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![]() by AFP Staff Writers Tehran (AFP) July 17, 2022
Iranian police have arrested several people for disturbing security after they protested the drying up of a lake once regarded as the Middle East's largest, official media said Sunday. Lake Urmia, in the mountains of northwest Iran, began shrinking in 1995 due to a combination of prolonged drought, and the extraction of water for farming and dams, according to the UN Environment Programme. Urmia, one of the largest "hypersaline" -- or super salty -- lakes in the world, is located between the cities of Tabriz and Urmia, with more than six million people dependent on agriculture around its shores. On Sunday, Rahim Jahanbakhsh, the police chief of Iran's West Azerbaijan province, reported the arrests. He described the suspects as "many evil and hostile elements, who had no other objective than to destroy public property and disturb the security of the population," according to state news agency IRNA. On Saturday, the Fars news agency reported that "dozens of people in the cities of Naghadeh and Urmia had protested against the authorities' lack of attention to the drying up of Lake Urmia". Fars said protesters had shouted slogans in the provincial capital of Urmia warning the lake was shrinking. "Lake Urmia is dying, parliament orders its killing", some shouted, Fars reported, with others calling out that "Lake Urmia is thirsty". Largely arid Iran, like other nearby countries, has suffered chronic dry spells and heat waves for years, which are expected to worsen with the impacts of climate change. In the last few months, thousands of people have demonstrated against the drying up of rivers, particularly in central and southwestern Iran. Lake Urmia is an important ecosystems, a key stopping point for migratory birds, and home to an endemic shrimp as well as other underwater species.
![]() ![]() Austria and Hungary fight nature to stop lake vanishing Illmitz, Austria (AFP) July 11, 2022 Kitesurfers and windsurfers dot picturesque Lake Neusiedl on the Austrian-Hungarian border - but the water is so low some get stuck in the mud. The salt lake and its marshes - the largest of its kind in Europe and a UNESCO world heritage site - could soon run completely dry, and locals are worried. The lake, only an hour from Vienna, last dried up in the 1860s yet was naturally replenished by rainwater. But back then it wasn't drawing millions of tourists, nor was the area producing 120, ... read more
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