Iraqi Wars' Deadly Legacy: Unexploded Ordnance

This picture taken on November 29, 2021 shows sweepers using metal-detectors to search for landmines and unexploded ordnances near the village of Hassan-Jalad, north of Iraq's northern city of Mosul. (Photo by Zaid AL-OBEIDI / AFP)
This picture taken on November 29, 2021 shows sweepers using metal-detectors to search for landmines and unexploded ordnances near the village of Hassan-Jalad, north of Iraq's northern city of Mosul. (Photo by Zaid AL-OBEIDI / AFP)
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Iraqi Wars' Deadly Legacy: Unexploded Ordnance

This picture taken on November 29, 2021 shows sweepers using metal-detectors to search for landmines and unexploded ordnances near the village of Hassan-Jalad, north of Iraq's northern city of Mosul. (Photo by Zaid AL-OBEIDI / AFP)
This picture taken on November 29, 2021 shows sweepers using metal-detectors to search for landmines and unexploded ordnances near the village of Hassan-Jalad, north of Iraq's northern city of Mosul. (Photo by Zaid AL-OBEIDI / AFP)

In the northern Iraqi hamlet of Hassan-Jalad, almost every family has a story to tell about a time when a child, nephew or brother was lost to wartime munitions.

Located near Mosul, a former stronghold of ISIS, the area is littered with unexploded ordnance, sometimes dubbed UXO.

"We are afraid for the children," said one local man, Awad Qado. "We show them the routes to take, the places to avoid. We tell them not to pick up things they find on the ground."

It was in 2017 that Qado's family was struck by a landmine explosion in the hamlet of about 50 homes.

Two of Qado's nephews were killed while tending to their herd. His son was injured and a fourth man's legs were severed in the blast that also killed some livestock.

Across Iraq, about 100 children were killed or injured between January and September as a result of remnants of conflict, according to the UN.

In a country that has one of the world's highest UXO "contamination rates", almost one in four people is exposed to risk from unexploded ordnance, say non-governmental groups.

Iraq's successive conflicts have left a deadly legacy, from the Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s, to the US-led invasion of 2003 and the defeat of ISIS in late 2017.

In the area around Hassan-Jalad, more than 1,500 explosives were found within one year, said Alaa al-Din Moussa, head of operations for the private demining company GCS.

"In this region, every house has a story," he added. "Many children are dead. Hundreds of animals have entered fields and triggered explosives."

Clearing the UXO is painstaking and dangerous work.

Ordnance awaiting disposal is left in a desert area behind a banner that reads "STOP,” AFP reported.

The explosives are classed in several categories including: 107-millimeter rockets, 23-millimeter projectiles and VS500 mines, it said.

Both Mosul and the western province of Anbar are among the most affected areas, as are other former ISIS strongholds.

"We see a lot of contamination in built-up urban areas," Pehr Lodhammar, program chief of the UN Mine Action Service (UNMAS) in Iraq, told AFP.

"Explosive hazards and explosive contamination are making it much more difficult for people to return to their homes and to resume a normal life."

More than 1.2 million people are displaced in the country as a result of the successive conflicts.

The fighting has left the borders littered with landmines and unexploded remnants of war, according to a report by the France-based group Humanity & Inclusion.

"Iraq is one of the countries most heavily contaminated by explosive ordnance on earth," the organization said in a report in October.

"Explosive remnants of war affect more than 3,200 square kilometers of land -- twice the area of London.

"A staggering 8.5 million Iraqis live amid these deadly waste-products of war."

A key challenge is raising awareness to allow people to change their behavior in the face of danger.

As a result of sessions held for children and adults, there have been "success stories", Ghaith Qassid Ali, who helps run GCS's awareness program in the Mosul area, told AFP.

As a result of the sessions, children playing in a field "saw a projectile, remembered the photos a team had shown them and warned us", recounted Ali.

He said the UXO phenomenon poses major economic challenges: "The majority of inhabitants of this village are farmers, but most of the land is contaminated by remnants of war."

At just 21 years old, Abdallah Fathi is living proof of the tragedy wrought by wartime munitions.

In 2014, he was tending to his herd when a mine exploded. He lost both his legs, his left hand and several fingers on his right hand.

"Before, I used to work, but now I can do nothing, carry nothing, not even cement blocks," he lamented.

"I stay at home all day, I don't go out."



Water Shortages Plague Beirut as Low Rainfall Compounds Woes

Low water levels are seen at the source feeding the pumping station of the Beirut and Mount Lebanon Water Establishment in Dbayeh © Joseph EID / AFP/File
Low water levels are seen at the source feeding the pumping station of the Beirut and Mount Lebanon Water Establishment in Dbayeh © Joseph EID / AFP/File
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Water Shortages Plague Beirut as Low Rainfall Compounds Woes

Low water levels are seen at the source feeding the pumping station of the Beirut and Mount Lebanon Water Establishment in Dbayeh © Joseph EID / AFP/File
Low water levels are seen at the source feeding the pumping station of the Beirut and Mount Lebanon Water Establishment in Dbayeh © Joseph EID / AFP/File

People are buying water by the truckload in Beirut as the state supply faces its worst shortages in years, with the leaky public sector struggling after record-low rainfall and local wells running dry.

"State water used to come every other day, now it's every three days," said Rima al-Sabaa, 50, rinsing dishes carefully in Burj al-Baranjeh, in Beirut's southern suburbs.

Even when the state water is flowing, she noted, very little trickles into her family's holding tank.

Once that runs out, they have to buy trucked-in water -- pumped from private springs and wells -- but it costs more than $5 for 1,000 litres and lasts just a few days, and its brackishness makes everything rust.

In some areas, the price can be twice as high.

Like many Lebanese people, Sabaa, who works assisting the elderly, relies on bottled water for drinking. But in a country grappling with a yearslong economic crisis and still reeling from a recent war between Israel and Hezbollah, the costs add up.

"Where am I supposed to get the money from?" she asked, AFP reported.

Water shortages have long been the norm for much of Lebanon, which acknowledges only around half the population "has regular and sufficient access to public water services".

Surface storage options such as dams are inadequate, according to the country's national water strategy, while half the state supply is considered "non-revenue water" -- lost to leakage and illegal connections.

This year, low rainfall has made matters even worse.

Mohamad Kanj from the meteorological department told AFP that rainfall for 2024-2025 "is the worst in the 80 years" on record in Lebanon.

Climate change is set to exacerbate the county's water stress, according to the national strategy, while a World Bank statement this year said "climate change may halve (Lebanon's) dry-season water by 2040".
Energy and Water Minister Joseph Saddi said last week that "the situation is very difficult".

The shortages are felt unevenly across greater Beirut, where tanks clutter rooftops, water trucks clog roads and most people on the ramshackle state grid lack meters.

Last month, the government launched a campaign encouraging water conservation, showing dried or depleted springs and lakes around the country.

North of the capital, levels were low in parts of the Dbayeh pumping station that should have been gushing with water.

"I've been here for 33 years and this is the worst crisis we've had for the amount of water we're receiving and can pump" to Beirut, said the station's Zouhair Azzi.

Antoine Zoghbi from the Beirut and Mount Lebanon Water Establishment said water rationing in Beirut usually started in October or November, after summer and before the winter rainy season.

But this year it has started months early "because we lack 50 percent of the amount of water" required at some springs, he told AFP last month.

Rationing began at some wells in June, he said, to reduce the risk of overuse and seawater intrusion.

Zoghbi emphasised the need for additional storage, including dams.

In January, the World Bank approved more than $250 million in funding to improve water services for greater Beirut and its surroundings.

In 2020, it cancelled a loan for a dam south of the capital after environmentalists said it could destroy a biodiversity-rich valley.

Wells
In south Beirut, pensioner Abu Ali Nasreddine, 66, said he had not received state water for many months.

"Where they're sending it, nobody knows," he said, lamenting that the cost of trucked-in water had also risen.

His building used to get water from a local well but it dried up, he added, checking his rooftop tank.

Bilal Salhab, 45, who delivers water on a small, rusted truck, said demand had soared, with families placing orders multiple times a week.

"The water crisis is very bad," he said, adding he was struggling to fill his truck because wells had dried up or become salty.

In some areas of greater Beirut, wells have long supplemented or even supplanted the state network.

But many have become depleted or degraded, wrecking pipes and leaving residents with salty, discoloured water.

Nadim Farajalla, chief sustainability officer at the Lebanese American University, said Beirut had ballooned in size and population since the start of the 1975-1990 civil war but water infrastructure had failed to keep up.

Many people drilled wells illegally, including at depths that tap into Lebanon's strategic groundwater reserves, he said, adding that "nobody really knows how many wells there are".

"Coastal aquifers are suffering from seawater intrusion, because we are pumping much more than what's being recharged," Farajalla told AFP.

As the current shortages bite, rationing and awareness campaigns should have begun earlier, he said, because "we all knew that the surface snow cover and rainfall" were far below average.