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Iraqis flock to hospitals after capital hit by fierce sandstorm

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Published Date: 06 July 2009
HUNDREDS of Iraqis are seeking medical help after one of the worst sandstorms in living memory stretched beyond a week yesterday.
The sandstorm has caused numerous flight delays out of the Iraqi capital and last week delayed Iraq's first international bidding round for its oil fields since the 2003 invasion by a day.

Many Baghdad shops stayed shut yesterday, while police w
earing masks directed thin streams of traffic through eerily misty streets. Hospital emergency rooms were packed with people complaining about breathing problems, officials said. Eyes and throats were badly affected with asthma sufferers particularly badly hit.

"We are on alert. This is the worst dust storm we have ever had in Iraq," said Dr Jasib Lateef, operations manager at the Iraqi health ministry. "A large number of people are turning up at emergency rooms at hospitals, challenging our resources."

At least 300 people came to Baghdad's Ibn al-Nafees hospital with breathing difficulties yesterday, a hospital official said.

"The weather has been dusty for a week. If healthy people can't breathe, how can the children cope?" Eman um Ali, who had brought her asthma-suffering son for treatment, said.

Iraq has long suffered blinding sandstorms, but several years of drought have aggravated the situation. The inadequate flow of water down its once-mighty rivers, the Tigris and Euphrates, which are choked by dams in upstream countries such as Turkey, has made things worse.

Water shortages make the land more dusty and the fine windblown dust gets everywhere, filtering under doors and through windows.





The full article contains 264 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 05 July 2009 10:10 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Iraq
 
1

Mashimaro,

China 06/07/2009 05:40:23
It's what happens when you drive heavy military vehicles across a desert.
2

Jim A,

06/07/2009 06:57:25
Oh Mashi you disappoint me. "It's what happens when you drive heavy military vehicles across a desert".
I'd expect something like that from Posty but not you.

Anyway Mashi, no it's nothing to do with traffic mate, civilan or military, geez I can't believe your trying to pin bad weather on us as well.

Sand storms form when the strong heating of the air over the desert causes the lower atmosphere to become unstable. This instability, mixes with higher winds in the middle troposphere and is forced downward, producing stronger winds at the surface which picks up the sand as it blows.

Traffic :-)
3

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06/07/2009 08:31:29
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4

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06/07/2009 12:21:25
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Jim A,

06/07/2009 15:47:39
#4 Posty, LOL, "a nerd", I don't have to pretend to be a meteorologist, I have a son who is a Meteorologist, another son who is a Bio chemist and a third son who is Psychologist.

The military or civilian traffic has nothing to do with sandstorms, and that is the kind of statement I'd expect from you as one of your anti west rants.




6

Jim A,

06/07/2009 15:59:54
Right then I'm off back to bed as it's around 3 am here so I don't expect I'll catch your reply.
LOL "operation Nature Desert Storm". Ooooh boy.
7

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06/07/2009 21:38:56
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06/07/2009 23:37:44
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07/07/2009 00:13:45
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07/07/2009 00:25:16
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11

mildred,

Philadelphia PA USA 14/07/2009 14:48:29
We also get great dust (sand) storms. The most memorable: longest lasting, repetitive, and largest areas covered were the great storms of the late 20's across our mid and southwestern plains. These resulted in a mass population migration out of the areas and the novel "Grapes of Wrath" was written describing the plight of the "Oakies". We still get blinding sand storms across Oklahoma. Arkansas and the general area. Has nothing to do with military vehicles. Has to do with destruction of the natural habitat. Rip out the vegetation, divert the waterways, drain the aquifers, mountain top and strip mining and watch what happens when a big rain tumbles and tunnels down the hills and mountains. The aftermath which is a big dry silty sandy wind will rip the enamel right off your teeth. That's exactly what happened in Iraq and the rest of the area once kinown as "The Fertile Crescent"
Moral of the story: If you get Mother Nature angry, she will pay you back a thousand times over. A woman scorned will try to kill you.

 

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