Iraq sandstorm closes airports, puts 3700 people in hospital
A sandstorm swept through Iraq, filling the air with choking dust that closed airports and put more than 3,700 people in hospital with breathing difficulties, the health ministry said Tuesday.
Visibility fell to less than one kilometer (barely half a mile) in central and southern cities as the storm cloaked the region in an eerie orange haze, AFP photographers reported.
Basra and Najaf airports both closed for the duration of the storm, which began to dissipate on Tuesday morning.
Health ministry spokesperson Saif al-Badr said Basra was the worst-hit province, accounting for more than 1,000 of the 3,747 hospital admissions attributed to the sandstorm.
Many of those who dared to venture out in Basra wore face masks to protect themselves from the choking dust, an AFP photographer reported.
Sandstorms are a perennial feature of life in central and southern Iraq but the environment ministry has warned the country can expect to suffer a rising number of 'dust days' in coming decades due to the impact of global warming.
A heavy sandstorm in 2022 saw one person die and more than 5,000 treated in hospital for breathing difficulties.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Arab News
2 days ago
- Arab News
Indonesia's health ministry issues warning over COVID-19 surge in Asia
JAKARTA: Indonesia's government has urged healthcare facilities to step up COVID-19 surveillance, as a more transmissible omicron subvariant drives a surge in cases across Asia. Parts of Asia have been reporting a new wave of infections since last month, especially Thailand, Hong Kong, Malaysia and Singapore. The new spread of the coronavirus that brought the world to a standstill a few years ago has been linked to JN.1, a highly transmissible variant of the omicron strain of COVID-19. It emerged in late 2023 and spread globally through early 2024, becoming one of the dominant variants in many countries. Indonesian Health Minister Budi Gunadi Sadikin met with President Prabowo Subianto on Tuesday to report on the country's COVID-19 situation. 'Cases are indeed increasing, but the rise is caused by variants that are relatively less deadly,' Sadikin told reporters after the meeting. His statement comes after Indonesia's Health Ministry issued a circular last week instructing regional agencies, hospitals, community centers and other medical service facilities across the country to monitor case trends and report unusual conditions. Health quarantine facilities are also instructed to 'step up surveillance on people, transportation and items coming from abroad, especially those from countries that are reporting surges in COVID-19 cases,' the circular stated. Indonesia has confirmed 72 COVID-19 cases and reported no deaths in 2025, the latest data from the Health Ministry showed. The caseload was at seven from last week alone, with the positive rate declining to 2.05 percent from a peak of 3.62 percent the previous week. Indonesia was among the hardest-hit countries in Asia during the COVID-19 pandemic. With a cumulative death toll of around 162,000, it has the second-highest number in the region, after 533,000 recorded in India.


Asharq Al-Awsat
2 days ago
- Asharq Al-Awsat
Japan Births in 2024 Fell Below 700,000 for First Time
The number of births in Japan last year fell below 700,000 for the first time on record, government data showed Wednesday. The fast-ageing nation welcomed 686,061 newborns in 2024 -- 41,227 fewer than in 2023, the data showed. It was the lowest figure since records began in 1899. Japan has the world's second-oldest population after tiny Monaco, according to the World Bank. Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba has called the situation a "quiet emergency", pledging family-friendly measures like more flexible working hours to try and reverse the trend. Wednesday's health ministry data showed that Japan's total fertility rate -- the average number of children a woman is expected to have -- also fell to a record low of 1.15. The ministry said Japan saw 1.6 million deaths in 2024, up 1.9 percent from a year earlier. Ishiba has called for the revitalization of rural regions, where shrinking elderly villages are becoming increasingly isolated. In more than 20,000 communities in Japan, the majority of residents are aged 65 and above, according to the internal affairs ministry. The country of 123 million people is also facing increasingly severe worker shortages as its population ages, not helped by relatively strict immigration rules. In neighboring South Korea, the fertility rate in 2024 was even lower than Japan's, at 0.75 -- remaining one of the world's lowest but marking a small rise from the previous year on the back of a rise in marriages.

Al Arabiya
2 days ago
- Al Arabiya
Japan births in 2024 fall below 700,000 for first time ever
The number of births in Japan last year fell below 700,000 for the first time on record, government data showed Wednesday. The fast-ageing nation welcomed 686,061 newborns in 2024 -- 41,227 fewer than in 2023, the data showed. It was the lowest figure since records began in 1899. Japan has the world's second-oldest population after tiny Monaco, according to the World Bank. Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba has called the situation a 'quiet emergency', pledging family-friendly measures like more flexible working hours to try and reverse the trend. Wednesday's health ministry data showed that Japan's total fertility rate -- the average number of children a woman is expected to have -- also fell to a record low of 1.15. The ministry said Japan saw 1.6 million deaths in 2024, up 1.9 percent from a year earlier. Ishiba has called for the revitalization of rural regions, where shrinking elderly villages are becoming increasingly isolated. In more than 20,000 communities in Japan, the majority of residents are aged 65 and above, according to the internal affairs ministry. The country of 123 million people is also facing increasingly severe worker shortages as its population ages, not helped by relatively strict immigration rules. In neighboring South Korea, the fertility rate in 2024 was even lower than Japan's, at 0.75 -- remaining one of the world's lowest but marking a small rise from the previous year on the back of a rise in marriages.