Morocco Celebrates Sheepless Eid as Drought Persists

A woman shops for cuts of meat from a butcher at the weekly market in Khemisset in the Rabat region, about 100 kilometres east of the Moroccan capital, on June 3, 2025 amidst preparations ahead of Eid al-Adha, the Muslim feast of sacrifice. (Photo by Abdel Majid BZIOUAT / AFP)
A woman shops for cuts of meat from a butcher at the weekly market in Khemisset in the Rabat region, about 100 kilometres east of the Moroccan capital, on June 3, 2025 amidst preparations ahead of Eid al-Adha, the Muslim feast of sacrifice. (Photo by Abdel Majid BZIOUAT / AFP)
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Morocco Celebrates Sheepless Eid as Drought Persists

A woman shops for cuts of meat from a butcher at the weekly market in Khemisset in the Rabat region, about 100 kilometres east of the Moroccan capital, on June 3, 2025 amidst preparations ahead of Eid al-Adha, the Muslim feast of sacrifice. (Photo by Abdel Majid BZIOUAT / AFP)
A woman shops for cuts of meat from a butcher at the weekly market in Khemisset in the Rabat region, about 100 kilometres east of the Moroccan capital, on June 3, 2025 amidst preparations ahead of Eid al-Adha, the Muslim feast of sacrifice. (Photo by Abdel Majid BZIOUAT / AFP)

As Eid al-Adha came, Fatima Kharraz can't seem to find the usual sense of celebration after King Mohammed VI decided to cancel the traditional animal sacrifice this year due to the country’s ongoing drought and economic challenges, which have led to a sharp drop in livestock numbers.

At the weekly livestock market in Khemisset, a small town near the capital Rabat, the usual holiday buzz was missing.

On February 26, the King announced through a letter read by the minister of Islamic affairs that families should “abstain” from slaughtering a sheep this year due to the ongoing drought and resulting decline in livestock. This is the first time Morocco takes similar measures since 1996.

While sacrificing sheep during Eid al-Adha is not a religious obligation, it remains a widely observed ritual across the Muslim world.

The North African country of some 37 million people has typically seen up to six million sheep sacrificed each year for Eid al-Adha, Agriculture Minister Ahmed Bouari said in March.

“We don't feel the usual excitement,” said Kharraz. “It's as if the holiday doesn't exist.”

But the 52-year-old said it would have been prohibitively expensive to observe the sacrifice this year: sheep “prices were already high last year... We couldn't have afforded it.”

Yet within Morocco, the king's appeal has largely been met with understanding.

“I support the decision,” said Mona Hajjami, 28, buying vegetables at the market. Still, she added, “it's normal to feel a void without an atmosphere of grilled meat.”

According to Hajjami, some families “would have to take out loans” to buy sheep.

Morocco grapples with a seventh consecutive year of a dry spell that has caused livestock numbers to decline.

Recent rainfall deficits have chipped away at grazing pastures, also driving up the cost of livestock feed.

This has shrunk Morocco's livestock numbers by 38% compared to the figure counted in the last census in 2016, according to the agriculture ministry.

In 2024, the Moroccan government has offered direct financial support for the importation of sheep intended for slaughter during Eid al-Adha.

“Our concern to enable you to observe this religious ritual in the best circumstances is accompanied by our duty to consider the climate and economic challenges facing our country, which have led to a significant disease in livestock numbers,” the King said in his directives.

He stressed that performing Eid al-Adha under these challenges “would cause real harm to many of our people, particularly those with limited resources.”

At the Khemisset market, 24-year-old Marouane Haizoun leaned against the rails of a nearly empty pen, waiting to sell two cows.

He said he had left his sheep on the family farm as it would have been difficult to sell any this year.

“Prices would have been exorbitant,” he said, while Mustapha Mastour, a 52-year-old horse and sheep breeder, said they would have climbed to “6,000 or 7,000 dirhams" ($600-$700).

In Morocco, the minimum wage is about $300.

Many households opted instead to purchase small cuts of meat or lamb liver -- key ingredients in Eid recipes.

“We've seen an increase in demand (for lamb meat), but it won't have any impact” on endeavors to restore livestock numbers, said Mohamed Jebli, president of the Moroccan Federation of Livestock Industry Stakeholders.



Firefighters Battle a Wildfire Burning Out of Control on the Greek Island of Chios

A firefighting helicopter during firefighting operations on Chios Island, Greece, 24 June 2025. EPA/KOSTAS KOURGIAS
A firefighting helicopter during firefighting operations on Chios Island, Greece, 24 June 2025. EPA/KOSTAS KOURGIAS
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Firefighters Battle a Wildfire Burning Out of Control on the Greek Island of Chios

A firefighting helicopter during firefighting operations on Chios Island, Greece, 24 June 2025. EPA/KOSTAS KOURGIAS
A firefighting helicopter during firefighting operations on Chios Island, Greece, 24 June 2025. EPA/KOSTAS KOURGIAS

Hundreds of firefighters backed up by aircraft were battling a wildfire burning out of control for the third day on the eastern Aegean island of Chios Tuesday, with authorities issuing multiple evacuation orders.

Towering walls of flames tore through forest and agricultural land on the island, where authorities have declared a state of emergency and have sent firefighting reinforcements from Athens, the northern city of Thessaloniki and the nearby island of Lesbos, said the Associated Press.

By Tuesday morning, the fire department said 444 firefighters with 85 vehicles were tackling the blaze on scattered fronts. Eleven helicopters and two water-dropping planes were providing air support.

Emergency services have issued evacuation orders for villages and settlements in the area since Sunday, when fires broke out near the island’s main town. The fire department has sent an arson investigation team to Chios to examine the cause of the blaze.

“We are faced with simultaneous fires in multiple, geographically unconnected parts of the island — a pattern that cannot be considered coincidental,” Climate Crisis and Civil Protection Minister Giannis Kefalogiannis said Monday from Chios. Authorities, he said, were “very seriously examining the possibility of an organized criminal act, in other words arson.”

The minister said police forces on the island had been reinforced, while military patrols had been doubled.

“Whoever thinks that they can play with the lives of citizens and cause chaos with premeditated actions will be led to court,” Kefalogiannis said. “Arson is a serious crime and will be dealt with as such.”

Wildfires are frequent in Greece during its hot, dry summers. In 2018, a massive fire swept through the seaside town of Mati, east of Athens, trapping people in their homes and on roads as they tried to flee. More than 100 died, including some who drowned trying to swim away from the flames.