conflicts that produce weak and fragile states across the MENA region. She is the author ofAfter the Uprisings: Progress and Stagnation in the Middle East and North Africa, with Valentine Moghadam. Read more about Professor Mako on herfaculty profile.

Posted 1 day ago in Research

Tagged: 2022, APSA, Iraq, Journal Article, MENA, Middle East and North Africa Studies, noora lori, political science, Shamiran Mako

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Mako Publishes Article on Disputed Territories in Iraq | The Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies - Boston University

Kurdish region of Iraq bans gun sales after deadly shootings – The National

The government of Iraq's semi-autonomous Kurdish region has banned the sale of guns to members of the public after two professors were shot dead at Salahaddin University in Erbil, the capital of the region.

The two men were killed on Tuesday, reportedly by a disgruntled former student who apparently bought the weapon on Facebook.

On Thursday, a husband and wife were shot dead, also in Erbil, after a family dispute, according to Kurdish news outlet Rudaw.

"We will not allow anyone to undermine public peace and security," Masrour Barzani, prime minister of the Kurdish region, said on Twitter.

"Today, I have called on security services to close all weapon dealerships and seize all unlicensed weapons. I urge our citizens to join this national campaign and turn over unlicensed weapons to the government."

The move follows a law passed by the Interior Ministry in Erbil in 2019 giving gun owners six months to register their weapons or face penalties for carrying illegal guns.

The federal government in Baghdad also has some loose gun-control measures in place, including requiring licences from owners and gun sellers, legislation introduced in 2018.

The family-run business sells, repairs and modifies weapons for its customers. Getty

Iraq has one of the highest rates of gun ownership in the world, a legacy of decades of war, from the rule of Saddam Hussein to the strife that followed the US-led invasion in 2003.

Hundreds of thousands of Iraqi soldiers who served during the Baath regime kept their weapons after the US dissolved the Iraqi army.

Subsequent US and coalition attempts to re-equip a new Iraqi force were stymied by high rates of desertion and cases where soldiers and police sold their weapons on the black market.

This phenomenon was also reported in the Kurdish region during the war against ISIS, when a number of soldiers from the Kurdish Peshmerga security force were investigated after allegedly selling their weapons, following a delay in salary payments.

Before the 2003 invasion, the Kurdish region also suffered a civil war between its two main political parties, the Kurdish Democratic Party and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan.

The region was allowed to maintain its own security policy in co-ordination with Baghdad, following Iraq's transformation to a federal system after 2003.

Since then, the government in Baghdad has struggled to control weapon ownership, particularly heavy weapons, including rocket launchers and heavy machine guns in the hands of tribes.

Iraqi government "buyback" efforts to limit tribal ownership of weapons in Iraq's south where tribal feuds frequently lead to fatal gun battles have had mixed results.

Updated: June 30, 2022, 2:23 PM

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Kurdish region of Iraq bans gun sales after deadly shootings - The National

Kurdistan Ministry of Planning, UNFPA launch results of the second Iraq Women Integrated Social and Health survey [EN/KU] – Iraq – ReliefWeb

28 June 2022; Erbil, Kurdistan Region of Iraq - The Ministry of Planning, the Kurdistan Region Statistics Office and UNFPA launched today the results of the second Iraq Women Integrated Social and Health (IWISH) survey in the Kurdistan Region, conducted in collaboration with the Ministry of Planning of the Federal Government and Central Statistical Organisation and with funding from Sweden.

The survey covers the topics of women empowerment, violence against women, early marriage, family planning and maternal health, COVID-19, education, employment and other relevant social factors influencing womens rights in Iraq. It also offers integrated data showing the change in women's economic and social status in Iraq since 2011.

Speaking at the event, Dr Dara Rasheed, Minister of Planning of the Kurdistan Regional Government, reiterated the importance of data and statistics and stated that: the Ministry of Planning prioritises making reliable data and new statistics available to governmental institutions to ensure that regulations and policies are developed based on evidence. We also encourage the government to utilise the data collected to develop their programmes and projects to empower women and girls in the Kurdistan Region.

Dr Rita Columbia, UNFPA Representative to Iraq, during the launch reiterated that availability and use of reliable data for policy and decision making is vital for the regional sustainable development, where the rights of all especially women and girls as the most vulnerable are protected and fulfilled.

The representatives of ministries in KRI, the High Council for Women Development, CSOs and international partners expressed their interest in studying the findings of the survey and using them for improving legislation, policies and programmes in KRI.

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UNFPA, the United Nations Population Fund, delivers a world where every pregnancy is wanted, every childbirth is safe and every young persons potential is fulfilled.

For more information or media inquiries please contact: Salwa Moussa, Communications Specialist, smoussa@unfpa.org

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Kurdistan Ministry of Planning, UNFPA launch results of the second Iraq Women Integrated Social and Health survey [EN/KU] - Iraq - ReliefWeb