Kadhimi Criticizes Iraq’s Sole Dependence on Iran for Electricity

Iraqi youths buy ice blocks at a factory in the Baghdad district of Sadr City. (AFP)
Iraqi youths buy ice blocks at a factory in the Baghdad district of Sadr City. (AFP)
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Kadhimi Criticizes Iraq’s Sole Dependence on Iran for Electricity

Iraqi youths buy ice blocks at a factory in the Baghdad district of Sadr City. (AFP)
Iraqi youths buy ice blocks at a factory in the Baghdad district of Sadr City. (AFP)

Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi defended his government’s efforts to find solutions to the deteriorating power crisis in the country.

During a meeting with the electricity emergency crisis cell on Saturday, the PM indirectly criticized Iraq’s dependence on Iran as a source of power.

He wondered why Iraq has not linked its electricity grids to other neighboring countries over the past 17 years, remarking that Tehran has its own people’s needs to address.

Moreover, he noted unpaid electricity bills and US sanctions against Iran, stressing that his government is determined to resolve this matter and pay Tehran is dues related to the import of gas and electricity.

The government issued a decision last year to connect Iraq’s electric grid with all neighboring countries, which will require time and patience, Kadhimi noted.

He wondered however, “who had decided to isolate Iraq and prevent it” from importing electricity from other countries.

The premier further slammed his political opponents who are trying to take advantage of the crisis for electoral purposes.
“You must continue to build,” he urged the gatherers, saying they “must disregard the electoral propaganda because political challenges do not make a state and do not provide electricity.”

“Let us all acknowledge that everyone has wronged the Iraqi people when they refused or hesitated to take a decision or failed in implementing it,” Kadhimi said.



Flooding Kills More than a Dozen People in Morocco, Algeria

A car drives through a flooded street after flooding in Morocco's region of Zagora on September 7, 2024. (AFP)
A car drives through a flooded street after flooding in Morocco's region of Zagora on September 7, 2024. (AFP)
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Flooding Kills More than a Dozen People in Morocco, Algeria

A car drives through a flooded street after flooding in Morocco's region of Zagora on September 7, 2024. (AFP)
A car drives through a flooded street after flooding in Morocco's region of Zagora on September 7, 2024. (AFP)

Torrential downpours hit North Africa's normally arid mountains and deserts over the weekend, causing flooding that killed more than a dozen people in Morocco and Algeria and destroyed homes and critical infrastructure.

In Morocco, officials said the two days of storms surpassed historic averages, in some cases exceeding the annual average rainfall. The downpours affected some of the regions that experienced a deadly earthquake one year ago.

Meteorologists had predicted that a rare deluge could strike North Africa’s Sahara Desert, where many areas receive less than an inch of rain a year, according to The AP.

Officials in Morocco said 11 people were killed in rural areas where infrastructure has historically been lacking, and 24 homes collapsed. Nine people were missing. Drinking water and electrical infrastructure were damaged, along with major roads.

Rachid El Khalfi, Morocco’s Interior Ministry spokesperson, said in a statement on Sunday that the government was working to restore communication and access to flooded regions in the “exceptional situation” and urged people to use caution.

In neighboring Algeria, which held a presidential election over the weekend, authorities said at least five died in the country's desert provinces. Interior Minister Brahim Merad called the situation “catastrophic” on state-owned television.

Algeria’s state-run news service APS said the government had sent thousands of civil protection and military officers to help with emergency response efforts and rescue families stuck in their homes. The floods also damaged bridges and trains.