Iraqs Dying Rivers Al Jazeera World Documentary











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For thousands of years, two famous rivers, the Tigris and Euphrates, made Iraq one of the most fertile regions in the Middle East. • Often called 'the cradle of civilisation', the first urban settlements grew up on the lands between the two ancient waterways. But today, things are dramatically different, - for the rivers and the people who depend on them. • Iraq's ancient rivers and water resources have been seriously damaged by wars, economic sanctions, the construction of upstream dams, pollution and a fall in water levels. • The Tigris and Euphrates meet in Basra province, in the south of Iraq, where they form the Shatt al-Arab waterway. Tens of thousands of Iraqis live in marshes, like Abu Haider and his wife who rely almost entirely on fishing to survive. • The displacement of over 200,000 Marsh Arabs by former President Saddam Hussein's government and the campaign of violence against them, led the international community to condemn it as ethnic cleansing. • The United Nations has described the draining of the marshes as a tragic human and environmental catastrophe on a par with the deforestation of the Amazon rainforest. • In September 2018, Iraq's ministry of water resources said the levels and rivers like the Tigris in Baghdad have dropped up to 40 percent in the last 20 years. Partly to blame are dams and reservoirs being built in Turkey to the north that has restricted the flow of water southwards, causing a shrinkage in farmland each year. • The Shatt al-Arab waterway flows into the Persian Gulf. Increasing pollution and low fish stocks have forced Iraqi fishermen to risk forays into Iranian and Kuwaiti waters. • The wrestle for control of the Shatt al-Arab waterway was one of the causes of the long, costly and bitter war between Iraq and Iran throughout most of the 1980s. That border dispute is still not settled. Kuwait and Iraq have also yet to agree on a sea border in negotiations which have been going on since Saddam Hussein's invasion of Kuwait in 1990. Many fishermen at the docks say Iraqis are viewed with hostility by Iranians and Kuwaitis who are still bitter over their conflicts with Iraq in the 1980s and 90s. • Today's crisis means that Iraq, once so abundant in water resources, now imports 60 percent of its fish. But above all, it threatens the roots of Iraq's identity as the land between the two ancient rivers, the Tigris and Euphrates, on which the country and its people have depended for thousands of years. • More from Al Jazeera World on: • YouTube - http://aje.io/aljazeeraworldYT • Facebook -   / aljazeeraworld   • Twitter -   / aljazeera_world   • Visit our website - http://www.aljazeera.com/aljazeeraworld • Subscribe to AJE on YouTube - http://aje.io/YTsubscribe

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