A severe drought is threatening Iraq’s southern marshes — the traditional site of the biblical Garden of Eden — just as the region was recovering from Saddam Hussein’s draining of its lakes and swamps to punish a political rebellion.
Marshes that were coming back to life a few years ago with United Nations help are again little more than vast expanses of cracked earth. The area’s thousands of inhabitants, known as Marsh Arabs, are victims of the debilitating drought that has ravaged much of Iraq and neighbouring countries in the past two years.
”I have no work. Our livestock have died, our children have left school because we don’t have money to buy them clothes,” said fisherman Yasir Razaq. He spoke in front of his wooden boat, which sat on a dried-up lake bed in the Hor al-Hammar marsh near Nasiriyah, 320km south of Baghdad.
”Before when there was fishing, we could get money for children’s clothes,” he said. ”Now we have lost everything and our situation is miserable.”
The Marsh Arab culture existed for more than 5 000 years in the 12 800 square kilometres of wetlands fed by the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. The marshes boasted hundreds of species of birds and fish, and periodic flooding created fertile farm lands.
The flooded, flat plain is said to have played an important role in the development of an agriculture-based culture that helped raise civilization to new heights. Some biblical scholars identified the vast marshes — the most extensive wetlands in the Middle East — as the site of the fabled Garden of Eden.
But after the 1991 Gulf War, the marshes became a casualty of Iraq’s religiously based politics.
Saddam, a Sunni Muslim, considered the thousands of mostly Shi’ite Marsh Arabs to be disloyal — first in the Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s and more seriously when Shi’ites in southern Iraq rose up against his regime after a United States-led coalition forced the Iraqi army out of Kuwait.
Many Shi’ite rebels hid among the Marsh Arabs in the forests of reeds and myriad of lakes. To punish them, Saddam built a massive network of dams and earthen walls to divert water and dry the marshes.
The effect was devastating.
By the time Saddam was overthrown in 2003, the marshes had shrunk by 90% from their size in the 1970s, when they had covered about 4 800 square kilometres — larger than Delaware.
Many experts direly predicted that the marshes might disappear entirely by 2008.
The UN launched an $11-million project to restore the marshes, including removing some of the barriers that were keeping water from flowing into the area.
And by 2006 more than half the original marshlands had successfully flooded.
”Our ministry right from beginning … started considering the restoration of the marshes area to be our priority,” said Iraqi Water Resources Minister Abdul-Latif Jamal Rasheed, adding that the effort had achieved some success.
The marsh restoration programmes depend on adequate water flow in the Tigris and the Euphrates, the two rivers that gave Iraq its ancient name of Mesopotamia — Greek for ”land between the rivers”.
But the recent drought has caused the levels of those two rivers to fall.
Iraq’s winter ended without adequate rain for a second year in a row. Overall, the rainfall for the last two years has been only about 30% to 40% of normal levels — not only in Iraq but in Syria and southeastern Turkey to the north, where the great rivers begin.
By the time the rivers meander through Iraq down to its southern marshes, much of the water has already been diverted into canals to irrigate parched farm fields.
Last month, the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organisation and the Iraqi government announced a new $47-million programme last month to restore the marshes, focusing on the southern provinces of Maysan, Dhi Qar and Basra.
But the programme’s Iraq director, Dr Fadel el-Zubi, expressed doubt that the marshes can be fully restored without a break in the drought. Also needed are new water-sharing agreements among countries in the region including Syria and Iran to give Iraq more access to water, he said.
”There is much less water coming from neighboring countries,” he said. ”So the amount of water going to the marshlands will be less.”
Much of the programme is aimed at improving the lives of Marsh Arabs, who pursue a life of fishing and foraging that has not changed substantially for thousands of years.
Among other things, the programme will include restocking the marshes with fish capable of surviving in areas where low water levels have raised the salt content, el-Zubi said.
He said the programme would also help people in the region replenish their livestock, mostly sheep and water buffalo.
”The main goal is to restore the maximum that you can within the coming five years and to enable the marshland people to resume farming, livestock production and so on,” he said.
Even with the drought, the outlook for the marshes is better than a decade ago.
But that means little to many of the Marsh Arabs.
”We hoped the new government might do something,” said a fisherman who gave his name only as Mohammed because he feared criticising the government publicly. ”But it’s still the same. This is the second time that the water has been drained away.” — Sapa-AP