logo
Iraq's Dhi Qar reports 86 CCHF cases in 2025

Iraq's Dhi Qar reports 86 CCHF cases in 2025

Shafaq Newsa day ago
Shafaq News – Dhi Qar
Health authorities in Dhi Qar, southern Iraq, have recorded 86 cases of Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever (CCHF) since the start of 2025, a source at the provincial Veterinary Hospital revealed on Monday.
The source told Shafaq News that most infections, which included six deaths, were reported among butchers and livestock handlers, who face heightened exposure due to the nature of their work.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Over 20 Yazidi ISIS victims identified through DNA testing
Over 20 Yazidi ISIS victims identified through DNA testing

Shafaq News

time6 hours ago

  • Shafaq News

Over 20 Yazidi ISIS victims identified through DNA testing

Shafaq News – Baghdad On Tuesday, Iraq's Ministry of Health identified 22 Yazidi victims killed by ISIS in Nineveh, nearly a decade after the group's massacre in the Sinjar region. The atrocities date back to 2014, when ISIS overran Sinjar and the surrounding Yazidi-populated areas. Thousands of men were executed, while more than 5,000 women and children were abducted—many subjected to enslavement and abuse. Though some have been rescued, thousands remain unaccounted for. Remains were matched to relatives using DNA analysis, which involved extracting genetic material from the victims' bones and comparing it with blood samples submitted by family members. A full list of the identified individuals has been made public, and authorities urged families of the missing to continue providing reference samples to aid further identifications.

UNICEF: Average of 28 children dying daily in Gaza
UNICEF: Average of 28 children dying daily in Gaza

Shafaq News

time17 hours ago

  • Shafaq News

UNICEF: Average of 28 children dying daily in Gaza

Shafaq News - Gaza An average of 28 children are dying each day in Gaza as bombardment and a months-long blockade continue to cripple access to basic necessities, the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) reported on Monday. In its latest update, the agency called for immediate access to food, clean water, medical care, and protection — but stressed that above all, a ceasefire is urgently needed. Death by by malnutrition and by lack of aid and vital Gaza, an average of 28 children a day - the size of a classroom - have been children need food, water, medicine and protection. More than anything, they need a… — UNICEF (@UNICEF) August 4, 2025 As humanitarian conditions deteriorate, the United Nations reported that more than 1,500 people have been killed in Gaza since May while attempting to access food or waiting at distribution points, many of which have come under Israeli military control. Some of the incidents even occurred along routes previously designated for UN aid convoys. In May, Israel introduced a parallel aid mechanism through the 'Gaza Relief Foundation,' a group backed by Israeli and US authorities. The initiative operates independently of UN oversight and has not been endorsed by international humanitarian agencies. Since the rollout of that plan, 1,516 Palestinians have been killed and more than 10,067 wounded by Israeli, according to Gaza's Ministry of Health. The overall toll now stands at 60,933 dead and 145,027 wounded since the conflict began in Ovtober 7, 2023.

War scars: Gaza boy's future hangs by a thread
War scars: Gaza boy's future hangs by a thread

Shafaq News

timea day ago

  • Shafaq News

War scars: Gaza boy's future hangs by a thread

Shafaq News – Gaza Fifteen-year-old Obaida Abdullah Atwan once dreamed of becoming a professional footballer. Now he sits in a narrow alley in Gaza, missing an arm and a leg after an Israeli airstrike leveled his family's home. His story mirrors the devastation faced by Gaza's youth, where war has not only shattered bodies but also crushed childhoods in a place with almost no functional healthcare. A Childhood Cut Short 'I was just sitting at home like any other day,' Obaida told Shafaq News. 'Then the bombing hit. I woke up in the hospital not understanding anything—when I realized I couldn't move my toes, I cried.' For children like Obaida, the wounds are more than physical. The trauma of sudden amputation—compounded by the absence of immediate rehabilitation—can lead to profound psychological distress. Aid organizations like the international NGO Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders) warn that without timely intervention, children develop long-term conditions such as depression, identity loss, and PTSD. In Obaida's case, the damage cut through more than flesh—it severed his connection to everything he once loved. A Family Changed Forever Obaida's uncle, Ibrahim Marwan Atwan, told our agency that the household dynamic shifted overnight, explaining, 'He used to do everything on his own. Now he needs help.' With no formal support system, the Atwans, like many Gaza families, have become full-time caregivers inside a broken system that can no longer carry its weight. A Pledge Undelivered Although Obaida received a medical referral and the Red Cross pledged assistance, his prosthetics have yet to arrive, delayed by Israel's blockade, stalled permits, and logistical failures that choke nearly every medical evacuation. 'Every time I pass the street where I used to play football, I remember those days,' Obaida said. 'If I get treatment abroad, I'll play again—maybe even better.' A Collapsing System Gaza's health infrastructure is in ruins—hospitals overcrowded, prosthetic care nearly nonexistent, and most devices requiring overseas fabrication and clearance through complex webs of bureaucracy, NGOs, and military permissions. Mental health programs are thin, sporadically funded, and constantly under threat from airstrikes and displacement, leaving most children without psychological care. A Generation on Hold Without urgent intervention, Gaza faces a silent emergency: thousands of children like Obaida may grow up permanently disabled, isolated from care, education, and opportunity—further deepening the enclave's long-term humanitarian collapse. Still, Obaida holds on, believing he'll get back on the field one day.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store